1 And
it came to pass that they did worship the Lord, and did go forth with me; and
we did work timbers of curious workmanship. And the Lord did show me from time
to time after what manner I should work the timbers of the ship.
2 Now
I, Nephi, did not work the timbers after the manner which was learned by men,
neither did I build the ship after the manner of men; but I did build it after
the manner which the Lord had shown unto me; wherefore, it was not after the
manner of men.
3 And
I, Nephi, did go into the mount oft, and I did pray oft unto the Lord;
wherefore the Lord showed unto me great things.
4 And
it came to pass that after I had finished the ship, according to the word of
the Lord, my brethren beheld that it was good, and that the workmanship thereof
was exceedingly fine; wherefore, they did humble themselves again before the
Lord. (1 Nephi 18:1-4)
I’m impressed about what these verses
say about the revelations Nephi received.
Verse 1 says the Lord showed Nephi from
time to time how he should work the timbers of the ship. I think this is cool
because it describes a process of continual, specific revelation to solve
mechanical problems. How did the Lord show Nephi? It could have been in open
daylight vision. It could have been in dreams. It could have been a combination
of the two. But however the Lord showed, it got the job done.
I wondered why Nephi didn’t describe in
more detail what the Lord showed him when other spiritual experiences he had he
gets pretty specific about. Eventually I realized that while it would expand on
that pattern of revelation, all it would teach us beyond that was how Nephi
built his ship. That might interest archeologists, but its value for salvation
is very low. We don’t have to build ships to be saved in the kingdom of God.
Even if we know next to nothing about
the ship Nephi built, we can extrapolate a few of the constraints on the
design. 1) It had to be a ship for a non-seagoing people, so it had to be easy
to learn and easy to use. 2) It had to be something that could be built with
the materials available at that location.
Verse 2 says Nephi didn’t work the
timbers like how men had learned, nor did he build the ship like men built, but
he did it the way the Lord showed him. It implies Nephi had some idea of what
ships should look like and what he was doing looked different. It seems he also
had a little bit of knowledge (but perhaps not all) about how ships were made,
and the Lord’s directions were different there too. It takes faith to follow
the Lord’s directions when they are different from our own previous notions, so
Nephi’s observation and obedience says a lot about his faith.
That phrase “not after the manner of
men” and “after the manner which the Lord had shown unto me” seems to hold a
more generally applicable lesson. Man has a small amount of wisdom gained over
time, but aren’t there things we’ve learned to do after the manner the Lord has
shown us, which is different from the manner of men? Some examples I think of immediately are, “no power or influence
ought to be maintained by virtue of the priesthood” or “he who is greatest
among you shall be your servant” or “love your enemies and pray for them.” There’s a bit of a risk when you go
differently, following the Lord’s way for the first time; you wonder if it will
work better or not. It takes faith.
(What other things can you think of that we know to do which are not
after the manner of men?)
Verse 3 tells of Nephi going to the
mount oft and praying oft and the Lord showed him great things. It seems Nephi
wasn’t just receiving revelation about how to build the ship, but was getting
other revelations as well—things he called “great.” He doesn’t tell us what
they are, but we at least know he valued them. To me this teaches the blessings
that can be ours if we will pray “oft” instead of just at the obligatory times
of meals, church meetings, and morning and evening.
Verse 4 tells of how once the ship was
finished, Nephi’s brothers saw it was good and they humbled themselves. If the
boat building had been up to them, they would never have started since even if
they got past murmuring, they would have had a hard time catching the vision of
what to do. If you can’t start a project until you can tell it is good, and it
doesn’t look good until the end, you will never start. Humbling oneself at the
end instead of the beginning is too late.
I get down on Laman and Lemuel here,
but I think far too often I have some of the same problems. I’m thankful for
Nephi’s great example to show what I should do instead.
2 comments:
Verse 2 is one of my all-time favorites. Here's what I wrote about it--http://plainandpreciousthing.blogspot.com/search/label/homeschooling
Thanks for sharing your thoughts too.
What neat examples of doing things "not after the manner of men." Do you suppose your daughter just needed some extra time to "take" to reading?
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