Saturday, October 12, 2013

"And wuv, tru wuv..."

October 12, 2013,

Blogging about women and the priesthood has brought to the surface all my many trains of thought on the subject of what constitutes an equal, fulfilling, and happy partnership in marriage. So, I figure this is as good a time as any to post. Fact: The equality of the priesthood and motherhood is founded on the eternal truth that men and women are suppose to be equally powerful.

It is a logical function of the brain to toss out anything that isn't working; it is in fact, a survival mechanism and serves us well in many settings. One place I don't think it's working for us is in the current views (based on current statistics) on marriage. I think the way the brain works is if this mechanism is activated too many times in one setting, it sends the conclusion to the brain and eventually the heart that the we should remove ourselves from the setting permanently. Now insert the contradiction: the innate and ingrown fear of what we don't know and can't control...which leads to a sense of emotional paralysis. In other words, most people are emotional pack-rats. The result? Divorce, separation, and high amounts of pain, frustration, heartbreak and repulsion.

Dr. John L. Lund has said something along the lines that it's time we were honest and admit that we will either marry our greatest trial or give birth to it. (not that men give birth birth, but you get the concept.) So, it makes sense that emotional paralysis could happen often in marriage. So what's up with this?

     I think we are misusing the structure of marriage. I don't think the structure itself is the issue, for God's laws are truth, but I think it's important to remember that we need to apply truth to truth, otherwise we turn truth into a lie. God will not be mocked and we cannot expect that we will be excused for actions committed in the name of misused truth. It is impossible for us to be saved -or find any semblance of happiness- in our ignorance*. It's time to step up to the plate and be real, otherwise we are going to get left behind, crippled by our own fear of doing something wrong. 1 Peter 1:14, Ephesians 4:18. Doctrine and Covenants 131:6

*Ignorance: Purposeful (whether conscious or sub-conscious) avoidance of truth in order to sidestep responsibility.

I am currently very single, therefore I can understand any trepidation about trusting or considering the words of someone who has never really "been there", or "knows what it's like".  However, my singleness also leaves me as a very unbiased and interested third party, a party who is more than willing to face and address her misconceptions about marriage and marriage relationships. I am also a hopeless romantic, complete with all the gushy, mushy, poem-writing tendencies that come with it. So, while I may not be the most experienced source, I believe there is some merit in what I am about to say.

1. Sacrificing too much is just as bad as not sacrificing enough.

     They say marriage is give and take, a meeting at the half-way point and in order to give and take, you have to compromise and compromise requires sacrifice. For the record, I hate the word compromise in this context. Marriage is about bringing two different people with different backgrounds and outlooks together and creating a new future. It's cooperation, not compromise. It's a merger, equal companies joining assets to improve productivity and net increase.It sounds like merging traffic during rush hour to me.  What it does not require is sacrificing identity. There is a huge difference. A marriage only works if both individual identities remain uncompromised.  Characteristics or tendencies such as anger, impatience, selfishness, martyr complex, etc, need to be addressed in a relationship because they only manifest at the expense of another person's identity; they play off of the weak or insecure points in a person's character. They are the very antitheses of love, both for self or for other people. They are also defensive mechanisms, a desperate, albeit typical attempt to protect one's vulnerability. It is taking the energy of the true emotion and projecting it outward into an emotion that effectively takes the responsibility off of you and onto another person or circumstance. Sacrificing too much is also a defense mechanism. It is protecting ourselves from the understanding that we can never be perfect, we can never control a situation enough to avoid pain, frustration or aggravation. It is the ultimate cover-up. Sacrificing too much means trying to be the answer to everything, always being the one to give in, give up, or fall back in order to avoid confrontation. These things are crucial to a healthy marriage relationship, but there is a line. A line that gets crossed too often.

     Here is the kicker: If you are sacrificing too much, then you are encouraging/causing/teaching your spouse to sacrifice too little. Funny thing is, the real change in the relationship usually comes down to the "weaker" (horrible word, but it gets the point across) person or the person who looks most like the victim.

It's a doubly-barbed threat either way, in order to truly fill someone's needs, you have to fill your own. The merger comes when you start to realize what are needs and what are societal and background-based expectations that are expendable.


2. "Love at home" does not mean "Happy at home all of the time".

Home is that safe place where the beautiful after the storm can happen, can be savored, can live. Home is the go-between between heaven and hell, wrong and right, chaos and stability, love and hate, fear and faith. That means it's going to get messy. It's not a sterile environment, and that's ok. What better place than home?


3. If you feel like you are in the background and are unable to feel satisfaction in yourself, you are probably doing too much.

