2 Ne
26:1-2 Christ…shall show himself unto you, my
children
In chapter
26, Nephi reviews some of the prophecies regarding the coming of Christ among
the Nephites, the destruction of the wicked among the Nephites, and the coming
forth of the Book of Mormon. The content of this chapter closely parallels the
content of his vision of the history of the world contained in 1 Ne 12-15. He
also uses Isaiah 29 in this chapter, thereby explaining the relationship
between Isaiah’s writings and his vision.
The first
thing that is referenced is the appearance of the Savior to the Nephites. This
is recorded in 1 Ne 12:6, I saw the heaves open, and
the Lamb of God descending out of heaven; and he came down and showed himself
unto them. When Nephi says in verse 2, I have
beheld…great wars and contentions among my people, he is referring to
his vision where he saw the people of my seed
gathered together in multitudes against the seed of my brethren; and they were
gathered together to battle (1 Ne 12:15). This pattern of referencing
this vision will continue for most of the chapter. Eventually, Nephi begins to
weave in the prophecies of Isaiah 29. By doing so, he helps us to understand
the meaning of some of these Isaiah passages.
2 Ne 26:3 signs given unto my people of his birth
Samuel the
Lamanite prophesied of the signs of the coming of Jesus Christ. Five years
prior to their fulfillment, he described the signs of his birth as follows, 1) great lights in heaven…one day and a night and a day, as
if it were one day, 2) there shall a new star
arise, and 3) many signs and wonders in
heaven (see Hel 14:2-6).
The signs of
his death and resurrection are 1) complete darkness in the land for 3 days, 2)
terrible destructions—lightning, thunder, earthquakes, etc., and 3) the resurrection
of many saints. See Hel 14:20-25.
2 Ne 26:3 the cry of the blood of the saints shall ascend up to God
from the ground
The
scriptures teach that the earth is a living being. Whether figurative or not,
the earth experiences what we do as individuals—a baptism by water, a baptism
by fire, a day of redemption, and a new, celestialized body. Therefore, it is
the earth itself that cries to the Lord when the blood of the saints is spilt.
As Enoch learned, And it came to pass that Enoch
looked upon the earth; and he heard a voice from the bowels thereof, saying:
Wo, wo is me, the mother of men; I am pained, I am weary, because of the
wickedness of my children. When shall I rest, and be cleansed from the
filthiness which is gone forth out of me? When will my Creator sanctify me,
that I may rest, and righteousness for a season abide upon my face? (Moses
7:48)
2 Ne
26:4-6 all those who are proud, and that do
wickedly…shall be as stubble
These three
verses describe the destructions in the Americas at the time of the death and
resurrection of Christ (compare to 3 Ne 8-9). We see that the destruction of
the proud and wicked Nephites are a type for the way the wicked will be
destroyed at the Second Coming of Christ. From this we learn that the signs in
the heavens and the destructions upon the land were not subtle but
catastrophic. We should expect nothing less than this with the Second Coming.
As Malachi prophesied, the day cometh, that shall
burn as an oven; and all the proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be
stubble: and the day cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts, that
it shall leave them neither root nor branch (Mal 4:1).
2 Ne 26:7 O the pain, and the anguish of my soul for the loss of the
slain of my people
Nephi first
felt this pain when he saw the vision of the history of his people, I considered that mine afflictions were great above all,
because of the destruction of my people, for I had beheld their fall (1
Ne 15:5). The Lord feels this same godly sorrow for His wicked children. He
explained to Enoch how the God of heaven was brought to tears by the wickedness
of his children:
‘And Enoch said unto the
Lord: How is it that thou canst weep, seeing thou art holy, and from all
eternity to all eternity?
…The Lord said unto Enoch:
Behold these thy brethren; they are the workmanship of mine own hands, and I
gave unto them their knowledge, in the day I created them; and in the Garden of
Eden, gave I unto man his agency;
And unto thy brethren
have I said, and also given commandment, that they should love one another, and
that they should choose me, their Father; but behold, they are without
affection, and they hate their own blood;
And the fire of mine
indignation is kindled against them; and in my hot displeasure will I send in
the floods upon them, for my fierce anger is kindled against them’ (Moses 7:29, 32-34).
