Brethren, We Have Work to Do
Elder D Todd Christofferson
Brethren, much has been said and written in recent years about the
challenges of men and boys. A sampling of book titles, for example,
includes Why There Are No Good Men Left, The Demise of Guys, The End of Men, Why Boys Fail, and Manning Up.
Interestingly, most of these seem to have been written by women. In any
case, a common thread running through these analyses is that in many
societies today men and boys get conflicting and demeaning signals about
their roles and value in society.
The author of Manning Up
characterized it this way: “It’s been an almost universal rule of
civilization that whereas girls became women simply by reaching physical
maturity, boys had to pass a test. They needed to demonstrate courage,
physical prowess, or mastery of the necessary skills. The goal was to
prove their competence as protectors of women and children; this was
always their primary social role. Today, however, with women moving
ahead in an advanced economy, provider husbands and fathers are now
optional, and the character qualities men had needed to play their
role—fortitude, stoicism, courage, fidelity—are obsolete and even a
little embarrassing.”1
In
their zeal to promote opportunity for women, something we applaud,
there are those who denigrate men and their contributions. They seem to
think of life as a competition between male and female—that one must
dominate the other, and now it’s the women’s turn. Some argue that a
career is everything and marriage and children should be entirely
optional—therefore, why do we need men?2
In too many Hollywood films, TV and cable shows, and even commercials,
men are portrayed as incompetent, immature, or self-absorbed. This
cultural emasculation of males is having a damaging effect.
In
the United States, for example, it is reported: “Girls outperform boys
now at every level, from elementary school through graduate school. By
eighth grade, for instance, only 20 percent of boys are proficient in
writing and 24 percent proficient in reading. Young men’s SAT scores,
meanwhile, in 2011 were the worst they’ve been in 40 years. According to
the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), boys are 30
percent more likely than girls to drop out of both high school and
college. … It is predicted that women will earn 60 percent of
bachelor’s, 63 percent of master’s and 54 percent of doctorate degrees
by 2016. Two-thirds of students in special education remedial programs
are guys.”3
Some
men and young men have taken the negative signals as an excuse to avoid
responsibility and never really grow up. In an observation that is too
often accurate, one university professor remarked, “The men come into
class with their backward baseball caps and [their lame] the ‘word
processor ate my homework’ excuses. Meanwhile, the women are checking
their day planners and asking for recommendations for law school.”4
One female movie reviewer expressed the rather cynical view that “what
we can count on men for, if we’re lucky and we choose to have a partner,
is to be just that—a partner. Someone who stands in his own space even
as he respects our standing in our own.”5
Brethren,
it cannot be this way with us. As men of the priesthood, we have an
essential role to play in society, at home, and in the Church. But we
must be men that women can trust, that children can trust, and that God
can trust. In the Church and kingdom of God in these latter days, we
cannot afford to have boys and men who are drifting. We cannot afford
young men who lack self-discipline and live only to be entertained. We
cannot afford young adult men who are going nowhere in life, who are not
serious about forming families and making a real contribution in this
world. We cannot afford husbands and fathers who fail to provide
spiritual leadership in the home. We cannot afford to have those who
exercise the Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of God, waste
their strength in pornography or spend their lives in cyberspace (ironically being of the world while not being in the world).
Brethren, we have work to do.
Young
men, you need to do well in school and then continue your education
beyond high school. Some of you will want to pursue university studies
and careers in business, agriculture, government, or other professions.
Some will excel in the arts, music, or teaching. Others will choose a
military career or learn a trade. Over the years, I have had a number of
craftsmen work on projects and repairs at my home, and I have admired
the hard work and skill of these men. In whatever you choose, it is
essential that you become proficient so that you can support a family and make a contribution for good in your community and your country.
I
recently saw a video showing a day in the life of a 14-year-old young
man in India named Amar. He gets up early and works two jobs, before and
after school, six and a half days a week. His income provides a
substantial part of his family’s livelihood. He hurries home on his worn
bicycle from his second job after dark and somehow squeezes in a few
hours of homework before dropping onto his bed on the floor between
sleeping siblings around eleven o’clock at night. Although I’ve never
met him, I feel proud of him for his diligence and courage. He is doing
the very best he can with his limited resources and opportunities, and
he is a blessing to his family.
You
adult men—fathers, single adults, leaders, home teachers—be worthy
models and help the rising generation of boys become men. Teach them
social and other skills: how to participate in a conversation, how to
get acquainted and interact with others, how to relate to women and
girls, how to serve, how to be active and enjoy recreation, how to
pursue hobbies without becoming addicted, how to correct mistakes and
make better choices.
And
so to all who are listening, wherever this message may reach you, I say
as Jehovah said to Joshua, “Be strong and of a good courage” (Joshua 1:6).
Take heart and prepare the best you can, whatever your circumstances.
Prepare to be a good husband and father; prepare to be a good and
productive citizen; prepare to serve the Lord, whose priesthood you
hold. Wherever you are, your Heavenly Father is mindful of you. You are
not alone, and you have the priesthood and the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Of
the many places you are needed, one of the very most important is your
priesthood quorum. We need quorums that provide spiritual nourishment to
members on Sunday and that also serve. We need leaders of quorums who
focus on doing the Lord’s work and on supporting quorum members and
their families.
Consider missionary work.
