followHIM - 1 Nephi 6-10 Part 1 • Dr. Gaye Strathearn • Jan 15 - Jan 21 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: January 10, 2024How did we forget the Lord? Dr. Gaye Strathearn examines key questions, ideas, and context to encourage understanding of Lehi’s Dream and Nephi’s Vision.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portu...guese): https://followhim.co/book-of-mormon-episodes-1-13/YouTube: https://youtu.be/_62ALc3ctFkApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part 1–Dr. Gaye Strathearn00:54 Dr. Strathearn previews the episode02:00 Introduction of Dr. Strathearn02:55 Hearkening to the Lord04:08 The context for Lehi’s Dream and Nephi’s Vision07:02 Lehi thinks about posterity08:42 Hope as catalyst for Lehi’s Vision11:35 Recording only things of worth12:35 Nephi’s questions to Laman and Lemuel15:36 How have we forgotten the Lord?17:37 Sister Browning and President Kimball on the word “remember”19:14 The Sacrament 21:35 The faith of Ishmael’s family24:32 Dream language27:16 The Lord answers prayers and expects work28:46 Being humbled 31:15 Faith, forgiveness, and sacrifice36:27 Lehi’s Dream and the Small Plates39:44 Dark and light40:40 Trees and temples44:38 The fruit47:50 The path and the Iron Rod49:14 The Garden of Eden parallels54:17 Numberless concourses56:58 Worshiping in the prone position1:00:11 Not choosing Jesus1:03:42 End of Part 1–Dr. Gaye StrathearnThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith and I'm your host. I'm here with my dreamy co-host, John, by the way. John, we're back. Another episode of Follow Him, Book of Mormon.
Yeah, I know why you said dreamy. I was hoping you'd say banana creamy. Those are really good, but we'll take dreamy.
I'll take dreamy. I'll take dreamy.
Day dreamy.
Yeah. Don't do that today. John, we have had a lot of fun. Our first two lessons in the book
of Mormon have just to me been absolutely exciting. I'm learning so much. How are you
feeling so far? What are you looking forward to today?
I've taught the book Mormon a lot and so have you,
but it's so fun to have a scholar come in
and tell me things and for me to go,
never saw that, never knew that.
So I'm looking forward to that again today.
It is so fun, John, to have such insightful guides with us.
It's such a benefit.
And speaking of insightful guides, John,
we have an insightful guide with us today, Dr. Gay Strathern. Gay, thank you for being here. And I'm really glad that we've kind of split it
off from Nephi's version of this, because I think what is happening here with Lehi is really,
really important in its own right. As he's thinking about his family, this dream vision,
I think, is very much for him, although later he's going to see the more expanded implications
of what he sees. Yeah, this is something that I think many of our listeners have read many times,
Lehi's dream. Yet, I think there's some things that we're going to learn today that perhaps we've
never seen before. Gay is a professor in the Department of Ancient Scripture in Near Eastern
Studies at BYU. We've had her on before.
She's taught at BYU since 1995, which is an important year for me.
That's the year that someone consented to marry me.
Sweet.
Yeah.
Deeply appreciated that.
Including a year at the Jerusalem Center.
Dr. Strathern received her Bachelor in Physiotherapy from, I love this, the University of Queensland in Australia,
and bachelor's and master's degrees in Near Eastern Studies from BYU and a PhD in New Testament from Claremont Graduate University.
And her research centers primarily on New Testament topics.
And that's why we've had her here before, especially those of interest to Latter-day Saints.
We're really glad to have you back.
And I believe you're also an associate dean.
So I'm going to sit up really straight and do my best to be a good employee today.
Thank you, John. It's good to be here. Thanks for having me back.
We love having you here, Gay. Really, it's such a treat. I'm going to begin here, Gay,
with the Come Follow Me manual, and then let's dive in and see where you want to go.
It says this, Lehi's dream with its iron rod, mists of darkness, spacious building and tree with most sweet fruit is an inspiring invitation to receive the blessings of the Savior's love
and atoning sacrifice. For Lehi, however, this vision was also about his family.
Because of the things I have seen, they're quoting Lehi here, I have reason to rejoice
in the Lord because of Nephi and Sam.
But behold, Laman and Lemuel, I fear exceedingly because of you.
When Lehi finished describing his vision, he pleaded with Laman and Lemuel to hearken
to his words that perhaps the Lord would be merciful to them.
Even if you have studied Lehi's vision many times, this time think about it the way Lehi
did. Think of someone you love. As you do, the security of the iron rod, the dangers of the
spacious building, and the sweetness of the fruit will take on new meaning, and you will understand
more deeply all the feelings of a tender parent who received this remarkable vision. What a
beautiful opening paragraph there from the manual. Gay, how should
we approach our lesson today? Well, I've said it before that I'm a context person, so I always like
to set what we're talking about in the larger context of what's happening in the Book of Mormon.
And I think that there's some really fun things going on here that help me at least appreciate just how important this dream is
for Nephi. I always look for things that jump out in scriptural texts and say,
why is this happening? In this case, it's that Lehi's dream is set in a section of scripture
where we have two chapters, one before and one after, that seem
to come out of nowhere. They interrupt the flow. Why is Nephi writing and putting chapter six
and chapter nine here? Both of these chapters are talking about plates and Nephi having two sets of plates. He's having a large
set of plates where we all know he talks about the history, but then he's also made these small
plates, which he does about 30 years after the family leaves Jerusalem. And this is now what
Nephi is writing on. And what he said is that up until now, he's
kind of been abridging Lehi's plates. He's not including everything in it. He has chosen out of
all of the stuff on Lehi's plates to include this dream in the small plates. And I think it's
important then for us to go through to remind ourselves about these small plates. And I think it's important then for us to go through to remind ourselves
about these small plates. Whereas the large plates deal with history and politics, Nephi is
really clear that he is using these plates to choose things that are of great worth,
that are pleasing to God. He says that the things will persuade people to come to
the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, that they might be saved. Nephi has set
up the vision by talking about that either end of the dream vision. And I see them as bookends.
