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Quick Quotes on the Ten Virgins
"I
believe that the Ten Virgins represent the people of the Church of Jesus Christ
and not the rank and file of the world. All of the virgins, wise and foolish,
had accepted the invitation to the wedding supper; they had knowledge of the
program and had been warned of the important day to come. They were not
the gentiles or the heathens or the pagans, nor were they necessarily corrupt
and reprobate, but they were knowing people who were foolishly unprepared for
the vital happenings that were to affect their eternal lives." Spencer W.
Kimball, Faith Precedes the Miracle, p. 253.
"The arithmetic of this parable [The
Ten Virgins] is chilling. The ten virgins obviously represent members
of Christ's Church, for all were invited to the wedding feast and all knew what
was required to be
admitted when the bridegroom came. But only half were ready when he came."
-Dallin H. Oaks, April 2004 General Conference
"The parable of the ten virgins is intended
to represent the second coming of the Son of man, the coming of the
Bridegroom to meet the bride, the church, the Lamb's wife, in the last
days; and I expect that the Savior was about right when he said, in
reference to the members of the church, that five of them were wise and
five were foolish; for when the Lord of heaven comes in power and great
glory to reward every man according to the deeds done in the body, if he
finds one-half of those professing to be members of his church prepared
for salvation, it will be as many as can be expected judging by the course
that many are pursuing. . . . Now the question is, how can we keep oil in
our lamps? By keeping the commandments of God, remembering our
prayers, do[ing] as we are told by the revelations of Jesus Christ, and
otherwise assisting in building up Zion. When we are laboring for the
kingdom of God, we will have oil in our lamps, our light will shine and we
will feel the testimony of the Spirit of God. On the other hand, if we set
our hearts upon the things of the world and seek for the honors of men, we
shall walk in the dark and not in the light. If we do not value our
priesthood, and the work of this priesthood, the building up of the
kingdom of God, the rearing of temples, the redeeming of our dead, and the
carrying out of the great work unto which we have been ordained by the God
of Israel--if we do not feel that these things are more valuable to us
than the things of the world, we will have no oil in our lamps, no light,
and we shall fail to be present at the marriage supper of the Lamb."
-Wilford Woodruff, in Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Wilford
Woodruff [2004], 256-57)
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This page was last updated:
January 8, 2007 |
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