Puhun teille tänään opettajana. Kerron yli 50 vuotta
sitten tuntemani opettajan vaikutuksesta. Kuten usein on asian laita,
tuon opettajan jättämä vaikutus ei piillyt itse opetetussa
asiassa. Tri Schaefer oli matematiikan professori Washingtonin valtionyliopistossa
Pullmanissa. Hänen hahmonsa ei tehnyt vaikutusta. En muista
hänen etunimeään, mutten koskaan unohda hänen
ensimmäisenä tapaamispäivänämme sanomaansa
ensimmäistä asiaa.
Tämä oli toisen maailmansodan aikaa. Olimme lentäjänkoulutuksessa,
ja meidät oli lähetetty, kuten ymmärsimme, yliopistoon
ilmatieteen, sään, navigoinnin, fysiikan, aerodynamiikan
ja muiden tekniikan alojen pikakurssille. Meidän lentäjäalokkaiden
mielestä "pikakurssi" ei kuulostanut kovin rohkaisevalta.
Intensiivikurssi olisi ollut parempi.
Paine oli kova, sillä kurssilla epäonnistuneet pantaisiin
pois lentäjäohjelmasta. Kamppailin kadettien kanssa -
heistä monet olivat olleet yliopistossa, joillakin oli jatkokoulutusta,
kun taas minulla oli takanani ainoastaan kansakoulun ylemmät
luokat.
Dr. Schaeferin oli tarkoitus painaa mieliimme matematiikkaa aina
perusteista kehittyneemmille tasoille vain muutaman viikon sisällä.
Minusta se oli toivotonta kunnes ensimmäisen tunnin ensimmäiset
minuutit olivat käsillä. Hän aloitti luennon tällä
ilmoituksella:
"While many of you have had some college, even advanced courses
in what we are to study, it will be my purpose to teach the beginners.
I am asking those of you who know the subject to be patient while
I teach the basics to those who do not."
Encouraged by what he said and more by how he taught, I was able
to pass that course with reasonable ease. It might otherwise have
been impossible.
When I decided to become a teacher, Dr. Schaefer's example inspired
me to try to the best of my ability to teach basic, simple truths
in the most understandable way. I have learned how very difficult
it is to simplify.
Years after the war, I returned to Washington State University
and found Dr. Schaefer. He, of course, did not remember me. I was
just one of many hundreds of cadets in his classes. I thanked him
for what he had taught me. The math and calculus had long since
faded away, but not his example as a teacher.
So, following that example, today I want to tell you something
about the Church. The things that I shall tell you are not explained
in the scriptures, although they conform to the principles taught
in the scriptures.
A principle is an enduring truth, a law, a rule you can adopt to
help you in making decisions. Generally principles are not spelled
out in detail. That leaves you free to adapt and to find your way
with an enduring truth, a principle, as an anchor.
The things I am going to tell you are not explained in our handbooks
or manuals either. Even if they were, most of you don't have handbooks--not
the Melchizedek Priesthood or Relief Society handbooks and the others--because
they are given only to the leaders.
I will be speaking about what I call the "unwritten order of things."
My lesson might be entitled "The Ordinary Things about the Church
Which Every Member Should Know." Although they are very ordinary
things, they are, nevertheless, very important! We somehow assume
that everybody knows all the ordinary things already. If you do
know them, you must have learned them through observation and experience,
for they are not written anywhere and they are not taught in classes.
So, as we continue, if you are ones that know it all, be patient
while I teach those who do not--and take a nap.
The basic foundation of knowledge and testimony never changes--the
testimony that God the Father lives, that Jesus is the Christ, that
the Holy Ghost inspires us, that there has been a restoration, that
the fullness of the gospel and the same organization that existed
in the primitive church have been revealed to us. Those things are
taught everywhere and always--in our classes, the scriptures, the
handbooks and the manuals--in everything we do.
