Not Meant to Be Alone

There is joy to be found in following the pattern of the Lord.

January 12-18

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Not Meant to Be Alone: Embracing the Lord’s Pattern for Happiness 

The world is so confused. The more I learn about the gospel and the more I observe the world, the more I’m amazed at how lost the world is. The world is constantly seeking happiness, but it still seems so elusive. 

I testify that there is joy to be found, and it is found in following the patterns of the Lord.

Moses 3:18 And I, the Lord God, said unto mine Only Begotten, that it was not good that the man should be alone; wherefore, I will make an help meet for him. 

And the Lord created Eve for Adam. They were married for eternity. They went through the “dating” stage where everything was perfect, and they also crossed over into the mortal, fallen world where they had a lot to learn and figure out. They had to toil and sacrifice together. They worshipped together. 

This is one of the ultimate patterns of the Lord. 

The ideal is marriage. It is not good for man or woman to be alone. That is the truth. God declared it Himself in the beginning. We were not meant to be alone.

Let’s talk about a couple of ways that our world is fallen and tries to take this away from us.

We live in a fallen world, full of hurt and selfishness and abuse and apathy and neglect. Somewhere inside, we know that we were meant to have true joy and so in a confused attempt to achieve this joy, we walk away from difficult and painful things. We shy away and assert that we’re happier on our own. 

And honestly, that is probably true in specific circumstances. Perhaps a person who has been abused for years in a scary marriage has finally found peace in the quiet that has been left behind after that marriage has fallen apart. Perhaps this person has found themselves again and likes who they are. Of course they are happier than they were in a toxic relationship.

But ultimate joy is found in following the pattern of the Lord and no matter what you’ve been through, the Lord stands ready to walk that hard path back towards healing and peace so that you’re prepared to find joy on the other end.

We live in a fallen world where many find themselves without a partner through no fault of their own. We live in a fallen world where many long for this pattern but it hasn’t come to them yet.

Just because the Lord has an ideal and you haven’t received that blessing yet does not immediately equate with being unloved or being unworthy. It does not mean that your life has to be void of joy or meaning. When I say that marriage is the ideal, I’m not simultaneously testifying that being alone means worthless. It’s not worthless. The Lord can take any journey on any path and turn it into powerful, meaningful, joy-filled growth opportunities.

We teach that marriage is ideal, not because we want to rub salt in the wounds of those who find that truth painful but because we want to testify of what the Lord wants them to have. 

He wants you to find what Adam and Eve found. He wants you to find what it means to labor alongside an eternal partner. He wants you to find what He has found with your Heavenly Mother. That blessing is there. He can see it. 

We live in a fallen world where the ideal is far away from many. Even if you’re not abused, there are many who worship without a spouse who has stepped away. There are many who long for an eternal sealing, a full bench during sacrament meeting, someone to engage in the deepest parts of life with. There are many who have been victims of infidelity, and there are many who are the ones who engaged in the infidelity and also feel far away from the ideal.

I testify that the truth is this: It is not good for man or woman to be alone.

I also testify of another truth. Christ can take you exactly where you’re at, no matter how far away you feel from the ideal. I testify that Christ knows how you feel. I testify that He stands ready to walk the path before you with you.

In The Book of Mormon, we learn about the strait and narrow path to walk towards the love of God. It is not “straight.” It is “strait,” meaning “narrow.” I understand that this partially refers to the covenant path, but I also believe there is another layer of meaning. 

When we picture the traditional life in church, we see finishing high school, going to college, serving a mission, coming home, getting married, finishing college, and having kids (sometimes with varying order). That’s the path. It’s straight. We can see it. We know how it’s supposedly meant to happen. 

But God set us up for a fallen world, and that means that there isn’t a “straight” path. There are only “strait” paths. There is a path for you to walk, and along that path, there are pieces of salvation that you will be picking up. A spouse, selflessness, compassion, knowledge. God can see your strait path, and Christ stands ready to walk it with you. The ideal is available to you even if it’s not the path you would have chosen for yourself. Trust me; the path that God chooses is so much better even if it feels painful right now. 


