{"id":21435,"date":"2020-01-07T11:59:08","date_gmt":"2020-01-07T18:59:08","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/?post_type=speech&p=21435"},"modified":"2023-11-17T15:29:04","modified_gmt":"2023-11-17T22:29:04","slug":"enduring-joy","status":"publish","type":"speech","link":"https:\/\/speeches.byu.edu\/talks\/kevin-j-worthen\/enduring-joy\/","title":{"rendered":"Enduring Joy"},"content":{"rendered":"

During this past October general conference, two members of the Quorum of the Twelve, Elder D. Todd Christofferson and Elder Neil L. Andersen, shared the exact same quote from a talk given by President Russell M. Nelson in the October 2016 general conference,1<\/sup> when President Nelson was serving as president of the Quorum of the Twelve. Although it is always good to follow the counsel of prophets, seers, and revelators, I have learned to pay particular attention to those instances in which more than one of them focuses on the same topic\u2014or, as in this case, the exact same words\u2014at the same time. My desire to carefully reread President Nelson\u2019s 2016 talk increased when I noted that Elder Dale G. Renlund also cited that same talk in his October 2019 general conference address.2<\/sup> Clearly these brethren had been reading President Nelson\u2019s October 2016 talk. Clearly, I thought, I should do the same.<\/p>\n

President Nelson opened his October 2016 talk by stating that he was going \u201cto discuss a principle that is key to our spiritual survival.\u201d3<\/sup> I thought, \u201cNo wonder Elders Christofferson, Andersen, and Renlund referenced the talk.\u201d President Nelson then upped the ante by adding, \u201cIt is a principle that will only become more important as the tragedies and travesties around us increase.\u201d4<\/sup> Now he had my full attention: \u201ca principle that is key to our spiritual survival\u201d and one \u201cthat will only become more important as\u201d our challenges increase. What was that principle?<\/p>\n

President Nelson introduced the principle by reviewing the life of Lehi as recorded in the Book of Mormon. Lehi was persecuted, mocked, and even physically threatened because of his belief in God and his desire to keep God\u2019s commandments. He left behind the comforts of home to go out into an unknown wilderness because of his commitment to God. He suffered hunger and other deprivations. Some of his sons rebelled against him. His was not an easy life. President Nelson summed up Lehi\u2019s life in terms that may sound a bit like your life at times: \u201cClearly, Lehi knew opposition, anxiety, heartache, pain, disappointment, and sorrow.\u201d5<\/sup> President Nelson also noted that, in these trying circumstances, \u201cLehi taught a principle for spiritual survival\u201d6<\/sup> by declaring \u201cboldly and without reservation a principle as revealed by the Lord: \u2018Men are, that they might have joy.\u2019\u201d7<\/sup><\/p>\n

There it is. Joy is the key to our spiritual survival in the trying times in which we live, as well as in the trying times that lie ahead of us. When we experience \u201copposition, anxiety, heartache, pain, disappointment, and sorrow\u201d\u2014things all of us are likely to face in this coming year\u2014how are we to survive? By tapping into the power of joy.<\/p>\n

Experiencing \u201ca Fulness of Joy\u201d<\/b><\/h2>\n

I believe we often underestimate the importance of the concept of joy. Without much thought, we sometimes casually wish others a joyous holiday season or invite them to spread joy. But I am not sure we fully appreciate how central joy is to God\u2019s plan for us. And it seems that our current leaders, from President Nelson on down, are now trying to draw our attention to it. In fact, according to a word search on the Gospel Library app, the word joy<\/i> was used 149 times in this most recent general conference\u2014more than double the sixty-five references in the April 2019 conference and nearly triple the fifty-four references in the October 2018 general conference. To use the current social-media parlance, joy was clearly trending in this last general conference.<\/p>\n

And the trend goes beyond general conference. The December 2019 issue of the Ensign<\/i> and Liahona<\/i> magazines focused on the concept of joy. Elder Patrick Kearon, a General Authority Seventy, quoted President Nelson\u2019s talk on joy in his remarks at the First Presidency Christmas devotional just four weeks ago,8<\/sup> as did Sister Jean B. Bingham in her recent BYU devotional talk here at the Marriott Center.9<\/sup> Add to that Elder David A. Bednar\u2019s BYU devotional last December,10<\/sup> which focused on joy, and it is clear that joy is one of the principles that current Church leaders want us to consider more deeply.<\/p>\n

