Jeff and I spoke in our Sacrament Meeting (ie our worship service) today for Mother's Day. I went first and selfishly took up most of the time (ok, all of it), so he only gave a portion of his talk. Although what he said was powerful and sweet, I wanted him to have a venue to share what he worked so hard on. So, in honor of our mother's here are his thoughts:
First of all, Happy Mother’s Day. It’s really a pleasure to
speak on this particular holiday because, first, this year my wife, Amy, is a
mother for the first time. Max came along and changed our lives, and we both
feel like completely different kinds of people than we were even a few months
ago, as most people do, I imagine, when faced with caring for a little lump
with an often piercing wail and a limited but specific range of needs and wants
that require attention regardless of the time of day (or night). It’s been
life-altering in a way that may sound cliché, but only because we lack the
proper terminology for describing all of the distinct aspects, mental,
physical, spiritual, of this process, which is simultaneously common or
communal and subjective,
individualized, unique, and extremely personal. Because of these experiences,
mothers embody, figuratively and literally, all that cannot be explained about
these kinds of experiences, and so we celebrate.
Second, this day is special because, let’s face it, even if
you aren’t a mom, I imagine you have had one at some time or another who was
primarily responsible for getting you here, and that’s also a reason to
celebrate. It’s not like a birthday where we, for the most part, celebrate the
wrong person, using cake and candles and presents to say, “Way to be born!” to people
who physically did absolutely nothing
to get themselves here. My wife has an uncle who takes flowers to his mother on
his birthday to celebrate the person
to whom the day signifies more than just “I made it here! Aren’t you proud of
me!” but also a lot of love, pain, and fulfillment in providing a physical body
for one of Heavenly Father’s children, and I don’t mean fulfillment simply in
an obligatory “I have a role that I have fulfilled because I am a woman” kind
of way, but in the sense that one receives a kind of beautiful satisfaction and
sense of one’s own strength and individual ability as a woman in God’s kingdom.
At least on Mother’s Day, we are all in agreement, in thought and in deed, and
mothers are brought to the forefront as objects of our praise, admiration, and
gratitude.
In his novel Ninety-Three,
Victor Hugo depicts a scene in which French soldiers encounter a woman, a
widow, whose husband had been killed three days prior and who has two children,
but little or nothing to feed them. Hugo writes, “The eldest of the
children…said, ‘I am hungry.’ The sergeant took a bit of regulation bread from
his pocket, and handed it to the mother. She broke the bread into two
fragments, and gave them both to her children, who ate them with avidity.
“‘She has kept none for herself,’ grumbled the sergeant.”
“Because she is not hungry,’ said a soldier.”
“‘Because she is a mother,’ said the sergeant.” (16)
In this scene, which Jeffrey R. Holland has quoted in General
Conference, we witness an exchange that in some ways feels like an allusion to
the words of James 1:27: “Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father
is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction.” But it is
what comes after that initial bit of charity, given in the form of “regulation
bread” that is, to me, most noteworthy. First, the woman, who is starving
herself, eats none of the bread, but divides it among her two hungry children,
it appears, as a near reflex. The sergeant, seeing her self-denial, grumbles.
The soldier and he offer their interpretations of the act, the soldier
suggesting that she does because she isn’t actually hungry, while the sergeant
remarks that she does it because “she is a mother.” In the context of this
scene, neither remark is intended positively and instead serve to diminish the
magnitude of this act. The soldier’s remark dissolves any hint of sacrifice on
the mother’s part, implying that if she were hungry, she would have eaten some
first. The sergeant’s comment, that “she is a mother,” is not a kind of admiration
for this mother, but is instead a kind of grumbling judgment or second-guessing
of her act of devotion to her children. He sees the mother’s act as a weakness
or lack of control; she cannot do otherwise because of what she is. Why he
grumbles and how he means “Because she is a mother” is not clear, but it does
give us something to contemplate.
