Pages

Sunday, August 1, 2010

2 Nephi 28: 18-19

 
"But behold, that great and abominable church, the whore of all the earth, must tumble to the earth, and great must be the fall thereof. For the kingdom of the devil must shake, and they which belong to it must needs be stirred up unto repentance, or the devil will grasp them with his everlasting chains, and they be stirred up to anger, and perish;"
 
Remember that this comes at the end of Nephi's ministry. He saw the vision of the great and abominable church at the beginning of his journey into the wilderness. There has been over forty years between the time of the earlier visions and the time of this summary of his great teachings. (See 2 Ne. 5: 34.)
 
Between the time Nephi saw the visions (set out beginning in 1 Nephi 11) and the time of this final instruction, Nephi has had decades to ponder on the things he was shown in vision. He has, in fact, spent those years reflecting constantly upon the visions he received. (2 Ne. 4: 16.) It is foolish to believe that Nephi, Joseph Smith or any prophet understood what they saw the day they saw it. Only time, careful, solemn and ponderous thought can unravel what a person is shown in vision by the Lord. The understanding of a prophet is not static. It unfolds. Joseph's first impression of the first vision was personal. He thought it was a message to him about himself. By the time he had finished translating the Book of Mormon, organizing the church, and collecting a following, Joseph realized the first vision was not his, but it belonged at a minimum to a larger community of believers. Eventually he would come to see it belonged to the world. The version we have in the Pearl of Great Price reflects that changing understanding. In it he gives the first understanding in what he told his mother the day it happened: He learned that Presbyterianism was not true.  (JS-H 1: 20.)
 
So this statement goes back forty years earlier and Nephi's vision of the fall of the great whore. This universal false religion will fail. It will "fall." The "fall" will be "great." It will "tumble to the earth"-- meaning that it will no longer stand on its own, but will altogether collapse.

The purpose of this great calamity is to bring about repentance. The purposes of God, even in punishment, are to elevate and save others.

Notice the devil's tool that will be used in opposition to repentance: they will "be stirred up to anger, and perish." That is, to harden hearts and to blind eyes, anger will be the most effective tool. Rather than being humbled by the fall of the great whore, those who will continue to resist repentance will be angry for the losses. They will lament the loss of what they held so dearly.
 
This, then, is how the groups break down - For those who repent, the difficulties they encounter bring humility and contrition. For those who refuse to repent, they respond with anger at their trials.

This is the great watershed test. If your set backs in life humble you, then your heart is soft and you are a candidate for repentance.  If you become angry, accuse God of causing evil, and refuse to be comforted, you are not a candidate for repentance. Your anger is a tool used to blind you. The one employing the tool is the enemy to your soul.
 
The trials and difficulties are gifts to stir you up to repentance. That is how you ought to respond. The only way to approach the Lord is through humility. Anything that aids you in becoming humble is good, merciful and just.  You should view it as a gift. No matter the difficulty. Christ descended below it all; and none of us are greater than He.  (D&C 122: 8.)

4 comments:

  1. Is there anyone else out there that has responded in anger because of a trial? I can think of twice. The first time was because of my own selfishness in a situation that I did not want to occur, but which I had no control over. I refused to be comforted. The second, I continued faithful and humble until the trial continued on and on (and hasn't resolved yet). Then I became angry for a season. All of this was for my learning because I had to stop and reconsider the "error" of teaching in the church that if you just pray, read the scriptures, attend the temple and be good that you will be blessed and all will be well. I hear that all the time in testimony meetings. I hope to never fall into this error again. Thank you for the clarity with which you have taught this principle, Denver.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anger, righteous anger, in certain circumstances is a righteous response, if used correctly, to protect the innocent & stop the wicked from hurting others & themselves.

    In such instances if a person isn't angry at the evil they see happening around them, they can't be trusted to help those who are hurt, nor will they feel to fight the wicked sufficiently to stop them.

    Also, some people in this life will not be totally comforted & healed until the next life, for their trials are too severe. Some trials even brought Prophets to their death beds.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Great insight as always, I appreciate your books & blog. I watched the latest "Mormon messages" video for the first time today and thought it went along perfectly with your post.

    http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=bd163ca6e9aa3210VgnVCM1000003a94610aRCRD&locale=0

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous,
    Thanks for the link to the Mormon message. That is very touching.

    ReplyDelete

What Say You?