Elder Marlin K. Jensen
addresses Mental Health Resource Foundation
Most families or extended
families have someone with mental health challenges of one type
or another, so knowing where to turn for help is a blessing and
a benefit, said Elder Marlin K. Jensen of the Seventy.
Elder Jensen gave remarks at
a dinner of the Mental Health Resource Foundation on February 23
at the Joseph Smith Memorial Building. The foundation has
created a website, mentalhealthlibrary.info, as well as
producing booklets and guidebooks with information to educate
LDS bishops and other leaders and clergy as well as caregivers
on most aspects of mental health, including essential steps for
addiction recovery.
“There is so much competing
for our time and talents and attention . . .there is a surplus
of everything, including [good] causes,” he said. “What is
remarkable to me about this group is that you have chosen
[mental health], one of the most Christlike things you could
do.”
Elder Jensen, who is also
Church historian and recorder, said that “our ability to care
and capacity and our willingness to serve is almost always
directly related to our own personal conversion to Jesus Christ,
because when we truly come to appreciate what He did for us, the
most logical response in the world is to want to give back.”
“Since He is not immediate,
and His children are, we turn to them as all of you have
tonight.”
Elder Jensen said that while
“our culture in the Church is a wonderful culture, it is
difficult to be outside the norm-the young man who doesn’t go on
a mission, the couple who don’t have children, those who may
face divorce—there are all kinds of people who don’t meet the
norm. I often think that it was these worthy people that Jesus
spent His life worrying about. Yes, He preached to the masses,
but His own personal ministry largely was extended to those who
didn’t fit the norm of that day and age.
“So thank you, brothers and
sisters, for your service to those who need His love and need
His care and concern.”
Also, a speaker at the
dinner was Fred M. Riley, commissioner of LDS Family Services,
who noted that this Church agency had almost tripled the number
of therapeutic hours delivered to Church members in the past
five years. It has also added 12 offices internationally and 11
offices in the United States. Also, some 1000 Church service
missionaries are operating the addiction recovery program, the
fastest growing program in the agency.
He said the agency is deeply
concerned for families and individuals who suffer needlessly
because they don’t know where to turn.
“Many fervent prayers are
offered to our Father in Heaven… for that friend who is pregnant
out of wedlock and doesn’t know what to do, or perhaps that
sister who has always dreamed of being a mother in Zion…and then
she finds herself unable to bear children and wonders what she’s
done wrong…And we see a mother praying for her son who is drug
addicted…a husband who is addicted to pornography…a prayer
offered for a loved one who simply doesn’t know how to cope with
life because of depression.
My belief is that every
one of those prayers will be answered. Those of you in this
foundation who are doing such a great work…are, and will be,
tools in our Father in Heaven’s hands, so that when those
prayers are answered, some of those prayers will be answered
through your efforts”