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Lesson 4
“The Things Which I
Saw While I Was Carried Away in the Spirit”
1 Nephi 12-14
By Breck England
Chapters
11-14 of 1st Nephi are often referred to as the Apocalypse
of Nephi.
An apocalypse is a vision given to
a prophet in which the veil is parted and some aspect of the Lord’s
plan is laid out to the prophet’s view. In fact, the word “apocalypse”
means “opening of the veil.” Such apocalyptic visions are often
symbolic in nature and require a heavenly messenger to explain
the meaning of the symbols. Apocalyptic visions were given to
Enoch, Abraham, Moses, Isaiah, Ezekiel, and perhaps most strikingly
to John the Revelator — the great example being the book of Revelation
(known to many as the Apocalypse).
What
we commonly call Lehi’s vision of the Tree of Life is an apocalypse,
which his son Nephi was privileged to share.
The Two Ways
In the Apocalypse of Nephi, the prophet
sees mankind following two ways — one that leads to the Tree of
Life and another that leads to destruction. In this lesson we
focus on chapters 12-14, in which an angel explains to Nephi the
meaning of his vision.
We learn that there are three key
dangers on the “broad road” that leads to destruction:
-
“Behold
the fountain of filthy water which thy father saw; yea, even
the river of which he spake; and the depths thereof are the
depths of hell.”
- “The
mists of darkness are the temptations of the devil, which blindeth
the eyes, and hardeneth the hearts of the children or men, and
leadeth them away into broad roads, that they perish and are lost.”
-
“The large and spacious building ... is vain imaginations
and the pride of the children of men.”
There is a “great gulf fixed” between
the way of the tree of life and the way of destruction, and a
great multitude gets lost beyond the gulf. Poignantly, in chapter
12 Nephi foresees the destiny of Lehi’s descendants as they are
ultimately lost on those broad roads, drowning in darkness and
doomed to fall with the great house of pride.
Then the vision expands in chapter
13 to include the “nations and kingdoms of the Gentiles,” or the
peoples of the earth, who are subject to a “great church”:
Behold the formation of a church
which is most abominable above all other churches, which slayeth
the saints of God, yea, and tortureth them and bindeth them
down, and yoketh them with a yoke of iron, and bringeth them
down into captivity ... and I saw the devil that he was the
founder of it.
Behold the gold,
and the silver, and the silks, and the scarlets, and the fine-twined
linen, and the precious clothing, and the harlots, are the desires
of this great and abominable church. And also for the praise
of the world do they destroy the saints of God.
The Great and Abominable
Church
This “great church” is symbolized
by the “large and spacious building” that Lehi saw hovering above
the earth. The Hebrew word Lehi used to describe the building
was probably binyan, which means “edifice” or “construction.”
In other words, the “great and abominable church” consists of
the systems and structures we build to “cover our sins, or to
gratify our pride, our vain ambition, or to exercise control or
dominion or compulsion upon the souls of the children of men.”
Dedicated
to the accumulation of power and wealth, the “great and abominable
church” is any system or combination dedicated to enrich some
at the expense of others. You find it in any organization where
you find corruption, greed, vanity, and mockery of the sacred.
In its worst forms it is a murderous combination engaged in the
torture and enslavement of others.
It
is primarily interested in merchandise, as John says in Revelation:
“The merchandise of gold, and silver, and precious stones, and
of pearls, and fine linen, and purple, and silk, and scarlet,
and all thyine wood, and all manner vessels of ivory, and all
manner vessels of most precious wood, and of brass, and iron,
and marble.” Lusting after these fruits, it makes
slaves of the souls of men.
Lest
we make the mistake of identifying the “great and abominable church”
with any particular organization, the angel explains to us: “There
are save two churches only; the one is the church of the Lamb
of God, and the other is the church of the devil; wherefore, whoso
belongeth not to the church of the Lamb of God belongeth to that
great church, which is the mother of abominations, whose founder
is the devil.”
In other words, there are two great
cities — Zion and Babylon
— and we decide every day of our lives which to live in.
This means that we cannot and must
not identify the “great and abominable church” with one or another
specific organization. It is all Babylon, and is found in innumerable organizations. In Nephi’s time,
the word “church” did not exist in its modern sense; he probably
used the Hebrew word yahad, which meant something like
“unity” or “society” or “brotherhood.”
The great and abominable system of
things is above all a business devoted to the gratification of
human pride; it is actually not so much a particular church as
a state of the heart.
As Professor Stephen Robinson has
pointed out, membership in the church of the Lamb of God “is based
more on who has your heart than on who has your records.” Innumerable people of all
ages whose names are not found on the records of the Church belong
to Christ because of their faith in Him and/or their practice
of His principles. By contrast, some Latter-day Saints seem to
belong to the “great and abominable church” because their hearts
are “set so much upon the things of this world, and aspire to
the honors of men.”