2 Ne
26:9-10 three generations shall have passed away
(in righteousness)
Again Nephi
learned this during his vision as recorded in 1 Ne 12:11. See 3 Ne 27:32 and 4
Ne 1 for the fulfillment of this prophecy.
2 Ne 26:11
For the Spirit of the Lord will not always strive
with man
B. H. Roberts
“When
the Spirit of the Lord is withdrawn…darkness, like the blackness of night
surges through the soul of man, and the sun of righteousness seems set for him,
he is then made to feel what it means to sin against the law of God as it has
been revealed unto his soul. When you think of the bitterness of that personal
suffering, you will not marvel that when the heavy burden of a world's sin
rested down upon the Son of God in Gethsemane--you certainly will not marvel
that he sweat great drops of blood in his agony; nor wonder at his suffering on
the cross.” (Defense of the Faith and the Saints, p. 514)
Joseph Fielding Smith
“The
Spirit of the Lord will not dwell in unclean tabernacles, and when the Spirit
is withdrawn, darkness supersedes the light, and apostasy will follow. This is
one of the greatest evidences of the divinity of this latter-day work. In other
organizations men may commit all manner of sin and still retain their
membership, because they have no companionship with the Holy Ghost to lose; but
in the Church when a man sins and continues without repentance, the Spirit is
withdrawn, and when he is left to himself the adversary takes possession of his
mind and he denies the faith.
“It
is possible for a man who has received a perfect understanding of the truth and
has walked in the light of the Holy Spirit to fall away through transgression.
But when he turns away, he still knows that he once had the light. The Lord has
said of such: ‘All those who know my power, and have
been made partakers thereof, and suffered themselves through the power of the
devil to be overcome, and to deny the truth and defy my power-They are they who
are the sons of perdition, of whom I say that it had been better for them never
to have been born.’ (DC 76:31-2)” (Doctrines of Salvation, vol. 3,
p. 309)
LeGrand Richards
“Now,
as I love the Saints for their faithfulness, I also feel remorse and sorrow for
those who fail to have that kind of faith, for those who are not willing to do
their part, for those who have discontinued attending their meetings. Brigham
Young said that when we fail to attend our sacrament meetings and observe our
prayers, the Spirit of the Lord will withdraw himself, and a spirit of darkness
will come over us. Now there are a great many people in our midst who have
ceased attending their meetings, and who do not observe their prayers. Some of
them are near to us, some of them are dear to us, but the Lord does withdraw
his Spirit.
“…And
when people walk in darkness, they cannot love the brethren; they cannot love
the Lord; they cannot love the people; they cannot love this great Latter-day
cause, the greatest movement the world has ever known, aside from the great
atonement of the Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.” (Conference Report,
Oct. 1950, p. 151)
Sterling W. Sill
“Repentance
is God's cure for every disease that plagues our lives. As repentance is
postponed, the sinner becomes more willful, and any upward change becomes more
difficult. If this Godly gift is not used, it may lapse into impotence, and the
soul may be lost.
“Through
Noah the Lord said, ‘My spirit shall not always
strive with man. . . .’ (Gen. 6:3.) And someday when it may be too late,
we may discover that repentance is the most thrilling, exciting, uplifting of
all possible activities.” (Conference Report, Oct. 1964, p. 112)
2 Ne 26:15
the Lord God shall have camped against them round
about
Nephi is
quoting Isaiah 29:3 which reads, I will camp against
thee round about, and will lay siege against thee with a mount, and I will
raise forts against thee. Without Nephi’s help it would be difficult to
determine that this passage had reference to the persecutions that the native
American Indians suffered at the hands of the Gentiles. Nephi is going to make
frequent references to Isaiah 29 and also his vision. He saw the same
persecutions as referenced in 1 Ne 13:31.
