{"id":4979,"date":"1975-10-28T13:39:40","date_gmt":"1975-10-28T20:39:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/speeches-dev.byu.edu\/?p=4979"},"modified":"2021-03-15T10:48:57","modified_gmt":"2021-03-15T16:48:57","slug":"appreciate-opportunities","status":"publish","type":"speech","link":"https:\/\/speeches-dev.byu.edu\/talks\/marion-d-hanks\/appreciate-opportunities\/","title":{"rendered":"Appreciate Your Opportunities"},"content":{"rendered":"

I\u2019m here today physically subdued from an interesting afternoon and evening in swinging an ax and pushing a saw in the snow at Aspen Grove, but I\u2019m built up to an exultation of spirit and emotion through that great experience. David Grayson wrote, \u201cIt is not the time of the day nor the turn of the season nor yet the way of the wind that matters most to us, but the ardor and glow we ourselves bring to the fragrant earth. It is a sad thing to reflect that, in a world so overflowing with goodness of smell or fine sights and sweet sounds, we pass by hastily and take so little of them. Days pass when we see no beautiful sights, hear no sweet sounds, smell no memorable odor, when we exchange no single word of deeper understanding with a friend. We have lived a day and added nothing to our lives.\u201d<\/p>\n

On our way to and from Aspen Grove we passed hunters, all of them driving slowly and looking forlornly at the hillside. I personally was not sorry to see them looking so forlorn. Of course it is a proper sport, and the proper season. I think more of fishing, and have spent some successful time on the river. You may know of the man in Arkansas, described in the Arkansas Gazette<\/i>, who went fishing at a place called Lee\u2019s Ferry on September 22, 1972, caught a few fish, and lost his wedding band. It was a matter of sore concern at his house. One year later on September 22, 1973, fishing in exactly the same place, he caught a fourteen-inch trout. While he was opening that trout with his sharp knife, the knife struck something solid. It was his thumb. Well, things are not always what they seem.<\/p>\n

Now, I\u2019d like to qualify my being here today. I didn\u2019t come for just another meeting, of course. I really feel like the Englishman who watched his first game of American football, saw all those huddles, and said, \u201cSeems like an interesting game. I think I could learn to like it, but they hold too many committee meetings.\u201d I didn\u2019t come, we didn\u2019t come, to see the local attractions.<\/p>\n

I was reading the other day about the archbishop of Canterbury who was warned about the American news media. Upon arrival he met a group of these interesting people who asked him questions. One said, \u201cArchbishop, do you intend to visit the night clubs in New York?\u201d<\/p>\n

Warily he answered, \u201cOh, are there night clubs in New York?\u201d<\/p>\n

The next day the paper printed the story: \u201cThe first question the archbishop of Canterbury asked upon arriving in New York was, \u2018Are there night clubs in New York?\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n

I\u2019m not here today to see anything except you, really, though I certainly enjoyed the beauty of the sky and the mountains on my way here.<\/p>\n

There is one other preliminary to the major message of my intent. That is a preliminary message which is entirely appropriate here. It came from the Tucson newspaper known to many of you, I am sure, and was in reference to a headline published over an article about the necessary discharge of a number of state employees because of budgetary limitations. The headline said: \u201cWhom shall be fired first?\u201d A letter to the editor said, quoting that headline, \u201cWhom shall be fired first? That\u2019s easy. Whom<\/i> wrote the headline, him<\/i> shall be fired first. Him doesn\u2019t know enough good English grammar to hold the job he has.\u201d<\/p>\n

Well, I didn\u2019t come to teach much that\u2019s new, either, and I\u2019ll therefore tell you why I\u2019m here. I came because I like to come and so accepted the invitation. I like to get the feel of this place. Someone has written, \u201cNew leaves do not come because old leaves are falling. Old leaves fall because new leaves are coming.\u201d You are the new leaves. We look with optimism to your coming and bid you remember with Charlie Brown that there is no heavier burden than great potential.<\/p>\n

Information and Appreciation<\/b><\/h2>\n

I came to deliver a nosegay of flowers collected along the road, tying together these blossoms with the frail thread of my understanding, acceptance, conviction, and appreciation. I\u2019d like to begin what I have to say with a quotation from a hero of mine whose name is Abraham Heschel. He is gone now but was a great rabbi and teacher. Abraham Heschel wrote:<\/p>\n

