Introduction
1) The
Book of Mormon contains,
as does the Bible, the fulness of the everlasting
gospel.
The term,
"fulness of the everlasting gospel," deserves some
explanation. Doctrinal subjects which
have become commonplace conversation among the Latter-day Saints are either
absent or nearly absent from the record. Consider the following topics:
A) The pre-mortal life.
B) The council in heaven, the war in
heaven, the third of the hosts of heaven that were cast down.
C) The three degrees of glory.
D) Baptism for the dead and vicarious
ordinances.
E) Celestial Marriage
F) The Word of Wisdom
While these
doctrines are essential for us, we may conclude that these doctrines are not
essential to the phrase “fulness of the everlasting gospel." The fulness of the
everlasting gospel contains all the principles, doctrines, and commandments
required to "gain peace in this life and
eternal salvation in the world to come." We must remind ourselves
that the gospel is simple. The doctrines
of the gospel are simple. The “fulness of the
everlasting gospel” is simple.
No other
scripture teaches about the power of the atonement of Jesus Christ as
completely and clearly as does the Book of Mormon. This is the essence of the "good
news" of the gospel. The message is
best described in the words of the Savior.
He defined his own doctrine, “And this is my doctrine, and it is the doctrine which the Father hath
given me… I bear record that the Father commandeth all men, everywhere, to repent and believe in
me. And whoso believeth in me, and is baptized, the same shall be saved; and
they are they who shall inherit the kingdom of God." (3 Ne
11:32-33)
2) Moroni, then a glorified, resurrected being
One might
wonder about the resurrection of Moroni, as he died
well after the first resurrection associated with the resurrection of Christ
when many bodies of the saints which slept arose
(Matt 27:52). The term, "first resurrection" is used to describe two
events, the resurrection associated with the resurrection of Christ
(Mosiah15:21-23), and the resurrection associated with the Second Coming of the
Lord (DC 76:64). Some have defined the
"first resurrection" as the
resurrection which begins at the resurrection of Christ and continues until the
"first" resurrection associated with his Second Coming. That definition raises the possibility that
some saints are being resurrected in the interval between those two great
events. However, the only individuals
known to have been resurrected during that time period are Moroni,
Peter, and James. Each of these men
"had special labors to perform in this day which necessitated tangible
resurrected bodies." (Mormon
Doctrine, p.639)
3) A new and additional witness that Jesus Christ is the Son
of the living God
Paul
records, “in the mouth of two or three witnesses
shall every word be established.” (2 Cor
13:1) This principle is taught in the
ancient Law of Moses (Deut 17:6), is repeated by the Savior (Matt 18:16), and
is taught again by Paul. It becomes the
standard by which a defendant is accused or a fact is established. Therefore, the Lord provides a second witness
of the divinity of Jesus Christ by giving us the Book of Mormon; “know ye not that the testimony of
two nations is a witness unto you that I am God” (2 Ne 29:8). A careful study of almost any important
doctrinal principle will reveal that the doctrine is taught in two or three
different sources, usually the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and the Doctrine
& Covenants. Thus we see that the
Lord abides the law that he gave to Moses.
This principle also condemns those who reject the message having had
more than one witness. (Alma 30:45)
4) The most correct of any book
Detractors
of the Book of Mormon have often quoted this phrase as they point to changes in
different editions of the Book of Mormon, punctuation or grammatical
problems. The context of Joseph Smith's
statement in this regard is that a man can grow nearer to God by abiding by its
precepts than by any other book.
Therefore, it is doctrinally the most correct book on the earth. The spirit of revelation which emanates from
its pages declares to all that Jesus is the Christ and that salvation comes
through his name. In Book of Mormon Symposium Series, George
A. Horton, Jr. explains:
"When
Joseph Smith said ‘the Book of Mormon was the most correct of any book on
earth,’ it seems evident that he was not talking about grammar, punctuation, or
spelling. He was referring to the clarity
and depth of doctrine, to the mission and message of the book, to the spirit of
inspiration that it fosters, to the divine desire that it sparks in the soul to
make the ‘mighty change,’ and to the abiding love of the Lord that it brings
into our hearts.”
President
Benson has declared:
“I
have a vision of homes alerted, of classes alive, and of pulpits aflame with
the spirit of Book of Mormon messages. I
have a vision of home teachers and visiting teachers, ward and branch officers,
and stake and mission leaders counseling our people out of the most correct of
any book on earth - the Book of Mormon.
I have a vision of artists putting into film, drama, literature, music,
and paintings great themes and great characters from the Book of Mormon. I have a vision of thousands of missionaries
going into the mission field with hundreds of passages memorized from the Book
of Mormon so that they might feed the needs of a spiritually famished
world. I have a vision of the whole
Church getting nearer to God by abiding by the precepts of the Book of
Mormon. Indeed, I have a vision of
flooding the earth with the Book of Mormon.” (Church News, 06/04/94)