The technical term is inclusio.
So if it starts with the importance of what's on the small plates
and it ends with the importance of what's on the small plates,
then it suggests to me that Nephi is wanting his audience
to see just how important this is.
He's reinforcing to us that this dream vision is of great worth, that it is pleasing to God,
and that it will bring us to God to help save us. And so it gives us the context, I think,
through which to think about what's going on in the dream vision. That's the first thing that I
think is really important. And then the second one is in chapter seven, we have an
introduction to what's setting up the dream. Lehi has sent his sons back to Jerusalem again, this
time to get wives. We don't see them balking at that too much like they have previously. But it's clear that Lehi is thinking about seed.
The word seed is used all over the place in these chapters. They go back to get Ishmael and his
family. We learn that the Lord softened Ishmael's heart and that of his household, which is reminding
us a little bit back to what the
Lord did for Nephi in chapter 2.
Nephi, it seems, was struggling just as much as Laman and Lemuel, but he reacted differently
and the Lord softens his heart so that he did not rebel.
Here we have Ishmael's family also being softened so that they'll want to participate
with Lehi and his family.
But we are hearing as we get to the end of chapter 7 that as they're on their way back,
Laman and Lemuel and some of Ishmael's family are going to rebel.
This sets up the sense for me that Lehi is really concerned about his family,
his posterity, and what's going to happen
to them. And this dream for me is initially so much focused on Lehi's concern for his family,
and particularly Laman and Lemuel. That's the second introductory thing. And then the third
is just a question I have, and I don't know
that I can answer it definitively. Lehi is having this revelatory experience. I wonder what was the
catalyst for this experience? Visions don't usually come out of the blue. They usually come because people are asking questions or they're reading scripture
and that leads to questions itself. So I've looked at the larger context of this dream vision.
I'm thinking back to chapter five where the brothers have returned with the plates, the brass plates. I see there in chapter 5 that Lehi
is really, really anxious to read them. It's almost like they come back and he immediately
goes away in his tent and starts reading them. God is commanding him to study and search these plates. And I'm wondering if it is what he's reading on the plates
that is acting as a catalyst for this stream vision. My next question is, well, what would
it have been on the brass plates that might have sparked this experience for him. And my thought is, I think that he was reading
Zenos's allegory of the olive tree. I hope in our discussions we can talk a little bit about that,
because Zenos's allegory, at least Jacob's version of it, is asking the question,
is there hope for the house of Israel who have rejected the Messiah or the stone upon
which they should build?
And having them rejected it, is there any hope for them?
And that's how Jacob introduces the allegory of the olive tree in chapter 5.
So that's the end of chapter four. And I'm wondering
again, whether Lehi is wondering, is there any hope for Laman and Lemuel? They're rejecting things,
but is there any hope for them? That's how I see things as I think through this vision in its context. Okay, that's an interesting point that you bring up.
1 Nephi 5, right at the very end, we obtain the records, we search them, we found them,
they were desirable, great worth unto us, and then they're searching them and it connects
it to their children, insomuch that we would preserve the commandments of the Lord unto
our children.
You can see what you just said in Lehi there, searching them and thinking about his posterity.
Yeah, I think that that really is the motivating factor here.
I love that idea. It was after Lehi went through these that he maybe had his mind on his own family,
and then this dream came. 1 Nephi chapter six is short.
There's only six verses, but I love the sixth verse
where Nephi says, I shall give commandment unto my seed
that they shall not occupy these plates with things
which are not of worth unto the children of men.
I like to read that to my class and ask them,
do you think that Nephi's posterity kept this
commandment?
And they all say, yeah.
And I say, so there's something of worth in the war chapters, huh?
Let's go find it.
There's something of worth in every chapter.
And if you don't see it, the writer saw it.
Our job is to search and ponder and find those things which are of worth.
I just wanted to give a shout out to 1 Nephi 6.6.
I love that verse.
If we're going into it thinking, well, I don't think this has any value.
No, there's a reason it's there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Keep looking.
Keep searching.
I've also been thinking about chapter 7, because chapter 7 and chapter 8 also align in some other ways. When Laman and Lemuel and some of Ishmael's family begin to rebel,
Nephi reaches out to them, right? And he asks them a series of questions. I love the questions,
and I think that they're applicable for all of us. He can't understand how they can be rebelling at this point. And so he says in verse 8 of chapter 7,
How is it that ye are so hard in your hearts and so blind in your minds?
How is it that ye have not hearkened unto the word of the Lord?
How is it that you have forgotten that ye have seen an angel of the Lord? How is it that you have forgotten that ye have seen an angel of the Lord? How is
it that ye have forgotten the great things that the Lord has done for us in delivering us out of
the hands of Laban? And how is it that ye have forgotten that the Lord is able to do all things
according to his will, if people will just exercise faith in him. And then he goes on
and says, let's be faithful. And he's working with them because he says that there's great blessings
in choosing to follow God. Is it going to be hard? Absolutely. But we will receive a land of promise
if we're faithful. We're going to know that about Jerusalem's destruction,
and we're going to see the hand of God in saving us from that
because we've listened to our father.
And if you return to Jerusalem like you want, you're going to be destroyed.
And of course, Laman and Lemuel are just angry with Nephi about that,
and that shouldn't surprise us because it happens quite a bit.