Two things a man needs\u2014information and appreciation. Now when I look at our educational system and many other institutions for civilization, I see a tremendous emphasis upon information, but hardly any cultivation of the sense of appreciation. Unless there is appreciation there is no mankind. The great marvel of being alive is the ability to discover the mystery and wonder of everything. The real dignity of anything that is, is in its relationship to God Who created it. Unless we learn how to revere, we will not know how to exist as human beings.<\/i><\/p>\n

For what information and appreciation shall we seek? Let me share a story you may have heard. If so, you will appreciate it more, and if not, it will be a thoughtful experience. An older man and a young man were drifting in a rowboat on a quiet lake, beneath the earthen dam that formed the lake. They had newly become friends. The older man, as they talked, picked up a leaf from the surface of the lake. He said, \u201cSon, do you know very much about biology?\u201d<\/p>\n

The young man said, \u201cI\u2019m afraid I don\u2019t, sir.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWell,\u201d he said, \u201cYou\u2019ve lost 25 percent of your life.\u201d<\/p>\n

They went a little farther and the older man took from the bottom of the boat a rock. He held it up, examined it, and said to the younger man, \u201cSon, do you know very much about geology?\u201d<\/p>\n

He said, a little embarrassed, \u201cno sir, I\u2019m afraid I don\u2019t.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWell,\u201d he said, \u201cyou\u2019ve lost 50 percent of your life.\u201d<\/p>\n

As they drifted it became dusk and the first evening star appeared. The older man asked, \u201cson, do you know very much about astronomy?\u201d<\/p>\n

He said, \u201cI\u2019m embarrassed to tell you, sir, that I don\u2019t.\u201d<\/p>\n

The older man answered, with a smile, \u201cYou\u2019ve missed 75 percent of your life.\u201d<\/p>\n

They drifted a little longer and then, sensing some unusual current in the water beneath them, looked up and saw coming at them a huge wall of water from the dam, which had burst. The young man said, \u201cSir, do you know how to swim?\u201d<\/p>\n

He said, \u201cNo, I\u2019m afraid I don\u2019t.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cWell,\u201d said the boy, \u201cyou\u2019re about to lose all of your life.\u201d<\/p>\n

A leaf, a rock, a star, swimming, biology, geology, astronomy\u2014all are wonderful. It would be wonderful if each of us had a broad enough base in the laws of nature and the basics of science and the facts of history and the principles of philosophy to be interested in and understand in a measure the great advances being made around us. This knowledge contributes richness to life and perhaps to making a living, but more important than any of it, central to all of it, giving it all meaning and coherence, is information about and appreciation of man himself, of his relationships with others and with God, and of his understanding of origins and heritage and possibilities, responsibilities, and an everlasting future. Let me look at two or three matters of appreciation selected out of a multitude I\u2019ve been turning over in my mind the last few hours.<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Life<\/b><\/h2>\n

Appreciate life. Grayson\u2019s comment about ardor is complemented for me by something I heard from two wonderful psychologists, a husband-and-wife team, teaching a group of adults a long time ago. Out of all that they said, much of which I remember, one thought is foremost in my mind: \u201cNor heaven nor hell can him surprise, who loves his home, and loves the rain, and looks on life with quiet eyes.\u201d<\/p>\n

You may have heard the last interview recorded with Dr. Tom Dooley before he died of leukemia. He had given the young years of his medical career, when he could have been making a lot of money, to the people of Indochina. These two or three sentences constituted the valedictory, of sorts, of Tom Dooley. Said the questioner, \u201cDr. Dooley, you are living on borrowed time, yet your contributions to humanity seem to take no account of the trials you personally are called upon to bear.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cYes,\u201d he said (this conversation was replayed the day he died), \u201cI am living on borrowed time. So are you; so is every man who walks this earth. I may live to be as old as you are now; I may not live to see my next birthday. This does not matter. What really counts is what I do in terms of human good with the days, the weeks, the months or the years allotted to me by my creator.\u201d Appreciate life.<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Others<\/b><\/h2>\n

Appreciate others and be respectful of their values. I was called upon to pray at a public gathering a few days ago and found myself without premeditation thanking God for the qualities of gentility and civility and caring which permit people of diverse points of view and diverse ways of living to be together in an atmosphere of courtesy and graciousness. I\u2019ve thought about that since. I think the Lord blessed me to say that. It certainly was consonant with how I feel and what I would like my life to represent. Do you remember the words of the great apostle who encouraged all of us to \u201chonor all men. Love the brotherhood. Fear God. Honor the king\u201d (1 Peter 2:17)? We also read of the Prophet, under the inspiration of God, preceding the marvelous words \u201clet virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly\u201d with the admonition that we be filled with love toward all men, and to the household of faith (see D&C 121:45). This message is repeated again and again. I wonder if we always are sensitive to it.<\/p>\n

