Tuesday, 19 May 2026

A BASKETFUL OF PROBLEMS

 


 

I carried my problems in a basket

To every friend I knew;

They rummaged and picked the ones

They thought they could stop me

From feeling so blue.

 

I carried my basket to the Saviour,

He recognised each problem so well;

He gave me the wisdom to solve them,

My suffering myself to quell.

 

He knew every fallen tear,

Every minute of fear and dread,

He knew the lonely road I travelled

And gave me solace instead. 


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: I Know You by B. Laura Wilson)

THE ONLY ONE

 



Some years ago, another divorced, single mother moved into my Ward which made us the only two women of that marital status in that ward. We struck up a friendship and I was grateful that there would be someone around who would understand me and my life. This proved more difficult than I thought.

The sister in question was vastly different from me. She was a career woman managing her own business and I was a lowly office worker, with no professional aspirations, struggling to make ends meet. She was a very strong, independent individual who handled her four children with ease and trained them well for a life of independence. I was a self-sacrificing mother who turned herself into a taxi driver for my young teenagers and who did everything in my power to spare them any discomfort and difficulty.

With time it became apparent to me that my new friend and I were reading the same book but we were not on the same page. In other words, we were two different individuals in the same situation but with different responses to that situation. We were different people and the same difficulties were affecting us differently. This taught me that it is futile to seek understanding from other people because of our differences.

I also came to understand another truth. Be careful of turning a close friend into your mentor. I had a handful of close friends that I used to seek advice from which I narrowed down to one confidant who I considered understood my spiritual journey more than anyone else but even though we had a very strong spiritual connection, our lives were vastly different. She was married and I was single, she was well and I was sick. I noticed with time that her advice was often, if not always, from her frame of reference and her experiences in life. I used to value whatever she said until I noticed that some of the advice she was giving me was not applicable to me.

When I became sick two years ago, I retreated into myself a lot and became very alienated from people I knew because I felt nobody understood what I was going through. Pain has a way of teaching you that. I had never been in a more isolating situation before in my life. All of a sudden I was incredibly alone with something I was dealing with that was very difficult. I knew it was futile to expect others to understand because nobody else had ever experienced what it is like to live in my skin……except only one..

I came to understand the Saviour’s lonely road He trod when He was here. This scripture seared my heart: “Reproach hath broken my heart; and I am full of heaviness: and I looked for some to take pity, but there was none; and for comforters, but I found none.” (Psalm 69:20). I understood a fraction of what He felt during the crucible of His life when He was forsaken by all. If Christ’s Atonement was a descent into the ‘bottomless pit’ of human agony, then I know that He alone understands my life and my sufferings…..because in that bottomless pit was my agony too.

I met You on the lonely road

And heard You say to me:

You will ever be mine

If you walk with me.

 

Your presence enthralled me,

Your exquisite love nearly ripped me apart;

I walked away from all else

Just to have You in my heart.

 

I walk now with Your hand in mine,

The lonely road paved with tears of love

Oh, if only everyone knew where to find You

And long for You to come!

 

- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Artist Unknown) 


Monday, 18 May 2026

MY KING REMEMBERS MY NAME


I don’t know how the sun remembers to rise,

Or how the stars remember their places.

I don’t know how the flowers remember to bloom,

Or how in spring the leaves fill their spaces.

It’s enough for me to know who created it,

And I’ll never be the same;

Because I know I have a God who loves me

And a King, who remembers my name.

 

My King, who remembers my name;

A mighty King, who remembers my name!

He is the Lord of all creation,

And yet, my King remembers my name.

I’m a small creature compared to His greatness;

I’m only one and the same,

But I’ll always be His, and He will be mine –

A King, who remembers my name!

 

I look at the world today with people

Rushing about without thinking of why;

Why we’re all here, and what is life about

And where we all go when we die.

But I know, and I’ll ever be thankful

That I know from whence I came.