The fundamental doctrine and instructions on the organization of
the Church are likewise found in the scriptures. In addition, there
is another source of knowledge relating to what makes the Church
work: We learn from experience and observation. If you learn about
these things that are not written down, the unwritten order of things,
you will be better qualified to be a leader--and you are going to
be a leader. The most important positions of leadership are in the
home--the father, mother, wife, husband, older brother and sister.
Then, in the Church, positions of leadership and teaching opportunities
are available as nowhere else on earth.
While the things I will talk about are not written, they are really
quite easily learned. Just be alert to the unwritten order of things
and take an interest in them, and you will find that you will increase
your ability and your value to the Lord.
Before I give you a few samples of this unwritten order of things,
let me remind you what the Lord said: "My house is a house of order,
saith the Lord God" (D&C 132:18). And he told his prophet: "See
that all these things are done in wisdom and order; for it is not
requisite that a man should run faster than he has strength. And
again, it is expedient that he should be diligent, that thereby
he might win the prize; therefore, all things must be done in order"
(Mosiah 4:27).
Paul told the Corinthians that "all things" were to "be done decently
and in order" (see 1 Cor. 14:40). We'll return to that in a moment
or two.
The things I am going to tell you about are not so rigid that the
Church will fall apart if they are not strictly observed all the
time. But they do set a tone, a standard, of dignity and order and
will improve our meetings and classwork; they will improve the activities.
If you know them and understand them, they will greatly improve
your life.
Our meetings should be conducted in such a way that members may
be refreshed spiritually and remain attuned to the Spirit as they
meet the challenges of life. We are to establish conditions under
which members can, through inspiration, solve their own problems.
There are simple things that help in that regard, and things that
hinder. Alma taught "that by small and simple things are great things
brought to pass; and small means in many instances doth confound
the wise" (Alma 37:6).
I give as my first illustration of this unwritten order of things
so simple a thing as this: The one who presides in a meeting should
sit on the stand and sit close to the one conducting. It is a bit
difficult to preside over a meeting from the congregation. The one
who presides is responsible for the conduct of the meeting and has
the right and the responsibility to receive inspiration and may
be prompted to adjust or correct something that goes on in the meeting.
That is true whether it be an auxiliary meeting presided over by
the sisters or any of our meetings.
A new stake president sometimes will ask, "Must I sit on the stand
in every meeting in the stake? May I not sit with my family?" I
tell him, "While you preside, you are to sit on the stand." I am
tempted to say, but I don't, "I can't have that privilege; why should
you?"
Another example: If you watch the First Presidency, you will see
that the first counselor always sits on the right of the president;
the second counselor on the left. That is a demonstration of doing
things "decently and in order," as Paul told us. Ordinarily, but
not always, if the presiding officer speaks, it will be at the end
of the meeting. Then clarification or correction can be given. I
have had that experience many times at the close of meetings, "Well,
brother or sister somebody said such and such, and I'm sure they
meant such and such."
Another illustration: We do not aspire to calls in the Church,
nor do we ask to be released. We are called to positions in the
Church by inspiration. Even if the call is presented in a clumsy
way, it is not wise for us to refuse the call. We must presuppose
that the call comes from the Lord. The fifth article of faith tells
us that we "must be called of God, by prophecy, and by the laying
on of hands by those who are in authority, to preach the Gospel
and administer in the ordinances thereof."
If some circumstance makes it difficult for you to continue to
serve, you are free to consult with the leader who called you. We
do not call ourselves and we do not release ourselves. Sometimes
a leader or a teacher enjoys the prominence of a presiding position
so much that, even after serving for a long time, they do not want
to be released. That is a sign that a release is timely.
We should do as we are called. We should accept the calls and
accept a release by the same authority.
When President J. Reuben Clark was called as second counselor
in the First Presidency after having served for many years as first
counselor, he responded at the Solemn Assembly where the sustaining
of the new First Presidency took place: "In the service of the Lord,
it is not where you serve but how. In The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, one takes the place to which one is duly called,
which place one neither seeks nor declines" (CR, Apr. 1951, p. 154).
