
This is a must read for all who are interested in Book of Mormon geography. Author Larry Barksdull illustrates for us a picture of the contemporary, counterproductive status of something we must all strive to avoid in our enthusiasm for the Book of Mormon; contention.
Your thoughts and feedback are always welcome.
The Dangers of Gospel Hobbies
(This article first appeared in Meridian Magazine on Friday, March 29th, 2013 and is reprinted here with
permission of Meridian Magazine and the author. Correspondence with the author can be found at end of article)
Imagine the Lord tasking
you with abridging one thousand years of your nation’s religious
history. You approach your assignment standing in the unique position of
being able to look back and, by the power of the Holy Ghost, assessing
why your people are now facing annihilation and why they have so
frequently suffered endless cycles of apostasy and war.
You are writing your book, in part, to save a future generation that
will face similar perils. As you dig into the records, armed with
prophetic insight, you see a pattern emerge. You perceive a subtle
strategy that Satan has employed time and again to destroy the peace,
divide the people, stir up anger and destroy lives.
Now, with a sense of purpose and urgency, you begin to write, always
with the thought in mind to warn your future readers about Satan’s
destructive strategy, ever pleading with them to not miss the point.
What is that point? To avoid the deadly twins: contention and disputation.
I draw attention to the dangers of contention and disputation because
often they are the bi-products of gospel hobbies, which, when the
proponents begin to promote them, tend to divide the saints. Elder
Quentin L. Cook wrote an article on the subject in March 2003. He didn’t
mince words: “Another sign of spiritual immaturity and sometimes
apostasy is when one focuses on certain gospel principles or pursues
‘gospel hobbies’ with excess zeal. Almost any virtue taken to excess can
become a vice.”[i]
I
have seen so much of this. I knew a man who once read in the scriptures
about living without purse or script and took it as a revelation that he
need not seek employment to support his family. Rather, as an “act of
faith,” he would make this “sacrifice” and trust that God would provide.
The result has devastated his family, who have lived in abject poverty
for over twenty years. To cling to his “revelation,” he has taken his
case public to any sympathetic ear. His actions are divisive. Now he
can’t step away and admit he was wrong; he has too much invested in his
“revelation.” Pride cements us to our gospel hobbies.
Or the woman who, every Fast Sunday, would begin her slow, pitiful walk
to the pulpit to bear testimony of her immense trials, which were
making her holy. Trials were all she ever thought about. She couldn’t
live without them, and she wanted to make sure that we knew all the
details, even if she had to force them down our throats. She, like the
non-working father, fed off the sympathy of others and sought an
audience. Her actions are device. If a blessing came along, she couldn’t
acknowledge it. Pride wouldn’t let her. She needed her gospel hobby as
much as she needed air.
Or the woman who had a slew of children whom she couldn’t stand, so she
abandoned them almost every night to go to BYU and do Family History
work. She, too, needed sympathizers to justify her lifestyle and clients
to support her lifestyle so that she could appear legitimately busy.
Back off? Absolutely not. She supposed that she would be letting down
the Lord and her sacred work would suffer. Her actions are divisive.
I have known people who are obsessed with food storage and make it a
religion. It’s not good enough that they gather a year’s supply; they
store for the extended family and neighbors and even have extra to
barter with. Some buy guns and ammunition to guard their stash. Others
are prepared to mobilize at a moment’s notice with all sorts of gear so
they can flee to tent cities. Many of these people don’t store food and
supplies quietly; they sound the alarm and preach their doctrine to
anyone who will listen. They are in the know and people ought to know
it. Their actions are divisive.
I am exhausted by the recruiting attempts of catastrophists who seek a
following to advance their conspiracy theories and interpretations of
the signs of the times. Talk about contention and disputation. Let me
tell you something: I’ve written a fair amount about Zion and Babylon,
and I feel pretty certain that aligning ourselves with the prophets and
living the commandments will keep us safe. There are two elevators: the
“Zion” elevator, which is going up, and the “Babylon” elevator, which is
going down. If I am riding the Zion elevator, I’m in a safe spot. I’m
aware of what is happening on the other elevator, but I am not affected.
Gospel hobbyists often fuel the fire of contention when they feel that
they, because of their scholarship, are in possession of exclusive
information or that they, because of inside information or revelation,
are aware of the real story that the Brethren don’t dare tell us. Elder
Cook said, “Some who are not authorized want to speak for the Brethren
and imply that their message contains the ‘meat’ the Brethren would
teach if they were not constrained to teach only the ‘milk.’ Others want
to counsel the Brethren and are critical of all teachings that do not
comply with their version of what should be taught.”
