The
Book of Mormon, A Latter-day Corrective — #14
So
Many Treasures!
By H. Wallace Goddard
If
you’re like me, you have recently finished reading the Book
of Mormon in response to the Prophet’s invitation. I was
sad as I finished. The experience was so enriching.
I
know I can start reading the book over again. And I can
move to another great book of scripture. But there was something
special about this pass through the Book of Mormon. Maybe
God is reminding me — and all of us — that there are special
blessings in store for those who take the counsel of living
prophets seriously. Maybe God is reminding all of us that
he is offering “wisdom and great treasures of knowledge,
even hidden treasures” (D&C 89:19).
It
was surprisingly easy to find clear messages to the latter-days
to help us steer clear of worldly reefs. The columns I have
written since September include the following:
#1:
Revelation (Revelation is commonplace in the Book of Mormon!)
#2: Mighty change (We will never get it right until our
hearts are changed.)
#3: Laws of Survival by Barbara Keil (God’s rules are very different from the world’s.)
#4: The R’s of Repentance (The ability to repent is a blessed
gift.)
#5: Are We Not All Beggars? (We are all dependent upon God
and should be gracious as He is.)
#6: A Better Kind of Esteem (Esteeming God rather than ourselves
is the key to our progress.)
#7: How Easy is the Way? (God shows us a clear path.)
#8: Sizing Up the Enemy (We should turn from Satan to the
Savior.)
#9: Learning and Unlearning Hatred (Hatred is Satan’s way,
not God’s.)
#10: Our Records Are Vital for Our Well-Being (The Book
teaches us to keep a faithful record.)
#11: Two Views of Conversion (We can learn about spiritual
processes by Alma’s change.)
#12: Portrait of Evil (Satan is a liar and a cheat. We should
recognize his deceptions.)
#13: His Image in Our Countenances (Compassion is the key
to being a disciple.)
What would you include if you were listing the messages of
the Book of Mormon that can help us steer a safe course
through latter-day storms and barriers? One perceptive reader
wrote me about the dangers of secret combinations. Others
have pointed to other lessons. There are many more vital
lessons and correctives in the Book of Mormon than any of
us have discovered.
Some of the themes I listed but did not find time to write
about include the following:
- We should trust God to manage and direct our lives.
- We must overcome the natural man so we can become
friends with God.
- God makes an invitation to consecration.
- We must teach our families to embrace light and
truth.
- The doctrine of the atonement (taught so clearly
and powerfully in the Book of Mormon!) is central to understanding
mortality.
- Rationalization endangers our relationship with
God.
- Learning is dangerous in the absence of faith.
- We can use our minds to carry ourselves to appointments
with the divine.
- Faith in God often entails surrendering control
in our lives.
- God gives guidance (and scripture) more gladly
than we suspect.
- The love and condescension of God are the energizing
power in the atonement.
- What some make into a mystery can be plain and
precious when we have the key of knowledge.
- Afflictions are blessings when seen through eyes
of faith.
- Agency is a divine gift and blessing.
- God is focused on blessing us — unlike the mainline
religious assumption that we exist solely to praise God.
- Our attitude toward the poor and struggling is
the measure of our conversion.
- Wealth is dangerous without faith, love, and humility.
- Truth is to be found in light.
- From the beginning those who have been taught from
on High have known of Jesus.
- Jesus is the central figure in all of human history.
As
I wrote in the first article in this series, “We commonly
cherry-pick a verse here or there from the Book of Mormon
to fill in the gaps in our talks and lessons. How often
do we go to that great book to be taught new ways of thinking?
Do we use the Book of Mormon to make our points or
to make His? Are we willing to be re-educated by
God? Since this great book was written and compiled with
us in mind, it has special claim on our interest. It has
special power to reform us.”
I
feel sure that we as a church and people have only scratched
the surface of truth that is available to us as we seek
the mind and will of God. We have seen the first fulfillment
of President Hinckley’s promise. We look forward to discovering
more great truths as we continue our study of the words
of God.
“Without
reservation I promise you that if each of you will observe
this simple program, regardless of how many times you previously
may have read the Book of Mormon, there will come into your
lives and into your homes an added measure of the Spirit
of the Lord, a strengthened resolution to walk in obedience
to His commandments, and a stronger testimony of the living
reality of the Son of God” (Gordon B. Hinckley, “A Testimony
Vibrant and True,” Ensign, August 2005, p. 6).