“Shall Be the Peace of Thy Children”

K. Douglas Bassett

(Isa. 54:13–14; D&C 45:58; refer in this text to 3 Ne. 20:40)

Surely every good parent would like this peace for his offspring. It comes from the simple life of the true Latter-day Saint as he makes his home and family supreme.

(Spencer W. Kimball, Ensign, July 1973, 16.)

[Sister Wirthlin quoted 3 Ne. 22:7,10,13, and then said] These words of the Savior are the theme for Primary … to teach children the gospel of Jesus Christ and help them learn to live it. As we witness the unfolding events of the last days, we cannot doubt that in this scripture the Lord is speaking directly to us. We are Israel of the latter days… . Peace that endures is not dependent upon outside forces that are beyond our control… . The Lord’s words … give comfort to righteous parents who teach their children of Him. They speak to us at a time when peace in the hearts of children can seem but an elusive dream. But the Savior has assured us that it can be a reality if we teach our children. Primary supports parents in this important responsibility.

(Anne G. Wirthlin, Ensign, May 1998, 9.)

This is a favorite and oft-quoted scripture noting the peace and freedom from fear that will come to those in Zion, including—and especially—to the children of those who have made and kept their covenants.

(Jeffrey R. Holland, Christ and the New Covenant [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1997], 291.)

Seven-year-old Jamie loved her mother dearly. The family had known for nearly a year that their wife and mother was dying of cancer. The father and seven children fasted and prayed; they pled with the Lord to heal her. Everything possible was done for their mother, yet at the end of three painfully difficult months, she passed from this life.
In the first hours following her death, the father brought the grieving family together. After prayer, the children went to their own rooms to prepare for bed. Jamie, who had spent many hours with her mother and was devoted to her, knelt at her own bedside. “Heavenly Father,” she prayed through her tears, “we thank thee for the great mom you gave us. We thank thee for helping us try to make her well. Help us to be good so we can live with her again.” Without a hint of bitterness, this little seven-year-old girl continued for several minutes in a sweet attitude of peaceful prayer, reflecting her understanding and acceptance of her mother’s death.
Jamie was a child at peace. How did she come to that peace? She had been prepared by parents with spiritual understanding. Such preparation brings peace… .
Our Heavenly Father has promised peace to his children. “All thy children shall be taught of the Lord; and great shall be the peace of thy children” (3 Ne. 22:13). Peace in the Lord can give them freedom from self-doubt, freedom from fear, freedom from the confinement of their environment, freedom from enslaving habits. His peace can free them to unfold from the tender buds they are to the mature and fruitful adults they can be.”

(Michaelene P. Grassli, Ensign, Nov. 1988, 90.)

Commentaries on Isaiah: In the Book or Mormon

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