2 Ne 26:16
for those who shall be destroyed shall speak unto
them out of the ground
Again Nephi
references Isaiah 29 and his vision, see 1 Ne 13:39. The Book of Mormon is
obviously the vehicle by which those who are dead will speak out of the ground.
The phrase, their voice shall be as one that hath a
familiar spirit, could be interpreted to have a double meaning. First,
in Isaiah’s day, a person with a familiar spirit was someone who claimed to be
able to speak with the dead. The voices of the ancient prophets, then, are
heard in the pages of the Book of Mormon. Second, the Book of Mormon has a
“familiar spirit” to all those filled with the Spirit of God. Through the light
of Christ and the Holy Ghost, the righteous recognize the divine nature of the
Book of Mormon. It is “familiar” in the sense that it carries the same spirit
of truth and righteousness that the Bible does.
2 Ne 26:17
written and sealed up in a book
See Isaiah
29:11.
2 Ne 26:18
their terrible ones shall be as chaff that passeth
away
Nephi
explains that the phrase, their terrible ones,
can refer to the mighty and proud of his people who were destroyed in the great
and last battle of the Nephites. It also refers to those of the Nephites and
Lamanites who had dwindled in unbelief (v.
17). Interestingly, he again gives us great insight into a less well understood
verse of Isaiah, Isa 29:5.
2 Ne 26:19
smitten by the hand of the Gentiles
“The
story of the invasion of America by Europeans in the 16th century, is a tragic
illustration of the truth of this prophecy. Witness the appearance in Mexico of
Cortez with his 450 Spaniards and 1000 Tlascalan allies. From the very first of
his contact with the natives, strife and slaughter ensued….Spanish cannon swept
the streets with terrible effects. Some idea of the losses of the Aztecs can be
formed from the fact that the battle and the retreat cost Cortez 750 of his
1250 white soldiers and 4000 of his 5000 Tlascalan allies.
“But
Cortez came back. On April 28, 1521, he began a siege of the city, which Dr.
John Fiske compares to the siege of Jerusalem by Titus, on a smaller scale, of
course. On August 18, Cortex was master of the situation. But then the city was
a ruin. A new era had been inaugurated, in which the natives lost their
culture, their literature, and arts, and were, practically, buried in the
‘dust.’
“The
first contact of the natives of Peru with the Spaniards under Pizarro and
Almargro-both of whom were finally murdered in a feud between themselves-was a
duplicate of the so-called conquest of Cortez. We shall not here repeat the
almost incredible stories of cruelties perpetrated on the Indians by some of
the early invaders. Suffice it to say that this prophecy was literally fulfilled.
The Indians were everywhere sorely ‘smitten by the
hands of the Gentiles.’” (Reynolds and Sjodahl, Commentary
on the Book of Mormon, vol. 1, p. 386)
2 Ne
26:20-21 many churches among the Gentiles
Nephi
describes the Gentile churches saying, they put down
the power and miracles of God, and preach up unto themselves their own wisdom
and their own learning. How similar are the words of the Savior to
Joseph Smith in the sacred grove, they draw near to
me with their lips, but their hearts are far from me, they teach for doctrines
the commandments of men, having a form of godliness, but they deny the power
thereof? (JS-H 1:19) See also Isa 29:13.
Joseph Smith
described the envyings and strifes of the religions of his day, it was seen that the seemingly good feelings of both the
priests and the converts were more pretended than real; for a scene of great
confusion and bad feeling ensued—priest contending against priest, and convert
against convert; so that all their good feelings one for another, if they ever had
any, were entirely lost in a strife of words and a contest about opinions (JS-H
1:6).
2 Ne 26:22
there are also secret combinations
Again the
parallels with the 29th chapter of Isaiah continue. Isaiah was
apparently describing secret combinations when he described those that seek deep to hide their counsel from the Lord, and
their works are in the dark, and they say, Who seeth us? And who knoweth us? (Isa
29:15) That these secret combinations are founded by the devil is well
established in the Book of Mormon. See also 1 Ne 14:9.
