Our Heavenly Father is a God of high expectations. His expectations for us are expressed by His Son, Jesus Christ, in these words, "I would that you should be perfect even as I or your Father who is in heaven is perfect." He proposes to make us holy so that we may abide a celestial glory and dwell in His presence. He knows what is required and so He provides His commandments and covenants, the gift of the Holy Ghost, and, most importantly, the Atonement and Resurrection of His Beloved Son to make our transformation possible. In all of this, God's purpose is that we, His children, may be able to experience ultimate joy, to be with Him eternally and to become even as He is. Some years ago, Elder Dallin H. Oaks explained, "The final judgment is not just an evaluation of a sum total of good and evil acts, what we have done. It is an acknowledgement of the final effect of our acts and thoughts, what we have become. It's not enough for anyone just to go through the motions. The commandments, ordinances, and covenants of the gospel are not a list of deposits required to be made in some heavenly account. The gospel of Jesus Christ is a plan that shows us how to become what our Heavenly Father desires us to become." Sadly, much of modern Christianity does not acknowledge that God makes any real demands on those who believe in Him, seeing Him rather as a butler who meets their needs when summoned or a therapist whose role is to make people feel good about themselves. It is a religious outlook that makes no pretense at changing lives. By contrast, as one author declares, "the God portrayed in both the Hebrew and Christian scriptures asks not just for commitment, but for our very lives. The God of the Bible traffics in life and death, not niceness and calls for sacrificial love, not benign whatever-ism." I would like to speak of one particular attitude and practice we need to adopt if we're to meet our Heavenly Father's high expectations. It is this, willingly to accept and even seek correction. Correction is vital if we would conform our lives unto a perfect man, that is under the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ. Paul said of divine correction or chastening, "For whom the Lord loveth, he chasteneth." Though it's often difficult to endure truly, we ought to rejoice that God considers us worth the time and trouble to correct. Divine chastening has at least three purposes: to persuade us to repent, to refine and sanctify us, and at times, to redirect our course to what God knows is a better path. Consider first of all repentance, a necessary condition for forgiveness and cleansing. The Lord declared, "As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. Be zealous, therefore, and repent." Again, he said, "And my people must needs be chastened until they learn obedience, if it must needs be, by the things which they suffer." In a latter-day revelation, the Lord commanded four senior Church leaders to repent-- as He might command many of us-- for not adequately teaching their children according to the commandments and for not being more diligent and concerned at home. The brother of Jared in the Book of Mormon repented when the Lord stood in a cloud and talked with him for the space of three hours and chastened him because he remembered not to call upon the name of the Lord. Because he so willingly responded to this severe rebuke, the brother of Jared was later given the privilege of seeing and being instructed by the primeval Redeemer. The fruit of God's chastisement is repentance leading to righteousness. In addition to stimulating our repentance, the very experience of enduring chastening can refine us and prepare us for greater spiritual privileges. Said the Lord, "My people must be tried in all things that they may be prepared to receive the glory that I have for them, even the glory of Zion, and he that will not bear chastisement is not worthy of my kingdom." In another place, He says, "For all those who will not endure chastening, but deny me, cannot be sanctified." As Elder Paul Johnson said this morning, "We should take care not to resent the very things that help us put on the divine nature." The followers of Alma established a Zion community in Helem, but then were brought into bondage. They did not deserve their suffering, quite the contrary. But the record says, "Nevertheless, the Lord seeth fit to chasten his people, yea he tryeth their patience and their faith. Nevertheless, whosoever putteth his trust in him, the same shall be lifted up at the last day. Yea, and thus it was with this people." The Lord strengthened them and lightened their burdens to the point they could hardly feel them upon on their backs and then, in due course, delivered them. Their faith was immeasurably strengthened by their experience and ever after, they enjoyed a special bond with the Lord. God uses another form of chastening or correction to guide us to a future we do not or cannot now envision, but which He knows is the better way for us. Elder Hugh B. Brown, formerly a member of the Twelve and a counselor in the First Presidency, provided a personal experience. He told of purchasing a run-down farm in Canada many years ago. As he went about cleaning up and repairing his property, he came across a currant bush that had grown over six feet high and was yielding no berries. So he pruned it back drastically, leaving only small stumps. Then he saw a drop like a tear on the top of each of these little stumps, as if the currant bush were crying and thought he heard it say, "How could you do this to me? I was making such wonderful growth and now you've cut me down. Every plant in the garden will look down on me. How could you do this to me? I thought you were the gardener here." Elder Brown replied, "Look, little currant bush, I am the gardener here and I know what I want you to be. I don't intend you to be a fruit tree or a shade tree. I want