Sunday School Lesson 2

Lesson 2: 1 Nephi 1-7 (11 January 2004)

As is often the case for Sunday School lessons, there is a tremendous amount of material to cover in this week’s lesson. These questions will focus on only a few verses that help us see some of the lessons taught in these chapters. However, to help keep the study questions in context, here is an outline of the history surrounding Lehi’s flight from Jerusalem and an outline of the story in these chapters:

Historical context of Lehi’s flight from Jerusalem

[Note that dates in bold are times when parts of Israel (whether the northern kingdom or the southern) were or probably were taken into captivity. Most of these dates are approximations.]

837 Syria takes the border cities of Israel (the northern kingdom) captive.

c. 795 Israel defeats Judah in battle and plunders the temple.

792-697 Isaiah prophesies in Judah

732 Assyria defeats Syria.

730-722 Assyria conquers Israel, becoming the dominant power in the region of Palestine; the end of the northern kingdom.

708 Judah rebels against Assyria’s domination, making an alliance with Egypt?against Isaiah’s advice.

670 Assyria defeats Egypt.

605 Nebuchadnezzar’s armies defeat Egypt making Babylon the dominant power of the wider region. Babylon’s armies attack Jerusalem as an Egyptian ally and take thousands from Judah captive, including Daniel and Ezekiel.

598 Concerned about rebellion, Nebuchadnezzar again sends his armies and confederate armies from Edom, Ammon, and Moab against Jerusalem. They execute King Jehoiakim and place his eight-year-old son, Jehoiachin, on the throne instead. Jehoiachin reigns for three months, giving Nebuchadnezzer all of the temple treasures as tribute. Nebuchadnezzer takes thousands more into captivity, including Ezekiel and, especially, those from leading familes, the artisans, and the government officials. Nebuchadnezzar appoints another son of Josiah, Mattaniah, as king, changing his name to Zedekiah. Lehi, from the northern kingdom, is living in Judah, presumably as an Israelite refugee. He is called as a prophet and leaves Jerusalem with his family. (Note: since he learns of his genealogy only from the brass plates, it is possible that Lehi did not know he was from the northern kingdom rather than the southern. However, given the fairly clear feelings against Judah that we see in Nephi, I doubt that is true.)

c. 590 In spite of his promise of loyalty to Nebuchadnezzer, Zedekiah forms an alliance with Edom, Ammon, Moab, Phoenicia, and Egypt, and they rebel against Babylon. Jeremiah prophesies that the rebellion will be unsuccessful and Babylon will continue to dominate Judah.

587 Under the personal leadership of Nebuchadnezzer, the Babylonian army lays seige to and conquers Jerusalem. Zedekiah flees and is captured at Jericho. One month after the fall of Jerusalem, Nebuchadnezzar’s army burns the city, destroying the temple and the palaces and tearing down the city walls. The Ark of the Covenant disappears. Much of the remaining population is taken into captivity; many flee to Egypt, but a significant portion also remain behind.

The story of these chapters

1 Nephi 1-2: Presumably in response to the prophets in Judah, Lehi prays and receives a revelation that Jerusalem will be destroyed. (This may have been a kind of conversion experience for him.) He joins the other prophets in preaching repentance, but is also ignored and persecuted. By divine command, he leaves Jerusalem and goes into the wilderness.

1 Nephi 3-5: Nephi and his brothers return to Jerusalem to get the brass plates from Laban. Lehi learns that he is a descendant of Joseph of Egypt. He sees that the plates contain the five books of Moses, a chronicle of the history of Judah, and a collection of prophecies, including those of Jeremiah.

1 Nephi 6: Nephi interjects an explanation of why he is writing what he does.

1 Nephi 7: Nephi and his brothers return to Jerusalem to persuade Ishmael and his household to become part of their exodus from Jerusalem.

Study Questions

Chapter 1

Verses 6-15: Lehi has two visions, and the second begins with him seeing “God sitting upon his throne, surrounded with numberless concourses of angels in the attitude of singing and praising their God” (verse 8). Why is that the way that he sees the Celestial Kingdom, as a place of praise rather than a place of celestial work? In verses 9-11, Christ appears to Lehi and gives him a book to read. Is it significant that this revelation occurs by means of a revealed book rather than by Christ speaking to Lehi or in some other way? (Compare Ezekiel 2:9, Revelation 5:1-5, and 10:2, and 8-10.) Verse 13 tells of the woes that are to come to Jerusalem and verse 14 follows immediately with Lehi’s praise of God. Then verse 15 tells us that Lehi’s heart was filled with joy because of the things that he had seen. Since the only thing we are told about what he has seen is that Jerusalem will be destroyed, how do you explain his joy?

Verse 20: In the last sentence of this verse Nephi stops to talk about why he is writing: to “show [. . .] that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance.” The phrase “tender mercies” is from the Psalms. In them the phrase is almost always used to refer to salvation from sin. (See, for example, Psalm 51:1.) Is Nephi using the phrase differently here? What does it mean to be chosen? Compare D&C 95:5-6, 105:35-6, and 121:34-36; Matthew 20:16 and 22:14; John 15:16; and Revelation 17:14. If we read the verb phrase, omitting the insertion, Nephi says, “chosen [. . .] to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance.” How would you paraphrase that in contemporary English? What does it mean to be chosen to be made mighty? Who has the power of deliverance, those chosen or God? Presumably the answer is the latter, but if so, what does it mean to be chosen to have to be mighty “even unto the power of deliverance”? Is Nephi thinking about being chosen in the same way that the other scriptures I’ve referred to are? What does it mean to say that people are chosen “because of their faith”? (Compare 1 Nephi 2:19.) Ending as it does with the total destruction of the Nephites, how does the Book of Mormon show us that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those chosen because of their faith “to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance”?

