When almost everything around you seems
to be falling apart, how can you be “glorious in the eyes of the
Lord” and God be the source of your strength?
“And now, saith
the Lord—that formed me from the womb that I should be his servant,
to bring Jacob again to him—though Israel be not gathered, yet
shall I be glorious in the eyes of the Lord, and my God shall be my
strength.” (1 Nephi 21:5)
Once we enter into the covenant, we are
all called to labor for the welfare of Zion. Unfortunately, Zion
involves group behavior. Every group enterprise is a difficult,
unpredictable and wayward thing. Although all of us should try to
pursue a Zion's welfare, Zion will be uncooperative. Even if Zion is
not gathered, it does not excuse the responsibility devolving upon
you. You should be "glorious in the eyes of the Lord" by what you do with
the covenants you make. You were formed to bring Israel (including
yourself and your family) back to the Lord. Others are not going to
cooperate. Priorities, practicalities, compromises,
institutional needs, cultural difficulties, and lethargy will oppose
this glorious work assigned to you. And Zion will largely fail,
despite your best efforts on her behalf. Yet, even in failing in the
larger task, you can be glorious in the Lord's eyes if you remain
faithful to his call to you. Isaiah's words describe Nephi's position.
Laman and Lemuel, along with the sons of Ishmael, were all unwilling
to accept prophetic leadership from Nephi. While this made the ones
rejecting him suffer, it did not prevent Nephi from being glorious in
the Lord's eyes. No blessing was withheld from Nephi because of his
audience's disobedience.
In our own day, we see most people want
a broad path to walk comfortably with a larger group. It is little
wonder that groups are usually headed to hell. The true path, with
all the confining discomforts of being straight and narrow, is less
inviting and generally a lonely undertaking. Yet if you are
willing to walk there and advocate to others, you will be "glorious
in the eyes of the Lord" though unaccepted among your peers. This is a recurring
pattern. Why should our day be different? If our day were much
different from the defects described in this verse, we should
question whether things are as they should be. These patterns reoccur
whenever the Lord has a people on the earth. And since latter-day
history is predicted to include the same opposition, struggles and
rejections, we have no scriptural basis for expecting a different set
of circumstances for our time.
Sobering words in our own latter-day
revelations suggest this pattern will unfold among us, to our own
great distress:
“Behold,
vengeance cometh speedily upon the inhabitants of the earth, a day of
wrath, a day of burning, a day of desolation, of weeping, of
mourning, and of lamentation; and as a whirlwind it shall come upon
all the face of the earth, saith the Lord. And upon my house shall
it begin, and from my house shall it go forth, saith the Lord;
First among those among you, saith the Lord, who have professed to
know my name and have not known me, and have blasphemed against me in
the midst of my house, saith the Lord.” (D&C 112:24-26, emphasis added).
The smug self-assurance of any Latter-day Saint thinking membership in the Church is enough to guarantee
return to the Lord, will certainly end at some point. Then those who
have heard the Master's voice and followed Him, rather than his
institution, will be vindicated. While the faithless, cultural,
social members of His Church will find themselves among the Telestial
residents of the world (D&C 76:98-102), destined to be consumed
at His coming. (JST 2 Peter 3:9-12)
For those who follow the Lord as Nephi
did, it will be glorious. But this will only occur when things are
finally seen in their true proportions and light. Until then, Israel
will not permit any true messenger to fully gather them. Israel
has always been too status conscious, making them unprepared to be
guided by the Holy Ghost. We prefer "bona fide" sources of
information; our PhD's, our distinguished faculty; even mediocracy is
deemed credible when it holds Church office. The Holy Spirit,
however, is unpredictable (John 3:8) and moves in unanticipated, even
counter-intuitive, ways (1 Cor 2:11). It has never been bona fide,
and almost always "has no beauty that we should desire" it.
Christ's pattern remains the same. To follow Him, we have to find his
voice, even when it originates from unlikely places, saying
unpleasant things. He will never scratch our "itching ears"
with words of praise, while we lack so much. (Source: Nephi's Isaiah, pages 127-129)
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