Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - The Family: A Proclamation to the World Part 2 • Sis. Carol Costley • December 15 - 21 • Come Follow Me -
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Sister Carol Costley continues to show how the Family Proclamation isn’t a blueprint for the perfect family but a lifeline for real ones, where God works through rebellious children, humbled parents..., and a covenant community that refuses to give up on each other.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTS English: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC251EN French: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC251FR German: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC251DE Portuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC251PT Spanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC251ESYOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/zPrCOcga_goALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIM.coNOW AVAILABLE INFrench @followHIMFrançaisSpanish @followHIMespañolPortuguese @followHIMPortuguês 2021 Episode The Family: A Proclamation to the Worldhttps://youtu.be/f5sbMDT96jcFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTER https://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE:00:00 Part 2 - Sister Carol Costley02:54 Family is the source of healing04:36 Gospel Library – Supporting Others06:12 Adoption, raising daughters, and a new calling10:34 Our stories are not totally written yet14:26 How family changes the world16:35 Elder Eyring’s story about a difficult grandchild18:25 Alma the Younger was listening to family scripture study21:37 God asks for a willing heart22:57 Parental obligation27:16 Prayers and ward families30:12 Don’t overlook repentance34:14 Peacemakers needed36:20 The value of work41:00 The plan is that we wouldn’t be in ideal situations46:55 President Oak’s story about his father’s death48:14 Could President Oaks be the “dumbest boy in the room?”50:24 The Y Religion Podcast on the Proclamation51:01 Sister Carol Costley bears her testimony of Jesus Christ55:39 Testimony of tithing and the Restoration1:01:53 End of Part 2 - Sister Carol CostleyThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika: Portuguese TranscriptsHeather Barlow: Communications DirectorSydney Smith: Social Media, Graphic Design "Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Part 2 with Sister Carol Costley on the Family Proclamation.
Several times we've talked about the real and the ideal.
I hope people don't read this and use it as a club to beat themselves with.
My family's not perfect.
This is showing us an ideal.
And look at that phrase that you mentioned as they progress toward perfection.
It gives us an ideal, an aspiration, a place to.
go that's founded in truth.
Boy, as you have so beautifully explained, Carol, your interesting background, this is
inspiring to you, and it's telling us of the possibility in the future, possibility that's
grounded in truth through the Savior.
Please, if you're reading this and thinking, what did Elder Razman say, this doesn't fit
for me?
This is truth for all of us.
It gives us an aspiration, a place for our future to go.
go, especially the young people they're listening, that are going, I don't know what my future
family is going to be like. This gives me the principles I need to plan and set goals.
I think you're right on both of you. I don't know if you've ever gone here, but if you go to
your gospel library app, just scroll down a little bit. For me, it's the third column on the right
hand side towards the bottom. There's a section called Life Help. And if you click on that,
there's abuse, addiction, adoption, and it's in alphabetical order. You can come down to the bottom
and there's transgender. And a lot of questions about how does the church feel about this or see this
are answered here. I was reading through this to prepare for today. There's a lot to read,
but I wanted to read this paragraph. One of the questions it's asked as, if I identify as
transgender, do I belong as a member of the church? Yes.
Church members need you and want you.
If you identify yourself as transgender, we know you face complex challenges.
You are deserving of Christ-like love, just as much of any of God's children,
and you should be treated with sensitivity, kindness, and compassion.
It says not everyone around you will be perfect in expressing that love.
and compassion and sensitivity.
I think we could all decide to be better.
I know of a person who's been rejected entirely by their family,
kicked out of their house for being transgender,
cut off all communication with that child.
I can't think of our Heavenly Father being,
or the Savior being pleased with that.
Because the family is the source.
of healing. That's where we heal. And it doesn't
bode well for that person because then they're going to go often and find
other resources that may not be as helpful in connecting them with Jesus Christ. You can
be transgender, gay, and be connected to Christ. I feel like
as a family, when we cut people off, we're doing a great disservice to them, kind of snuffing out a light
that could really provide some direction, some love, some support, so that whatever it is that they're
experiencing that they can get the comfort that they need. I am not a fan of tough love. I'm not a
fan of cutting people off because I really feel like if this unit is by divine design, then
everybody should have access to a loving and supportive unit to where they can get the
comfort and healing that they need. I am so disappointed when I hear these stories because one of
the number one things that they say is that when a person has family support, there
success in overcoming, it could be depression, it could be addiction, it could be a myriad of
issues, having that family support, that foundational unit to help them is key.
There's another section under this same part of the gospel library that's called supporting
others, and there's just a simple statement. There's a lot there, but one simple statement that I hope
anybody listening who has decided to go the wrong direction and cut off a family member.
It says, if you overreact, get angry, or say things you regret, don't be discouraged.
This may be hard for you as well.
This is one moment in a lifetime of conversations you will have with your loved one.
If you feel you should apologize for your actions, do it.
That apology can begin the process for repair.
