Saturday, 18 July 2026

SEEKING HIS FACE

 



Some days, Father, I cannot bear,

The absence of Your touch.

I cannot wait for Your embrace

That I have missed so very much.

 

In this abyss of worldly darkness

I stumble but I fall into the arms of Him

Who lifts me higher than I can go.

 

I fly to You, Father, on my wings of faith,

I sail through stormy skies,

Seeking for Thy face.

Look Father, no hands!

Only trust in these strong arms

Of my Saviour’s loving grace.


-      CATHRYNE ALLEN 


A VIEW OF ETERNITY

 



For years now I have tried to understand fully the necessity for suffering in mortality. From time to time different insights and portions of understanding have been given to me but recently I received what I consider an adequate and favourable theory of the same.

What came to me first is the reason for our lack of understanding of this subject. It is simply this: it is easy not to understand the here and now because we cannot see beyond this life to the rewards of the splendour of eternity and our eternal place within it.

There are three things I am very convinced of and the first is this. We could see the reward in our pre-earth life and we chose which level of the splendour we wanted  to live in for all eons of time. In other words, we chose there and then where we wanted to end up.

The second is that not everyone wanted godhood. We could see it when we made the choice but we could also see the responsibility of such a state of being and the high price attached to it. Some of us were more spiritually inclined than others and as such we sought for higher spiritual levels of intelligence and power that godhood could give us.

The third is this. Since we are not here to choose our eternal destiny, we are here to prove ourselves worthy of the choice we have already made. All kingdoms are kingdoms of glory and they all have degrees of splendour of eternity.

 And here is the wonder of eternity. The telestial kingdom, being the lowest, is a kingdom of glory that passes all understanding even though it is a kingdom where murderers, rapists, liars, adulterers and all manner of wicked people will go (D&C 76:89). It is also worth noticing that the inhabitants of only this kingdom will be as innumerable as the sand of the seashore (v 109). This is the kingdom for those who sought the ease and glory of earthly life. This is the kingdom that comes with the lowest price. But a price has to be paid even for this kingdom…..the souls who will inherit it will pass through hell to earn their place therein. This is outer darkness where they suffer torments of hell until their resurrection day following the Millenium (Alma 40:11-14; D&C 76:103-106; see also Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine, pp 349-50)

And now the necessity for suffering. This life offers us something valuable that helps us prove we deserve the outcome we have chosen: our moral agency. Suffering reveals to us our true nature and refines within us the attributes needed through the exercise of our agency to become worthy of the splendour of our eternal reward. If we wanted godhood, our agency has to develop within us a godly character. Water meets its own level.

For years I have felt my life has been unjust. I have had to live through some major trials and the suffering has been acute. This week I made a list of all the growth I have experienced throughout my life and the qualities I have acquired through my choices to endure, trust, overcome, forgive…..qualities like compassion, love and tolerance. I have learnt mercy and even humility as I was brought down to the dust of the earth. One day I will kneel at the throne of my God and present these gifts as the greatest treasures I have come to own.

Herein is the mercy of two Gods: God the Father who sacrificed His best child for the lowest of His children, and God the Son who willingly submitted to that sacrifice. Honour and glory be theirs forever for the joy that awaits us…..

"In my Father's house are many mansions....I go to prepare a place for you." (John 14:2)

I pledged my life into thy hands

When by example you showed me how;

I promised my trials to endure

When I was with You and do so even now.

 

You dried my tears when I barely coped

And carried me when I could walk no more;

You fed me truths I needed to know

And nurtured my flight into the unknown.

 

As I promised to obey,

You promised we’d never part;

I remember, I remember

And carry it all

In the shadow of my heart.

 

- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

Friday, 17 July 2026

JOSIAH WHO LOVED GOD

 


There is nothing that excites me more than coming across someone in scripture who loved the God of Israel. One such man was King Josiah of the Kingdom of Judah. You might have gathered by now that there weren’t many kings of Israel like him. He stole my heart the year I discovered him in the Old Testament.

Before we can appreciate Josiah, it’s imperative to look at his predecessors. Josiah’s grandfather was Manasseh who ascended the throne of Judah at the age of twelve. He reigned for fifty years and became the most loathed and cursed king in the history of Judah.

Manasseh exceeded the idolatry of his predecessors by adding a third form of worship: devotion to the heavenly bodies and constellations. Remnants of this worship are seen today in astrology (The Old Testament Student Manual Book 2 p 213). If you live by your horoscope, give this some thought…..

Not only did Manasseh exceed the idolatry of his forefathers, he defiled the temple and the whole country out of contempt for God and barbarously slew all the righteous Hebrew men, ‘ till Jerusalem was overflown with blood’ (Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, bk 10, chap 3, par 3)

This evil king repented when he was in affliction, after the king of Assyria captured him and took him to Babylon. He pleaded with the Lord who had mercy on him and brought him back to Jerusalem. Upon his return Manasseh cleaned house by putting away all the idols out of the temple and the country but it was too little too late. Idolatry was so engrained in his people by then that they continued to worship in ‘high places’ and when his son Amon succeeded him, he returned the people to full blown idolatry again (2 Chronicles 33:10-22).  This is a perfect example of how much damage one man can do to a whole nation.