you to be a currant bush and someday, little currant bush, when you're laden with fruit, you're going to say thank you, Mr. Gardner, for loving me enough to cut me down." Years later, Elder Brown was a field officer in the Canadian army, serving in England. When a superior officer became a battle casualty, Elder Brown was in line to be promoted to general, and he was summoned to London. But even though he was fully qualified for the promotion, it was denied him because he was a Mormon. The commanding general said, in essence, "You deserve the appointment, but I cannot give it to you." What Elder brown had spent 10 years hoping and praying and preparing for slipped through his fingers in that moment because of blatant discrimination. Continuing his story, Elder Brown remembered, "I got on the train and started back with a broken heart, with bitterness in my soul. When I got to my tent, I threw my cap on the cot, I clenched my fists, and I shook them at heaven. I said, 'How could you do this to me, God? I've done everything I could to measure up. There's nothing I could have done that I should have done, that I haven't done. How could you do this to me?' I was as bitter as gall. And then I heard a voice, and I recognized the tone of this voice; it was my own voice. And the voice said, 'I am the gardener here. I know what I want you to do.' The bitterness went out of my soul and I fell on my knees by the cot to ask forgiveness for my ungratefulness and now, almost 50 years later, I look up to God and say, 'Thank you, Mr. Gardner, for cutting me down, for loving me enough to hurt me.'" God knew what Hugh B. Brown was to become and what was needed for that to happen, and He redirected his course to prepare him for the holy apostleship. If we sincerely desire and strive to measure up to the high expectations of our Heavenly Father, He will ensure that we receive all the help we need, whether it be comforting, strengthening, or chastening. If we're open to it, needed correction will come in many forms and from many sources. It may come in the course of our prayers, as God speaks to our mind and heart through the Holy Ghost. It may come in the form of prayers that are answered "no" or differently than we had expected. Chastening may come as we study the scriptures and are reminded of deficiencies, disobedience, or simply matters neglected. Correction can come through others, especially those who are God-inspired to promote our happiness. Apostles, prophets, patriarchs, bishops, and others have been put into the Church today just as anciently for the perfecting of the Saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ. Perhaps some of the things said in this conference have come to you as a call to repentance or change which, if heeded, will lift you to a higher place. We can help one another as fellow Church members. It's one of the primary reasons that the Savior established a church. Even when we encounter mean-spirited criticism from persons who have little regard or love for us, it can be helpful to exercise enough meekness to weigh it and sift out anything that might benefit us. Correction, hopefully gentle, can come from one's spouse. Elder Richard G. Scott, who just addressed us, remembers a time early in his marriage when his wife, Jeanene, counseled him to look directly at people when he spoke to them. "You look at the floor, the ceiling, the window, anywhere but in their eyes," she said. He took that gentle rebuke to heart and it made him much more effective in counseling and working with people. As one who served as a full-time missionary under then-president Scott's direction, I can attest that he does look one squarely in the eye in their conversations. I can also add that when one needs correction, that look can be very penetrating.
Parents can and must correct, even chasten, if their children are not to be cast adrift at the mercy of a merciless adversary and his supporters. President Boyd K. Packer has observed that when a person in a position to correct another fails to do so, he's thinking of himself. Remember that reproof should be timely with sharpness or clarity when moved upon by the Holy Ghost and then showing forth afterwards an "increase of love toward him whom thou hast reproved, lest he esteem thee to be his enemy." Remember that if we resist correction, others may discontinue offering it altogether despite their love for us. If we repeatedly fail to act on the chastening of a loving God, then He too will desist. He has said, "My spirit will not always strive with man." Eventually, much of our chastening should come from within. We should become self-correcting. One of the ways that our late beloved colleague Elder Joseph B. Wirthlin became the pure and humble disciple that he was was by analyzing his performance in every assignment and task. In his desire to please God, he resolved to determine what he could have done better and then he diligently applied each lesson learned. All of us can meet God's high expectations, however great or small our capacity and talent may be. Moroni affirms, "If you shall deny yourselves of all ungodliness and love God with all your might, mind and strength, then is Christ's grace is sufficient for you, that by his grace ye may be perfect in Christ." It is a diligent, devoted effort on our part that calls forth this empowering and enabling grace, an effort that certainly includes submission to God's chastening hand and sincere, unqualified repentance. Let us pray for His love-inspired correction. May God sustain you in your striving to meet His high expectations and grant you a full measure of the happiness and peace that naturally follow. I know that you and I can become one with God and Christ, of our Heavenly Father and His Beloved Son and the joyous potential we have because of them. I humbly and confidently bear witness in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.