My Come Follow Me studies for this week took me to First Nephi 1-5 in a lesson titled “I Will Go and Do.” The lesson was introduced with the following information:
The Book of Mormon begins
with an account of a real family experiencing real struggles. It happened in
600 BC, but there are things about this account that might seem familiar
to families today. This family was living in a world of wickedness, but the
Lord promised them that if they would follow Him, He would lead them to safety.
Along the way they had good moments and bad moments, great blessings and
miracles, but they also had arguments and contention. Rarely in scripture is
there such a detailed account of a family trying to live the gospel: parents
struggling to inspire faith in their family and worrying about their safety,
children deciding if they will believe their parents, and brothers dealing with
jealousy and contention—and sometimes forgiving each other. Overall, there is
power in this imperfect family’s examples of faith.
The principle for this discussion is as follows: “God will
prepare a way for me to do His will” (1 Nephi 3-4). Lehi and his family had
traveled for two weeks into the wilderness when the Lord commanded Lehi to send
his sons back to Jerusalem to obtain the plates of brass from a relative named
Laban.
The commandment from the Lord was general in nature: go to Jerusalem and bring back the plates of brass. He did not give specific instructions about how to obtain the plates. There is little wonder that Laman and Lemuel considered the commandment to be “a hard thing” to do (1 Nephi 3:5). Nephi responded differently:
7 And it came to
pass that I, Nephi, said unto my father: I will go
and do the things which the Lord hath commanded, for I know that the Lord
giveth no commandments unto
the children of men, save he shall prepare a
way for them that they may accomplish the thing which he commandeth them (1
Nephi 3:7).
As
it turned out, obtaining the brass plates was a challenging task. Lehi’s sons
first asked Laban to give them the valuable family heirloom. Then they tried to
buy the plates from Laban.
When
neither of the first attempts were successful, the Lord commanded Nephi three
times to kill Laban. After the first two commands, Nephi hesitated. He wrote the
following after the third command: “Behold the Lord slayeth the wicked to bring
forth his righteous purposes. It is better that one man should perish than that
a nation should dwindle and perish in unbelief” (1 Nephi 4:13).
Once
Nephi heard these words, he understood that Lehi and his family needed the
brass plates in order to have the law of Moses and the teachings of other
prophets. He understood that they could not keep the commandments and prosper
in the land of promise if they did not have the commandments. He knew that the
law was inscribed on the brass plates and that he needed to get them. He also
knew that God had provided a way for him to obtain the plates. Therefore, he
was obedient to the commandment to kill Laban.
President
Ezra Taft Benson taught: “When obedience ceases to be an irritant and becomes
our quest, in that moment God will endow us with power” (quoted in Donald L.
Staheli, “Obedience – Life’s Great Challenge,” Ensign, May 1998, 82).
The
Lord is willing to guide us along the path that will take us back into His
presence IF we are willing to listen to Him. I know this is true because He has
helped me. In 2015, the Holy Ghost whispered to me that I should enter the
Pathway Program to obtain a college degree. I was seventy years old, and I
questioned why He had waited so long to inspire me and to prepare the way.
Nevertheless, I registered for Fall Semester 2015, and I have been taking
college classes since that time.
There
have been many times when I have relied on the Lord to help me to understand
what I needed to learn. The first help that He gave to me was when I looked at
the list of assignments due the first week and almost cried. The Spirit
whispered, “You can do it IF you focus on one assignment at a time.” I have
followed that counsel diligently for more than eight years, and I have been
successful in my college experience. Another way that the Lord helped me was to
help me to learn enough about algebra to earn an A- in the class in spite of
developing coronary heart disease and needing a stent at the end of the
semester. Indeed, I know that He saved my life!
The
Lord prepared a way for Nephi to obtain the plates of brass, and He has
prepared a way for each of us to accomplish our mortal missions through obedience
to His commands. The most important thing that He did to prepare us to keep His
commandments is that He send Jesus Christ to be our Savior, to atone for our
sins and to show us the path back to the Father’s presence. Will you “go and do”
the things that God commands you to do? I know that He will provide a way for
you and for me to be successful in keeping His commandments.
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