
Excerpt
Consecration isn’t giving things as much as yielding self. When heart, soul, and mind align with God, He consecrates our efforts for lasting good.
Intro
Elder Neal A. Maxwell teaches that ultimate consecration is our will swallowed up in the Father’s. Step by step, His grace is sufficient, and our performances are consecrated “for the lasting welfare of [our] souls.”
Straight line (what he’s saying)
• Consecration = yielding will to the Father—one stepping-stone at a time.
• We often “keep back part” (skills, status, habits); partial surrender still diverts.
• Worth is fixed; assignments change—He must increase, we decrease.
• Good things can crowd out the first commandment; beware lesser gods.
• Acknowledge His hand; avoid the “my power, my hand” trap.
• Discipleship polishes us (rough stone rolling): contact, friction, meekness.
• Surrendering the mind is victory; God teaches higher ways.
• Jesus is the pattern—never lost focus; Gethsemane above all other miracles.
Final reflection
My hardest “part” isn’t money—it’s control. God wants a consecrated person more than a perfect portfolio. Yielded work beats impressive work.
Pocket I’m keeping
• Ask daily: “Lord, is it this?”—take the next small stone.
• Worship before work; name His hand first.
• Hold assignments lightly; hold Jesus tightly.
• Trade applause for alignment.
• Measure by love, patience, meekness.
What I hear now
I’ll hand Him today’s schedule, camera, and keyboard—and let Him aim them. Consecration is hourly trust; even detours can be consecrated.
Link to the talk
“Consecrate Thy Performance” — Neal A. Maxwell.
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