Our Desperate Needs
In the midst of our mortal predicament we have needs, even desperate needs. The first is for a mentor, an exemplar, one who has been over not just a similar road but an even far worse one. A person who can show us what we have it in us to do and to become. One who is able without hypocrisy to say to us: “What manner of men ought ye to be? Verily I say unto you even as I am” (3 Nephi 27:27).
Second, we need a person who knows the heights and depths of our frailty, our stupidities, our failures, no matter how extreme they become. He must be no stranger to our glaring imperfections, immaturity, and rebellions. we need one who is acquainted first-hand with all these earthly weaknesses. And as a physician of mind and body, he must know the antidotes to the poisons we have inherited and imbibed.
Third, we need a person who acts in our behalf not because of compulsion nor grudgingly but because of genuine care, rooted in love–a constant and steady love. Otherwise how can we trust him? How can we be assured that at some point he will not abandon us, go his own way, let us down?
Fourth, when we run afoul of the law and flounder in the aftereffects, including guilt and torment, we need, indeed we crave, an even-handed and wise judge. But we long for him to also be merciful: one who has the right, the authority, the ability, to deliver us from the threats of bondage and the compounding of our misdeeds. He must be willing, whatever the decrees of others, to use his own resources to absolve us from severe punishment, indeed, to intervene in our behalf, even if that means he himself has to pay the penalty. Most remarkable of all, he must be willing to do the same for those we hae injured, mistreated, misled.
is there any person in the universe who qualifies for such multiple roles? Only one.
Truman G. Madsen, Our Desperate Needs, The Gift of the Atonement, Deseret Book, 2004, p 10-11.
Tags: Atonement, failures, imperfections, Jesus Christ, penalty, qualify
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