Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Nephi 3-5 Part 1 • Dr. Jan J. Martin • Feb 12 - Feb 18 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: February 7, 2024How do we address difficult topics in the scriptures? Dr. Jan Martin explores the importance of record-keeping and covenant-keeping throughout trials.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese):... https://followhim.co/book-of-mormon-episodes-1-13/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056YouTube: https://youtu.be/X8nOlPcADycInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part 1–Dr. Jan Martin01:48 Introduction of Dr. Martin02:56 The concept of covenants05:38 Nephi’s purpose08:05 Enduring difficulty through covenantal relationships11:22 Remembering what the Lord has done13:26 Lehi’s conversation with his family17:11 Purpose alleviates suffering20:12 Joseph of Egypt and Joseph Smith24:22 The Book of Mormon is to maintain covenants27:51 God’s perspective and many Josephs35:25 Wilfred Woodruff and Lorenzo Snow37:55 Joseph Smith and testimony39:12 Covenant renewal among the Lehites42:02 2 Nephi 5:443:54 Grief and death50:45 An imperfect family52:53 Suzerainty55:07 Six essential parts1:03:15 Ishmael’s daughters fearful of the future1:06:25 Commandment to be cheerful01:11:15 Gratitude and journaling01:12:55 End of Part 1–Dr. Jan MartinThanks to the followHIM 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 DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill 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 a new episode of Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith. I'm your host.
I'm here with my happy co-host, John, by the way, John, you can't disagree with that one.
You are a happy co-host. I'll take it. John, the reason I call you happy is because the title
of this week's Come Follow Me lesson is, We Lived After the Manor of Happiness. I've heard you
reference 2nd Nephi 4
multiple times over the last few years. What are you looking forward to today?
This is a time when Nephi has to move and Lehi dies and he laments that and his, I
mean Nephi calls himself wretched which makes me think, ooh, can I be wretched
like Nephi? There's some great things today and then of course living after
the manner of happiness like you said. Right John. I know this is going to end almost our narrative portion of Nephi's
life. This is going to be kind of the end of our story. And we're going to get a lot of doctrine
and Isaiah chapters after this one. I'm excited to see how his life plays out here.
John, we are joined by our good friend, Dr. Jan Martin. She is a joy.
Jan, what are we looking forward to in this lesson?
I really like to take a covenant perspective
of these chapters, and that's not one
that a lot of people take, and it is so much fun.
So I'm just looking forward to sharing with you
a way to see what's going on with Nephi,
what's on his mind, and how
covenants is a big thing, and how it helps him through all of these difficult transitions
with losing his dad and becoming the person in charge of everything, and then having to
move to a new location and set up, and how this covenant is really that stability for
him and that helps them live after the
manner of happiness. So I think it's going to be really good.
I love these chapters. Jan is not new to our podcast. She's given us some incredible episodes
in the past, John, but some people might be just joining us. So tell us about Jan.
We're excited to have Dr. Jan J. Martin back. She's an associate professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Mung University and she specialized in the Book of Mormon, the New Testament,
a PhD in 16th century religious reformers and Bible translation, which is so cool. So we're
really glad to have you back. I look forward to everything that Jan does. She's been on the Y
Religion podcast a couple of times.
It's the podcast of the Religious Education Department at BYU and Jan has given a couple of episodes there that for me personally
had a complete paradigm shift on a couple of topics, especially the King James English in the Book of Mormon. Wow!
So we encourage everyone to go find the Why Religion podcast,
and especially go find Jan over there. All right, Jan, where should we start? Second
E5, three, four, and five. We had a great experience last week with Dr. Anderson. Where
should we go now?
Okay. Well, I would like to do a little exercise with you guys that I do with my students when
we hit this spot because it's really just fun. And it's about perspective.
It's about zooming out first before we zoom in. And that's one thing I like about the scriptures,
is you can take the distant view of things if you're willing to look at things kind of as a whole.
And then as you learn, you zoom in really close and you start looking at the details.
I just want to introduce this concept
of covenants. Russell M. Nelson has said that one of the most important concepts of revealed
religion is the sacred covenant. I'm going to have us just zoom all the way out. We're
going to take kind of a more wide approach of looking at Nephi's writings for a minute
and I'll just have you guys have some fun with a little exercise. Then we can zoom in on chapters three, four, and five, and then have a much clearer view
of what we're seeing because we took the broader perspective for a minute.
Jan, Jan's always telling me I need to get more exercise, so I'm excited for this.
What I want you to do for just a minute, we're just going to look at First Nephi as a whole
for just a second. What I have my students do is I'll say, okay, in First Nephi there are six big stories and
they all know what they are.
You're leaving Jerusalem, you're getting the plates, you're convincing Ishmael's family
to come with you, you have that broken bow issue story there, then you build the ship
and then you cross the ocean.
Those are our six major stories in First Nephi.
So what I ask my students to do is talk amongst themselves and say, if you had to pick one
theme that runs through every story, what would it be?
So let me have you and John just do that.
Just kind of remember those six stories and then pick something that you could identify
as a common theme through
every one of them. What would that be?
John, you get to go first. So it'll give me time to think.
I think that God helped them, maybe they needed help and they got help.
And that's great because they need to leave Jerusalem and they need to get the plates. They
have to convince Ishmael's family, they got to solve the broken bow. They've got to build this ship and they got to cross
the ocean. So good, John. That's a great theme. Hank, did that give you any little breather moment?
It's hard to do that on the spot, but anything coming to you that would be different than that?
Yeah. I think divine direction and kind of a stretch is Something I don't want to do
or I don't want to deal with, right?
When I think of that broken bow
how we talked about with Dr. Griffin,
I don't like problems.
I want to stay comfortable
and these are all uncomfortable things.
Okay, so I'm just gonna put those two things together.
John, you saw God's side of it
and Hank, you're seeing the human side of it.
This is what I want to argue is, first Nephi is really about exercising faith that God will help
you with uncomfortable situations. In other words, you're in a covenant relationship that I can do
hard things because I'm yoked with the divine. First Nephi, if you back out and look at it,
you can see Nephi purposely giving us these stories to help us see, well, how did we get to the new
world? We got here because we listened to God, we did hard things with his help and we kept that relationship. Does that make sense?
So you see First Nephi as a story of faithful people and what happens when they keep their
covenants or not.
Like Laman and Lemuel often are the foil of people who are struggling to have that faith.
But when they do and when they are supportive, like with getting Ishmael's family or building
the ship, amazing things happen. We've got first Nephi kind of as our backdrop for second Nephi, and if we
approach it through the covenant lens, we can see Nephi illustrating what happens when you keep your
covenants. Then we hit second Nephi, which is our New World story. We're now in the New World.
We've arrived here. As most of you know, second Nephites full of Isaiah.
And you guys are going to get to that in the next episodes here.
But what I want to say is you have Nephi
showing what covenants happened and what things happened because I kept my covenants.
