All Things Witness

Thoughts on the mission and power of Jesus Christ

A piece of bread with a heart in the centre being given to a young boy


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I Did Liken the Scriptures

If you follow this blog you will have noted my saying that the Book of Mormon was written not only to us and for us, but also about us. If you’re not already a bit sick of me saying that, you’ll probably become so. One reason I repeat it is because I suspect most people who read my posts aren’t regularly returning for more and it’s such an important message I don’t want it to get lost. It’s not something I had recognised until the last couple of years – and I’ve spent my life so far (into my late 50’s) studying the Book of Mormon.

When I realised that Nephi’s statement about likening the scriptures to ourselves (1 Nephi 19:23) meant putting ourselves in the position of the people being preached to in the Book of Mormon, a whole new world of understanding opened to me. Putting ourselves in the shoes (or sandals) of Nephi is fine, but we’ll learn more if we assume we’re more like Laman and Lemuel. We’re less like Abinadi and more like King Noah. Rather than being like Alma, the wicked Zoramites provide a better example of our attitudes and behaviour. This is uncomfortable, for sure, but it’s the only way we can become the people God wants us to become. It’s the only way we truly apply what the Book of Mormon is trying to teach us into our lives.

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Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden


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They Were Not Ashamed

Guilt and shame. One is healthy, one isn’t. One is necessary for repentance, one isn’t. One hopefully encourages you to improve your life, while the other takes you further from God and happiness.

In psychological terms, guilt is described as feeling bad about something you’ve done, while shame is feeling bad about who you are. Guilt is about actions, while shame is about the core or essence of your very being.

We see this in the creation and garden of Eden story in the Bible. After God has created male and female, the record reads, ‘And they were both naked, the man and his wife, and were not ashamed.’ (Genesis 2:25)

After the serpent manages to manipulate Adam and Even into partaking of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, our first parents1 hide from the approaching Lord God (Jehovah-Elohim) (Genesis 3:8). In the LDS temple endowment, it is Satan who tells Adam and Eve to make aprons of fig leaves and it is Satan who tells them to hide. We don’t get this in the Biblical account, but we do see that the reason they make themselves aprons is to hide their naked bodies (Genesis 3:7). And when God calls them forth, Adam tells Him that the reason they hid themselves was because they were naked (Genesis 3:10).

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