This is a sweet and wonderful book full of inspiration and talks by Elder Holland specifically about the importance of knowing and trusting Jesus Christ. We are invited to come to Him. He knows us. He loves us. He will help us. He will heal us. We can trust Him. Hope and peace and joy and direction comes when we follow Him. I'm grateful for Jesus Christ and the reminder to trust Him! Here are a few of my favorite quotes:
"Everyone meets affliction in mortality. Everyone knows some sorrow. Everyone experiences disappointments, even despair, and looks for ways to bear up and keep on going. The answer for all times and all seasons is to 'trust Jesus (p. x).'"
"My testimony is of the angels and ministers of grace who will always defend us, as the prophet Alma commanded us, we 'take care of...sacred things,' we 'look to God and live' (Alma 37:47). More prayer and humility, more faith and forgiveness, more repentance and revelation and reinforcement from heaven--these are where we seek remedy and deliverance (p. 4)."
"During the Savior's Galilean ministry, He chided those who had heard of Him feeding the 5,000 with only five barley loaves and two fishes and now flocked to Him expecting a free lunch. That food, important as it was, was incidental to the real nourishment He was trying to give them (p. 11)."
"Everything in the gospel teaches us that we can change if we need to, that we can be helped if we truly want it, that we can be made whole, whatever the problems of the past (p. 14)."
"We could remember that even with such a solemn mission given to Him, the Savior found delight in living; He enjoyed people and told His disciples to be of good cheer. He said we should be as thrilled with the gospel as one who had found a great treasure, a veritable pearl of great price, right on our own doorstep. We could remember that Jesus found special joy and happiness in children and said all of us should be more like them--guileless and pure, quick to laugh and to love and to forgive, slow to remember any offense (p. 23)."
"Don't count on laws or legislatures or courts or civil authorities or anyone else to provide our defense. Our defense is a burning conviction of the gospel of Jesus Christ and a keeping of those commandments. Our defense is in prayer and faith, in study and fasting, in the gifts of the Spirit, the ministration of angels, the power of the priesthood (p. 26)."
"Healing is mentioned as if it were a synonym for teaching and preaching (p. 29)."
"Christ wants our teaching to lead to healing of the spiritual kind....As with the Master, wouldn't it be wonderful to measure the success of our teaching by the healing that takes place in the lives of our students?...Rather than just giving a lesson, please try a little harder to help that blind basketball star really see, or the deaf homecoming queen really hear, or the privately lame student body president really walk. Try a little harder to fortify someone so powerfully that whatever temptations the devils of hell throw at her or him, these students will be able to withstand and thus truly in that moment be free from evil (p. 31)."
"The thing Christ seems most anxious to stress about His mission--beyond the personal virtues and beyond the magnificent sermons and even beyond the healing--is that He submitted His will to the will of the Father (p. 42)."
"A convert's new life is to be built upon faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and His redeeming sacrifice--a conviction that He really is the Son of God, that He lives this very moment, that He really is the door of the sheepfold, that He alone holds the key to our salvation and exaltation. That belief is to be followed by true repentance, repentance which shows our desire to be clean and renewed and whole, repentance that allows us to lay claim to the full blessings of the Atonement (p. 48)."
"In the 11th chapter of Matthew, verses 28-30, the Savior says" 'Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.' This is my basic message to each of you, wherever you live, whatever your joys or sorrows, however young or old you may be, at whatever point you may find yourself in this mortal journey of ours. Some of you are where you want to be, or you know where you want to go with your lives, and some of you don't. Some of you seem to have so many blessings and so many wonderful choices ahead of you. Others of you feel, for a time and for whatever reason, less fortunate and with fewer attractive paths lying immediately ahead. But whoever you are and wherever you find yourself as you seek your way in life, I offer you 'the way...and the life' (John 14:6). Wherever else you think you may be going, I ask you to 'come unto Him' as the imperative first step in getting there, in finding your individual happiness and strength and success (p. 63)."
"I love that. The hills and the mountains may disappear. The seas and oceans may dry up completely. The least likely things in the world may happen, but 'my kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed [from thee] (p. 67).'"
"Don't worry about Christ running out of ability to help you. His grace is sufficient. That is the spiritual, eternal lesson of the feeding of the 5,000 (p. 73)."
"One of the grand ironies of the gospel is that the very source of help and safety being offered us is the thing from which we may, in our mortal shortsightedness, flee....Too often we see gospel commitments and commandments as something to be feared and forsaken (p. 74)."
