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The Banana and Monkey Story
When the men left, the monkeys began
to come down from the trees and examine the boxes. Finding that there were nuts
to be had, they reached into the boxes to get them. But when a monkey would try
to withdraw his hand with the nut, he could not get his hand out of the box
because his little fist, with the nut inside, was now too large.
At about this time, the men would
come out of the underbrush and converge on the monkeys. And the men coming, they
would shriek and scramble about with the thought of escaping; but as easy as it
would have been, they would not let go of the nut so that they could withdraw
their hands from the boxes and thus escape. The men captured them easily.
And so it often seems to be with
people, having such a firm grasp on things of the world -- that which is
telestial -- that no amount of urging and no degree of emergency can persuade
them to let go in favor of that which is celestial. Satan gets them in his grip
easily. If we insist on spending all our time and resources building up for
ourselves in worldly kingdom, that is exactly what we will inherit.
In spite of our delight in defining
ourselves as modern, and our tendency to think we possess a sophistication that
no people in the past ever had -- in spite of these things, we are, on the
whole, an idolatrous people -- a condition most repugnant to the Lord.
. . . It may seem a little difficult
at first, but when a person begins to catch a vision of the true work when he
begins to see something of eternity in its true perspective, the blessings begin
to far outweigh true perspective, the blessings begin to far outweigh the cost
of leaving "the world" behind.
Herein lies the only true happiness,
and therefore we invite and welcome all men, everywhere, to join in this work.
For those who are determined to serve the Lord at all costs, this is the way to
eternal life. All else is but a means to that end.
-President Spencer W. Kimball,
"The False Gods We Worship," Ensign, June 1976, First Presidency Message, pages
5-6.
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I
am reminded of an article I read some years ago about a group of men who had
gone to the jungles to capture monkeys. They tried a number of different things
to catch the monkeys, including nets. But finding that the nets could injure
such small creatures, they finally cam upon an ingenious solution. They built a
large number of small boxes, and in the top of each they bored a hole just large
enough for a monkey to get his hand into. They then set these boxes out under
the trees and in each one they put a nut that the monkeys were particularly fond
of.