May Christ Lift Thee Up and the Hope of His Glory and of Eternal Life Rest in Your Mind Forever

Bryan Richards

Marion D. Hanks

“Christ in our lives is not meant to grieve us or weigh us down unto death because we have been imperfect. Through him we may be lifted up by accepting his gifts and his mercy and long-suffering. These blessings we must seek to keep in our minds always.” (Ensign, July 1973, “What Manner of Men”)

Henry B. Eyring

"I was chatting with my wife at the end of a long day. Three of our children were in the room, listening. I turned and noticed that one of them was watching me—and watching my face intently. And then he asked me, softly, ’Why are you unhappy?’ I tried to give a reason for my furrowed brow, but I realized later that he could well have been asking this deeper question: ’Can I see in you the hope for peace in this life that Jesus promised?’
“To turn my thoughts from what darkened my look to what would brighten it, I went to another letter from Mormon to his son. Both Mormon and Moroni were facing days of difficulty that make my challenges pale. Mormon knew his son might be overcome with gloom and foreboding, so he told him the perfect antidote. He told him that he could choose, by what he put in his mind, to become an example of hope. Here is what he wrote: ’My son, be faithful in Christ; and may not the things which I have written grieve thee, to weigh thee down unto death; but may Christ lift thee up, and may his sufferings and death, and the showing his body unto our fathers, and his mercy and long-suffering, and the hope of his glory and of eternal life, rest in your mind forever.’ (Moroni 9:25.)” (To Draw Closer to God, p. 133)

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