I think apologies are great, but I think a critical piece that we miss is the repair of the
relationship that's damaged or broken. That's where the work really needs to take place. And in a
family, that's where the repair can happen, is working on that relationship and taking commitments
and saying, okay, I did this. I am really sorry. I'm going to do something different than commit to
what you can do to change or improve that relationship. Do you remember that family that I prayed
to have? At 40, I couldn't get pregnant. That was a big disappointment. I felt inspired to adopt.
So I talked to my husband about it. He was a little nervous about how he would feel if he could
bond with a child that was born into another family. And I remember we went and visited a friend.
they had just adopted a baby girl. My husband held her. I could tell that he had fallen in love with
this baby. When we left, he said, I can do it. We adopted two girls and added them to three boys that
were my husband. I'm in a second marriage for my husband. This is my first marriage. So we had these two
girls, and they were wonderful. My oldest was a little fireball, a very independent thinker,
kind of did her own thing, marched her own tune. Well, by the time she turned about 10,
we started having some problems with her. She was a struggle in, after sharing that she was
depressed, really struggled in school, in every situation. And it got to the point where our
relationship became very adversarial. It was heartbreaking to me because we were so close when
she was little. It was at the time when there was a lot of arguing and yelling back and forth and her not
respecting us as parents, leaving and going with friends and not coming back. And I get a phone call from
Salt Lake wanting me to come down for an interview. And I thought, what would they be wanting with me
coming down to Salt Lake. I remember going in and sitting down with my husband. At first, I thought
it was for him. Then when I got there, it was clear that it was for me. I met with Elda Gong, and he said,
are you prepared to accept a call today? I had no clue about what that call was, but when they
extended the call to me, I remember thinking, ah, young women, people in my ward will really laugh because
right now my home is a disaster and I said well I have a daughter and I said her name and he says
oh we know all about your daughter and I thought okay well I guess yes yeah it really gave me
a peace of mind because I felt like Heavenly Father was saying I know you're doing the best that you
can I remember accepting the call to serve on the general young women's advisory council
And I thought, people are not going to take me seriously if they know about my child who just stormed out of young women and cursed out everybody in the building.
I was shocked that I would get this assignment.
I went home and I told my girls what call had been extended to me.
Believe it or not, they were both excited.
It was the call, I believe, and the association with the women that changed.
the trajectory of my older daughter's life. This past Saturday, we were in the temple with
her. I am telling you that Heavenly Father answers prayers. As a mother who begged and pleaded,
I'm telling you the times that I spent in my closet on the floor crying because of a reaction
that I made or a thing that I said that was mean.
begging for forgiveness and asking to learn a different way of managing my daughter. We have funny
stories. We have sad stories. The call changed my life and my husband said to me one day,
said, what if you had not accepted the calling because of all that was going on in our home?
Because you feared the judgment of others. I really did fear the judgment of others.
something so sweet was a woman when I was in St. George came up to me and she said,
I have just been put in a stake young women's president. And I have a son. And I said,
you don't need to say much more. I have a daughter. And we commiserated over some of the
struggles that we had had with our children. And I just said that you are the right person
because you can understand some of those youth who are struggling. To think that
things have to be perfect or that we have to be perfect to serve or that we have to be perfect
to have a testimony. It is not true. We can have testimonies about lots of different things and together
they'll build a very strong testimony. I really feel like watching my daughter change over the
years is incredible. She's 22 now. She's the mother of two. She's married to a wonderful guy. Their plan is
get sealed in a few months, I had no idea that this would be my story. Now, this is my story,
and I know that it sounds ideal and perfect for a parent who is struggling and their child
is not coming around. It doesn't matter when they come around. It is that these seeds are
planted, and I had no idea that I was planting seeds. I had no comprehension whatsoever.
that I was even making a difference in this child's life.
And I realized I was planting a seed when we were in the conference center.
She was so happy to tell everybody that my mom is going to be sitting on the stand at the women's meeting.
That's my mom.
She had never shown that she was proud or that she had a love for me.
One of her little friends from school came up to her and she said,
Hannah, what are you doing here? And she said, my mom is a member of the general young women's
advisory council. And she said to the little girl, why are you here? And the little girl looked at
her. And this had been a friend that had come over to our home to play. She goes, my grandfather's
the prophet. Okay. We laugh about that all the time. But Hannah,
took such great pride in the fact that I was there and I think that I watched her change
because she was proud of my service and for what I was doing. She met some incredible sisters
who loved on her, who cared about her and who showed support. It is about this heavenly family
that we're talking about in the proclamation on the family that people in our ward, people that
we serve with matter and can impact and make this document come to life and have meaning for them.
Now watching her starting her family, this document is important to her as she mothers, as she
serves with her husband in this marriage. It's just beautiful to see the respect and the love that
they have for each other is so sweet to my soul. It is a balm for my soul that was really,
harrowed and racked for about four years, four years of watching the turmoil of this child.
