From lds.org “Viewpoint: Be a Voice of Gladness”, Contributed
By the Church News, 9 NOVEMBER 2014
President Gordon B. Hinckley said: “We have every reason to
be optimistic in this world. Tragedy is around, yes. Problems everywhere, yes.
… You can’t, you don’t, build out of pessimism or cynicism. You look with
optimism, work with faith, and things happen” (Jeffrey R. Holland, “President
Gordon B. Hinckley: Stalwart and Brave He Stands,” Ensign, June 1995).
In his April 1991 general conference address, Elder Marvin
J. Ashton of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles said: “In the world, where there
are often voices of pessimism and negative feelings, the voice of gladness is
welcome indeed. … If it is our nature to criticize or demean, we can cause the
voices of gladness to be silenced. We need those who bring gladness into our
lives. We need those who give encouragement and reflect optimism.
“Sincere yet simple words of praise can lift souls and bring
gladness. Mark Twain remarked that he could live two months on one good
compliment. In the words of the biblical proverbs of Solomon: ‘A word fitly
spoken is like apples of gold in pictures of silver’ (Proverbs 25:11).
“Encouragement can be quick and simple, but it is a voice of
gladness that is needed by everyone” (“A Voice of Gladness,” Ensign, May 1991).
President Thomas S. Monson, in an article in the February
2000 issue of the Ensign, wrote of what he called the plagues of today: “They
linger; they debilitate; they destroy. They are to be found everywhere. Their
pervasiveness knows no boundaries. We know them as selfishness, greed,
indulgence, cruelty, and crime, to identify but a few. Surfeited with their
poison, we tend to criticize, to complain, to blame, and, slowly but surely, to
abandon the positives and adopt the negatives of life.”
He recited the lyrics of a Johnny Mercer song, “Accentuate
the Positive”:
Accentuate the positive;
Eliminate the negative.
Latch on to the affirmative;
Don’t mess with Mr. In-between.
“Good advice then. Good advice now,” President Monson
declared (“An Attitude of Gratitude”).
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