From Kent: Posts for the next several weeks should continue daily, but I may miss a day(s), due to out of state family considerations. kdm

Continuing from a previous post Revealing Ourselves—Revealing God . . . and the book ‘The Holiness of Everyday Life’, Joan B. MacDonald shared:

I live in a ward in the suburbs of Boston. Over the years I’ve seen six or seven bishops come and go. Most of them have been successful businessmen. Many of them were required to travel extensively in relation to their work. I remember two of them relating stories of personal encounters in foreign lands that profoundly affected their spiritual lives. One bishop told of spending a week in Mexico with a Mexican executive and his family. The man was highly successful, wealthy, powerful, intelligent, and articulate. He was also a devout Catholic and was deeply committed to his family. He led his family in daily devotions, actively taught his children, and often made sacrifices at work to make time for his family. He and our bishop had several long discussions about the importance of family and the need to keep work and family commitments in balance. The second bishop spent a week in India with a similarly successful Hindu man. They also spent time discussing the importance of devotion to God and family. In addition, they discussed the responsibility of wealth and position. Our bishop discovered that his Hindu counterpart was deeply involved in helping solve some of India’s social problems. Both bishops came home from their travels humbled and challenged to increase to the Lord and to their families.

Cultural diversity can also result in exposure to ideas, perspectives, and ways of being that we might not have otherwise encountered or consider. Diversity can challenge us to alter or expand our world view, to reassess our understanding of how God works with all his children. It can shed a fresh new light on basic assumptions with which we’ve become overly comfortable. Finally, diversity can bring us face-to-face with people who, without the benefit of the Church, have reached a level of spiritual maturity that dwarfs our own and through whom we might suddenly see the essence of true religion. We may be meeting in a conference room, conversing with a friend during our morning break, lecturing in front of a class, or laying a pipe at a construction site when something is said or done, and—surprise!—like Paul on the road to Damascus or Jacob in the desert wrestling with an angel, we see something we never saw before, understand something we never understood before, or have a problem we never had before. Because nonmembers and non-Christians express themselves with different words or interpret their experiences in different ways, or, sometimes, because of their experiences or understanding are so similar to ours even though they are not members of the Church, they can open our minds and hearts to new ideas, new feelings, or new insight and understanding. They can even open our minds and hearts to see God. ~Joan B. MacDonald, The Holiness of Everyday Life (Deseret Book Company: Salt Lake City, 1995), 9-10    (continued)

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