Thursday, December 28, 2023

 

Perspective

 

As I have experienced Christmas this year, the words of a Christmas hymn have been running through my head…

“And in despair I bowed my head, ‘there is no peace on earth’ I said, ‘for hate is strong and mocks the song of peace on earth good will to men.’

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep, ‘God is not dead nor doth he sleep, the wrong shall fail the right prevail with peace on earth good will to men.’”[1]

 

Years ago, working as a supervisor in a parking garage, one of my duties was to help parkers exit the facility as quickly as possible following major events. During such times, we would have traffic directors throughout the garage to help people find the quickest route out of the garage.

During one of these events, I had a traffic director working for me who it seemed was struggling to send people in the proper direction. I would call him on the radio and tell him to direct the cars a certain way, and he would send a couple of vehicles, then he would revert to sending them in the opposite direction. After this happened a couple of times, I asked him why he kept sending them the wrong way. His reply was that there were cars backed up in the direction I was telling him to send them, so he was sending them to the other exit where he couldn’t see anyone waiting. That was when I realized that the problem was not with his intent, but with his perspective.

You see, this traffic director was stationed on the lowest level of the parking garage where he could see the cars backing up in the exit he was being told to send them to, however I was stationed on the top level of the garage where I could look down and see how long the lines were at all of the different exits. So, in his efforts to keep people from having to wait in the line he could see, he inadvertently was sending them to wait in much longer lines that he could not see from his location. After explaining this to the traffic director, he learned that he needed to trust in the supervisors who had a higher perspective and by doing so he would be better able to assist the parkers who trusted him to get them out of the garage.

How often are we like the traffic director on the lower level of the garage, thinking we have a great understanding of the world and life to the point where we question the commandments, the love, or even the very existence of our Father in Heaven? How often are we limited by our mortal perspective and forget that God stands on a much higher level and has sight beyond our understanding?

We see pain and suffering and say “How can a loving God allow such things.” We see war and hatred and say “Surely, there is no god, or maybe he is asleep.” We see children hungry and dying and in anger say “God must be cruel.” From our perspective we cannot understand.

While serving a mission together, in the city of Ammoniha, Alma and Amulek suffered many trials including being imprisoned on false charges and beaten by the judges and lawyers in the city. However, their greatest suffering came from being forced to watch as the people whom they had taught and who had believed their testimonies, specifically the women and children, were rounded up by their enemies and cast into a fire. “When Amulek saw the pains of the women and children who were consuming in the fire, he also was pained; and he said unto Alma:


How can we witness this awful scene? Therefore, let us stretch forth our hands, and exercise the power of God which is in us, and save them from the flames. But Alma said unto him: The Spirit constraineth me that I must not stretch form mine hand; for behold the Lord receiveth them up unto himself, in glory’ and he doth suffer that they may do this thing, or that the people may do this thing unto them, according to the hardness of their hearts, that the judgments which he shall exercise upon them in his wrath may be just; and the blood of the innocent shall stand as a witness against them, yea, and cry mightily against them at the last day.”[2]

Amulek from his perspective, knew that God could save the people from the flames. Alma from his perspective knew that they were already saved.

 But you may ask, “Why not show us all things? Why not open our eyes as the Lord did for Elisha’s servant so he could see “the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire…”[3] For those who would ask, “Why would God create people who cannot understand Him?” We must understand our relationship to God. He is truly Our Father in Heaven, and we are his children.

The Apostle Paul taught “When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.”[4]

We tell children, “Don’t play in the road,” or “Don’t get too close to the fire.” They don’t understand why. Sometimes we remove their agency and forcibly keep them from danger, at other times we allow them the freedom to learn and to grow.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. said “the arc of the Moral Universe is long, but it bends toward justice.” The arc of eternity is even longer, and it bends past justice toward mercy. Our existance did not begin at birth, and it does not end at death. And while our sight is obscured, Our Father’s is not, and His love for us is unconditional and when we cannot understand how such hate, pain, and suffering can exist in our world, we must remember that Our Savior has “decended below them all,”[5] giving him the infinite perspective to work out an infinite atonement.

The Lord allows us to make our choices, He allows us to learn. He allows us to hurt one another, and He allows us to help one another. We must remember that He stands on a higher level, and that He knows all things from the beginning. We trust that “He loveth His children,” and while we “do not know the meaning of all things”[6] we know that His judgements will not only be just, but will be merciful according to his infinite love.

            “Surely, He taught us to love one another; His law is love and His Gospel is Peace.

“Chains shall He break, for the slave is our brother, and in His name all oppression shall cease.”[7]

           



[1] I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

[2] Book of Mormon Alma 14:10-11

[3] Holy Bible 2 Kings 6:17

[4] Holy Bible 1 Corinthians 13:11

[5] Doctrine and Covenants 122:8

[6] Book of Mormon, 1 Nephi 11:17

[7] O Holy Night, Placide Cappeau