I am appreciative to all the people, her counselors, all the people that jumped in and helped
with her. It has changed the view of her relationship. I quit my job to stay home with my kids.
It was a really good job, too. I remember when I quit that job and wanted to stay home,
someone came up to me and said, I can't believe you quit your job.
You took up a space in graduate school that could have been given to someone else
if we would have known that you weren't going to work in the profession.
I thought, wow.
And that was someone that I had gone to school with that really surprised me at the time
that they had that feeling.
I needed to be home for these two girls.
I was planting seeds.
for anyone out there that thinks that they're not planting the seeds of the gospel and a child
is not listening, it is not true. I am quite surprised at some of the things that she tells me
about the gospel, about our book of Mormon readings when she was over there rolling her eyes
and making noise and not reading properly. I would just get so frustrated. Yet there were things
that stuck. She was involved. She was listening. The family is ordained of God, this sacred union
of a marriage or the responsibility of a mother, even if she is by herself, it's sacred.
They will have the support of Heavenly Father.
I love that Elder Oaks talked about being raised by a single mom and to look at him
and to know what he was able to accomplish in that situation.
It is sweet to me to know that just because something is not ideal,
it doesn't mean that it's not going to work or that we can't implement some of those
teachings and recommendations of family scripture prayer going to the temple all of those
things they can still help even if we are a parent by ourselves
Hank you remember our discussion of section 137-138 about the spirit world
and just this wonderful idea and impression that God's in this he has the long game
mind. Our timing, Carol, you suffered for four years. The Lord knew what he was doing. I think it was on
a wonderful podcast called Follow Him, where I heard a guest quote a scripture and I just went,
wow, how have I never seen that? Like four years ago, Hank, you cannot behold for the present
time with your natural eyes, the design of your God concerning those things, which shall come
hereafter. He's got you. It might not be in our sequence or the time we want. We can trust a God
who loves his children, as this is teaching us, who is our father, and who has the long game in
mind, which I just think is very comforting thought. Yeah. I have a story that I thought was a
couple of years old. Turns out it's 12 years old. Why do years go by so fast? This is President
Irene, both of you will remember this. Years ago, a friend of mine spoke of his grandmother.
She had lived a full life, always faithful to the Lord and to his church. Yet one of her grandsons
chose a life of crime. He was finally sentenced to prison. My friend recalled that his grandmother,
as she drove along a highway to visit her grandson in prison, had tears in her eyes as she
prayed with anguish. I've tried to live a good life. Why? Why do I have this tragedy of a grandson
who seems to destroy his life? The answer came to her mind in these words. I gave him to you
because I knew you could and would love him no matter what he did. President Irving says,
there's a wonderful lesson for us all. The way for loving parents and grandparents and all of
God's servants will not be easy in a decaying world. We cannot force God's children to choose the way to
happiness. Heavenly Father and his beloved son love all of God's children no matter what they choose to do
or what they become. He says we cannot force the Holy Ghost on others, but we can let them see it in our
lives. We can always take courage from the assurance that we all once felt the joy of being
together as a member of a beloved family of our Heavenly Father. With God's help, we can all feel
that hope and that joy again. I knew you would love him no matter what he did. And I love what Carol
said about a daughter that didn't seem to be listening to Scripture study. Yeah, this is an old
story. Alma has just been knocked flat by an angel who says, arise. And then he says, if you want to be
the story, keep doing what you're doing. He falls down again. What is Elmer?
Emma saying, and I remember my father to have taught concerning a son of God who could forgive sins.
And I cried within my soul, oh, Jesus, thou son of God, have mercy on me.
And it came back.
I think of a Minidab in prison, right?
Who had once belonged to the church, but had dissented from among them.
There's this dark cloud in the prison.
All the prisoners are like, what are we supposed to do?
And a Minadab, who somewhere back there,
He remembered, oh, cry unto the voice until you shall have faith in Christ and repent.
First principles, boom.
A Minidab had it the whole time, even though probably someone who's introduced as someone
who was in the church who had dissented, it was in there.
I love those kind of stories to give us hope.
One more, one more.
I think you guys will remember this one too.
This is Elder Bednar.
He said, when our sons were growing up, our family did what you have done.
He's breathing my air.
Oh, yeah, that's it.
Sometimes, Sister Bednar and I wondered if our efforts to do these spiritually essential things were worthwhile.
Now and then, verses of scripture were read amid outbursts such as, he's touching me, make him stop looking at me.
Mom, he's breathing my air.
Sincere prayers occasionally were interrupted with giggling and poking.
Family home evening lessons did not always produce high levels of edification.
At times, Sister Bednar and I were exasperated because the righteous habits we worked so hard to foster did not seem to yield immediately the spiritual results we wanted and expected.
He goes on to talk about it takes time.
He says, results like that do not occur each time we study or pray or learn together.
It's the consistency of our intent.
And those were long years, sounds like Carol.