So my request for this coming year is that we focus more on joy; that we seek to understand it better; that we come to view it not just as a mental or emotional concept or feeling of comfort but as a principle of power\u2014power to survive and thrive spiritually and otherwise; and that we come to experience what President Nelson has called \u201cenduring joy.\u201d11<\/sup><\/p>\n

So we begin by asking, \u201cWhat is joy?\u201d That is not a simple question. It is a question that philosophers, psychologists, songwriters, theologians, and poets have explored and debated for millennia. Part of the difficulty is that language is a little imprecise and ultimately inadequate to capture the concept fully. For example, some distinguish happiness from joy, although in scriptures and prophetic teachings those terms are sometimes used interchangeably.<\/p>\n

However, this much seems clear: joy is not merely a temporary emotion but rather a more permanent and constant condition. As stated in the Guide to the Scriptures, joy is \u201ca condition of great happiness coming from righteous living.\u201d12<\/sup> It is not some momentary sensation of rejoicing but a condition\u2014a state of being.<\/p>\n

King Benjamin described it this way:<\/p>\n

Consider on the <\/i>blessed and happy state<\/i><\/b> of those that keep the commandments of God. For behold, they are blessed in all things, both temporal and spiritual; and if they hold out faithful to the end they are received into heaven, that thereby they may dwell with God in a <\/i>state of never-ending happiness<\/i><\/b>.<\/i><\/b>13<\/sup><\/p>\n

President Dallin H. Oaks explained it this way:<\/p>\n

Joy is the ultimate sensation of well-being. It comes from being complete and in harmony with our Creator and his eternal laws.<\/i><\/p>\n

The opposite of joy is misery. Misery is more than unhappiness, sorrow, or suffering. Misery is the ultimate state of disharmony with God and his laws.<\/i><\/p>\n

Joy and misery are eternal emotions whose ultimate extent we are not likely to experience in mortality. In this life we have some mortal simulations, which we call happiness or pleasure and unhappiness or pain.<\/i>14<\/sup><\/p>\n

Notice three common elements in King Benjamin\u2019s and Elder Oaks\u2019s descriptions:<\/p>\n

1. In its fulness, joy is a condition or state of being; it is a constant.<\/p>\n

2. It comes from living in harmony with God\u2019s laws, from keeping His commandments.<\/p>\n

3. We may not experience it fully in this life. Indeed, because of the limits of our mortal bodies and finite minds, we likely cannot even fully describe or understand this condition.<\/p>\n

As President Nelson noted, God \u201coffers an intensity, depth, and breadth of joy that defy human logic or mortal comprehension.\u201d15<\/sup> In fact, the scriptures indicate that we can completely experience \u201ca fulness of joy\u201d only after resurrection, when our perfected bodies and spirits are \u201cinseparably connected.\u201d16<\/sup><\/p>\n

Thus joy is in one sense a description of our ultimate destiny. Joy is at the center of God\u2019s plan for us. The book of Job recorded that when that plan was presented to us in the premortal existence, we \u201cshouted for joy.\u201d17<\/sup> Note that the scripture indicates we shouted for<\/i> joy and not with<\/i> joy. It may well be that we were not just generally rejoicing at the announcement of the plan but rather were celebrating the concept of joy itself, shouting for<\/i> joy, overwhelmed at the beauty and depth of the concept of joy and our realization that we, too, might enter into that state of being that our Heavenly Parents enjoyed. As Joseph Smith put it, joy or \u201chappiness is the object and design of our existence.\u201d18<\/sup> Joy is the very purpose for which we, and everything else in the cosmos, were created. Thus it should be no surprise that it was the \u201cgood tidings of great joy\u201d19<\/sup> that the angel pronounced to the shepherds at Jesus\u2019s birth.<\/p>\n

However, just because we may not completely experience a fulness of joy in this life, it does not mean that we are without joy in the world. Adam and Eve both recognized that their choices in the Garden of Eden made it possible that \u201cin this life [we] shall have joy,\u201d even \u201cthe joy of our redemption.\u201d20<\/sup><\/p>\n

