This blog post has been coming for a long time. It’s just
been hard to put it into words. Many of my friends from Hill Cumorah Pageant
will remember belting out “I’ll Make a Man Out of You” during karaoke on Hobart
Day. There is also a Youtube video that Garrett showed me of him belting out
this song (big mistake,
buddy, haha). I also have memories of my friend, Michele Smith (who is now
on her mission in Japan), playing this song whenever we (me, her, Melissa, and
Eric) were going somewhere in Eric’s car. I absolutely love this song. It is
such a goofy, weird, and strangely spiritually inspirational song.
The day my district left the MTC for Toronto, we were
walking across the MTC campus in the early morning, this song was going through
my head. Maybe it was because we were up so early… maybe it was because we’d
spent three weeks straight trying to train ourselves to think spiritually…
maybe it’s just because I’m weird… I started to analyze this song spiritually,
in regards to a mission, so here we go:
The biggest point of this song, spiritually, that I saw came
from a conversation I’d once had with Juliana about guys and missions. The
point of the conversation had been that missions turn boys into men. In other
words, the mission will “make a man out of you.” Get it? ;) A mission
(hopefully) will teach a young man to follow the Spirit, to learn the gospel,
and what is most important. Even after only the three and a half months I was
out, people could see this in me.
I’m sure I could break down most of the lines of this song
to have some spiritual meaning, but there’s one part that means something to me
particularly right now as I come closer to finding out about returning to my
mission (even if I don’t know exactly when I will find out): “You’re unsuited for the rage of war. So,
pack up, go home. You’re through. How could I make a man out of you?” I
mentioned the spiritual application of this part to Garrett in one of my
letters. Oddly enough (or not oddly, for anyone who knows me and him) he had
been thinking of a spiritual application to this song too and he’d gotten stuck
on this line. My spiritual application that I told him was this: the line is
Satan telling us we’re no good, we can’t make it the rest of the way, and we
can’t do it. If you remember from the movie, though, this line in the song is
said and Mulan is about to leave. She turns around, sees the pole, arrow, and
medals from the original challenge that Shang had given them. She goes back and
makes it up the pole.
Life seems to get hard just before something good happens
(so I’m expecting something good pretty quick). Satan tells us we’re not good
enough or strong enough to make it through the trial. If we give up when he
tells us to though, we’ll miss out on the prize that our Heavenly Father has in
store for us. He will never ask us to do
more than we can handle (1 Corinthians 10:13;
1 Nephi 3:7).
When Joseph Smith was in the Sacred Grove, the adversary attacked him. By his
own account, Joseph Smith was just about to give up, when the light of Heaven
began to appear (JS-H
1:16). He will rescue us in our darkest hour. That I know for certain.
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