Monday, August 16, 2010

2 Nephi 30: 3

2 Nephi 30: 3:
"And now, I would prophesy somewhat more concerning the Jews and the Gentiles. For after the book of which I have spoken shall come forth, and be written unto the Gentiles, and sealed up again unto the Lord, there shall be many which shall believe the words which are written; and they shall carry them forth unto the remnant of our seed."

Nephi speaks again prophetically about our time. He makes no distinction between the Jews and "the remnant of our seed," or Nephite remnant in what he says here. The "book of which I have spoken" is the record of the Nephites. It will come forth, written as a warning to the gentiles. Here is another attempt to establish a time frame for a prophecy. It will be after the record exists, gets brought forth "unto the gentiles" and then is "sealed up again unto the Lord." We are in that era now. The record exists, even if part of it is sealed. It has come forth, at least in that part intended to be released at the point of this prophecy. And it has been "sealed up again unto the Lord." We don't have possession of it at present.

I've addressed the cover story that the Angel Moroni still has the plates in what I've written before. Briefly, the Book of Mormon tells Joseph Smith to "seal them up unto the Lord" in detail in three places. This is one of them. The other two are
2 Nephi 27:22 (giving the most detailed instruction to Joseph) and Ether 5: 1-4. All of these instructions are to the same effect. Once the Book of Mormon has been translated, to the extent it is to come forth in our day, the plates are to be "sealed up again" by Joseph. Since he did everything else in the way he was instructed, there is no reason to believe he wouldn't have sealed up the record and hid it again.

Here Nephi prophesies that "there shall be many which shall believe the words which are written." Meaning that those words "written unto the gentiles" or what we have in print now, will in fact be believed by "many." They "shall believe the words." Nephi has assured us of that. Therefore, it is necessary that some group from among the gentiles distinguish itself by actually believing the words of the Book of Mormon. It will be this group which "shall carry them forth unto the remnant of" Nephi's seed. Notice that they will "believe" in the book. (That will require them to have a correct understanding of the book's content, otherwise they would have unbelief.)




Those who do not believe (or have unbelief) in the Book of Mormon will not, indeed cannot, bring the words to the remnant. They aren't qualified. They would not be able to convert any of the remnant. It will be those who actually believe in and accept the precepts of the Book of Mormon who will carry them forth unto the remnant.






Considering the otherwise direful predictions about the gentiles, this is the one way where hope may come to them. The group that believes in the Book of Mormon will necessarily have to be preserved to fulfill their responsibility to carry the words to the remnant. This is a subset of the Saints, and clearly not all of the members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. For the church itself, there remains a condemnation because of their unbelief in the book. (
D&C 84: 54-57.) This condemnation of the church was repeated by President Benson and again by Elder Oaks.

If, therefore, you would like to be preserved, the manner in which that will happen, according to Nephi's prophecy, will necessarily require you to abandon the condemnation of the larger church, and become one of those who believe in the Book of Mormon. Not only to say, but to do; as Section 84 above requires.

It is surprising how much information the Book of Mormon has for us. It is even more surprising that with such detail available to us, we have done so little to understand and teach it. The words of this prophecy by Nephi ought to be proclaimed among us. However, very little attention has been given to it.

One of the effects of pride is blindness. We can't see what our pride prevents us from seeing. We have to come down to the depths of humility (to use a phrase Nephi coined in
2 Nephi 9: 42.) Interestingly it is only the Book of Mormon which tells us to "come down in the depths of humility." (2 Ne. 9: 42; Helaman 6: 5; and 3 Ne. 12: 2.) Once Nephi coined the phrase, Mormon used it twice in his abridgement. It is a good phrase. It does tell us what we must do.

The great work of the Lord in this day revolves around the Book of Mormon. More instruction, prophecy and promises are contained in that book for our day than any other. You can get closer to God by abiding its precepts than any other book.

Joseph Smith didn't write it. It was written by ancient prophets, sealed up to come forth in our day, and translated by the gift and power of God.

It is a perilous book. We neglect it at the risk of failure. Don't let it remain a "sealed book" for you. Anyone can come to believe in it if they are willing.

5 comments:

  1. Seems I recall a while back Denver stating something akin to, "Forget your preconceived notions about the New Jerusalem being in Missouri," and a promise that a discussion would be forthcoming. Are we still on track for that?

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  2. I sense that finishing one subject in connection with understanding a full topic is imposing upon the patience of some of you. The whole setting needs to be set out, because it runs against a lot of our preconceived notions. We're headed somewhere, but won't get there for a while.

    I wondered if this ought to be dealt with in a book instead of a blog when we started. Maybe it should be taken up there rather than here.

    If you are patient, we'll get there. But we can't just leap from one topic to another without leaving out a large segment of the overall picture necessary for the pieces to fit together.

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  3. Personally, I am happy to patiently read your blog each day and learn what I can..... I hope you will continue here.

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  4. I appreciate the foundation being laid and my patience is doing great now. Just a little reassurance is all I needed. :)

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  5. I like the patient approach.
    I have time to ponder as we move through.
    I need this here and now.
    I fear there is not time to wait for a book, seeing I have neglected the best book for too long.

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