 If you are not feeling good about yourself, or if you feel unappreciated, then it means somewhere your needs aren't being met. Sometimes the decisions we make ourselves, even if they seem innocent enough are the very opposite of what we actually need and create this feeling of emptiness, and sometimes it is because the people we are involved are being dorks. However, either way, it is our personal responsibility to address the emptiness on the inside. They say that you cannot rely on circumstances to make you happy. Well, you can't. Our identity has to be filled with our own beliefs, our own understandings, and our own convictions, otherwise we are running on phantom fumes. If we rely on an outside source to validate our identity, say a neighbor, a parent, child, sibling, spouse, mentor, teacher, or otherwise, we are placing our sense of self in the hands of another mortal, one whose ideas, motivations, and feelings are subject to change at any time. In other words, we leave our sense of worth to be judged and juried by the fragility of human emotions.

Taking responsibility for this means that we are willing to address our needs. You can't save someone who is drowning unless you know how to swim, otherwise you'll just drag each other down. In the same way, it is impossible to really be there for the person you love if you haven't been there for yourself.

In order to be a supportive spouse, you have to be your own best cheerleader, you have to believe in yourself.

4. Loving someone means that you are willing to do the hard thing.

The presence of love doesn't mean the absence of pain, it means that the happy times go deeper and the pain isn't wasted.

It's quite the cliche, but in a relationship, honesty is the best policy. Why? Because suppression of any kind of truth, and I mean any kind of truth causes stagnation, or to put it more bluntly, damnation. Damnation in its literal definition, as a stoppage or force against progression. It's not about making choices that make it the easiest for everyone, that is not love. It is about making the choices that facilitate the most future.

5. Fairy tale vs. Happy Endings

Growing up, I was the queen of the fairy tale fantasy. I knew what it was suppose to be like, and I wanted it. There would be a man, handsome, kind, basically perfect and we would be the most beautiful couple, and we would be completely happy, with no arguments, no frustrations, we would like all the same things, and we would be the soul-iest soul mates this world had ever known. The dream, the expectation was my heart and soul. I felt like it would be the end, the destination, the pinnacle. It's been a journey to come to understand that what I really want is a happy ending, not a fairy tale. Well, I guess it's more correct to say a happy continuing, rather than a happy ending. The relationship is not an ending, it's a beginning, and more than that, it is a continuation of the you you were before. It comes down to realizing that it's not about the perfect fit, it's about the right fit. The fit that can support you, the fit that's got you're back, that's willing to give up the stupid things and hold to the important things, the fit that supports your dreams and gives you wings to fly, the fit that requires you to do the same for them, the fit that drives you to be a better and better you. It's not about the perfect fit, it's the right fit.

6. Being equally yoked.

Like I said before, the equality of the priesthood and motherhood is founded on the eternal truth that men and women are suppose to be equally powerful.  I am not intending to be sexist here, but I have seen so many women living more timidly than their true nature suggests and demands, because they think that is what is appropriate. Well folks, it's not. It is not appropriate. And the more timidly women choose to live, the more men will follow and the more it will become expected. That's the truth of the relationship between the priesthood and motherhood. That saying "Behind every good priesthood holder there is good woman"? Well, first of all, none of this "behind" stuff, that is total semantics. But the principal here is that women have the ability to set the tone of the progression of both self, children, and spouse. I am not ratting on men. Please understand that. I deeply respect men. But when I said our understanding of motherhood was compromised, I wasn't kidding. That was actually an understatement. It is our perception that is broken, not the system. I've seen it mostly in women, but that doesn't mean it only happens in that scenario. The bottom line is that people need to start being bold, because life is too stupid to be anything else. There is too much joy, too much opportunity to be had to waste time on being timid. There is only enough time to live.

7. The best way to avoid looking stupid is to take responsibility for your mistakes.

Like, really. It's not hard to spot. Might as well own up to it and keep your self-dignity intact. We have to be willing to take the risk that it might be our fault. I have seen so many times where people do not acknowledge their mistakes. So many times when people find it more important to be right than to be happy. From what I have observed, there is nothing more damaging than someone refusing to see the truth, especially if it means admitting that they messed up. Marriage is a risk. Happiness is a risky endeavor and it means we have to be willing to see, actually see. Not second guess, not dumb down, not punish, but see! That means it might be uncomfortable, but if nothing was ever uncomfortable, we would flat-line.


Anyway, I believe in love. I believe in passion. I believe in dreams, and growth, and hope. I believe in love.



Sunday, October 6, 2013

Women and the Priesthood

October 6, 2013,

This is not really a topic associated with my blog but it has been something that has been on my mind a great deal the past few months.

