Wednesday, March 25, 2009


MY HEAD IS GOING TO EXPLODE ALREADY

Once again, just a couple of weeks ago, another speaker during sacrament meeting emphatically quoted what he said were Jesus' words: I never said it would be easy...I only said it would be worth it.

Far too many times, I would hear this heartfelt statement given with such conviction that invariably there would be tears and an accompanying heartfelt testimony. Consequently, I never had the zeal to challenge them to find me the book, chapter and verse in the Bible where Jesus' supposedly uttered these words because I didn't have the heart to see the blank look on their faces, the stuttering of their words or their embarrassment or mortification when it finally dawns on them that those words simply do not exist in any scripture that we accept as the standard works of the church. But the frequency with which I find myself in this deliciously high octane moment is so ridiculous that I am now convinced that studying the scriptures and essential gospel principles are not as popular as I expected it to be else this fraudulent claim would have been laid to rest in the cemetery of dangerous models of thoughts.

I want to list some of the common Mormon rhetoric that seems to make sense on first blush and yet, if we wake up from the catatonia of complacency, becomes a conundrum of triteness and befuddlement. But I only have time for this one. Would that I could convince more of my brothers and sisters that there is no Biblical reference that gives credence to this falsehood. Jesus never said those words.

"I never said it would be easy, I only said it would be worth it" negates the very words of Christ as quoted in the New Testament:

Come unto me all ye that labour and are heavy laden, for 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. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light. (Matthew 11:28-30)

Clearly, the abundant life that follows the teachings of the Saviour is one that is free from the shackles and devastation of sin. Life indeed does come packaged with strife, challenges and hardship---that is a given. But the blessings and untold treasures that come from availing of the gifts of the Atonement through faith, repentance, baptism and the right to the companionship of the Holy Ghost brings us the balm of Gilead. Indeed, Christ never told us it would be 'difficult' but rather, the opposite. He provides us the easy way where our burdens can be made light.

I fear that my head will explode if I hear this common false and to a degree, dangerous rhetoric that is haplessly being propagated. I wish to curtail it's proliferation and replace it with truth.