5 Ways Life Would Be Radically Different If Christ Never
Made His Atonement
by Brother Tad R. Callister, excerpted from "The
Infinite Atonement"
One Sunday morning our teenaged son stood with two other
priests to administer the sacrament, as they had done on many prior occasions. They
pulled back the white cloth, but to their dismay there was no bread. One of
them slipped out to the preparation room in hopes some could be found. There
was none. Finally our troubled son made his way to the bishop and shared the
concern with him. A wise bishop then stood, explained the situation to the
congregation, and asked, "How would it be if the sacrament table were
empty today because there were no atonement?" I have thought of that
often—what would it be like if there were no bread because there had been no
crucifixion, no water because there had been no shedding of blood? If there had
been no Atonement, what would the consequences be to us? Of course, the
question is now moot, but it does put in perspective our total dependence on
the Lord. To ask and answer this question only heightens our awareness of, and
appreciation for, the Savior. What might have been, even for the
"righteous," if there had been no atoning sacrifice, stirs the very
depths of human emotion.
First, there would be no resurrection, or as suggested in
the explicit language of Jacob: "This flesh must have laid down to rot and
to crumble to its mother earth, to rise no more" (2 Nephi 9:7).
Second, our spirits would become subject to the devil. He
would have "all power over you" and "seal you his" (Alma
34:35). In fact we would become like him, even "angels to a devil" (2
Nephi 9:9).
Third, we would be "shut out from the presence of our
God" (2 Nephi 9:9), to remain forever with the father of lies.
Fourth, we would "endure a never-ending torment"
(Mosiah 2:39).
Fifth, we would be without hope, for "if Christ be not
risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain. . . . If in
this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most miserable"
(1 Corinthians 15:14, 19).
On one occasion I was asked to speak at a graveside service
for a fine man who had passed away. Prior to the service, I met with the family
at the mortuary. It was obvious from those in attendance that the deceased was
greatly loved and missed. For a few moments, as the family gathered round the
casket, I tried to offer some words of counsel and comfort. We then had a word
of prayer and all departed for the graveside service. I lingered long enough,
however, to see the bereaved widow walk over to the casket for the last time,
gently kiss her beloved companion's forehead, and say, "Goodbye, darling,
I love you." How senseless life would be if that goodbye were forever. Yet
such would be the case without the Savior.
If there had been no Atonement, the rising of every sun
would be a reminder that for us it would one day rise no more, that for each of
us death would claim its victory, and the grave would have its sting. Every
death would be a tragedy, and every birth but a tragedy in embryo. The culmination
of love between husbands and wives, fathers and sons, mothers and daughters
would perish in the grave, to rise no more. Without the Atonement, futility
would replace purpose, hopelessness would be exchanged for hope, and misery
would be traded for happiness. If there were no Atonement, Elder Marion G.
Romney declared, "The whole purpose for the creation of earth and our
living upon it would fail."6 President David O. McKay quotes James L.
Gordon in this regard: "A cathedral without windows, a face without eyes,
a field without flowers, an alphabet without vowels, a continent without
rivers, a night without stars, and a sky without a sun—these would not be so
sad as a . . . soul without Christ."7 The contemplation of such a world as
this would be the most despairing thought that could ever darken the mind or
sadden the heart of man. But fortunately, there is a Christ, and there was an
Atonement, and it is infinite for all mankind.
No comments:
Post a Comment