Spiritual Insights
Tuesday, 16 June 2026
KAHLIL GIBRAN ON PAIN
A FALL FROM GRACE
The year I
studied David’s story for the first time, I was as devastated with his fall
from grace as much as I was enthralled by the Israelite boy who slew a lion and
a bear (1 Samuel 17:34-36) and ‘the uncircumcised Philistine who dared to defy
the armies of the living God’ because ‘there was a cause in Israel’ (1 Samuel 17:26,29).
His Israelite blood coursing through his veins with valour and warrior spirit
won my heart. I considered him one of the inspirational voices of the Old
Testament as I followed his rise from the heroic Israelite boy to the king of
the golden age of Israel.
David’s
achievements impressed me but his psalms blew me away. His words appealed to the
poet in me. I was enchanted by the depth of his soulful worship of Jehovah and
the national sovereignty of Israel that was so closely knit with his heart. However,
I learnt much from David and his humanity. He showed very well that no matter
how high you climb, the ground beneath your feet is never 100% steady. In this
life of uncertainty, if we are not alert enough, we will likely one day fall. The
worst of it is when the fall costs you your exaltation.
Despite all his great accomplishments David made one very big
error of judgment. He became very comfortable as a monarch of a successful
kingdom. This comfort zone became detrimental to his ability to endure to the
end. As his kingdom ran like a well-oiled machine, his approach to his kingly
duties became somewhat lax. "At the time when kings go forth to
battle" (2 Sam 11:1) David chose to send Joab and all Israel to fight
Ammonites while he remained in Jerusalem, strolling upon the roof of his house
to cool off in the heat of the night.
This was David's first and big mistake that began his gradual
demise into depths of sin from which he could not extricate himself. Sin seldom
happens in one giant leap. As Elder Boyd K. Packer says: "I don't think
anyone steps off a precipice into the depths of immorality and apostasy. They
slide down the slippery sides of the chasm...." (Improvement Era. May
1970, p. 7)
It would seem that David didn't think he needed his armour of God
on such a hot night while he was lounging and relaxing away from battle but the
adversary doesn't take sabbaticals and he took advantage of David's lack of
protection. David spotted a temptation bigger than the Goliath he slew so
valiantly some years prior. Not turning away once he happened to see a woman
washing herself his gaze lingered enough to discover she was beautiful. Not
content with leaving it there, he inquired about her. This should have stopped
him in his tracks for the reply he got was that her name was Bathsheba (which
means "daughter of the covenant") and that she was married to a man
called Uriah (which means "Jehovah is my light").
The adultery that happened next was tragic but what happened after
it was devastating. David dared to believe that he could conceal his sin, not
just from Israel but from God. As he devised one plan after another to cover
his sin, he developed a treacherous character that led him to the loss of his
salvation. When he failed to entice Uriah to spend time with his wife so that
the conceived child could be passed off as his, David allowed the spirit of
murder to enter his heart. He devised a plan that would ensure Uriah's death at
the front lines of battle and took Bathsheeba to be his wife.
At what point do you think David could have stopped himself from
advancing towards the edge of the precipice? None of this need have happened if
David was at the right place at the right time, namely, out on the battlefield
instead of the roof of his house.
A warrior with a battle he so tragically lost….a loss that no
doubt pierced the heart of Jehovah…..
What win I
if I gain the thing I seek?
A dream, a
breath, a froth of fleeting joy?
Who buys a
minute's myrth to wail a week
Or sells
eternity to get a toy?
For one
sweet grape, who would the vine destroy?
Or what
fond beggar but to touch the crown,
Would with
the scepter straight be stricken down.
- William Shakespeare
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: David's First Victory by William Strutt (1825-1915)
Monday, 15 June 2026
THE BOOK OF LIFE
Because I am a writer, the very essence of me
has been spilt on paper….in my journals, my blogs, my poetry. My thoughts, feelings, perceptions,
understanding, my lessons, my experience here on earth…is all documented. I
often look at my journals and notebooks I have used as my companions over the
years and I feel sorrow that I will leave them behind when I am called home.
I am convinced that I was a writer in my
pre-earth life and that all my writing is waiting for me somewhere in a room
that was my very own….and so I have also
hoped that there would be someone I know in heaven who has copied all my
earthly writing to add to the existing stash for me to own for eternity.
