2021
The Mountains in Our Lives
September 2021


Area Presidency Message

The Mountains in Our Lives

Our Prophet reminds us that the Saviour is never closer than when we are facing or climbing our personal mountains with faith.

The Saviour Jesus Christ, in preparing us for what lies ahead, teaches us of what His gospel is and what it could do for us: “Behold I have given unto you my gospel, and this is the gospel which I have given unto you—that I came into the world to do the will of my Father, because my Father sent me.

“And my Father sent me that I might be lifted up upon the cross; and after that I had been lifted up upon the cross, that I might draw all men unto me, that as I have been lifted up by men even so should men be lifted up by the Father, to stand before me, to be judged of their works, whether they be good or whether they be evil”1.

Understanding that the gospel which the Lord has given to us came through His sacrifice helps us know that our covenant path is not a smooth journey. We will face challenges along the way. The Lord tells us the remedy to these challenges as He invites us: “Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.

“Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls”2.

The Lord’s invitation to come unto Him, is an invitation for us to exercise faith in Him. “Through your faith, Jesus Christ will increase your ability to move the mountains in your life, even though your personal challenges may loom as large as Mount Everest”3.

President Tafadzwa Mahachi, who is serving as a branch president in the Zimbabwe Kadoma First Branch, and is also an author, publisher, graphic designer and a mathematics teacher shares how he overcame his mountain through faith: “I have discovered through interaction with both prospective and returned missionaries in Zimbabwe that there is a general fear of the unknown that keeps many from wanting to serve a mission. In reflection to President Nelson’s talk in which he spoke fervently about the need to replace our fears and doubts with faith, I could not help seeing the challenges of a returned missionary as a mountain that can only be moved through faith.

“After finishing my upper high school while living with my grandfather after the demise of my grandmother two years prior, grandfather passed. My father’s death followed exactly 21 days later. Given these circumstances, my future was no longer clear as all the supporting pillars were collapsing [before] my eyes. I could have doubted. I could have given up. But I give thanks to a supportive mission president who identified me among myriads of members who also needed his attention. He called me for an interview, and ministered to me so I could see the blessings of putting my faith into action. He realized that all my mission papers were ready and helped me to enter the mission field”.

President Mahachi served an honorable mission without knowing what awaited him upon his return. He placed his faith in the Lord. President Nelson taught us during the April 2021 general conference, “your mountains may be loneliness, doubt, illness, or other personal problems. Your mountains will vary, and yet the answer to each of your challenges is to increase your faith”4.

When President Mahachi returned from his mission, he knew that his success depended on exercising faith with total integrity, despite all the opposition around him. He shares his experience: “The anticipated mountain came immediately after my honorable release as a missionary. I had no job. With only high school qualifications, there were no prospects of getting any. Living in a developing country required some form of dishonesty to rise to the top through bribing those who could give me a job or entrance into a tertiary institution. I was a returned missionary. All I had was a testimony of the divinity of the Saviour and the truthfulness of the restored gospel.”

Despite those great barriers, President Mahachi said that through prayer and fasting he successfully secured a position in college which opened up the doors of opportunity.

Another returned missionary, Bishop Fortunate Chitiyo from Nketa Second Ward, Nkulumane Zimbabwe Stake shares his and his dear wife’s mountain experience: “When our dear daughter Amalia Chitiyo was born, she had bilateral clubfoot” (a birth defect in which the foot is twisted out of shape or position). The Chitiyos couldn’t afford the funds for treatment and the special shoes which were recommended for their daughter. Bishop Chitiyo said, “During this process we prayed and fasted continuously and pleaded with God to heal our daughter and remove this mountain according to His will”.

After several months, the Chitiyos’s daughter was miraculously healed. Bishop and Sister Chitiyo testified of this healing experience: “This [experience] increased our faith and through it all we testify with the prophet of God, President Russell M. Nelson that the Lord loves effort! Truly, faith is the power that enables the unlikely to accomplish the impossible. The healing of our daughter did not happen according to our timing and in the manner we expected, but according to God’s timing and in His own way.”

President Nelson teaches us, “the Savior is never closer to you than when you are facing or climbing a mountain with faith5. My humble prayer is that we will read and reread President Nelson’ s talk and apply the solutions he shares with us on how we can move mountains in our lives.

Edward Dube was named a General Authority Seventy in April 2013. He is married to Naume Keresia Salizani. They are the parents of four children.

Notes

  1. 3 Nephi 27:13–14.

  2. Matthew 11:28–29.

  3. Russell M. Nelson, “Christ is Risen; Faith in Him Will Move Mountains”, Liahona, May 2021, 102–103.

  4. Russell M. Nelson, “Christ is Risen”, 103.

  5. Russell M. Nelson, “Christ is Risen”, 103.