32 (And these are the words which I spake unto my servant Moses, and they are true even as I will; and I have spoken them unto you. See thou show them unto no man, until I command you, except to them that believe. Amen.) (Moses 4)
As I finished up my most recent three part post series about Adam and Even in the scriptures, an idea grabbed my attention. It has a lot to do with the verse above, which is the final verse in Moses 4 contained in parentheses.
The other important context has to do with the target audience in each sermon in the Book of Mormon that contains references to Adam and Eve:
- 2 Nephi 2:15-26 (Lehi speaking to his son Jacob)
- 2 Nephi 9:9,21 (Jacob speaking to Nephites)
- Jacob 4:3-5 (Jacob speaking to Nephites)
- Mosiah 3:11-26; 4:7 (King Benjamin speaking to his people/s as they enter a covenant)
- Mosiah 16:3 (Abinadi speaking to apostate Nephite priests)
- Alma 12:21-26 (Alma-2 speaking to rebellious Nephites)
- Alma 42:2-7 (Alma-2 speaking to his son Corianton)
- Helaman 14:16-18 (Samuel the Lamanite speaking to wicked Nephites)
- Mormon 3:20 (Mormon writing to latter-day Gentiles)
- Mormon 9:11-14 (Moroni writing to latter-day Gentiles)
- Ether 8:25 (Moroni writing to latter-day Gentiles)
- Moroni 8:8 (Mormon writing to his son Moroni)
- Moroni 10:3 (Moroni writing to latter-day Gentiles)
Do you see a pattern? Aside from the Gentiles, the audience is always comprised of covenant-keepers or those who were once covenant-keepers.
I see a message embedded in the fact that the last of these prophets spoke to us in the same way and about the same topics their predecessors spoke to other covenant-keepers. We are part of the house of Israel. We belong in the fold of God. That we have these words is an indication that the latter-day work has commenced (see Ether 4:17). This fits with the purposes outlined in the Title Page:
Which is to show unto the remnant of the house of Israel what great things the Lord hath done for their fathers; and that they may know the covenants of the Lord, that they are not cast off forever—And also to the convincing of the Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ, the Eternal God, manifesting himself unto all nations
There is a pretty close parallel in the early Christian church that is well documented, where esoteric teachings and rites were widely practiced at first, but eventually considered heretical and excised from the practice of Christianity.
Even in the church today there are quite a few mainstream believing members who consider the temple problematic. This could be a pattern. Unlike previous dispensations, though, we know there won't be another global apostasy, so it becomes an individual question. Will we embrace these doctrines and seek to understand them? Or will we reject them and lose the understanding they offer?