They want to lay their hands on him and have him die by wild beasts and things like that.
But Nephi's faith and prayers in that lead to seeing another evidence that God is involved
in their lives, and he's not just some theoretical being, but he's intimately involved.
And so I like to see that because Nephi, like his father, Lehi, in the next chapter,
is really, really concerned about his brothers. And he's trying so desperately to help them see as he sees and understand as he understands.
Nephi and Lehi never give up on Laman and Lemuel.
And that, I think, is a beautiful part of these early chapters of the Book of Mormon as well.
And they teach me something about God and hopefully that he is not going to give up on me,
even though I do stupid things sometimes and sometimes I fail to see.
But that he's always there for me if I can just wake up and remember how great he has been in my life.
I think the Holy Ghost might ask me some of those same questions.
How is it that you have forgotten?
How is it that you're so quick to forget?
I think Mormon says
later in the book of Helaman, how quick we are to forget. Gay, you said something earlier that
I wanted to ask you about. You said Nephi made these plates 30 years after these events. Do you
see that impacting the way he writes? Because he knows how this plays out. As he's writing this story, he knows how this is going to end.
Perhaps seeing the heartbreak already, seeing where the decisions led them and the break
that they have in opening chapters of 2 Nephi, that might influence the way he describes
what happened with them.
That's absolutely true.
With the value of hindsight, we're able to see little things along the way that we might not have seen while we're in the midst of things.
And that's why I think it's important to see these editorial choices that he makes,
because he's doing it with hindsight.
So how can I make sure that people don't miss this story?
How do I make sure that readers don't just jump to Nephi's version of it,
which is different than what Lehi is doing? How do I set this apart so that it stands out
in the minds of the readers and sees how really, really valuable I see this dream vision?
So he chooses to highlight it by putting those bookends on either side.
Of course, in the original text, there's no chapter breaks, as we would see it.
It would be one cohesive section, inclusio, with these highlights on either end that would make that stand out as you read along.
He would say, look, I'm starting this story and here I finished this portion. And we do that with chapter breaks in our minds, but the ancients had different
ways of highlighting the really important stuff. This is one way to do it. Excellent. I'm glad that
both of you mentioned those like three verses in a row, 1 Nephi 7, 10, 11, and 12, that all begin, how is it that ye have forgotten?
And you might remember the First Presidency Christmas devotional, Sister Tracy Browning
quoted President Spencer W. Kimball, who made this great observation. He said, when you look
in the dictionary for the most important word, do you know what it is? And he said, it could be
remember. Think of all the things we
learned in New Testament. All the feasts were to help them remember the Exodus and their deliverance
and parts of that. A fun way to go through the Book of Mormon or something to watch for
is for the words remember and forget the opposite. You'll see there, oh, remember,
remember my sons, but you'll also see, don't forget these
three verses here. And it seems like we need reminders of how merciful God has been. And
right on the title page that we talked about a couple of weeks ago, the idea of remember the
great things the Lord has done, because it's easy to forget. I think, Hank, we also talked about
journals, didn't we? And how President Eyring said that you document the hand of God in your life and a journal will help us remember those things too.
Excellent.
Absolutely excellent.
You can almost hear Nephi saying, you have forgotten, but I remember.
I remember to hearken to the words of the Lord.
I remember you seeing an angel.
I remember the great things the Lord has done for us in delivering us out of the hands of Laban.
And because I remember, I will go and do even the hard things the Lord invites.
Yeah.
John, as you made that comment, I thought of all the ways the Lord brings remembrance.
I just think all the things I'm asked to do are probably at least in part helping me remember.
Isn't that a big part of the sacrament that they will always remember?
Yeah, that's exactly what President Kimball said in the latter part of that quotation is that you've got to go to a sacrament meeting and hear the priests pray that we will always remember.
Isn't it nice that the sacrament is every week? We don't pull the tables out of the storage by the cultural hall every Christmas and Easter, but it's every single week, every single week, which is also just evidence of the Lord's mercy.
Like, come back.
Let's do this again.
You're going to need this.
Let's never forget.
Let's remember.
John, this is going to be a little fun quotation, but I thought of it as you were making your comment. The movie Lion King, where Simba checks out. Remember who you are? It's far away. Yeah. Mufasa, Simba, father, Simba, you have forgotten me. No, no. How could I? You have forgotten who you are. And so forgotten me. Let's see if I can channel my inward James Earl Jones.
Look inside yourself, Simba. You are more than what you have become. How can I go back? I'm not who I used to be. Remember who you are. You are my son and the one true king. Remember who you are.
Well, that's really impressive, Hank, that you could quote all of that.
You must have children.
So, Gay, I just wanted to mention one thing.
I wanted to ask you about this.
It's interesting to me when they go back to talk to Ishmael's family, they go back to Jerusalem.
Nephi mentions that they journeyed into the wilderness with Laman and Lemuel.
Verse 6.
Nephi, Sam. Yeah yeah he lists all these people but
zoram does not go with them back at least it's not mentioned i've wondered if zoram's a wanted man
in jerusalem suspect right yeah laban's been killed the plates are missing and the one guy
who's gone is zoram so i've often thought i wonder if they brought a
wanted poster back with them said hey zoram they're looking for you back there well that's
an interesting possibility yeah yeah you have to admire ishmael and their family and clearly the
lord softened their heart but hey lehi a cousin, don't the scholars think, or some relation
to Lehi. My cousin had a dream, everybody pack up, we're leaving. I just think this is amazing,
especially when people were so tied to the land that God gave them after the Exodus, and to just
pack up and leave must have been, I mean, we do that now. Our kids go off to college, they meet somebody,
they get married, they move off somewhere. But back then, do you just move like this?