I testify that the ideal is to not be alone. The world will tell you that you’re better off alone or that you don’t need a relationship, and they’re right but only to an extent. You can be happy on your own. However, the ideal, the most amount of joy available, comes from being in a relationship centered on Christ. God declared this truth, Himself. Sometimes this truth feels unbearably painful because it feels withheld or tangled up with trauma, but it is still the truth. Luckily, I can simultaneously testify that if we cling to the Savior, He can help us find that ideal and He can help us be able to find joy in the strait path that eventually leads to the ideal. You can find joy now in less than ideal circumstances if you include Christ, and you will also eventually find the ultimate joy if you continue to hold to Christ.

4 thoughts on “Not Meant to Be Alone

  1. Good morning,

    It was pretty late last night when I finished reading your message, so I decided to sleep on it first.

    This is a tough one to respond to (with many rabbit holes).

    If your main point was that man and woman were not meant to be alone eternally, I would wholeheartedly agree.

    If any mortals could have come to this earth and be blessed with an ideal life, it would make sense to me that apostles, prophets would qualify, yet they (and us) only get glimpses of it.

    Since we don’t have a complete picture of everything we agreed to experience while on this earth, in order to learn the lessons we need to learn, so that we can become who we need to become. Couldn’t being alone (at least temporarily), fit into the Great Plan of Happiness? Does being physically, mentally or spiritually challenged also fit?

    Did the woman who cast her 2 mites into the treasury (Luke 21:2) agree to live in poverty (or was blessed, commanded, foreordained) so that she might prove, by her sacrifice, that being obedient was a very high priority for her?

    Continuing with the poverty theme, in John 12:8 Jesus taught “the poor always ye have with you”. This says to me that some were sent here to lives of poverty — decade after decade, century after century. If that is the case, did some also agree to have estranged children, multiple divorces, cancer, leukemia and on and on??

    Of course, others are given resources to be able to make a feast in order to bless and provide comfort to “the poor, the maimed, the lame, the blind” (Luke 14:13) and by doing so “shalt be recompensed at the resurrection of the just”. (vs 14)

    I definitely agree that Christ can take us exactly we are and succor us in our afflictions.

    Whatever the difficult purposes for us being here, isn’t it so that we can develop charity (1 Corinthians 13) & get practice loving others the way our Savior loves us so that when we see Him, we shall think and act like He does? (1 John 3:2)

    This has been wonderfully thought provoking once again. I marvel at your ability to have such excellent messages week after week. You are a great blessing!! Stay amazing!

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    • Hah always so kind! I was feeling rather passionate when I wrote this so thank you for balancing me out. There are always exceptions and alternate journeys that the Lord has for His children. I think my intensity stemmed from seeing a ton of garbage on social media, and I probably should have reread it one more time to make sure I wasn’t using too many absolutes or sweeping generalizations. I am often guilty of that. Thank you for bringing it to my attention.

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      • Thanks for the humble reply. I wasn’t trying to bring anything to your attention, just sharing thoughts that your delightful insight brought to my mind as I read your message. I truly admire your gift. As I said long ago, I could probably do a handful of enlightening Podcasts, but to joyfully see you do this week after week, year after year has been a tremendous blessing for me. Keep the office open!

        The many rabbit holes I mentioned earlier, included garbage too. A few of these I listed farther down in my first comment, estranged children, multiple divorces, cancer, leukemia and on and on??

        When a disgruntled spouse uses gossip and slander to intentionally damage the other parent’s relationship with their children and grandchildren, is that part of the Great Plan of Happiness? Whether it is or isn’t, because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ, and the “Immediate Goodness of God” (Elder Kyle S McKay April 2019), we are always in the middle of our next miracle. Since it involves stretching, I think it certainly can be! While we aren’t perfect, the Plan certainly is!

        Even if some things must until the next life, all will be made right. Eventually, we will stop seeing “through a glass darkly”. (1 Corinthians 13:12). Our tears will be wiped away (Revelation 7:17). The truth will come out, and each of us will be judged based on the desires of our hearts. The slanderer can always repent and the slandered can choose to practice “being reviled, we bless, being persecuted, we suffer, being defamed, we entreat” (1 Corinthians 4:12-13).

        Best wishes always

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      • “Part of the plan” is relative. Allowing trials was part of the plan but did the Lord specifically send it? My guess is no as He doesn’t influence us to do what’s wrong. Honestly, I wrote this months ago and need to review probably. I should make sure I didn’t imply that. Anyway, thank you for sharing. The Lord has got this. I’m excited for the day when I can see people and things clearly. I hope I don’t have to repent too much when I do! Haha

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