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Take
Homemaking to An Enlightened Level, Part 2: Who Is My
Neighbor?
By Natalie J.
Hale
We have been commanded to love our neighbors. But
in a world where words have been redefined — thanks
to political correctness and infamous double speak —
one must ask the question, what does “love your neighbor”
really mean and how do we apply it to our own lives,
especially as homemakers?
A
lawyer once had the same question, and he took it
to the Savior:
And,
behold, a certain lawyer stood up, and tempted him
[Jesus], saying, Master, what shall I do to inherit
eternal life?
He
said unto him, What is written in the law? How readest
thou?
And
he answering said, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and
thy neighbour as thyself.
And
he said unto him, Thou hast answered right: this do,
and thou shalt live.
But
he, willing to justify himself, said unto Jesus, And
who is my neighbour? [i]
Most of us I’m
sure are familiar with the Savior’s response. He spoke
it as a parable about a man who fell among thieves.
The lawyer had a very good question (just don’t use
it to try and trip up the Savior or any of his disciples).
Who really are our neighbors and how can homemakers
apply this important doctrine to themselves?
In order to recognize
who our neighbors are we need to better understand
what is means to love the Lord. There is solid reason
why the First Commandment came first. As we step through
these next paragraphs you’ll see that we need to look
to God for enlightenment [ii] , otherwise we’ll have
confusion. Everyone will have his own definition of
what love is then we’ll really be in trouble [iii] .
“We must,” said
President Ezra Taft Benson, “put God in the forefront
of everything else in our lives. He must come first,
just as He declares in the first of His Ten Commandments:
Thou shalt have no other gods before me (Ex. 20:3).”
He continues by saying,
“When we put God first, all other things fall into
their proper place or drop out of our lives. Our love
of the Lord will govern the claims for our affection,
the demands on our time, the interests we pursue,
and the order of our priorities. We should put God
ahead of everyone else in our lives.” [iv]
We can safely deduce
from the previous statements that the Lord must come
first in our lives. That shouldn’t be too hard to
wrap our brains around and accept. But now for the
seemingly more elusive, yet vitally important question
to answer: what does it mean to love God?
What
Does It Mean To Love God?
Remember the familiar
verse from John: “If ye love me, keep my commandments”? [v]
As a result, we see that
to love God means we will keep his commandments. That
concept shouldn’t be difficult to understand. But
that was written years ago. Our problems today seem
so much more complex with all our modern technology
and sophistry.
So let’s bring this basic
doctrine into focus in this last dispensation. Again,
to quote President Ezra Taft Benson, “The breadth,
depth, and height of this love of God extend into
every facet of one’s life. Our desires, be they spiritual
or temporal, should be rooted in a love of the Lord.
Our thoughts and affections should be centered on
the Lord. ‘Let all thy thoughts be directed unto the
Lord,’ said Alma, ‘yea, let the affections of thy
heart be placed upon the Lord forever’ (Alma 37:36).” [vi]
Thus, it can be said
that keeping the commandments includes all facets
of our lives summarized by our thoughts, words, and
works. [vii]
So
How Do We Obtain This Love of God?
In order to obtain a
love of God, we must first live his commandments in
all areas of our lives. This has hereby already been
established. Logically the next question should be,
what are the Lord’s commandments? The Savior
himself defined his commandments as His Doctrine or
the Doctrine of Christ:
And
this is my doctrine, and it is the doctrine which
the Father hath given unto me; and I bear record of
the Father, and the Father beareth record of me, and
the Holy Ghost beareth record of the Father and me;
and I bear record that the Father commandeth all men,
everywhere, to repent and believe in me.
And whoso believeth in me, and is baptized, the same
shall be saved; and they are they who shall inherit
the kingdom of God.
And
again I say unto you, ye must repent, and become as
a little child, and be baptized in my name, or ye
can in nowise receive these things. [viii]
By living the Doctrine
of Christ, we will repent of our sins and be baptized [ix] , and then there will come a change
in us and we will be like unto a little child. [x] We will have put off the natural man
in every facet of our lives [xi] and then we will have Christ-like
love for our fellowmen. [xii] I’ll go into greater depth on this
topic in later article.