“They have taken away
from the gospel of the Lamb”
It
was essential to the plan of Satan that the progress of the great
and abominable church not be hampered by the gospel of Christ.
As a result, through the devil’s machinations many of the saving
truths and covenants were simply removed from the scriptures:
Behold, they have
taken away from the gospel of the Lamb many parts which are plain
and most precious; and also many covenants of the Lord have they
taken away. And all this have they done that they might pervert
the right ways of the Lord, that they might blind the eyes and
harden the hearts of the children of men.
Modern
scholars now confirm that the scriptures were tampered with. Professor
Margaret Barker argues that early in the Christian era, Jewish
authorities removed elements from the sacred writings that pointed
to a Savior who would be the Son of God — precisely to weaken
the case for Jesus as the Messiah. She says:
There was no fixed
canon of Hebrew Scripture until after the advent of Christianity,
and there is good reason to suspect that the familiar Hebrew canon
was established in reaction to Christianity. Even the Hebrew text
from which the English Bible is translated was fixed at the end
of the first century CE and excluded the version(s) which
the first Christians (and the Dead Sea community) had used ...
This explains what happened to much of the evidence.
Ironically,
the later Christian church adopted these altered Hebrew scriptures
without realizing it, and the loss of the plain gospel led to
centuries of confusion. “Because of these things which are taken
away out of the gospel of the Lamb, an exceedingly great many
do stumble.”
The Plain and Precious
Things Shall Come Forth
Still,
Nephi learns, the Lord will not “suffer that the Gentiles shall
forever remain in that awful state of blindness.” The Book of
Mormon will ultimately restore what has been lost. The Lord says
to Nephi:
I will manifest
myself unto thy seed, that they shall write many things which
I shall minister unto them, which shall be plain and precious
... these things shall be hid up, to come forth unto the Gentiles
... And in them shall be written my gospel, saith the Lamb, and
my rock and my salvation.”
The Book of Mormon is the Lord’s
tool for bringing down “the great and abominable church.” For
“these last records ... shall make known to all kindreds, tongues,
and people, that the Lamb of God is the Son of the Eternal Father,
and the Savior of the world.” In the end, Satan’s plan to
cover the truth with a mist of darkness will be foiled by the
light that comes from the Book of Mormon.
It
will be a long twilight struggle. Given the grip over of the earth
of the “great and abominable” system of things, the church of Jesus Christ will never be particularly
numerous:
I beheld the church
of the Lamb of God, and its numbers were few, because of the wickedness
and abominations of the whore who sat upon many waters.
The power of the Lamb of God ...
descended upon the saints of the church of the Lamb, and upon
the covenant people of the Lord, who were scattered upon all
the face of the earth; and they were armed with righteousness
and with the power of God in great glory.
And when the day
cometh that the wrath of God is poured out upon the mother of
harlots, which is the great and abominable church of all the earth,
whose founder is the devil ... the work of the Father shall commence,
in preparing the way for the fulfilling of his covenants, which
he hath made to his people who are of the house of Israel.
Clearly,
that day has come. The wrath of God is now being poured out upon
the “great and abominable” system of things. Unceasing war and
turmoil — “wars and rumors of wars” — afflict us more and more.
But the “work of the Father” has commenced, the restoration of
the “plain and precious gospel” has come, and the two ways Lehi
saw in his vision are set before each one of us:
For the time cometh,
saith the Lamb of God, that I will work a great and a marvelous
work among the children of men: a work which shall be everlasting,
either on the one hand or on the other — either to the convincing
of them unto peace and life eternal, or unto the deliverance of
them to the hardness of their hearts and the blindness of their
minds unto their being brought down into captivity.
Let
us each be very sure where our hearts are — in Zion
with the humble followers of Christ or with the proud and arrogant
citizens of the “large and spacious building” of Babylon.
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© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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Breck England, product architect and consultant for FranklinCovey Company, earned a bachelor's degree in Medieval History and master's and PhD in English and literary criticism from the University of Utah. He was director of consulting for Shipley Associates, an international business consulting firm, until 2000 when he joined FranklinCovey. At Brigham Young University, he is adjunct professor of organizational communication in the Marriott School. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Kappa Phi, the Society for Technical Communication, and the American Society for Training and Development.
An appointment in his college years as an assistant researcher to the Church historian led to the publication of numerous articles. The Life and Thought of Orson Pratt, a biography of the early LDS apostle, won the Best First Book award of the Mormon History Association in 1986.
Brother England served a mission in Paris, France, and since then as a bishop's counselor, ward clerk, Institute and Gospel Doctrine teacher, and member of the Mormon Tabernacle Choir. He belongs to the Canyon Park Ward in Bountiful, Utah, where he lives with his wife Valerie and their five children. |
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