Priesthood Perspective (Pres. Monson, Apr. 2012 Gen. Conf.
Priesthood Session)
During World
War II, in the early part of 1944, an experience involving the priesthood took
place as United States marines were taking Kwajalein Atoll, part of the
Marshall Islands and located in the Pacific Ocean about midway between
Australia and Hawaii.
What took
place in this regard was related by a correspondent—not a member of the
Church—who worked for a newspaper in Hawaii. In the 1944 newspaper article he
wrote following the experience, he explained that he and other correspondents
were in the second wave behind the marines at Kwajalein Atoll.
As they
advanced, they noticed a young marine floating face down in the water,
obviously badly wounded. The shallow water around him was red with his blood.
And then they noticed another marine moving toward his wounded comrade. The
second marine was also wounded, with his left arm hanging helplessly by his
side. He lifted up the head of the one who was floating in the water in order
to keep him from drowning. In a panicky voice he called for help. The correspondents
looked again at the boy he was supporting and called back, “Son, there is
nothing we can do for this boy.”
“Then,”
wrote the correspondent, “I saw something that I had never seen before.” This
boy, badly wounded himself, made his way to the shore with the seemingly
lifeless body of his fellow marine. He “put the head of his companion on his
knee. … What a picture that was—these two mortally wounded boys—both … clean,
wonderful-looking young men, even in their distressing situation. And the one
boy bowed his head over the other and said, ‘I
command you, in the name of Jesus Christ and by the power of the priesthood, to
remain alive until I can get medical help.’”
The
correspondent concluded his article: “The three of us [the two marines and I] are
here in the hospital. The doctors
don’t know [how they made it alive], but I know.” (In Ernest
Eberhard Jr., “Giving Our Young Men the Proper Priesthood Perspective,”
typescript, July 19, 1971, 4–5, Church History Library).
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