Hello everyone! :) I’m currently taking a particular religious course that
allows me to study the life and ministry and Atonement of Jesus Christ. As an
introduction to said course, the professor has been insistent on our learning
of the differences between the Four Gospels in the New Testament that provide
the backbone of our knowledge regarding the life of the Savior. Rather than
merely harmonizing the Gospels, throwing them all into a blender to produce a combined
image of Christ that is far less poignant and far less unique than separate and
individual portraits of Him, this professor suggests that we ought to cherish
and accentuate the beauty of the four different portrayals of Christ that we
see in the Gospels.
This isn’t
to say that one Jesus is better than the other—in all reality, all are Christ,
and each Gospel exemplifies a different side of Him that, when understood with
reference to the others, makes clearer the actual person of our Savior. That
being said, it got my gears turning, and I began to realize something.
All of the
writers of the Gospels focus on different aspects of Christ’s mission and
divinity. One focused on His suffering, one on His divine Sonship, while
another strove to teach about His fulfillment of the Mosaic Law. These personal
testimonies of our Lord are to be cherished both collectively—in showing us
that He is God—and individually, in showing us different aspects of the Savior.
Each of us,
too, has a unique understanding of our Lord and King. Each of us can read the
Bible text and realize that He is something special for us: that some part of
the Savior resonates with all of us. Rather than trying to ambiguously “come
unto Christ”, we should be looking for ways to enhance our relationship with
Him. How is He our personal Savior?
How can we have a personal relationship
with Him?
To better
enhance and define this desired personal relationship, God has given us the
scriptures, which teach us about the premortal, mortal, and millennial Messiah.
He has given us commandments throughout these scriptures, giving us a pattern
of living that will allow us to be in harmony with Christ’s lifestyle, thereby
enabling us to understand Him better. He has also given us covenants, or
binding promises, and ordinances, or sacred symbolism associated with those
promises, that not only teach us more about the nature of Jesus Christ, but
also spiritually bond us to Him and His Atonement, tightening our relationship
and expanding our definition of the Savior of the world. With just a single
covenant, we understand Him deeply already—but with an increasing number of
covenants, made plain and clear by the mouths of modern-day prophets, we begin
to see Him as a truly universal, all-powerful Being worthy of worship, praise,
and emulation.
Maybe none
of this makes sense. I’m struggling to write it all down coherently. God has
given us our agency, or the ability to choose. As we exercise that agency in
accordance with His divine will, as revealed through scripture and Church
leadership, we see ourselves becoming more like our Savior. The more we emulate
Him, the better we understand Him. We will want to continually build our faith
in Him in specific ways, leading to a very personal and intimate relationship
with Him. We will want to repent and change, moving away from worldly trends to
more holier spheres. We will want to make promises with Him, as did ancient
prophets like Noah and Abraham and Moses, that will secure our relationship
with Him, obtaining the promise that He will always be our God, and we will
strive to always be worthy of that. With each additional covenant, or sacred
promise, that we make, we further strengthen that relationship and expand our
vision of Who He is—thus necessitating the need for several covenants, and the
need for modern-day revelation, that will increasingly expand the parameters of
our understanding.
Baptism and
a copy of the Bible will only take us so far. We can better learn about and
know and experience Christ as we
glean information and knowledge about Him from multiple, divinely acknowledged
sources, like modern-day prophets, additional revelations, and more canonical
scriptures, meant to bolster the mind and improve our relationship with Him.
This brings
me back to the beginning. God has given us the tools we need to build a
relationship with Him—He has given us the necessary materials to come more
fully into His presence. He has also given us the agency, the liberty, the
freedom, to use these materials to build a unique
relationship with Him. Note that we still must go to Church, and read our
scriptures, and say our prayers, and make and keep sacred covenants—those are
the tools. But how we go to Church, how we read our scriptures, how we say our prayers, and how we live a covenant-making and –keeping
lifestyle—that’s up to us. That’s what determines the level of the intimate
relationship with God.
How we choose to use the tools He has
given us ultimately affects what our
relationship with Him becomes. The more tools we have, the better we can build
our relationship with Christ. The better we use the tools we have, the more
rich, unique, intimate, personal, and lovely that relationship will be. Those
laws of physics and motion and math used to design a bicycle are also applied
in designing a car, or a train, or an airplane.
It really
is all up to us. And note as well that the better we use our tools, the easier
it will be to discover new ones. The Wright brothers couldn’t have dreamed of
jet planes when they first flew at Kitty Hawk. Newton couldn’t have dreamed of
nuclear power when an apple fell on his head. Hippocrates couldn’t have dreamed
of eradicating entire diseases as he strove to understand the four humors. It’s
the same with us—the limits of our relationship with God...well, there aren’t any! There are qualifications and
necessary requirements to build that relationship, but within the parameters
that these guidelines set, there is an infinite possibility of connection with
God. The better defined our qualifications and requirements, the better the
ultimate relationship will be.
Just as the
Gospel writers each saw a unique perspective of Jesus, so too can we as we use
the tools He has given us to build a more personal relationship with Him. Just
as they each bore witness that He is the Son of God, so too can we. Just as
they each made covenants with Him, so too can we. And just as they each saw Him
not only as a Redeemer for all men, but also as Redeemer for every individual man, so too can we. May we
use the tools God has given us—the scriptures, the commandments, the covenants—to
build a personal relationship with Him is my prayer.
Great insights! I love the idea of studying the 4 gospels that way.
ReplyDelete