This past week my district has been upping the ante with how
often we try to speak in Italian. We've begun to recognize that the fastest way
to learn the language is simply to speak it, so we've developed a few
strategies to help us with that. One of them includes a game that was
recommended to us by a member of our branch presidency. It's called "Who's
the Italian?".
Basically, we as a district draw from a hat to decide who
will be the Italian, but no one is supposed to know what you draw. The person
who draws and becomes the Italian can't use English for the whole day, and
everyone is trying to pretend to be the Italian so that they can win. Because
at the end we all vote on who we think the Italian was and the winner gets a
prize. So this ensures that we all are trying our bests to speak the language
and it's pretty effective I might add!
On Sundays everyone in the zone has to write a talk about
that week's sacrament meeting topic and on the day of two of us are randomly
chosen to speak. I spoke last week on repentance and this week our topic was
The Atonement. I was puzzled for a while about what I would say considering the
two topics are so closely related, and seeing as I gave my repentance talk the
Sunday before, I couldn't just rely on that one. As I studied the Atonement in
preparation for this talk, I began to realize that the Atonement is so much
more than a solution to spiritual death, so much more than an enabler for
repentance (though, if this were all it were we would still have endless reason
to rejoice). I found in Preach My Gospel that the Atonement of Jesus Christ has
the power to make right "all that is unfair about this life". That's
a pretty profound thought. Everything unfair that we experience in this life
can be made right by the power of the Atonement, whether in this life or the
next. For some blessings come soon, some take years, and others don't come
until the resurrection, but if we have faith and endure to the end, then those
blessings will most certainly come.
This simple fact has strengthened my testimony of the
Atonement a lot. With a power such as this so infinitely available to us
throughout our lives, can we really ever say that "life isn't fair"?
I believe the only truly unfair life this world has ever seen is the life of Jesus
Christ, who suffered everything and was guilty of nothing. We cannot say the
same; in comparison we are each guilty of a great many of things, and yet our
lives will never be as hard as his was. For he suffered everything that we will
ever suffer, everything that anyone ever has suffered, and everything that ever
will be suffered. Because his Atonement is sufficient to cover it all. I bare
testimony to this in the sacred name of Jesus Christ, amen.
until next time,
Anziano Wilkinson

