If a Man Die Shall He Live Again Monson

The empty tomb that start Easter morning was the answer to Task'south question, "If a homo die, shall he live again?" President Thomas S. Monson said.

"To all within the sound of my voice I declare, 'If a man die, he shall live again.' Nosotros know, for we accept the light of revealed truth."

President Thomas S. Monson expresses appreciation to members of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles as he departs the morning session.
President Thomas S. Monson expresses appreciation to members of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles every bit he departs the morning session. Credit: Keith Johnson, Deseret News

Addressing Church building members around the globe on Easter forenoon, President Monson titled his address "He is risen."

"Among all the facts of mortality, none is and so sure as its cease," he affirmed. He quoted from Jesus the Christ, by Elderberry James E. Talmage:

" '[Death] comes to all; information technology is our universal heritage. It may merits its victim[s] in infancy or youth; [it may visit] in the catamenia of life's prime; or its summons may exist deferred until the snows of age have gathered upon the … caput; information technology may befall every bit the effect of blow or disease, … or … through natural causes; but come information technology must.'

"It inevitably represents a painful loss of association and, particularly in the immature, a crushing blow to dreams unrealized, ambitions unfulfilled and hopes vanquished."

President Monson said every mortal existence, faced with the loss of a loved one or standing himself on the threshold of infinity, has pondered what lies across the veil.

Centuries ago, the homo Job, then long blessed with every cloth souvenir just to discover himself sorely afflicted by all that can befall a human beingness, uttered a timeless, ageless question: "If a man die, shall he live again?" (Job 14:xiv), President Monson said.

"This glorious Easter morning, I'd like to consider Task's question … and provide the reply, which comes non only from thoughtful consideration but also from the revealed word of God."

President Thomas S. Monson and his counselors, President Henry B. Eyring, left, and President Dieter F. Uchtdorf, right, stand after the Sunday morning session of general conference.
President Thomas South. Monson and his counselors, President Henry B. Eyring, left, and President Dieter F. Uchtdorf, right, stand later the Sunday morning session of general briefing. Credit: Intellectual Reserve, Inc.

To practice then, President Monson began with the essentials.

"If there is a design in this world in which we live, in that location must be a Designer. Who tin can behold the many wonders of the universe without believing that there is a pattern for all flesh? Who can doubt that at that place is a Designer?"

The Yard Designer created the heaven and the earth. He created the dominicus and the moon and the stars. He called for living creatures in the water and fowls in the air. He made cattle, beasts and creeping things.

"Last of all, He created human in His ain image — male and female — with dominion over all other living things," President Monson said.

"Human being alone received intelligence — a encephalon, a mind and a soul. Human alone, with these attributes, had the capacity for organized religion and promise, for inspiration and appetite."

President Monson said to understand the meaning of death, Latter-solar day Saints must capeesh the purpose of life.

"The dim lite of belief must yield to the noonday sun of revelation, by which we know that we lived before our birth into bloodshed. In our pre-real state, we were doubtless among the sons and daughters of God who shouted for joy because of the opportunity to come to this challenging all the same necessary mortal existence.

"We knew that our purpose was to proceeds a physical body, to overcome trials and to prove that we would continue the commandments of God. Our Father knew that because of the nature of bloodshed, we would be tempted, would sin and would fall curt. So that we might accept every chance of success, He provided a Savior who should suffer and dice for us. Not only would He atone for our sins, simply every bit a part of that atonement He would likewise overcome the physical death to which we would be subject considering of the Fall of Adam.

"Thus, more than 2,000 years agone, Christ, our Savior, was born to mortal life in a stable in Bethlehem. The long foretold Messiah had come."

The Savior was baptized. He called the Twelve Apostles. He blessed the ill and even raised the dead.

"And then the mortal mission of the Savior of the world drew to its close. A last supper with His apostles took place in an upper room. Ahead lay Gethsemane and Calvary's cantankerous.

"No mere mortal can conceive the full import of what Christ did for us in Gethsemane," President Monson declared.

Following the agony of Gethsemane, the Savior was seized by crude, crude hands and defendant and cursed. "Finally, on a hill called Calvary, while helpless followers looked on, His wounded body was nailed to a cross. Mercilessly, He was mocked and cursed and derided."

President Monson said that at the last minute the Chief could have turned back, but He did not. "He passed below all things, that He might salve all things. His lifeless body was hurriedly simply gently placed in a borrowed tomb.

"No words in Christendom mean more to me than those spoken past the angel to the weeping Mary Magdalene and the other Mary when, on the kickoff day of the calendar week, they approached the tomb to care for the body of their Lord. Spoke the angel, 'Why seek ye the living among the expressionless? He is not here, but is risen.'

"Our Savior lived again. The most glorious, comforting and reassuring of all events of human history had taken identify — the victory over death. The pain and desperation of Gethsemane and Calvary had been wiped away. The salvation of mankind had been secured. The Autumn of Adam had been reclaimed."

President Monson said he has read and believes the testimonies of those who experienced the grief of Christ'southward crucifixion and the joy of His resurrection. "I accept read — and I believe — the testimonies of those in the New World who were visited by the same risen Lord."

The darkness of death can always exist dispelled past the lite of revealed truth, President Monson said.

"My dearest brothers and sisters, in our hour of deepest sorrow, we can receive profound peace from the words of the angel that get-go Easter morning, 'He is not here: for he is risen.' … Equally one of His special witnesses on earth today, this glorious Easter Dominicus, I declare that this is true."

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Source: https://www.thechurchnews.com/archives/2010-04-04/president-thomas-s-monson-he-is-risen-65444#:~:text=The%20empty%20tomb%20that%20first,die%2C%20he%20shall%20live%20again.

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