Enter Josiah. He was only eight years old when he began his 31 year reign. This was a man who as a child watched babies scarified to the god of fire, Moloch. A man who in adulthood became highly troubled by the spiritual decay of the kingdom he inherited. The  truth had been lost and the covenant between Israel and Jehovah forgotten…..until he set about repairing the temple and ‘the book of the law’ was found (2 Kings 22:8-11). Some historians have suggested this book was Deuteronomy and some have concluded it was the entire Pentateuch (the first five books of the Bible written by Moses).

When the book of the law was read to Josiah,  he realized how far Israel had strayed from the one true and living God and in his grief he tore the clothes on his body (2 Kings 22:11). Josiah cleaned the land of idolatry even more scrupulously than Manasseh but he could not bring about a thorough conversion of the people. Chapter 23 of 2 Kings outlines his detailed efforts of cleansing the insidious practice of idol worship but he could not undo the damage his grandfather Manasseh had done. Not even by putting his people under the covenant could he uproot the deep inward apostasy of the people. (2 Kings 23:26)

History records there was no king like Josiah before or after him. That he loved the Lord with all his heart, his soul and with all his might (2 Kings 23:25).

This is the lesson we can learn from Josiah. No matter what family we come from, what our upbringing was like and who raised us, we still have a choice to forge our own path in the world. No habit, false belief, addiction or immoral behaviour of those around us has to have power over us. We are in charge of our own destiny and have the ability to say: ‘this ends with me’.

The God of Israel saw Josiah’s grief when he heard the book of the law and when he tore his clothing. He recognized his sincerely and his desire for obedience and his efforts to turn the tide. He promised him that he will be ‘gathered unto his fathers and into his grave in peace’ so that he will not see all the evil which He would bring upon Jerusalem to punish the people for their disobedience (2 Kings 22,19-20).  Josiah died at age 39 in the Valley of Megiddo at the hands of the king of Egypt (2 Kings 23:29). And all Judah and Jerusalem mourned for him (2 Chronicles 35:24)

- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art by AI)






THE VICTORY

 



As Golgotha raged and tore

Your flesh without mercy

The Garden sprang anew,

As from every drop You spilt

New flowers came into bloom.

How pitiful the cross that claimed You

Not knowing it sent a God to a

Darkened tomb!


-     Cathryne Allen


Thursday, 16 July 2026

THE MEDIATOR

 




“Each of us lives on a kind of spiritual credit. One day the account will be closed, a settlement demanded. However casually we may view it now, when that day comes and the foreclosure is imminent, we will look around in restless agony for someone, anyone, to help us….

“Unless there is a mediator, unless we have a friend, the full weight of justice untampered, unsympathetic, must, positively must, fall on us. The full recompense for every transgression, however minor or however deep, will be exacted from us to the uttermost farthing.

“But know this: Truth, glorious trust, proclaims there is such a Mediator. ‘For there is one God, and one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus’  (1 Timothy 2:5). Through Him mercy can be fully extended to each of us without offending the eternal law of justice. This truth is the very root of Christian doctrine.”

-          Boyd K. Packer, “The Mediator”  General Conference April 1977

 

Like a bird in flight

My sins ascend to Thee;

Rising from the ashes of mortality,

They seek Thy love to set them free.


- Cathryne Allen 


TRUSTING HIM

 



“On the night of the greatest suffering the world has ever known or will ever know, He said, “Pease I leave with you, my peace I give unto you….Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let it be afraid.” (John 14:26-27)

“I submit to you that may be one of the Saviour’s commandments that is, even in the hearts of otherwise faithful Latter-day Saints, almost universally disobeyed; and yet I wonder whether our resistance to this invitation could be anymore grievous to the Lord’s merciful heart.

“I can tell you this as a parent. As concerned as I would be if somewhere in their lives one of my children were seriously troubled or unhappy or disobedient,  I would be infinitely more devastated if I felt that at such a time that child could not trust me to help, or should feel his or her interest were unimportant to me or unsafe in my care.

“In that same spirit, I am convinced that none of us can appreciate how deeply it wounds the loving heart of the Saviour when He finds that His people do not feel confident in His care or secure in His hands or trust in His commandments.”

-          Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, Created For Greater Things, A Collection of Inspiring Quotes

 

You come to me to dispel the darkness

And embrace me in the splendour of Your light.

Even in the midst of Your Godly moments

You attend to the needs of my feeble heart.

I give my all to You who are

My wings of protection,

The Saviour of my soul,

The path to my eternal home.

 

- Cathryne Allen 


Wednesday, 15 July 2026

THE ONE

 



He is my Sovereign,

He is the king of all kings,

He is my wings of protection,

He is my everything.

 

-      Cathryne Allen