Be of Good Cheer: Choosing Happiness
Challenges have always been part of mortality and God’s plan for our growth. Through the power of the Atonement, we can still “be of good cheer.”
     To the paralytic man lying helpless on a bed, Jesus proclaimed, “Be of good cheer” (Matthew 9:2). To the frightened Apostles battling the tempestuous sea, Jesus appeared on the water, declaring, “Be of good cheer” (Matthew 14:27). As Joseph Smith met with 10 elders about to be sent out on missions fraught with trouble and danger, the Lord announced, “Be of good cheer” (D&C 61:36).  In each instance the people had every reason to be anxious, fearful,  and hopeless, yet the Lord directed them toward a reason to rejoice.
How  does the Lord’s admonition of cheer sound in our world today? When  economic uncertainties, terrorist threats, and corruption provide top  stories for the evening news, how can the good news of the gospel  intervene? When we experience personal loss in so many ways and on so  many days, what is left to be cheerful about?
The Key to Cheerfulness
We  find the key to understanding this seeming contradiction in the context  of the Last Supper. Speaking to the Apostles in His final moments  before Gethsemane, Jesus said, “In the world ye shall have tribulation:  but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).  Elder Neal A. Maxwell explained: “The unimaginable agony of Gethsemane  was about to descend upon Jesus; Judas’ betrayal was imminent. Then  would come Jesus’ arrest and arraignment; the scattering of the Twelve  like sheep; the awful scourging of the Savior; the unjust trial; the  mob’s shrill cry for Barabbas instead of Jesus; and then the awful  crucifixion on Calvary. What was there to be cheerful about? Just what  Jesus said: He had overcome the world! The atonement was about to be a  reality. The resurrection of all mankind was assured. Death was to be done away with—Satan had failed to stop the atonement.”         1            
Christ’s  enabling power helps us feel happiness and cheer amid mortal gloom and  doom. Misfortune and hardship lose their tragedy when viewed through the  lens of the Atonement. The process could be explained this way: The  more we know the Savior, the longer our view becomes. The more we see  His truths, the more we feel His joy.
Consider two false assumptions that, if pursued, will block our appreciation of and access to the Lord’s divine assistance.
False Assumption 1: We Can Avoid Tribulation
First  is the false assumption that, if we are good enough, we can avoid  having bad things happen to us and those we love. If we can just keep  all of the commandments, pay an honest tithing, and have daily prayer  and scripture study, we can assure ourselves of His protection from  heartache, accident, or tragedy. But trials will surely come, including  when we are trying to do everything right.
If  we believe that God will shield us from tribulation because of our  obedience and then adversity strikes, we may be tempted to accuse God of  not hearing our prayers or, worse, of not honoring His promises.  Obedience to God is not insurance against pain and sadness. Challenges  have always been included in God’s great plan to test our faith and to  help us grow in humility and compassion.
The  Apostle Paul acknowledged, “There was given to me a thorn in the flesh,  … to buffet me, lest I should be exalted above measure” (2 Corinthians 12:7).  Part of Christ’s mission is to heal broken hearts. He came to wipe away  our tears, not to ensure that we would never weep (see Revelation 7:17). He clearly promised, “In the world ye shall have tribulation” (John 16:33).
False Assumption 2: We Can Trust in Our Own Efforts
A second false assumption might come from misunderstanding 2 Nephi 25:23—“It  is by grace that we are saved, after all we can do.” We mistakenly  deduce that we must first prove our worth through our obedience and  righteousness before the Lord’s sacrifice will cover us or His grace  enable us.
We may come to believe that we can and should trust in our own efforts rather than humbly acknowledge God. This is self-righteousness.  When we look through the lens of our righteousness and take comfort in  our good efforts, the idea of depending wholly on Christ (see 2 Nephi 31:19; Moroni 6:4) seems a bit risky.
Unwittingly, when we reason this way, we sound eerily similar to Korihor, the anti-Christ from the Book of Mormon,  who taught that “every man fared in this life according to the  management of the creature; therefore every man prospered according to  his genius, and … conquered according to his strength” (Alma 30:17), thereby arguing that his listeners had no need for Christ and His Atonement.
