Sunday, January 8, 2012

Refinement: The Endangered Virtue


“If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy, we seek after these things.” (13th Article of Faith)

A "friend of mine" (to whom we'll refer, in the interest of privacy and discretion, as "not me") was recently asked his criteria for selecting young women to date.  His relatively short list (paired down to 3-4 characteristics) included the desire to court women of "refinement."  This prerequisite proved grounds for the rather abrupt pronouncement that "not me's" standards were hopelessly unrealistic.

Perhaps refinement in character, bearing, and behavior has always proven the exception rather than the rule.  But it has always been a realistic standard to which earnest men and women aspire.  Has it now become an idealistic relic of a gentler era prematurely cast aside?

In the interest of all things "virtuous and lovely," to include our own souls, Fidelity For Life is pleased to re-post excerpts from the August article "Ennobling Refinement:"

Each of us is born to be great.  Each of us is meant to "fulfill the measure of our creation."  But our Digital Age of Enlightenment coexists with an Age of Careless Convenience, of ill-punctuated text messages, of embarrassing photographs thoughtlessly published on social media, and of steeply declining standards in appearance and manners (see: Crocs, All Neon-colored Iterations Of). 

Thankfully, bold champions of propriety, civility, and refinement continue to encourage us to "stand a little taller, to lift our eyes and stretch our minds." (Gordon B. Hinckley)

In his 2006 address entitled "Your Refined Heavenly Home," Elder Douglas L. Callister issues such encouragement, challenging each of us to live up to our divine potential by "paint[ing] a word picture of the virtuous, lovely, and refined circumstances that" await us beyond the mortal veil.

The full text and video are available at http://speeches.byu.edu/reader/reader.php?id=11394.  Some thoughts from his address:
  • "The nearer we get to God, the more easily our spirits are touched by refined and beautiful things."
  • "I imagine that our heavenly parents are exquisitely refined. In this great gospel of emulation, one of the purposes of our earthly probation is to become like them in every conceivable way so that we may be comfortable in the presence of heavenly parentage."
  • "Refinement is a companion to developed spirituality. Refinement and spirituality are two strings drawn by the same bow."
Refinement of Speech:
  • "Our language reveals our thoughts, our virtues, our insecurities, our doubts, even the homes from which we come. We will feel more comfortable in Heavenly Father’s presence if we have developed proper habits of speech."
  • "Refinement in speech is more than polished elocution. It results from purity of thought and sincerity of expression. A child’s prayer on occasion may reflect the language of heaven more nearly than a Shakespearean soliloquy."
  • "Refinement in speech is reflected not only in our choice of words but also in the things we talk about....There are those who speak of stirring ideas, compelling books, and inspiring doctrine. These are the few who make their mark in this world."
Refinement in Entertainment:
  • "I don’t know whether our heavenly home has a television set or a DVD machine, but in my mind’s imagery it surely has a grand piano and a magnificent library."
  •  "The images to which our minds are exposed are held in store, seemingly forgotten, even for years. But at the crucial moment they re-present themselves to influence our thoughts and lives. And so it is with the music, literature, art, media, and other images to which we are exposed."
  • "When some music has passed the tests of time and been cherished by the noble and refined, our failure to appreciate it is not an indictment of grand music. The omission is within."
Refinement in Appearance and Conduct:
  • "That which has been said about bringing great language, music, and literature into the home...may also be said of our physical appearance and manners."
  • "We must not “let ourselves go” and become so casual—even sloppy—in our appearance that we distance ourselves from the beauty heaven has given us."
  • "Every man has the right to be married to a woman who makes herself as beautiful as she can be and who looks in the mirror to tidy herself up before he comes home."
  • "Every woman has a right to be married to a man who keeps himself clean, physically as well as morally, and takes pride in his appearance." 
  • "A husband should hurry home because of the angel who awaits him, and that angel should be watching the clock awaiting his arrival."
Elder Callister reminds us that we "are children of an exalted being. [We] are foreordained to preside as kings and queens. [We] will live in a home and environment of infinite refinement and beauty, as reflected in the language, literature, art, music, and order of heaven."

Whether we live up to our refined privileges in our media-saturated, entertainment-obsessed, morally cavalier society is a decision made with each conversation, each wardrobe choice, each piece of art on the wall, and each Friday night plan.

And our refined Heavenly Father stands ready to help us make the right one.

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