{"id":1825,"date":"2009-04-23T15:21:02","date_gmt":"2009-04-23T21:21:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/?p=1825"},"modified":"2021-03-15T10:46:45","modified_gmt":"2021-03-15T16:46:45","slug":"neither-trust-arm-flesh","status":"publish","type":"speech","link":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/talks\/russell-m-nelson\/neither-trust-arm-flesh\/","title":{"rendered":"\u201cNeither Trust in the Arm of Flesh\u201d"},"content":{"rendered":"

Thank you, President Samuelson. Thank you for your excellent service and exemplary leadership. We admire you and Sister Samuelson greatly. We also express our gratitude to the faculty and staff for their help to these choice students at Brigham Young University. Wendy and I are grateful to be here\u00a0with you today.<\/p>\n

We are very pleased that President Dieter F. Uchtdorf has been awarded an honorary doctorate. We congratulate him. When we think of all he has accomplished\u2014from his childhood days as a refugee in Europe\u2019s cold, cruel cauldron of war to his position now in the First Presidency of the Church\u2014we stand in awe. Through those years he has become a great man of faith and a devoted disciple of the Lord. Wendy and I have deep affection for him, for his dear wife, Harriet, and for their family.<\/p>\n

Now to each individual graduate we extend our heartfelt congratulations. We commend you for completing the course. You are winners. To your families and loved ones who have encouraged you, prayed for you, and sacrificed for you, we also express our gratitude and love.<\/p>\n

Some of you graduates will continue your educational studies. Keep up the good work! We\u2019re proud of you! Most of you will not pursue more formal education but will embark on your chosen career. We\u2019re grateful for you and wish you well.<\/p>\n

Brothers and sisters, regardless of your choices for the future, you will continue to learn. As long as you live, you will learn. It is part of God\u2019s plan for us. You will grow intellectually and spiritually. Just as Jesus the Christ \u201cincreased in wisdom and stature, and in favour with God and man,\u201d1<\/sup> so may you.<\/p>\n

To increase your wisdom and stature, you will exercise your agency. You will choose your teachers and your role models. Choose them wisely. Heed this counsel of Alma: \u201cTrust no one to be your teacher . . . , except he be a man of God, walking in his ways and keeping his commandments.\u201d2<\/sup><\/p>\n

If you enter the job market now, you will do so at a time of economic distress. Job opportunities throughout the world are diminishing and becoming more competitive. You will need to work hard and perform well to hold a job in the difficult days that lie ahead.<\/p>\n

Challenges are not limited to your age group. The decline of our economy is affecting many others. Senior citizens who have retired from their work are strained because the value of their nest egg has now been substantially eroded.<\/p>\n

Such economic woes are not new. Verses recorded long ago in the Book of Mormon apply today. From the book of Helaman we read:<\/p>\n

The time cometh that . . . your riches . . . become slippery, that ye cannot hold them; and in the days of your poverty ye cannot retain them. . . .<\/i><\/p>\n

. . . Yea, in that day ye shall say: O that we had remembered the Lord our God in the day that he gave us our riches, and then they would not have become slippery that we should lose them; for\u00a0behold, our riches are gone from us.<\/i>3<\/sup><\/p>\n

Throughout history economic conditions have been cyclic in nature. So you will live to see more ups and downs in the economy, just as surely as you will see the seasons change.<\/p>\n

With the cycles of man and nature all about us, we need to remember that truth never changes. God lives. He is our Father. He loves us. He wants us to be happy. Because He loves us, He wants us to prepare well now for our eventual return to Him. Can you imagine anything more joyful than that homecoming? It truly will be glorious for those who have qualified for the blessings of eternal life.4<\/sup><\/p>\n

To assist us in that quest, we have been given help through the teachings of God\u2019s prophets and the scriptures. Here is one example: \u201cCursed is he that putteth his trust in man, or maketh flesh his arm.\u201d5<\/sup> To rephrase that in today\u2019s terms, if you trust only in your 401(k)s or IRAs, your retirement plans may be disappointing. But your investments in tithing will continue to pay rich dividends\u2014here and hereafter. Indeed, the nest egg of tithing will never be eroded.<\/p>\n

