I substitute-taught a primary lesson this last Sunday on
Moroni and his writings to the 11-12 year-olds. When I was first asked to do
it, I said yes mostly for selfish reasons because I’ve found that somehow the
Lord gives me opportunities to substitute-teach when the lesson is something He
particularly wants to teach me. I didn’t know what the lesson was about
when I agreed to do it, but when I looked at it, I knew that once again it was
for me.
2 And now
it came to pass that after the great and tremendous battle at Cumorah, behold,
the Nephites who had escaped into the country southward were hunted by the
Lamanites, until they were all destroyed.
3 And my
father also was killed by them, and I even remain alone to write the sad tale
of the destruction of my people. But behold, they are gone, and I fulfil the
commandment of my father. And whether they will slay me, I know not.
4 Therefore
I will write and hide up the records in the earth; and whither I go it
mattereth not.
5 Behold,
my father hath made this record, and he hath written the intent thereof. And
behold, I would write it also if I had room upon the plates, but I have not;
and ore I have none, for I am alone. My father hath been slain in battle, and
all my kinsfolk, and I have not friends nor whither to go; and how long the Lord
will suffer that I may live I know not.
(Mormon 8:2-5)
Show
the picture Mormon Bids Farewell to a Once Great Nation and ask the children
who the men in the picture are.
· Explain
that Mormon gave part of the sacred records to his son, Moroni, to protect them
from the Lamanites and to have Moroni complete the account. Have the children
read Moroni’s words in Mormon 8:2–5.
· Help
the children determine approximately how long Moroni was alone by finding the
year of the final Nephite battle on the bottom of the page in Mormon 6. Then have the children subtract that
date from the year listed on the bottom of the last page of Moroni 10. (421 - 385 = 36 years.)
· Ask
the children how long they have ever been alone. Help them imagine what it
would be like to be alone for thirty-six years.
· Explain
that Moroni lived through many difficulties to complete the gold plates so they
could come to future generations as the Book of Mormon and help us become like Jesus
Christ.
· You
might also use enrichment activity 1 as an attention activity.
Enrichment
activity: For this activity you
will need a piece of tin and a nail. (A large lid from a can might work for the
piece of tin. Cover all sharp edges with tape.) Have the children take turns
using the nail to scratch a letter or two of the following words: Now I, Moroni
… on the piece of metal or tin. Express your appreciation for the Book of
Mormon record keepers, who engraved the words of God on metal plates.
A few reasons why I felt this lesson was for me was because
1) I’ve been going through one of those periodical struggles wherein I feel my
writing is not worthwhile or important 2) I’ve been feeling like I’m very much
isolated and alone a lot and don’t have much opportunity to be an influence for
good, and 3) I’ve been feeling like writing is getting harder for me.
Reading over Moroni’s experience has given me some
much-needed perspective about what I face. I am nowhere near the same class as the prophet Moroni,
either in spirituality, or in difficult life experience, and the comparison is
instructive to me.
1) Moroni was alone for 36 years. Any civilization he ran
across was likely to be dangerous to him. Me, I’m only alone during the day as
I write. (The longest I was ever
alone was about a week when my husband was overseas for work, and even though I
was going through a sad time in my life, I had other people I could talk to.)
My neighbors are not likely to kill me if they find out I believe in Christ.
2) Moroni was an apostle with no one to minister to, since
all the Nephites were destroyed and everyone left was determined to destroy
believers in Christ. (Talk about feeling unimportant and unable to be an
influence for good!) Me, I’m a run-of-the-mill Latter-day Saint who gets to
live in a place and time with a relatively high number of faithful Saints of
the restored church, and I have people I can serve in my callings.
3) Moroni had to painstakingly scratch his message on metal
and carry that load around with him everywhere. Me, I get to type my little
thoughts and scripture insights out on a nice laptop in the comfort of my
central-heated home with running water and a pantry of food. When I’m ready, I
can instantly post my writing to the internet where anyone in the world can
read it.
I have so much to be thankful for! (I guess that makes this
a belated Thanksgiving post.)
And still the few challenges I face are just enough for me
to feel great respect and compassion for Moroni.
What prophets and people in the scriptures have you
identified with in difficult times?
Have you ever taught lessons seemed to speak directly to
your difficulties?
3 comments:
Hi Michaela. I don't comment at all in most blogs I read and I probably won't comment again on yours (I just feel I have nothing to add to blogs!)
But I wanted to let you know how much I appreciate your blog in my life. I never learned how to scripture study in such depth as you seem able. All your posts and your observations are very meaningful to me and I can't begin to tell you how many of them have helped me in my day to day life. I look forward to new posts and I think about their chosen verses and your comments in depth so I can better understand those particular scriptures, but also HOW to read and pull apart their meaning and how to apply it in my life.
Thank you so much for your commitment to the gospel, the scriptures, and The Lord.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, Bex; that means a lot to me. Every once in a while I wonder if I'm doing any good with this blog, so it is nice to hear from people who are helped by it.
Thanks for coming out of the woodwork, so to speak, to comment here. :-)
Thank you for this. I needed it so today.
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