There just so happens to be a book in heaven in
which are recorded names of the righteous who will be immortalized in the analls
of eternal history. This book is called the Book of Life:
“In one sense the Book of Life is the total of
a person’s thoughts and actions – the record of his life. However, the
scriptures also indicate that a heavenly record is kept of the faithful,
including their names and accounts of their righteous deeds (Rev 3:5; 20:12;
D&C 88:2;128:6-7; Alma 5:58) .” (LDS
Guide to the Scriptures, Book of Life)
A St George Temple worker by the name of Elder
John Mickelson Lang received a revelation in 1928 regarding the Book of Life that
explains the process of this record keeping:
“Every spirit that comes to earth has a
guardian angel, whose duty it is to keep a record of the individual’s
parentage, the conditions under which it was born, its inheritance,
environment, thoughts and desires, and when the individual’s life is completed,
the guardian angel’s mission ends. It returns, makes its report and hands in the
record it has kept. This record is placed upon the other book, spoken of as The
Book of Life. All this gave me to understand that in this other book is
preserved the names and perfect dates of every spirit that ever came to earth.”
(Joseph Heinerman, Temple Manifestations, (1836-1930), St George Temple)
I want to remember the beauty
Surrendered by the withered rose
And all the memories of my life
Near and far,
I want to take them with me
When I am called to cross the bar.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
A SUFFERING SERVANT
Chapters 52
and 53 of Isaiah contain the greatest Messianic prophecy identifying the
Messiah as ‘the Suffering Servant’. This was the Saviour’s role in His mortal
life. This prophecy is also dualistic in nature, meaning it speaks of two men
in very similar roles.
In this
prophecy Isaiah says the Saviour’s visage was “marred more than any man”. This
is a reference to His crucifixion and suffering on Calvary when He atoned for
the sins of the world (Isaiah 52:14).
When
visiting the Nephites, the Saviour Himself made it clear that there shall be
another servant in the latter days who shall accomplish ‘a great and marvelous
work’. Even though there will be many who will not believe him, the Saviour
said this servant shall be ‘marred’ because of them and be persecuted
throughout his life until they succeed in killing him. This latter-day servant
is Joseph Smith. (3 Nephi 21:9,10; Old Testament Student Manual, commentary for
Isaiah 52:13-15).
I am amazed
at how similar Joseph’s earthly life was to that of the Saviour’s. Like many
other prophets, he was the prototype of Christ. When Joseph cried out in misery
to God whilst in Liberty jail, the Lord told him that hell shall rage against
him (D&C 122:1-2). This truly proved to be true.
Right from
the beginning Joseph was aware that he was destined to be “a disturber and an
annoyer of Satan’s kingdom” (JSH 1:20). Two years prior to his death he said
that ‘envy and wrath of man have been his common lot all the days of his life
and that ‘deep water was what he was wont to swim in, which had become second
nature to him’ (D&C 127:2). That is a description of one hard life….
This is how
he saw himself:
“I am like
a huge, rough stone rolling down from a high mountain, and the only polishing I
get is when some corner gets rubbed off by coming in contact with something
else, striking with accelerated force against religious bigotry, priestcraft,
lawyer-craft, doctor-craft, lying editors, suborned judges and jurors, and the
authority of perjured executives, backed by mobs, blasphemers, licentious and
corrupt men and women – all hell knocking off a corner here and a corner there”
(Teachings of Prophet Joseph Smith, p 304).
Not only
did Joseph have to contend with the unbelievers but he often had to struggle
with opposition within the Church: “In early 1844 a group of apostates in
Nauvoo, Illinois, declared the Prophet Joseph Smith to be a fallen prophet and
tried to start a rival church. Some even held secret meetings, during which
they plotted to kill him” (See Glen L. Leonard, Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, a
People of Promise [2002], 357-62).
I am
certain that Joseph felt it was all worth it when the Saviour sealed upon him
his exaltation a year prior to his death:
“For I am
the Lord thy God and will be with thee even unto the end of the world, and
through all eternity, for verily I seal upon you your exaltation, and prepare a
throne for you in the kingdom of my Father…..Behold, I have seen your
sacrifices, and will forgive all your sins….”
(D&C 132:49,50)
A mission achieved, a life
well endured……I wonder how many of his critics would be willing to live a life like his.
You
stood so resolute and willing
In
the councils of heaven,
Knowing
the jaws of hell
Would
open at the mention of your name.
Still,
you knelt in the sacred grove
And
uttered the words of faith.
You
honoured your promise
To
restore the truth
And
you opened the heaven’s gate.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
Sunday, 14 June 2026
THE MIGHTY DAVID
There
has not been a king who loved the God of Israel more than King David. When he
conquered Jerusalem he brought the ark of the covenant into the city ‘with
gladness’ and led a procession of Israelites playing instruments, shouting,
singing and dancing ‘before the Lord with all his might’ in praise of the God
he worshipped (2 Samuel 6:12-15). No king of Israel was more free from
idolatrous inclinations or practices than David. Because of this, he became the
standard of excellence that all subsequent kings came to be measured by (The
Old Testament Student Manual Book 2, Enrichment F-1).