And then he's going to jump into the larger view, which is Israel's covenant destiny
through the Isaiah teachings and where
the Nephites fit into that. You have Jacob coming in as a teacher and his job is to teach
why the Nephites need to feel like they haven't been abandoned by God. And he uses Isaiah
to show that the covenant is still there, God is still keeping his end, even though you've
been scattered over to this new world. And even though you've been kicked out of laymen, the initial lands of
inheritance. And here we are, but we're going to use covenants to help us recognize that this is all
okay. And I don't need to feel like God abandoned me. I think it's the kind of woman, forget her
baby. No, she cannot, and I will not forget you.
Exactly. As we jump into 2nd Nephi chapters 3-5, that's the backdrop of which I want to approach it
is. Nephi is really occupied with covenants. And he's really shown, we got here because of covenants,
we're now here and we're able to deal with our adversity in the new world because of covenants.
And I'm going to spend my whole second Nephi teaching you about Israel's covenant destiny
and that the Nephites fit in that.
As we look at the narrative in second Nephi 3 through 5, it's a really great lens that will
help us deal with a lot of the narrative and the painful moments.
And then some of the things in second Nephi 5 that might be a little confusing or troubling are
really helpful when we look at them through the covenant lens. I just want to set us up for that,
that you just first and second Nephi are heavily saturated with covenants.
I like that. And as you're talking, Jim, in the back of my mind, I'm thinking,
hey, do you take your covenants as seriously as Nephi?
As Nephi.
mind I'm thinking, Hank, do you take your covenants as seriously as Nephi? His Nephi.
Because you can also do hard things with the Lord's help when you focus on your covenants,
when it's not just words to you.
These are real promises.
Yeah.
When, as I started off with quoting President Nelson, let me carry on with that, he says,
through the ages God has made covenants with his children.
His covenants occur through the entire plan of salvation and therefore are part of the fullness of
the gospel. And then he says the greatest compliment that can be earned here in this
life is to be known as a covenant keeper. If you just take first Nephi, you see
Nephi is the ultimate covenant keeper. Then we're moving to the new world and
the challenge is to maintain
our perspective of that covenant and continue to be covenant keepers, which is why the Nephites
are able to live after the manner of happiness. They're doing the covenant things, keeping
commandments and following the prophet and looking after each other. So that leads us
to this happiness even if we have to do hard
things. Like happiness isn't always an absence of hard things.
I like that. Sometimes when we initially hear the word covenant, we feel an obligation,
this promise that I made. What I hear you saying and what I love about covenants is
it's a promise of togetherness, of you have help, you're not alone. And I hope we can
look at it that way. Like God wants to help me keep my covenants. What it really means is not
an obligation, but I have help in everything I need to do. I have help. And I'm guaranteed to help.
That's the thing is I can have absolute confidence that God is going to play a role
in all of this.
And that's that security that we're sometimes missing in life.
But when you have that relationship with God, you absolutely have no reason to believe
he won't help because he will.
He's promised.
So, rather than thinking of covenants as,ants as this obligation that I have, let's think of it
as I have so much help. I have constant help. And we talked before about the word comfort,
how it means together strong. When I think about covenants, I think together we can do
this. Together strong, I have help.
Nice. I'm going to quote from your Ezekiel interview, Jan.
You said, when you need to be revitalized and you need some hope, look at our promises.
Keep focusing on the things the Lord has promised for the future. Seems that this has been on your mind the last couple of years. Because it's been so well taught by President Nelson. He's really
had a focus on covenants, on the covenant
path, on staying on the covenant path. And I like to follow the lead of our prophets
and try and take a similar focus to them as I'm approaching things. It's a really great
way to follow the prophet is what is he saying and how can I learn to take those things into
my own perspective. So I've really
tried to say, okay, if covenants are on the mind of our prophet, then they need to be
on my mind. And then as I look in the scriptures, you see them everywhere.
Wonderful. Wonderful. What you've said here really links well with the opening of the
manual. It says, reading first Nephi, you might get the impression that
Nephi was somehow larger than life. Large in stature, both physically and spiritually,
he seemed unshaken by the trials he faced, or at least that is what we might assume.
While Nephi's faith was remarkable, his tender words in 2 Nephi 4 reveal that even faithful
people sometimes feel wretched and easily beset by temptations.
Here we see someone who is trying, who wants to be joyful, and we might add, who really
wants to trust in the Covenant, but whose heart growneth because of his sins.
We can relate to this and to the hopeful determination that follows.
Nevertheless, I know in whom I have trusted.
There is those Covenants again. While Nephi and his
people learn to live after the manner of happiness, they also learn that happiness does not come
easily or without periods of sorrow. And you referenced that earlier. It ultimately comes
from trusting the Lord and we might throw in there and his promises, the rock of our righteousness.
All right, Jan, I think we're ready to jump into these individual chapters.
Where do we start?
What I'd like to do really quick is just remember what's in chapter 1 and chapter 2,
because when we jump into chapter 3, we're kind of in the middle of the conversation that Lehi's having with his family.
Chapter 1, if you look at it through the covenant lens,
what you see is Lehi reviewing the covenant that's
been made with his people. He's in the middle of renewing and reviewing this covenant. And
then part of that renewal ceremony is teaching doctrine. So you get to 2nd Nephi 2, which
you guys have already done and you hear all these great divine laws, the agency, the opposition, the probationary state, the atonement.
Now, as most of you know, Layman and Lemuel have complained about being on this journey the entire way.
They never did understand why we had to leave Jerusalem and how come we had to go out here and suffer.
And then you've got little Joseph who's born into the middle of this and all he's ever known is traveling and adversity
and moving and never being able to be settled in one place for very long.
What an opportunity for a loving father to say, Joseph, let me put this in perspective for you.
So then we look at verse four and we get the connection to his own ancestry. I'm a descendant of Joseph of Egypt.
And then notice the end of verse four, here we go.
And great were the covenants of the Lord,
which he made unto Joseph.
Lehi's gonna explain Joseph's life
using an ancestor's covenants.
Why are we out here, Joseph?
Why did our family have to leave Jerusalem? Why? Well, let me explain it through the covenants why are we out here Joseph? Why did our family have to leave Jerusalem?
Why will let me explain it through the covenants that were made to our
patriarch Joseph back in the day again
How do I handle adversity? How do I explain adversity?
I'm gonna focus on the covenant part. Well, this reminds me a little bit of my childhood John
My mother saying in the days of my greatest sorrow,
I did bear thee.
Poor Joseph, I can't imagine getting this. Well, thank you, Father. Oh really? No, it was really the worst. Yeah.
No, let me just tell you, it was awful. It was bad.
You know, if you're trying to explain why bad things are happening to these people who
are trying to be good and notice where he goes, I'm going to go back to this promise
that was made to our ancestors.
So have a look at verse five, everyone, for Joseph truly saw our day.
Little Joseph, our ancestor Joseph, saw us.
Like how cool is that to know that?
That somebody from the past saw our family
and he obtained a promise,
there's the covenant again of the Lord,
that out of the fruit of his loins,
the Lord God would raise up a righteous branch
unto the house of Israel.