There has been an increase of talk about this movement surrounding the church concerning the rights of women and the priesthood. I appreciate the complexity of this query in a time when every right, belief, law, and expectation is being dismantled, disabled, and analyzed to find its worth and relevancy to the human individual.

So here's my opinion on the subject.

In a nutshell:

I believe that our understanding of motherhood has been compromised. Motherhood and the priesthood are two halves of the same whole. They work in harmony, unison, and are fueled by the same source: God's own power. Motherhood and the priesthood are equal in importance, power, and capability. Simply stated, they are the same thing.

Let me start at what I think is the beginning. It's kind of a long trajectory, but bear with me. (It also doesn't help that I'm rather long-winded.)

1. God's power, and therefore the power of the priesthood, is love in its purest form.

     God is all powerful; He is omniscient, omnipresent, and omnipotent. But what makes Him King of Kings and Lord of Lords is the fact that He is perfect. God is perfect because His motivation and use of His all-encompassing knowledge are perfect. That means that everything God does is for the right reason. Everything He does is done with a complete understanding of the consequences and without any ulterior motives.  Anything short of that would not be true perfection, and God would not be God, but merely an opportunist.
       There are many names and titles used to try to describe the magnitude and beauty of God's character; names such as Bread of Life, Living Water, Lamb of God, and Savior, just to name a few. Another name is one that becomes very relevant here. 1 John 4:8 states that God is Love. Moving along this theme is John 3:16, where the depth of God's love becomes clear in His willingness to sacrifice even the most precious of treasures to procure an environment where His children would be able to have a chance to grow and be happy. Our salvation rides on the love of God and our Elder Brother Jesus Christ. The Atonement is functional because Jesus Christ put His love for His brothers and sisters and for God ahead of every other feeling possible and fulfilled the Atonement. He went below all things, felt every pain, every sin, every horrible, frightening, disappointing, saddening or confusing thing ever felt by anyone and came through it all to provide us a means of escape and healing. That is love, and that is also power, because by doing so He becomes Judge, Juror, and Savior. He holds justice in one hand and mercy in the other, and there is nothing more powerful than that.

     A parent's love is the closest natural feeling to God's perfect love.  Love, sacrifice, dedication, judgement, and mercy, when used appropriately, become crucial proponents to the raising of children.


*1 John 4:8, 1 John 4:16, Matthew 22:36-40, 2 Nephi 2.

2. God gave Adam and Eve two commandments in the Garden of Eden. Eve took of the fruit and Adam joined her to gain experience and to obey the first commandment: raise a family. 

     From "Our Glorious Mother Eve":

"If it were left up to Adam, Adam and Eve might still be in the Garden of Eden and we wouldn't be here at all. While Adam seemed content with the status quo, Eve was not.  She had been named, “the mother of all living”, long before she ever bore a child.  How long did she have to wait before fulfilling that responsibility?  Eve did not choose to leave the garden for trivial, selfish gratification.  She opened the way for the birth of the whole human family.  Eve had courage and wisdom to say "let's get this thing going".
    ...Because of their choice to partake of the fruit and leave the garden, Adam and Eve had to accept certain painful consequences.  But you don’t hear of their complaining, and Eve even expressed gladness at the opportunity their transgression made possible:  “Were it not for our transgression we never should have had seed, and never should have known good and evil, and the joy of our redemption, and the eternal life which God giveth unto all the obedient” (she considered herself one of the obedient)  (Moses 5:11)  
Fortunately for us as well, Adam concluded that God’s command to remain with his wife was more important than His command to abstain from the fruit.  Again, it wasn’t going to be good for man to be alone.  Paradise may have been great, but Adam and Eve were now sufficiently mature enough to move on to their “real job”. It was not like Milton’s a Paradise Lost, but a Paradise Outgrown..."


Parenthood is God's greatest glory. Moses 1:39

*Vivian McConkie Adams' "Our Glorious Mother Eve."