No. And especially, as you noted, leaving from Jerusalem and from the promised land.
We see this later in the Book of Mormon, where they seem to be really wrestling with the implications
of this move and leaving behind their covenant lands, seeing themselves. They're going to
reinterpret scripture, reinterpret Isaiah and other places according to their experience.
That's really important to understand because they're seeing themselves as
part of the scattering, but they also want to understand Isaiah and not just the scattering,
but part of the gathering. Whereas Isaiah, it's gathering back to the land. There's this
realization that they're never going to come back to this land. Now they're looking for their gathering in another land and
trying to understand it. While they're interpreting Isaiah, and it might be easy for us to say,
oh, well, this is what Isaiah originally intended. I don't think that that's the case.
I think that they're just interpreting the scripture according to them and their needs
and trying to see meaning of it.
And they're seeing it in the scattering, but more importantly, the gathering of Israel.
And of course, the Savior, when he comes to third Nephi, is going to reiterate that.
It is such a difficult thing for it that they've got to look at scripture, their scripture
through new eyes and see things a little bit
more uniquely for them. I've wondered if Lehi and Ishmael had already discussed this journey
earlier, and Lehi says, I'll go out into the wilderness and then have your family come join us.
I don't know if that happened or not, but there's one thing about talking about something,
and it's an entirely another issue to actually follow through and do something so drastic.
The faith of Ishmael and his family has to be mentioned and thought of.
I think about these mission leaders, too, that have to go tell their kids, hey, we're going to Argentina that are called when they still have children in school.
These kids that say, OK, mom and dad, we'll go. There's a lot of amazing families out there that do something similar,
I think. Yeah. I put this at the beginning of chapter eight when he's coming into the dream.
And verse two comes to pass while my father tarried in the wilderness, he spake unto us
saying, behold, I have dreamed a dream, saying, Behold, I have dreamed
a dream, or in other words, I have seen a vision.
Now, that language is really interesting.
From my schooling, I remember this, and I'd have no idea why I remember it, but it's stuck
in my brain.
But dream to dream is a cognate accusative.
Why I remember that, I have no idea.
But it's all throughout the Book of Mormon, but it's also throughout the Old Testament
where they're having visions and especially interpretive or symbolic visions.
That's the kind of language that they use.
But as I thought about this again in the context of what's happening here, this language of
dream to dream is meaning that Lehi's family are going to go, oh, this dude's a visionary man.
So the book opens with a vision that he has.
And what's the result of this for Laman and Lemuel?
They have to leave Jerusalem and leave all their wealth behind.
They're murmuring against Lehi and they say, he's a visionary man.
They're saying it in a very, very negative way because there's a cost to them because of the
vision of their father. The next time we see this, he's going to say to his sons, I've had another
one of these visions, go back to Jerusalem and get the plates. And the result of this is Sarai is going,
when she thinks her son are dead because they're taking so long to come back, and she starts to
complain. And what does she complain? Lehi, you are a visionary man, and there's some costs involved
with that. And you can see Lehi going, and he says to his wife, I know that I'm a visionary man. I'm
going to own that. But this is not just a
negative thing. This for me is an important thing. It's because I'm a visionary man that I've seen
the goodness of God and those kinds of things. So far, every time he said this, there's been some
negative consequences, at least from the perspective of his family. When he gets up in
chapter eight again and said,
I have dreamed a dream, I can only imagine what is going
through Laman and Lemuel's minds, going, oh, no, not again.
What's going to be the cost to us this time because of what's going on?
Oh, gosh, I can see the dread kind of going through them.
But I can also imagine that Nephi is anxious to hear this revelatory experience of his father.
Yeah. You need to stop having these dreams.
That's right.
Stop dreaming. Stop sleeping.
And Gay, I wonder if they're frustrated as well with that Nephi is becoming a visionary man. Oh no, we've got a second one
coming up through the ranks. Back in chapter seven, Nephi says they sought to take away my life
out in the wilderness on their way, returning with Ishmael's family. Back when I was a younger
seminary teacher, I had a student in my class say she just really loved verses 17 and 18.
I said, why do you love it?
And she said, well, notice that Nephi prays, give me strength that I may burst these bands
with which I am bound.
That's verse 17.
And verse 18, she pointed out to me that it says, when I said these words, the bands were
loosed from off my hands and my feet.
And she said, you know, I just really like that because sometimes we expect our prayers
to be answered in a certain way. Nephi wants bands bursting, right? Hitting people in the face,
like the incredible Hulk moment. Instead, the bands did come off, but they were loosed.
Just a little insight that a student
showed me years and years ago that I've never forgotten, that pray for something to happen
and then be okay if something different is the result. Because the implication is Nephi still
has to do some work, right? If they're burst, then God has done all of the work, but there's
still a little bit of struggle for Nephi to have the desired result.
Yeah. I've noticed also, Gay, that one thing we can watch for is what it takes to humble Laman and Lemuel.
It seems that it takes more and more throughout 1 and 2 Nephi.
Right here, it just takes one of the daughters of Ishmael, the mother, some of the sons pleading with my brethren,
and it softens their heart. But later it's going to be a storm that's threatening their lives that
softens their heart. So just maybe something to watch for as we go through. One other thing in
chapter seven, Gay, I wanted to ask you about is this, how quick Nephi is to forgive and how do we get to that point?
I did frankly forgive them all that they had done as if it's that easy.
Well, I think that this speaks to Nephi's love for his brothers. I think that I would be struggling
a little bit with that love part, given that all that they have done to him.
It's not just, I mean, he's been beaten, not just bound, but beaten.
And to be able to forgive them with all of these things just speaks to the love that
he has.
