Monday, October 28, 2013

Shibon - The Good Son

Shibon was a never-do-it-oncer.  He was that classic young man raised in the church with obedience that comes naturally in a society filled with good role models.  Shiblon has been steady and faithful unto God (v.2); he commenced in his youth to look to the Lord.  On his mission to the Zoromites he has been faithful, diligent, patient and long suffering (v.3).  He has been raised well and had made good choices.

Alma, in verse 6, feels  to tell his son that he (Alma) has been born of God.  He tells his son that he had to cry unto the Lord for mercy, receive a remission of his sins and find peace to his soul.  He emphasizes the importance of Jesus Christ being at the center of Shiblon's faith (v.9), not extolling Christ as one of Shiblon's virtues but as counsel for Shiblon to learn wisdom (v.9)

It's as if Alma sees what Shiblon lacks and is gently persuading him to add the mercy (v.8), the saving power (v.9) and centrality of Christ - being the life, the light and the word of truth and righteousness - as new additions to his son's belief system.

Alma counsels Shiblon to be temperate (v.10), not be lifted up in pride (v.11), that he not boast in his own wisdom nor in his much strength (v.11).  It's almost as if Alma sees the direction a young man raised well will take if Christ doesn't become the center.  Strict observance can unwittingly become pride, the very thing that was to be avoided.  If this happens, the mark is missed and the whole of being raised in strict obedience is lost.

Alma counsels his son to take of stand for righteousness (boldness in v.12) but not overbearance; to bridle his passions, be filled with love and refrain from idleness.  He then tells Shibon what prayer isn't (v.13).  As Alma is speaking of the wickedness of the Zoromites, it's as if he sees something that needs correcting in his son.  Alma senses that Shiblon believes he is 'better' than others because he has done all the outward commandments since his youth (see v. 14).  Alma's counsel strikes to the heart of the matter that plagues all who have outwardly obeyed yet never felt mercy: judging oneself as better than others.  "Rather say, forgive thy unworthiness, and remember my brethren in mercy" (v.14)

I can imagine seeing the obedient young person, like Shiblon, saying, "but, how can I be unworthy?  I have obeyed all the commandments from my youth!  I don't get it. This doesn't make sense."  Alma goes on and says, "acknowledge your unworthiness before God at all times", re-enforcing the fact that Christ paid for all our sins and we will forever be unworthy creatures.  There's no changing this.  To believe otherwise denies that atonement and suggests that we work our way back to heaven.  Then why obey? Why do good works?

Embedded throughout Alma's counsel to his second born son is the need to live a Christ-centered life. We change and become better people because Christ paid for our sins in the first place.  He loved us first.  This should cause us great humility.  Alma was trying to teach his son, and all of us, that we choose to change and progress by and through the grace of God because we love Him and want to be like Him.  Any other motive breeds pride.  We know we are running on that other motive when we can't see or comprehend our own unworthiness.

Unworthiness, in a scriptural sense, is our acknowledgment to our Savior that he has paid the price so we can return.  Mercy has satisfied the demands of Justice.  This unworthiness produces an attitude of  humility, contriteness and a broken heart.  It is the foundation on which all other gospel virtues hinge.





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Posted By NelsonFamilyBlog to Scott's Life at 10/28/2013 07:37:00 AM

Saturday, April 20, 2013

The Community Foundation of Jacob 2 - Part 1


As I studied the words of Jacob to his people, I realized that Jacob dictated (from God) two community principles upon which the Nephites were to build their civilization.  The foundation principles were temporal equality and gender equality.  These two principles are outgrowths of living or striving to live, the principles of the gospel.  Instead dispelling already embedded false traditions, Jacob, was not going let them get started. (Jacob 2:5).  Nephi's group had grown large enough by this time that the people weren't inherently acting as a cohesive family unit.  So, this first regulation was made.  Their society and their church were essential the same.

Jacob seeing that some men are now obtaining more wealth than other men, were beginning to walk in the pride of their hearts (Jacob 2:13).  Their wearing of fine apparel and their persecuting of their brethren are the evidences Jacob uses to show their pride.  Jacob tries to impress upon their minds the gravity of the matter by telling them that God could strike them down with a single glance (v.10,15).  Jacob later infers that their abundance is a gift from God (v.20) and temporal inequality is an abomination unto God (v. 21).  No wonder Jacob tells his brethren to "be free with their substance, that they may be rich like unto you"(v.17).  He explains in his way what Christ taught in his ministry in Palestine to seek first for the Kingdom of God and all things would be added unto them (Matthew 6:33).  The obvious outcome of first having a hope in Christ is to use your surplus riches to help others (v.18,19).

The Nephite prophets sought to uphold and maintain the foundation principles taught by their fathers.  Two of these were temporal equality and gender equality (to be discussed).  Their church was built on these principles. Falling away from these principles was consider wickedness and pride. I find it curious that we, the LDS people, continuously strive to arrive at a similar state (of mind and reality).  We are coming from a different direction, though.  To dispel our deep set traditions is not easy.  Our logic, and the natural man within us, easily dismisses the idea that temporal equality will work.  More progress has been made in the area of gender equality.

See other writings on the Book of Mormon at:
http://greenscootersimplelife.blogspot.com/