Now, not the Messiah, okay,
we have all of those scriptures to talk about that,
but a branch which was to be
broken off, nevertheless, to be remembered, here we go again, in the covenants of the Lord,
that the Messiah should be made manifest unto them in the latter days. Joseph, the reason we're out
here in the wilderness is because our ancestor Joseph received a promise that there would be this branch of
his family that would be led somewhere else, Messiah would come and visit, and we're fulfilling
that. This is one of the reasons we're out here is to fulfill prophecy and to fulfill covenant.
How cool is that to have that perspective for your rough life that you've had?
Yeah, there is purpose in this suffering. This isn't just suffering for suffering's sake.
And you remember Layman and Lemuel, I was telling their dad that he's kind of this
visionary man who's making things up. Like the only reason we're out here in the wilderness
is because you've lost your mind. So why are you doing that? But here is Lehi saying, I didn't lose my mind.
The reason we're out here, the reason we came here is partly, obviously to save our lives
from destruction of Jerusalem, but this is part of these ancient covenants and promises
and prophecies and we're fulfilling them.
I don't know how you guys are, but when you recognize that what's going on around you
is part of the fulfillment of prophecies and covenants,
you can really handle things better
because you see that there's a larger purpose.
I'm not just suffering for the sake of it.
Like God is really working here and I can trust this.
And the reason I'm out here is really great
and grand even though it's hard.
Wonderful.
I've wondered if Lee, I could have been saying you were a blessing in the middle
of that great affliction that I had, maybe, because I have seen my children
come into very clean, tidy sanitary hospital rooms.
And to imagine having children in the wilderness, that's whole other topic what that must have been like but I wanted to say that I love how often
people are compared to trees in the scriptures and we are a righteous branch
not just a branch that's broken off and scattered but a righteous branch and I
feel like usually people get scattered when they're wicked they lose their
testimony then they lose their real estate. But what he's saying is actually we were scattered to preserve us. We are a righteous branch,
which is, like you said, Jan, a really positive way to look at this. Here's what's happening.
The Lord is preserving us. We're a righteous branch that He's moving to a different place.
Yeah, and sometimes we see our adversity. We have this typical natural man way of saying,
well, something bad's happening to me, so I must have done something wrong. Like,
what did I do? Why is God punishing me? And I imagine layman and Lemuel kind of took that
approach as well, because they weren't happy of being out there and they may have thrown those
kind of comments. But here is Lehi saying, there isn't anything wrong. We were led out to protect
us. And yes, it's
been hard, but these are all positive reasons we're here and we're not being punished and
we're righteous people and God is leading us to these places where he can bless us more.
So I don't need to see my adversity as negative. It's part of the growth that's going to take
place as he's moving me somewhere else where he can bless me with more things. But we don't need to take that negative approach. And I
don't think Lee Hayes, I think he's really trying to orient everyone to the blessings
of, yes, I know this was hard, but this is really cool to be part of this bigger picture. Jan, I have at the top of my page written,
this is Joseph times four because we've mentioned two Josephs so far, but there's more to come.
Yeah. So if everyone wants to come to verse six, you'll see more of this Josephness.
Verse six is where you start with Joseph being able to talk for himself. Like,
Lehi's kind of been summarizing some things, but now we're going to look.
So for Joseph of Egypt in verse six, truly testified, saying,
a seer shall the Lord my God raise up who shall be a choice seer
unto the fruit of thy loins.
In verse seven, yeah, Joseph truly said, thus sayeth the Lord unto me, a choice seer,
will I raise up out of the fruit of thy loins,
and he shall be esteemed highly among the fruit of thy loins, and unto him will I give
commandment that he shall do a work for the fruit of thy loins, his brethren, which shall
be of great worth unto them.
Here we go again, even to the bringing of them to the knowledge of the covenants, which
I have made with thy fathers. Most of us know as
you read through the rest of chapter 3, we're going to name this seer after his father and
his name is going to be after Joseph. So there's your other two Joseph's. You have
Joseph Smith, the seer, but his father is Joseph. And then we're connecting Joseph Smith
to fulfilling part of this covenant that was made to Joseph of Egypt, that he would come and bring forth this
record, this record of Lehi's descendants that are going to be of great worth and remind the people who read it
that they can be part of the covenant people.
Whether you're a descendant of Abraham or whether you join in through baptism, doesn't matter.
Everyone can be part of this covenant family. It can't
have been easy for Lehi to have done any of this. And he's getting adversity from everyone
around. They're trying to kill him. And then from in his own family, you constantly have
this pushback. Why are we out here? What are you doing? Are you sure you know what you're
doing? You're a crazy guy. So for him to try
and reconnect with his own ancestry and find meaning in the scriptures is really important.
And then to name his kids after these two pivotal figures, and especially this youngest
one after Joseph, when you start looking at what he knows about this covenant with Joseph
of Egypt, it's hard to think that that was random,
that he's naming these kids
and just pulling names out of somewhere.
I think that these names really represent teachings.
Now that they're in the new world,
this is why we're here and it's not a bad thing
and you didn't do anything wrong that you've suffered.
This is all part of the covenant.
Then we can come and look at verse 12,
which is a really significant part of this prophecy
that says here, where for the fruit of thy loins,
that's Joseph of Egypt's loins shall write,
and the fruit of the loins of Judah,
that's the line of the Messiah, obviously, shall write,
and that which shall be written by the fruit of thy loins, and also that which shall be written by the fruit of thy loins, and also
that which shall be written by the fruit of the loins of Judah, shall grow together unto
the confounding of false doctrines, and laying down of contentions and establishing peace
among the fruit of thy loins, and bringing them to the knowledge of their fathers in
the latter days, and also, here we go again again to the knowledge of my covenants.
All those records they're keeping, we know Lehi keeps a record, we know Nephi's
keeping one. And these records are going to also be part of the fulfillment of
Joseph of Egypt's prophecies and promises. And to bring these two records
together, we know Lehi's family has the brass plates with the record of the Israelites
and now we're going to bring these two records together and make those record keeping efforts
really important. It's important that they keep them and you see the Nephites being very protective
of their records all the way through their Nephi history. You've also got this footnote there is to the Ezekiel
37 idea of the stick of Joseph, stick of Judah being one in thy hand. Like the way this says
it a little bit even more because it talks about what that will do. Confound false doctrines,
lay down contentions and establish peace and bring them to a knowledge of covenants. John, if you remember, Dr. Sears a couple of weeks ago
showed us in Nephi's vision, if you remember, the plain and precious truths which are taken away
1st Nephi 13 verse 26, which are plain and most precious and many covenants of the Lord have
they taken away. So it seems like what Jan just pointed out and you,
John, just pointed out is that one of the major purposes of the Book of Mormon,
we're coming back around to what we've been talking about, I think all year so far,
is to make sure that the knowledge of the covenant is maintained and is recorded for the latter days.
Knowing the book is going to come forth in the latter days, it needs to re-establish
the covenant, these plain and precious truths. Is that kind of fit with verse 12?
Yeah, absolutely. You know, when you think about us trying to make sense of our lives and where we
fit in the eternal scheme of things, and to know that God has had a plan all along, and that from
your Old Testament all the way through your Book of Mormon, you
can see that plan, that he's working with individual prophets and keeping those covenants and
that we all fit into this is again like Lehi's trying to do with his sons. This is positive.
