Friday, December 20, 2019

What’s in your wallet?



If you watch television you will see and hear this message from a credit card company asking you this question. What’s in your wallet? I could have titled this post “ Better than a credit card “. 

Many years ago I encouraged the members of the Riverton Wyoming Stake to have a current temple recommend. At that time the temple recommends were renewed on a yearly basis and good for all the temples in the world, now they are good for two years and in January we will renew ours.

I posed to the members this scenario: Suppose you heard that Jesus Christ was going to be in the temple tomorrow. Would you be ready and prepared to go to the temple the next day?  In order to have a valid temple recommend there needs to be three signatures on it. There has to be the signature of the bishop, the stake president and the individual. 

Now suppose you don’t have a valid recommend. You were waiting to renew it in a month or two when you planned to take some time off to go to the temple. You call the bishop and he arranges to meet with you before he leaves for the temple. So far so good. 

Now you just need to get a member of the stake presidency to interview you and sign the recommend. The second counselor lives in your neighborhood so you call him, but he and his family have left to go to the temple. The second counselor lives in another city and the road is closed. You call the stake president and he is leaving in twenty minutes and you live thirty minutes away and in order for him to go to the temple he must leave. You are unable to get that signature that you need. 

Now let me tell you a true experience.

There was a bishop in Germany who was going on a trip to Israel. He would be spending time in Jerusalem. He looked in his wallet to see if there were any items that he did not need. There were a number of items that he felt that he would not need. He saw his temple recommend and reasoned that there was no temple where he was going and if he had his pocket picked he did not want to put his precious recommend at risk.  As part of his itinerary he wanted to visit the Jerusalem center. At that time there was a disturbance in Jerusalem and security was tight. As he went to the Jerusalem center he met an Israeli security guard. The guard asked him what he wanted to do. He replied that he wanted to visit the center. The guard asked him if he were a member of the church. He replied in the affirmative. The guard then asked him for his temple recommend. The bishop was not able to present one to the guard and did not get to visit the Jerusalem center. 

The temple recommend is better than a credit card for spiritual things. 

Now grandpa asks you my grandchildren, what is in your wallet?

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

A letter to a friend



This is a letter that I wrote some years ago.  I think it applies now as well.

Dear Friend,
     I am writing to you to let you know that I too, am concerned about the sorrow that has come into your life.  I have had time to contemplate on this and other experiences that have come into the lives of people that I love and respect.  It is difficult when a child exercises the agency that is theirs and makes decisions that bring their parents and those who love them pain and suffering.  I remarked to my wife the other day that you certainly did not deserve to be treated in such a way.  We don't deserve to be treated that way, but children in the exercise of their agency may bring to their parents agony and grief that is really not understood by them or by those who know them.  As I have pondered about this I have come to the conclusion that the first problem is a lack of respect for the role of the parent.

     We have a really egocentric society that teaches self indulgence and lack of self discipline.  It is hammered at us throughout the mass media and is taught and fostered in the school system and in the peer group.  There are few examples of self control to be seen and in reality there is little said by the church at a local level.  We have become so materialistic in our society that we have little respect for people who do not exercise self indulgence with the rest of us.  Children are so oriented that they have a hard time sharing one with another and giving of themselves to another person's benefit. We are so accustomed to instant gratification of our pleasures and appetites that we find it difficult to accept that we should bend our will to that of another person, particularly someone with delegated authority.

     As a comment on our society and its lack of self control I have been taken with the preponderance of gluttony that we exhibit.  Convenience Stores sell large containers with straws and encourage us to drink as much as we want and carry it around with us so that we can satisfy our appetite at our whim.  When I was growing up it was considered ill mannered to eat or drink in the presence of others and not offer to share the entire thing with them.  Now we encourage people to be selfish and uncaring if it satisfies their appetite.  The attack on self‑control is so subtle that it is in every day living.  We expect instant resolution to our problems and demand that if there is any injustice that the government solve the problem for us so that we don't have to deal with any unpleasantness.  We are so afraid of failure and insecurity that we would fain sell our birthright for a mess of potage,  but condemn Esau for doing the same.  It is in this atmosphere that our children are growing up and gaining their values in spite of what we teach them to the contrary.  It would take a full blown Madison Avenue approach to change the direction that we are taking and I am doubtful that it would be effective now.  Many of our young men are being kept from the destiny to which they were commissioned because they have not learned to be more concerned with what the Lord has asked them to do than they are with their own feelings and desires.