I’ll go home to heaven once more,

To my King, who remembers my name.


- BONNIE LAKE BLOOMFIELD (7/5/20)

(Art: I Have Suffered for You by B. Laura Wilson)


 

TO REMEMBER



I wrote yesterday about God’s admonition to ancient Israel to remember their deliverance from ‘the house of bondage’. This practice was so ingrained in them that they took it to the new promised land in ancient America. Some notable references to this important part of their history in the Book of Mormon are: 1 Nephi 4:2,3; 17:23-42; Mosiah 7:19; Alma 36:28-29.  

Remembering became a legacy amongst God’s people. King Benjamin spoke of ‘remembering’ 15 times in his farewell speech to motivate his people to obedience to God (Mosiah 1:3,4,6,7,17; 2:40 twice, 41 twice; 4:11,28,30; 5:11,12; 6:3).

As I was reading Alma’s instructions to Helaman one day, I expected to come across this familiar scripture:   “O remember, remember that it is upon the rock of our Redeemer, who is Christ, the Son of God, that ye must build your foundation….…” I was convinced it was the advice that Alma gave to his sons. However, this scripture was nowhere to be found in the book of Alma.

I eventually found it in Helaman 5:12, and to my surprise I discovered this advice was given by Helaman to his sons Nephi and Lehi and not Alma to his sons. I then realized why I got that wrong. When Alma spoke to Helaman he also, at one time, began with, “O remember, remember…..” (Alma 37:13). Like father, like son…… The legacy of remembrance passed on from Alma to Helaman was so strong that Helaman named his sons Nephi and Lehi for this very purpose (Helaman 5:6).

Alma used the verb ‘remember’ 6 times in speaking to his sons (Alma 37:13,14,32,35; 42:11). Helaman used it 11 times in speaking to his sons in Helaman 5. Why did Alma put such importance on remembering? This is why:  As he lay unconscious he ‘remembered’ his father’s prophecy concerning the coming of Jesus Christ and when he pleaded with Christ to have mercy on him, he could not ‘remember’ his pains anymore (Alma 36:17, 19). Remembrance played a crucial part in his conversion. I guess you could say he too was delivered from ‘the house of bondage’…..

When we pass on from this life, we hope we will be remembered for ‘something’. None of us want to be forgotten. Nephi is remembered for his obedience, Alma for his repentance, Helaman for his strategic warfare, Captain Moroni for his passionate patriotism, Mormon for his discipleship, Moroni for his endurance, but one thing they all had in common was a firm foundation in Christ.

Our testimony of Him and what we accomplish because of it is the greatest legacy we can leave to our posterity and to the world…..because the memories we leave behind of ourselves help others to ‘remember’ and that remembrance will lead them to courage, good works, endurance and ultimately to eternal life. This is the power of the Book of Mormon and all holy writ…..it makes us remember Christ.  

The testimony we bear, as His disciples, can ensure the world remembers Him…and now more than ever, to prepare to meet Him. Because He remembers us, and He will never forget…” Can a woman forget her sucking child, that she should not have compassion on the son of her womb? Yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget thee. I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands; thy walls are continually before me….” (Isaiah 49:15-16)


 - CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art: Walk by Faith by Chris Brazelton)

Sunday, 17 May 2026

TRUST

 


I viewed my life as hopeless pieces

And shame consumed my fragile heart.

I questioned every move and every choice;

I berated, I gave no value to any part.

Not until my trust consumed me

And my will to heavens flew

Did solace nestle in my soul

And such freedom as I never knew.


