Lesson 5
“Hearken to the Truth and Give Heed unto
It”
1 Nephi 16-22
By Breck England
We examine the Book of Mormon with
a great sense of urgency because it was written to show us our
own predicament: Jerusalem of Lehi’s
day was just like the world we live in — full of abominations
— and about to be destroyed. We are commanded to escape
from the threat of Babylon just as Nephi was (compare 1 Ne. 1:13 to D&C 1:16). Nephi is a noble example
of trust in the Lord as he leads his family to a land of promise
and to faith in Christ. In this lesson we will explore these questions:
- How did Nephi demonstrate obedience,
faith, and courage?
- How did Nephi’s response to trials
differ from the responses of many of his family members?
Throughout sacred history, the Lord
has shown his mercy to the faithful by helping them to escape
the “awful monster” (2 Ne. 9:10) of
captivity and death. Enoch, Noah, Abraham, and Moses were
each inspired to take their people out of the world and into a
place of safety — a promised land that is itself a prefiguring
of eternal life in the celestial kingdom of God.
The pattern continued in the latter
days as the Saints escaped destruction at the hands of their enemies
and trekked westward to establish Zion in a place where they could flourish and worship in peace.
Each of these epic journeys constituted
not only an escape from the “vale of sorrow” but also a pilgrimage
to a “far better land of promise,” as Alma
denotes it (Alma 37:45).
But these were not easy journeys. Afflicted with famine, hardship,
and uncertainty, the wandering saints of former days had only
their faith to sustain them, while the world continually beckoned
to them. Many of the children of Israel
murmured in the wilderness, longing for Egypt;
and in our own day a good many members of the Church shrank from
the journey west and lost themselves once again in Babylon.
The story of Lehi
is of such an epic escape. The Lord showed Lehi
in vision the fate of Jerusalem and commanded him to “take his family and depart into the
wilderness” to a “land of promise … which is choice above all
other lands” (1 Ne. 2:2, 20). The life
of a faithful Latter-day Saint re-enacts these epic escapes of
Abraham, Moses, and Lehi.
We too are called on to come out
of Babylon and to “take
our journey” back to the presence of our Heavenly Father. From
the example of Nephi, we can learn how to take the journey of
life successfully.
Nephi wanted his readers (us) to
know about the challenges of his journey to the Promised Land
because he knew it was a story of the Lord’s deliverance that
would give us courage. He recognized the pattern of the Lord’s
dealings with his people and knew that the story of his small
family re-enacted a similar exodus: that of the children of Israel
from Egypt.
“Quite probably, Nephi ... consciously wrote his account of the
wilderness journey in a way that would remind the reader of the
Exodus of the children of Israel from Egypt.”[1] We have the privilege
of drawing strength from Nephi’s example of obedience, faith,
and courage.
Pointing the Way
When Lehi’s family was at last ready to take their journey into
the wilderness, Lehi awoke to find “upon
the ground a round ball of curious workmanship ... and within
the ball were two spindles; and the one pointed the way whither
we should go” (1 Ne. 16:10). The
Lord never leaves his faithful children without direction.
The instrument not only pointed the
way, but was full of writing “which was plain to be read, which
did give us understanding concerning the ways of the Lord; and
it was written and changed from time to time, according to the
faith and diligence which we gave unto it” (1 Ne.
16:28-29). The ball’s instructions eased the path by leading
them “in the more fertile parts of the wilderness” (1 Ne.
16:16).
As we face our own journeys through
life, we should keep in mind the symbolic importance of Lehi’s
compass, known to them as the Liahona. Alma likens the instrument to the scriptures
and the words of the prophets: “It is as easy to give heed to
the word of Christ, which will point to you a straight course
to eternal bliss, as it was for our fathers to give heed to this
compass, which would point unto them a straight course to the
promised land” (Alma 37:44).
Alma notes that when the Lehites were “slothful
and forgot to exercise their faith and diligence” the director
ceased working “and they did not progress in their journey; therefore
they tarried in the wilderness, or did not travel a direct course”
(Alma 37:41-42). We are thus reminded that if we study faithfully the
word of God and diligently keep it, the Lord will guide our steps.
Wading Through Much Affliction
Throughout the journey, the family
of Lehi struggled with hunger, death,
and dissension. “We did travel and wade through much affliction
in the wilderness,” Nephi writes. I have been to the Arabian
Peninsula where Nephi journeyed and have seen firsthand how desolate
that land can be. To take families through the mountains and deserts
must have been nigh impossible. Starvation threatened when Nephi
and his brothers lost the use of their metal bows. No longer able
to hunt game, “they did suffer much for the want of food.”
The response of Laman
and Lemuel, Nephi’s brothers, was to
take counsel of despair. They “did begin to murmur exceedingly
... against the Lord.” Even Lehi
began to murmur. Nephi, on the other hand, faced the brutal
reality of their situation and did what he could. “I did make
out of wood a bow, and out of a straight stick, an arrow: wherefore,
I did arm myself with a bow and an arrow, with a sling and with
stones. And I said unto my father: Whither shall I go to obtain
food?” (1 Ne. 16:23). By the Lord’s
direction and his own efforts, Nephi was able to find the food
his family needed.