     In less affluent times the children had to rely on their parents for their very existence and thus there was a bond built into the family that they knew there were not alone and the love was tangible and manifest in the care that they received, for their food clothing and shelter were at the discretion of the parents and survival depended upon the family staying close as a unit.  We were more interested in having clothes to wear rather than Calvin Klein or Liz Claybourne.  This has had the effect of isolating the children from their parents.  Once the child feels isolated and lonely and misunderstood it is easier for Satan to replace the true affection and love of a parent with the false love of the world.  Thus the lonely and unwary are led to accept the things of the world and the false sense of security that it gives, until they are entrapped by the evil one.  When the child feels that his parents represent a hindrance rather than a help they loose the faith and understanding that the parents represent the shepherd to keep the wolves away from the flock.

     Once the breech occurs it is difficult to reestablish the sense of trust that previously was there.  The child realizing that he or she has made a mistake then is usually too proud to admit that.  Thus the breech remains, and any effort that is made by the parents is seen as an intrusion into the privacy rather than an effort at reconciliation.  The pattern for the parents is to keep up an effort in spite of the rejection of the child.  This is much like a continual effort to self mutilation, because the pain experienced by the parent is renewed at each encounter and instead of receiving a resolution of the agony it is only prolonged.  We want so much to have the resolution of the dominant seventh cord to make the music sound "right" but it continues enough to keep us on edge.

     Time does have a dimming or numbing effect.  As time passes the acute pain is no longer there, but a great and overwhelming sense of failure initially seems to pervade the thoughts of the parent.  It swells and breaks like the waves of the sea against the rocks of the shore.  At times a relentless pounding and crashing and at others a pressure of surging that cannot be ignored.  I would compare this to the feeling that one experiences at the death of a loved one.  In a sense it is a spiritual death and I can understand why in some cultures, ie. Jewish, the family would prefer to treat them as if they were dead, because it is much less painful and preferable than to have the constant feelings of frustration, loss of self esteem, isolation, failure, and sorrow for the lost child.  In a sense we have lost our innocence in the world and unwillingly been forced to become part of it, without being adequately prepared to deal with the issues at hand.  We could not precisely know what exquisite pain that we would feel, the lump in the pit of our stomach, the lack of sleep to lay like a warm and comforting blanket over our tortured soul, the darts of our self recrimination wondering what we could have done to avert what has transpired in our lives.   We cannot in good faith say a Kaddish and let the matter pass out of our lives as a bad dream.  The greater our faith and knowledge of the gospel are, the more we know that we must open the door of our hearts, if only to have them crushed again by unthinking, ununderstanding, inconsiderate people or children.

     In our zeal to right the wrong and make sure that we had done all that was possible to repair the damage that was done we sometimes become super righteous and "bear down in pure testimony" on the child thinking that we will by so doing wash our garments clean of the blood that we feel stains them and us. The time for teaching and training is long since past and the child now marches to the beat of a distant different drummer.  What are we then to do?  We would like to think that the principles of the gospel, if properly presented, would turn the child in the path and bring them around to embrace again the saviour.  Again to sing the song of redeeming love with the loving arms of parents around them to help them on their way.

     As I have pondered the scriptures in this regard, I have gained some insight into the problem by reading the story of the prodigal son.  The same scenario exists, the child leaves the family, but the father does not go out to tell the child where he has strayed and preach to him.  He knows that this is to no avail.  He waits patiently and then seeing him afar off, runs to meet him.  There awaits for the repentant child the tokens of, a ring, a best robe, shoes for his feet and a fatted calf, "For this my son was dead and is alive again. He was lost and is found."

     The prodigal son has to come back, not on his own terms, but the terms of the father.  Not terms that demean, but are understood by both parties, for it goes without saying, that the principles were taught and understood by both participants in the past.  Elder Maxwell has said that we need to make the home such a sweet place that when the children taste of the world they will find it bitter and return, because they discern the difference.   

     I wonder why there seems to be more of this going on in our day than in the past.  As I contemplate the past I know that there were some families that were touched by such sorrow, but I don't remember that so many stalwart couples have had this same experience.  I am convinced that it is because of the worldly experience that we are forced to participate in.  I watch the television and see how the philosophy of men is taught and repeated until we think that this is the norm.

Friday, November 15, 2019

It doesn’t matter where you pray.


It doesn’t matter where you pray.

