followHIM
followHIM

Heart Transplant from Grandson • followHIM Favorites • Apr. 6 - 12 • Come Follow Me

2h ago5:15818 words
0:000:00

SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT215ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT215FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT215DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT215PTSpani...

Transcript

EN

Welcome to Follow Him Favorites, this is where John and I share a single stor...

with each week's come follow me lesson, John, Exodus 7 through 13. You've told me you have a story that fits. What is it? Yeah, you remember after all these plagues, boy Moses says the coolest thing, Exodus 13 3, Moses said it to the people, remember this day, in which you come out of Egypt, that

idea of remembering a day, Hank wins your anniversary, that would be March 18th. You remember that day? No, absolutely.

Okay, months of November 28th, when's your birthday?

That would be May 12th. No, my October 8th, so you just remember those things, the important days, Elder Dale G. Renland in April of 2020 gave a talk and he told this amazing story. He said I became acquainted with Thomas Nielsen, a remarkable man who needed a hard transplant. He was 63 years old, that hit home and lived in Logan, Utah, in the United States, following

military service during World War II, he married Donna Wilkes in the Logan, Utah Temple, became an energetic and successful brick mason. In later years, he especially enjoyed working with his oldest grandchild Jonathan during school vacations. The two developed a special bond in part because Tom saw so much of himself in Jonathan.

Some found waiting for a donor heart frustrating.

He was not a particularly patient man, he'd always been able to set and achieve goals

through hard work and sheer determination, struggling with heart failure, with his life on hold, Tom sometimes asked me what I was doing to speed up the process. Jokingly, he suggested avenues I could pursue that would make a donor heart available

to him sooner, remember Elder Remland is a doctor, right?

Yeah, one joyous, yet dreadful day, an ideal donor heart became available for Tom. The size, the blood type, where a match, the donor was young, just 16 years old, the donor heart belonged to Jonathan, Tom's beloved grandson. Earlier that day, Jonathan had been fatally injured when the car in which he was riding was struck by a passing train.

When I visited Tom and Donna in the hospital, Elder Remland says they were distraught, it's hard to imagine what they were going through knowing that Tom's life could be extended by using their grandson's heart.

At first, they refused to consider their profit heart from Jonathan's grieving parents.

Their daughter and son-in-law, Tom and Donna knew, though, that Jonathan was brain dead and came to understand that their prayers for a donor heart for Tom had not caused to Jonathan's accident, their prayers for a donor heart, right? No, Jonathan's heart was a gift that could bless Tom in his time of need. A recognized something good might come out of this tragedy and decided to proceed.

The transplant procedure went well, afterwards Tom was a different man. The change went beyond improved health, or even gratitude. He told me he reflected every day, wow, on Jonathan, on his daughter and son-in-law, on the gift he had received, what that gifts had entailed. Even though his innate good humor and grit were still readily apparent, I observed that Tom

was more solemn, thoughtful and kind-hearted. He lived in addition to 13 years after the transplant, years he otherwise would not have had. His obituary stated that these years allowed him to touch the lives of family and others with generosity in love.

He was a private benefactor and an example of optimism and determination now. Just as Tom, all the Rennland concluded, did not take Jonathan's heart for granted in a joyful and revered way, Tom remembered each day, the tragedy that brought him extended life. Wow.

The exuberance of knowing that we can be saved and exalted, we need to remember salvation

and exaltation came at a great cost. Wow. I just thought, remember this day said Moses. And every day he remembered that gift. Wow.

What a powerful story about remembering and it's because you're looking in the mirror that you're

going to remember. Right? The fact that you're still breathing, that you're going to say, wow. Hey, can you remember Elder Kevin Brown of the 70s gave a talk of conference or two ago and how he remembered that day.

Right? Remember the date he accepted the gospel. These are important days and here's Moses said, okay, everybody, don't forget remember this day. That's beautiful.

We hope you'll join us on our full podcast. It's called Follow Him. You can get it wherever you get your podcast where with Dave Hadlock this week, he has quite a background in biblical Hebrew and he shows us some really fun things about the

Book of Exodus you probably never seen before.

And then come back next week. We'll do another follow him favorites. [Music]

Compare and Explore