I Meet God
At various moments throughout my childhood I had exposure to the concept, if not the reality, of God. I had a primary teacher who walked with the Savior and who did then still does exude the pure love of Christ. I had devout grandparents who loved and cherished me and who urged me to be baptized, attend meetings, and bear my testimony. I had parents who — even if they didn’t participate, were at least willing to permit me to attend meetings when it wasn’t inconvenient, and who, out of respect for my grandparents, didn’t bad-mouth the Church. But those exposures were fleeting, and generally speaking, I wasn’t raised in the Church.
When I was in the seventh grade, I had a Bishop who took a puzzling and compassionate concern with my well being. He called the house and persuaded me to join the youth on a temple trip — whatever that was — and I cajoled my sister, Lisa, into going with me. I didn’t have a clue what a temple trip was, or even what a temple was. The week-long multi-state itinerary included a day at the Y, which I assumed must be the YMCA, having never heard of BYU. But it was a chance to get out of the house for a week, and so I agreed to go. (I later discovered that the rest of the youth had spent an entire year raising funds for this trip, and I was being invited without having done a darned thing to pay my own way. Ungrateful child. I didn’t even appreciate it.)
The trip involved a bus ride from Seattle to the Oakland temple, and from there to Provo, and then back north through Salt Lake City via Ogden and Logan back to Seattle, covering half of the continental US temples in existence back in those days. (Today you could stand in Seattle swinging a cat and hit about the same number of temples as we visited on that week-long trip. But I digress.)
In California and on the road I picked up that the temple was meaningful, and needed to be treated with respect. I also fought with Lisa and our new friends Patty and Kristine, and discovered the Beach Boys, but I just didn’t get it. I wasn’t sure what the point was of this whole experience.
Until we got to the Logan temple. There, on the last night of our temple trip, we had a testimony meeting. I don’t remember a word that was said at that meeting, but I do remember feeling an outpouring of the Spirit (I didn’t actually recognize what I was feeling at the time, but now it’s nameable) and I remember being filled by the sense that I belonged here. At the close of the meeting we stood together and sang “I Know that My Redeemer Lives,” (one of the few songs I had learned during my years of spotty Primary attendance), but I was unable to sing. I was completely overwhelmed by the Spirit, and stood there openly weeping while trying to choke out the words.
That was my real introduction to what it meant to be LDS, and I committed myself then to doing whatever it took to have that same sense of peace permanently in my life.
Thirty-some years later, it’s still good.
–L’editrix
May 3rd, 2006 17:42
Thank you for this beautiful account of your epipheny, L’editrix. It was a remembrace of a similar sense of peace and belonging that set me on my journey back to belief in the Church when I had wandered.
May 3rd, 2006 20:50
That presence–man, when it hits, it hits. You can’t describe it like anything else, but it is so *there*. I’m glad that bishop called you, and I’m glad you were too clueless to possibly back out.
“sense of peace” That’s what it’s all about. I just wish I knew how to show others (those outside the gospel) what it means–show them what they’re missing.
May 4th, 2006 03:48
I really enjoyed this post, thank you for sharing it.
May 4th, 2006 07:47
Outstanding! I’m glad you had that experience.
Is swinging a cat a common thing in Seattle? I use that expression to
May 4th, 2006 13:35
I remember being filled by the sense that I belonged here.
That’s what the Gospel is all about! I think everyone has something from time to time that may make them feel alone, so isolated. So, it’s the spirit and love from others we all seek. Life is hard. But it’s so worth it when we feel that belonging; the Gospel is the only real substance that fills the void.
Thanks for the post.