One of my favorite scriptures - and it applies to those loved ones who have strayed from the path - there is little room for tender mercies here:
"No man having put his hand to the plough and looking back, is fit for the kingdom of God".
Luke 9:62
God loves those who are fiercely loyal - who are not lukewarm and wishy-washy. As the parable of the Prodigal Son also points out, God would rather have a lost one wander back than to not have them at all, but we may not feel as comfortable at that feast in our honor as we otherwise might - unless we throw our full weight behind the return as we otherwise would have.
I have a fellow missionary that worked me under the table back in the day - to the point that he committed to the goal (with the Lord's assistance) of bringing 100 people into the fold the last 3 months of his mission - and did so. He kept every command with exactness and reaped miracles in his consecrated effort to the Lord. I was always in awe of his energy and still am today. He was a bishop by 35 and has done much with his talents. Before his mission, he had severely departed the way and then came back into full fellowship - and did so with a vengeance. He, I know, will fully qualify for the kingdom of God. There was no fiddle-farting around on the sidelines waiting for a convenient time to mosey on back. He recognized that he was in the wrong, and made a might course change and had a mighty change of heart. No deathbed repentance there.
Here is Brigham's quote:
Brother Brigham Young was hung up on a sandbar crossing a river on the plains. His companion, troubled, said, "Let's pray."
Brigham replied, "Pray? I prayed this morning. Let's get out and push." There is a time for total concentration in prayer and a time for answering prayer with your own muscles—helping.
But this is the same man who was specific enough to bring to the Lord concrete and urgent feelings, even hostile ones. His prize saddle was misplaced or did not hang properly, and the horse trampled it into shreds. He sharply rebuked the neglectful man and then made a beeline for the bedroom where he said (someone overheard him), "Down Brigham." Then he knelt and prayed, "Lord, I'm sorry. I was angry. Take my anger away and help me to do better next time."
"When I am angry," he said to a friend, "the first thing I do is pray." -from a BYU devotional address, "Souls Aflame" by Truman Madsen.
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