I don't need to panic. I don't need to abandon God because I feel like things aren't going
very well. I'm part of this larger purpose and that helps me keep things in perspective when maybe it's rough.
Yeah. Genesis, all the way back to Genesis 12, we're going to bless all the families of the earth.
All the families of the earth.
So there's great purpose in what you're going through.
It's part of the plan of the Lord to use the house of Israel to bless the earth.
As we keep saying, just because I have adversity does not mean I am being punished.
When I am in that covenant relationship, I have absolute confidence that God is going
to help me.
I can go back and read these ancient stories and see God doing that and then have confidence.
If we want to jump down and just look at verses 13 and 14, you will see Lehi doing that and then have confidence. If we want to jump down and just look at verses 13 and 14,
you'll see Lehi doing that. Verse 13 is continuing to talk about this seer, this Joseph Smith we're
talking about. And out of weakness, he shall be made strong. And those of you that know anything
about Joseph's life, plenty of weaknesses, plenty of things. And he becomes a really powerful instrument in the hands of the Lord over time. And in that day, when my work shall commence among all my people
and to the restoring the O'House of Israel saith the Lord. And thus prophesied Joseph
of Egypt saying, Behold, that seer, that's Joseph Smith, will the Lord bless? And they
that seek to destroy him shall be confounded for this
promise?"
And in that case, the word for means because, because of this promise, which I have obtained
of the Lord, of the fruit of my loins, shall be fulfilled.
Behold, I am sure of the fulfilling of this promise.
How great is this?
Like when we're struggling, having a hard time, where do we
look for the confidence? We'll go back and look at the Lord's promises for other people
that He's made in the past. And we can have absolute confidence because we can see Him
keeping His promises in the past, which means He is going to keep them in the future. And
Lehi is totally confident. Like, I'm okay. I don't always know how things are going to keep them in the future. And Lehi is totally confident. Like, I'm okay. I don't
always know how things are going to play out, but I know that they will. One of the impressions
I've had so far this year in the Book of Mormon, I keep thinking of this phrase that,
God has a long view. We have such short views that, and maybe covenants help us see a longer view.
Instead of, oh no, this happened, oh no, longer view Instead of oh no this happened. Oh no this happened. Oh no this happened and the Lord saying I got you I got this and I have a
Long view and I'm gonna keep my covenant. So I like that he would say I am sure of this. That's a testimony
That's nice. Yeah, and again when we looked back at first Nephi
How many times has the Lord come through for them in those six critical stories of helping them? And they've been able to grow, at least Lehi and Nephi and Sam at least have
been able to grow in their confidence of God is in this and He will continue to help us.
Even though we're settling in this new place and we've had all this trouble, it's going to work out.
We can do it. I feel badly for Joseph Smith as he's
translating these words going, look, Joseph of Egypt had a very hard life of like above and beyond
because of the covenant. This Joseph, Lehi's son, has had a very hard life because of the
covenant. He's, I mean, he might be thinking, oh no, right? I think
I'm going to have a very hard life because of this covenant. There's a pattern here.
Yeah. But how cool if you're Joseph and you're reading verse 14, they that seek to destroy
him shall be confounded. Like absolutely in the end, I will come out on top. But I'm going to really maybe have
some adventures on the way there. But that's kind of the inheritance of
covenant people is adversity's part of it. Then we hit verse 15 which is, we've
talked about this, this is the fun one with the names of the father and the son
and so we have Joseph Sr. there and Joseph Jr. there. And then you hit verse
16 and we're continuing to let Joseph of Egypt speak for himself. So he says, We have Joseph senior there and Joseph junior there and then you hit verse 16
And we're continuing to let Joseph of Egypt speak for himself. So he says I am sure of this thing
There it is again. I'm sure of this thing even as I am sure of the promise of Moses
So when Joseph of Egypt's learning all these Moses hasn't even come on the scene yet
But he's he's sure of the promise of the seer being raised to the
other house of Israel as he is about the one coming to his broken-off branch. We have the Moses
and then we have Joseph Smith who's likened to Moses often in the scriptures. And he's very,
very confident that this will be fine. Again, verse 17 continues on with that,
I will raise up a Moses. So that's our Joseph Smith and start talking to him about this record and how
he's going to help the Nephite prophets have a voice in translating their words
and things. So that's verse 18. Really fun stuff, but poor little Joseph.
Maybe you've had a little simple question of what's up with my life.
And you, you look at this amazing revelation that he's being given to give him
some confidence that it will all be okay.
I just like to jump us over to verse 22 so we can bring this chapter to a close and have
a look at the other two.
But now we have Lehi taking back the conversation.
He's been quoting Joseph of Egypt the whole time.
And now he says, and now behold my son Joseph,
after this manner did my father of old prophesy,
verse 23, wherefore, because of this covenant,
thou art blessed, for thy seed shall not be destroyed,
for they shall hearken unto the words of the book.
Again, Joseph, I know you've had a hard life.
I know this hasn't been very much fun and you've been this nomad all of the time you've been on earth.
And here we are having to rebuild in a new world, but the covenant is what we're
part of and that is going to bless you in all these ways and bless your
posterity. That book that we've been talking about will speak to your
descendants at some point and bring
them back into the covenant as well. Covenant, covenant, covenant all the way through chapter 3.
Jen, I think in the past as I've taught this and looked at this chapter, I've focused on the word
Joseph, where actually you should focus on the word covenant. It comes up actually more than the
word Joseph. Yeah. And to help us place all these events inside that larger viewpoint, the Joseph Smith's
activities is part of this larger picture. As important as he is, he's not the picture.
He's a player in the picture, and he's a significant player. But this plan of God has been going on
all along. You can't wreck God's plans,
and we need to fit in that. And that's really the message I think Lehi's trying to give to
Little Joseph, is our family's a player in this overarching plan. How cool! But there's more to
the plan that'll be coming. The other people are going to play a role in, but we need to rejoice
that we're seeing
the covenant that we know we're part of the covenant and all of this is doable because
we're yoked to God.
For all the moms out there who are listening, they can share this with their children too.
Did you know that we are part of this covenant family and that even when we have ups and
downs and trials, it's okay because we're part of this covenant family and God's made promises that we can bless all the families of the world
I mean, it's so funny because here's Lehi saying this has been really rough, but you have been so blessed
He's like really is that what this is?
But you've been blessed because you're part of this covenant
and we know how this is going to turn out.
Well, and how cool it would be for moms to remind their children of their baptismal
covenants. And that's how you join this family. And that because you've been baptized and
because we have these other covenants as well, not every family that we're having listened
to our podcast has mom and
a dad, but everybody can have a baptismal covenant that we can connect this to. Any
mom could say, right, you're having a hard time. How can your baptismal covenants give
you this perspective? Cause you're part of this family. And let's look at little Joseph
or let's look at Jacob in the previous chapter, both of whom had rough childhoods.
And how is this covenant going to help you deal with something difficult at school or
difficult at home or difficult at work?
Yeah, I think there's a lot of power in connecting your children to the overarching covenant.
