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Transcript

Sisters, what a joy it is to be gathered with each of you in this women's session of General Conference.

I grew up in western New York and attended a small branch of

the Church about 20 miles from our home.

As I sat in Sunday School class in the basement of our old rented chapel

with only my friend Patti Cho, I never could have imagined being part of a global sisterhood of millions of women.

Five years ago, my husband Bruce became seriously ill when we were serving with

the consecrated saints in the Europe East Area.

We returned home, and he passed away only a few weeks later.

My life changed overnight.

I was grieving and felt weak and vulnerable.

I pled with the Lord to direct my path.

What would Thou have me do?

A few weeks later, I was going through my mail when a small picture in a catalog caught my eye.

As I looked closer, I realized it was an artist's rendition of the Samaritan woman with Jesus at the well.

At that moment, the Spirit spoke clearly to me.

That is what you are supposed to do.

A loving Heavenly Father was inviting me to come to the Savior and learn.

I would like to share with you three lessons I am learning as I continue to drink from His well of living water.

First, our past and present circumstances do not determine our future.

Sisters, I know that many of you feel, as I did, unsure how to face difficult challenges and loss.

Loss because your life is not unfolding in the way you had hoped for, prayed for, and planned for.

No matter our circumstances, our lives are sacred and have meaning

and purpose.

Each of us is a beloved daughter of God, born with divinity in our souls.

Our Savior, Jesus Christ, through His atoning sacrifice, made it possible for us to be cleansed and healed and enabling us to fulfill our purpose

on Earth, regardless of decisions of family members, our marital status, physical or mental health, or any other situation.

Consider the woman at the well.

What was her life like?

Jesus perceived that she had had five husbands and was currently not married to the man she was living with.

And yet, despite her life's difficulties, one of the Savior's first

public declarations that He was the Messiah was to her.

He said I, that speak unto thee, am He.

She became a powerful witness, declaring to those in her city that Jesus was the Christ.

And many of the Samaritans of that city believed on Him for the saying of

the woman.

Her past and present circumstances did not determine her future.

Like her, we can choose to turn to the Savior today for the strength

and healing that will enable us to fulfill all that we were sent here to do.

Second, the power is in us.

In a familiar verse in the Doctrine and Covenants, the Lord encourages women and men to be anxiously engaged in a good cause and do many things of

their own free will and bring to pass much righteousness, for the power is in them.

Sisters, the power is in us to bring to pass much righteousness.

President Russell M. Nelson testified every woman and every man who makes covenants with God

and keeps those covenants and who participates worthily in priesthood

ordinances, has direct access to the power of God.

I have come to know that as we strive to honor sacred covenants made at

baptism and in holy temples, the Lord will bless us with His healing

strengthening power and with spiritual insights and awakenings we’ve never had before.

Third, out of small things proceedeth that which is great.

In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus taught His disciples, "Ye are the salt

of the earth, and ye are the light of the world." Later, he compared the growth of the kingdom of heaven to leaven, which a woman took and hid in

three measures of meal until the whole was leavened.

Salt, leaven, light: Even in very small amounts, each affects everything around them.

The Savior invites us to use His power to be as salt, leaven, and light.

Salt.

It is surprising how much difference a sprinkling of salt makes in the flavor of what we eat.

And yet, salt is one of the least expensive and simplest ingredients.

In the book of 2 Kings, we read of a little maid who was captured by the Syrians and became a servant to the wife of Naaman, captain of

the Syrian army.

She was as salt.

She was young, of no worldly importance, and her life is a slave in a foreign country was clearly not what she had hoped for.

However, she spoke two sentences with the power of God, testifying to Norman's wife: "Would God, my Lord, were with the prophet that is in Samaria, for He would recover him of his leprosy.

Her words of faith were relayed to Naaman, who acted on her words, allowing him to be healed, both physically

and spiritually.

We often focus on the servants who convinced Naaman to bathe in the River Jordan as the prophet Elisha directed.

But Naaman would not have even been at Elisha's door without a little maid.

You may be young or feel of no importance, but you can be as salt in your family, at school, and in your community.

Leaven.

Have you ever eaten bread without leaven?

How would you describe it?

Dense, heavy, hard.

With only a small amount of leaven, bread rises, expanding to become lighter and softer.

When we invite the power of God into our lives, we can replace the spirit of

heaviness with inspired perspectives that lift others and make room

for hearts to be healed.

Recently a friend of mine lay in bed on Christmas morning, overcome with sorrow.

Her children begged her to get up.

However, she was filled with the pain of her pending divorce.

Lying in bed, sobbing, she poured out her soul in prayer to her Heavenly Father, telling Him of her despair.

As she concluded her prayer, the Spirit whispered to her that God knew her pain.

She was filled with His compassion for her.

This sacred experience validated her emotions and gave her hope that she was not grieving alone.

She got up, went outside, and built a snowman with her children, replacing

the heaviness of the morning with laughter and joy.

Light.

How much light does it take to pierce the darkness in a room?

One small ray, and that ray of light in a dark place can emanate from the power of God in you.

Even though you may feel alone as the storms of life are raging, you can shine a light in the darkness of misunderstanding, confusion,

and unbelief.

Your light of faith in Christ can be steady and sure, leading those around

you to safety and peace.

Sisters, hearts can be changed and lives blessed as we offer a pinch of salt, a spoonful of leaven, and a ray of light.

I testify that the Savior is the salt in our lives, inviting us to taste of

His joy and love.

It is He who is the leaven when our lives are hard, bringing us hope

and lifting our burdens through His matchless power and redeeming love.

He is our light, illuminating our path back home.

I pray that we can come to the Savior.

Like the woman at the well and drink of His living water.

With the people of Samaria, we can then declare, "Now we believe, for we have

heard Him ourselves and know that this is indeed the Christ, the Savior of

the world." In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.

Lessons at the Well

Description
Sister Porter shares three lessons she is learning and invites the women of the Church to follow the Savior’s teachings to be as salt, light, and leaven.
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