"Even if you cannot always see that silver lining on your clouds, God can, for He is the very source of the light you seek. He does love you, and He knows your fears. He hears your prayers. He is your Heavenly Father, and surely He matches with His own the tears His children shed (p. 93)."
"No one's eyes were more penetrating than His, and much of what He saw pierced His heart. His ears heard every cry of distress, every sound of want and despair. To a degree far more than we will ever understand, He was 'a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief' (Isaiah 53:3). Indeed, to the layman in the streets of Judea, Christ's career must have seemed a failure, a tragedy, a good man totally overwhelmed by the evils surrounding Him and the misdeeds of others. He was misunderstood or misrepresented, even hated from the beginning. No matter what He said or did, His statements were twisted, His actions suspected, His motives impugned. In the entire history of the world no one has ever loved so purely or served so selflessly--and been treated so diabolically for His effort. Yet nothing could break His faith in His Father's plan or His Father's promises. Even in those darkest hours of Gethsemane and Calvary, He pressed on, continuing to trust in the very God whom He momentarily feared had forsaken Him. Because Christ's eyes were unfailingly fixed on the future, He could endure all that was required of Him (p. 94)."
"'Don't give up, boy. Don't you quit. You keep walking. You keep trying. There is help and happiness ahead--a lot of it--thirty years of it now, and still counting. You keep your chin up. It will be all right in the end. Trust God and believe in good things to come (p. 97).'"
"'The temple is the only place I have been where I felt truly whole. I have always felt I was a daughter of God, but only in the temple did I understand what that truly meant (p. 105).'"
"I testify of home and family and marriage, the most precious human possessions of our lives. I testify of the need to protect and preserve them while we find time and ways to serve faithfully in the Church (p. 113)."
"My call to you is something of the call Joshua gave to an earlier generation of priesthood bearers, young men and those not so young, who needed to perform a miracle in their time.... Joshua said, 'Sanctify yourselves: for tomorrow the Lord will do wonders among you' (Joshua 3:5) (p. 117)."
"'To every man there comes...that special moment when he is figuratively tapped on the shoulder and offered the chance to do a special thing unique to him and fitted to his talent. What a tragedy if that moment finds him unprepared or unqualified for the work which would be his finest hour (Winston Churchill, p. 123).'"
"The gospel of Jesus Christ holds the answer to every social and political and economic problem this world has ever faced. And I know we can each do something, however small that act may seem to be. We can pay an honest tithe and give our fast and freewill offerings, according to our circumstances. And we can watch for other ways to help. To worthy causes and needy people, we can give time if we don't have money, and we can give love when our time runs out. We can share the loaves we have and trust God that he cruse of oil will not fail (p. 148)."
"When the call to serve came, he responded. When his particular assignment involved more than he had bargained for and was harder than he expected, he accepted that as well. And when enemies of the Church, malicious men, might have done him harm or otherwise damaged his faith, he said to them just one thing. 'There are many things I don't know. What I do know is that a prophet of God has sent me here. I will be true to that trust placed in me (p. 157).'"
"Brothers and sisters, I testify that no one of us is less treasured or cherished of God than another. I testify that He loves each of us--insecurities, anxieties, self-image, and all. He doesn't measure our talents or our looks; He doesn't measure our professions or our possessions. He cheers on every runner, calling out that the race is against sin, not against each other. I know that if we will be faithful, there is a perfectly tailored robe of righteousness ready and waiting for everyone (see Isaiah 61:10; 2 Nephi 4:33; 9:14) (p. 165)."
"Don't let your guard down. Don't assume that a great revelation, some marvelous, illuminating moment, the opening of an inspired path, is the end of it....What happens to Moses next, after his revelatory moment, would be ludicrous if it were not so dangerous and so true to form. Lucifer--in an effort to continue his opposition, in his unfailing effort to get his licks in later if not sooner--appears and shouts in equal portions of anger....But Moses is not having it. He has just seen the real thing, and by comparison this sort of performance is pretty dismal (p. 169)."
"What goodly land? Well, your goodly land. Your promised land. Your new Jerusalem. Your own little acre flowing with milk and honey. Your future. Your dreams. Your destiny. I believe that in our own individual ways, God takes us to the grove or the mountain or the temple and there shows us the wonder of what His plan is for us. We may not see it as fully as Moses or Nephi or the brother of Jared did, but we see as much as we need to see in order to know the Lord's will for us and to know that He loves us beyond mortal comprehension (p. 177)."