Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Ode to Elder Maxwell

My last post had two great and fantastic quotes by Elder Neal A. Maxwell and it got me thinking that I should probably devote a post to some of my favorite quotes from this wonderful apostle. Please feel free to add your favorites that I may have missed:

The Lord does not ask us about our ability, but only about our availability. And then, if we demonstrate our dependability, the Lord will increase our capability.


Whether in tranquil or turbulent times, our best source of comfort is the Comforter.


Though we live in a failing world, we have not been sent here to fail.


God, who oversees the interlacings of galaxies, stars, and worlds, asks us to confess His hand in our personal lives, too...Just as the Lord knows all of His vast creations, He also knows and loves each in any crowd—indeed, He knows and loves each and all of mankind!


Ignoring the revelations about God’s astounding capacity is like playing aimlessly and contentedly with wooden blocks featuring the letters of the alphabet, without realizing Shakespearean sonnets were created using that same alphabet.


Spiritual submissiveness is not accomplished in an instant, but by the incremental improvements and by the successive use of stepping-stones. Stepping-stones are meant to be taken one at a time anyway. Eventually our wills can be “swallowed up in the will of the Father” as we are “willing to submit … even as a child doth submit to his father” (see Mosiah 15:7; Mosiah 3:19).


In striving for ultimate submission, our wills constitute all we really have to give God anyway. The usual gifts and their derivatives we give to Him could be stamped justifiably “Return to Sender,” with a capital S.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

I don't recall the exact quote but my favorite Maxwell-ism is about being 'high yield, low maintenance saints'.....can you find and post that one?

7Carters!E,H,V,B,R,C,E said...

Okay. I hope I found what you were thinking of. It may be found in multiple talks, but this was the only one that I found. And I really liked it!
"Part of discipleship should be to become high-yield, low-maintenance members of the Church. These members are not high profile; they won’t be on the six o’clock evening news when they die. But they have done what Heavenly Father has wanted them to do meekly and humbly."

Neal A. Maxwell, “The Holy Ghost: Glorifying Christ,” Ensign, Jul 2002, 56–61