We attended the Saturday evening session of our stake conference. The visiting authority was Elder Daniel Mehr. He told a story about his experience on his mission. He climbed up on the roof of his apartment and then up onto the top of a water tower where he could look over the city where he was assigned to preach the gospel. This was the first day he was with a brand new missionary companion. He there had a conversation with the Lord. It lasted some time and when he got down from his talk with the Lord he wanted to share with his companion, but his companion was asleep.


He then invited us to have a "water tower” experience and ask the Lord a question.


We do not need to go up on the roof and on top of a water tower to talk to the Lord.


Recently there was a missionary in England laboring on one of the Channel Islands. He would go up on the roof of his apartment to pray. One night he went up and it was raining. The roof was slick and he slipped and fell to the pavement below. He fortunately was not killed, but was so badly injured that he could not be air evacuated home to the United States.


It was foolish for him to go up there in the first place. He may have gotten the idea from a story similar to the one told by Elder Mehr.


I have asked questions of the Lord and received answers without going upon a rooftop. I did not go out in the forest to hurt beasts as Enos or in a grove of trees on in prison like Joseph Smith or on a mountaintop like Moses. I still received answers.


The most important thing to remember is that you have to be prepared to talk to the Lord and ask Him a question and be prepared to act on the answer. If not you may be like Nephi's brothers. In our recent reading of the Book of Mormon I was struck by the exchange between Nephi and his brothers. He asked them whether they had inquired of the Lord. Their reply was that the Lord didn’t answer. This was not because the Lord didn’t want to answer them. It was because they were not prepared and would not receive the answer.


I have found that when I was prepared and would respond to the answer, the Lord would answer the question.


We may ask in faith nothing wavering and when the time is right the Lord answers.


It is our job to wait upon the Lord.


Do not ask a question that you already have an answer to. Do not ask to see an angel. They only come to give you an assignment, not to satisfy your curiosity.


Now my grandchildren the Lord does guide his children and give us answers if we pray with real intent. I testify that He is there.


Love,
Grandpa





Tuesday, October 29, 2019

The covenant path


This phrase is mentioned a lot now in church articles and in conference talks. I don’t remember ever hearing that phrase when I was growing up.

I think for the benefit of my posterity I will give my thoughts on the matter.


I have understood that the Lord our Father in Heaven sent us here on earth to see if we would prove that we could learn to be like Him.


In order to do this the Lord requires us to make covenants with Him. If we keep the covenants then He promises us that He will allow us to live with Him.


The first covenant we make is the covenant of baptism. We promise to mourn with those that mourn and comfort those that stand in need of comfort and to stand as a witness of God at all times and in all places even until we die. 

Jesus Christ was baptized as an example and to show that it was a necessary ordinance. As a result the ordinance of laying on of hands is given to give us a gift. That gift is the Holy Ghost. The Holy Ghost will lead us to all truth.

The next covenant that we make is to partake of the sacrament. By so doing we covenant to always remember Christ and keep all of His commandments. Since we are imperfect and often do not live and keep all the commandments, we can repeat this ordinance every week. The Lord promises us that if we keep His commandments we will always have His Spirit to be with us to guide us on the path to Him.


The next covenant that we, as His sons, make is what is called the oath and covenant of the priesthood. The oath is sworn by the Lord. This states “All that my Father hath shall be given unto them.” We make the covenant to accept the priesthood and to honor it.  See Doctrine and Covenants 84:33-41.


The next covenant we make is temple covenants. In order to enter the temple one needs a recommend from two priesthood leaders. In the mouth of two or more witnesses shall all things be established. The questions in the interviews are pointed to see if we are willing to live by the covenants that we will make in the temple. In the temple we make a series of covenants and the Lord endows us with priesthood power. That is why it is called an endowment. Most people do not fully understand the difference between priesthood power and priesthood authority. I will not elaborate here. You can ask me later.


All these covenants are individual covenants that we make with the Lord. They do not involve any other individual, only the person involved and the Lord.


The next covenant that we make does involve an other person. It is called the new and everlasting covenant. Some people call this a temple marriage. It is really much more than that. It is properly called a sealing in the new and everlasting covenant. There are many promises associated with this covenant. Without this covenant we cannot live with God for it is essential for our salvation and exaltation. It comes with certain commandments and expectations. They are to be found in the scriptures.


There are more covenants that are necessary to live with our Father in Heaven, but they will be given to us at the Lord’s discretion and many will receive them in the spirit world.


The covenant path is strait and narrow. As Lehi saw, there are obstacles placed in our path for us to overcome, just as our Heavenly Father did before us.


We need to hold onto the iron rod to be safe. These are the scriptures and the words of God’s messengers the prophets and daily conversations with God (prayer).

