Six years ago, our family was traveling at night just outside the city of Oxford. As is often the case with young children, we needed to stop, so we found a service station with an array of shops and restaurants.
With precision, we filed out of the car, visited the services, and filed back in, resuming our journey.
Fifteen minutes later, our eldest son asked a significant question: “Where is
Jasper?” Jasper sits on his own at the back of the car.
We assumed he had fallen asleep or was hiding or playing a trick on us. As his brother inspected the back of the car more closely, we discovered our five-year-old son was not there.
Our hearts filled with dread.
As we made our way back to the service station, we pleaded with Heavenly Father that Jasper would be kept safe.
We called the police and informed them of the situation.
When we anxiously arrived, more than 40 minutes later, we found two police vehicles in the car park, lights flashing. Inside one of them was Jasper, playing with the buttons.
I will never forget the joy we felt in being reunited with him.
Many of the Savior's parabolic teachings focus on gathering, restoring, or striving to find that which has been scattered or lost.
Among these are the parables of the lost sheep, the lost coin, and the lost son.
As this incident with Jasper has played in my mind over the years, I have reflected on the divine identity and importance of God's children,
the redemptive power of Jesus Christ, and the perfect love of a Father in Heaven who knows you and me.
I hope to bear witness of these truths today. Firstly, Children of God.
Life is challenging. Many people feel overwhelmed, alone, isolated, or exhausted. When things are difficult, we may feel that we have wandered or fallen behind.
Knowing that we are all children of God and members of His eternal family will restore a sense of belonging and purpose. President Ballard shared:
“There is one important identity we all share now and forever. ...
That is that you are and have always been a son or daughter of God. ...
Understanding this truth— really understanding it and embracing it—is life-changing.”
Do not misunderstand or devalue how important you are to your Father in Heaven. You are not an accidental byproduct of nature, a cosmic orphan,
or the result of matter plus time plus chance.
Where there is design, there is a designer.
Your life has meaning and purpose.
The ongoing Restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ brings light and understanding regarding your divine identity.
You are a beloved child of Heavenly Father.
You are the subject matter of all these parables and teachings.
God loves you so much that He sent His Son to heal, rescue, and redeem you.
Jesus Christ recognized the divine nature and eternal worth of each person.
He explained how the two great commandments to love God and love our neighbor are the foundation of all of God's commandments.
One of our divine responsibilities is to care for those in need.
This is why, as disciples of Jesus Christ, we “bear one another’s burdens,
... mourn with those that mourn, ... and comfort those that stand in need of comfort.”
Religion is not only about our relationship with God;
it is also about our relationship with each other.
Elder Holland explained that the English word “religion” comes from the Latin “religare” meaning “to tie” or more literally, “to retie.”
Thus, “true religion is the tie that binds us to God and to each other.”
How we treat one another truly matters.
President Nelson teaches, “The Savior’s message is clear: His true disciples build, lift, encourage, persuade, and inspire.”
This is even more important when our fellow travelers feel lost, alone, forgotten, or removed. We do not have to look far to find people who are struggling. We can start by helping someone in our own family, congregation, or local community.
We can also seek to relieve the suffering of the 700 million people living in extreme poverty,
or the 100 million people who are forcibly displaced due to persecution, conflict, and identity-based violence.
Jesus Christ is the perfect example of caring for those in need—
the hungry, the stranger, the sick, the poor, the imprisoned.
His work is our work. Elder Gong teaches that “our journey to God is often found together.” As such,
our ward should be a refuge for all of God's children.
Are we passively attending church or actively creating communities whose purpose is to worship, remember Christ, and minister to one another?
We can heed President Nelson's counsel to judge less, love more,
and extend the pure love of Jesus Christ through our words and actions. Two. The redemptive power of Jesus Christ.
The Atonement of Jesus Christ is the supreme expression of our Heavenly Father's love for His children.
The word “atonement” describes the setting “at one” of those who have been estranged or separated.
Our Savior's mission was to provide both a way to return to Heavenly Father and relief in the journey.
The Savior knows through His experience how to support us through life's challenges.
Make no mistake, Christ is our Rescuer and the Healer of our souls.
As we exercise faith, He helps us press forward through hardships.
He continues to extend His loving and merciful invitation:
“Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn of me; ... and ye shall find rest unto your
souls.” The metaphor of the yoke is powerful. As President Howard W. Hunter explained, “The yoke was a device that allowed the ‘strength’ of a second animal to be linked and coupled with the effort of a single animal, sharing and reducing the heavy labor of the task in hand.
A burden that was overwhelming or perhaps impossible for one to bear could be equitably and comfortably borne by two
bound together with a common yoke.”
Present Nelson taught: “You come unto Christ to be yoked with Him and with His power, so that you’re not pulling life’s load alone. You’re pulling life’s load yoked with the Savior and Redeemer of the world.”
How do we yoke or bind ourselves to the Savior?
Elder Bednar explains: “Making and keeping sacred covenants yokes us to and with the Lord Jesus Christ.
In essence, the Savior is beckoning us to rely upon and pull together with Him. ... We are not and never need be alone.”
To any one burdened, lost, confused, you do not have to do this alone.
Through the Atonement of Christ and His ordinances, you can be yoked or bound to Him.
He will lovingly provide the strength and healing you need to face the journey ahead. He is the refuge from our storms still.
Third. Heavenly Father’s love.
For the record, Jasper is witty, affectionate, intelligent, and rambunctious. But the key to the story is
he is mine.
He is my son. And I love him more than he will ever know.
If an imperfect, earthly father feels this way about his child,
can you imagine how a perfect, glorified, loving Heavenly Father feels about you?
To my dear friends of the rising generation, Gen Z and Gen Alpha:
please know faith requires work.
We live in a time when, for many, only seeing is believing.
Faith can be challenging and requires choices.
But prayers are answered and answers can be felt.
Some of the most real things in life are not seen.
They are felt, known, and experienced. They, too, are real.
Jesus Christ wants you to know and have a relationship with your Father in Heaven.
He taught: “What man among you, having a son, and he shall be standing out, and shall say, Father,
open thy house that I may come in and sup with thee, will not say,
Come in, my son; for mine is thine, and thine is mine.”
Can you think of a more personal, loving image of God, the Eternal Father?
You are His child. If you are feeling lost, if you have questions or lack wisdom, if you are struggling with your circumstances, or wrestling with spiritual dissonance, turn to Him.
Pray to Him for comfort, love, answers, and direction. Whatever the need and wherever you are, pour out your heart to your Heavenly Father.
For some, you may want to follow President Nelson's invitation and “ask if He is really there—
If He knows you. Ask Him how He feels about you and then listen.”
Dear brothers and sisters: Know your Father in Heaven. He is perfect and loving. Know who Jesus Christ is.
He is our Savior and Redeemer.
Bind yourself and those you love to Him and know who you are.
Know your true divine identity. God's plan of happiness is all about you.
You are His precious child and of great worth.
He knows and loves you. Of these simple but foundational truths I testify, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.