2015
The Plan of Salvation: A Sacred Treasure of Knowledge to Guide Us
October 2015


“The Plan of Salvation: A Sacred Treasure of Knowledge to Guide Us,” Ensign, October 2015, 24–31

The Plan of Salvation: A Sacred Treasure of Knowledge to Guide Us

The key to our success in our premortal life was our support of the Father’s plan. It is likewise the key to our success in mortal life.

I have often pondered the hopelessness of God’s children wandering in the dark and dreary world, not knowing who they are, where they came from, why they are here on earth, or where they are going after their mortal lives.

We need not wander. God has revealed eternal truths to answer these questions. They are found in His great plan for His children. In the scriptures this plan is known as the “plan of redemption,”1 the “plan of happiness,”2 and the “plan of salvation.”3

The Beeches

The Beeches, by Asher Brown Durand, © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, image source: Art Resource, NY, may not be copied

By understanding and obediently following God’s plan, we keep ourselves from wandering off the path that leads back to our Heavenly Father.4 Then, and only then, can we live the kind of life He leads, which is “eternal life, … the greatest of all the gifts of God.”5

The gift of eternal life is worth any effort to study, learn, and apply the plan of salvation. All humankind will be resurrected and receive the blessing of immortality. But to achieve eternal life—the life God leads6—is worth living the plan of salvation with all our heart, mind, might, and strength.

Understanding the Plan of Salvation

How empowering it is to know the plan! The plan of salvation is one of the greatest treasures of knowledge ever given to mankind because it explains the eternal purpose of life. Without it, we are truly wandering in the dark. This is why God’s pattern is to give commandments to His children “after having made known unto them the plan of redemption.”7

My desire is to help each of us take advantage of this treasure of knowledge—to better understand the plan of salvation and apply that understanding in our daily lives.

Agency

Because agency is essential to this plan, let us start there. Our Father has given us the capacity to act or to refuse to act8 according to eternal truths—the truths that make God what He is and heaven what it is.9 If we use our agency to accept and live these truths, we receive everlasting joy. Conversely, if we use our agency to disobey, to reject God’s laws, we experience suffering and sorrow.10

Agency provides a fitting backdrop for the three chapters of the plan of salvation: premortal life, mortal life, and postmortal life.

Premortal Life

As declared in “The Family, a Proclamation to the World,” each of us “is a beloved spirit son or daughter of heavenly parents” with “a divine nature and destiny.”11 In a premortal council, Heavenly Father explained to us His plan of redemption.12 The plan was based on doctrine, law, and principles that have always existed.13 We learned that if we accepted and followed the plan, we would be required to willingly leave our Father’s presence and be tested to show whether we would choose to live according to His laws and commandments.14 We rejoiced at this opportunity15 and gratefully sustained the plan because it offered us the way to become like our Heavenly Father and inherit eternal life.

But the plan was not without risk: if we chose in mortality not to live according to God’s eternal laws, we would receive something less than eternal life.16 Father knew we would stumble and sin as we learned by experience in mortality, so He provided a Savior to redeem from sin all who repent and to heal the spiritual and emotional wounds of those who obey.17

Christ in Emmaus

Detail from Christ in Emmaus, by Carl Heinrich Bloch

Jesus Christ was the Father’s beloved, chosen, and foreordained Son from the beginning.18 He sustained the Father’s plan and offered to be our Savior, saying, “Here am I, send me.”19 Thus, Jesus was appointed by the Father to be the One to live a sinless life in mortality, atone for our sins and afflictions, and be resurrected to break the bands of death.

