Hey guys! I was asked to speak on modesty in sacrament meeting a couple months back-- Here's the final product!
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Imagine if you could spend a few minutes one on one with the
prophet, what would you say? What would
you ask? Imagine what that experience
would be like.
While vacationing with their family in Hawaii, two sisters
planned to meet some boys at the beach.
After being out with their family for the day, they snuck back up to their
hotel room and changed from their appropriate swim attire into some bootlegged
bikinis.
As they excitedly raced to the elevator and began their
journey down, a guest, whom both girls recognized, joined them on the tenth
floor. President Spencer W. Kimball
boarded the elevator, and the three of them rode down to the bottom floor. The young women moved to the back corner of
the elevator and tried to cover themselves with the one towel they had planned
to share to dry off. As they hid their
faces and tried to cover their bodies they didn’t say a word to the
prophet. After spending a few silent minutes
with the prophet, he exited the elevator and the girls returned back to their
hotel room beyond embarrassment, crying as they changed clothes.
Just like in the plan of salvation, you’ll be placed where
you are comfortable. These sisters were
hiding from the prophet in the elevator because they were embarrassed of their
attire. That’s not something I would wish on anyone, but it’s a small lesson to
learn as we prepare to meet the epitome of righteousness.
So why should any of us be modest besides the off chance we
might be stuck in an elevator with the prophet someday?
A religious song sings: “Will He know you when He comes
again because you will be like Him. When
He sees you will the Father know His child?”
Ladies, we are daughters of God, our King, making us
royalty. All of us. Elder Holland
proclaims that “every woman is a child of destiny and every adult woman a
powerful force for good.” And pleads with us saying: “be more accepting of yourselves, including
your body shape and style, with a little less longing to look like someone else. We are all different. Some
are tall, and some are short. Some are round,
and some are thin. And almost everyone at some time or other wants to be
something they are not!
But as one adviser to teenage girls said: ‘You can’t live your life worrying
that the world is staring at you. When
you let people’s opinions make you self-conscious you give away your power. … The key to feeling
[confident] is to always listen to your inner self—the real you.’ And in the kingdom of God, the real you is
‘more precious than rubies.’ This world is in need of more lovely women. Sister Nadauld has commented that: "Women
of God can never be like women of the world. The world has enough women who are tough; we need women who are
tender. There are enough women who are coarse; we need women who are kind. There are enough women who are rude; we
need women who are refined. We
have enough women of fame and fortune; we need more women of faith. We have enough greed; we need more goodness. We have
enough vanity; we need more virtue. We have enough
popularity; we need more purity."
Lovely women are not
revealing in attire. Only in
spirit. Elder Holland knew a woman that worked
with many beautiful people. This beauty
was the kind defined by the world. But
this women said that the loveliest woman she had every met was not a scantily
dressed, size 0 with long flowing hair.
The loveliest woman “had a glow of health, a warm personality, a love of
learning, stability of character, and integrity”.
In True to the Faith it says that “your clothing expresses
who you are. It sends messages about you, and it influences the way you and
others act. When you are well groomed and modestly dressed, you can invite the
companionship of the Spirit and exercise a good influence on those around you.”
When we show respect to ourselves by dressing modestly, we
are showing our self-confidence. We are
showing our gratitude to the Lord for the body He has given us. We can still be fashionable, keeping the
higher standard of the Church, without succumbing to the revealing pressures of
the world.
Dressing with modesty can help us prepare for one day
entering into the temple – which I hope is everyone’s goal if they haven’t
already been. In the temple, we will make
covenants with our Father in Heaven and will receive the sacred temple
garment. We are commanded to wear our
garments virtually all the time. What is
going to happen to all of the short skirts or sleeveless tops when the garments
are received? One has to go – garments
or immodesty. I really hope that it is
the latter. But what great preparation
it is for us now if we choose to be
modest today. If we are modest now, we don’t have to make
that decision when we go through the temple – our sacred garments will already
be our priority.