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Art by David Beraru)


OUR PROMISED LAND

 


 We are about to study the book of Joshua this week. Joshua is one of those Old Testament figures we don’t talk about much yet there is so much to admire about the man. I feel he is overlooked to our detriment because he too, like Moses, was a prototype of Christ:

“Joshua, the son of Nun, of the tribe of Ephraim, was first called Oshea or Hoshea,….[Numbers 13:16], which signifies saved, a saviour, or salvation; but afterwards Moses, guided no doubt by a prophetic spirit, changed his name into….Yehoshua or Joshua, which signifies he shall save or salvation of Jehovah; referring, no doubt, to his being God’s instrument in saving the people from the hands of their enemies, and leading them from victory to victory over the different Canaanitish nations, till he put them in possession of the promised land…in the New Testament he is expressly called….Jesus [see Acts 7:45; Hebrews 4:8].” (Clarke, Bible Commentary, 2:3). In other words, in the original Hebrew both Joshua and Jesus were the same name.” (see Old Testament Student Manual Book 1 p 236)

As a preface to the Ten Commandments which Jehovah gave to Moses he made it clear why they were given: “I am the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of BONDAGE.” (Exodus 20:2). The operative word here is ‘bondage’. It has reference to the Ten Commandments which are meant to give Israel freedom. If Israel cleaved to obedience of the Law, they would never again be in bondage, physical or most importantly, spiritual. 

Thereafter, Moses made it a point to define the deliverance from Egypt as deliverance from ‘bondage’ (Det 6:12; 8:14; 13:5). After Jehovah confirmed to Joshua that he is to take charge of the Tribes and lead them to the promised land, He charged him to make the law the basis of all he did. He was not to vary from it or depart from it, all that he spoke was to conform to it, and he was to meditate upon it constantly (Joshua 1:5-8). Joshua followed these rules to the letter and like Moses, reminded Israel that they had been delivered from ‘the house of bondage’ in the land of Egypt (Joshua 24:17). He understood clearly what the God of Israel had done which made him a spiritual leader of God’s people as well as the physical one.

At the onset of conquest of the promised land, the mighty Jehovah spoke to Joshua and told him he is to conquer all the land from Lebanon to the river Euphrates (Joshua 1:4). In actuality, this meant the region south and southwest of the Lebanon mountains, north and east of Egypt, east of the Mediterranean coastal plain and west of the Arabian desert (OT Student Manual 1, p 236). In other words, the land that lay before Joshua was massive. Overwhelming, isn’t it? But Jehovah issued an admonition to Joshua to ‘be strong and of good courage’ three times (Joshua 1:6,7,9) assuring him: ‘I will not fail thee, nor forsake thee….be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest’ (vs 5,9).

And then the promise: Joshua was told that he must adhere strictly to the law of Moses and he shall have success (v 8) but not just any success, he was promised that his success would be so great that there shall not any man be able to stand before him all the days of his life (v 5). This Joshua did, obeying all of the Lord’s instructions with exactness (fascinating examples of this to look out for in his story). The result of his meticulous obedience?  A success unsurpassed:  the Lord was with Joshua; and his fame was noised throughout all the country’ (Joshua 6:27).

We, of the House of Israel, are standing on the earth which is our ultimate promised land. This earth will one day be redeemed and sanctified from all unrighteousness that it may be prepared for the celestial glory, that the bodies who are of the celestial kingdom may possess it forever and ever (D&C 88:17-20). This is our promised land. This is our ultimate forever home. 

Before each of us is the vastness of our mortal probation fraught with challenges and trials to conquer and overcome. It is also the ‘house of bondage’ from which the Saviour has delivered us through His atoning sacrifice if we will but obey the commandments, the path to unsurpassed freedom.....


- CATHRYNE ALLEN 

(Artist Unknown)


Saturday, 16 May 2026

RETURN TO HEAVEN

 



Will I be lost in crowds of heaven

When my mortal shell at last I leave,

And will this earthly life appear unreal

When my true home is to me revealed?

 

Will I come to see Thy face

I so often sought on bended knee,

And forget all the lonely moments

I suffered with merciful help from Thee?

 

My heart will rend within my chest

When I kneel before Thy throne;

I will weep with grateful heart

For cherished truths that I have known.

 

-       CATHRYNE ALLEN

(Art: Christ by David Beraru)