That the essence of motherhood stems in part from natural tendencies
is absolutely accurate, and this woman’s act at least on the surface features
characteristics we associate with reflexive action, an action that occurs
naturally in her because of a particular stimulus, the way a knee will jerk if
you tap it with a hammer. But we also know that human beings are born with
fallen natures; we have mortal bodies coupled with eternal spirits, and the
fallen part of ourselves is something we must wrestle with, through the
positive enactment of agency, throughout this life. This is not a negative; on
the contrary, if we do something good, it means we have to overcome the selfish
“natural man” part of ourselves in order to do it. Mothers are not exempt from
that. Through a repeated pattern of selfless acts, like so many mothers I know,
this mother has built a lifestyle of giving, of sacrifice, to the point that
her act becomes instantaneous, an act that at one time was a conscious process
that has become automatic, she is not at the mercy of her own nature but because
she has denied or conquered the animal part of her human nature that would have
seen to her own needs first.
In 1 Nephi 5, Sariah “complains” to Lehi, when her sons do
not return: “Behold thou hast led us forth from the land of our inheritance,
and my sons are no more, and we perish in the wilderness.” Now, I would first
like to say that I think it is significant that these lines and those in verse
8 when she bears her testimony that the Lord is in charge and that he did
protect their sons from Laban are the only times in The Book of Mormon that
Sariah has any quoted dialogue, so I’m pretty sure Nephi felt there was
something substantial to learn from this experience. Yes, Sariah does complain,
and we admit that. It says so right here. But please can we not consider all
the murmuring in the wilderness to be of
the same kind? Nephi’s brothers have a pattern of rebellion and throughout
these writings, but Nephi gives no indication of a similar pattern for Sariah.
He does not depict his mother as an incessant nag. If Hugo’s sergeant had been
involved in this story as well, he probably would have said that it was
“Because she is a mother” in a way that implies irrationality, uncontrollable
emotion, insubordination, and weakness. But this has nothing to do with that. What
we can extrapolate from the context of this outburst and apply what we know
about mothers, and mothers worrying, and why they worry, and how much they
worry, is that this is not the absence of faith so much as the presence of
sheer terror and worry and anxiety on behalf of her children, and this is
probably not, and this is my opinion of course, the first time she has been
subjected to that kind of distress. This is just the latest, I imagine, in a
series of sleepless nights. Laman and Lemuel’s complaints are self-serving and
self-interested, while Sariah’s come from a place of love, which is why, on the
one hand, Lehi corrects them, and on the other hand as Nephi explains, his
father “did…comfort my mother Sariah concerning us, while we journeyed in the
wilderness up to the land of Jerusalem” (1 Nephi 5:8). He understands that
Sariah is not angry at him so much as she is angry at the situation and
attempting to process the reasons behind it.
In light of these two examples, I would ask how can we know
how to serve mothers, ours or anyone else’s? Hugo demonstrates physical support
alone being given, while Lehi looks past what outwardly seems like rebellion
and supplies the proper response to Sariah’s pain. Physical and emotional
support are both highly important forms of service, and providing one and not
the other essentially equates to what Jesus said of the Pharisees, that “ye pay
tithe of mint and anise and cumin and have omitted the weightier matters of the
law” (Matthew 23:23). I think the key thing involves cultivating a perspective,
a discerning eye, that ability to see needs that are less obvious and fill
them. Ever since our little boy was born, my life is filled with opportunities
to serve my wife, to sustain her physically and emotionally, to meet her needs
and our son’s whether they are glaring or subtle, to understand the pain,
tiredness, and discomfort that lies just beyond what the natural eye can
perceive. If we really want to build the kingdom of God quickly, we should turn
our hearts to our mothers, as well as our fathers, and sustain them in the ways
they really need. As I work toward building my own consistent lifestyle of
self-sacrifice by overcoming the “natural man,” I hope that I can become that
person who loves the mothers in my life in ways they require and not
necessarily in the ways I think they need and by really understanding that
there is no such thing as an insignificant need.
1 comment:
This is awesome Jeff!
Post a Comment