“What is True Greatness?”
Howard W. Hunter, BYU Devotional, February 10, 1987
“True greatness is never a result of a chance occurrence or
a one-time effort or achievement. It requires the development of character. It
requires a multitude of correct decisions for the everyday choices between good
and evil that Elder Boyd K. Packer spoke about when he said, “Over the years
these little choices will be bundled together and show clearly what we value”
(Ensign, Nov. 1980, p. 21). Those choices will also show clearly what we are.
“As we evaluate our lives, it is important that we look, not
only at our accomplishments, but also at the conditions under which we have
labored. We are all different and unique individuals. We have each had
different starting points in the race of life. We each have a unique mixture of
talents and skills. We each have our own set of challenges and constraints to
contend with. Therefore, our judgment of ourselves and our achievements should
not merely include the size or magnitude and number of our accomplishments; it
should also include the conditions that have existed and the effect that our
efforts have had on others.
“It is this last aspect of our self-evaluation—the effect of
our lives on the lives of others—that will help us understand why some of the
common, ordinary work of life should be valued so highly. Frequently it is the
commonplace tasks that have the greatest positive effect on the lives of
others, as compared with the things that the world so often relates to
greatness.
“It appears to me that the kind of greatness our Father in
Heaven would have us pursue is within the grasp of all who are within the
gospel net. We have an unlimited number of opportunities to do the many simple
and minor things that will ultimately make us great. To those who have devoted
their lives to service and sacrifice for their families, for others and for the
Lord, the best counsel is simply to do more of the same.”
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