Sunday, February 23, 2025

Yielding Our Hearts to God Our Christ





When we open ourselves to the Spirit, 

we learn God’s way 

and feel His will.

 I submit that personal reformation begins with 

a change of heart—

no matter your life experiences or your place of birth.


I come from the Deep South of the United States, 

and in my youth the words of old Protestant hymns 

taught me of a true disciple’s heart—

one that has been changed. 

Consider these lyrics, so dear to me:



Have Thine own way, Lord!

Have Thine own way!

Thou art the Potter;

I am the clay.

Mould me and make me

After Thy will,

While I am waiting,

Yielded and still.2


How do we, 

a modern, busy, competitive people, 

become yielded and still? 


How do we make the Lord’s ways our ways? 


I believe we begin by learning of Him 

and praying for understanding. 

As our trust in Him grows, 

we open our hearts, 

seek to do His will, 

and wait for answers that will 

help us understand.




My own change of heart started when, as a 12-year-old, 

I began to search for God. 

Other than saying the Lord’s Prayer,3 

I didn’t really know how to pray. 

I remember kneeling, 

hoping I could feel His love, 

and asking, 


“Where are You, Heavenly Father? 

I know You must be out there somewhere, 

but where?” 

All through my teen years, 

I asked. 

I did have glimpses of the reality of Jesus Christ, 

but Heavenly Father, 

in His wisdom, l

et me seek and wait for 10 years.

In 1970, when missionaries taught me 

about the Father’s plan of salvation 

and of the Savior’s Atonement, 

my waiting ended... 

I embraced these truths and was baptized.

Based on this knowledge of the Lord’s 

mercy and power, 

my husband, children, and I chose this family motto: 

“It will all work out.” 

Yet how can we say those words to one another 

when deep troubles come 

and answers aren’t readily available?





When our delightful, worthy, 21-year-old daughter, Georgia, 

was hospitalized in critical condition following a bike accident, 

our family said, 

“It will all work out.” 

As I flew immediately from our mission in Brazil 

to Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, to be with her, 

I clung to our family motto. 


However, our lovely daughter passed into the spirit world 

just hours before my plane landed. 

With grief and shock running through our family like a current, 

how could we look at one another and still say, 

“It will all work out”?


Following Georgia’s mortal death, 

our feelings were raw, 

we struggled, 

and still today we have moments of great sorrow, 

but we hold to the understanding that 

no one ever really dies. 

Despite our anguish when 

Georgia’s physical body stopped functioning, 

we had faith 

that she went right on living as a spirit, 

and we believe we will live with her eternally 

if we adhere to our temple covenants. 

Faith in our Redeemer and His Resurrection, 

faith in His priesthood power, 

and faith in eternal sealings 

let us state our motto with conviction.



President Gordon B. Hinckley said: 


“If you do your best, 

it will all work out. 

Put your trust in God. … 

The Lord will not forsake us.”4


Our family motto doesn’t say,

 “It will all work out now.” 

It speaks of our hope in the eternal outcome—

not necessarily of present results. 


Scripture says, 

“Search diligently, pray always, 

and be believing, 

and all things shall work together for your good.”5 

This doesn’t mean all things are good, 

but for the meek and faithful, things—

both positive and negative—

work together for good, 

and the timing is the Lord’s. 

We wait on Him, 

sometimes like Job in his suffering, 

knowing that God 

“maketh sore, and bindeth up: 

he woundeth, and his hands make whole.”6 

A meek heart accepts the trial 

and the waiting 

for that time of healing 

and wholeness to come.




When we open ourselves to the Spirit, 

we learn God’s way and feel His will. 

During the sacrament, 

which I call the heart of the Sabbath, 

I have found that after I pray for forgiveness of sins, 

it is instructive for me to ask Heavenly Father, 

“Father, is there more?” 

When we are yielded and still, 

our minds can be directed to 

something more we may need to change—

something that is limiting our capacity 

to receive spiritual guidance 

or even healing and help.


For example, 

perhaps I have a 

carefully guarded resentment toward someone. 

When I ask if there is more to confess, 

that “secret” comes clearly to my memory. 

In essence, 

the Holy Ghost is whispering, 

“You honestly asked if there was more, 

and here it is. 

Your resentment diminishes your progress 

and damages your ability to have healthy relationships. 

You can let this go.” 

Oh, it is hard work—

we may feel quite justified in our animosity—

but yielding to the Lord’s way 

is the only way to 

lasting happiness.





In time and by degrees, 

we receive His gracious strength and direction—

perhaps leading us to frequent the temple 

or to study more deeply the Savior’s Atonement 

or to consult with a friend, a bishop, a professional counselor, 

or even a doctor. 

The healing of our heart begins 

when we submit to and 

worship God.

True worship begins 

when our hearts are 

right before the Father and the Son. 


What is our heart condition today? 

Paradoxically, in order to have a healed and faithful heart, 

we must first allow it to break before the Lord. 

“Ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me 

a broken heart and a contrite spirit,”7 

the Lord declares. 

The result of sacrificing our heart, 

or our will, 

to the Lord is that we 

receive the spiritual guidance we need.

With a growing understanding 

of the Lord’s grace and mercy, 

we will find that our self-willed hearts 

begin to crack and break in gratitude. 

Then we reach for Him, 

yearning to yoke ourselves 

to the Only Begotten Son of God. 

In our brokenhearted reaching and yoking, 

we receive new hope and 

fresh guidance 

through the Holy Ghost.



I have struggled to banish 

the mortal desire to have things my way, 

eventually realizing that 

my way is oh so lacking, 

limited, and 

inferior 

to the way of Jesus Christ. 

His way is the path that leads to 

happiness in this life 

and eternal life in the world to come.”8 

Can we love Jesus Christ and His way 

more than we love ourselves 

and our own agenda?

Some may think 

they have failed too many times 

and feel too weak to 

change sinful acts 

or worldly desires of the heart. 

However, 

as covenant Israel, 

we don’t just try and try on our own to change. 

If we earnestly appeal to God, 

He takes us as we are—

and makes us more than we ever imagined. 



Noted theologian Robert L. Millet writes of

 “a healthy longing to improve,” 

balanced with the spiritual 

“assurance that in and through Jesus Christ 

we are going to make it.”9 

With such an understanding, 

we can honestly say to Heavenly Father:


So trusting my all to thy tender care,

And knowing thou lovest me,

I’ll do thy will with a heart sincere:

I’ll be what you want me to be.10


When we offer our broken heart to Jesus Christ, 

He accepts our offering. 

He takes us back. 

No matter what losses, 

wounds, and 

rejection 

we have suffered, 

His grace 

and healing 

are mightier than all. 


Truly yoked to the Savior, 

we can say with confidence, 

“It will all work out.” 

In the name of Jesus Christ, 

amen.



Search diligentlypray always, and be believing, and all things shall work together for your good, if ye walk uprightly and remember the covenant wherewith ye have covenanted one with another.

D & C 90:24


And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit. And whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit, him will I baptize with fire and with the Holy Ghost, even as the Lamanites, because of their faith in me at the time of their conversion, were baptized with fire and with the Holy Ghost, and they knew it not.

3 Nephi 9:20


“I’ll Go Where You Want Me to Go”





From the talk....

"Yielding Our Hearts to God"

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