Wednesday, July 24, 2013

The Written Word: A Priesthood of Memory

Hello everybody. I'm not going to moan too much about the fact that it's been THREE YEARS since I posted anything on this blog. I just feel I should start up again.

What brought this on?
Well, the world is changing. (Cue the LOTR music, and shots of the Elves in hooded cloaks gliding through the forests, passing away from Middle Earth.)


And there is no getting around the fact that I'm changing along with it. I-- I am astounded to realize-- am getting old.

I suppose I always knew theoretically that I would get old. But I'm embarassed to say I thought I would grow old the way Jack Lalanne grew old... swimming from San Francisco to Alcatraz pulling a boat with his teeth when he was 70. 

But guess what? I'm no Jack Lalanne. I will be lucky to make it to 70 with enough teeth to pull the crust off a grilled cheese sandwich. I pull myself out of bed in the morning. I pull myself up the stairs every night. In short...
I'm feeling it.

 When I lived at Marks Rd I had a program running in my nervous system that said every day would be like this, family and kids, forever.


In 1976 Mary was born. In 2006 Ben left for Utah State. I was a mom at home for over thirty years. But now I've moved on. I live in Hong Kong of all things!

Not that I'm departing anytime soon. 
But departing I am. Grow old we must.
  
I'm hoping I will be at all their baptisms, (if Ben gets married soon) but probably I won’t be at all their weddings.

The baptism of my first grandchild-Nikolai Wilson Hales.


My husband says I sound morbid. Don't mean to.  I'm definitely not depressed or sad about growing old. If God designed it this way, He had a good reason.
I also prefer to be realistic. No matter how much one would like to slow down time, the torch always passes to newer generations. 

I could not be more enthusiastic about those newer generations coming along behind me. I just spent a month with them, including a glorious  week at the beach with all my children and grandchildren. 

It was so, so much fun to play in the water and the sand, and paint the granddaughters' toenails pink and collect shells. All that is wonderful and I loved it.

Old and Young

But I was seeing things differently. I could hear something ticking in the background that I'd never heard before. Now once I started considering realistically the fact that I won't always be here, my mind went in some new directions.

I find myself mulling this over: If there is a torch to be passed, what kind of torch will it be? What will I pass on of values, or of faith, and knowledge? 








One thing I know is that I don't want to fade from their lives completely when I die. 

I like what I've learned in the school of experience we call life. I have wrestled a few angels and have the wisdom and the limp to show for it. (Gen 32:24-30)

A marvelous depiction of Jacob's wrestle with the angel by LDS artist Brian Kershisnik
Certainly, my children and my grandchildren will have to learn about God by wrestling their own angels, but it is also possible to learn from earthly angels. 
What would I have done without Grandma Mabel's love of the scriptures. And her shining faith that "earth has no sorrow, that heaven cannot heal."
These things guided me. 

What's more important than 
the connections we have to the people we love?
I guess I want a way for those connections to continue.
And the only way is writing.

Writing lasts. 

Writing is amazing. Writing is like magic.
Writing lets us make connections between generations.

Writing is, in fact, the second of the God-given powers of godliness--the first being the power to multiply and replenish the earth.

You might even say it's the first priesthood, speaking metaphorically.

You see priesthood, if you go back to the ancient roots, is about being an intermediary between God and man.  That's what priests did. By using their sacred authority to act in God's name, they could secure blessings to the people and make sacrificial offerings for them. They brought blessings down from God, and they brought the people up to God through covenants and they linked the two. 

Priesthood is always about a way to link up God with his people. Priesthood, like writing, is all about connections. 

Now if you want to look at something very old in a new way, consider this scripture:

And then began these men to call upon the name of the Lord, 
 and the Lord blessed them;                               

And a book of remembrance was kept, in the which was recorded, 

in the language of Adam, 
for it was given unto as many as called upon God 
to write by the spirit of inspiration;  
And by them their children were taught to read and write, 
having a language which was pure and undefiled. 
Now this same Priesthood, which was in the beginning, 
shall be in the end of the world also. 
Moses 6:5-7

Does that fascinate you like it does me? What could it mean: "Now this same priesthood...?"

The Technical Stuff: Read the small print only if, like me, this fascinates you.
Being the textualist that I am, I combed through the Book of Moses looking for any previous use of the word "priesthood," or a reference to some priesthood-type activity, to see what Moses 6:7 was referring to. Whatever the word "priesthood" is talking about here, it should be found somewhere in the text nearby--that's the basic rule of scripture texts. You can't assume it refers to your own conceptions or what you heard in a talk.  But there is nothing else in the text that we typically think of as priesthood related. Aaron and Melchizedek were thousands of years away. Cain had just killed Abel. The human race had barely gotten started.
If you allow yourself to think outside the box and think of priesthood in a larger way, then conceivably the "priestly" things referred to are receiving the gift of writing from God, "writing by inspiration", "keeping a book of remembrance" (or, i.e., "a book of the things you want remembered" since the family tree was pretty stubby in Adam's day for this to be a genealogical record!) and teaching children to read and write.

In combing my memory banks, I recollect Hugh Nibley talking about this sacredness of writing and how it was originally something that priests did, and  was inseparably connected to the idea of sacred texts.  (Anyone want to give me a H.N. reference?)