Chapter 2

Verses 16-17: Did Nephi initially believe his father’s visions? If so, then what does it mean that his heart was softened and why was he “crying unto the Lord”? What is Nephi’s explanation for why he didn’t rebel against his father like his older brothers? What is the difference between Lehi’s belief and Sam’s? Compare D&C 46:14. Does that difference necessarily say anything about the faith of either of them?

Chapter 3

Verses 7-8: Compare verse 7 to D&C 124:49. How do you explain the difference between the teachings of these verses? Verse 8 tells us that Lehi knew that Nephi had been blessed. The suggestion is that he knew because of what Nephi said in verse 7. How is Nephi’s statement in verse 7 evidence of having been blessed? How is what we see in these verses connected to 1 Nephi 2:16?

Verse 16: What does it mean to be “faithful in keeping the commandments of the Lord”? What does the word faithful or faithfully add that is important? Why not just say “keeping the commandments”? How is keeping the commandments faithfully connected to being chosen for deliverance because of faith (1 Nephi 1:20)?

Chapter 4

Verses 1-2: In verse 1, Nephi again exhorts his brothers to be faithful in keeping the commandments of the Lord. Then, in verse 2, he appeals to the experience of Moses, asking them to remember what the Lord did for Israel at the Red Sea. Book of Mormon sermons often begin in this way, by calling on the listeners to remember something from scriptural history or their own history and then preaching the Gospel based on that remembrance. Nephi is using a version of that pattern here. Why is remembering the Lord’s deeds in the past so important to keeping the commandments faithfully? How does the Book of Mormon call us to remember? What does it call us to remember?

Chapter 5

Verses 20-21: Lehi and Nephi have been faithful in keeping the commandments and that has resulted in them getting the brass plates. How is that an example of what Nephi said he would show, namely “that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance” (1 Nephi 1:20)? They have found that the plates “were desirable; yea, even of great worth” because the plates will allow them to “preserve the commandments of the Lord unto our children” (verse 21). If we were to change unto to for, would that change the meaning of that statement? In other words, is unto just an archaic usage, or does it mean something other than what we might expect? The plates contain the five books of Moses, a chronicle of the history of Judah, and a collection of prophecies, including those of Jeremiah. How will those preserve the commandments for Lehi’s descendants?

Chapter 6

Nephi says that he intends to write the things of God (verse 3). In verse 4 he expands on that, saying that he intends to persuade people to come to the God of the Patriarchs and be saved. Compare this description of his intent with that we saw earlier in 1 Nephi 1:20.

Chapter 7

Verses 11-12: Nephi again appeals to Laban and Lemuel’s memory to try to help them repent. One of those memories (verse 11) is quite specific, but the other is much more general: “the Lord is able to do all things according to his will” (verse 11). What would make it possible for them to remember the second of these? In both of these verses Nephi asks how they could have forgotten. Does 1 Nephi 2:16 suggest an answer? At the end of verse 12, Nephi uses “exercise faith in him” and “be faithful to him” to mean the same thing. How does the second of these help us understand better what it means to have faith? What does it mean to be faithful to someone? The scriptures often use the metaphor of betrothal or marriage to describe the relation of the faithful to Christ. Does that help us understand what it means to have faith in him? My wife and I are faithful to each other, but it seems odd to think of either of us as obedient to the other. How is obedience related to faithfulness? Does this way of thinking suggest a different way of thinking about obedience?

4 comments for “Sunday School Lesson 2

  1. Answer to your first question under Chapter 1: Apparently God shares the Mormon preference for ridiculously large choirs :) !

  2. Jim,

    I don’t envy you the task of attempting to cover this material in one class. As our discussion below (http://timesandseasons.org/archives/000233.html) indicates, you could probably spend the entire class on the first verse!

    My wife has made a study of the “power of deliverance.” This seems to be a term of art in the scriptures. I will try to persuade her to post some thoughts about that.

    On the subject of memory, this is a topic that arose in Seminary in relation to the exodus. In my view, memory is critical to the development of faith. This is an aspect of faith that is not emphasized by the metaphor of Alma’s seed, though hints of it are present there. After one “gives place” to the seed, it “swelleth, and sprouteth, and beginneth to grow.” Alma asks: “will not this strengthen your faith?” Of course it will. And this stronger faith encourages further cultivation of the seed.

    That’s all for now. Great questions, Jim. I look forward to reading more discussion on this.

  3. Verses 16-17: Did Nephi initially believe his father’s visions?

    Maybe yes, maybe no…but he at least had doubts. His words indicate that he didn’t believe, at least fully, until after the Lord softened his heart.

    I enjoy these verses because they illustrate testimony growth/gaining by a future prophet in his youth under somewhat challenging circumstances.

Comments are closed.