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Elder Maxwell Addresses

Remember How Merciful the Lord Has Been

Elder Neal A. Maxwell standing beside a fireplace in a dark suit and tie, hands clasped, in a formal black-and-white portrait.
From the Maxwell Children: In this message, Elder Maxwell teaches that, “as you submit your wills to God, you are giving Him the only thing you can actually give Him that is really yours to give. Don’t wait too long to find the altar or to begin to place the gift of your wills upon it!” Elder Maxwell taught this principle in many settings to illustrate that Church members must be completely committed to the Lord and His Church. Elsewhere, he observed, “Even if we decide to leave Babylon, some of us endeavor to keep a second residence there, or we commute on weekends.”[1]

This was the last General Conference talk Elder Maxwell gave. The fact that it was his last conference address and that he reflected on his life seemed to make it a fitting concluding testimony for this collection.

Elder Maxwell was a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles when he delivered this General Conference address at the Priesthood Session of the conference in April 2004.

Brethren, please allow me to reminisce informally and gratefully. Hopefully this will be done in a relaxed, almost conversational way by citing a few remembrances, a few of life’s little lessons—nothing spectacular. There will also be several one-liners whose durability reflects their brevity. The focus of these remembrances is upon being stretched by a merciful Lord (see Moroni 10:3).

If just one of these remembrances can be “likened” unto yourselves (see 1 Nephi 19:23), there might be a brief father and son discussion later on.

Elder Neal A. Maxwell in U.S. Army uniform, smiling in a formal portrait before leaving for basic training during World War II.
Elder Maxwell in full uniform before he left for basic training in World War II.
  1. Let’s go back sixty years. The minutes of the Wandamere Ward of the Grant Stake for June 4, 1944, indicate the sacrament was administered by my friends Ward Jackson, Arthur Hicks, and me to a congregation of 141. Then it was off to war. In May of 1945, I was blessing the sacrament again—but in a foxhole on Okinawa for a congregation of only one, myself! The training of my youth took over without fanfare—something only partially appreciated by me then—including abstaining from coffee in those same circumstances when water was scarce and highly chlorinated.
    I do not know what lies ahead of you young men, but my advice would be to fasten your seat belts and hold on firmly to your principles!

  2. In my Primary days, we sang “‘Give,’ Said the Little Stream”[2]— certainly sweet and motivating but not exactly theologically drenched. Today’s children, as you know, sing the more spiritually focused “I’m Trying to Be like Jesus.”[3]

  3. Back then, in family, neighborhood, ward, and school life, we were all poor together, but we didn’t know it. We made room for each other to grow, to make dumb mistakes, to repent, and to begin to develop at least some spiritual reflexes. Today, some anxious parents seem to insist on constantly pulling up the daisies to see how the roots are doing.

  4. Young or old, my priesthood brothers, be grateful for people in your lives who love you enough to correct you, to remind you of your standards and possibilities, even when you don’t want to be reminded.
    A dear and now deceased friend said to me years ago when I had said something sardonic, “You could have gone all day without saying that.” His one-liner reproof was lovingly stated, illustrating how correction can be an act of affection.

  5. When loved ones exemplify, it is especially memorable. My sister Lois, legally blind from birth, not only coped but served well as a public schoolteacher for thirty-three years. She had that same reflex possessed by those pioneer souls who quietly picked up their handcarts and headed west, a reflex we all need. So if various trials are allotted to you, partake of life’s bitter cups, but without becoming bitter.

Elder Neal A. Maxwell and Sister Colleen Maxwell seated together in a formal portrait, smiling warmly at the camera.
Elder Maxwell and Sister Colleen Maxwell
  1. Soon after arriving home from World War II, I had “promises to keep”[4]—meaning going on a mission now. I grew tired of waiting for the bishop. And in some early ark-steadying, I went to the bishop’s home and said I had saved the money and wanted to go, so let’s “get this show on the road.” The good bishop hesitated, and then said he’d been meaning to ask me about going.
    Years later, I would learn from that bishop’s devoted ward clerk that the bishop had felt I needed a little more time with my family after having been away so far and for a tenth of my life. Hearing this, I chastised myself for having been too judgmental.[5]
    No wonder the wise father of Elder Henry B. Eyring observed once how the Lord had a perfect Church until He let all of us inside![6]

Elder Neal A. Maxwell in a suit and glasses, smiling gently.
Candid photo taken of Elder Maxwell while attending a granddaughter’s reception during the last few years of his life.
  1. Two relevant memories for young fathers. When I was such, I had just received a phone call telling me of a friend’s death in an accident. I was sitting in the living room with tears streak- ing down my cheeks. Our young son, Cory, saw the tears as he passed in the hallway. I learned that he had anxiously assumed the tears were because he had disappointed me in some way. He didn’t know about the phone call. Brethren, we underestimate how genuinely and frequently our children want to please us.