I have watched people get worked into frenzy and solicit disciples over
such trivial things as the birthday of Christ and the place of his
birth. Did these professed students of the scriptures ever read the
Lord’s injunction to be temperate in all things?[ii]
And how about those who are fixated on the Word of Wisdom? Here is what Elder Cook says of people in that group:
Certain members have wanted to add substantially to various doctrines.
An example might be when one advocates additions to the Word of Wisdom
that are not authorized by the Brethren and proselytes others to adopt
these interpretations. If we turn a health law or any other principle
into a form of religious fanaticism, we are looking beyond the mark. The
Lord said regarding important doctrine, “Whosoever declareth more or
less than this, the same is not of me” (D&C 10:68) and “That which
is more or less than this cometh of evil” (D&C 124:120).
Can you see the common denominator? Good people taking a good thing and
obsessing over it until it consumes their lives and pride won’t let it
go. Often gospel hobbyists take an ancillary subject and inflate it up
so that it appears crucial or urgent. But now how do they feed the
beast? They need sympathizers; they need disciples for their
sub-religion. Because their gospel hobbies are by nature controversial,
they tend to divide the saints from each other with contention and
disputation.
Elder Cook
called these gospel hobbyists to task because they are “looking beyond
the mark” and attempting to gather followers to do the same thing. The
Book of Mormon specifically warns against such behavior.
But behold, the Jews were a stiffnecked people; and they despised the
words of plainness, and killed the prophets, and sought for things that
they could not understand.Wherefore, because of their blindness, which
blindness came by looking beyond the mark, they must needs fall; for God
hath taken away his plainness from them, and delivered unto them many
things which they cannot understand, because they desire it. And because
they desire it God hath done it, that they may stumble.[iii]
Continuing, Elder Cook said, “We are looking beyond the mark when we
elevate any one principle, no matter how worthwhile it may be, to a
prominence that lessens our commitment to other equally important
principles or when we take a position that is contrary to the teachings
of the Brethren.”
He prefaced this statement by warning of the prevalence of gospel hobbies and looking beyond the mark.
The wild rush to find the new often tramples on what is true. Today
there is a tendency among some of us to ‘look beyond the mark’ rather
than to maintain a testimony of gospel basics. We do this when we
substitute the philosophies of men for gospel truths, engage in gospel
extremism, seek heroic gestures at the expense of daily consecration, or
elevate rules over doctrine. Avoiding these behaviors will help us
avoid the theological blindness and stumbling that Jacob described.
One of the real dangers of gospel hobbies is evangelizing them,
soliciting a following to perpetuate an idea. Worse than evangelizing is
merchandizing and profiteering a gospel hobby. How many times have I
been approached by LDS authors who want to know how to get on the
“fireside circuit?” I can’t believe they could invent such a coarse
term.
When I was just
starting out as a writer and being asked to speak, I went to my friend,
Blaine Yorgason, who gave me the best counsel I had ever received on the
subject. He said, “When I am asked to speak, I assume that the Lord has
placed me in that position to teach the gospel. I am not there for
myself, but for Him. I never mention my books.” To this day, I have
tried to follow that advice.
On the other hand, I know writers who promote themselves or even hire
promoters to get on the “circuit” in an effort to advance themselves and
sell books about their gospel hobby. If the bishop would let them, they
would set up a table and cash register at the back of the chapel.
Instead, they hand out business cards with ordering information or take
people outside to their car, open the trunk and sell books – on Sunday!
I’m not making this up.
There is another gospel hobby that is gaining some recent notoriety,
but it has existed for a long time: Book of Mormon geography. Whoa! Talk
about contention and disputation.
Like many of you, I am continually pressed to give my opinion about the
location of Book of Mormon lands. My response is always the same: “I
don’t care.” If Mormon didn’t feel the need to give us more geographical
information and if the General Authorities, who are the custodians of
the Book of Mormon, haven’t felt the need to make a definitive
declaration, then I don’t perceive that the subject should demand much
of my attention. But that doesn’t stop their efforts to recruit and
bombard me with their “evidence.”
Don’t get me wrong. I am as interested as the next person about Book
of Mormon archaeology and geography, which are legitimate, honorable
pursuits. But these subjects are ancillary to the purpose of the book,
which is to bring people to Christ. Nevertheless, what was once a
beautiful subject has now devolved for many enthusiasts into a gospel
hobby, and pride, contention and disputation have followed.