Failure to hold onto the iron rod will make us a target for the adversary and lead us off the path.


Now my dear grandchildren, where are you on that covenant path?


Love Grandpa


Friday, August 23, 2019

The Implication of Time


“Dost thou love life? Then do not squander time, for that is the stuff life is made of.”

This is a quote from Benjamin Franklin. 

Too often we do not take this counsel into consideration in our lives. We, as a people, generally do waste a lot of precious time doing things that will have little consequence in our lives here in this mortal existence and certainly in the life to come. 

Elder Bednar gave a talk recently about this subject.(View Here) or (Read Here ) Most of us have a device in our hands that will allow us to read a number of books. We can write essays or a journal or email friends. We can read the news or look at videos of symphony orchestras.  But a great number of people just while away precious time playing games or posting on social media. A small amount of time doing this for entertainment may be acceptable, but most people spend more time doing this than is wise. 

The problem is that they do not expand their vision to see what they could accomplish. They do not really believe with all their hearts that they were sent here on earth to learn to be like their Father in Heaven. 

Let virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly is the counsel of the Lord to us in these latter days. 

We will eventually have to learn everything that our Father in Heaven knows in order to be like Him. We need to expand our knowledge in all fields. 

In the Book of Mormon, Lehi has a dream in which he sees a number of things. One of these is mists of darkness that cloud the vision of the people seeking the love of God. These are not put there by God, but by the adversary. 

On your device you can read the scriptures (the iron rod in the dream) or the words of the prophets (the conference addresses).  How much time do you spend holding on to the iron rod as compared to looking at social media or playing games? The iron rod will get you closer to God than any of these. 

Once you are out of school, you shouldn't stop learning. In my day we had encyclopedias with a lot of information.  Now you can learn about idiopathic pulmonary hemosiderosis from your hand held device. You can learn about stars and their motion and the tides of the ocean.  You have the information that your ancestors never had and now how are you spending your time?

Grandpa says,"Spend it wisely!"

Sunday, July 21, 2019

Let the lower lights be burning


Let the lower lights be burning

I just attended the funeral of my grandson Christopher. The song that my four sons sang was “Brightly Beams Our Father’s Mercy“. There is this phrase in the song ‘let the lower lights be burning’.


Some years ago I heard a talk by Elder Boyd K. Packer who addressed this subject. The song is an allegory. The "brightly beams" refers to the lighthouse. This is a navigational point to guide sailors. It is a reference point so that people know where they are. It shines at night with an oscillating light so that the ships will have a reference to steer by and it can be seen for many miles. During the daytime most lighthouses are placed in a prominent location so they can be seen for miles. This is exactly what Our Father in Heaven does by shining his mercy out into the darkness of the world.


Most of us don’t have any trouble seeing during the daytime. We do have problems when it is dark. Think about driving a car on an unfamiliar road at night without lights on your car. Now think about trying to navigate a boat in the water at night. There is no road to guide you. If the sky is overcast you will have no reference points.


Perhaps you can see the lighthouse, but you don’t know where the rocks are and a passageway into an inlet where there is a safe harbor. This is where the lower lights come in.


We have GPS now, but in the early days we had to rely on lights.


In order to guide sailors to safety, they would place lights along the shore to indicate where to steer the ship safely.

 
We are to be the lights along the shore so to speak. It is our light that will help others to find the true gospel of Jesus Christ. Christ taught that we should let that light shine before men that they would see our good works and then they would glorify God by repentance and come into his kingdom.


We are to lift up the hands that hang down and strengthen the feeble knees by shining our light.


When we visited Dunraven castle, Stanley Bevan told us a story that you can read here. Dunraven castle is where our Butler ancestors came from. 


The next time you hear the song “Brightly Beams Our Father’s Mercy“ think of how you can help someone to come into the safe harbor of the mercy of our Heavenly Father. You are the light. Keep it burning bright. My light shines for you. 

Look to my light and not the lanterns on the tails of the sheep or cattle. There are plenty of Matts of the Iron Hand out there to mislead you. The Father's light shines ever so brightly. 
 
Love,

 
Grandpa



Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Macular degeneration and me



No one likes to discuss illnesses, let alone hear about other people’s aches and pains. 

A doctor’s life is centered around this discussion, so I hope that you will indulge me for a minute or two. The reason being, is that you belong to my gene pool. 

What I have, may come into your life as well. 