The Church had been taught a very valuable lesson in the unwritten
order of things.
I learned years ago that we do not choose where we serve--we just
answer the call. Soon after our marriage, I was called as an assistant
stake clerk. My bishop did not want to release me as Gospel Doctrine
teacher. He told me that I had much more to offer as a teacher than
in the very obscure assignment as assistant stake clerk. But he
knew that, under the unwritten order of things, the stake president
presided and that his call took precedence.
I cannot tell you all that I learned in that calling. I was able
to see how a presidency works. I was the witness to revelation in
the calling and the releasing of stake and ward officers. By watching
our stake president, I learned by observation and experience many
things that are not in the handbook. It was in that calling that
I first met members of the Twelve and others of the Brethren as
they came to conference. It was a time of training in the unwritten
order of things.
I was on a plane once with President Kimball who, I think, served
for 19 years as a stake clerk. A member that lived in the stake
at that time was on the plane. He said to me, "If I'd known that
our stake clerk was going to be President of the Church, I'd have
treated him a lot better."
Brother Kimball was actually serving as second counselor in the
stake presidency when the stake clerk moved. They called a clerk
and that clerk moved. Brother Kimball had taken over the responsibility.
Brother Melvin J. Ballard came to conference, and he said, "You
shouldn't have to be the second counselor and the stake clerk at
the same time. You choose which you would rather be."
Brother Kimball was not used to having a choice. He wanted to
have Brother Ballard tell him, but Brother Ballard said, "No, you
choose." So Brother Kimball said, "I have a typewriter. [Very few
people had typewriters then.] I know the system. I think I can make
a bigger contribution if I stay as the stake clerk." And so it was.
In those days the stake clerk received a small stipend, a little
monthly something or other, I suppose to buy supplies. A sister,
who knew him well, wrote and said, "Spencer, I'm surprised at you--to
take a calling just because there is money involved." Then she said,
"If you don't change your attitude, within two months, you'll apostatize
from the Church." Well, she was a little off in her timing!
Now an example: On one occasion Elder Harold B. Lee presided over
our stake conference. Between sessions we had lunch at the home
of President Zundell. Donna and I arrived a little late because
we had gone home to check on our young children. Elder Lee had come
to the car to retrieve something from his car and was on the walk
when we arrived. I am sure we were very visibly moved to be able
to talk personally and to shake hands with an Apostle. He gestured
toward the house and said, speaking of the stake presidency who
were assembled there, "They are great men. Never fail to learn from
men such as these." And I had been taught something of the unwritten
order of things by an Apostle.
There is so much you can learn by watching experienced leaders
in the wards and stakes in which you live. There is so much you
can learn by listening to the older brethren and sisters who have
had a lifetime of experience in the school of the unwritten.
Another illustration. There is an order of things as to where
we go for counsel or blessings. It is simple--we go to our parents.
When they are no longer available, if it is a blessing, then we
may go to our home teacher. For counsel, you go to your bishop.
He may choose to send you to his file leader--the stake president.
But we do not go to the General Authorities. We do not write to
them for counsel or suppose that someone in a more prominent position
will give a more inspired blessing. If we could get this one thing
taught in the Church, great power would rest upon us.
President Joseph F. Smith taught that should there be sickness
in a home and should there be present "apostles, or even members
of the first presidency of the Church, . . . the father is there.
It is his right and it is his duty to preside" (Gospel Doctrine,
p. 286).
There is one authorized "end run" around the bishop, the stake
president, the General Authority, and everyone else in our line
of authority. That is to our Father in Heaven in prayer. If we do
that, we will in most instances solve our own problems.
Another principle: Revelation in the Church is vertical. It generally
confines itself to the administrative or geographic boundaries or
limitations assigned to the one who is called. For instance, a bishop
who is trying to solve a problem will not get revelation by counseling
with a bishop from another ward or stake to whom he is related or
with whom he might work at the office.