Lucifer, who came to be known as Satan, also lived in the premortal existence.20 For selfish reasons he rejected the plan, sought to destroy the agency of man, and rebelled against the Father.21 As a consequence, Satan and those who followed him will never have a body. They forfeited their chance to participate in the Father’s plan and lost their divine destiny.22 Today they continue their war of rebellion against God and seek to turn the minds and hearts of humankind against Him.23

This earth was designed and created for those who accepted the Father’s plan.24 Here we obtain a body created in God’s image and likeness. Here we are tested and proven. Here we gain the experience necessary to inherit eternal life.25

Mortal Life

Adam and Eve

Detail from Adam and Eve, by Douglas M. Fryer

God created Adam and Eve and joined them as husband and wife, placed them in the Garden of Eden, and commanded them to have children.26 Exercising their agency, Adam and Eve together fell from the presence of God and became mortal beings.27 This fulfilled the Father’s plan by making it possible for them to have children, which they could not do in the Garden of Eden.28 By eternal law, the divine power of procreation must be used within the bounds set by our Heavenly Father. Doing so provides opportunity for eternal joy. Any use of this sacred power outside of God’s boundaries will ultimately result in misery.29

Satan, who desires that all “be miserable like unto himself,”30 tries to draw us away from the opportunities available through the Father’s plan. Why does Heavenly Father allow Satan to tempt us? Because He knows that opposition is necessary for our growth and testing in mortality.31 Opposition gives us a priceless opportunity to turn to God and rely on Him. Because good and evil are constantly before us, we can clearly express the desires of our hearts by embracing one and rejecting the other.32 Opposition can be found in Satan’s temptations but also in our own weakness, the mortal frailties that are inherent in the human condition.33

To help us choose wisely, God has revealed His plan of redemption and has provided commandments,34 the Light of Christ,35 and the companionship of the Holy Ghost.36 Yet even with all of these gifts, every one of us in this fallen world commits sin, and so we are all incapable of entering the presence of God on our own merits.37 That is why His merciful plan provides a Savior.

Jesus Christ came to earth as the Only Begotten Son of God and fulfilled His appointed mission perfectly by submitting to the will of the Father in all things.38 According to the merciful plan of the Father, the effects of the Fall are conquered through the Resurrection of the Savior,39 the consequences of sin can be overcome, and weakness can turn into strength, if we avail ourselves of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.40

Christ’s Image

Christ’s Image, by Heinrich Hofmann

We can qualify for eternal life only through obedience to the commandments. This requires having faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, repenting, being baptized, receiving the gift of the Holy Ghost, and enduring to the end in following the Savior’s example.41 In practical terms, we must receive all essential priesthood ordinances and endure to the end in keeping the associated covenants.

Postmortal Life

After we die, we will one day stand before the Savior to be judged.42 Because God is merciful, those who exercise their faith in Christ unto repentance will be forgiven and inherit all that the Father has, including eternal life.43 Because God is just, each person who does not repent will not receive the gift of eternal life.44 Each person will be rewarded according to his or her faith, repentance, thoughts, desires, and works.45

Applying the Plan of Salvation in Our Daily Lives

Once we understand the grand panorama of the plan and see ourselves in it, we gain something invaluable, even essential: eternal perspective. Eternal perspective informs our daily decisions and actions. It steadies our minds and souls. When persuasive but eternally flawed opinions swirl about us, we are steadfast and immovable.

As Elder Neal A. Maxwell (1926–2004) of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles taught: “Without an understanding of the plan of salvation, including our premortal existence and the judgment and the resurrection, trying to make sense of this life by itself would be like seeing only the second act of a three-act play.”46 We must understand the first act (premortal life) in order to know how to make the best choices in the second act (mortal life), which will determine what happens to us in the third act (postmortal life).

Stated another way, understanding the plan of salvation, coupled with sincere prayer, changes the way we see life, everyone around us, and ourselves. Understanding the plan clarifies our spiritual vision and allows us to see things as they really are.47 Just as the Urim and Thummim enabled the Prophet Joseph Smith to receive revelation and guidance,48 so will knowledge of the plan show us how to “act in doctrine and principle pertaining to futurity, according to the moral agency” the Lord has given us.49 Thus, our faith will be strengthened, and we will know how to chart our life’s course and make decisions consistent with eternal truth.

Here are a few examples that are especially relevant in our time.

