
The
older I get – and the longer I live in the South – the more I
admire King Benjamin.
“And now, for the sake of . . . retaining a remission of
your sins from day to day, that ye may walk guiltless before
God – I would that ye should impart of your substance to the
poor, every man according to that which he hath, such as feeding
the hungry, clothing the naked, visiting the sick and administering
to their relief, both spiritually and temporally, according to
their wants.” (Mosiah 4:26, emphasis added)
King
Benjamin seems to see our care of the poor as the sure indicator
that the doctrine of the atonement has seeped into our souls.
Learning from the Poor
We
first met the man I will call “H” some weeks after we had moved
to a southern community. I was invited to speak at his baptism.
Since we knew neither of the candidates for baptism, I supposed
the missionaries were desperate for a speaker. Little did I know
what lessons God had in store for me
from this humble new convert.
H
is a young black man with a scrawny, twisted body. Every step
is a limp. Those are some of the effects of his cerebral palsy.
In spite of his physical limitations, he speaks well and thinks
with a lilt.
We
got to know H better as he attended a Sunday school class I taught.
He listened attentively whenever he was there. Occasionally his
hand would shoot up. I would call on him and he would make comments
that might be described as offbeat. They were insightful, usually
delivered with an ironic chuckle, and they always looked at life
and the gospel from an unexpected perspective.
Over
the years we had H over for dinner or took him out to dinner a
few times. I took him to a movie once. I can’t remember why I
was giving H a ride when he told me some details about his childhood.
His mother died when he was a child. When he was 12, his father
equipped him with a gun and sent him out to sell drugs. His father
was ashamed of his son’s twisted body, so he ultimately had him
committed to an institution. H felt desperately lonely there.
But there was nothing he could do. I was amazed at the string
of pains he endured.
When
Nancy and I visited H’s apartment in a reputedly-dangerous neighborhood,
we were always amazed at the way he felt honored to have “the
priesthood of God” in his home. He spoke longingly of the day
when he would receive the priesthood.
A Trip to the Hospital
One
day when we checked our phone messages, we found one from H saying
that he was in the state mental hospital. We went to visit. While
H has had recurring bouts with mental illness, the main reason
for this confinement was a disagreement he had with his father.
He had asked his father to vacate his apartment because he was
selling drugs and causing trouble. Words were spoken. His father
called the police and told them to pick up his son because he
had gone crazy again. While H was in the hospital, his father
cashed and spent H’s disability checks, leaving all bills unpaid.
H
taught us a vital lesson in appreciation as we sat in the modest
visiting room of the state hospital. He said that he had gotten
pretty discouraged. Then he realized something that helped: “I
won’t say my life will get any better. It can’t get no better than this! You can change your scenery but breathin’
is ‘bout as good as it gets.” I was amazed. He rejoiced in the
blessing of breathing as he sat clutching the hymnbook we brought
him sitting incarcerated, uneducated, unemployed, and disabled.
One
day on the way home from the office I felt that I had to stop
at H’s place. It had been too long since we visited him at the
state hospital. I wondered how he was doing at home. I found his
place and went to the door. I knocked. No answer. I knocked again.
A gruff and round black woman came to the door. I asked for H.
She walked away. I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to follow but
I did. She marched into a back bedroom where H’s shriveled body
lay on the bed facing the wall. When I greeted him he rolled over,
“Hey, Bruther Goddurd.” The black woman with her handsome little
boy stood nearby. The woman kept threatening to hit her little
boy. H introduced the woman as his fiancée.
Trying Hard and Not Making It
Since
his dad spent all his money while he was in the hospital, H had
no money to pay his bills. His house (for which he paid $20 per
month rent – you can imagine the place) had no gas. No water.
He had no phone except a pager. A charity paid his electric bill.
He is unable to work because of his disabilities. He had tried
college classes but found it hard to figure out the system. He
was discouraged. But he brightened to have “the priesthood of
God in his home.” I gave him three things: the money I had in
my pocket, the appreciation for him that flows naturally from
my heart, and a promise to call the Relief Society.