My experience has taught me that revelation comes from above,
not from the side. However more experienced or older or however
more spiritual someone to the side may appear to be, it is better
to go up through proper channels.
Principle: A prime attribute of a good leader is to be a good
follower. In a meeting with bishops, a new and struggling bishop
once asked me, "How do I get people to follow me? I have called
nine sisters to be president of the Primary and none has accepted."
There was a good humor and pleasant spirit in the meeting which
made it an ideal teaching moment. I answered that I doubted that
he had "called" any of the nine sisters. He must only have asked
or invited them.
I told him that if he had earnestly prayed and counseled with
his counselors as to who should preside over the Primary, the first
sister would have accepted the call. Perhaps he might have discovered
in the interview some reason why it was not advisable or timely
for that sister to serve and excused her from serving. But surely
not more than one or two. If that many sisters turned down the call,
something was out of order--the unwritten order.
Because there was such good spirit in the meeting, I said to him,
"Bishop, I know something else about you. You're not a good follower,
are you? Aren't you the one who is always questioning what the stake
president asks of his bishops?" The other bishops in the room started
to chuckle and nodded their heads--he was the one. He chuckled and
said he supposed that was right. I said, "Perhaps the reason your
members don't follow their leader is because you don't follow yours.
An essential attribute of a leader in the Church is faithful and
loyal followship. That is just the order of things--the unwritten
order of things."
When I was a young man, Elder Spencer W. Kimball came to our conference
and he told this experience. When he was a stake president in Safford,
Arizona, there was a vacancy in the office of superintendent of
Young Men in the stake, as the office was then called. He left his
office one day, went a few steps down the street, and had a conversation
with the owner of a business. He said, "Jack, how would you like
to be superintendent of the stake Young Men's organization?"
Jack replied: "Aw, Spencer, you don't mean me."
Spencer replied, "Of course I do. You get along well with the
youth." He tried to convince him, but the man turned him down.
Later in the day, after smoldering with his failure and finally
remembering what Jacob had said in the Book of Mormon-- "having
first obtained mine errand from the Lord" (Jacob 1:17)--he returned
to Jack. Calling him "brother" and by his last name, he said, "We
have a vacancy in a stake office. My counselors and I have discussed
it; we've prayed about it for some time. Sunday we knelt down together
and asked the Lord for inspiration about who should be called to
that position. We received the inspiration that you should be called.
As a servant of the Lord, I am here to deliver that call."
Jack said, "Well, Spencer, if you are going to put it that way
. . ."
"Well, I am putting it that way."
You know the result. It helps to follow the proper order of things,
even the unwritten order.
I have on my desk a letter from a brother who is greatly bothered
because he was not called to office properly. He accepted the call
and is willing to serve, but he said his bishop did not consult
his wife first and otherwise did not handle it properly.
When I respond to him, I will try to teach him something of the
unwritten order of things as it relates to being a little patient
with how things are done in the Church. In the first section of
the Doctrine and Covenants, the Lord admonished every man to "speak
in the name of God the Lord, even the Savior of the world" (D&C
1:20). I think I'll point out to him that he may one day be a bishop,
overburdened with problems in the ward and with an extra burden
of personal cares, and suggest that he give now what he would appreciate
receiving then.
Another point of order: Bishops should not yield the arrangement
of meetings to members. They should not yield the arrangement for
funerals or missionary farewells to families. It is not the proper
order of things for members or families to expect to decide who
will speak and for how long. Suggestions are in order, of course,
but the bishop should not turn the meeting over to them. We are
worried about the drift that is occurring in our meetings.
Funerals could and should be the most spiritually impressive.
They are becoming informal family reunions in front of ward members.
Often the Spirit is repulsed by humorous experiences or jokes when
the time could be devoted to teaching the things of the Spirit,
even the sacred things.
When the family insists that several family members speak in a
funeral, we hear about the deceased instead of about the Atonement,
the Resurrection, and the comforting promises revealed in the scriptures.