And I would see this as him having a sense of, with his maturing himself spiritually and in preparing for the time when
he will take over the prophetic mantle. But these are all tutoring opportunities that the Lord is
giving him to practice loving as God loves, to having that kind of agape type of experience, right?
Because he has to learn it.
I don't think it happens automatically, given their responses to him.
So interesting.
We can see some of these early experiences as tutoring for what he's going to become.
I really like that.
I like in verse 20 how they did bow down before me and plead that I would forgive them.
I'm reminded of who is it that bows down to Peter?
Hey, we are men of passions like yourselves.
Don't bow down to us.
And Nephi does that same thing.
Verse 21.
I told them to pray unto the Lord, their God, for forgiveness.
I kind of like that thing.
What are you bowing down for me for?
Ask God for forgiveness.
And I'm reminded of Peter.
Doesn't that happen to Paul too?
It does happen to Paul, yeah yeah they think that they're gods and he says no i'm not a no no no don't bow down to me
right bow down to god so i like that if i does that too i have a little thought from james e
faust this is back from the 1900s i don't know if you guys remember that far back yeah guys. He said, those who extend judgment, mercy, faith, and forgiveness exhibit a greatness of
soul, a greatness of soul and mind consistent with the spirit of the Lord's teachings.
I liked that phrase, a greatness of soul. Forgiveness can be difficult, but it can
exhibit that idea that I'm really taking in the teachings of the Lord,
and it's changing my soul. It's changing who I am. Sacrifices, as we know, was a really,
really important part of the gospel. It's not just the mosaic stuff from the book of Moses.
We know they were doing this very early on. The giving of an animal, there was always a cost involved to an individual.
Even if they owned their own herds, there's a cost because if you give an animal and the best
of the animals to offer up as a sacrifice, that means they're not only decreasing the numbers of
their herd, but it also means that they're
losing everything that might come from that animal, whether it be milk or whether it be
further offspring or whether it's sheep, the wool or something.
They're losing access to that and they're giving it to God.
And that was always going to be difficult for people, even with some
money. But imagine those who don't have that. And so why does God want to do that? Why is he asking
us to do that, especially in our poverty or especially as we're itinerants wandering in the
desert? At least part of it, it may be. God, of course, would have to speak for himself on this. But
I think generally mortals are very self-centered. I'm sure that there's a reason for that in terms
of protection and being able to survive difficult things. But we think about ourselves. What is it
that I need to survive? What do I need to help me along it's about me me me but what God
is asking us to do is to stop and say hang on a minute it's not just about me life is so much more
than that this is also about giving it's about God it's about those around us. And sacrifices were a way to show God that we're committed to him and that he will use
his sacrifices to bless the lives of others who are also in need.
So I think in some way, these sacrifices were about us getting out of this self-centeredness
and help us to see that there are other needs and there are some things that are more important than us.
There seems to be something about sacrifice
that changes the individual.
I can't imagine the Lord is saying,
hey, I need this from you.
I think he's saying, you need this from you.
I think about tithing.
The Lord doesn't need it.
I need it.
I need to pay my tithing.
In this Old Testament times where they
burn the entire animal sometimes, I can't imagine. I can't imagine taking a bunch of cash to the
bishop and he just burns it. That would be so, what did we just do? But that was essentially
part of what they did at times. Yeah. One of the things, though, that I think we sometimes don't always appreciate when we're
thinking about sacrifices, particularly under the Mosaic law, that it was always the intent
that the sacrifice was an outward manifestation of what's going on inside of ourself.
We talk about a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
And certainly the Savior, when he comes, he's going to talk about,
well, this is the sacrifice that I want to concentrate on now.
But that was always, always a part of the Mosaic law.
We often think of it's just the outward sacrifices.
But when the prophets talking about people of broken covenants and things like that, they're talking about, at least in part, sacrifices. But when the prophet's talking about people have broken covenants and
things like that, they're talking about, at least in part, sacrifices, and you haven't
done it the way that I intended. You've just done the outward thing without having this
outward being a reflection of what's happening internally. I remember last year for our lesson
on the Garden of Gethsemane, Dr. Dan Belknap taught us something that had great impact on me.
He said, in the ancient world, sacrifice wasn't giving something up.
It was making something holy.
It was, I'm going to make this thing holy.
That really had impact on me as I think about the time that I give to callings and temple attendance and church attendance.
Instead of giving that time up, I'm making that time holy.
The money that I give, it's not giving it up.
It's making it holy.
That really had impact on me.
Leviticus tells us that in the process of doing that, we become holy.
It's not just the sacrifice becomes holy, but we become holy as God is holy.
That's the whole point of all of this is becoming holy.
Gabe, we've spent time in chapter six, chapter nine and chapter seven and just a tiny bit in chapter eight.
And I know that as you and I discussed this interview, that chapter eight was really the jewel of this lesson.
So I want to give you plenty of time in chapter eight.
How should we go about
reading this incredible experience Lehi has? I think if we work through it methodically,
there's a couple of things I think are important. Then what I'd like to do is also jump to chapter
10, because as I read this, at least, this is Lehi's interpretation of what he's just experienced.
So I think we get some really good stuff. And of course, that's going to have a huge
impact on Nephi because then he desires to see and hear and know the things that his father saw.
So we have the vision in chapter 8 and the interpretation in chapter 10.
Yeah, that's what I think is happening there.
We've already mentioned that as a result of this dream vision, Lehi has great hopes for Nephi and Sam and Sarai, but also has great fears for Laman and Lemuel.
And then he goes and he talks about this experience that he had.
