But there was one exception. One year, I heard a talk about people who leave the church. The speaker described people who left as being led astray by Satan, fallen into the depths of immorality. He told us that people who left were angry and deluded. Deep down they knew the Church was true and so, locked in the throes of Satan, they were trying their best to tear the Church apart.
I was terrified. My dreams that night featured an army of people seeking to tear my family apart. The talk left an emotional imprint on my mind that lingered for years as I grew up and began navigating my religious identity.
About a year ago, I started wondering about the talk that had left such an impression on a little girl. I started combing through the LDS archives, searching for the talk that had struck so much fear in me.
Locating the talk took a long time. I was searching during the years when I would have been between 6 and 10 years of age. I kept searching, trying to find the talk but nothing seemed to fit my memories. Then I started searching the earlier years; that was when my search finally yielded results.
If I am correct, I heard this talk in April 1989. I would have been four years old at the time. The talk was titledFollow The Prophetand given by Glenn L. Pace. I have included excerpts of his talk.
The second category of critics is former members who have become disenchanted with the Church but who are obsessed with making vicious and vile attacks upon it […]
[…] In addition to attacking our sacred beliefs, some former members speak evil of the Brethren […]
[…] It seems that history continues to teach us: You can leave the Church, but you cant leave it alone. The basic reason for this is simple. Once someone has received a witness of the Spirit and accepted it, he leaves neutral ground. One loses his testimony only by listening to the promptings of the evil one, and Satans goal is not complete when a person leaves the Church, but when he comes out in open rebellion against it.
Sometimes I wish I could go back in time. If I could, I would walk into the darkened church of that General Conference. I would sit next to the girl with the ragged blonde hair, wearing threadbare hand-me-downs. I would put my arms around her and tell her that everything will be all-right. That I know what she is going through, that I know what she will go through in the future. That the road ahead of her will be long and winding and hard but that she will come out the other end a stronger, more resolute woman. She will become her own person; not the woman that others expect her to be but the woman that she truly is.
Note: This was originally posted over at “A POST-MORMON LIFE”.
Ah conference! Why is it the talks are so rarely memorable, and when they actually are memorable it’s usually not a good thing…
Well — most conference talks are usually coma-inducing. So the ones that we do remember, we REALLY remember. 🙂