Photo by Amauri Mejia on Unsplash
Our Heavenly Father gave us life, and He intends for us to
be creative with it. In so doing we find
joy. God wants us to have joy. Facilitating our joy is what He does with His
life. It is His creativity. In the process He gains a fulness of joy.
Let me illustrate from ancient scripture. When Jesus Christ, shortly after His
resurrection, visited His disciples in the ancient Americas, He bid the
multitude to kneel. Then Jesus knelt,
and He prayed to God the Father for them.
This is from their record of that prayer: “no one can conceive of the joy which filled
our souls at the time we heard him pray for us unto the Father.” (3 Nephi 17:17) How would you feel if you heard Jesus Christ
pray to Heavenly Father for you? Could
you find words to express your joy?
Neither could these disciples.
How did Jesus feel?
The account relates, Jesus said, “And now behold, my joy is full.” What does it take to fill the capacity for
joy of the Creator and Savior of the world?
Some days later, meeting with those whom Jesus had chosen to
lead the ancient church in the Americas, the Savior promised them that because of
their faithful service their “joy shall be full, even as the Father hath given
me fulness of joy; and ye shall be even as I am, and I am even as the Father”
(3 Nephi 28:10).
This was in keeping with what the Lord revealed through the
prophet Lehi, some 600 years before, “men are that they might have joy.” (2
Nephi 2:25).
How does it happen?
Consider the difference between life and non-life, the difference
between animate creatures and inanimate objects. The distinctions are many, but for this
discussion I would focus on the fact that those that have life are movers,
actors. They act upon the inanimate
things around them. I recall once
complaining in frustration about my computer, when I was reminded that
computers are stupid; they can only do what they are told to do. Even the much vaunted “artificial
intelligence” of computer programs is for all its sophistication still artificial; there is an artist behind
it.
Every thing in the universe moves only as it is
forced to. The children of God are
different. In giving us life God gave to
each of us the power to move, to initiate action, to create. We can give (an endless power if used
properly, whereas taking is always limited and has an end).
God created the
earth (among an infinity of other works).
He organized the chaotic elements around Him and made something
marvelously beautiful. God “saw every
thing that he had made” and He saw that “it was very good” (Genesis 1:31). And then He gave it to us. He did so that we might have something to
work with as we learned to create. God
did not build the farms and the cities.
He left those for us, allowing us to participate in creation, and
experience the joy of creation.
His creation is our example.
It is creation with a purpose, it is organizing the resources around us
for greater joy. The most meaningful
form of creation is creation-giving, creating what we then pass on to
others. If you consider the commandments
of God, they all have as their purpose to enhance our ability to create and
then bless others with our creations, to receive more from God and each other
that we might create more and share more, and in the process that we might
learn so that we might go on creating forever.
Sin is what limits our creativity.
What we create and keep to ourselves has a way of becoming
unsatisfying. It has an end in us, and
in that end the joy is lost; it might just as well have not been created at
all. When we give, when we
create-give—and in return receive and give—this creation moves forward. When the creation and the joy are passed on, as
they are passed on, they have no end.
The creative work lasts forever and becomes more. Man, by engaging in such creation experiences
joy and creates joy. That is what our Father sent us here to learn
to do. By so doing, we learn to become
like Him, creatively joyful in turn. We
gain more life, we become more lively, until the Lord gives us all that He has,
eternal life.
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