To begin with, both my parents had macular degeneration. I was naive and did not pay much attention, mainly because it was their problem and I did not know that it would affect me until later on.

One day I saw a dumbbell shaped object in my vision. I went to see Dr. Fontaine down the street. He said that I had a hemorrhage on the retina and referred me to a retinal specialist in Salt Lake who used a laser to stop the bleeding. I developed another hemorrhage in the same right eye and underwent another laser treatment. 

I was diagnosed with dry type of macular degeneration and other than losing the central vision in my right eye I have done well over the past 20+ years with only peripheral vision on the right. I have normal vision in the left eye. 

Our family was enrolled in a study at the Moran Eye Institute at my request and they found that my wife had the wet type of macular degeneration and she eventually ended up getting shots in both eyes to preserve her vision. Her vision is stable now.

We have a son who is now getting shots in his eye to preserve his vision. 

So you may end up with age related macular degeneration. 

This condition occurs in the Kerr family.
My aunt Alta had it, as well as number of her siblings and some descendants. Alta’s son George had it and his son George has the disease. 

Robert Marion Kerr and his son Robert had it as well. Robert’s brother Joseph also had the disease.
My cousin Merrill Gee has stable macular degeneration.

On the Stucki side;

My uncle Wendell Stucki had the disease as well and so far none of his children have reported being affected. 

My cousin Mary Lou had the condition. She was my aunt Evelyn’s daughter. 

My uncle Max had macular degeneration as well, but none of his three children have it. 

As you can see this appears to be a genetically inherited disease. 

So what is Grandpa’s counsel?
I have always said illness like sin is best treated early in its course. Since you don’t know if you are going to have vision problems in the future, you should check the vision using an Amsler grid.Here is the URL:
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&channel=tus&q=amsler+grid

If the lines look wavy start taking PreserVison vitamins and get an appointment with a retinal specialist. 

The earlier you get intervention the better the result will be. 

You need to save both your physical and spiritual vision to see clearly.

Love,

Grandpa

Thursday, June 27, 2019

Immunizations and me

This is a really strange title for a Blog, but what could you expect from a grandpa who is a doctor?

I thought it appropriate since there is an outbreak of measles going around in the country right now. 

I grew up when there were only a few immunizations available as compared to the present time. 

When I was about six months old I got scarlet fever. The mortality rate for this disease in infants of one year or less was 20% at the time. In addition the complication of rheumatic fever was high. If one contracted rheumatic fever there was also a chance that it would result in heart disease with scarring of the heart valves. Especially the mitral valve. 

Scarlet fever is a result of an infection with group A streptococcus that contains an erythrogenic toxin. This causes the typical sandpaper rash of the disease. 

When I first came to Lander to practice, a cardiologist from Casper, Brendan Phibbs, instituted a strep eradication program in the state of Wyoming. We would have all the schools routinely do throat swabs and send them to the state lab. Any positive cultures were then treated with long acting penicillin and recultured after a month. We thus eliminated the asymptomatic strep carriers and reduced the cases of rheumatic fever to zero over the course of a few years. Every child in school who was ill with a sore throat was cultured on their return back to school. There is no immunization for this disease. 

I got all the “childhood diseases”. I got measles, mumps, chickenpox, German measles and whooping cough.  I was immunized for smallpox and carried a yellow card with me on my mission to Germany. At that time no one could come into the United States unless they had proof that they had been immunized for smallpox. I still have the scar from that and your grandmother does as well.

When I left practice in 1996 there had been no cases of smallpox in the United States since 1949 and they had stopped immunizing for smallpox. It was no longer a threat. 

My aunt Mable got smallpox and had a scarred pox marked face for the rest of her life. She was fortunate enough to avoid any more serious complications. 

My grandfather’s brother Charles got measles when he was 4 years old and as a result was deaf for the rest of his life. 

There are a number of family members of Lysander Gee buried in the Tooele cemetery who died of Diphtheria. Now we have a vaccination for it.  Fortunately I did not get the disease. 

When we visited Donetsk Ukraine. There were two patients in the ICU on ventilators.  They had diphtheria. 

I saw a case of tetanus when I was in my internship in Ogden. Marion Joseph Kerr, my great grandfather, got tetanus when he was kicked by a horse. He nearly died. I also took care of a patient with paralytic poliomyelitis. Now we have immunizations for the disease. 

We have immunizations to prevent many diseases. My grandchildren and their posterity can avoid the illnesses that I had by receiving immunizations. 

Grandpa says get your shots or oral vaccine and save your self from illness. 

Love, 
Grandpa