The Prophet Abinadi,
Part 1
“And it came to pass
that there was a man among them whose name was Abinadi; and he went forth among
them, and began to prophesy, saying: Behold, thus saith the Lord, and thus hath
he commanded me, saying, Go forth, and say unto this people, thus saith the
Lord – Wo be unto this people, for I have seen their abominations, and their
wickedness, and their whoredoms; and except they repent I will visit them in
mine anger” (Mosiah 11:20).
Implicit in the phrase “thus saith the Lord” is the idea
that the words Abinadi gives the people in his message are not his own but the
Lord’s. He had no need to form the
message in his own mind, or to prepare his remarks, because the message was
given to him. He was in fact
“commanded” to say the things that he said.
Notice in this verse that a part of the commandment that
came from the Lord to Abinadi was that he use the phrase “thus saith the
Lord.”
“He commanded me, saying, Go forth, and say unto this people, thus saith the Lord…”
This is a pattern that we see most prolifically in the Old
Testament. The phrase is used
there over 400 times by prophet-writers.
Many of our revelations as contained in the Doctrine and Covenants use
this phrase.
The prophets are conscientious and deliberate when attesting
to the truthfulness of their message by invoking the name of the Lord. To use this phrase without authority
and without an authentic message from God would be to take the name of the Lord
in vain. This kind of
authoritative message, spoken by a messenger who received that message directly
from God, is the type of message to which the Lord was referring when he closed
his “Preface” to the Doctrine and Covenants:
“What I the Lord have
spoken, I have spoken, and I excuse not myself; and though the heavens and the
earth pass away, my word shall not pass away, but shall all be fulfilled,
whether by mine own voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same”
(D&C 1:38).
“It is the same” because his sent servants neither add to,
nor do they take from the message that was given to them from the Lord, but
deliver it according to the will of the Lord. We've superfluously
applied this verse to mean the Lord will stand by anything that is spoken
"in general conference," for instance, or anything that is in the
Ensign magazine, or anything the Bishop said, for "whether by mine own
voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same." This is
wrong, and the Lord has never promised to stand by all such messages. The
Lord "excuses not" himself. The philosophies
of men, regardless of the calling or office of the man who utters them, and no
matter how sincere he may be in his attempts to impart them, cannot save you
and do not originate with the Lord. Any such message is not the
same as His "own voice." God's voice is truth (D&C 88:66).
The sent servant does not fear the consequences of delivering a message
of truth because he knows the Lord, and is his friend. The servant
understands that since the Lord excuses not himself, it is not his prerogative
to excuse the Lord.
The Lord is very clear in his message to King Noah’s people
that he has seen “their abominations, and their wickedness, and their
whoredoms.” There is nothing that escapes his all-searching eye (Mosiah27:31). Even the most secretive acts of men are not secret, and will all
be revealed. You have a false sense of privacy that is only
illusory. The day is soon coming when the secret acts of all men will be
revealed (D&C 1:1-3).
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