Have you ever considered the doctrines taught by the Articles of Faith? I did not until I took a class on them, and I am amazed at the number of doctrines taught in the simple statements that make up the Articles of Faith.
Articles of Faith 1:2 states: “We believe that men will be punished for their own sins, and not for Adam’s transgression.” That simple statement means that we are born innocent and into innocence and are responsible for only the things that we do wrong. Three doctrines taught by this statement are The Fall, Agency, and Personal Accountability.
As I studied the three doctrines associated with the second Article of Faith, I gained much more understanding about it. Here are a few of the insights that I gained.
I will first discuss The Fall. I appreciate the way that The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints teaches that The Fall was a part of God’s plan for His children. This tells us that it was not an accident or just a happenstance but was meant to be. The Church of Jesus Christ also teaches that The Fall happened in two directions (True to the Faith). The earth and everything on it fell downward to a telestial level and were no longer in God’s presence. In other words, The Fall brought both spiritual and physical death into the world. However, mankind fell forward in that we received the opportunity to come to earth to gain physical bodies and to learn and progress to become like Heavenly Father.
In 2 Nephi 2:25 Lehi taught that Adam fell
to give mankind the opportunity of a mortal life and to have joy. We know that
joy comes from working and progressing toward a goal. We also know that we
receive joy from our family relationships. Even though we live in a fallen
world and are constantly “tested by the difficulties of life and the
temptations of the adversary” (Gospel Topics), we can use our mortal
lives to work toward our full potential as divine sons and daughters of God.
This means that The Fall was a good thing and that we should be grateful to
Adam and Eve for making such a difficult decision.
The more I learn about the Fall and it
being a fall forward, the more I love Adam and Eve for making their difficult
choice. Many people blame Eve, but I honor her courage. I also honor Adam for
thinking through the problem and making the correct choice. Eve understood that
the fruit was good for food and that it looked good. She believed that the
fruit would give her wisdom (Moses 4:12). We do not know how much Eve
understood before she partook of the fruit, but we know from her statements
that she soon gained great understanding about the importance of what she did.
We know also that the ability to know good from evil (Moses 4:28) is important
to our growth.
The second doctrine is agency. I find it
amazing that Heavenly Father trusted us enough to give us the gift of agency
prior to our proving ourselves worthy of it. It is a gift that was given to us
in our pre-mortal life. It is gift that is ours to use in our daily life no
matter where we live or in what the conditions. Even in the German
concentration camps, some of the people understood that they could still choose
their attitude about being there. Satan understands the importance of this gift
for our eternal progression and continually seeks to destroy it (Moses 4:3).
Jacob taught the importance of agency when
he said that there must be “opposition in all things” (2 Nephi 2:11). He also
taught that Adam had some understanding of the importance of the Fall and
partook of the fruit that he might have posterity (2 Nephi 2:25). Jacob states plainly that we can use our
agency to choose to follow the Savior to “liberty and eternal life,” or to
follow Satan to “captivity and death” (2 Nephi 2:27).
As a parent, one of the most difficult
things that I did was to allow my children to use their agency. It was not too
difficult when they were choosing their pants and shirts because it did not
matter whether they chose as I would choose. However, they did not stay little
for long, and their choices became more important. Thus, allowing agency became
more difficult.
The more I learn about agency, the more I
marvel that Heavenly Father trusted us enough to give it to us. Usually people
are given great gifts after they have earned them in some way, but Heavenly
Father gave us agency before we had proven ourselves. We were given agency in
the pre-mortal world, and we brought it with us to this world. We know that we
exercised our agency wisely because we are here on earth in physical bodies (True
to the Faith). We are told that those who used their agency to rebel
against Heavenly Father were cast out without physical bodies. He is so
committed to allowing His children to use agency that He allowed one-third part
of His children to rebel and receive much less than He desired for them.
We learn in 2 Nephi 2:27 that we can use
our agency to “choose liberty and eternal life” or to “choose captivity and
death.” That choice is so much greater than choosing the color of shirt to wear
today or what meal to order at McDonalds. Even though agency was given to us
freely, we can lose it by the choices we make. We lose agency in many ways,
such as going into debt and losing financial freedom, but we lose agency in
more important ways by breaking the Word of Wisdom, the Law of Chastity, and
other commandments.
The third doctrine is personal
accountability. God gave us agency in our pre-mortal life, and The Fall gives
us many opportunities to use it in this fallen world. However, we have full
accountability for the choices that we make. We are accountable for choices
that lead us into sin, and we are also accountable for how we use our abilities
and time (True to the Faith). Abraham 3:25 tells us that God created the
earth and gave us agency in order to “prove” us. This is the reason why He gave
us agency before we earned the gift. We must have freedom to choose for
ourselves before we can be held accountable for our choices.
Heavenly Father allows us to make choices
and to act as we choose. However, He cannot change the consequences. We will
move toward “happiness, peace, and eternal life” when we make good choices, and
we move toward “heartaches and misery when we choose to sin” (True to the
Faith). I will close with a powerful statement made by Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles about personal accountability.
[Personal accountability] has been under assault since before
the creation. We must defend accountability against persons and programs that
would — sometimes with the best of intentions — make us dependent. And we must
defend it against our own inclinations to avoid the work that is required to
cultivate talents, abilities and Christ-like character….
Who bears responsibility for what happens in our lives?
When things turn bad, there is a tendency
to blame others or even God. Sometimes a sense of entitlement arises, and
individuals or groups try to shift responsibility for their welfare to other
people, or to governments. In spiritual matters some suppose that men and women
need not strive for personal righteousness because God loves and saves us ‘just
as we are.’
[God intends for us to use the moral
agency given to us in our pre-mortal lives.]
It
is His plan and His will that we have the principal decision-making role in our
own life’s drama,” he said. “God will not live our lives for us, nor control us
as if we were His puppets, as Lucifer once proposed to do. Nor will His
prophets accept the role of ‘puppet master’ in God’s place.
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