As
soon as I got home I called the Relief Society president. She
suggested I call the elders quorum, which, in my view assured that nothing would
be done – we have a wonderful elders quorum president who is badly
overloaded. I called the elders quorum president, who promised
to work with the bishop to help H.
Then
I left on a trip. Twelve days later, back at work, H called me
and told me that he was staying at his uncle’s place because it
was hard to live in the winter without water and heat. He and
his girlfriend were breaking up. He wondered if he could borrow
a few dollars from me. I asked if he had heard from the Church.
Not a word. I sighed. Sometimes the priesthood of God doesn’t
deliver. I met with our bishop the next morning about getting
some help. I continue to suspect that none of us are doing enough.
And
H is not alone. There are H’s in every community, awaiting those
who respond to the Master’s call. They are, as much as anything,
our rendezvous with Jesus. “Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one
of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me” (Matthew
25:40).
Conflict of Values
It
seems to me that Latter-day Saints are caught in a mighty clash
of values. We believe in helping the poor. Yet we also believe
in self-sufficiency. Sometimes those two can co-exist fairly peacefully
– unless you live where poverty and discrimination are common.
H
tries very hard, but in the race of life he has a twisted body
and a crushing burden. He keeps trying, but sometimes he gets
discouraged. Our experiences in the South have taught me forcefully
that my appreciation for self-sufficiency does not justify keeping
the poor at arms’ length. We must help.
“And also, ye yourselves will succor those that stand in
need of your succor; ye will administer of your substance
unto him that standeth in need; and ye will not suffer that the
beggar putteth up his petition to you in vain, and turn him out
to perish.
“Perhaps thou shalt say: The man has brought upon himself his
misery; therefore I will stay my hand, and will not give unto
him of my food, nor impart unto him of my substance that he may
not suffer, for his punishments are just –
“But I say unto you, O man, whosoever doeth this, the same
hath great cause to repent; and except he repenteth of
that which he hath done he perisheth forever, and hath no interest
in the kingdom of God.
“For behold, are we not all beggars? Do we not all depend
upon the same Being, even God, for all the substance which we
have, for both food and raiment, and for gold, and for silver,
and for all the riches which we have of every kind?” (Mosiah 4:
16-19, italics added)
Indeed,
we are all beggars. None of us will feel self-sufficient when
we face God at the judgment bar.
The Challenge
God
expects us to “succor the weak, lift up the hands which hang down,
and strengthen the feeble knees” (D&C 81:5). Many of us are
tempted to use the self-sufficiency argument to excuse ourselves
from our Christian duties.
Of
course self-sufficiency is a true principle. We believe in being
anxiously engaged in a good cause. We are to cheerfully do all
we are able. But it is not my job to impose self-sufficiency on
another person. My obligation towards others is charity and benevolence.
That is one of the central messages of the Book of Mormon. It
is one of the great latter-day challenges.
- Do we gladly give whatever resources we have –
time, money, or expertise – to help the poor?
- Do we give all we are able to give to fast offerings,
humanitarian aid, and the perpetual education fund? (Remember
President Kimball’s challenge to give 10 times the cost of 2
meals, where possible?)
- Do we move back from the edge of coveting so that
we have more room for giving to the poor?
- Do we appreciate the abundance we already have
rather than racing endlessly on the acquiring treadmill?
- Do we gladly contribute goods to Deseret Industries
and other organizations that help the poor?
- Are we as mindful of the needs of the poor as we
are of finding tax deductions?
- Do we note the frequent scriptural warnings to
those who are prosperous?
- Do we look beyond the shabbiness of poverty to
appreciate the God-given gifts of the strugglers?
- Do we seek counsel of those whose life experiences
have been filled with pain and disappointment?
- Do we recognize that many of God’s greatest have
been poor?
The Final Judgment
If
any of us turn away from the poor, we may feel quite lonely on
judgment day. Joseph Smith’s words will ring in our ears: “… if
you would have God have mercy on you, have mercy on one another”
(TPJS p. 241).
After
all, “a man filled with the love of God, is not content with blessing
his family alone, but ranges through the whole world, anxious
to bless the whole human race” (TPJS p.174).
I
thank H for the lessons he has taught me about gratitude, determination,
and life. I know that God expects me to do more than I have to
help him.