Literally a quote from work: one of the clients we're helping has a curriculum written for military families facing the stress of deployment and separation. It's a tiny project that was written by elderly missionaries and isn't as bad as it could be considering the limited resources they had in creating it, but as I'm helping revise and update it I'm having to track down the sources of a lot of quotations they used and a lot of them are from really old or obscure sources.
This one was tricky, even though it was attributed:
"The deeper the dark, the closer the dawn. However profound the suffering that envelops you, never forget the inner spark of hope and courage. Never lose the capacity to wait with patient enduring. Every hardship is an opportunity to strengthen ourselves, to temper our life and make it shine with greater luster. If you are going through a dark time, remind yourself that dawn is very close. Hope and courage will sustain you."
- Bishop Drew Rousse, Faith Cathedral
A quick search for Bishop Drew Rousse showed that he's a motivational speaker and there's not really anything credible published by him anywhere that I could find, so I assumed he had probably used the quote in a speech and it was attributed to him. Searching for the quote itself gets me a lot of Buddhist "thought of the day" sites and Tumblrs. Several different people attribute it to Daisaku Ikeda. The part where this gets odd is that I am one of the few LDS Church employees who would probably know who Daisaku Ikeda is. And I find that fact that one of his quotes made it into an LDS class somewhere rather funny.
Ikeda Sensei is the president of Soka Gakkai, a modern sect of Buddhism. One of the places I lived on my mission, Hachioji, is the world headquarters of Soka Gakkai and home to their university. They're, to be polite, a little wacky. And I realize that it's a little ridiculous for a Mormon to call a religious group wacky, but they display flags with the Soka Gakkai logo outside their apartments and wear lapel pins to identify themselves all the time and if you are a missionary and run into one you get an interesting militaristic pre-rehearsed spiel just for Mormons. There's kind of a cult of personality around Ikeda and he's one of the reasons that most Japanese people mistrust religion and equate "sect" with "cult." Some people call SGI (Soka Gakkai International) the "Mormons of Buddhism," which makes this all a lot funnier, but having had experience with both groups I hope I could authoritatively say this isn't true.
So, you know, it's a nice-sounding quote, but not the most legit of materials and I think I'm going to recommend that they remove it. And giggle to myself about the really weird coincidence that led me to be the one researching its origins.