When my father and my mother forsake me, then the Lord will take me up.

Jeffrey R. Holland wrote in his book “For Troubled Times:”

Nothing should be more dependable in a child’s life than a mother and father. Fortunately, most parents are magnificent. Even though it may not always be manifest perfectly, the love of a father or mother has for a child is the closest thing to divine love that most will ever know in this world. Parenting is so very important for just that reason: as mothers and fathers we represent—and to the best of our abilities are to replicate—the love and strength our heavenly parents have for the children they have loaned to us. With heavenly parenthood as a backdrop, mortal parenthood takes on its profound, eternal significance.

Unfortunately, there is that rare father or mother who abdicates his or her responsibility, who flees home and hearth either literally or figuratively, forsaking the child who looks to that parent for love. That is a painful and devastating thought, but there is evidence of such abandonment in some elements of societies, including societies that make a mockery of marriage and turn a blind eye to the destruction of the family unit. To any child who experiences such a loss—and no child should have to face it—the Psalmist offers an assurance that will never fail, a love that never grows cold, a parenthood that never walks out the door or out of our life. He offers the love of a heavenly parent.

The love of God toward His children is secure. His parenthood is His most treasured role; of all His titles he most prefers that of “Father.” He will “take [us] up” in His strong arms when no earthly parent is there to do so. He will never forsake us. ~Jeffrey R. Holland, For Troubled Times (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2012), 64-65

(Posts with a preamble asterisk * are for a more general audience, and not specific to teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.)

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