I am the law and the light.
Look unto me, and endure to the end, and ye shall live;
for unto him that endureth to the end will I give eternal
life...This is the law and the prophets, for they truly
testified of me.
What we call the Old Testament
Jesus referred to as “the law and the prophets.” The Lord
intends everything in the Old Testament to bring us to Christ.
As our goal in life is to “come unto Christ and be perfected
in him,” the Old Testament becomes a precious and
invaluable guidebook.
The question posed by this
lesson is: How do we come unto Christ while living in the
midst of this telestial world? The story of Abraham and
Lot provides important guidance. Traveling from Egypt to
the land of promise, Abraham and Lot found themselves living
among the Canaanites, who were not worshipers of the Lord.
Abraham shows us the way to come unto Christ even as we
are surrounded by the evils of the world.
Honor the Ordinances of
the Lord
Wherever Abraham went, he built
altars to the Lord: “He went on his journey from the south
even to Bethel... unto the place of the altar, which he
had made there at the first: and there Abram called on the
name of the Lord.” And again when he moved near Hebron,
he “built there an altar unto the Lord.” Why?
Abraham honored the ordinances
of the priesthood. He carried out the prescribed sacrifices
in “similitude of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten of
the Father, which is full of grace and truth.” Surely he
offered these sacrifices in the spirit of Father Adam, repenting
and calling upon God in the name of the Son. Today
we are called upon to do the same. In our Sacrament meetings
we offer up “the sacrifice of a broken heart and a contrite
spirit” in remembrance of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten. We
go to the temple to take part in ordinances that remind
us of the sacrifice of the Son. As an example of faithful
obedience to the ordinances of the Atonement, he shows us
how to come unto Christ.
Love One Another
Abraham was called “the friend
of God” because
he was the friend of man. The Lord loved Abraham in part
because Abraham loved others and put their happiness before
his own. When a problem arose with his beloved nephew Lot,
he promptly sought a peaceful solution.
Clearly, the Lord honored Abraham
because of his unselfish love for his brethren and promised
him not only the entire land but also a kingdom eternal
in scope.
Then as soon as Abraham heard
that Lot had been taken prisoner by the four kings, he marshaled
his friends and neighbors — even the king of the wicked
city of Sodom — to help free him. They pursued the enemy
almost to Damascus; Abraham and his allies prevailed and
brought Lot home with all his goods. Abraham could have
let his nephew languish in captivity; after all, some might
say, the younger man had “cheated” Abraham by taking the
choicest part of the land for himself. But this was not
Abraham’s way of thinking, and he did his best to save the
life of his brother’s son.
Perhaps the most outstanding
example of Abraham’s love for others was his plea to the
Lord on behalf of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. When
the Lord threatened to destroy the cities because of their
wickedness, Abraham begged the Lord to spare them for the
sake of any righteous people that might be found in those
cities. “I will not destroy it for ten’s
sake,” the Lord promised Abraham. Presumably Abraham understood
very well the nature of the wickedness of those cities but
was unwilling to see them perish, such was the tenderness
of his heart for his fellow man.
The behavior of the people
of Sodom provides an outrageous contrast to the charity
of a man like Abraham. Theirs was no ordinary hatred for
others. Ezekiel says: “This was the iniquity of... Sodom,
pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was
in her and in her daughters; neither did she strengthen
the hand of the poor and needy. And they were haughty, and
committed abomination before me: therefore I took them away
as I saw good.”
When the Lord’s messengers
went to Lot’s house in Sodom, the people demanded that Lot
turn the messengers over to be sexually abused. When Lot
remonstrated with them, they demanded that he turn over
his virgin daughters as well. The next morning the Lord rained
down fire and brimstone on the city. It was precisely their
monstrous lack of charity, their arrogance and abusiveness,
that brought destruction to the people of Sodom.
The Lord has said, “Be kindly
affectioned one to another with brotherly love; in honour
preferring one another.” In
his kindness toward Lot, he “preferred” the interests of
his nephew over his own. As Abraham had charity even for
the people of Sodom, we too must “pray with all energy of
heart that [we] may be filled with this love,” which is
the pure love of Christ.
Deny Yourselves of Ungodliness
The way to Christ requires
that we deny ourselves of the ungodly things of the world.
When Abraham and his allies had conquered the four kings,
one of his allies, the king of Sodom, offered to give Abraham
all the booty he had captured in the war. But Abraham refused
to take anything from the hand of this wicked man: “I have
lift up mine hand unto the Lord, the most high God, the
possessor of heaven and earth, that I will not take from
a thread even to a shoelatchet, and that I will not take
any thing that is thine, lest thou shouldest say, I have
made Abram rich.”
In this way Abraham obeyed
one of the key principles of coming unto Christ, as Moroni
says: “Come unto Christ, and lay hold upon every good gift,
and touch not the evil gift, nor the unclean thing.”
By contrast, Lot was apparently
enticed by the telestial. When he left Abraham to move into
the Jordan Valley, he “pitched his tent toward Sodom” and
was soon living within the city of Sodom itself. Although Lot never embraced the wicked behaviors
of the city, he found himself drawn into it and lost most
of his family because of it. His daughters and sons-in-law
rejected his pleas to leave and died inside the city. Evidently
his wife found it too hard to leave behind the enticements
of the city and was killed when she disobeyed the Lord and
looked back at the destruction of the city.
Jesus reminded his followers
that his second coming will be like the day of Sodom and
warned the faithful “not to return back” to the ways of
the world. His warning took the form of three words: “Remember
Lot’s wife.”
Remember also the counsel of
Moroni that if we would come unto Christ, we must strictly
avoid “the unclean thing”: “Yea, come unto Christ, and be
perfected in him, and deny yourselves of all ungodliness;
and if ye shall deny yourselves of all ungodliness, and
love God with all your might, mind and strength, then is
his grace sufficient for you... that ye may become perfect
in Christ.”
Honor Priesthood Authority
After defeating the four kings,
Abraham took his portion of reward to the King of Salem,
the great high priest Melchizedek, and paid tithes to him. This act of obedience to the constituted
authority of the priesthood helped Abraham come closer to
his Savior. Alma teaches:
“It was this same Melchizedek
to whom Abraham paid tithes; yea, even our father Abraham
paid tithes of one-tenth part of all he possessed. Now these
ordinances were given after this manner, that thereby the
people might look forward on the Son of God, it being a
type of his order, or it being his order, and this that
they might look forward to him for a remission of their
sins, that they might enter into the rest of the Lord.”
The paying of tithes to the
Lord’s representative is a token of our reverence for the
Atonement of the Son of God. It is a limited and temporal
sacrifice we make to honor His infinite and eternal sacrifice.
At the hands of Melchizedek,
Abraham received the gift he had longed for: ordination
to the priesthood. In
the Book of Abraham, he says: “I sought for mine appointment
unto the Priesthood according to the appointment of God
unto the fathers.” Why did he so earnestly seek this appointment?
Because of the blessings that flow from it: