Friday, July 6, 2012

Vengeance is Mine


Vengeance is Mine.

The year is 350 A.D.  The Nephites have just been through terrible battles with the Lamanites. They have been winning lately (not in the strength of the Lord, though), pushing the Lamanites back to the narrow neck of land.  A treaty is made that the Lamanites and Gadianton robbers get everything south and the Nephites get everthing north.  There isn't any more fighting for ten years.  During this time of relative peace, Mormon is told by God to begin preaching repentance unto the Nephites. He is also told to establish His church again among the Nephites.(Mormon 3:2)  The Nephites harden their hearts and reject Mormon's preaching.  They don't realize that the Lord has spared them and has granted them a chance to repent. (Mormon 3:3) The war with the Lamanites begins again and under Mormon's leadership they effectively defend themselves at the narrow neck of land.  But, instead of being humble, they boast in their own strength, are filled with revenge and want to annihilate the Lamanites.  They decide to cross a line.  They go on the offensive. (Mormon 3:9-10) Mormon utterly refuses to lead them.  The Nephites don't make the connection that God was helping Mormon to deliver them. (Mormon 3:11,13) The Lord tells Mormon, "Vengeance is mine and I will repay..." (Mormon 3:15)

This crossing the line or going on the offensive is so blurred in our day that it's hard to tell if we do the same thing at a  national level.  It's as difficult for many of us to determine when we cross the line in our own lives.  Our culture rejects the notion that there is a line to be crossed.  As a Latter-day Saint, I didn't realize that this precept is a basic tenet of the gospel.

The concept of "Vengeance is mine and I will repay" teaches me that I can, in faith, leave many matters in the Lord's capable hands rather than going on the offensive.

So, as soon as I take something into my own hands to take revenge on another, I lose the Lord's support in the matter.  Do you see how this ties into forgiveness and the giving evil acts of others to God?  Is our desire to fight back, seeking revenge in a way?  I guess if you are defending yourself, that's okay.  But, where is the line that one crosses when they've gone too far.  This is vengeance.

Vengeance is being so angry at what someone else just did - because what they did was terrible - that if you have the power, or if you had the power, you would go after them to punish them.  Instead of taking steps to defend yourself you go on the offensive (or dream about what you would do if you could).  By doing this you cross the line and don't stand blameless.  Since you would if you could you're 'as' guilty as the person doing it.  Your heart is not cleansed.  When I say 'as guilty' I only mean that your heart is not right and that you are not ready to meet God.  I don't mean that you have put those thoughts into action which is a far worse step in the wrong direction.  God is merciful by allowing us to repent of our thoughts rather than taking the sometimes irreversible action.

Perhaps this doctrine of vengeance being the Lord's is just an extension of other eternal laws contained in the gospel.  For example, Christ taught that when slapped on the cheek, to turn the other cheek.  This resisting not evil could be construed as letting the Lord take care of the matter in the way that He sees fit.  When we choose not to judge what another person did against us as bad, we put the problem in God's hands.  This casting of our burdens unto the Lord is an act of faith.  We are saying to ourselves, our God, and perhaps, to the offending party, God judge between me and thee and reward thee according to thy deeds (DC 64:9).  Since we have demonstrated an act of faith, rather than taking the matter into our own hands (which is a just thing to do in some instances), God becomes bound to take care of the matter.  Whatever the way the Lord takes care of the problem is His perogative.  There's a 101 ways to skin a cat.

As we forgive others instead of taking vengeance, we are exercising faith.  Faith always precedes the miracle.