And Lehigh does it really well through here.
Jan, I know you taught us well here that the Second Nephi 3 is,
let's focus on the covenant and not necessarily the players
in the covenant.
You're absolutely right on here.
And also, in addition, John, you talked
about parents teaching their kids.
This is an excellent opportunity,
though he is a player in this story,
to testify of the Prophet Joseph Smith.
When I think about how others talk about Joseph Smith in this day and age, if I were him and I
wanted you to know about me, besides talking to me and my family, I would want you to hear from my
closest friends. And I was reading to prepare, and I think most of us have heard Brigham Young's quote.
I feel like shouting, Hallelujah, all the time when I think that I ever knew Joseph Smith, the
prophet. I think most of us have heard the statement of John Taylor from section 135.
Joseph Smith, the prophet and seer of the Lord, has done more save Jesus only for the salvation
of men in this world than any other man that has lived in it. I wanted to add two more, because there is two more presence of the Church after
Brigham Young and John Taylor, who also knew Joseph Smith personally,
Wilford Woodruff and Lorenzo Snow. And here is what they say.
Wilford Woodruff. I want to say that I have traveled with Joseph Smith a good deal in my day.
I associated with him more or less from the spring of 1834 to the day of his death.
That would be 10 years later.
I know, as I do my brethren, who were associated with him, that he was a prophet of God, one
of the greatest prophets God ever raised up on the earth.
As I said yesterday, he was in general conference, he received revelations upon every subject
necessary for the
organization of the church. He laid the foundation of a great work and this is the greatest dispensation
God ever gave to man. And then another friend of the Prophet, Lorenzo Snow, Joseph Smith,
the Prophet, with whom I was intimately acquainted for years, as well as I was with my brother. I know
to have been a man of integrity, a man devoted to
the interests of humanity and to the requirements of God all the days in which he was permitted to
live. There was never a man that possessed a higher degree of integrity and more devotedness to the
interest of mankind than the Prophet Joseph Smith. I say this from a personal acquaintance with him."
So this is a great opportunity. Don't you both think for parents to tell their children,
look, Joseph Smith is going to have evil spoken of him. But there's quite a few people who have
spoken good about him. Let's hear from them. Yeah. And let's add Lehi's testimony if we want to just go finish up with chapter 3.
If you look at verse 24, this is a brilliant testimony. He says, There shall rise up one
mighty among them, you know, Joseph's posterity, who shall do much good both in word and indeed,
being an instrument in the hands of God with exceeding faith to mighty works, wonders, and
do that thing which is great in the sight of God unto the bringing to pass much restoration
unto the house of Israel and unto the seed of thy brethren.
What a testimony.
That's Lehi's testimony of Joseph.
You've given us all these modern prophets.
Let's add an ancient prophet.
And Joseph is certainly a
significant contributor to this covenant plan that God has. And we have every reason to testify
of him. Be grateful for what he's done. John and Jan, I had a student recently, just a great girl.
She said, Brother Smith, I love the church. I love the gospel. It really is my world. I just don't know what
to think about Joseph Smith, you know, from all that she'd heard. And I thought it's
interesting how maybe some of us have separated the church and the gospel that we enjoy and
love from Joseph Smith. It's like you're at a restaurant. Oh my goodness. I love this primary, but so
good. Oh, those green beans were perfection. Oh, this salad is so delicious, but I just
don't know if the chef is a good cook.
Right. Yeah. Yeah, the gospel came through Joseph. You understand people who are wrestling
with these kinds of questions, but honestly,
by their fruits, Shai know them. And if the fruits of the gospel you're enjoying came
through Joseph, there's every reason to accept him and believe him to be the prophet.
Absolutely. If you rejoice in the Latter-day Church and in the Gospel you are receiving, you automatically are rejoicing
in Joseph Smith.
Jen, are we ready to move into chapter 4?
I think we are.
You watch Lehi blessing all of the rest of his children.
There he goes through and leaves his promises on laymen and Lemuel's children, on sons of
Ishmael, on Sam. I don't want to lose our
covenant focus because I introduce you to the idea that Lehi is conducting a covenant renewal
ceremony here before he dies. And part of that ceremony is giving blessings to your children.
This isn't him going off in another tangent. This is part of a covenant renewal ceremony.
And if you look in Deuteronomy,
you'll see Moses doing that same thing with the tribes of Israel. We get over to verse 12 after
all the blessings are given, and then you get the news that Lehi has died, and now Nephi is going to
be in charge, and he's going to have this rough time. And we all love 2nd Nephi 4. We know it is Nephi
Psalm. Many authors have shown that it's carefully and meticulously crafted, that he's really working
through his grief here. But what I want to do is show you the covenant structure of it. 2nd Nephi
1 gives you this Suzerainty Treaty structure of the Lehihtic Covenant.
But second Nephi 4 gives you a look at Nephi using a covenant to walk himself through some of the
worst times of his life. Before I show you that, let me read something Elder D. Todd Christofferson
said. He said, Making and keeping covenants with God gives us the power to smile
through hardships, to convert tribulation into triumph, to be anxiously engaged in a good cause,
and to bring to pass much righteousness. Divine covenants make strong Christians.
I just want to show you how the covenant structure is here that you maybe have not seen, but it's
allowing Nephi to figure out how to smile through his hardships, how to convert this
tribulation into a triumph.
And he comes out on the other end in 2nd Nephi 5 able to do some more hard things.
He's shown us the grieving and how covenants will help us with the grieving.
So this is a fun thing to do.
I'm excited to walk through this. It reminds me of the first experience I had when I heard,
maybe both of you have heard this, the hymn that was created by John Tanner from this
Psalm. Anybody can look it up. It's on YouTube. It's called I Love the Lord by the BYU Men's
Chorus. It is pretty incredible. I would encourage everybody to go take a look. Have
you both heard that? It is... I haven't, so I need to. It's really spectacular.
Okay, John, would you start in verse 15 and read from 15 through 18, and then I'll show you how to
start analyzing the rest through the covenant perspective. Okay. 2nd Nephi 4, beginning in verse 15,
And upon these I write the things of my soul and many of the scriptures which are engraven
upon the plates of brass, for my soul delighteth in the scriptures, and my heart pondereth
them and writeeth them for the learning and the profit of my children.
Behold, my soul delighteth in the things of the Lord, and my heart pondereth continually
upon the things which I have seen and heard.
Nevertheless, notwithstanding the great goodness of the Lord, in showing me His great and marvelous
words my heart exclameth, O wretched man that I am, yea, my heart sawerth because of my
flesh, my soul grievous because of mine iniquities. I am encompassed about because of the temptations and the sins which do so easily beset me."
Thank you. Here's Nephi in a dark place.
His dad has died, so you have the grieving that comes from losing a close parent.
One of the things I like to have my students do is really think about all the reasons Nephi has to be struggling here. And Lehi has always been his ally and he's gone.
He's having to put up with the adversity of his siblings all alone. And you can just imagine
the grief and then the adversity and just that one. And there's other reasons Nephi
has to be feeling down. You know, he's taking over as the spiritual leader.
He's probably feeling inadequate. He's probably feeling incapable.