Who
Is My Neighbor?
Now that we know what
it means to love the Lord, let’s return to the lawyer’s
question of “who is my neighbor?”
Perhaps a Book of Mormon
prophet can help us better understand this.
If you will recall
Enos, the son of Jacob, prayed all day and all night
for a remission of his sins. After the Lord granted
forgiveness he turned his desires to the welfare of
the souls of others.
Now,
it came to pass that when I had heard these words
I began to feel a desire for the welfare of my brethren,
the Nephites; wherefore, I did pour out my whole soul
unto God for them.
And
after I, Enos, had heard these words, my faith began
to be unshaken in the Lord; and I prayed unto him
with many long strugglings for my brethren, the Lamanites. [xiii]
This great prophet sets
a truly significant example for us in his short, one
chapter book. By first setting himself aright with
the Lord he fulfilled the First Great Commandment.
And then he turned his desires to the welfare of not
just the souls of men, but first for his family the
Nephites, which brings into perspective the Second
Great Commandment.
So who are our neighbors?
According to Enos, our neighbors are everyone. But
there is a priority placed on family first because,
“The most important of the Lord’s work that you will
ever do will be the work you do within the walls of
your own home,” as stated by President Harold B. Lee. [xiv]
This is where loving our
neighbors really starts — at home. And as homemakers,
this is where our part in the great tapestry
[xv] of mortality is very critical, indeed necessary.
Like all prophets of God, President
Joseph F. Smith recognized this important role of mothers
(and fathers) when he said,
Oh, mothers, salvation,
mercy, life everlasting begin at home. “What profiteth
it a man, though he gain the whole world and lose
his own soul?” What would it profit me, though I
should go out into the world and win strangers to
the fold of God and lose my own children? Oh! God,
let me not lose my own. I can not afford to lose
mine, whom God has given to me and whom I am responsible
for before the Lord, and who are dependent upon
me for guidance, for instruction, for proper influence.
Father, do not permit me to lose interest in my
own, in trying to save others. Charity begins at
home. Life everlasting should begin at home. I should
feel very badly to be made to realize, by and by,
that through my neglect of home, while trying to
save others, I have lost my own. I do not want that.
The Lord help me to save my own, so far as one can
help another. I realize I cannot save anybody, but
I can teach them how to be saved. I can set an example
before my children how they can be saved, and it
is my duty to do that first. I owe it more to them
than to anybody else in the world. Then, when I
have accomplished the work I should do in my own
home circle, let me extend my power for good abroad
just as far as I can. [xvi]
Further
we learn from God Himself that, “Inasmuch as parents
have children in Zion, or in any of her stakes which
are organized, that teach them not to understand the
doctrine of repentance [the doctrine of Christ], faith
in Christ the Son of the living God, and of baptism
and the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of the
hands, when eight years old, the sin be upon the heads
of the parents.“For this shall be a law unto the inhabitants
of Zion, or in any of her stakes which are organized.” [xvii]
Now in light of what you just read, take into consideration
the following statement by Elder David A. Bednar of
the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles:
These
verses do not simply recommend or suggest that we
teach our children. Rather, they outline a law
unto the inhabitants of Zion-that we must teach our
children to understand. [xviii]
How
do we Love Our Neighbors?
Now that we know what
it means to love God, and thanks to prophets both
ancient and modern we have found a definition of who
our neighbors are, it would seem appropriate to ask
how do we love our neighbors?
Do you think the Lord
cares how we love our neighbors, just so long as we
make sure that we do love them? Or does He provide
guidelines, like He has for all of his other commandments,
for us to follow? Let’s take a look and see.
On the subject of love,
Elder Marvin J. Ashton of the Quorum of the Twelve
Apostles said in General Conference that, “We must
at regular and appropriate intervals speak and reassure
others of our love and the long time it takes to prove
it by our actions. Real love does take time. The Great
Shepherd had the same thoughts in mind when he taught,
‘If ye love me, keep my commandments’ (John
14:15; italics added) and ‘If
ye love me feed my sheep’ (John 21:16;
italics added). Love demands action if it is to be
continuing. Love is a process. Love is not a declaration.