2 Ne 26:22
he leadeth them by the neck with a flaxen cord
A flaxen cord
is a soft cord, one that is easily broken. Often the soft flaxen cord is hardly
noticed when first placed around the neck. However, with time the grip of Satan
strengthens until one is bound with strong cords and led to eternal
destruction. “The safest road to Hell…is the gradual one—the gentle slope, soft
underfoot, without turnings, without milestones, without signposts.” (C.S.
Lewis, The Screwtape Letters, p. xi)
In other words, “By small sins are great sins brought to pass.” (compare
1 Ne. 16:29)
If only we would recognize the flaxen cord for what it is. When Satan puts such cords around our necks, they can be easily broken if they are noticed. However, as he progressively places stronger cords around our necks, his grip over our souls strengthens—we become choked as to the things of the Spirit. Elder Carlos E. Asay said, “The first wrongdoing is like a single strand of flaxen thread; it is easily broken and thrown aside. But each time the wrong is repeated another strand is intertwined around the first, and on and on it goes until an almost unbreakable cord of multi-strands is woven. ‘The chains of habit,’ said Samuel Johnson, ‘are too small to be felt until they are too strong to be broken.’” The Road to Somewhere: A Guide for Young Men and Women [Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1994], 94.)” Eventually, Satan binds us with his chains of darkness which we cannot, by ourselves, remove. Unlike the breakable flaxen cord, these chains of darkness require the assistance of others, priesthood leaders and the Savior’s atonement, in order to break free.
“Sin
is the older and uglier brother of bad habit. Sin, like habit, can enter our
lives in a seemingly innocuous way. It can begin small and occupy only a corner
of our lives. Yet, if left unattended, countenanced, and allowed to flourish,
it can consume our souls.
“An ancient American prophet understood perfectly this concept of which I speak. He referred to the devil as the founder of sin and works of darkness and warned: ‘He [the devil] leadeth them by the neck with a flaxen cord, until he bindeth them with his strong cords forever’ ("2 Ne. 26:222 Nephi 26:22).
“Those who become followers of the evil one do not generally reach their captive state with one misdeed; they lose their freedom one sin at a time—one error after another—until almost all is lost. Flaxen cords are transformed into awful chains of steel as they allow themselves to follow the downward course. Each easy step away from the line of goodness and truth makes it more and more difficult to recover.
” (In the Lord's Service: A Guide to Spiritual Development [Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1990], 74.)
2 Ne 26:24 he layeth down his own life that he may draw all men unto
him
Some have
criticized the Book of Mormon because it sounds too much like the New
Testament. They ask, how could Old Testament era prophets speak with the same
words and phrases that the New Testament writers did? They proclaim that the
Book of Mormon is full of doctrinal anachronisms. We can see with this phrase,
that a very similar phrase is found in the New Testament, And I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men
unto me (Jn 12:32).
We do not
have to worry about these apparent anachronisms because we understand that
Nephi saw the ministry of Christ in vision (1 Ne 11:27-8). We can even look to
the Old Testament to show that other prophets wrote the exact words which Jesus
spoke during his mortal ministry. The book of Psalms contains many of the
events surrounding the crucifixion of Christ and some of the phrases that Jesus
spoke while on the cross. Is that an anachronism or just evidence that the
psalmist saw the Savior being crucified? See Ps 22:1; 22:7-8; 22:16-18; 31:5;
34:20; 69:19-21.
2 Ne 26:25
Come unto me…buy milk and honey, without money and
without price
Nephi again
borrows from the prophecies of Isaiah. This passage, found in Isa 55:1,
discusses how the blessings of the gospel can be obtained without money or
material wealth. Although Nephi is using this passage to demonstrate that the
Lord invites all to come unto him, the following explanation is useful. From
the 1981 Old Testament Institute Manual:
“The
invitation to come unto Christ and obtain those gifts without money and without
price suggests not that they can be obtained without effort, however, but that
one does not need the goods of this world to obtain them.