It's really hard because they talk about the consistency, but man, when you've tried and you've tried and it's just not working, there's a temptation to give up.
There is a temptation to give up on scripture reading because you get the same old attitude every single time.
And it's just like, why bother?
But we're told right there that we bother.
We keep with that consistency.
And we'll see the fruits of our labors in the temple.
I just sat next her and just held her hand, and I thought, we're here. We made it. And she had a great experience. I think that that consistency and trusting in Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ that they've got our backs, their plan supersedes any plan that we could have ever thought of for ourselves. This Saturday, that plan did supersede what I had even hoped for. So it was a sweet, sweet day.
John frequently reminds our listeners that this is his work and his glory to bring to a past,
the immortality, eternal life of man.
And what does he say, John?
Is it Second Nephi?
I am able to do my work.
Yeah, Second Nephi, 27.
Yeah, I just need you to be willing, right?
Why can't you guys do my work for me?
He doesn't say that.
He said, look, I got this.
This is my job.
And I'm able to do my job.
Be available.
Do the best you can.
But I got this.
Joseph Smith said, he has made ample provision for everyone's redemption.
He's not counting on us.
He's mighty to save, not, he's somewhat average at saving on a good day.
Nope, he's mighty to save.
I'm pretty good at this.
My husband reminds me that the sacrament prayer emphasizes willingness.
He always inserts that word willingness in many parts of that sacrament prayer to help us
understand that Heavenly Father just wants someone who is willing. You don't have to be good at
something. You just need to be willing to learn or just willing to take the first step into the
darkness. That has really hit me whenever he has mentioned that, just the act of being willing.
Carols, can we keep going? What's next up on the proclamation?
John, could you read where we left off? I numbered mine. So this is like paragraph 6.
that starts with these words,
husband and wife have a solemn responsibility to love and care for each other and for their
children.
Children are an heritage of the Lord from Psalm 127, verse 3.
Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children in love and righteousness,
to provide for their physical and spiritual needs,
and to teach them to love and serve one another,
observe the commandments of God, and be law-abiding citizens wherever they live.
Husbands and wives, mothers and fathers, will be held accountable before God for the discharge of these obligations.
It talks about our obligations to teach and to be accountable for the protection and the physical and spiritual needs of our children.
I know as a social worker, I see a lot of situations where some of those physical needs are not met, let alone even moving into the spiritual.
When we teach out children to love and to serve one another, it really does go far in helping them to create relationships with others where they love and they serve.
That was the one thing that I really enjoyed about my older daughter was that she loved other people.
She would go up and talk to anyone.
She would reach out.
I think that we have an obligation to teach to live.
in a manner that can help our children develop attributes of Jesus Christ.
Husbands and wives, mothers and fathers will be held accountable before God
for the discharge of these obligations.
I remember in rearing my children, I had to recognize that there is a season for certain
things to happen.
Sometimes I was really hard on myself.
It wasn't the season.
It wasn't the time for me to be doing what I thought it ought to.
to be doing and that God was quite satisfied with where I was at. Just being able to understand that
when we are trying to care for the spiritual needs of our children and we're praying over them
daily. In Messiah 2714, we read about the power of a parent that says, and again, the angel said,
behold, the Lord hath heard the prayers of his people and also the prayers of his servant, Alma,
who is the father, for he has prayed with much faith concerning thee that thou mightest be
brought to the knowledge of truth. Therefore, for this purpose, have I come to convince thee
of the power and authority of God that the prayers of his servants might be answered
according to their faith.
When we as parents exercise faith and trust in Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ,
we do get answers to our prayers in his timetable, not necessarily in hours.
Yeah, that angel's funny.
I don't even want to be here, but I'm only here because of your dad and his friends.
Can you dispute the power of God?
Do you not be holding standing here before you?
Can you flow the earth shaking under your feet there, Buster?
You can go out and destroy the church anymore, tough guy?
Hank, as you know, we got an email from a wonderful sister who talked about her son, who had left the church, left the family, and suddenly showed up at a sibling's farewell. Do you remember this, Hank?
And texted, he was nearby, came in the chapel. He didn't look great. She said, well, she said he looked terrible. His hair was scraggly, his jeans were messed up. And she said, touches me.
A young men's leader came running across the back of the chapel and embraced this kid.
Yeah.
Everyone greeting him as he came up and sat there.
The son or daughter, I can't remember who was having their farewell texted and said,
Are you watching this?
You know?
And this mom said, look at what that angel said.
The prayers of any people.
She said people would call and say, is there anything I could do?
And she would say, yeah, pray.
Pray for my son or my daughter, whatever the case may be.
In the scripture, that's exactly what you just said, Carol.
The angel said because of the prayers.
Go back to Mosaic 2714.
Behold, the Lord hath heard the prayers of his people
and also the prayers of his servant, Alma, who is thy father.
For he has prayed with much faith concerning thee,
that thou mightest be brought to acknowledge of the truth.
The prayers of many people and thy father.