Young men, you have no time to waste. You can’t wait to get serious
about preparing until you are 17 or 18. Aaronic Priesthood quorums can
help their members understand the oath and covenant of the priesthood
and get ready for ordination as elders, they can help them understand
and prepare for the ordinances of the temple, and they can help them get
ready for successful missions. Melchizedek Priesthood quorums and the
Relief Society can help parents prepare missionaries who know the Book of Mormon
and who will go into the field fully committed. And in each ward and
branch, these same quorums can lead out in an effective collaboration
with the full-time missionaries who are serving there.
A
related work that rests primarily on priesthood shoulders is the
Savior’s call, echoed by President Thomas S. Monson, to rescue those who
have drifted from the gospel or who have become disaffected for any
reason. We have had wonderful success in this effort, including
excellent work by young men. An Aaronic Priesthood quorum in the Rio
Grande (Spanish) Ward in Albuquerque, New Mexico, counseled together
about whom they could bring back and then as a group went to visit each
of them. One said, “When they came to my door, I felt important,” and
another confided, “I feel happy inside that someone actually wants me to
go to church; it makes me want to go to church now.” When the quorum
members invited one young man to come back, they asked him to come with
them on the next visit, and he did. They were not just inviting him to
attend church; they were immediately making him a part of the quorum.
Another
challenging but stimulating priesthood work is that of family history
and the temple. Watch for a First Presidency letter arriving shortly
that will offer a renewed call and a higher vision of this vital part of
the work we have to do.
Our
quorums also form a brotherhood of mutual support. President Gordon B.
Hinckley once said: “It will be a marvelous day, my brethren—it will be a
day of fulfillment of the purposes of the Lord—when our priesthood
quorums become an anchor of strength to every man belonging thereto,
when each such man may appropriately be able to say, ‘I am a member of a
priesthood quorum of The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. I stand ready to assist my brethren in all of
their needs, as I am confident they stand ready to assist me in mine. …
Working together, we can stand, without embarrassment and without fear,
against every wind of adversity that might blow, be it economic, social,
or spiritual.’”6
Despite
our best efforts, things don’t always work out as we have planned, and a
particular “wind of adversity” that can come into a man’s life is
unemployment. An early Church welfare pamphlet stated: “A man out of
work is of special moment to the Church because, deprived of his
inheritance, he is on trial as Job was on trial—for his integrity. As
days lengthen into weeks and months and even years of adversity, the
hurt grows deeper. … The Church cannot hope to save a man on Sunday if
during the week it is a complacent witness to the crucifixion of his
soul.”7
In
April 2009 former Presiding Bishopric counselor Richard C. Edgley told
the story of an exemplary quorum that mobilized to assist a fellow
member who had lost his job:
“Phil’s
Auto of Centerville, Utah, is a testament of what priesthood leadership
and a quorum can accomplish. Phil was a member of an elders quorum and
worked as a mechanic at a local automobile repair shop. Unfortunately,
the repair shop where Phil worked experienced economic trouble and had
to let Phil go from his job. He was devastated by this turn of events.
“On
hearing about Phil’s job loss, his bishop, Leon Olson, and his elders
quorum presidency prayerfully considered ways they could help Phil get
back on his feet. After all, he was a fellow quorum member, a brother,
and he needed help. They concluded that Phil had the skills to run his
own business. One of the quorum members offered that he had an old barn
that perhaps could be used as a repair shop. Other quorum members could
help gather needed tools and supplies to equip the new shop. Almost
everyone in the quorum could at least help clean the old barn.
“They
shared their ideas with Phil; then they shared their plan with the
members of their quorum. The barn was cleaned and renovated, the tools
gathered, and all was put in order. Phil’s Auto was a success and
eventually moved to better and more permanent quarters—all because his
quorum brothers offered help in a time of crisis.”8
Of
course, as has been repeated by prophets over the years, “The most
important of the Lord’s work you will ever do will be within the walls
of your own homes.”9
We have much to do to strengthen marriage in societies that
increasingly trivialize its importance and purpose. We have much to do
to teach our children “to pray, and to walk uprightly before the Lord” (D&C 68:28).
Our task is nothing less than to help our children experience the
mighty change of heart or conversion to the Lord spoken of so eloquently
in the Book of Mormon (see Mosiah 5:1–12; Alma 26).
Together with the Relief Society, priesthood quorums can build up
parents and marriages, and quorums can provide the blessings of the
priesthood to single-parent families.
Yes,
brethren, we have work to do. Thank you for the sacrifices you make and
the good you do. Keep going, and the Lord will help you. At times you
may not know quite what to do or what to say—just move forward. Begin to
act, and the Lord assures that “an effectual door shall be opened for
[you]” (D&C 118:3).
Begin to speak, and He promises, “You shall not be confounded before
men; for it shall be given you in the very hour, yea, in the very
moment, what ye shall say” (D&C 100:5–6).
It is true that we are in many ways ordinary and imperfect, but we have
a perfect Master who wrought a perfect Atonement, and we have call upon
His grace and His priesthood. As we repent and purge our souls, we are
promised that we will be taught and endowed with power from on high (see
D&C 43:16).
The
Church and the world and women are crying for men, men who are
developing their capacity and talents, who are willing to work and make
sacrifices, who will help others achieve happiness and salvation. They
are crying, “Rise up, O men of God!”10 God help us to do it. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen
This is so important--to set up an ideal of what kind of many you want to marry! Thank goodness for the men in our lives, and thank goodness you have dad to show you just how terrific a man can be :).
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