Now it's all right to have a family member speak at a funeral, but
if they do, their remarks should be in keeping with the spirit of
the meeting.
I have told my Brethren in that day when my funeral is held, if
any of them who speak talk about me, I will raise up and correct
them. The gospel is to be preached. I know of no meeting where the
congregation is in a better state of readiness to receive revelation
and inspiration from a speaker than they are at a funeral. This
privilege is being taken away from us because we don't understand
the order of things--the unwritten order of things--that relates
to the administration of the Church and the reception of the Spirit.
Our bishops should not give our meetings away. That is true of
our missionary farewells. We're deeply worried that they now have
become kind of reunions in front of ward members. The depth of spiritual
training and teaching which could go on is being lost. We have failed
to remember that it is a sacrament meeting and that the bishop presides.
There are many things I could say about such matters as wearing
Sunday best. Do you know what "Sunday best" means? It used to be
the case. Now we see ever more informal, even slouchy, clothing
in our meetings, even in sacrament meeting, that leads to informal
and slouchy conduct.
It bothers me to see on a sacrament meeting program that Liz and
Bill and Dave will participate. Ought it not be Elizabeth and William
and David? It bothers me more to be asked to sustain Buck or Butch
or Chuck to the high council. I just say, Can't we have the full
names on that important record? There is a formality, a dignity,
that we are losing--and it is at great cost. There is something
to what Paul said about doing things "decently and in order."
Well, there is so much I want to tell you about the unwritten
order of things, but then these are things that you must learn for
yourself. If we could only put you in the circumstance where you
begin to observe, begin to get that training, then you will know
how the Church is to operate and why it operates that way. You will
find that it conforms to the principles which are outlined in the
scriptures. If you will just "treasure up in your minds continually
the words of life," the Lord will bless you and give "you in the
very hour" what you should say and what you should do (D&C 84:85).
Learn about this great pattern--the teachings that come to us from
just watching and participating.
Soon after Spain had been opened for the preaching of the gospel,
I was in Barcelona. Two of the first missionaries sent to Spain
were sent to Barcelona to open the city. They had appealed to President
Smith Griffin for forty chairs. He was in Paris at the time, and
he didn't know why they wanted forty chairs when they had no members.
He hesitated at the expense, but he thought he would encourage the
missionaries. So he approved the forty chairs.
When we arrived at the meeting hall, upstairs in a business building,
the forty chairs were filled. There were people standing. The elders
had arranged for their first convert, a middle-aged man who worked
in a fish market, to conduct the meeting. We watched as they taught
him what to do, sometimes standing up to whisper to him.
Brother Byish nervously got through the meeting with their assistance.
And then, as he stood to close, the Spirit of the Lord fell upon
him and he preached with great power and at some length. It was
an inspired testimony, an unforgettable moment. The two young elders,
both converts from South America, had somehow learned something
of the unwritten order of things. They were putting the Church in
place in proper order in Barcelona. Now there are four stakes in
that city.
And so it goes. The Lord uses the ordinary Saints, the rank and
file, to move his work along.
Isn't it strange that princes and kings
And clowns that caper in sawdust rings
And just plain folks like you and me
Are builders for eternity?
To each is given a bag of tools,
A shapeless mass and a book of rules,
And each must build ere life has flown,
A stumbling-block or a stepping stone.
--R. L. Sharpe,
"Stumbling-Block or Stepping Stone"
The Church will move on, and it moves on just because the rank
and file learn by observation, learn by teaching, learn by experience.
Most of all, we learn because we are motivated by the Spirit. One
day, of course, you who are young now will lead the Church. If in
the intervening time you will learn and study the unwritten order
of things, the power of the Lord will be upon you to the end that
you might be the useful servant.
I bear witness that this is His Church, The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints and, as the Lord said, that all "might speak
in the name of God the Lord, even the Savior of the world" (D&C
1:20).
I invoke his blessings upon you and bear witness to you in the
name of Jesus Christ, amen.
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