The Women of God
We know so  little, brothers and sisters, about the reasons for the division of  duties between womanhood and manhood as well as between motherhood and  priesthood. These were divinely determined in another time and another  place. We are accustomed to focusing on the men of God because theirs is  the priesthood and leadership line. But paralleling that authority line  is a stream of righteous influence reflecting the remarkable women of  God who have existed in all ages and dispensations, including our own.  Greatness is not measured by coverage in column inches, either in  newspapers or in the scriptures. The story of the women of God,  therefore, is, for now, an untold drama within a drama.
We men know the  women of God as wives, mothers, sisters, daughters, associates, and  friends. You seem to tame us and to gentle us, and, yes, to teach us and  to inspire us. For you, we have admiration as well as affection,  because righteousness is not a matter of role, nor goodness a matter of  gender. In the work of the Kingdom, men and women are not without each  other, but do not envy each other, lest by reversals and renunciations  of role we make a wasteland of both womanhood and manhood.
Just as certain  men were foreordained from before the foundations of the world, so were  certain women appointed to certain tasks. Divine design—not  chance—brought Mary forward to be the mother of Jesus. The boy prophet, Joseph Smith, was blessed not only with a great father but also with a superb mother, Lucy Mack, who influenced a whole dispensation.
When we would  measure loving loyalty in a human relationship, do we not speak of Ruth  and Naomi even more than David and Jonathan? And no wonder God with His  perfect regard for women is so insistent about our obligations to  widows.
A widow with  her mite taught us how to tithe. An impoverished and starving widow with  her hungry son taught us how to share, as she gave her meal and oil to  Elijah. The divine maternal instincts of an Egyptian woman retrieved Moses from the bullrushes, thereby shaping history and demonstrating how a baby is a blessing—not a burden.
What greater  conversation of anticipation has there been than that of Elisabeth and  Mary when also the babe in Elisabeth leaped in recognition of Mary? (Luke 1:41).
Does it not  tell us much about the intrinsic intelligence of women to read of the  crucifixion scene at Calvary, “And many women were there beholding afar  off.” (Matt. 27:55.) Their presence was a prayer; their lingering was like a litany.
And who came first to the empty tomb of the risen Christ? Two women.
Who was the  first mortal to see the resurrected Savior? Mary of Magdala. Special  spiritual sensitivity keeps the women of God hoping long after many  others have ceased.
The charity of  good women is such that their “love makes no parade”; they are not glad  “when others go wrong”; they are too busy serving to sit statusfully  about, waiting to be offended. Like Mary, they ponder trustingly those  puzzlements that disable others. God trusts women so much that He lets  them bear and care for His spirit children.
In our modern  kingdom, it is no accident that women were, through the Relief Society,  assigned compassionate service. So often the service of women seems  instinctive, while that of some men seems more labored. It is precisely  because the daughters of Zion are so uncommon that the adversary will  not leave them alone.
We salute you,  sisters, for the joy that is yours as you rejoice in a baby’s first  smile and as you listen with eager ear to a child’s first day at school  which bespeaks a special selflessness. Women, more quickly than others,  will understand the possible dangers when the word self is militantly placed before other words like fulfillment.  You rock a sobbing child without wondering if today’s world is passing  you by, because you know you hold tomorrow tightly in your arms.
So often our  sisters comfort others when their own needs are greater than those being  comforted. That quality is like the generosity of Jesus on the cross.  Empathy during agony is a portion of divinity!
I thank the  Father that His Only Begotten Son did not say in defiant protest at  Calvary, “My body is my own!” I stand in admiration of women today who  resist the fashion of abortion, by refusing to make the sacred womb a tomb!
When the real  history of mankind is fully disclosed, will it feature the echoes of  gunfire or the shaping sound of lullabies? The great armistices made by  military men or the peacemaking of women in homes and in neighborhoods?  Will what happened in cradles and kitchens prove to be more controlling  than what happened in congresses? When the surf of the centuries has  made the great pyramids so much sand, the everlasting family will still  be standing, because it is a celestial institution, formed outside  telestial time. The women of God know this.
No wonder the  men of God support and sustain you sisters in your unique roles, for the  act of deserting home in order to shape society is like thoughtlessly  removing crucial fingers from an imperiled dike in order to teach people  to swim.
We men love  you for meeting inconsiderateness with consideration and selfishness  with selflessness. We are touched by the eloquence of your example. We  are deeply grateful for your enduring us as men when we are not at our  best because—like God—you love us not only for what we are, but for what  we have the power to become.
We have  special admiration for the unsung but unsullied single women among whom  are some of the noblest daughters of God. These sisters know that God  loves them, individually and distinctly. They make wise career choices  even though they cannot now have the most choice career. Though in their  second estate they do not have their first desire, they still overcome  the world. These sisters who cannot now enrich the institution of their  own marriage so often enrich other institutions in society. They do not  withhold their blessings simply because some blessings are now withheld  from them. Their trust in God is like that of the wives who are  childless, but not by choice, but who in the justice of God will receive  special blessings one day.
I, along with my brethren of the priesthood, express undying gratitude  to our eternal partners. We know that we can go no place that matters  without you, nor would we have it otherwise. When we kneel to pray, we  kneel together. When we kneel at the altar of the holy temple, we kneel  together. When we approach the final gate where Jesus Himself is the  gatekeeper, we will, if faithful, pass through that gate together.
The prophet  who sits with us today could tell us of such togetherness, when at the  time of his overwhelming apostolic calling he was consoled by his  Camilla, who met his anguished, sobbing sense of inadequacy and, running  her fingers through his hair, said, “You can do it, you can do it.” He  surely has done it, but with her at his side.
Notice, brethren, how all the prophets treat their wives and honor women, and let us do likewise!
Finally,  remember: When we return to our real home, it will be with the “mutual  approbation” of those who reign in the “royal courts on high.” There we  will find beauty such as mortal “eye hath not seen”; we will hear sounds  of surpassing music which mortal “ear hath not heard.” Could such a  regal homecoming be possible without the anticipatory arrangements of a  Heavenly Mother?
Meanwhile,  there are no separate paths back to that heavenly home. Just one  straight and narrow way, at the end of which, though we arrive trailing  tears, we shall at once be “drenched in joy.” I so testify in the name  of Jesus Christ. Amen.




                                                     
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