At an early age, Joseph Smith encountered gospel hobbyists and learned
about the toxic nature of contention and disputation that result. In his
sincere quest for truth, he described “a scene of great confusion and
bad feeling ensued—priest contending against priest, and convert against
convert; so that all their good feelings for one another, if they ever
had any, were entirely lost in a strife of words and a contest about
opinions.”[iv]
Contention and disputation are so damning and damaging. Mormon waded
through centuries of pride, contentions, disputations, apostasy and
warfare when finally, almost like a sigh of relief, he was able to write
about the Savior’s appearance. Mormon must have rejoiced when he wrote
that Jesus commanded the people to abandon contention and disputation
once and for all.
And
there shall be no disputations among you, as there have hitherto been;
neither shall there be disputations among you concerning the points of
my doctrine, as there have hitherto been.
For verily, verily I say unto you, he that hath the spirit of
contention is not of me, but is of the devil, who is the father of
contention, and he stirreth up the hearts of men to contend with anger,
one with another.
Behold, this is not my doctrine, to stir up the hearts of men with
anger, one against another; but this is my doctrine, that such things
should be done away.[v]
Contentions and disputations had always been the common denominators of
Nephite decline and misery.[vi] Looking across the generations of his
children, Nephi prophesied that contention would define his people’s
history and eventually cause their downfall: “For behold, I say unto you
that I have beheld that many generations shall pass away, and there
shall be great wars and contentions among my people.”[vii]
Contentions also brought down the Jaredite civilization,[viii] and
Alma, in his day, commanded the members of the Church “that there should
be no contention one with another, but that…their hearts [should be]
knit together in unity and in love one towards another.”[ix] Later
contention nearly destroyed the Nephites after the birth of Christ.[x]
A cursing is pronounced upon those who contend,[xi] and prophets have
sought to teach unifying principles to avoid the evil of
contention.[xii] King Benjamin warned,
But, O my people, beware lest there shall arise contentions among you,
and ye list to obey the evil spirit…. For behold, there is a wo
pronounced upon him who listeth to obey that spirit; for if he listeth
to obey him, and remaineth and dieth in his sins, the same drinketh
damnation to his own soul; for he receiveth for his wages an everlasting
punishment, having transgressed the law of God contrary to his own
knowledge.[xiii]
The
phrase “list to obey” means “want to obey.” What a frightening thought!
King Benjamin seems to be saying that contention results from the
conscious desire to yield to the temptation of making an argument at all
costs. We want to contend; we like to dispute a point. And the worst
part is that we know better. We know that contentious behavior is wrong,
but nevertheless, for the argument’s sake to keep the gospel hobby
alive, we vigorously dispute and thereby transgress “the law of God
contrary to [our] own knowledge.”
According to King Benjamin, the consequences are serious. Contention
draws from God a “wo” upon the contender.A wo is a condition of
“calamity, wretchedness, deep distress, misery and grief.”[xiv] Is a
gospel hobby really worth the price of arguing in order to perpetuate
it?
Mormon also wrote
of the terrible price we pay for contending and disputing with each
other. Of the sorry state of the Nephites who had listed to obey the
evil spirit and chose to contend, he said they “were much disturbed.”
Why? Because “Satan did stir them up…. yea, he did go about spreading
rumors and contentions upon all the face of the land, that he might
harden the hearts of the people against that which was good and against
that which should come…. Satan did get great hold upon the hearts of the
people upon all the face of the land.”[xv]
Do you see what was happening? Satan had managed to twist “that which
was good” and “that which was to come” and turn them into gospel
hobbies. In the process, he stirred up he people so that they were much
disturbed. Now contending and disputing over interpretations, Satan was
able to divide the people and harden their hearts against each other and
against the Lord.
Clearly, contention sets in motion a frightening set of circumstances that never turn out well.
No matter how well-intended, if people’s ideas divide the saints from
each other and from Christ, if they set themselves up as a light or
claim exclusive knowledge, if they compete for disciples, if they turn a
gospel hobby into a pseudo-religion and merchandize it, if they preach
their doctrine from the pulpit, if they contend and dispute with people
of another point-of-view, if they demean them or if their message and
actions are in any way divisive or if pride makes them inflexible, I
would advise that you flee from them.
When Mormon finally got to write about a people who had managed to rid
themselves of contentions and disputations, he began to exult. He had
waited so long that he couldn’t help himself. In the first two pages of 4
Nephi, he rejoices four times! “There were no contentions and
disputations among them, and every man did deal justly one with
another….And it came to pass that there was no contention among all the
people, in all the land….there was no contention in the land, because of
the love of God which did dwell in the hearts of the people….and there
was no contention in all the land.”[xvi]
And what was the result? “They did walk after the commandments which
they had received from their Lord and their God, fasting and praying,
and in meeting together oft both to pray and to hear the word of the
Lord.”[xvii] No gospel hobbies! They were one in heart, mind and
doctrine.
