(Adapted from a Sacrament Meeting
talk given on March 11, 2018, Mothering Sunday in the UK)
As Zina Young (who later became the third General Relief
Society President) was grieving the death of her mother, she asked Joseph Smith “Will I know my mother as my mother when I
get over to the Other Side?” The prophet responded, "Certainly you will. More than that, you will meet and become
acquainted with your eternal Mother, the wife of your Father in Heaven".1
One of the most cheerful doctrines embraced by the Church of
Jesus Christ is that we know we have, in addition to a Father in Heaven, a
Mother in Heaven.
In a Gospel Topics Essay we read “The doctrine of a Heavenly Mother is a cherished and distinctive
belief among Latter-day Saints… All human beings, male and female, are beloved
spirit children of... a Heavenly Mother.”2
President Dallin H. Oaks taught: “Our theology begins with heavenly parents. Our highest aspiration is
to be like them.”3 If our highest
aspiration is to be like both our Heavenly Parents, including our divine
Mother, it follows that we must learn as much as possible about who She is and
how we can become more like Her.
Unfortunately, for such a cherished part of our doctrine,
Heavenly Mother is spoken of surprisingly rarely at Church. At times, searching
for truths about Her in the scriptures reminds me of P. D. Eastman’s book, Are You My Mother?4
In this children’s book, a baby bird hatches while his
mother is away looking for food. He sets out to look for her, asking all the
animals he meets “Are you my mother?” The other animals and even an airplane
each turn him away; “I am not your mother,” they say. The baby bird starts to
feel hopeless in his search - abandoned and alone. Sometimes, seeking knowledge of our Heavenly Mother might start to feel the same way.
Fortunately, modern prophets and Church leaders have
revealed many precious truths about our Mother in Heaven. Despite rumors to the
contrary, no General Authority of the Church has ever taught that we should
avoid speaking of Her, nor have they given any reason as to why relatively
little information has been revealed.5
Joseph Smith privately introduced the doctrine of Heavenly
Mother early in the Church on several occasions. Those who heard him recorded
these teachings in journals, interviews, and poems. The most prominent example
is Eliza R. Snow’s popular hymn, O My
Father (which she originally titled Invocation
or The Eternal Father and Mother).6
“In the heav’ns are parents single?” Eliza asks. “No, the thought makes reason stare!/ Truth is reason; truth eternal/
Tells me I’ve a mother there.”7
From records such as these, we learn that our Heavenly
Mother is completely united and equal with our Heavenly Father.
Susa Young Gates (daughter of Brigham Young, Founding Editor
of the official Relief Society Magazine, and prominent suffragette) quoted Joseph Smith
as saying “The divine Mother, [is] side
by side with the divine Father and [has] the equal sharing of equal rights,
privileges and responsibilities.”8 Indeed, James E. Talmage referred to her as “our God
Mother.”9
Elder Erastus Snow of the Quorum of the Twelve emphasized
Her undoubtable godhood. “Do [I] mean we
should understand that Deity consists of man and woman?” he rhetorically
asked. “Most certainly I do. If I believe
anything that God has ever said about himself... I must believe that deity
consists of man and woman... There can be no God except he is composed of the
man and woman united, and there is not in all the eternities that exist, or
ever will be a God in any other way.”10
The Mother not only has a relationship with the Father, but
with each of us as well. Brigham Young revealed, “we were created. . . in the image of our father and our mother, the
image of our God.”11 Spencer W. Kimball
taught women, “You are daughters of God…
You are made in the image of our heavenly mother.”12 Elder Rudger Clawson of the Quorum of the Twelve explained, “We honor woman when we acknowledge Godhood
in her eternal Prototype.”13
We have also been taught that Heavenly Mother plays an
active role in our current lives. Harold B. Lee taught, “we have a... Heavenly Mother who [is] even more concerned, probably,
than our earthly father and mother, and that influences from beyond are constantly
working to try to help us.”14 Spencer W. Kimball
added, “Knowing how profoundly our mortal
mothers have shaped us here, do we suppose [our Heavenly Mother’s] influence on
us as individuals to be less?”15
Many of the particular ways our Mother in Heaven influences
us have not yet been revealed, but Church leaders have repeatedly emphasized
that She plays a critical role in the world to come. Elder John A. Widtsoe
anticipated that the afterlife "is
given radiant warmth by the thought that ... [we have] a mother who possesses
the attributes of Godhood."16
I believe this is to what the LDS poet and scholar Rachel Hunt Steenblik
was referring when she wrote “She is what
I mean/ when I say, I want/ to go home.”17
This homecoming will be made more sweet by how familiar we
find our Mother in Heaven. Chieko Okazaki, a former counselor in the General
Relief Society Presidency, taught that “At
the end of this process, our Heavenly Parents will have sons and daughters who
are their peers, their friends, and their colleagues.”18 Glenn L. Pace of the First Quorum of the Seventy promised, "I testify that when you stand in
front of your heavenly parents in those royal courts on high and look into Her
eyes and behold Her countenance, any question you ever had about the role of
women in the kingdom will evaporate into the rich celestial air, because at
that moment you will see standing directly in front of you, your divine nature
and destiny."19
At the conclusion of Are
You My Mother?, the baby bird is reunited with its mother.
