“Evidences of the Heart”, Rodger Sorensen, BYU
Devotional, July 29, 2008
The Seating Area--Elder Carlos H. Amado spoke of service. He said:
Those who serve with devotion, even when things don’t turn
out the way they would like, are not easily discouraged, fatigued, or
frustrated because the promise of peace of mind and the companionship of the
Holy Spirit will never abandon them. (Carlos
H. Amado, “Service, a Divine Quality,” Ensign, May 2008, 37.)
There is something in service and sacrifice, especially in
the face of adversity, that prepares the heart for hearing the Holy Spirit.
Seven years ago I was standing at the crest of the Hill
Cumorah. It was before the sets were up and before the cast arrived, and I was
visiting with a group of tourists. One of them asked where the audience would
sit. I pointed to the empty field at the foot of the hill where, in two weeks,
8,000 chairs would be arranged. Looking closely, I noticed something I had not
seen before: there was a pattern on the field showing where the seats go—the
aisles in between subtly imprinted in the grass. Later I talked to Brother
Paine, who, year after year, was in charge of marking out the location of the
chairs and supervising their setup. I asked if he had noticed that the grass in
the aisles was darker and hardier than the grass where the seats were located.
He told me the grass in the aisles was so distinct he could almost mark the
field for the chairs without measuring.
On the day it is marked and the cast members set up the
8,000 chairs, the field is lush and green. During the run of the pageant,
thousands and thousands of feet tramp down those aisles. Eleven days later,
when those same chairs are placed back into their storage trailers, the field
is a modified checkerboard of long green grass where the chairs have been
sitting and 10-foot-wide strips of either matted, brown, seemingly dead grass
in dry years or muddy bogs in wet years. It grows back stronger every year.
I believe service and sacrifice, especially when performed
in the arms of adversity, strengthen our souls and soften our hearts. Mighty
struggle prepares us to hear and follow promptings and enlarges our capacity to
follow Christ. We experience peace of mind and the assurance that the Holy
Spirit will be our constant companion.
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