This is a favorite verse of mine.
because I love specifically what the angel said,
that they might as be brought to a knowledge of the truth.
It was that Heavenly Father, I don't know how you're going to do this,
but will you help my loved one come to the knowledge of the truth?
It might be through a tough road.
You have a better idea of how to do that than I do.
Help them come to a knowledge of the truth.
And in this case, an angel shows up.
I don't know if there's an order form in Mosaic 27.
for people to fill out, for how they would like it.
But I love that he left that to the Lord, not to specifically come back to church,
but come to a knowledge of the truth.
However, the Lord wants to do that.
That's a fascinating topic and an element of trust.
This is Heavenly Father's child as we just been reading.
He knows them too.
He will have a plan to bring them to a knowledge of the truth.
And I think that how he brings them and what knowledge they're going to gain
is something that we just need to be satisfied with
because there's timing and everything
because a lot of times we think,
well, it's fine that that happened,
but he really needed to do X, Y, and Z.
And I think I found myself as a mother sometimes doing that.
My daughter, I don't think that she missed church very much.
She would come.
Maybe she wouldn't stay.
I remember that one of her young women peers
was trying to talk to her in the hallway
and just trying to motivate her to participate and come back.
It's been sweet to hear some of the people come forward
and share some of the stories and some of the influence that they have had
and some of the time they took with my daughter.
This is the beauty of the family, of our heavenly family,
is that there are people that will step up
when we have lost patience, when we feel worn out,
when we feel like we've not been able to make it work.
I have just been so appreciative of those who have stepped up in my ward family
and my friends that have taken the reins and they've filled in where we cannot.
And it's almost as if Heavenly Father put them there to help answer your prayers.
I had to give space for that because I have.
I didn't always.
Something that we do need to highlight, though, is successful marriages and family
are established and maintained on principles of faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness,
respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome recreation.
I want to emphasize the work, because honestly, when I got married and started my family,
I really didn't understand the work part of it.
It's important for us to recognize that there is going to be work.
I mean, when Adam and Eve left the Garden of Eden,
they were told specifically that there would be some work.
I didn't realize that this would apply within my home,
within my family, within my relationships,
just that the work would be perpetuated in every single relationship
or situation that I was in,
that we would need to do the work, that it would need to be supported with faith and prayer
and repentance.
That is one thing that I really struggled with.
I didn't understand or cherish the gift of repentance, like it says in that young women's theme.
I, into my adulthood, thought that if I had to repent, it was not a good thing.
It was in my calling, actually, that I really came to know.
and understand that if I wasn't repenting, that wasn't a good thing.
That was an aha moment for me, that it was okay to repent and to want to change and make
things right with God, because that was the only way that I was going to get back to him.
We've said this many times, John, but we celebrate faith, we celebrate baptism, we celebrate
someone getting the gift of the Holy Ghost.
And for some reason, repentance out of the four gets a bad rap.
We've talked about this before, too, the Bible dictionary definition of repentance.
Maybe you showed me this, Hank.
A fresh view about God, about oneself, and about the world.
It's easy to think of repentance as an event instead of as an ongoing daily process.
An ongoing fresh view.
the Lord working in us, Jesus working in us to change us and change our hearts.
And I want that to be a process, not just, oh, I knelt down and I said, hey, sorry about that.
Therefore, I repented.
This is an ongoing work in progress.
And that way it becomes exciting that I can grow and repent.
Do you think that if our fellow brothers and sisters really supported the whole idea of repentance as well?
because I know a lot of times there are those that if somebody has a problem that is visible to the world,
like getting pregnant or going to prison, it's a visible sin is what I always say that a lot of times you have a tendency to back away
instead of embrace and support and to show love. I just wish as members, I include myself in that
process that we be more sensitive and be more willing to love, show love and support even when
a situation is awkward or uncomfortable, sometimes having the confidence to be there, not have
to say much of anything, just to be there, to be a support while this person is going through
this anguish. Yeah, that's straight out of peacemakers needed. President Nelson.
If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good reporter praiseworthy that we can say about
another person, whether to his face or behind her back, that should be our standard of communication.
If a couple in your ward gets divorced or a young missionary returns home early or a teenager
doubts his testimony or all of those others that you just gave us, Carol, back to President
Nelson, they do not need your judgment. They need to experience the pure,
love of Jesus Christ reflected in your words and actions. We can make it so much easier for people
to change and repent. As we go through this process, we can think about how can we make it
easier for people by just adjusting our attitude about the repentance process and about
sin, going back to what President Kimball said, having that view of it.
so that we can help support people when they're going through that repentance process,
avoiding the need to whisper and chat.
Jesus had such a way with just one sentence.
I mean, that's why it's so fun to read the New Testament,
because Jesus would just say these mic-drop moments.
He that is without sin, let him first cast a stone at her.
Boy, you know.
And I think that's one way.
I need forgiveness.
I cherish repentance.
How can I withhold that from someone else when I know I need it?