Indeed, one of the purposes of this life is to develop our capacity for joy\u2014and the extent to which we do that will impact the degree to which we will experience joy both in this life and even more in the world to come. As Elder Jack H. Goaslind once observed, \u201cOur joy in God\u2019s kingdom will be a natural extension of the happiness we cultivate in this life.\u201d21<\/sup> Thus Moroni taught that our level of joy does not automatically change with death. When the Judgment comes, he wrote, \u201che that is happy shall be happy still; and he that is unhappy shall be unhappy still.\u201d22<\/sup><\/p>\n

Thus, even though we may not experience a complete fulness of joy until the next life, it is very much in our interest to do what we can to experience all the joy we can in this life\u2014both because it will make our current lives better and because it will better prepare us for our ultimate destiny to experience the fulness of joy that God wants to share with us.<\/p>\n

So how do we do that? How can we cultivate more joy in our lives now and thereby increase our capacity to experience joy in the next life? Let me share six suggestions.<\/p>\n

Cultivating More Joy in Our Lives<\/b><\/h2>\n

First<\/b>,<\/b> we need to recognize, and constantly remember, that our ability to have joy in this life\u2014and in the eternities\u2014is not dependent on external conditions. As President Nelson so eloquently put it:<\/p>\n

The joy we feel has little to do with the circumstances of our lives and everything to do with the focus of our lives.<\/i><\/p>\n

When the focus of our lives is on God\u2019s plan of salvation . . . and Jesus Christ and His gospel, we can feel joy regardless of what is happening\u2014or not happening\u2014in our lives.<\/i>23<\/sup><\/p>\n

This is the quote that Elders Christofferson and Andersen cited in their most recent general conference talks. This is the quote that Elder Kearon shared in the Christmas devotional and that Sister Bingham shared in her most recent BYU devotional. It is so contrary to what many in the world think\u2014and that erroneous thinking diverts us from joy\u2014that it bears repeating:<\/p>\n

The joy we feel has little to do with the circumstances of our lives and everything to do with the focus of our lives.<\/i><\/p>\n

When the focus of our lives is on God\u2019s plan of salvation . . . and Jesus Christ and His gospel, we can feel joy regardless of what is happening\u2014or not happening\u2014in our lives.<\/i><\/p>\n

This is not a mere abstract concept. It is to be taken literally. President Nelson made this clear:<\/p>\n

For example, it doesn\u2019t seem possible to feel joy when your child suffers with an incurable illness or when you lose your job or when your spouse betrays you. Yet that is precisely the joy the Savior offers. His joy is constant.<\/i>24<\/sup><\/p>\n

This is what President Nelson invites us, as well as all the world, to experience\u2014what he calls \u201cenduring joy\u201d\u2014joy that can exist even when we fail a test, feel rejected, or face ridicule. It is a joy that does not need to wait until midterms, finals, or any other unpleasant task is over before we feel it. True joy, even the somewhat diluted but still overwhelming25<\/sup> brand we can experience in this life, transcends our circumstances. So don\u2019t wait for your circumstances to change before experiencing an increase of joy. Draw on the power of joy in every situation.<\/p>\n

Second<\/b>,<\/b> we should recognize and remember that enduring joy\u2014constant joy\u2014does not mean uninterrupted bliss and a life free of challenges. Suffering and adversity are part of the eternal plan, a part of the process by which we come to develop enduring joy. Joy helps us transcend temporary trials; it does not eliminate them from our lives. As Elder Lawrence E. Corbridge recently noted, \u201cSuffering and joy are not incompatible but essential companions. You can suffer and never know joy, but you can\u2019t have joy without suffering.<\/i>\u201d26<\/sup><\/p>\n

Even God, who is the very essence of joy, experiences sorrow. As recorded in Moses 7, God weeps over the wrong choices of His children and over their resulting, unnecessary sufferings.27<\/sup> But, at the very same time, He comforts those who join in that sorrow by instructing them to \u201clift up your heart, and be glad,\u201d28<\/sup> because those who embrace His plan \u201cshall come forth with songs of everlasting joy.\u201d29<\/sup><\/p>\n

