
Life
can be a brutal course. There are so many ways to fail.
As
a young adult I used to grade myself every day — initially
in three areas, which grew to twelve areas, then seventeen
areas, and ultimately twenty-eight areas. Every day I evaluated
how well I had used my time, read my scriptures, kept virtuous
thoughts, been patient, managed my money, gotten enough
sleep, and so on. For months at a time, my life was a wave
of F’s with an occasional D or C. There was not an A or
B in sight.
I
was not meeting my standards and I knew it. No matter how
hard I tried, I could not be the kind of person I knew the
Lord expected me to be.
I
got depressed.
Failing Alone
I
kept trying to be a better person. I worked hard. I used
to go to a chapel and pray for help. But the darkness persisted.
I yearned for answers but found none.
During
that era I was having trouble with a calculus class. I went
to the instructor and told him I was lost. His answer confirmed
my desperation: “That’s your problem.”
Is
life a calculus class with daily quizzes and no mentors
or tutors? Are we on our own? If we are not smart enough
to “get it” from studying the text, is our only option to
drop out of life as a spiritual failure?
I
was rescued from myself by the demands of a mission. Two
years of service and spiritual experiences turned me from
a gloomy, weary traveler into a jubilant learner. I stopped
trying to fix myself and got busy serving.
What
could I have done to make my pre-mission experience more
productive?
A Set-Up for Success
A
friend was recently telling me about her college experience.
She said that every semester she used to sign up for many
more classes than she could actually complete. During the
first week of class, she studied the syllabi and the teachers.
Then she dropped those classes where she was not sure she
could get an “A.” She had found a good strategy for a good
GPA — but not for getting a good education. She graduated
at the top of her class but missed out on a lot of beneficial
learning she might have gained from risking the more anxiety-producing,
challenging courses.
My
friend recognized this as a model for the course of life.
God is determined to give us as much education as we are
prepared to receive. We can drop the courses that frighten
us in order to appear successful — but we will miss out
on the learning that matters most. Many courses may seem
daunting. But He is an unusual instructor.
One
teacher in my friend’s college education was both a blessing
and a frustration. He told his classes that he required
students to submit a paper each week on the assigned topic.
The students had the option of attending class or not. If
the teacher found the paper acceptable, it would get an
A. If he felt that the paper needed additional work, he
would write comments and return it to the student. Each
student could re-write the paper until it was accepted —
until it got an A. It could be re-written an unlimited number
of times, each time with coaching from the teacher. His
attitude was, “I’d like all of my students to learn the
lessons and have the experiences that qualify them for an
A.” He was working tirelessly to help them learn.
The
course of life is much like that. Each week we write a paper
— or live a span of life. Each week we present it to Him.
He accepts it — or returns it to us with suggestions for
additional refinement. If we are willing to keep living
and learning, He is willing to keep teaching and guiding.
We can re-submit our imperfect efforts an unlimited number
of times. He will continue to coach us until we get it right
— as long as we don’t drop the course and don’t stop turning
in our papers.
The Weekly Encounter
As
she talked about our weekly assignments, the blessing of
the sacrament seemed clearer than ever to me. It is our
weekly accounting with our Instructor. He invites us to
bring our notes, scribbles, and compositions from the week.
We may be reluctant to take our flawed creations to Him.
But He invites us to “come boldly [fully, completely] unto
the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy, and find
grace to help in time of need” (Hebrews 4:16, alternative
words for “boldly” suggested by Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance
of the Bible).
We
certainly have the need. He assuredly has the grace.
But
perhaps the encounter is not intended primarily to evaluate
us. Perhaps the Master Instructor is less interested in
grading what we submit than in developing us further as
His students. God will sort among our efforts during the
week and accept parts: “This offering is acceptable.” He
will also send us back to re-write parts that need more
thought and nobler purpose. He will haul off those sins
that burden us. And He will touch and stanch those issues
of blood that drain us.
Each
week He meets us at the sacrament table to sort us out.
Over time He turns our weakness into strength.
He
will set right everything that we bring to Him. Clearly
we should never hold anything back. If we do not submit
it, it cannot be refined.
Those
few minutes when we sing a sacrament hymn and ponder His
Plan may be the most important time of any Saint’s week.
Perhaps He would like us to more consciously bring our weeks
to Him. So lately I have made sure that my skimpy journal
— really nothing more than a few words listing the activities
of the days — is up-to-date when the Sabbath comes. Then
I take the week to Father so I can be taught.
I
offer my resentments and beg Him to transform them into
appreciations and compassion.
I
shuffle my reluctance to the Throne and plead for Him to
replace it with glad service.
I
humbly drag my sins and beseech Him to pay my burdensome
debts.
I
heave my burden of self-interest before Him and implore
Him to change my heart.
I
confess my doubts and confusion and earnestly appeal for
additional insight and greater faith.
I
take my imperfect performance and ask that He extend my
contract yet another week.
Understanding the Pained Past
What
should I have done differently as a young adult to avoid
the endless and pointless self-evaluation, self-hate, and
self-destruction?
The
key is to know who will save me. It is not I. It is He.
Back
then I was the judge, jury and executioner of my tortured
young adulthood. I seemed to think that if I worked hard
enough and hated sin ardently enough, I would overcome it.
But I cannot. He is the Conqueror. Of course I do all that
I can do. But I do not deceive myself. I am not the God
of my life; He is.
So
I try to be better prepared for my weekly encounter with
the Professor of Heaven and Earth. I go wholeheartedly to
the weekly encounter knowing that He is able to do His work.
Week after week I will return to Him ready to be blessed,
taught, and strengthened.
I
thank Him for His perfectly gracious tutoring.