  2. Having virtually no quantitative skills, I was seldom if ever able to help our children with math and scientific subjects. One day, our high school daughter Nancy asked me for “a little help” regarding a Supreme Court case, Fletcher v. Peck. I was so eager to help after so many times of not being able to help. At last, a chance to unload! Out came what I knew about Fletcher v. Peck. Finally, my frustrated daughter said, “Dad, I need only a little help!” I was meeting my own needs rather than giving her “a little help.”
    We worship a Lord who teaches us precept by precept, brethren, so even when we are teaching our children the gospel, let’s not dump the whole load of hay.

  3. In later years, I saw a few leave the Church who could then never leave it alone. They used often their intellectual reservations to cover their behavioral lapses.[7] You will see some of that. By the way, do not expect the world’s solutions to the world’s problems to be very effective. Such solutions often resemble what C. S. Lewis wrote about those who go dashing back and forth with fire extinguishers in times of flood.[8] Only the gospel is constantly relevant, and the substitute things won’t work.

Elder Neal A. Maxwell carrying the Olympic torch during the 2002 Winter Olympics torch relay in Salt Lake City.
Elder Maxwell was invited to carry the Olympic Torch in connection with the Winter Olympics in February 2002 in Salt Lake City.
  1. Once when traveling with Elder and Sister Russell M. Nelson, we left our hotel in Bombay, India, to catch a plane for Karachi, Pakistan, and then on to Islamabad. When we got to the chaotic airport, our flight had been canceled. Impatiently, I said to the man at the airline counter, “What do you expect us to do, just give up and go back to the hotel?” He said with great dignity, “Sir, you never go back to the hotel.” We rummaged about the airport, found a flight, kept the appointment in Islamabad, and even had a night’s sleep. Sometimes life is like that: we are left to press forward and endure frustrated expectations—refusing to “go back to the hotel”! Otherwise, such “give-up-itis” will affect all seasons of life. Besides, the Lord knows how many miles we have to go “before [we] sleep.”

  2. In 1956, after returning home from several years in Washington, D.C., and having declined several attractive offers there, I received an offer to work at the University of Utah. My wife said I should take it. She said presciently, “I feel if you go there, maybe you will have some influence on students.” I replied impatiently, “I’ll be typing news releases, not working with students.” The subsequent opportunities included being a bishop of a student ward, dean of students, and teaching hundreds of fine students in political science. It wasn’t status that mattered, of course, but being stretched and being given opportunities to serve.
    Our wives are often inspired but sometimes in counterintuitive ways—a reality, young men, which your fathers may be brave enough to explain to you sometime.

  3. It’s interesting, too, how we create, cumulatively, expectations in the lives of our grandchildren even when we are not aware of it. Some years ago, when our grandson Robbie was about five, we dropped by to see his family in Orem. He was asleep upstairs, and his mother called, “Robbie, Grandpa Neal is here!” A tired little voice floated downstairs saying, “Shall I bring my scriptures?”
    Of course, he was too young to read them, but he carried them, as so many do in the Church today, in that fine new pattern!

Brethren, there are clusters of memories embedded in each of your lives. And these can help us to “remember how merciful the Lord hath been” (Moroni 10:3). He certainly has been to me!

Brethren, as you submit your wills to God, you are giving Him the only thing you can actually give Him that is really yours to give. Don’t wait too long to find the altar or to begin to place the gift of your wills upon it! No need to wait for a receipt; the Lord has His own special ways of acknowledging.

I testify to you that God has known you individually, brethren, for a long, long time (see Doctrine and Covenants 93:23). He has loved you for a long, long time. He not only knows the names of all the stars (see Psalm 147:4; Isaiah 40:26), He knows your names and all your heartaches and your joys! By the way, you have never seen an immortal star; they finally expire. But seated by you tonight are immortal individuals—imperfect but who are, nevertheless, “trying to be like Jesus”! In His name, even Jesus Christ, amen.


[1] Neal A. Maxwell, A Wonderful Flood of Light (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1990), 47.

[2] Children’s Songbook of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (1989), 236.

[3] Children’s Songbook, 78–79.

[4] Robert Frost, “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening,” in The Poetry of Robert Frost, ed. Edward Connery Lathem (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969), 225.

[5] See Bruce C. Hafen, A Disciple’s Life: The Biography of Neal A. Maxwell (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2002), 129–30.

[6] Henry Eyring (1901–1981), father of Henry B. Eyring, was a world-renowned chemist. He also served in the Church as a longtime member of the general board of the Deseret Union Sunday School, the Church’s Sunday School organization at the time. (Eds.)

[7] See Neal A. Maxwell, All These Things Shall Give Thee Experience (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1979), 110.

[8] See The Screwtape Letters (New York: Macmillan, 1959), 117–18.