“Do you know who I am?” she asks.
He looks at her and recognizes that she is unlike any of the
other animals he has spoken to. Rather, she is like him.
“Yes, I know who you are,” he responds. “You are my mother.”20
Based on what Church leaders have taught, I imagine that
reuniting with our Celestial Mother might be very similar. She will be unlike
anyone we have ever before met, and yet will feel so familiar. In that moment,
we will not need to ask who She is. We will know she is our Eternal Mother.
In honor of our wonderful Mother in Heaven, as we read the
scriptures and listen to the words of living prophets, let us look for
references to both of our Heavenly Parents, those wonderful beings whom we
aspire to emulate, and with whom we can eventually share a glorious reunion.
“Father, Mother, may I meet you/ In your royal courts on
high?/ Then, at length, when I’ve completed/ All you sent me forth to do,/ With
your mutual approbation/ Let me come and dwell with you.”
Eliza R. Snow21
* * * * *
Additional reading on the Divine Mother:
"A Mother There": A Survey
of Historical Teachings about Mother in Heaven, by David L. Paulsen and Martin
Pulido https://byustudies.byu.edu/content/mother-there-survey-historical-teachings-about-mother-heaven
Mother In Heaven, Gospel Topics Essay
What I first learned about Heavenly
Mother,
by Rachel Hunt Steenblik
Sources:
1 Rachel Hunt Steenblik, "What I first learned about Heavenly Mother," Exponent II, September 25, 2013, https://www.the-exponent.com/what-i-first-learned-about-heavenly-mother/ (accessed May 6, 2018).
1 Rachel Hunt Steenblik, "What I first learned about Heavenly Mother," Exponent II, September 25, 2013, https://www.the-exponent.com/what-i-first-learned-about-heavenly-mother/ (accessed May 6, 2018).
2 "Mother in Heaven," LDS.org, https://www.lds.org/topics/mother-in-heaven?lang=eng#overview (accessed May 6, 2018).
3 Dallin H. Oaks, "Apostasy and Restoration," April 1995 General Conference, LDS.org, https://www.lds.org/general-conference/1995/04/apostasy-and-restoration?lang=eng (accessed May 6, 2018).
4 P. D. Eastman, Are You My Mother? (Random House Children's Books, 1960); I believe Rachel Hunt Steenblik was the first to draw the
connection between Heavenly Mother and this book in her poem of the same name,
published in Mother’s Milk: Poems in Search of Heavenly Mother (By Common Consent Press, 2017).
5 David L. Paulsen and Martin Pulido, "'A Mother There': A Survey of Historical Teachings about Mother in Heaven," BYU Studies 50, no. 1, 75-76, https://byustudies.byu.edu/content/mother-there-survey-historical-teachings-about-mother-heaven (accessed May 6, 2018).
7 Eliza R. Snow, "O My Father," LDS.org, https://www.lds.org/music/library/hymns/o-my-father?lang=eng&_r=1 (accessed May 9, 2018).
10 Erastus Snow, "Discourse by Elder Erastus Snow," Journal of Discourses 19, 269-70, http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/digital/collection/JournalOfDiscourses3/id/9597/rec/19 (accessed May 9, 2018).
15 Spencer W. Kimball, "The True Way of Life and Salvation," April 1978 General Conference, LDS.org, https://www.lds.org/ensign/1978/05/the-true-way-of-life-and-salvation?lang=eng (accessed May 9, 2018).
17 Steenblik, “Home”, Mother’s Milk: Poems in Search of Heavenly Mother.
19 Glenn L. Pace, "The Divine Nature and Destiny of Women," BYU Devotional, March 6, 2010, https://speeches.byu.edu/talks/glenn-l-pace_divine-nature-destiny-women/ (accessed May 9, 2018).
21 Snow.
To read more of Riley's work, click here or follow him on Twitter.
Comments
Post a Comment