Do you know the story of Mike Gold? I didn\u2019t until a year or so ago.<\/p>\n

In the 1920s, the philosopher of American communism was a Jew named Mike Gold. After communism fell into general disrepute in this country, Mike Gold became a man of oblivion. In this oblivion he wrote a book, <\/i>A Jew Without Knowing It. In describing his childhood in New York City, he tells of his mother\u2019s instructions never to wander beyond four certain streets. She could not tell him that it was a Jewish ghetto. She could not tell him that he had the wrong kind of blood in his veins. . . .<\/i><\/p>\n

In his narration, Mike Gold tells of the day that curiosity lured him beyond the four streets, outside of his ghetto, and of how he was accosted by a group of older boys who asked him a puzzling question: \u201cHey, kid, are you a kike?\u201d \u201cI don\u2019t know.\u201d He had never heard that word before. The older boys came back with a paraphrase of their question. \u201cAre you a Christ-killer?\u201d Again, the small boy responded, \u201cI don\u2019t know.\u201d He had never heard that word either. So the older boys asked him where he lived, and trained like most small boys to recite their address in case of being lost, Mike Gold told them where he lived. \u201cSo you are a kike; you are a Christ-killer. Well you\u2019re in Christian territory and we are Christians. We\u2019re going to teach you to stay where you belong!\u201d And so they beat the little boy, bloodied his face and tore his clothes and sent him home to the jeering litany: \u201cWe are Christians and you killed Christ! Stay where you belong! We are Christians, and you killed Christ.\u201d . . .<\/i><\/p>\n

When he arrived home, Mike Gold was asked by his frightened mother: \u201cWhat happened to you, Mike?\u201d He could answer only: \u201cI don\u2019t know.\u201d \u201cWho did this to you, Mike?\u201d Again he answered: \u201cI don\u2019t know.\u201d And so the mother washed the blood from the face of her little boy and put him into fresh clothes and took him into her lap as she sat in a rocker, and tried to soothe him. Mike Gold recalled so much later in life that he raised his small battered lips to the ears of his mother and asked: \u201cMama, who is Christ?\u201d<\/i> [John Powell, Why Am I Afraid to Love,<\/i> pp. 114\u201316]<\/p>\n

I read from the Book of Mormon:<\/p>\n

And now, my brethren, I have spoken to you concerning pride; and those of you which have afflicted your neighbor, and persecuted him because ye were proud in your hearts, of the things which God hath given you, what say ye of it?<\/i><\/p>\n

Do ye not suppose that such things are abominable unto him who created all flesh? And the one being is as precious in his sight as the other. And all flesh is of the dust; and for the selfsame end hath he created them, that they should keep his commandments and glorify him forever.<\/i> [Jacob 2:20\u201321]<\/p>\n

Do you remember Shaw\u2019s Pygmalion<\/i>? One of the lines from this play is \u201cthe difference between a flower girl and a lady is not how she behaves but how she is treated.\u201d When I think of another sentence from Abraham Heschel. \u201cHolocausts,\u201d he said, \u201care caused not only by atomic explosions; holocausts are caused whenever a person is put to shame.\u201d<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Yourself<\/b><\/h2>\n

Appreciate your own special spiritual heritage and value. I read in a wonderful Christian-Protestant magazine a little while ago a somewhat strange, and to me sorrowful, statement: \u201cLike all other institutions of liberal Protestantism, this magazine is suffering from an erosion of self-confidence. There is a pervasive feeling that we no longer have anything particularly distinctive to offer by way of religious insight.\u201d In this world, where the Lord needs every strong heart and devoted hand and tongue he can find, I think that\u2019s very sad indeed.<\/p>\n

What I\u2019m saying to you is that we need to appreciate the special heritage and values that have come to us. Think for a moment what particularly distinctive insight the kingdom of God offers you in these matters: God, Christ, man, life, sex, marriage, family, resurrection, eternity. Special instruction has been given to us concerning conservation, pollution, liberation, population, elections, freedom, abortion, government, Christ. In these and many other very important principles, programs, doctrines, and matters, there are distinctive, special insights we have to share. But just knowing that or hearing it doesn\u2019t really suffice, does it? We must learn to understand these insights and become really converted to them, and to act on them.<\/p>\n

