Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Getting Personal - President Packer

Not only does President Packer follow a specific format of rhetoric, he has drawn on similar themes and ideas. In his talks "The Witness" and "The Reason for Our Hope",  President Packer starts with a story. The story about his visit to Oxford and how he shared his testimony of the Savior with the Chaplin of Oxford gave him validity and laid a foundation for the rest of his talk. In the last conference session he opened up with a story about his first major spiritual experience in getting to know God in a personal way.

Knowing the Savior and gaining a personal testimony of him has been the major theme of these past to conference talks. In fact, He even uses the same scripture.

"And we talk of Christ, we rejoice in Christ, we preach of Christ, we prophesy of Christ, and we write according to our prophecies, that our children may know to what source they may look for a remission of their sins."
Photo By Drew Geraets 
His words are powerful to me, not because of his tone or his style, but because of the use of scripture that highlights the points he makes. Those scriptures of the Savior create the greatest sense of Ethos in both talks.

He stresses the importance of knowing the Savior because he personally suffered for you. This truth evokes a great amount of emotional appeal (Pathos). This was illustrated by the story of the women, being upset by the tragedy and hardships that fell upon her exclaimed, "Someone must pay!" It was then that a voice came to her mind. "Someone already has."

Anecdotes illustrating a personal relationship with Jesus Christ make for a common theme among his talks. Similar and identical scriptures of Jesus Christ shows power in repetition.

Personal "Kairos" played a major role for me while I was experiencing his talk. I was with a friend high up in the mountains as I listened to his talk. I was in a much more personal setting than i am used to. The theme of a personal and individual Christ was amplified as I was in a place where I was not distracted by other cares of the world. It seems like President Packers old age is shaping the tone and theme of his talks. He has reflected on core personal beliefs as he knows that he is coming towards the end of his life.


3 comments:

  1. President Packer has been around a the block, and has and experience to back up basically everything that he says. This allows the audeince to repect his context because he has lived through everything that he says. I also agree that he is very adept at likening the scriptures to our time, to teach those in. His audeince.

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  2. It is interesting how the location of where you experience speeches changes how you understand it. Being at home, and listening to it over the T.V. the story of "someone must pay" was a little different. I still understood the point, and it still hit my emotions really hard, but by being high up on a mountain, admiring His creations, far away from the commotion of life, you gained a deeper testimony of it.
    It is interesting how repetition makes an impact on human minds, because we are creatures of habit. Repetition sticks with us and leaves us with something we can always remember.

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  3. I liked how you talked about how President Packer continues to emphasize the same scriptures because that was something I hadn't noticed. He has incredible ethos because of his long history as a general authority and his overall life experience. Nice picture!

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