One of the first things I want to notice is we've talked about the plates and how we're now on the small plates, how precious this space is here and things like that. What is interesting to me here
that at least for the first part of the vision, as Nephi is recording this, he chooses to do it
in the first person. He's not just kind of summarizing what Lehi had experienced. He is
doing specifically its Lehi speaking. And that goes up until verse 29. Nephi says, and now I, Nephi, do not speak all
of the words of my father. But from that point on, it goes to third person. Nephi seems to be
summarizing what his father says, but early on, this is first person, and that's important to him. In verse 5, it came to pass that, notice it,
I saw a man, Lehi, and he was dressed in a white robe and came and stood before me,
and it came to pass that he spake unto me and bade me follow him. Lehi is getting a guide here.
We don't know whether this man is an angel because we're in a dream or in the
symbolic world rather than the world as we know it, but he's getting a guide here. But we don't
see the guide doing very much, which is very different from Nephi's experience later on.
He just says, come and follow me.
We don't really know a whole lot of what this dark and dreary waste is.
It doesn't sound wonderful.
I think it's in great contrast to when he sees the tree,
and so that offsets things.
And in symbolic things, you often like a dark and a light to contrast what's really important here.
I think Lehi is going to refer to that later in his interpretation and we'll leave that for then.
Gay, I would think to myself, hey, that's the last time I'm following that guy.
That's right.
He said, follow me.
And then he disappears.
That's my experience.
Right.
Yeah.
And it goes on for hours.
It's not a short thing.
It's ongoing.
Is it a little bit like Joseph Smith's experience,
that contrast between I was seized upon by a power
that had such astonishing influence over me to bind my tongue,
I couldn't speak, and then the light comes?
Yeah, that's very, very important.
And he sees, it comes past,
after I prayed unto the Lord,
I beheld a large and spacious field.
So we're getting kind of he's coming out of this darkness.
Exactly what the field is, I don't know,
but he still has to go a certain way until verse 10,
it came to pass that I beheld a tree.
Now, this tree, we don't know what it is.
Lehi doesn't ever tell us what it is, but I am
going to jump ahead to Nephi, at least for this one verse, and he's going to call it the tree of
life. And I think that that's a really important thing to do. Trees in the ancient world often had
this symbolic sense of importance, and the tree of life was very, very ubiquitous in the ancient world.
And there's lots of ways to understand it, but a tree was symbolic of a kind of a conduit
between the earth, the underworld, and the heavens. So it was often seen as something
like what's called an axis mundi, but a place where
all three spheres can be connected in some way.
Trees or a tree of life is often associated with temples, and we see them there all of
the time.
And I think that that's a really nice image of connecting heaven with earth and the underworld
as well.
The living on earth, the dead
and the heaven. So this connection, this conduit between them. In the Hebrew temple, this tree of
life is symbolized by the menorah that was in the holy place. So this is a very prominent symbol
and it's often associated with this idea of life, an eternal life, and the opportunity for
people to receive that, which I think works really nicely here, given ultimately what we see.
Gay, what a fascinating idea. I remember in the book of Revelation, John says they couldn't find
someone to open the seals of the book, so they looked in heaven and in earth and under the earth.
And there you've got a tree that reaches the heavens, it touches the earth, and it goes under the earth.
What a beautiful insight.
I've never seen that before.
Remember, I wanted to connect this with Zenith's allegory.
So we have lots of trees there in that, and the roots are really, really important
for the tree. And in Zenos's allegory, it's the thing that lasts even when the tree begins to die
is the roots representing of the covenants. Israel itself will have fruitful and decaying times,
but as long as the roots are strong, then olive tree can come back and to
regrow. And that's what this Zenesis allegory is all about and why the olive tree is often
associated with eternal life, because an olive tree, the roots can survive for a thousand years,
even though the tree decays and grows back. So there's lots of symbolism in that tree.
But just again, as in Zenith's allegory, the tree is important,
but the tree is important because of the fruit that it produces.
And Nephi is going to spend a lot of time talking about this fruit.
It is described as it was desirable to make one happy.
The fruit was most sweet above all that Lehi had ever tasted, and the fruit thereof was white to
exceed all of the whiteness that I had ever seen. Alma later on is going to pick up in that same kind of language when he's talking
about the seed and the seed growing into a tree and the tree producing fruit. He uses that same
kind of language about the fruit thereof. As he partook of the fruit, it filled my soul with
exceedingly great joy, wherefore I began to be desirous that my family should partake of it as well.
The purpose of the tree is to provide the fruit here,
and this is something that Lehi had never experienced in his world.
He's clearly had trees.
He's had olive trees.
They would have been around there, but this tree and this fruit
is very, very different. He has made this journey to the tree. It's been difficult for him,
but what he's seeing is even though he went for hours in this dark and dreary waste,
that didn't matter because this fruit is so supernal for him.
I often throw this out to my students.
Why would a man in a white robe?
That sounds like a positive thing.
And he bade me follow him.
That sounds like a positive thing.
Why would he lead you to darkness?
We have concluded that he wasn't leading him to the darkness, but perhaps he was leading
him through the darkness.
Maybe this is symbolic of the fall or something like that. Throughout the scriptures, there's
this idea that you've got to go through the wilderness to get to the promised land.
Absolutely. And I love the idea that it's dark, and then he prayed, and then after he prayed,
in verse 9, after I prayed, I beheld.
It's like the Lord turned the lights on.
It was dark.
I couldn't see.
But after I prayed, I could see.
After I prayed, I beheld.
And that's the first time he mentions a large and spacious field.
So it sounds like the Lord flipped the lights on after he prayed.
I want to believe that it was the right thing for him to do to follow this
being in the white robe, but maybe he was leading him through the darkness, not to the darkness.
A part of that is that this is representative of mortality. And that mortality is meant to
be difficult. It's meant because how are we going to learn if we don't have to struggle with things?
