30
The Value of Faith
Relief Society General Conference
Assembly Hall, Temple Square, Salt Lake City, Utah
April 3, 1926
The lack of faith in the world today, together with some recent personal experiences, has led me of late to appreciate more than ever before the value of faith and the great blessing it is to those who possess it.
I am sure that every woman in this audience has passed through trials and afflictions which would have been almost unbearable without faith in God and a testimony of the gospel, with all that it comprehends.
Faith in our Heavenly Father and in his Son Jesus Christ is an asset to any individual. It helps him to be a brave and courageous individual. It helps to make him a positive and forceful character as opposed to a negative and vacillating one. It helps him to have confidence in himself and confidence in others; to believe in himself and to believe in others; to be generous to those in need and charitable to those less fortunate; to be cheerful, hopeful, and optimistic.
Faith in the Father and the Son is a blessing—yes, one of the greatest blessings one can have. It is more far-reaching as a comforter than any other influence. It is a source of solace in times of sickness, sorrow, and despair. Faith helps an individual to be philosophical and to meet with comparative composure whatever comes, and to be resigned and reconciled to circumstances over which he has no control. It helps one to be meek and humble and to put his trust in God.
Faith in the Father and the Son presupposes a belief in their teachings which include a preexistent state and a life beyond the grave; and to a Latter-day Saint it comprehends the gospel plan of life and salvation as revealed to us through the Prophet Joseph Smith.12 Such faith and such belief helps one to formulate a plan of life on the highest plane, and to set up worthy and worthwhile standards of living which conform to the standards of the gospel. It helps one to judge of values—to choose between those things which are really worthwhile, which are lasting and eternal—and those things which are temporary and passing. It makes one realize that life is a stepping stone to a higher life, and the better the life here the greater the happiness here and in the life to come. Faith fills the possessor with the desire to emulate the life of the Savior and to keep the commandments of God.
Sublime faith is one of the greatest of all gifts. Let us pledge our allegiance to our faith. Let us as individuals say, “No man may destroy my faith and hope and belief and leave me a stone.” For I have observed that those who have no faith, and who tend to undermine and destroy faith in others, never, so far as I know, leave anything constructive in its place.
Let us not be influenced by doubters and cynics and atheists, nor by the wave of doubt and despair which is filling the earth today.13 Let us cling to the belief that faith with good works is an asset,14 a comforter, a blessing; it is the power of God unto salvation to everyone that believeth.15 Let us cling to the belief that faith is our birthright, and let us sell it not for a mess of pottage.16
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Footnotes
Footnotes
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[1]Amy Brown Lyman, In Retrospect: Autobiography of Amy Brown Lyman (Salt Lake City: General Board of Relief Society, 1945), 36, 42; Belle S. Spafford, “In Memoriam: President Amy Brown Lyman,” Relief Society Magazine 47, no. 1 (Jan. 1960): 47. The Relief Society offices were housed on the second floor of the Bishop’s Building from 1909 until 1956, when the Relief Society Building was dedicated. (Relief Society General Board Minutes, vol. 2, 1892–1910, Dec. 3, 1909, 183, Jan. 27, 1910, 191, CHL; Jill Mulvay Derr, Janath Russell Cannon, and Maureen Ursenbach Beecher, Women of Covenant: The Story of Relief Society [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1992], 174–177, 197.)
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[2]Lyman, In Retrospect, 42–43, 89. Joseph F. Smith served as the sixth president of the church from 1901 to 1918. Smith’s request that Lyman modernize the Relief Society offices was part of a wider trend within the church to align with Progressive-era practices. (Dave Hall, A Faded Legacy: Amy Brown Lyman and Mormon Women’s Activism, 1872–1959 [Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2015], 64–65; Matthew Bowman, The Mormon People: The Making of an American Faith [New York: Random House, 2012], 152–183.)
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[3]Spafford, “In Memoriam,” 5; [Vera White Pohlman], “In Memoriam: Amy Brown Lyman, 1872–1959, Biographical Summary and Funeral Services,” 10–11, CHL.
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[4]Lyman, In Retrospect, 30.
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[5]David Hall, “Anxiously Engaged: Amy Brown Lyman and Relief Society Charity Work, 1917–45,” Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 27, no. 2 (Summer 1994): 76–77; Hall, A Faded Legacy, 48–50; [Pohlman], “In Memoriam,” 12–13.
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[6]Lyman, In Retrospect, 63; Spafford, “In Memoriam,” 46.
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[7]Joseph F. Smith, “Elder Richard R. Lyman Chosen to Fill the Vacancy in the Council of Twelve,” in Eighty-Eighth Annual Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Apr. 5–7, 1918 (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1918), 51; Amy Brown Lyman, “Social Service Work in the Relief Society, 1917–1928,” Sept. 1928, 4–7, CHL; [Pohlman], “In Memoriam,” 13.
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[8]Lyman, In Retrospect, 64–65, 84; Derr, Cannon, and Beecher, Women of Covenant, 236. For more on the development of Social Service Institutes, see chapter 31 herein.
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[9]Lyman, In Retrospect, 83; Derr, Cannon, and Beecher, Women of Covenant, 231.
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[10]The Promotion of the Welfare and Hygiene of Maternity and Infancy (Washington DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1931), 134, 138; Loretta L. Hefner, “The National Women’s Relief Society and the U.S. Sheppard-Towner Act,” Utah Historical Quarterly 50, no. 3 (Summer 1982): 263–264.
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[11]Relief Society General Board Minutes, vol. 15, 1926–1927, Apr. 3, 1926, 21, 29.
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[12]For a contemporary discussion of the plan of salvation and premortal life, see James E. Talmage’s popular treatment of Mormon theology, The Vitality of Mormonism: Brief Essays on Distinctive Doctrines of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Boston: Gorham Press, 1919), 48–51, 256, 236–238.
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[13]Urbanization, industrialization, and disillusionment with World War I led Americans to question the Victorian ideal of order and rationality in which they had previously taken comfort. For a discussion of the new ways Americans were seeing the world at this time, see Lynn Dumenil, The Modern Temper: American Culture and Society in the 1920s (New York: Hill and Wang, 1995), 145–200.
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[14]See James 2:18.
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[15]See Romans 1:16; and 1 Peter 1:5.
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[16]See Genesis 25:29–34.