He's got his weaknesses. Maybe his brother's pushes buttons and he's let some of that loose and he's feeling repentant and sad about weaknesses.
You can be drawn right in to a very dark time for Nephi.
And we don't always get a look at this. Nephi has been
pretty stalwart all the way through 1 Nephi. But here we get the look at the real person and not
just the always faithful person, but somebody who's just real and hurting right now.
As Nephi is looking back, this isn't written at the exact time, but he's looking back upon the death of Lehi. I have wondered, and maybe both of
you can comment on this, and please point out where I might be flawed in my argument
here.
I think there is always a hope that people will change and repent, and then perhaps as
Lehi is in his dying days, that maybe there's a hope that this family is going to stay together
and that they'll come through.
And then as Nephi is looking back, I wonder if there's that feeling of inadequacy.
What if I would have done things differently?
Did I fail my father?
Here he is writing about it.
Did I fail in keeping our family together?
And that would rip you apart.
I'm sure there's probably,
this is inevitably going to happen,
but I hope it doesn't.
There's always that hope of things will turn around.
And I wonder if he long past,
he's looking back and thinking,
oh, no, I'm sorry, dad, I'm sorry.
Yeah, I don't think there's anything flawed in that thinking,
you know, because by the time he's writing about this, the family has split. They're not living
together. There's probably been some wars and contentions. There's probably maybe been a few
more heated interactions. The population isn't huge at this point. I think that Nephi carries
that maybe heavy responsibility and maybe sometimes takes on, this is my fault.
Had I been more patient or had I not lost my temper, because he has, you know, he admits
he has an issue with anger sometimes. Looking back, he can just be like, my dad would be
disappointed. Maybe.
Yeah. I mean, he wrote in verse 13 that not many days after his death, things go back to the way they were. They are angry with me.
John, I've heard you talk about your father. It's something that is so dear to your heart. Does that speak to you at all?
In 2nd Nephi 4, he writes about the death of his father and those emotions all start coming up. Yeah, I think what Jan just said a minute ago, this was his spiritual ally and he was one of
the younger siblings as his brothers continually reminded him, right? But at least I'm seeing
eye to eye with dad and then dad's gone, like you said. And like carries through the seemingly the
rest of the Book of Mormon.
The descendants of the older brothers should be ruling the younger brothers and this that
seems to go on for hundreds of years. But anyway, that friendship he had with his dad
and I don't want to discount we don't know much about Nephi's wife. But I'm saying kind of what
Jandid this was his spiritual ally. He had seen things and Nephi had seen things and they were prophets together, perhaps.
And now he's gone.
I think you're absolutely right and I couldn't keep the family together.
But yeah, to answer your question, I just had a dear friend who lost his father and
even when you know it's coming, when it really happens, it hits you and it's sobering.
Nephi's got a lot going
on right now with his fathers. And then, as you said, verse 13, they're angry with me.
I've always thought, how strange, they're angry with me because of what God said. They're
angry with me because of the admonitions of the Lord. My dad died about three years ago, but I find myself almost avoiding the topic sometimes,
talking about my dad.
Because I can see if I were to make a journal entry all about his death and what had happened
since then, I could see all these emotions, these uncomfortable emotions, not bad emotions,
but uncomfortable emotions coming up in writing
the history. Yeah, for sure. He's a real guy here. He's a real human being. Yeah. And as many of us
know who've lost loved ones, grieving sometimes takes years, years and years to work your way
through the different layers. And as we've said, Nephi's writing, looking back on this and writing about it. But I think you can still see some of that grieving,
just still the sometimes you just miss people like, they're gone and they nobody can fill their
place. And they were unique. And even if you've been 10, 20, 30 years out from the loss of a loved one, you still miss them.
Like it's not the same.
And I think you can see Nephi being able to be very real here
of I've missed him ever since.
I didn't just miss him in the moment that he died,
but I've had to do a lot of hard things all by myself
since then and I miss my dad.
I miss that pillar, I miss that support.
And how wonderful to know that part of this
long view covenant we're talking about is family,
that that relationship will continue, thankfully.
And we all have that to look forward to,
that those relationships will continue.
And if you don't mind, I'm gonna jump in
and be a little
personal here too, because I realize that we have a wide
variety of people listening to the podcast and family can be a
really painful subject for a lot of people, because not
everyone has a happy family. Not everybody has a good
relationship with their parents. And some of us, I'm one of
these doesn't have a good relationship with their parents. And some of us, I'm one of these, doesn't have
a good relationship with my father. And the grief that I have is, when my dad passes,
there's not a lot to say. I think the grief that I'm going to have is that I could never
connect with them. I've tried. For those people out there who don't have parents they can connect to and they're having
that kind of grief that I have that this has been difficult, it has not worked out in this
life, but there's the covenant hope that it can work out in the future, that maybe in
the next life I'll be able to connect with my father in the way that I was
never able to do here.
And that these family problems that are so painful can be healed.
As you've said, that's the beauty of having that long view is that all these messy things
about families will ultimately be healed.
So we want to speak to anyone who has grief, whether they've lost a loved parent
or have never had a great relationship with a parent. There's grief of both types, but the
gospel can really keep us focused on healing and hope. And at some point, it's not over yet.
And at some point, it can be made maybe more of what we were hoping it to be.
Jen, I'm so glad you bring that up. I'm sure there's a lot of folks out there
nodding with you as they're listening and one of the things I love about the
Book of Mormon is it isn't a story of a long line of perfect families. It's the
story of a long line of families with problems.
Hopefully that gives us some hope that God has this long view.
These families went through struggles like we will.
And if you look at Nephi as well, I think he's grieving over his dad, but I think there's
some grief over his brothers as well.
And we can have really difficult relationships with siblings sometimes. Not everyone has great relationships with siblings.
And that's another great thing about the Book of Mormon is you actually see some really
problematic sibling relationships all the way through Nephi's story at least. And those
continue into the Nephi Lamanite history as a nation. But again, how Nephi's grieving, I know he loved his brothers,
they were hard to get along with, and they had personality issues.
But I'm sure there's grieving too over the loss of them,
and then feeling responsible,
and then wondering if you're ever going to be able to heal that breach that's there.
And a lot of our listeners may have those
concerns about siblings and wonder if those gaps can ever be healed. It's a place to be like,
we need to play the long game. And remember that there's things that can happen on the other side of the veil and that everything doesn't have to be sorted in this life. They'll be more changing. Don't assume you're alone with your family situation.
I'm recalling, was it Elder Gary Stevenson
that showed a family picture
and then talked about the backstory behind the picture?
Right.
And just the idea that we sometimes get
is we see everybody's Facebook posts
and we assume the hunky dory-ness.
Is that a word?
That's a new word I'd like to invent.
Of everybody's life. And you know, there's a backstory. All of us are just struggling through this. So, hang in there. That's a great segue now too. We've got Nephi in this dark place
and anyone who's struggling with family issues, Nephi's there with you, whether it's parents or
siblings or extended family, he's got a
lot to grieve about.
And so how does he then smile through the hardship as Elder Christopherson said, he's
going to utilize covenant.