“And there
were no envyings, nor strifes, nor tumults.” Imagine! “And surely there
could not be a happier people among all the people who had been created
by the hand of God.”[xviii]
But Mormon’s joy was short-lived. On the very next page of 4 Nephi,
things began to unravel: “there began to be among them those who were
lifted up in pride….”[xix]Suddenly, we hear the bells of Hades start to
toll. Had they learned nothing? Contentions and disputations follow
pride like night follows day. Then came class distinction and people
dividing into factions to pursue their unique take on the gospel and
exclusive points of view.[xx] From that point forward, Mormon narrates
the tragic demise of a people who became extinct because they couldn’t
stop arguing with each other over things that didn’t matter.
Is any subject, no matter how intriguing, worth the price of contention and disputation?
_____________________________________
[i] Quentin L. Cook, “Looking Beyond the Mark,” Ensign, March 2003.
[ii] D&C 12:8.
[iii] Jacob 4:14.
[iv] JS-H 1:6.
[v] 3 Nephi 11:28-30
[vi] See 1 Nephi 9:4; 12:3; 19:4; 2 Nephi 26:2, 32; 28:4; Omni 1:17;
Words of Mormon 1:12; Mosiah 9:13; Alma 2:5; 4:9;50:25; 51:9; Helaman
16:22; 3 Nephi 2:11
[vii] 2 Nephi 26:2
[viii] See Ether 11:7
[ix] Mosiah 18:21
[x] See 3 Nephi 2:11
[xi] See Ether 4:8
[xii] See Mosiah 29:7
[xiii] Mosiah 2:32-33
[xiv] American Heritage Distionary, s.v. “woe.”
[xv] Helaman 16:22-24.
[xvi] 4 Nephi 1:2, 13, 15, 18.
[xvii] 4 Nephi 1:12.
[xviii] 4 Nephi 1:16.
[xix] 4 Nephi 1:24.
[xx] 4 Nephi 1:26-29.
Email conversation between BMAF vice president Doug Christensen and author Larry Barkdull:
On Thursday, March 28, 2013 at 12:06 PM, Doug Christensen <dou...@cableone.net> wrote:
I thoroughly enjoyed your article. I have been involved in BoM
geography pursuits for the past 25 years. I follow the examples
of
my peers and never bear my testimony about BoM geography and never
solicit followers. No one but a few close friends know of my concepts.
No one in my ward has a clue. I'm webmaster for Book of Mormon
Archaeological Forum (www.bmaf.org).
We hold once a year conferences for which we charge only enough to
cover food and room rental. Though BMAF has a few members who have
written and sell their books, they sell through DeseretBook or Amazon,
never the back of a
car and never, ever on Sunday. I see the very
real dangers of fanatical gospel hobbies and have been awe struck at the
pied piper "successes" of Rod Meldrum and his programs which include
everything you have listed. I have placed enough articles on our
website to inform those who may be interested about this man and his
tactics. I invite you to familiarize yourself with the website if you
are not already and would like to ask your permission to add your
excellent article to the website corpus.
Doug Christensen
On Friday, March 29th, 2013 at 11:19 PM, Larry Barkdull <lwb...@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course I know your work, and I appreciate your scholarship and
the professional way you present your science. Many in your community
are cut from the same cloth, but unfortunately others have prostituted
our wonderful Book of Mormon to merchandize it and make it the subject
of public dispute. Our enemies must be rejoicing over such vulgar
infighting. If my article will help you, I would be honored to allow you
to post it on your site. May the Lord bless you for your contribution
and your willingness to conduct yourself professionally and take the
high ground.
Best,
Larry
About the author:
Larry Barkdull is the author of number of books, his newest being an eight-book series on Zion (www.pillarsofzion.com)
and Rescuing Wayward Children, a subject that he teaches at BYU
Education Week. He writes a weekly column for Meridian, alternating
between "Rescuing Wayward Children" and "Becoming a Zion Person." He is
the president of Gospel Ideals International (www.gospelideals.org),
a foundation that promotes the gospel on the Internet. He is a longtime
publisher and writer of books, music, art and magazines. He published
the Tabernacle Choir Performance Library and more than 600 products for
numerous authors, composers and artists. His books have won various
awards: American Family Best Fiction Award; Benjamin Franklin Book
Award; and the Book of the Year Award from Foreword Magazine. He and his
wife, Buffie, have been married for 40 years, and live in Orem, Utah.
They have ten children and fifteen grandchildren.