There are many ways to justify immodesty. “It’s a hot day. Shorter shorts or a short skirt
will help me stay cool in my car without AC.”
Or “the dress just came this way—adding length or sleeves will make it
look tacky.”
I am not excluded in trying to justify immodest at one point
or another. But the obedient are blessed.
If you want blessings the solution is simple – be obedient. Our Heavenly Father LOVES blessing us when we
are following his true disciples. Did
you know that disciples are not just the apostles of Christ. A disciple is a follower of Christ. This makes the prophet, apostles, stake
presidents, bishops, young women leaders, even our parents, disciples of
Christ. And many of these disciples have
asked, even begged for the modesty of the young women of the Church.
There are reasons
we are asked to be modest.
As already mentioned, it shows our confidence, self-respect
and obedience.
But one of my biggest reasons for being modest is in good
supply right here in this room.
I am modest for the men.
It is our duty to help
these men who are trying to do good in thought and in action. And it is also our duty to help the men who
are a little too willing to NOT do good in thought and in action.
Men should not have to come to church events and have to
divert their eyes because we are not willing to wear undershirts or buy a shirt
a size larger to avoid tightness or give up that really cute skirt that used to
be modest when we were a couple inches shorter.
We should be their safe haven.
How many of you sisters have brothers? I have three.
And most people here today know at least one. I tend to be a protective sister anyway but
what I wouldn’t give to walk around with a pile of trench coats supplying every
immodest woman so that my brothers don’t have to look at the ground when they
walk past.
And I’m not saying that men have absolutely no control for
their thoughts. I give them credit more
than that. But if by wearing a Down East
shirt under most of what I wear, so that nothing is being revealed, makes this
hard world a little easier for someone else. That is a small price I am more
than willing to pay.
Sisters, these men have a divine role to protect us. We need to do our part in protecting
them. They are visual creatures. Do not make it any harder for them to be
righteous in this fast growing - wicked world.
Do chests, stomachs, derrières, and legs draw attention from men? You bet they do. But I know that when the day comes for me to
meet my eternal companion, I don’t want him to have approached me because he
liked how much leg I was showing.
We are not only respecting ourselves through modest dress,
we are respecting men -- Particularly the wonderful priesthood holders who are
striving to be worthy.
When the people in
the great and spacious building mocked those that were progressing by the iron
rod toward the tree of life, those mockers tried to make the righteous people
feel bad about what they were wearing.
We need to remember that, when the world mocks us, it is often because
the world abhors righteousness.
Make no mistake, immodesty is a sin. It may not be a sin that rivals serious
transgressions, but it can be the first or second step down the road to those
more serious transgressions. When we are
deciding what to wear, we should also be considering what we wish to
accomplish. If it is to satisfy sinful
desires, then we should change. If it
leads to the temple and to righteous goals, we are on the right track.
If we have been immodest in the past, that need not change
our resolve to be modest now and in the future.
That is one of the great blessings of God’s plan for our happiness. We can leave the past in the past. Through the Atonement of Jesus Christ, we can
repent of past sins and become new. When
we repent of our sins, the Lord remembers them no more and we are clean.
Brethern, encourage the women to be modest.
Sisters, modesty isn’t hard.
Yes, it does take some effort – buying longer dress, longer shirts - and
I am by no means perfect at it - but it is very doable.
I am grateful for the examples in my life that have showed
me that I can be lovely, I can be fashionable, and I can be beautiful while
still being completely modest.
I am grateful for the men in my life that have told me that
my modesty makes me beautiful.
I’m grateful for Jesus Christ, for His Atonement – His
sacrifice. I am grateful that I can
repent when I make mistakes. I am
grateful that through that repentance I can be clean, feel clean, and be pure
in the sight of God.
I say these things in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
Hilary Hogge, “Modesty”
January 1, 2012
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