The Purpose of Marriage in God’s Plan

bride and groom standing by temple

Illustration by James Johnson

Marriage and family are under attack because Satan knows that they are essential to obtaining eternal life—as essential as the Creation, the Fall, and the Atonement and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.50 Having failed to destroy any of those pillars of the plan, Satan seeks to destroy our understanding and practice of marriage and family.

With Heavenly Father’s plan as a fixed point of reference, the purpose of marriage comes clearly into focus. The commandment to leave father and mother, cleave to one another in marriage,51 and multiply and replenish the earth52 makes His plan possible. Through marriage we bring His spirit children into the world and become partners with Him in helping His children participate in His plan.53

The Father’s plan provides us the way to inherit eternal life, the life our heavenly parents lead. In the plan, “neither is the man without the woman, [nor] the woman without the man, in the Lord.”54 The very essence of eternal life includes the eternal marriage of man and woman, which is an essential part of becoming like our heavenly parents.55

Marriage between a Man and a Woman

In marriage we complete one another, as only man and woman with their unique and essential differences can. Walking through mortality as husband and wife, we grow together, drawing closer to the Savior as we obey, make sacrifices to do God’s will, and build up His kingdom together. Knowing that eternal marriage is a commandment of God and that He prepares a way for His children to accomplish all He commands,56 we know that our marriages will succeed as we unite in keeping the covenants we have made.

It is through the ordinances of the priesthood and choosing to keep the associated covenants that we receive the power of godliness as we deal with the challenges of mortality.57 The ordinances of the temple endow us with power from on high and enable us to return to the presence of our Heavenly Father.58 The sealing ordinance enables husband and wife to grow together by God’s power and be one with the Lord.59 Any substitute for this kind of marriage will not fulfill His sacred purposes for us or for the generations of His children who follow.60

Attractions and Desires

Each of us comes to this fallen world with weakness or challenge inherent in the human condition.61 Understanding God’s plan enables us to see all human frailties—including attractions and desires inconsistent with His plan—as temporary.62 Knowing we lived before this life as beloved sons and daughters of heavenly parents enables us to take our personal identity from our divine origin. It is our status as a son or daughter of God—not our frailties or tendencies—that is the true source of our identity.63

With this perspective, we are better able to wait humbly and patiently upon the Lord,64 trusting that through our faith, obedience, and endurance to the end, our dispositions and desires will be purified, our bodies will be sanctified, and we will truly become the sons and daughters of Christ, perfected through His Atonement.

The eternal perspective of the plan brings the assurance that for the faithful, the day will surely come that “God shall wipe away all tears; … neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.”65 This “perfect brightness of hope”66 will steady our minds and hearts and enable us to patiently, faithfully wait upon the Lord.

Promises for Those Who Faithfully Endure

Those who wonder if their current circumstance or condition cuts them off from eternal life should remember that “no one is predestined to receive less than all that the Father has for His children.”67

No blessing will be denied the faithful. President Lorenzo Snow declared: “There is no Latter-day Saint who dies after having lived a faithful life who will lose anything because of having failed to do certain things when opportunities were not furnished him or her. In other words, if a young man or a young woman has no opportunity of getting married, and they live faithful lives up to the time of their death, they will have all the blessings, exaltation and glory that any man or woman will have who had this opportunity and improved it. That is sure and positive.”68

Promises for All Who Know the Plan and Apply It Daily

Teach Them to Understand

Teach Them to Understand, by Walter Rane

Each of us wholeheartedly supported the Father’s plan in the premortal life. We knew He loved us, and we were awed by His generous offer of this opportunity to inherit all He has, including eternal life. The key to our success in our premortal life was our support of the Father’s plan. It is likewise the key to our success in mortal life.

So my invitation is that together we stand again in support of the Father’s plan. This we do with love for all, for the plan itself is an expression of the love of God.

As we daily apply our knowledge of the Father’s plan, our life will take on deeper meaning. We will face our challenges with greater faith. We will press forward with the sure, bright, resplendent hope of eternal life.