I
wrote recently on how important the Church is in our preparation for Zion. The
Church as an administrative institution is vital but the members of it even
more so. If there were no members, there would be no Church.
There
was a time when I was saved by two Wards I belonged to. The first was in my
youth when I walked away from my family to be baptised and the second was
following my divorce. I had never felt more loved and valued as I had in those
two wards. I survived both crisis of enormous loss because of Church members
who embraced me and would not let me become lost.
One
of the greatest lessons I learnt from the Old Testament is the importance of
belonging to a body of saints. Some of you will remember, when the children of
Israel conquered the promised land following their captivity in Egypt, they
were divided geographically by the River Jordan. The inhabitants of Canaan were ripe in
iniquity and idol worship, and as a thorough and complete cleansing of the land
was not achieved, they presented a very real threat to the covenant people
(Joshua 23:11-16).
Among the first to receive land were the tribes of Reuben, Gad and half
of Mannesah. They settled in the land of Gilead which divided them from the
rest of Israel by the river Jordan (Numbers 34:14,15; Deuteronomy 3:12,13;
Joshua 22:9). When these tribes settled they built an altar by that river.
When the rest of Israel heard of it they were outraged presuming the
altar was built for idol worship. They sent Phineas, the son of Eleazor the
priest, with the heads of the remaining tribes, to call these two and a half
tribes to repentance. In their defense, these tribes explained that the altar
was not made for any worship but was meant to stand as a witness to the rest of
Israel that the tribe of Reuben, Gad and Mannesah were united with them in the
worship of one true and living God.
These three tribes recognised that even though they were geographically
divided from the rest, they were still a link in the chain. They knew that if
they turned to the worship of other gods, the ripple effect would be
detrimental to the whole House of Israel. They recognised the importance of
unity in their righteousness.
Today the
chain, being the Church of Jesus Christ, spreads across the globe. It unites
me, who am an Australian, with you who are an American, European or African. It
unites us through our faith in Him who is the Saviour of all, regardless of
nationality, colour or culture.
Our faith
in Christ and our commitment to that faith is our commonality. It creates a
spiritual umbilical cord between us that tells us we are one. It tells us to be
united in spirit, in love, in care, because you don’t know who you can one day
save.
Next time
you take the sacrament, think about every member in every ward in every stake
in the world doing the same and that by it we are, like the Israelites of old "witnessing
between us that the Lord is God" (Joshua 22:34) and thereby keeping the
chain unbroken because one day this chain will bring us together to live with
Him in Zion in preparation for the celestial kingdom of our eternal home.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: Sacrament Meeting by Doc Christensen)