“Elder
Marion G. Romney explained what price is required:
‘When
earth life is over and things appear in their true perspective, we shall more
clearly see and realize what the Lord and his prophets have repeatedly told us,
that the fruits of the gospel are the only objectives worthy of life’s full
efforts. Their possessor obtains true wealth—wealth in the Lord’s view of
values….
‘I
conceive the blessings of the gospel to be of such inestimable worth that the
price for them must be very exacting, and if I correctly understand what the
Lord has said on the subject, it is. The price, however, is within the reach of
us all, because it is not to be paid in money nor in any of this world’s goods
but in righteous living. What is required is whole hearted devotion to the
gospel and unreserved allegiance to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
saints….A half-hearted performance is not enough.’” (Conference Report, Oct.
1949, p. 39 as recorded in the O.T. Institute Manual, p. 203)
2 Ne 26:29
priestcrafts are that men preach and set themselves
up for a light unto the world
When we hear
a term like “priestcrafts” we are likely to think first of the impure motives
of religious leaders of other denominations. Elder Dallin H. Oaks explained
that this term just as accurately describes those within the Church who set
themselves up as a light to the world with the intention of gaining the praise
of the world.
Dallin H. Oaks
“Focusing
on the needs of the students, a gospel teacher will never obscure their view of
the Master by standing in the way or by shadowing the lesson with
self-promotion or self-interest. This means that a gospel teacher must never
indulge in priestcrafts, which are ‘that men preach
and set themselves up for a light unto the world, that they may get gain and
praise of the world’ (2 Ne 26:29. A gospel teacher does not preach ‘to become popular’ (Alma 1:3) or ‘for the sake of riches and honor’ (Alma 1:16). He
or she follows the marvelous Book of Mormon example in which ‘the preacher was no better than the hearer, neither was
the teacher any better than the learner’ (Alma 1:26). Both will always
look to the Master.” (Conference Report, Oct. 1999)
Hugh Nibley
“’Priestcrafts are that men preach and set themselves up
for a light unto the world, that they may get gain and praise of the world; but
they seek not the welfare of Zion.’ That's very interesting when he
says, ‘They seek not the welfare of Zion.’ He's
talking about somebody who is in Zion in that case who sets himself up for a
light and wants to get gain and praise. Well, I know lots of businessmen and
others who have had a free ride on the Church. That's done quite commonly. They
set themselves up for a light. Many of them have been high priests-bishops,
stake presidents, etc. My father was one of them; he cashed in on it. It's sad.
But you'll find that in every church, too. We might as well be frank about
these things. How do we deal with these people? The next verse makes it clear.
You should have charity; you don't judge them at all. Of course not.”(Teachings
of the Book of Mormon, Lecture 21, p. 335)
Bruce R. McConkie
“Priesthood
and priestcraft are two opposites; one is of God, the other of the devil. When
ministers claim but do not possess the priesthood; when they set themselves up
as lights to their congregations, but do not preach the pure and full gospel;
when their interest is in gaining personal popularity and financial gain,
rather than in caring for the poor and ministering to the wants and needs of
their fellow men -- they are engaged, in a greater or lesser degree, in the
practice of priestcrafts.
“Apostasy
is born of priestcrafts (2 Ne. 10:5; 3 Ne. 16:10; D. & C. 33:4), for those
who engage in them follow vain things, teach false doctrines, love riches, and
aspire to personal honors. (Alma 1:12, 16.) Men are commanded to repent of
their priestcrafts (3 Ne. 30:2), and eventually, in the millennial day, these
great evils will be done away. (3 Ne. 21:19.)” (Mormon Doctrine, p.
593-4)
2 Ne 26:30
charity is love
The fact that
charity is the pure love of Christ is well known. This topic will not be dealt
with in detail in this chapter. It will become an important topic in the
writings of Moroni. The following quote should suffice for now.