Mortality is something God wanted for each
and every one of us so that we could progress. But we couldn't progress in the premortal world
because we needed these kinds of challenges. We needed to learn how to choose God in mortality,
even when there's a veil put upon us, so that he gives us a world of choices.
Agency is very, very important in God's eternal plan. But the reason we have agency is not
necessarily so that we can choose, we can still choose God.
Are we willing to do that even when there's a veil on us? Are we able to do it? I think we
are able to do it when we have guides, but it's difficult. We have to learn in the process.
We've got to embark upon this journey through difficulties so that we can better appreciate the fruit and the
tree when we come to it. Yeah, that's an opposition and all things message. And I always like to
emphasize this part because when we think tree of life, we think, oh yeah, tree, rod of iron,
path building. But don't forget the first part. He went through this darkness first. In the story
of Job, what does God say to him?
Were you there when the sons of God shouted for joy?
And Elder Maxwell said, now that we're here, we're wondering what all the shouting was about.
And I think, yeah, we chose to come through mortality.
And boy, it begins like this.
It's going through a lot of darkness.
But if we will pray, we can behold.
God will help us see the light, literally literally and see what this is all about but immediately there's an opposition
and all things as the vision starts you both are showing me things i've never seen john you're
absolutely right he says i followed this man who dressed in a white robe told me to follow him and
he says that's not when he's introduced to
the darkness. If you read seven closely, he says, it came to pass that as I followed him,
I beheld myself that I was in a dark and dreary waste. It's almost as if he was already in the
dark and dreary waste. Didn't know he was until this man showed up and he said, oh, I was able
to look around and see things as they
really are, that I was in this dark and dreary waste.
I didn't know that I was until I followed that man.
That was really good.
Both of you.
So there's one other thing that I think is important here.
And that's if we're calling this tree, the tree of life, which Nephi does, and we're
talking about fruit and the tree of life, I hope that there's
all sorts of bells going off in our head thinking about another place where there was a tree of life
and there's fruit. Everybody who was reading this in antiquity, and I hope in the modern day,
should be thinking, I think, of the experience in the Garden of Eden, where they had the opportunity
to experience things. They chose to partake of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
But when that happens, they're cast out of the garden and a cherubim and a flaming sword
is placed to guard the way, and the word in Greek, the derik, the path to the
tree of life. So in the Genesis story, they are prevented. It seems like God doesn't want them
to partake of the fruit of the tree of life. And that seems to be very different than what's going
on here in Nephi's dream vision, because God wants Lehi to partake. Lehi wants his family
to partake. So as I was looking at and thinking about why in Genesis it's a negative thing to
partake of the fruit of the tree of life, why is it so positive here in Lehi's experience where he thinks it's great to partake of it and so much
so that he wants to invite his family to join with him. I was thinking about some of Alma's
teachings to his son Corrie Anton where he's talking a bit about the tree of life and starting
maybe in verse 4 where he's just talked about the cherubim and the flaming sword
that he should not take the fruit and thus we see that there was a time granted unto man to repent
yea a probationary time a time to repent and serve God for behold if Adam had put forth his hand
immediately and partaken of the tree of life,
he would have lived forever according to the word of God.
So he would have lived forever in his fallen state, according to the word of God, having
no space for repentance.
That to me explains Genesis.
So what is different then from what's going on here in chapter 8 is because it's not that
God never wants humans to partake of the fruit of the tree of life, but he doesn't want them
to do it in a fallen state.
He'd rather he did it in a redeemed state.
In a redeemed state, then the full force, positive sense, of the fruit can take hold of a person,
and the person can be transformed into a spiritual being.
What I think is happening is Lehi, and at least Sarai and Sam were good people.
They understand about Christ and what he's doing.
They want to listen, they're open to
revelatory experiences here, and that they're being beckoned and having the opportunity because
they're in this redeemed state. It doesn't mean that they're a perfect state, but in a state of
redemption because of Christ's atonement on their behalf, that they can partake of the full value or the full extent of partaking
of the fruit. And I think that that's a really, really beautiful idea. It may also explain why
Laman and Lemuel have no desire to come to the tree because they have rejected God. They've rejected his prophets.
They've rejected what God wants for this family.
They stay away.
And then it's very interesting to me,
and actually I just read this last night as I was preparing.
I was reading one of my colleagues' work, Joe Spencer,
talking about this vision,
and he makes something that I had never thought of
before, that this dream vision seems to be in two parts. Initially, this is about Lehi and his
family. He's worried about his seed, and Laman and Lemuel are an important part of that. They refuse
in verse 17, he was desirous that Laman and Lemuel should come
and partake of the fruit also. Wherefore I did cast mine eyes towards the head of the river,
that perhaps I might see them. And it came to pass that I saw them, but they would not come
unto me and partake of the fruit. And I like that, come unto me. They refused to come unto me.
Come unto me, not just as their father, but as God's mouthpiece on the earth for them at this point. They refused that invitation that God was extending to them through their father.
And then Lehi seems to see more things. He sees a rod of iron, he sees the narrow path, he sees the head of the
fountain. Now we've extended, this is no longer becoming just about Lehi and his family. Now we're
seeing numberless concourses of people, many of whom were pressing forward and trying to get to the tree. And one of the things that Joe said here that I just never thought of, these numberless
people is Lehi here not just seeing people in general, but seeing the seed of Laman and Lemuel and how the struggle it is for them to come, maybe because of the rippling
effects of Laman and Lemuel's choices. But their struggle is very different than what Nephi,
Lehi, Sam go through. Certainly there's a dreary world that they have to go through, but this just seems
to be a struggle after struggle. But God has put in place aids for them in this struggle to get to
the tree. So the rod of iron then becomes something for them to hang on to and to guide them
through the mists of darkness, something for them to hang on to and to guide them through the mists of darkness,
something for them to hang on to even though people in the great and spacious building are mocking them and things like that. Is this dream then about the consequences, this second half,
the consequences of Laman and Lemuel's rejection of the opportunity and the impact that that has on their posterity
as they go forward. And some of them try and succeed. Some of them may even get to the tree,
but then they clearly aren't totally committed to it. They might have experienced some great
things of God, but the pull of the world continues to have an impact upon them. Some of them just
never make it to the tree because the mists of darkness become so difficult for them.
