What Dan Brought Home

Cedar Valley News
Monday, April 6, 2026
What Dan Brought Home
By Dan Larson

I spent this past weekend attending General Conference with Rebecca. We didn’t talk much during it. We sat and listened, the way you do when something important is being said and you want to make sure you hear it right.

I came home from Conference with one thing sitting on me. Not a doctrine. Not a list. A recognition.

The world is not at peace. Anyone reading this already knows it. The war, the arguments, the bitterness in public life, the exhaustion in people’s faces. We have gotten very good at identifying what is broken. What I keep wondering is where the repair begins.

I am a contractor. I have built houses for thirty years. I know where repair begins. It begins at the foundation. Not the roof, not the walls, not the paint. The foundation.

What I heard at Conference — what settled on me and has not left — is this: the peace the world needs begins inside a person. Not inside a policy. Not inside a treaty. Inside a person choosing to become something better than they currently are. Developing the attributes. Doing the quiet work. Humility. Patience. Charity. Forgiveness. The willingness to restrain the anger, to extend the grace, to keep going when it would be easier to stop.

Christ said: “My peace I give unto you, not as the world giveth.” I have read those words a hundred times. This weekend, they landed differently. The world’s peace requires conditions to be right first. His peace does not wait for conditions. It comes from what a person is becoming, not from what the world is doing around them.

I sat with this on the drive home, and I thought about Cedar Valley. I thought about Imam Al-Rahman at the mosque, teaching his congregation the same patient work in a different language. Salaam. The root of Islam itself. Peace. Not the absence of conflict — the presence of wholeness. His people greet one another with it every time they meet. They are offering it as a gift with every hello.

I thought about what the Jewish tradition teaches about shalom. Not just peace but completeness. Nothing lacking, nothing broken. The Talmud says the whole Torah was given for the sake of peace. Not as a side benefit. As the purpose.

I thought about the Greek Orthodox families in Cedar Valley, and what their tradition carries about theosis — the lifelong work of becoming more like God. And what the Buddha taught, which George knows something about from his own study: peace comes from within. Do not seek it without.

Different buildings. Different vocabularies. Different paths to the same recognition: the work begins inside the person.

I am only one. I know this. I cannot fix what is broken in the world. I cannot even fix everything broken in Cedar Valley. But I have been in this town long enough to know what it looks like when enough people are doing the quiet work. You feel it in the way a family holds together under pressure. In the way a neighbor shows up without being asked. In the way a disagreement gets resolved without anyone needing to win.

You feel it in George’s deli when he listens to a customer the way he would listen to a friend. In the way Aisha asks her questions — not to win an argument but to understand. In the way Lars stands at his counter and holds the standard without making anyone feel small for not meeting it.

Cedar Valley is not a peaceful place because we agree on everything. We do not. Cedar Valley is a community because enough people in it are doing the work. Quietly. Imperfectly. Persistently.

What I brought home from Conference is not a program. It is a reminder. Peace is not what happens when the world gets better. Peace is what happens when enough people decide to get better themselves. One at a time. Building from the foundation up.

I am going to try to be one of them. Rebecca already is.

— Dan Larson

Cedar Valley News has a new Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

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