I wish it were appropriate to tell you all the details of a conversation I once had with a young lady, a lovely person, who was professionally qualified in a certain field. I would not want you to know those details, so I simply share a headline. She was about to make a decision that would influence her and her generations. She came into my office reluctantly, but she came because both she and I loved her parents. She was not really interested in anything I had to say and acknowledged it openly when I asked her. I said to her, \u201cWhen did you last do any serious reading about the Church?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cOh,\u201d she said a bit blithely, \u201cin the ninth grade. We were reading the Book of Mormon. I quit, though.\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cDid you also quit praying and going to church?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cYes,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n

\u201cAnd pretty soon you stopped living the life of the Church?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cYes.\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cI really just have one other question to ask you. The new Church Office Building is about ready to be completed\u2014all those many stories. Your speciality will be involved in its completion. I\u2019d like to do what I could to get you the job to work on that great building. Would you like that?\u201d<\/p>\n

Looking a little dubious, she said, \u201cWell, sure!\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cAll right, I think I can do it on one condition. You agree to perform your professional speciality on that building on the basis of what you knew about it in the ninth grade.\u201d<\/p>\n

She looked a long time at the floor before the teardrops came, and she said, \u201cOh, Brother Hanks, I\u2019m in terrible trouble. Can you help me?\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cYes, I think I can now.\u201d<\/p>\n

To learn and then to act. I know a man who as a bishop won an award for his great skills and success in training teachers who work among underprivileged people. Some of his fellow teachers who knew him and knew the quality of his record and the nature of his life and his attitude toward his fellowmen said, \u201cWe just don\u2019t get it. How can you, being a Mormon, do the kind of work you do?\u201d<\/p>\n

He said, \u201cYou really don\u2019t get it, do you? I do the kind of work I do precisely because I am a Mormon.\u201d<\/p>\n

Appreciate your own particular, distinctive heritage and the religious insights which it offers.<\/p>\n

I stood under an awning one day, low in spirit, soaked by the rain. I had some law books under my arm, and they had been soaked, also. There were a lot of other problems on my shoulders, problems concerning people I loved very much, and other demands made on me, and many Church assignments. I hardly knew where to turn, and I really was depressed. There were two others under the awning who I did not at first even notice in my preoccupation with my own problems, but I couldn\u2019t keep from hearing them speaking to each other. One said\u2014she was a beautiful person, very near the birth of a child\u2014to her friend, \u201cHow are things going with you?\u201d<\/p>\n

She said, \u201cJust fine, but we can\u2019t find an apartment. Have you found one yet, with the baby coming?\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cOh, yes,\u201d said the pregnant girl, \u201cwe found one.\u201d<\/p>\n

The other said, \u201cYou did? How could you? We\u2019ve looked and looked.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cOh,\u201d she said, \u201cWe did, too. Bob and I looked till we were exhausted, and then, having tried as hard as we could, we fasted and prayed for a couple of days and he went out and found a nice place.\u201d<\/p>\n

\u201cOh,\u201d said the other. And I stood feeling ashamed, remembering some things I hadn\u2019t even thought of for a while.<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Humility<\/b><\/h2>\n

Appreciate the importance of being humble. Do you remember the wonderful words of an anguished father recorded in scripture? \u201cLord, I believe; help thou mine unbelief\u201d (Mark 9:24). Do you remember the wonderful line about matters of greater consequence\u2014\u201cweightier matters\u201d the Lord called them\u2014judgment, mercy, and faith (see Matthew 23:23)? Do you remember the wonderful man who knew how to treat his neighbor, who knew how to love God and his fellowman though he wasn\u2019t a member of the kingdom? The Savior said to him, \u201cThou art not far from the kingdom of God\u201d (Mark 12:34). There was something more he had to do, but he had the spirit and the meaning. And do you remember the Pharisee and the publican, the one so congratulatory over his religious rigidities, and the other who \u201cwould not lift up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but smote upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner\u201d (Luke 18:13)?<\/p>\n

Out of literature a long time ago I extracted a sentence I hope I can remember. A young priest was about to leave his calling because he saw injustice, an older priest encouraging him to remain because he saw true Christian strength in the youth. He said to the younger man, \u201cYou have inquisitiveness and tenderness. You are sensible to the distinction between thinking and doubting. And best of all, you do not have that bumptious security which springs from dogma rather than from faith\u201d (A. J. Cronin, Keys of the Kingdom<\/i>). In the name and worship of Jesus Christ we should be humble.<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Responsibility<\/b><\/h2>\n