So don\u2019t let Satan fool you into thinking that you are failing in your quest for joy because you have tough days. All of us do. Satan wants us to be miserable like unto him,30<\/sup> and one way he strives to do that is by discouraging us into thinking that the challenges and difficulties we experience are the result of our own inadequacies and prove that we are not worthy of joy. But many of life\u2019s events are beyond our control. We may struggle with mental health issues or be radically affected by the inadvertent, or even intentional, misdeeds of others, or maybe we just struggle because of the vicissitudes of life. If so, we should not blame ourselves or think ourselves beyond God\u2019s reach. Instead we should recognize that with the Savior\u2019s help, we can still experience joy\u2014even in the midst of our afflictions. As President Nelson explained, because of Christ \u201cwe can feel joy even while having a bad day, a bad week, or even a bad year!\u201d31<\/sup> When you experience the inevitable challenges that lie ahead, believe in God and believe that He is concerned for you individually. He will weep with you, even as He bids you to \u201clift up your heart, and be glad.\u201d<\/p>\n

And when you are struggling, do not overlook the positive impact that you can have on others even while you are feeling inadequate. You are probably doing much better than you think, and others around are uplifted even when you are struggling inwardly. I often meet with distinguished visitors to campus. Many of them are struck by the joy they feel radiating from the students on campus. They labor to describe what<\/i> they feel as they mingle with students, and they search for words to explain why<\/i> they feel it. One such visitor asked me if we had \u201ca happiness initiative\u201d on campus. I responded that we did not, that it was just the natural disposition of our students. I am sure that not every student this visitor met was having the best day ever; some, I am sure, were struggling. Yet they still radiated joy that uplifted this visitor\u2014and many others. I realized later that I had missed a wonderful missionary opportunity. When I was asked if we had a happiness initiative, I should have said, \u201cYes. It is called the plan of happiness. Would you like to learn more about it?\u201d<\/p>\n

Third<\/b>,<\/b> recognize and remember that true joy, enduring joy\u2014the joy that many visitors to campus sense\u2014ultimately comes only through keeping God\u2019s commandments. Remember, King Benjamin indicated that joy describes \u201cthe blessed and happy state of those that keep the commandments of God.\u201d Indeed, the commandments are the guidelines or the requirements for experiencing enduring joy.32<\/sup> As Joseph Smith explained:<\/p>\n

Happiness is the object and design of our existence; and will be the end thereof, if we pursue the path that leads to it; and this path is virtue, uprightness, faithfulness, holiness, and keeping all the commandments of God.<\/i>33<\/sup><\/p>\n

It is only when we live in accordance with celestial law that we are able to experience celestial joy. As section 88 of the Doctrine and Covenants makes clear, \u201cFor he who is not able to abide the law of a celestial kingdom cannot abide a celestial glory.\u201d34<\/sup><\/p>\n

And one of those commandments is to love our neighbors35<\/sup> and to demonstrate that love through serving them, whether it be through formal ministering assignments or just through simple deeds of kindness for a roommate or a stranger. Focusing on the well-being of others increases our joy, regardless of our external circumstances. As Elder Goaslind once observed, \u201cOne key to maintaining your happiness in spite of adversity\u201d is to follow Christ\u2019s commandment to lose our lives for the sake of others.36<\/sup> It is concern for the well-being of others that gives God joy.37<\/sup> It is in following Him and His example that we will experience that same fulness.<\/p>\n

President Nelson summed up the connection between joy and keeping the commandments with this very practical, but powerful, observation:<\/p>\n

Every time we nurture our spouse and guide our children, every time we forgive someone or ask for forgiveness, we can feel joy.<\/i><\/p>\n

Every day that you and I choose to live celestial laws, every day that we keep our covenants and help others to do the same, joy will be ours.<\/i>38<\/sup><\/p>\n

Fourth<\/b>,<\/b> because we will not in our mortal state keep the commandments perfectly, repentance is a critical part of experiencing enduring joy. Many in the world, and too many in the Church, view repentance as an unpleasant, even dreaded process, confusing the consequences of failing to repent with repentance itself. However, as Elder Christofferson explained, just the opposite is true:<\/p>\n