Such  thinking easily leads to justifying wrongdoing because we think we are  in control; we think we know better than others, and sin is not a  problem for us. If we can just get control over our world—our addictions  in all their varieties, our eating disorders and obsession with  thinness, our insistence that our house always be immaculate, our  fascination with outward evidence of education and success—then we can  finally be cheerful.
Christ declared, “In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33; emphasis added).
Be of Good Cheer
      Cheerfulness in the scriptural context connotes a divinely assured  optimism, “a deep trust in God’s unfolding purposes,” a grounded  conviction that God will always keep His promises.         2        When Christ proclaims, “Be of good cheer,” He is not  requesting a naïve, Pollyanna-like response to life’s cruel twists and  turns. Nor is He promising a pain-free life of constant bliss. Trial is  no respecter of persons. Tragedy and hardship do not discriminate. Our  world sees opposition among rich and poor, men and women, the righteous  as well as the wicked. The Savior specifically prayed that God would not  take us “out of the world” (John 17:15). “In this world your joy is not full,” He taught, “but in me your joy is full” (D&C 101:36). True happiness and satisfaction are found only by turning away from the world and coming to Christ.
Only  after Sariah feared the loss of her sons and then saw their deliverance  did she come to her own deeper conviction of the Lord and His plans.  She declared:
“Now  I know of a surety that the Lord hath commanded my husband to flee into  the wilderness; yea, and I also know of a surety that the Lord hath  protected my sons, and delivered them out of the hands of Laban, and  given them power whereby they could accomplish the thing which the Lord  hath commanded them” (1 Nephi 5:8).
She  discovered that Christ’s grace was sufficient. And when her sons  returned to their father’s tent, Nephi reported, “My mother, Sariah, was  exceedingly glad” (1 Nephi 5:1).  Naturally such gladness came because her sons returned safely. But such  joy is also evident in her witness that the Lord’s power enabled her  sons to do good works that they otherwise would not have been able to do  if left to their own means.
After  suffering physical and emotional persecution throughout years of  missionary labors, Paul landed in a Roman prison and then declared:
“I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.
“I  know both how to be abased, and I know how to abound: every where and  in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to  abound and to suffer need.
“I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me” (Philippians 4:11–13).
The Lord clearly promises, “In the world ye shall have tribulation” (John 16:33).  When we acknowledge that we each face difficulties, that the Savior  overcame the world, that He has lifted and strengthened and given vision  to each of us in very personal ways, we will realize that we are never  alone. We will feel a peace within even though the crisis without still  rages. We will be filled with hope and even cheer.
Christ Has Overcome the World
As mentioned before, Jesus Christ  has indeed overcome the world. As darkness has no power when light  appears, so the world cannot overcome the Light of the World (see John 1:5). He is the Victor, come to earth “with healing in his wings” (3 Nephi 25:2) for all humankind. He will not forsake us.
As  a mother hen covers her chicks with her wings, so the Redeemer will  surround us with His comprehensive power if we will come to Him (see Matthew 23:37). There is room under those wings for all of us, for He declares:
“Wherefore,  be of good cheer, and do not fear, for I the Lord am with you, and will  stand by you; and ye shall bear record of me, even Jesus Christ, that I  am the Son of the living God, that I was, that I am, and that I am to  come” (D&C 68:6).
True,  we live in a time of war, a day of conflicts and terrors not only among  nations but within our own hearts. But He who is the Balm of Gilead  (see Jeremiah 8:22)  is the Lord of all creation; only in Him are peace and serenity found.  Amid all our mortal gloom and doom, Jesus Christ has overcome the world.  Come, let us rejoice.
I think you know how I feel about this already. We choose our happiness. We either focus on what we have and the blessings that have been so graciously bestowed upon our heads, and live with a cheerful, grateful heart, focusing on the blessings that can come through adversity, and live happily. Or we choose to wallow in self pity, questioning God's will, and focusing on the things that we lack or the trials we have been given. I know that we all have trials. For some it may be financially, for some it may be health related, for others, mourning the loss of loved ones, some may find themselves in situations beyond their control, the victim of another persons choice, whatever Hardship we find ourselves in there is nothing that the atonement of our savior cannot overcome. Be of good cheer. Things will get better, and you will be grateful when you look back at the trails you have been given. If you rely on the savior, they will bring you closer to him, and give you a greater understanding of who he is and his sacrifice for you will become personal.

 
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