Bruce R. McConkie
“Above
all the attributes of godliness and perfection, charity is the one most
devoutly to be desired. Charity is more than love, far more; it is everlasting
love, perfect love, the pure love of Christ which endureth forever. It is love
so centered in righteousness that the possessor has no aim or desire except for
the eternal welfare of his own soul and for the souls of those around him. (2
Ne. 26:30; Moro. 7:47; 8:25-26.)” (Mormon Doctrine, p. 121)
2 Ne 26:31
the laborer in Zion shall labor for Zion; for if
they labor for money they shall perish
The enormous
growth of the Mormon Church has created an interesting explosion of Mormon
cultural paraphernalia. Books, videos, music, accessories, you name it, it has
been produced and tailored to the “Mormon market.” There are members of the
church who seem to see no conflict with making money off this cultural
phenomenon. The writings of Nephi warn the members of Zion about their motives
in such endeavors. The quote of Hugh Nibley, as recorded above, is uniquely
candid and honest.
A good
example of performing ones labors in Zion with pure motives is seen in the work
of Elder LeGrand Richards. A great lover of missionary work, Elder Richards
donated all the proceeds of his Marvelous Work and a Wonder to the
general missionary fund of the Church. The preface of his book states, “This
book has been prepared and published without any monetary remuneration to the
author. It is dedicated to the great missionary work of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints which is so dear to the author’s heart.” He also
put pressure on publishers to keep costs down, thereby making the book
available to a greater audience at a low price (personal communication). Elder
Richards clearly had pure motives in his labor in
Zion.
2 Ne 26:33
he inviteth them all to come unto him…black and
white, bond and free, male and female
Nephi
understood that the Lord loves all his children. The doctrine that salvation
should be offered to all of God’s creations is foreign to the traditional
Jewish thought. So much of the Law of Moses tried to separate the children of
Israel from the Gentiles (in order to keep them from practicing the idolatry of
their neighbors and in an attempt to help them understand the difference
between clean and unclean, holy and unholy). This tradition led to an
ethno-centrism which produced ill feelings toward anything Gentile. For Nephi
to look beyond this tradition shows that he was more influenced by the Spirit
of the Lord than he was by his upbringing among the Jews.
“For any people to believe that it is
the only people in whom God is interested, or helps, or that we have special
merit because of our color, race, country or beliefs, that is, that we are
inherently superior and loved by God without regard to the lives we live is one
of the great fallacies and barriers to peace. This is a fallacy whether in an
exploded myth of an Aryan race of supermen, or disguised in more subtle form in
our own consciousness. We must not be guilty of such a fallacy.” (Harris,
Franklin S. Jr., The Book of Mormon: Messages and Evidences, p. 20)
James E. Faust
“I
hope we can all overcome any differences of culture, [and] race….In my
experience, no race or class seems superior to any other in spirituality and
faithfulness….Spiritual peace is not to be found in race or culture or
nationality, but rather through our commitment to God and to the covenants and
ordinances of the gospel.” (Ensign, May 1995, pp. 61,63 as
taken from Latter-day Commentary on the Book of Mormon compiled by K.
Douglas Bassett, p. 155)
M. Russell Ballard
“Our
Father in Heaven loves all of His children equally, perfectly, and infinitely.
His love is no different for His daughters than for His sons. Our Savior, the
Lord Jesus Christ, also loves men and women equally. His atonement and His
gospel are for all of God’s children. During His earthly ministry Jesus served
men and women alike: He healed both men and women and He taught both men and
women….for example, faith, repentance, baptism and the gift of the Holy Ghost
are requirements for all of God’s children, regardless of gender. The same is
true of temple covenants and blessings. Our Father’s work and glory is to bring
to pass the immortality and eternal life of His children (see Moses 1:39). He
loves us all equally, and His greatest gift, the gift of eternal life, is
available to all.” (Ensign, Nov. 1993, p. 89 as
taken from Latter-day Commentary on the Book of Mormon compiled by K.
Douglas Bassett, p. 154-5)