The death of Ishmael caused real
sorrow to his daughters, who did “mourn exceedingly,” and they
also began to murmur. “Our father is dead; yea, and we have wandered
much in the wilderness, and we have suffered much affliction,
hunger, thirst, and fatigue” (1 Ne.
16:35). The women also had to bear children in the wilderness.
These difficulties must have been overwhelming.
Worse than the physical hardship
and loss were the cruel dissensions that plagued the family. Laman
and Lemuel were not only rebellious
but murderous. They longed for the ease and comfort of the world.
They were lazy, refusing to work with Nephi in building the ship.
They were insulting (“our brother is a fool”) and treacherous
(“behold, let us slay our father, and also our brother Nephi”).
In their carousing on the ship, they bound Nephi with cords and
cruelly mistreated the rest of the family.
Laman and Lemuel typify the cynical
and destructive forces at work in our world. Their view of people
of faith? “Led away by the foolish imaginations of [their]
hearts.” Their definition of happiness? “We might
have enjoyed our possessions and the land of our inheritance;
yea, and we might have been happy.” Their approach to the
challenges of life? “ ”My brethren did complain against me, and
were desirous that they might not labor.”
As we view the world around us sinking
more and more under the tide of sin, we recognize the “Laman-and-Lemuel”
syndrome among many. They become desensitized to truth and virtue.
They become “past feeling,” unable to feel the influence of the
Spirit in their lives (1 Ne. 17:45).
Hearkening to the Truth
Nephi’s response to these nearly
overwhelming challenges was an unwavering faith in the Lord and
obedience to his instructions.
“Do you believe that our fathers,
who were the children of Israel, would have been led away out
of the hands of the Egyptians if they had not hearkened unto the
words of the Lord? “ Thus Nephi begins his remarkable discourse
on Exodus, likening the history of Israel’s
wanderings to the situation of Lehi’s
family (1 Ne. 17:23-43). We are in the same position, he seems to say
to his brothers. “Do ye suppose that they would have been led
out of bondage, if the Lord had not commanded Moses that he should
lead them?”
The message is clear: bondage awaits
those who fail to follow the Lord’s prophets. Spiritual
bondage is the inevitable result when we do not “hearken unto
the words of the Lord.”
“By his word the waters of the Red
Sea were divided ... the Egyptians were drowned in the Red
Sea, who were the armies of Pharaoh.” The Lord will not
allow the forces of evil to overtake and destroy those who are
faithful.
“Ye also know that they were fed
with manna in the wilderness ... there came forth water, that
the children of Israel
might quench their thirst.” The Lord provides spiritual as well
as physical sustenance to us freely if we follow his commandments.
The Lord led them by day and gave
light to them by night, “doing all things for them which were
expedient for man to receive.” The faithful may count on
the Lord’s guidance at every moment. We receive from his
hand whatever is “expedient” for us; in other words, the blessings
we receive are specifically tailored to help us progress in the
Lord’s own way. Ultimately, he “leadeth away the righteous into precious lands,” emblematic
of the celestial kingdom
of God (1 Ne. 17:30, 38).
But the family of Israel,
like Laman and Lemuel,
had refused again and again to hearken. “They hardened their hearts
and blinded their minds, and reviled against Moses and against
the true and living God ... even as ye have.” And the day
of destruction awaits, Nephi warns. Speaking of the Jews
at Jerusalem, Nephi declares that “the time has come that they
have become wicked, yea, nearly unto ripeness ... they must be
destroyed, save a few only, who shall be led away into captivity”
(1 Ne. 17:42-43).
Nephi’s exhortation that we should
“liken all scriptures unto us, that it might be for our profit
and learning” (1 Ne. 19:23), is sobering
when we consider the parallels between our own situation and Lehi’s. We too lie under the shadow of Babylon. Like the Jews at Jerusalem
in Lehi’s day, the world nervously goes about its business without
regard to the word of the Lord. “They set him at naught, and hearken
not to the voice of his counsels” (1 Ne.
19:7).
Nevertheless, because “he loved our
fathers, and he covenanted with them ... and he remember[s] the
covenants which he had made,” the “God of our fathers ... yieldeth himself ... to be lifted up ... and to be crucified.”
And he shall surely visit all the house of Israel in our day, “some with
his voice, because of their righteousness, unto their great joy
and salvation, and others with the thunderings
and lightnings of his power.”
Like Lehi,
we have been commanded to separate ourselves spiritually from
the world to escape the bondage of sin. Like Lehi, we each have a journey to take with our families either
into the “precious land” of our Father’s kingdom or into captivity
and death.
Our destiny is entirely our choice.
We can choose to hearken or not. We can choose as Nephi did to
listen to the Lord and be preserved by his power, or to choose
as Laman and Lemuel
did to harden our hearts. Both paths are hard, but while
one leads to darkness and futility, the other leads to the light.
The path that leads to the Savior, although challenging at times,
is ultimately the path of “simpleness and easiness,” and our labor is to look to Christ
and live (1 Ne. 17:41).
Notes:
[1] Szink, Terrence L. “Nephi and
the Exodus.” In Rediscovering the Book of Mormon, John
L. Sorenson and Melvin J. Thorne, eds., Deseret
Book, 1991, p. 38.