Two other suggestions and I\u2019m through. Appreciate the responsibility of being an individual in an organized society, a person and a social being with responsibility to others. Avoid, I pray you, that lone-eagle complex that makes some people say, \u201cIt\u2019s my life and I\u2019m going to live it. I\u2019m going to do what I want to do in spite of what it does to anybody else, what effect it has on anyone else.\u201d<\/p>\n

Do you remember Niemoller\u2019s interesting bequeathment\u2014he who got along for a time with the Nazis and finally was imprisoned? \u201cThey came after the Jews, and I was not a Jew so I did not object. Then they came after the Catholics, and I was not a Catholic so I did not object. Then they came after the trade unionists. I was not a trade unionist so I did not object. Then they came after me, and there was nobody left to object.\u201d<\/p>\n

Christ asked, at the end of a story well known to all of us, \u201cWhich one of these three, thinkest thou, was neighbor unto him that fell among thieves?\u201d (Luke 10:36). Six hundred or more years before that Jeremiah had asked, \u201cIs it nothing to you, all ye that pass by?\u201d (Lamentations 1:12).<\/p>\n

Appreciation for Covenants<\/b><\/h2>\n

Appreciate, please, the need we all have to keep the pledges we have made. Sister Hanks and I were at the tomb of Gandhi in India. We read there a few words that I have treasured since\u2014words about pledges, words that I have found mirrored within the standard works and my own covenants and the memory of them reflected in the little piece of bread and the cup of water we take on the Sabbath. Gandhi said: \u201cEven for life itself we may not do certain things. There is only one course open to me, to die but never to break my pledge. . . . How can I control others if I cannot control myself?\u201d I remind you to be grateful for your pledges, and to keep them. I exemplify my pledges in an experience I once had. In a small town I had a talk with a lovely young woman about an opportunity she desired and now felt ready for. We were talking about her qualifications. She was candid and humble and gentle and forthright, anxious for her great opportunity. As we finished, I said to her, \u201cDoes anyone else know about the problem that makes this conversation necessary?\u201d<\/p>\n

She said, \u201cMy bishop and my stake president and my parents.\u201d<\/p>\n

I said (and I have more often felt blessed by the Spirit to ask a question than in answering one), \u201cWhat was the reaction of your parents when you told them?\u201d<\/p>\n

She said, \u201cMy father put his arms around me and wept. He said, \u2018Ah, sweetheart, how could you carry this heavy burden alone without us to help?\u2019\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cWas that his first response? Was that his reaction?\u201d<\/p>\n

She said, \u201cYes.\u201d<\/p>\n

I said, \u201cDo you know how blessed you are? Could I have the honor of meeting your father before we leave here?\u201d<\/p>\n

The arrangement was made. I said to him, \u201cIf I can express in my own life the maturity of Christian understanding of the gospel that you have, I will be very grateful.\u201d<\/p>\n

I bid you remember that, please. It is important to have that quality of character, and that kind of mature understanding of what it is really all about, and that kind of love. I see that as an appreciation of what God really expects us to grow to and is pulling for us to accomplish.<\/p>\n

This is a good place to stop, save one, and that one is a scripture:<\/p>\n

And now I, Moroni, bid farewell unto the Gentiles, yea, and also unto my brethren whom I love, until we shall meet before the judgment-seat of Christ. . . .<\/i><\/p>\n

And then shall ye know that I have seen Jesus, and that he hath talked with me face to face, and that he told me in plain humility, even as a man telleth another in mine own language, concerning these things.<\/i>[Ether 12:38\u201339]<\/p>\n

And I join Moroni in this invitation:<\/p>\n

And now, I would commend you to seek this Jesus of whom the prophets and apostles have written, that the grace of God the Father, and also the Lord Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost, which beareth record of them, may be and abide in you forever.<\/i> [Ether 12:41]<\/p>\n

This is his work. I think to learn of it and appreciate it is the main undertaking and highest blessing of us all, in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.<\/p>\n

\u00a9 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved.<\/i><\/p>\n","protected":false},"template":"","tags":[],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nAppreciate Your Opportunities - Marion D. Hanks - BYU Speeches<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Appreciate life. Appreciate and respect others. Appreciate your own spiritual heritage. Appreciate humility, responsibility, and keeping pledges.\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/speeches-dev.byu.edu\/talks\/marion-d-hanks\/appreciate-opportunities\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Appreciate Your Opportunities\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Appreciate life. Appreciate and respect others. Appreciate your own spiritual heritage. 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