We learn more about the limitations of the arm of flesh from the Doctrine and Covenants. In its preface we read that \u201cthe weak things of the world shall come forth and break down the mighty and strong ones, that man should not counsel his fellow man, neither trust in the arm of flesh.\u201d6<\/sup> Or, to rephrase that warning, even though you may be learned in the ways of the world, don\u2019t forget the power of God.<\/p>\n

More than 30 years ago my medical school classmates and I learned that lesson in an unforgettable way. We will never forget it. Our experience took place in the little town of Manzanillo on Mexico\u2019s western coast. The year was 1978. We were attending a meeting with our medical school graduating class and their wives.<\/p>\n

One evening after the scientific sessions had\u00a0been completed, one of the doctors suddenly became seriously ill. Without warning, he began to lose massive amounts of blood from his stomach. Totally stunned, we surrounded him, watching life\u2019s precious blood flow out from him. There we were, medical specialists skilled in various disciplines\u2014including surgeons, anesthesiologists, and internists\u2014with wisdom gained through more than 30 years of experience. What could we do? The nearest hospital was in Guadalajara, more than 100 mountainous miles away. It was night. No planes could fly. Blood transfusions were out of the question because of lack of equipment. All of our combined knowledge could not be mobilized to stop his hemorrhage. We were totally without the facilities or equipment needed to save the life of our beloved friend.<\/p>\n

Our stricken colleague, a faithful Latter-day Saint, was well aware of his plight. Ashen and pale, he whispered a request for the administration of a priesthood blessing. Several of us held the Melchizedek Priesthood. We responded to his request immediately. I was asked to seal the anointing. The Spirit dictated that he be blessed to the end that the bleeding would stop and that he would continue to\u00a0live and return to his home. That blessing was administered in the name of the Lord.<\/p>\n

The next morning, his condition had improved. Miraculously, the bleeding had stopped. His blood pressure had returned to normal. In a couple of days he was able to return to his home. Unitedly, we thanked the Lord for this most remarkable blessing.<\/p>\n

The lesson we learned was simple: \u201cTrust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.\u201d7<\/sup> We experienced this firsthand. This doctrine, taught repeatedly in the scriptures,8<\/sup> had now become our sure and certain knowledge.<\/p>\n

Please do not misunderstand me, brothers and sisters. Of course we need to prepare for worthy work to do. Yes, we do need to do our work well, whatever we choose to do in life. We need to be able to render significant service. And before we can achieve that competence, we must have an education. With us, education is a religious responsibility. \u201cThe glory of God [really] is intelligence.\u201d9<\/sup><\/p>\n

But the learning of man has its limitations. And sometimes, as in our circumstance in rural Mexico, the combined learning of many experts cannot be applied when we need it most. We have to place our trust in the Lord.<\/p>\n

That experience in Mexico taught us another important lesson. It pertains to our ultimate priorities and highest destinies as mortal beings. We learned that a doctor\u2019s ultimate destination is not in the hospital. For a lawyer, it is not in the courtroom. For a jet pilot, it is not in the cockpit of a Boeing 747. Each person\u2019s chosen occupation is only a means<\/i> to an end; it is not an end in itself.<\/p>\n

The end for which each of you should strive is to be the person that you can become\u2014the person that God wants you to be. The day will come when your professional career will end, as it has already for President Uchtdorf and Elder Nelson. The career that you will have labored so hard to achieve\u2014the work that will have supported you and your family\u2014will one day be behind you.<\/p>\n

Then you will have learned this great lesson: Much more important than what you have done for a living is what kind of a person you have become. On your final graduation day\u2014when you leave this frail existence\u2014what you have become will matter most. Attributes such as \u201cfaith, virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience, brotherly kindness, godliness, charity, humility, [and] diligence\u201d10<\/sup> will all be weighed in the Lord\u2019s balance.<\/p>\n

Keep learning and keep preparing for your ultimate graduation day.11<\/sup> From time to time ask yourself these questions:<\/p>\n