And so let me walk you through the beautiful covenant structure here that if you don't
know the Susurainty Treaty that I've been talking about that the law of Moses has presented
in, let me introduce you to it here because he follows the format as he's going through
and talking himself through the positive side and how am I going to deal with all
the grief I've got. And so if everybody wants to come to verse 19.
Jan, I want to write this treaty at the top of my page.
So how do I spell?
I was just going to say, can you spell that? I need to see that word.
Suzerainty. So S-U-Z-E-R-A-I-N-T-Y. Suzerainty treaty.
Oh, yeah. That's how I was going to spell it.
Well, it's a funny word because it is kind of spelled Suzerainty treaty,
but nobody says it like that. It's just kind of this Susarainty Treaty.
And what does it mean?
And what's the etymology of that?
Is was there a Susie who ain't coming or something?
Yeah, no, it's the Middle Eastern style of covenants
that they were making.
And we have, if you go back and look at Old Testament times,
you'll find loads of these
Suzerainty treaties evident in archaeological texts. So we have lots of them from different nations
all around the Mediterranean. The law of Moses is actually structured in this way.
And so I didn't want to go off on that, but you can see the structure in 2nd Nephi 1, and you can
see it again in 2nd Nephi 4. So I, and you can see it again in Second Nephi 4.
So I'll show it to you carefully in Second Nephi 4.
I do have a document we can put up on your notes for the listeners that will show it in
Second Nephi 1.
And that way, if they want to study it and mark it in their scriptures, they can go get
that document.
So I'll make sure you guys get that.
I came prepared with that.
We can put that on our show notes, follow him.co.
Go over there and look for Jan's episode. You
can find those show notes. And I can just introduce you to the six things that the Sucerenti Treaties
always have. And Nephi has them all. And you watch him using this covenant to help him talk
himself through the darkness. And he comes out a lot better on the other side. So verse 19 is the beginning
of his use of the covenant. He says, when I desire to rejoice, my heart growneth because
of my sins. But this word nevertheless is really important. Despite of all the darkness,
I know in whom I have trusted. So in a Suzerainty treaty, this is what we would call the preamble. The preamble always identifies the parties that are involved in the covenant.
Nephi is there, I know in whom I've trusted, and that would be Jehovah.
So we have our preamble and he's starting off reminding himself that he and Jehovah are partners in a covenant.
Then he moves from the preamble to what we would call a historical prologue.
The historical prologue reviews the past relationship between the suzerain, which is Jehovah, and
the vassal, which is Nephi, and it emphasizes the benevolence of the Suzerain. So let's watch. Hank, if
you want to be the reader, let's have you read, start in verse 20. Read, if you don't mind,
all the way to 27 and watch how Nephi goes back through the history of his relationship
with Jehovah. It's really cool.
Okay. It seems, John, and right in the there in verse 19 is where it switches right right in the middle
Right there. He's gonna go to the covenant. Yeah, nevertheless. I know in whom I have trusted now verse 20
My God hath been my support. He hath led me through my inflections in the wilderness
And he hath preserved me upon the waters of the great deep
He hath filled me with his love, even unto the
consuming of my flesh. He hath confounded mine enemies, unto the causing of them to quake
before me. Behold, he hath heard my cry by day, and he hath given me knowledge by visions
in the night-time. And by day I have waxed bold in mighty prayer before him, yea, my
voice have I sent up on high,
and angels came down and ministered unto me.
And upon the wings of his spirit hath my body been carried away upon exceedingly high mountains,
and mine eyes have beheld great things, yea, even too great for man, therefore I was bidden
that I should not write them. O then, if I have seen so great things, if the Lord in his condescension unto the children
of men hath visited men in so much mercy, why should my heart weep, and my soul linger
in the valley of sorrow, and my flesh waste away, and my strength slacken?
Because of my afflictions?
And why should I yield to sin
because of my flesh? Ye, why should I give way to temptations that the evil one have
place in my heart to destroy my peace and afflict my soul? Why am I angry because of
my enemy?" So a good historical prologue always reviews the amazing things the Suzerain has done, which you got
all the way from verse 20 through verse 26. You get these beautiful review of the past,
the miracles, and you can link every one of those verses to a story or an event that Nephi's
experienced in verse Nephi. It's a brilliant historical prologue, but the other part of historical prologue is reminding
yourself that you're the weaker part, that you're the vassal, and if there's a problem
here, it's you, not the suzerain.
The end of verse 26 and the end of verse, and all of verse 27 is that it's showing Nephi's
weakness.
There's a reason he's the vassal and not the
Suzerain. The Suzerain is the more powerful person in the relationship. And you always
want to humbly admit that you're the one that's at fault. And he does that. Why is
my heart weeping? Why am I being depressed? Why am I yielding to my flesh? Why am I giving
into temptations and why am I angry?" So he's humbly finishing that
prologue with exactly what you need to have in it, which is, I'm the fallen weaker person in this
relationship. It's really neat to see the covenant prologue as he goes through it. And then what
follows the historical prologue is the stipulations of the covenant which establishes this reciprocal
relationship for each party.
John, if I could have you be a reader again and start in verse 28 and let me have you
read 28 and 29, watch him reconnecting to his obedience part.
Awake, my soul, no longer droop in sin.
Rejoice, O my heart, and give place no more for the enemy of my soul no longer droop in sin rejoice oh my heart and give place no
more for the enemy of my soul do not anger again because of mine enemies do
not slacken my strength because of my inflections this is the stipulation
section where he reminds himself of his part in the covenant awake my soul I
shouldn't be drooping in sin.
I need to be rejoicing.
Get a handle on your anger
and do not lay around in your tent
feeling sorry for yourself.
Let's recommit to the obedience part.
I have a part in this.
And then we hit verse 30 which I'll read
and it says,
Oh Lord, I will praise thee forever.
Yea, my soul will rejoice in thee, my God and cry unto the Lord and say, Oh Lord, I will praise thee forever.
Yea, my soul will rejoice in thee, my God and the rock of my salvation."
Verse 31 says, Oh Lord, will thou redeem my soul, will thou deliver me out of the hands
of mine enemies, will thou make me that I may shake at the appearance of sin?
He finishes his side of the agreement and then he launches into what he
needs from the Suzerain. Jehovah, I need you to do the covenant part and I'm going to remind you
of what I need. I need you to redeem me from my weaknesses and I need you to deliver me out of the
hands of my enemies and I need you to help me be stronger in dealing with my enemies
and not cave into some of these maybe button-pushing issues that I have with my siblings.
So this stipulation section is what you have in a covenant. I'll do this, God does this,
and I have every right to call on Him to do His part when I'm committed to doing my part and you see that there. And then the final
part of one of these covenants is what we call a blessing and a cursing section. The blessing
section is there to motivate you to keep your covenants. It gives you all the positive consequences
for being a covenant keeper. And then the cursing section always outlines the negative things that will come
to you if you don't keep the covenant and that's just what a good covenant is about.
It lets you know what will happen when you're doing the right thing and educates you on
what will happen if you don't keep it.