When prophets come crying repentance,<\/i> [some say] it \u201cthrows cold water on the party.\u201d But in reality the prophetic call should be received with joy. . . . Repentance is a divine gift, and there should be a smile on our faces when we speak of it. . . . Rather than interrupting the celebration, the gift of repentance is the cause for true celebration.<\/i>39<\/sup><\/p>\n

One stake president wisely observed that \u201cif we really understood the doctrine of repentance, we would run to repent.\u201d40<\/sup> Reflecting this same understanding, one of my Church colleagues confided in me that one of his goals was to be in the Repentance Hall of Fame.<\/p>\n

This does not mean that repentance is easy or that it should be done casually. President Nelson has taught, \u201cTo repent from sin is not easy. But the prize is worth the price.\u201d41<\/sup><\/p>\n

Repentance always stretches our souls, sometimes beyond what we think we can stand, as Alma the Younger discovered. But the joy Alma felt as a result was so great that, once he had experienced it, he \u201clabored without ceasing, that [he] might bring [other] souls unto repentance; that [he] might bring them to taste of the exceeding joy of which [he] did taste.\u201d42<\/sup><\/p>\n

So if we want to experience joy, we need to repent\u2014and to even repent joyfully. Because, as President Nelson observed, \u201cwhen we choose to repent, we choose to . . . receive joy\u2014the joy of redemption.\u201d43<\/sup><\/p>\n

Fifth<\/b>,<\/b> we need to recognize and remember that joy is a principle of power. Joy is not just a reward for a lifetime effort to follow God\u2019s commandments and to repent when we fail. Joy can increase our ability to stay on the covenant path that leads to enduring joy, to do things we might not otherwise be able to accomplish. As President Nelson explained, \u201cJoy is powerful, and focusing on joy brings God\u2019s power into our lives.\u201d44<\/sup><\/p>\n

As proof of this truth, President Nelson pointed to the example of the Savior, \u201c\u2018who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross\u2019 [Hebrews 12:2]. Think of that! In order for Him to endure the most excruciating experience ever endured on earth, our Savior focused on joy<\/i>!\u201d45<\/sup><\/p>\n

Similarly, we can bring God\u2019s power into our lives by focusing on joy. President Nelson asked:<\/p>\n

If we focus on the joy that will come to us, or to those we love, what can we endure that presently seems overwhelming, painful, scary, unfair, or simply impossible? . . .<\/i><\/p>\n

. . . What repenting will then be possible? What weakness will become a strength? What chastening will become a blessing? What disappointments, even tragedies, will turn to our good? And what challenging service to the Lord will we be able to give<\/i>?<\/i>46<\/sup><\/p>\n

Sixth<\/b>,<\/b> and finally, all of this is possible only because of Jesus Christ. President Nelson summed it up: \u201cHow, then, can we claim . . . joy? We can start by \u2018looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith\u2019 \u2018in every thought.\u2019\u201d47<\/sup><\/p>\n

Let me repeat again, with a little different emphasis, the quote that so many Church leaders have recently shared:<\/p>\n

The joy we feel has little to do with the circumstances of our lives and everything to do with the focus of our lives.<\/i><\/p>\n

When the focus of our lives is on<\/i><\/b> God\u2019s plan of salvation . . . and <\/i>Jesus Christ and His gospel, we can feel joy<\/i><\/b> regardless of what is happening\u2014or not \u00adhappening\u2014in our lives. <\/i>Joy comes from and because of Him. He is the source of all joy. . . . For Latter-day Saints, Jesus Christ is joy<\/i><\/b>!<\/i><\/b>48<\/sup><\/p>\n

Thus Christ is not only \u201cthe author and finisher of our faith\u201d but is, in one sense, the author and finisher of our joy. We begin to have joy when we focus on Christ. We can then bring the power of Christ into our lives by focusing on joy.<\/p>\n

I bear witness that He lives and that because He lives, we can, in the world to come, experience the fulness of joy that is part of our eternal destiny, if we so choose. And in this life we can, through joy, survive and flourish spiritually. May we more fully experience the power of joy in the coming year is my prayer, in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.<\/p>\n

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