Each organ of your body is a wondrous gift from God.
Each eye has an autofocusing lens. Nerves and muscles control two eyes to make
a single three-dimensional image. The eyes are connected to the brain, which
records the sights seen.
Your heart is an incredible pump.17 It has four delicate
valves that control the direction of blood flow. These valves open and close
more than 100,000 times a day—36 million times a year. Yet, unless altered by
disease, they are able to withstand such stress almost indefinitely.
Think of the body’s defense system. To protect it from
harm, it perceives pain. In response to infection, it generates antibodies. The
skin provides protection. It warns against injury that excessive heat or cold
might cause.
The body renews its own outdated cells and regulates the
levels of its own vital ingredients. The body heals its cuts, bruises, and
broken bones. Its capacity for reproduction is another sacred gift from God.
Be we reminded that a perfect body is not required to
achieve one’s divine destiny. In fact, some of the sweetest spirits are housed
in frail or imperfect bodies. Great spiritual strength is often developed by
people with physical challenges, precisely because they are so challenged.
Anyone who studies the workings of the human body has
surely “seen God moving in his majesty and power.”18 Because the body is
governed by divine law, any healing comes by obedience to the law upon which
that blessing is predicated.19
Yet some people erroneously think that these marvelous
physical attributes happened by chance or resulted from a big bang somewhere.
Ask yourself, “Could an explosion in a printing shop produce a dictionary?” The
likelihood is most remote. But if so, it could never heal its own torn
pages or reproduce its own newer editions!
If the body’s capacity for normal function, defense,
repair, regulation, and regeneration were to prevail without limit, life here
would continue in perpetuity. Yes, we would be stranded here on earth!
Mercifully for us, our Creator provided for aging and other processes that
would ultimately result in our physical death. Death, like birth, is part of
life. Scripture teaches that “it was not expedient that man should be reclaimed
from this temporal death, for that would destroy the great plan of happiness.”20
To return to God through the gateway we call death is a joy for those who love
Him and are prepared to meet Him.21 Eventually the time will come when each
“spirit and … body shall be reunited again in … perfect form; both limb and
joint shall be restored to its proper frame,”22 never to be separated again.
For these physical gifts, thanks be to God! (Russell M. Nelson, “Thanks be to
God,” General Conference Apr. 2012).
“There
will be some things that take patience and faith. You may not like what comes
from the authority of the Church. It may contradict your political views. It
may contradict your social views. It may interfere with some of your social
life. But if you listen to these things, as if from the mouth of the Lord
himself, with patience and faith, the promise is that ‘the gates of hell shall
not prevail against you; yea, and the Lord God will disperse the powers of
darkness from before you, and cause the heavens to shake for your good, and his
name’s glory.’ (D&C
21:6.)” (President Harold B. Lee, In Conference
Report, Oct. 1970, p. 152.)
No comments:
Post a Comment