David’s
valour and his accomplishments as king
were outstanding. His
reign is known in the annals of history as ‘the golden age of Israel’ (The Old
Testament Student Manual Book 1 p 287). His love
for the God of Israel can leave you breathless through the psalms he wrote
about Him. But David was also the greatest tragedy of the ancient world. His
life is the most dualistic out of any and accentuates Jehovah’s warning about
kings. It goes on to show, the higher the rise, the greater the fall. To
understand the tragedy of the fall we must understand his accomplishments as a
king.
David did
three things for temporal Israel that typify what Christ will do for spiritual
Israel. Firstly, following Saul's death, Israel's kingdom was divided in
two for seven years. The tribe of Judah accepted David as their king and the
rest of the tribes of Israel were ruled by Ishbosheth, one of the sons of Saul,
whom Abner, Saul's commanding general set up as the new king (2 Sam 2:8-9).
Despite being
anointed as Israel's king, by Samuel, the prophet, David refrained from taking
action against Ishbosheth in honour of the covenant he made with Jonathan not
to retaliate against Saul's family when he came to power. Following
Ishbosheth's murder David showed great wisdom and judgment by executing the two
men responsible (see (2 Samuel 3). This brought him into favour with the tribes
under Ishbosheth and ultimately united all twelve tribes into one nation under
the ultimate leadership of God.
Secondly,
David succeeded in winning the whole extent of the promised land for the
covenant people. For the first time the chosen people of the Lord controlled
the whole land promised to Abraham's posterity nearly a thousand years earlier.
Thirdly, David
established Zion or Jerusalem as the spiritual and political center of Israel.
Under David's reign Israel reached its golden age. Never before had Israel
achieved such heights of power nor did they ever again. (Old Testament Student
Manual, Book 1 p 291)
All this for
the love of Jehovah and then this: “….As the transgressor moves deeper and
deeper in his sin, and the error is entrenched more deeply and the will to
change is weakened, it becomes increasingly near-hopeless, and he skids down
and down until either he does not want to climb back or he has lost the power
to do so.” (President Spencer W. Kimball, The Miracle of Forgiveness [1969],
117). This became the tragic path of David but more of that later….
So do we hold
David in our esteem as the greatest Israel king or do we think of him as a
tragedy to be remembered???
David was
anointed to sit on the throne of Israel and to establish the royal family that
would produce the King of Kings who would one day sit ‘on the throne of his
father David’ (Luke 1:32-33). My question
is this: was David chosen to be an example of the good King who was to come or
was he chosen to show that no king can be as good as the King that was to
come????? I often think our present-day governments will with their weakness
and corruption accentuate the blessing that the King of Kings will be when He
comes to govern the world.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: King David Playing the Harp by Gerard Van Honthorst [1622]
HE WHO KNOWS ME BEST
The
greatest surprise of this stage of my life, as I struggle with bad health, is how
it has affected me mentally and how I have responded to it. I never knew its
effects would be so far and wide. As I have looked back over my life, I had to
admit to myself that I didn’t know beforehand how I would react to anything I
have experienced in my life.
Sometimes
we think we know ourselves but we really don’t. I have noticed the push in our
society is to invest ourselves in achieving this very thing….we are told it’s
the greatest thing we can do. Experience, however, seems to do that with great
proficiency. This is why we are here.
I had a
very unusual experience which I wrote about recently. I was musing about my life, which is
happening more often than ever before as I approach the last leg of my journey
here. As I was reflecting, I found myself in my mind in front of the great
Judge, God the Father. He asked me three questions: How did you enjoy your
mortal probation? What do you think you learnt from it? How do you think you
did overall?
An
understanding like no other flooded my being that there was nothing I could
hide or tell half-truths about because He knew the very essence of my being: my
innermost thoughts and intents, my sins, my rebellious moments in response to
my sufferings, the times I had questioned Him and His goodness, my dislikes and
likes, my conduct, my earthly indignities, my ingratitude, everything that made
me tick….there was nothing, absolutely nothing about me or in me that He did
not know. Every time I opened my mouth, nothing would come out. I knew with
every fibre of my being that He knew the answer to every question before I
could form it in my mind.
I
felt like I was transparent before Him. He was not watching me but looking into
the very depths of my soul. It was as if He was inside me. I understood clearly
as I understand that day follows night because I can see it, that God is so
inter-connected with His children that it defies our mortal understanding. We,
here and now, do not know and cannot fathom our spiritual origin or the
Father’s connection with His children. God is beyond our understanding.
Then
hope flooded my being. I had nothing to say and would not need to. There was
someone else who saw into the very depths of my soul during the greatest moment
of suffering known to man. He who absorbed the totality of my life could and would
answer all the questions the Father would have of my conduct on Judgment Day: my
intentions, my achievements, my failings. He, the Advocate who suffered for my
soul would with His strength make up for my frailty (D&C 45:4-5).