Yeah.
Don't judge me because I sin differently than you.
Right.
Or more loudly.
Yeah, more publicly, maybe.
Publicly, yeah.
It's interesting how we have to have this same message over and over and over.
It keeps coming.
It's almost like we're not learning it.
entirely. You talked about work earlier, Carol. That's not something my children love
that work is important. Dad, can you give us some jobs today? Please, please, such a blessing.
Can we have some more chores? I wrote a book on happiness. It sold dozens of copies,
mostly to John and my sister. One thing I learned is that work is key to a happy
life, that depriving children of work is not a blessing. One of the stories I tell in the book is
my son, Mason, he's out on his mission right now, and he is such a kind, gentle heart. We used to
incubate chickens. So we put the eggs in incubator, and 28 days later, you can hear the little chirps.
From the inside, those little chicks are just struggling to get out of those shells and their little
chirp sounds like they just are pleading for help.
And Mason, as a little boy, he would go over and he'd want to lift up the incubator lid
and just help him out a little bit.
And I'd tell him, and he'd go over there.
I'd say, don't do it.
And he'd, why not?
I'd say, don't do it, don't do it.
And he'd say, you're mean.
That's what he said to me.
You're mean.
Why don't you want to help them?
I had to explain to him that that process of work that they go through is,
making them strong. And if they are strong, they'll be able to live. If we actually help them
out of their shells, we're actually going to end up hurting them. And it took a long time for him
to comprehend that taking away someone's struggle is actually not helpful at times. I bet you've
seen that as a counselor. Absolutely. That one gentleman that I told you about, he's now a father
and he has a teenage daughter.
He was struggling and doubting his ability to recover.
He didn't want to go into impatient.
He didn't want to do the work.
And I remember talking to him and saying,
if you're not making it in an outpatient setting
and you're still having struggles,
then we need to kind of re-look at impatient.
No, I can't do that.
I can't do that.
He finally decided to go.
and go to an impatient setting.
I haven't heard back from him as yet,
but I'm hopeful that this is the stay that he needed
to get him out of the circumstances that he was in
so he could clear his head.
I think that once he realized,
I'm not going to be able to be with my daughter
unless I do the work.
She was an age now where she was asking a lot of questions
about what's going on, what are you doing,
why are you not doing this? Why am I not important? I think that he realized, hey, I need to put the
work in. Sometimes just deciding on the work that we need to do can be a challenge. When working
with couples or individuals, I find that it's the work that's sometimes off-putting and whether or not
they value the work as much as they value the relationship. John's story always makes me laugh.
the day before he's going to the MTC.
You'd think, hey, we're going to MTC.
Let's have a celebration.
Let's have our friends over.
Let's take you to dinner.
Not John, by the way's dad.
John, by the way, his dad had him loading manure.
Right, John?
Did I get that right?
Yeah, absolutely right.
As Jack is my witness, he's up in the spirit world right now in a mission.
He had me hauling manure up the front lawn.
in a wheelbarrow.
I can't wait to get to the MTC and get some rest.
He saw that, right?
He saw the value.
So grateful for that work ethic, my dad had.
You're right.
Hey, thanks for remembering that makes me laugh.
But that's what I was doing the day before.
Hey, would you go up to Kmart and buy this manure and take it in the backyard?
Sure, dad.
Sure, dad.
You know, I'm leaving tomorrow.
for a couple, for a little while.
Perhaps you've heard I'm off to the Philippines.
Perhaps that work was what you needed to get you started.
Yeah.
Carol, we're getting close to the end here.
What else do you want us to look at in the proclamation?
Two things.
The idea that Heavenly Father recognizes that we are not going to be in ideal situations.
That was never the plan in the first.
place, I don't think, for us to be in ideal situations. He says, in these sacred responsibilities,
fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners. And I like that equal
partners. We might have different duties, but we're equal partners. Those duties can be switched
around depending upon the makeup of your family, makeup of the education, of the parents in the
family. He says, disability, death, or other circumstances may necessitate individual
adaption. He's giving us permission or understanding for those adaptions to occur if we don't
have an ideal structure. That's important. Also calls upon extended families should lend support
when needed. I know that that young man that I told you about earlier on whose grandmother
was an integral part of helping him.
That's what's important is letting us know
that if the parents can't do it,
then there are other people that can do it.
Always ending with that warning of what could happen
if we as parents use our agency
to not do the right thing
where we violate covenants of chastity
or if we abuse
our spouse or offspring, or if we fail to fulfill family responsibilities, the impact of that
choice will devastate a family.
Yeah.
For generations.
For generations.
It can create extreme insecurity.
My girlfriend, one of my dearest and closest friends, was married for 28 years.
There was infidelity.
and the impact on her family was significant.
I remember her having to rely on the Savior.
Her testimony of his support and help was so powerful to me.
Not a nasty word came out of her mouth about her spouse.