3. Families are central to the Creator's plan.

     "THE FIRST COMMANDMENT that God gave to Adam and Eve pertained to their potential for parenthood as husband and wife. We declare that God’s commandment for His children to multiply and replenish the earth remains in force..“Children are an heritage of the Lord” (Psalm 127:3). Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children in love and righteousness, to provide for their physical and spiritual needs, and to teach them to love and serve one another, observe the commandments of God, and be law-abiding citizens wherever they live. Husbands and wives—mothers and fathers—will be held accountable before God for the discharge of these obligations...THE FAMILY is ordained of God. Marriage between man and woman is essential to His eternal plan. Children are entitled to birth within the bonds of matrimony, and to be reared by a father and a mother who honor marital vows with complete fidelity...Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their children. In these sacred responsibilities, fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners"
   
     I realize that some of the language sounds like women are expected to be stuck at home, cut off from the rest of the world and tucked away from social and career-oriented aspirations. This is soo far from the truth it hurts. We have been told that home should be and is a piece of heaven on earth. It is the only place besides the temple that is the contact point between heaven and earth. God is asking us to spend more time nearer to Him? That's not a punishment, it is a compliment!
      My patriarchal blessing lists some of my qualities and gifts, it urges me to gain education, and learn all I can possibly learn, and then comes the clincher. It says that I need to gain this information to accomplish my greatest mission; that of being a wife and mother. This is not a let down. This is an insight into the sheer importance of this role. It  literally blows me away. I am working on my Masters degree and plan to obtain a DMA before I am done. I have come to understand that I need the experiences associated with my degrees in order to be able to fully be prepared for marriage and a family, and you know what, I am okay with that. I am so okay with that, because I want to become like God and I want to raise my children knowing that I am becoming fully converted.

I'd like to use a personal experience to illustrate another point. My mother did not complete a college degree, she finished some of her generals, and then married my Dad and began raising me and my three fellow hooligans. My mother is one of the most intelligent, powerful, beautiful, mature, generous, and incredible human beings I have ever met. Anyone who knows her will tell you the same thing. She is a veritable goddess incarnate. She has never stopped progressing, learning, exploring or growing. She has become what she is because of her experiences in rearing her overly emotional children and establishing an equal partnership with my dad. To me, she is a true example of a mother and she rejoices in her motherhood. She is powerful and bold, she is a true revolutionary, and her strength comes from reliance on the Lord and her dedication to motherhood. This is what motherhood provides us. True progression, true experiences that bring us closer to godhood.  

*The Family: A Proclamation to the World

4. Exaltation only comes through eternal marriage, and man and woman are equal partners.

      I suggest the everyone read Vivian McConkie Adams' "Our Glorious Mother Eve." It really provides clarity on the events in the Garden of Eden. It's just too good not to quote, so here we go:

"In English, the word “helpmeet” sounds like the woman was supposed to be an assistant of lesser status.  Those who have studied the word in ancient languages tell us it means equal partner, a power equal to, worthy of, exactly corresponding to.  Obviously more than just a companion dog.  
It comes from a root word that also implies to be strong, to succor, to rescue, to save, to “deliver from death”.   Eve was in very deed, a Savior to man, choosing to give up her lifestyle and life, die a mortal death that mankind might be.  It was her job to save those spirits waiting to come through the veil by giving them bodies. This is Eve’s legacy for all women, not just within the bounds of marriage and child bearing.   All daughters of Eve have the obligation to be as a “mother to all living”, dedicated to saving their own little corner of the world.   ...“Thy desire shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee” (Moses 4:22).  Some men will interpret this verse as God’s permission to disregard a woman’s wisdom and to force her desires to his. President Gordon B. Hinckley explained that Adam's "ruling over" Eve really means "to responsibly provide for, to protect, to strengthen and shield [his] wife." That sounds to me like more of a Christ-like role.  The greatest of all came to serve, not to be served.  (See Mark 10:44-45)
Like Adam, if men hearken carefully to the counsel of women, they may come to know, like Adam came to know, that women possess a certain kind of wisdom and power that men need.  President Harold B. Lee had said – “The purest form of revelation is the intuition of a righteous woman”. We can do more than provide the refreshments and pour the punch....
What can women learn from Eve?
They have inherited a divine intuition 
God trusts their judgment   
He has a great and marvelous plan for them   
They can do hard things   
Their righteous sacrifices are accepted   
They can seek truth, chose wisely, and accept the responsibility   
They can articulate spiritual truths   
They are born with the inherent right to be the saviors of human souls   
They are an absolute necessity to building up the kingdom of God on the earth today
It is my prayer that women will be able to move ahead boldly like Eve, to make wise and thoughtful choices, and know that they are precious daughters of God, of divine heritage and worthy and fit for His kingdom on earth and in heaven..."

The fact that exaltation is only possible through eternal marriage supports the fact that motherhood and the priesthood are equally important. We cannot be saved without each other. Marriage is not the last piece of the puzzle, but rather it is both the subject and the approach to the puzzle. Interdependence is a celestial law. Marriage is where this becomes most relevant. Spouses should be equally yoked, no one is more important. Priesthood responsibilities are meant to support and uplift the responsibilities of motherhood and vice versa. Becoming one, becoming unified is essential to becoming like God. This is just one of the myriad reasons why families and eternal marriage facilitate exaltation.