Love is not an announcement. Love is not a passing
fancy. Love is not an expediency. Love is not a convenience.
‘If ye love me, keep my commandments’ and ‘If ye love me
feed my sheep’ are God-given proclamations that should
remind us we can often best show our love through
the processes of feeding and keeping.” [xix]
Also remember when Jesus
told His Apostle, “When thou art converted, strengthen
thy brethren.” [xx]
Here we have a guideline. Elder Ashton equates
loving neighbors with feeding sheep. I doubt many
of us are shepherds and have literal sheep to feed,
so what does that scripture mean? How do we liken
it to ourselves as homemakers?
There exist two kinds
of feeding: a physical and a spiritual. The physical
shouldn’t be too hard to figure out. Our children
are hungry so we fill their stomachs with things like
chicken and broccoli. But what does it mean to feed
someone spiritually?
Spiritual foods come
in the form of commandments. And getting these foods
from ourselves to others requires teaching. And teaching
presents itself in two forms:
1
Precept — our words [xxi]
2.
Example — our actions [xxii]
And we are forever teaching
by these means. Our children hear what we say and
they see what we do; whether or not we are teaching
them what the Lord would have us teach them depends
on our choosing to do so. [xxiii]
And what are these things Heavenly Father would
have us teach our children? If we look to the prophet
Alma from the Book of Mormon, he taught his people
“that they should preach nothing save it were repentance
and faith on the Lord, who had redeemed his people.”
[xxiv]
Sound familiar?
God’s commandments really are a beautiful,
seamless plan. First we must love Him by keeping His
commandments and exercising faith and repentance in
our own lives, and then we love our neighbors by teaching
others — starting with our children — to do the same.
[xxv]
As a homemaker, who knows how many future civilizations
you are influencing every day in your home, however
modest or grand it may be. Surely we can see and understand
that we must love our children by first keeping the
Lord’s commandments and then teaching them to do the
same. Such is the eternal round [xxvi] of God’s plan for
us and for all his children. And such is the homemaker’s
sacred obligation.
Natalie
is the editor of the Enlightened Homemaker
newsletter. Each monthly issue contains homemaking
and parenting helps, including articles and preschool
activities. Currently she is giving away free tote
bags and subscriptions to those who get their friends
to subscribe. For more information visit http://www.enlightenedhomemaker.com
[iv] President Ezra Taft
Benson, Ensign, May 1988, 4
[vi] < President Ezra Taft
Benson, Ensign, May 1988, 4
[xiv] Harold
B. Lee, Strengthening the Home [pamphlet, 1973], p.
7
[xv] Gordon B.
Hinckley, “An Ensign to the Nations,” Ensign,
Nov. 1989, 51
[xvi] Joseph
F. Smith, Gospel Doctrine, p. 300, 461
[xviii] Elder David A. Bednar, “ Arise and
Shine Forth,” Brigham Young University-Idaho Education
Week Devotional, June 28, 2003
[xix] Marvin
J. Ashton, “Love Takes Time,” Ensign, Nov. 1975, 108
[xxi] Henry B. Eyring,
“The Power of Teaching Doctrine,” Ensign, May 1999,
73
[xxii] Lorenzo Snow, The Teachings of Lorenzo Snow,
comp. Clyde J. William [1984], 78-79
|
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| About
the Author: |
Natalie
J. Hale is founding editor of the Enlightened Homemaker newsletter.
Coupling years of research and experience from parents, she implements
daily issues into doable activities. She also hosts a book club
for homemakers where they study books on any of the many topics
of homemaking, and publishes their reviews. For more information,
or to subscribe visit http://enlightenedhomemaker.com
Natalie is also
a member of the Society of Children’s Writers and Illustrators,
has had two short stories published, written articles and reviews
for several other publications including Renaissance Magazine,
Children’s Book Insider, and Writer’s Weekly. Plans to
self-publish her first children’s books are underway.
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