I was in awe because I could have said,
few things because I was so disappointed. I followed her lead. She was a great example to me. I just
followed her lead to those children. She reflected on the good times and on the positive things that
had happened in their union. And I was thinking about the union with my husband as a second spouse.
it actually turned into a situation for us where when we would have family parties, his ex-spouse would come
and participate in those family parties with us. We were able to develop a great friendship
and the grandchildren were able to have both the families there. It was just a really sweet experience.
It was difficult initially because I just wasn't quite secure in the relationship.
It was new.
It was a beginning.
It turned out to be a great blessing for us.
She was always so sweet and so kind would babysit our girls.
We truly became a family and that we could incorporate her and her husband.
It was just a good experience for the grandchildren.
and the children to have that. I am grateful that she feels comfortable coming to our home
and spending time with us. And so I think that there is a provision for us to make adjustments
when it is not the ideal. And I love that that is spoken here. But I also love the warning
that can come from when things get adversarial. What my friend has tried to do now that she
is remarried. She just got remarried a few months ago. And it's been sweet to see her new partner
be a support and a strength to her enough that she was able to go to a joint activity where her
ex-spouse was going to be there after, I think, 10 years. I don't think she had seen him and was
able to see him with the woman who is now his wife. And for her to say, I'm going to move forward
with this because I have the support of this new spouse in my life. That unit that Heavenly
Father talks about, whether it's ideal or not, when you have the support of that family
member, it can really serve to strengthen and support and to start rebuilding a relationship
with the Savior and to strengthen that. That is what is most important to have a situation
where you can continue that relationship with the Savior and have that support. And it's
been so sweet to see her have this back in her life to where she can go to the temple and be with
her partner and start fresh again. It's just sweet. Those warnings are real. The effects are
impactful and can change the lives of children. Can cause them to doubt their faith, can cause
them to step away. It's really critical that we use our agents.
see wisely.
Yeah. Elder Holland has said before that the price to be paid for our choices sometimes gets
paid by our children and our grandchildren in far more expensive ways than we ever intended
them to be. I'm sure you both shed a tear. I did when President Oaks talked about his
grandfather. This recent general conference, seven years old, seven years old.
seven-year-old boy on a farm in Payson, Utah. He said, I will never forget the promise of my maternal
grandfather Harris. We're living on his farm near Payson, Utah. He gave me the tragic news. This little
seven-year-old, that my father had died in far away Denver, Colorado. I ran into the bedroom and
knelt beside the bed, crying my heart out. Grandpa followed me and went to his knees,
beside me and said, I will be your father. That tender promise is a powerful example of what
grandparents can do to fill in the gaps when families lose or are missing a member.
So we have a president of the church right now who knows what it looks like to adapt,
different situations. When President Dallin H. Oaks was president Dallin A. Chokes of Brighamon,
he gave a talk in about 1975, I think, he talked about his father dying before he was ever
able to repay his medical school debt. He said, I went through a period of school, he said,
where I could not do math. I was, his words, I was the dumbest boy in the room. And I remember
an occasion where others threw rocks at me and called me stupid. To think that churchly
have perfect families or perfect lives, that everything works out perfectly.
No, we all, we all go through things.
Imagine President Oaks.
I'm the dumbest kid in the room.
Yeah.
I don't think so.
Yeah, I don't think so.
Well, it just speaks to the fact that we don't know the work Heavenly Father can do
and to see the presidents of the church and to hear and know some of the challenges
and struggles that they've gone through is truly a blessing.
I'll never forget when President Holland talked about his depression,
how life-changing it was for many of my clients that I see,
who are members of the church, that felt like they were finally seen.
To hear subsequent talks about mental health has been a great blessing
to a lot of the folks that I've worked with.
It's really nice to hear some of the challenges that our general leaders do experience
because it allows us to see ourselves and to see the potential that we could have
to still continue in a relationship with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Despite the roadblocks or the little excursions off this way that we didn't think that we would ever be at,
I love that our general leaders share moments in their lives.
Yeah.
Before we wrap up here, Carol, I wanted to do a quick FYI.
If anyone listening wants to know more about the history of the proclamation, the Y religion podcast that I am a part of and part of the religion faculty at BYU, did two episodes on the history of the proclamation.
One is episode 121 with Dr. Michael.
Goodman where he some people might say oh this was written by a bunch of lawyers i've heard that
criticism of the proclamation and brother goodman goes through that history in a really
beautiful beautiful very particular way it's very detailed and also there's another criticism of
the proclamation that women were not involved in its formation well dr barbara morgan gardner
who's also been on our show
with Dr. Goodwin
and her student
Olivia Osgothor
that's episode
115 of the Y religion
podcast if either of those topics
interest you
those are fascinating
interviews
Carol this has been a
wonderful day
we've walked through the proclamation
and you've used your expertise
John and I are going to be better
fathers
here you are
an educated
counselor
You've dealt with, I'm sure, countless clients who have had a myriad of difficulties.