Elder Bednar has talked a lot about this, like the different people. There's people who
grab onto the rod but then let go. We have them clinging to the rod of iron but they get there
and then they walk away and then he comes down
and he particularly notices that there are those who are pressing forward,
who are catching hold on the end of the rod of iron in verse 30.
And the important part that Elder Bednar puts out is that they are continually
holding to the rod of iron until they come down and fall down and
partake of the fruit of the tree. And again, we have this sense of this proskynousis that we see
throughout the Book of Mormon and the biblical record of people falling down on their face.
Prone is what you do when you enter the presence of God. This is a form of worship
reserved for kings, but more particularly for gods. And these fall down at the tree as they
partake of it because they're recognizing that they're entering the presence of God. And this
tree and the fruit then becomes even more powerful and I think connect us more powerfully even with the temple,
because the purpose of going to the temple in antiquity and modern day
is not just to get baptized.
It's not for others.
It's not just to get sealed.
It's not just to make an endowment.
All of those are critically, critically important,
but they're a means to an end. They're
not the end in and of itself. We go to the temple to enter the presence of God. And all of these
things help us on their journey. But if we lose sight of that fact, then we've missed the very
heart and soul of what temple here. And so in this case then, the tree represents the presence of God
and all of the fruits and blessings that come from paying the price
to enter into his presence.
The blessings of eternity become manifest,
which is what the temple is all about for us, I think.
Beautiful.
I love that the tree is an eternal
symbol. Where do you find the beginning of a tree? Well, it comes from a seed. Okay, where did that
come from? Well, it came from a tree. Well, where did that come from? Well, it came from a seed.
You can't find the beginning of a tree. We're not there yet, but the great spacious building is
something man made, but the tree is something god created and it's this eternal symbol
as you mentioned so beautifully i love that when lehi as soon as he partakes of the fruit verse 12
he says where's my family i began to be desirous that my family should partake of it also
have you ever been to a restaurant and you tasted something and you're, oh, like, oh, you, you, you've got to try this here. Swallow, swallow it. You have got to try this. Yeah. You're almost forcing it.
Like you got it here. And you're so willing to share something because you want someone else
to have that joy that you just had. And so I think it's such a natural reaction that Lehi tastes it.
And where is my family when he sees them in verse 14, I beheld your mother, Sariah, and Sam,
and Nephi, and then this wonderful line, they stood as if they knew not whither they should go.
I put my margin, Doctrine and Covenants, section 123, verse 12, where that letter from Liberty
Jail, there are many yet on the earth who are only kept from the truth because they know not where to find it.
So where do you look?
You look to the prophet who says, come unto me.
And as Gay pointed out, verse 18, this is a gut-wrenching verse.
They would not come.
It's not they could not come.
It's not something was preventing them.
What's the difference between could not and would not?
They chose not to come. And that's a hard verse. That's a hard reality for lots of family members
who are enjoying the fruit of the gospel and inviting some to come and they would not come.
They will not come. They choose not to come.
Now, I noticed in that time, John, that Lehi doesn't leave the tree to go get them.
Elder Kevin Pearson gave a talk about stay by the tree.
And you see in 19, 20, and 21, the tree by which I stood, the tree by which I stood, the tree by which I stood.
It's like as soon as Lehi found it, I'm not going anywhere.
As a parent, you might be tempted.
Let me go where you are yet lehi seems to understand something
the only way i'm going to get them here is by staying here staying by the tree in verse 15 he
beckoned unto them with a loud voice so i'm staying here but i but I'll invite you with a loud voice. Come unto me.
That's great.
By which I stood, by which I stood.
Gay, these four different groups, do they feel all-inclusive to you?
Does it feel like I'm going to find myself in one of these four groups?
Yeah, I think so.
I would also say that this is typologically speaking, but if I'm honest
with myself, then I see myself in each of them. It's not one or the other for me.
Different times in my life, sometimes even day, sometimes even different times of the day
in my experience that I am more enticed by the things of the world that, if I'm not
intentional, can pull me away from the rod of iron, from the word of God. I love thinking about
the word of God with John chapter 1. In the beginning was the word, and the word was with
God, and the word was God, and the word is Christ. We have this tree here that can be a representation of Christ, but this rod of iron is also holding
on to Christ in this mortal experience is represented.
So it can be scriptures, it can be patriarchal blessings, the rod of iron, but I think ultimately
it is holding on to Christ that enables us to come into the presence of God
and participate in the full blessings of eternity. Even though that I know that that's what I want
and that's what I hope for, there are still moments of being mortal that I experience
elements of each of these four groups. Except I hope I'm not somebody who gets there and takes the fruit and then walks away.
But honestly, there are times when I do that.
I feel the Spirit so strongly, but then the pull of the world comes at me again.
That's one of the reasons why I think that Lehi and Nephi don't give up on Laman and Lemuel,
because there's always this hope that they will make a better choice and come back.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
Listen, back when I was drinking and partying, I had a good time.
He said, I had a great time.
I have to admit, I was in the Great and Spacious laughing at you guys.
He said, I did 25 years of field research in the Great and Spacious building.