*D&C 131-132, Vivian McConkie Adams' "Our Glorious Mother Eve."
   

5. The qualities of a good priesthood holder are exactly the same as those of a good mother.
   
     Comparing a list of qualities is really when I started to realize the connection between motherhood and the priesthood. Look at Doctrine and Covenants 121: 41-45:

Persuasion              Pure knowledge                                                                          
Long-suffering        Without hypocrisy (real conversion)                                            
Gentleness              Without guile (pure motivation)                                                    
Meekness               Reproving betimes with sharpness when inspired, followed by    
Love unfeigned       Increased love (loving the sinner without loving the sin)
Kindness                Charity
Faith                        Virtue
Increased confidence through progression.
     The power of the priesthood is accessed through the same qualities that a mother develops through her nurturing. This tells me that the end results for both parties is the same. We are all working toward the same end goal, and in order to get there, we need the same qualities. We are all working to become like God, which means we need to emulate His attributes and understand how to use the power He will bestow upon us. A power that is only available to us as we pursue these characteristics.

6. There is a micro and a macro application to every principal of the gospel.

     Just like the earth was created spiritually before it was physically created, the truths of the gospel are infused into every atom of existence, which means that there will be recognizable patterns and cycles in all areas of life, temporal, spiritual, mental, emotional or otherwise, and there will be an distinct, though perhaps subtle parallel between the spiritual reality and the physical reality. This also means that principals, truths, and scriptures can be used to explain what needs to be done on the personal level as well as on a worldwide scale. This is why you can read the same verse of scripture over and over, and depending on your current circumstances, you will learn something different every single time. One example from the scriptures is the concept of Zion. Zion has two accepted definitions: Zion the physical place and Zion the state of heart. Both are required in order for the kingdom of the Lord to be prepared,  and for us to be in a place where we can really become like God. The physical location of Zion is a group of people who already have Zion in their hearts, so the state of heart needs to be acquired before the physical Zion can really be completed. You really can not have one without the other. Elder Christofferson states "Zion is Zion because of the character, attributes, and faithfulness of her citizens."

     Motherhood and the priesthood work in tandem to pursue both aspects of Zion. The only difference is that the priesthood deals more with big picture logistics while motherhood has the opportunity to influence the longer trajectory; that is, the environment of the first and most formative years of a person's life. It's like the priesthood is the typical branches of the FBI, while motherhood is a deep cover op. One is not more important than the other, and both are utterly crucial. One begins on the micro and the other ends on the macro.

*Mosiah 18:21, Colossians 2:2, "Come to Zion"  D. Todd Christofferson,

From what I understand, the priesthood and motherhood operate under the same power, and are in
essence the same thing. They are two sides of the same coin, mirror reflections, equal power contingencies, two halves of the same Oreo. No matter how you choose to eat your Oreos, or interpret truth, it is still an Oreo.

One thing that I want to make really clear. Based on these conclusions it is also important to state that motherhood is a calling, not an event! We have responsibilities and blessing available to us whether or not we are currently or ever will be raising children.

Maybe women will hold priesthood offices at some point. Cool, I'm happy with the possibility. That works for me. I honestly don't care either way. I think it is much more important to focus on the call and responsibilities we have been given now. I feel that there is more we can do, more we can understand, more we can trust in the Lord to raise His children in righteousness and rejoice in the power we have been given. That is power and responsibility enough. I don't think we are accessing the true power associated with the office of motherhood, and until we do that, until I do that personally, I am not worried about having a priesthood office, because I already have one. I'm going to be a mother.


I think it's important that we ask these questions; we would be naive to think we are going to make it through the years ahead without coming to our own grips on these topics. What I do not think is helpful is approaching sensitive and complicated questions like these as if they were faults in the constitution of a government. The church is not a system to be corrected, manipulated or cajoled into something that seems more fair, relevant, or discerning. It operates under the reality of absolute truth. Absolute truth, truth that exists above and despite what the current understanding or intelligence level of human beings happens to be at the moment. This usually means if there is changing to be done, it is on our part. Hard, yes, but what is our goal? A sense of immediate satisfaction or the real deal? Granted, the church is run by imperfect people, but God will not let human mistake compromise the progression of the Kingdom. We can trust that there is a means to the apparent madness, even if it includes mistakes. So I say go to the source. Go to God, ask Him what is truth, ask Him to give you understanding. He will answer for He is good. I know that more than I know anything else and it makes me glad.


~Gabbi



This is a great article. Women and the Priesthood