You're a woman of color, and you're a faithful member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
I think our listeners would love to know how that happened.
Why do you believe?
Wow.
First of all, I can't help think about the impassioned testimony.
of Kevin Brown, who is a fellow Jamaican.
Parents were Jamaican, and so it was beautiful to hear him speak from the pulpit.
He basically said, when you know, you know, I remember when I encountered the missionaries, I knew.
Everything about the doctrine that I learned seemed to fit in.
The one thing that threw a wrench in things was learning about the priesthood.
I was devastated because everything that I held dear, marriage in the temple, being sealed,
all of those things seemed to evaporate when I heard about the priesthood.
I remember telling them the night before my baptism when they told me about the priesthood ban
was that I would not be baptized. I was so hurt by it. And one elder stood up, made a promise to me.
and his promise was that by the time that I was ready to be married, every worthy male would have the
priesthood. And I remember him standing and making me that promise. It was May 29, 1975. It was that promise
that he made me that hit my heart and I believed his promise. I said, okay, I will be baptized to me.
model. I remember also having a personal prayer about why, and Heavenly Father promised me that
it would be revealed to me, but it's not what I'm being told. Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ
have been involved in my life from the beginning of my investigation of the church. Every time
I've questioned, I've opened up the scriptures, and the one scripture that I opened up to when I was
having doubts was the one where it says, did I not speak peace to your mind? That has come up on many
occasions. I have had many confirmations. I have seen the Lord's hand in my life, getting me from
London, England to Brigham Young University, to where I was one of the first to graduate with my
master's in my family. I believe that he really helped me and has been showing up in my
life for many occasions, and I have felt his testimony. To be this obscure girl from London,
England, to be called to serve on his counsel, tells me that I am cherished and that I am love,
and he repeats it over and over again in every aspect of my life as I have lived this gospel,
even when some of my choices were questionable
or caused me to have to repent,
I really felt like he was with me.
I struggled to pay my tithing.
It was one of the hardest things for me to pay.
I could not make sense of the math,
that if I am just barely making it,
then how can I pay 10% and pay my rent
and do the things that I needed to do,
and he showed me over and over again that he would help me.
Sometimes it was monetary.
Other times I must have made cuts that allowed me to pay my tithing.
And I remember I was overdrawn in my checking account by $300 and some of dollars.
I just was not sure how I was going to make it work.
I was a student at BYU at the time.
I was working at F.W. Woolworth down on Santa Street,
right by where the new skin building is.
And I remember going to work that day thinking,
I am in trouble because I'm not going to get paid for another couple of weeks.
I'm overdrawn.
I didn't know what to do.
And I remember going into work,
my manager said, I need to talk to you.
And she called me back.
Apparently, someone came in from the labor department
and said that they needed to pay the part-time staff holiday pay.
and different things like that to bring them into compliance.
They handed me a check, and it was for $365,
which was the amount that I was overdrawn in my account,
and I could not believe it.
I know that that seems pretty crazy,
but it happened, and I was able to get out of debt with my bank,
get my affairs in order.
Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ have shown up for me on many occasions and have spoken peace to my mind
or have given me a direction or something I believe because I have seen the fruits of this gospel
and what it can bring into my life even when things have been hard.
It's kind of like when you're swimming and you feel like you're drowning and you relax
and then you become buoyant and you float to the top.
That's what it feels like when Heavenly Father grabs you in his arms
and takes you through.
You feel like you're floating and you're buoyant in water.
And I have felt that many times.
When my sister passed away, when I struggled with wanting to be married,
I just felt his presence and his assurance that he has a plan
and it's better than I thought.
It has always worked out that way, which helps me to believe.
I have chosen to trust him most of the time.
When I have, it has brought great blessings to my life.
That is why I believe.
I believe in his promises, because I have been privileged to some of those blessings that he has promised me.
Thank you.
what a beautiful day. Carol, I want you to be in my family. I'm glad we're all one family.
Yes, we are. I am in your family. Yeah. We can call each other family, brother and sister. There's a reason we.
That's right. There's a reason we do that. John, one way I know I have an increase of the spirit is my desire to do better, to be better, to be more.
kind, to be more gentle, to repent, to go and hug my little kids.
They're not so little anymore, but kiss them on the head and say,
Dads mess up sometimes.
Yeah.
I thought I knew Carol and some of her backstory.
I didn't.
And my respect for you is, I can't reach high enough to show you.
So thankful that you came and talked to us today.
I think people will feel like Hank felt.
going to do a little better, going to try a little harder.
I'm going to love my kids and tell them, hey, dad's make mistakes.
We're going to keep trying.
We're going to keep going.
We're going to keep going.
Yeah, Aunt Carol's going to help us.
I had many adopted kids for many, many years of my friends.
Well, don't worry.
I have four boys.
I can drop off at your house very soon.
Okay, great.
With that, we want to thank Sister Carol Costley for joining us today.
It has been such a true.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen.
And every episode, we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week.
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