If you will all jump over to verse 34 and 35, you'll see that little blessing and cursing section. Verse 34, I
have trusted in me, I will trust in thee forever, I will not put my trust in the arm of the
flesh. Why? Because I know that cursed is he that puteth his trust in the arm of the flesh.
There's the cursing part. He cursed is he that put his trust in man or make flesh his
arm. Then here's the blessing part.
Yeah, I know that God will give liberally to him that asketh, yeah, my God will give
me if I ask not amiss.
Therefore I will lift up my voice unto thee, yeah, I will cry unto thee, my God, the rock
of my righteousness and so forth.
You have this whole treaty structure that he walks himself through which allows him to come out on
the other side of this dark place and recognize I'm not alone. I have confidence
in calling on Jehovah. He will help me and he uses the covenant to get through
it and this is a great way to apply. When I'm having a dark time, how can I review
my covenants the way Nephi did
and use them to help me smile through the hard times and find joy in the difficulties?
So it's brilliant what he's got here.
Jen, this has been fantastic. Not only learning about the treaty itself and its place here
in the Book of Mormon and how incredible that is. But also, how Nephi uses it to get himself out of this really dark place,
which again is not a bad place to be. Sometimes we think that negative emotions are, we want to get rid of those. Let's push those off.
I should be happy all the time. Why am I not happy? It's okay to sit in
Grief for a little while, but you can't stay there. No, you've got to find a way out
Yeah, so let me share another comment from our president Nelson
He says committed children of the covenant remain steadfast even in the midst of adversity
When that doctrine the covenant doctrine is deeply implanted in our hearts, even the sting of death is soothed and their father's death in 1st Nephi 16 and
how they don't seem to come out of it.
They mourn exceedingly because of the death of their father.
Then they start thinking of all their past problems.
They've been brought out of Jerusalem.
They've wandered in the wilderness.
They have suffered a lot of things.
Then they start predicting the future.
We must perish in the wilderness with hunger.
Nephi's way seems much more effective. Wouldn't you say that perhaps another way to put
this, which I think you've walked us through, is Nephi is experiencing the fall. And in order to
really appreciate the atonement, you have to experience the fall. The light doesn't mean as much
if you're not sitting in the dark. And
that's something we've seen throughout the Book of Mormon so far is people
experiencing the hardship of the fall creates in them a need, a longing for
restoration for the light. Yeah, and when you are talking about the fall and the things that you need to experience,
it's always you need to taste the bitter that you know the sweet.
It's not taste the sweet so you know the bitter.
And that's an important order that you don't realize that things are good until they're
not.
And then when you're sitting in the darkness like Nephi's doing,
you have a desire to get back to the light that maybe you took for granted. So that then is a motivation to have you do something to get out of the dark and then back to the light. But because
it was dark, you now appreciate the light more and can really value that. It's an important thing.
And one thing I was
going to say about the daughters of Ishmael in their morning, if you compare
what they are focused on, it's all the negative compared to what Nephi focuses
on in that historical prologue. He goes and looks at all the good things God did.
That's really important. We need to acknowledge that negative things happen,
but you also, even in the dark places, there's good things happening. We need to
emphasize that. And as we emphasize the light, the light can then have more power to help
bring us out of the dark place. The daughters of Ishmael would have maybe had a better experience
had they utilized that historical prologue and not just looked at the hard things, but looked at the good things that God did to help them with that and that seems to be what's missing in
Their review of the past is well God was actually there helping as well. So yeah, I've often told friends when you're really in a hard
Difficult dark place. It's probably not a good time to predict the future
It's probably not a good time to predict the future. It's probably not a good place to go.
No, because everything looks bad.
Yeah, everything looks bad.
But when you do it the way Nephi did it, and you go back and look at the way God was involved in your past in a positive way,
then you have more grounding, and then you can see, well, the future's not as dark as I think it is.
I have a God I can call on and I can have this
confidence and he's going to help me with this. It reminds me of the way the Liberty Jails sections
start with section 121 verse 1. God, where are you? How long? Where are you now?
Yeah. And then 123 finishes with, let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power." You're going,
yeah, even if he maybe isn't as aware of the structure as Nephi, as Nephi's perfectly aware
of this and would seems to be deliberately using it. But we can all do this. And when I have my
students walk through second Nephi four, even if they don't know the Suzerain T structure, they can
see that he's grateful. Like he starts out with the grateful, even though they don't know the Suzerainty structure, they can see that he's grateful.
Like he starts out with the grateful.
Even though they don't always know it's a historical prologue and that's what you do,
they can see the progression from I'm being grateful and then I'm acknowledging my weaknesses
and then I'm coming up with a plan to strengthen them and then I'm going to rely on the Lord
and they can see all of that even if you don't know what to call it. And it's a great way of working through dark times.
I really enjoy watching this switch from sadness and heartache to almost excitement about the
future.
I mean, you look at verse 35, you know, he's just rejoicing right there by the end, like
I know that it's going to be fine. My future future is gonna be brighter than I was looking a few verses ago
I'm imagining that we could sit down with her kids and say you know what God did for Nephi
He can do for us God will support us through our trials. He'll lead us through our afflictions
He'll preserve us. He'll fill us with love. He'll confound our enemies and hear our prayers and give us knowledge
Just trying to think of a way to apply this that we can share with our families separate from the really amazing
structure you've showed us that
That's true, but we can tell our kids look these are the kinds of things God can do for us when we strive to keep our
Covenants. Yeah, you could even take it deeper than that and say okay in the past
When has God filled you with his love? When in the past has he confounded your enemies?
When has he heard your prayers? Like, of course, he's going to do that, but sometimes children need
to have that active remembrance and go back and remember their past spiritual experiences and
that God has really been part and then they can tell you about them. And that's a bearing of
testimony. And I don't know anyone that feels sad after you start bearing a testimony of truth,
like the spirit just can really lighten things. If parents are looking for some application,
this is a great chapter to get out and then start asking your kids those questions when
they're having a hard time and see if they can start testifying of the way that
God has been part of their lives already. It's much easier to remember those experiences
if you've written them down. Amen.
Gratitude journals or spiritual experience journals, I think we all remember Henry B.
Eyring talking about that in general conference, that miracle journal, and that might be a fun way for families to start applying this to is to sit down on
a family home evening and start a miracle journal, start a family journal or an individual
journal and encourage them to write down their spiritual experiences so they can go get them
out and read them if they can't remember.
I think of prepping a son for a mission or anyone who's serving
a mission and you're going to have dark days. It comes with the territory. You can follow
the same pattern that Janice taught us here of sit in that emotion, feel it, and then
start remembering all the good things the Lord has done. Even list them. Start listing them and
watch your feelings change. And it will surprise you what the Lord has done, right?
Great chapter chapter 4. Love that. Chapter 4 is one of those I've heard many people say when I'm feeling down or I'm struggling
I go back to 2nd Nephi 4.
It's one of those chapters that you say if that's the only one Joseph Smith gives us.
If this is the only chapter you'd feel like he gave you enough.
That's one of the strongest pieces of research context that we have is that racial prejudice as understood with skin tone does not exist
in the ancient world anywhere.