This
is grace, the ultimate all-encompassing gift, second only to eternal life. This
grace too is beyond our understanding. We will fully come to know it when we
are face to face with the justice of the Father. We will know then who the
Saviour truly is…a sacrifice that none of us could give, a hope of salvation,
another God we are yet to comprehend.
Often You come into my mind
And I wonder about my ‘enoughs’:
Did I go to Church enough?
Did I serve enough?
Have I done enough?
I see you in my heart smiling
And I know….
What will matter in the end the most
Is not what I have done
But what I have become.
I follow in Your footsteps
And try to be like Thee
But often fail because of weakness
that is in me.
Your blood flows from Calvary still
And I hear You say:
It is enough, I will make up the rest,
I accept Your holy quest!
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
Saturday, 13 June 2026
THE WISH
I look back
on my upbringing years in Croatia during the 60s with great fondness. A large
part of my gratitude goes to the Catholic Church for giving me my foundation of
faith in God. I cannot separate my memories of my country from my Catholic
upbringing. It was so much a part of my youth. I was the one in my family that
attended Church services and confessions. It was an entire culture of my
upbringing and all I knew of life.
At the end
of the street we lived in was the cemetery with our local church. That cemetery
with the church was the focal point of our neighbourhood. We had to walk
through it to get to three other streets. In one of those streets was my school
so the cemetery and the Church became my daily visit. School was divided into
two shifts, the morning shift and the afternoon shift. The afternoon shift didn’t
end until 6 pm. In winter, when the sun went down early, it was an interesting
walk home….
I never
looked at the cemetery with morbid attitude. I am a poet and I feel deeply. I knew
graves with poetic and heart rendering prose on the gravestones. I knew where
children were buried and I knew which graves were visited often. All Saints Day
was one of my favourite times of the year. The cemetery came alive with
visitors coming and going all day and at night the place was alight with
candles. It was magical.
The
cemetery was also our playground with luscious grass to configure the clouds in
our minds and to simply get together with friends and play. This is where we
smelled the first sign of spring with the violets and new flowers born after
the snow had melted. It also heralded one of my favourite times of the year –
Easter. Easter Sunday found us at Church with our baskets of food for the
priest to bless. Christmas was another. Buying presents was not the custom I
was ever familiar with. What I looked forward to the most was the nativity
scene in our Church. Christmas was all about Jesus.
When my
family moved to Australia in my early teens, my world changed. As I saw beyond
my little Croatian town, my thinking and wondering went into overdrive. By the
time I was 16, I was asking serious questions like, ‘what is the purpose of
life?’ and ‘why am I here on this
planet?’ I realized that the Catholic Church did not have a lot of answers.
I found the
answer to my purpose in life when I was 17 years old, in the doctrine of a church
I had heard about, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It is
called The Plan of Salvation. It blew me away with its simplicity and
truthfulness. It taught me that I lived with God in pre-earth life as a spirit
and that I was born into mortality to one day be resurrected to immortality and
live with God again. And not just to live with Him but to become like Him, who
is a resurrected, exalted God.
In this
Church, I found Christ. He was no longer someone out of my reach that I believed
died for me but a personal Saviour of my soul, with a kinship going back to the
life I lived before. My association with Him deepened over the years. The more
I learnt of Him, the more of an idol He became. I know I wanted to be like Him
before I was even born because He was and is the path to my eternal existence.
I know who
He is, He is ……the bread of life (John 6:31,51), the light of the world (8:12),
the good shepherd (10:11,14), the resurrection and life (11:25), the way, the truth
and the life (14:6). He is also the potter and we are the clay in His hands
(Isaiah 64:8). He makes of us what we can never become on our own. He is the
Master builder and the Master healer of our souls. He is our only hope of
salvation and there is none else (Isaiah 43:10-11; 45:5,6,14,18,22; 46:9; Deut
4:35,39; 5:8; 1 Kings 8:60; D&C 76:1; 2 Nephi 25:20; 31:21; Moses 6:52)
I had a
memory from my pre-earth life some time ago. I was sitting with the Saviour and
He was saying to me: “I will save you and I will make up for everything.” When
I cry my tears, it’s a memory to hold onto.
When in the realms of heaven
You asked me what in mortality
I
wanted to be,
It
was so easy, I said I wanted
To
be like Thee.
You
warned me of the suffering
That
would have to equal in measure
To
what you would suffer for me;
That
my life would not be easy
But
that You would
make
up for everything.
Now
I am here,
I
fear the refiners’ fire of the kiln
When
Your potter hands are moulding me
But
I try to be the woman I was who said
She
wanted to be like Thee.
Some
days I want to change my wish
I
am not worthy to bear my suffering,
But
then I notice the chains
around
my heart are broken,
and
I remember:
You
will make up for everything.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: Spring of Life by Chris Brazelton)
Chris Brazelton - Official Website