I love this idea myself. Writing is sacred.  Of course like all good things, it can be used for other purposes, but think what this gift has enabled man to do.

It has given us a way to overcome death's stroke of finality, as we record thoughts that will outlast our physical time on earth, and remain for our posterity. It has given us a way to have the word of God as light and truth in our lives.

Animals Don't Keep Journals 
And have you ever thought about how the gift of writing separates us from the animals? They can’t do this—they can’t record their thoughts and feelings.  They can’t leave behind wisdom for their descendants. There is no Book of the Elephants, no Tales of the Walrus. 

Each baby elephant goes through the very same life cycle that her mother, and her great-great-great grandmother did before her. And each time, there is nothing new about it. Our hypothetical baby elephant won’t know the past generations' stories. She can only know the ones she knows, and must depend on what they teach her and her own instincts. She can take no credit for those either. She is what she is, a creature of the present, like all the elephants before her.

Elephants 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5

Henry, Maude and Isla

To live a human life, not an animal life, but a fully human life, and to learn from it and write down what you learned so that it persists after you die is a sacred gift-- a priesthood indeed-- for it enables men and women to connect beyond the physical limits and boundaries that death imposes. 
I like to think of it as the Priesthood of Memory.

We are individuals with names and unique stories, each one of us distinct from every other human that has ever lived. We leave a trace, or should I say, we can leave a trace and we should leave a trace. Unlike the animals, we can leave a record of ourselves.

 Do we dare not do it?


(Not my actual hand....yet.)

So to Niko and Eva and Luke and Livi and Hazel and Finn and Penn and Faye and Georgia....

I have lots and lots of things I want to tell you. Anyone else is welcome to listen in.

But that's enough for today, my dears. Nana needs a nap. 







7 comments:

Laura said...

Mike, Sarah and I just read your post and enjoyed the train of thoughts it produced. Michael has been writing a lot lately in bound journals so he can leave a trace.

You have a gift in your writing and we enjoy reading and learning.
All our love to you and your family!
The Waldron's

kara said...

Welcome back. It's good to hear you again. This post, while for your grandchildren, is a bit of an answer to prayer for me. Your wisdom and your heart are appreciated by many more than just your family. I'm glad you're back.

Lisa Michelle said...

I'm glad you're back, too, Aunt Lynda! I enjoy reading your thoughts. I recently started some new files in my cabinet -- one for each of my children's grandparents. They hold special cards, notes & letters/emails the respective grandparents have written, things others have written about them, etc. I figure some day they may be a great way for my kids and others to really *know* what kind of wonderful people their grandparents are. Perhaps I'll start one for you, too...! ;)

calizona said...

My daughter referred your thoughtful blog to me a little more than three years ago. Welcome back!

Speaking in anthropological terms, it is very significant to acknowledge the power and "magic" of writing. Couched as we are in our very comfortable modern society, we forget that it has only been extremely recent history which nets us a world where much of the common populace is literate! We forget the concept of public education and common, lawful access to written materials is also revolutionary in the scope of human history.

For millenia education was something only the elite class could afford. Everyone else had to devote themselves to acquiring resources just to sustain life. Only the privileged and ceremonial segments of society (the clergy or holy men) could enjoy the luxury of time spent studying.

I think it is brilliant that you apply the word "priesthood" to the function of writing. This application honors the intent with which heaven gave us the higher ability to communicate in the first place.

Too much of what our current communication is sprinkled with "lol" or thoughtless inanities, rudeness, and the manipulative language of marketing - be it goods and services, entertainment or politics. However, in light of your beautifully stated premise, these too, will serve as witness to who we were and what we gave our attention to.

No other age in the history of the world has experienced the level of literacy or free access to knowledge as we do today. We surely will be held accountable for how we utilized this great blessing.

May your "pen" never run out of ink.

Cindi Tanner

MaryM said...

I thought of you this morning as I read this:

"for the Lord God hath said that the words of the faithful should speak as if it were from the dead." (2 Nephi 27:13)

Thanks for the reminder that my writing could influence my posterity in my absence. The love and concern I have for them is overwhelming. It keeps me on my knees and gets me to the temple often. Now it needs to motivate me to write more!

Sure do miss you.

David K. Skidmore said...

Lynda - Thanks for helping me ponder. The following isn't quite church doctrine but a good quote: “People disappear when they die. Their voice, their laughter, the warmth of their breath. Their flesh. Eventually their bones. All living memory of them ceases. This is both dreadful and natural. Yet for some there is an exception to this annihilation. For in the books they write they continue to exist. We can rediscover them. Their humor, their tone of voice, their moods. Through the written word they can anger you or make you happy. They can comfort you. They can perplex you. They can alter you. All this, even though they are dead. Like flies in amber, like corpses frozen in the ice, that which according to the laws of nature should pass away is, by the miracle of ink on paper, preserved. It is a kind of magic.”

From: The Thirteenth Tale
By: Diane Satterfield

We are not old - just preparing for the transition. Your writing alters me in a positive way.
Keep writing - David Skidmore (class of '65)

dow said...

Lynda: I’m pretty sure the articleyou are referring by Hugh Nibley was “genesis of the written word.” I believe it is in the collection of essays under the title The Timely and the Timeless. I loved it. Bless you.