I am 73
years old and have read the Book of Mormon many times in my life – probably 40
to 50 times. (But who’s counting?) I love the Book of Mormon! It speaks to my
mind and heart with a familiar voice and feels like taking a long walk with an
old friend or visiting a place I love to go. And yet it is always fresh and new
with insights, truths and treasures to be discovered each time I read it – not
just each time I read the whole book but each time I sincerely apply myself to
reading, even if only a chapter or for a few minutes. It is timeless and
timely!
Many ways to read the Book of Mormon
There are
many ways to read the Book of Mormon either individually or as a family. (In
this post and elsewhere in this blog, unless specified otherwise, “family” in
the context of reading the Book of Mormon refers to any setting of two or more
people reading the Book of Mormon together. “Where two or three are gathered
together in my name, as touching one thing [i.e. united in purpose], behold,
there will I be in the midst of them – even so am I in the midst of you.”
D&C 6:32) Any two (or more) truth-seeking people can read the Book of
Mormon together and create a synthesis that is greater than the sum of the
parts. We teach and inspire each other.
There is no wrong way to read the
Book of Mormon, as long as we follow Moroni’s exhortation to read “with a
sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ” (Moroni 10:4). I’ll
discuss below some of the possible approaches for reading the Book of Mormon
for you to consider.
Actually, there is a wrong way to
read the Book of Mormon. The wrong way is to read it without a sincere heart and
with the intent to prove it to be false. Some people read the Book of Mormon
that way. They miss the forest for a tree or two. They focus on something that
they see as a “deal breaker” in the Book of Mormon such as references to cement
(such as Helaman 3:7, 9, 11) or horses (such as Enos 1:21) or Jacob’s use of
the French word “adieu” (Jacob 7:27) or minor textural changes which have been
made since the original edition of the Book which they feel “prove” the Book is
a fraud and discount all of the remainder of the Book of Mormon with its
profound truths, doctrines, stories and messages for our day. They never really
read the whole Book. They see it through the pinhole of the unbeliever’s cynical
eye rather than through the eyes-wide-open broad vision of the sincere truth
seeker’s panoramic vista of this marvelous book. (See Tad Callister’s A Case for the Book of
Mormon for an in-depth discussion of the most commonly cited “deal
breakers” of the Book of Mormon’s veracity.)
So, what are some of the ways to
read the Book of Mormon?
Reading sequentially
Most people read the Book of Mormon
from front to back, Nephi to Moroni, a chapter at a time or a certain number of
pages at a time or for a certain amount of time at each sitting. (This is
sometimes called “Netomo” – just like riding a bicycle from Logan to Jackson is
called “Lotoja.”) This is a good way to read the Book of Mormon, especially for
those who may be less familiar with the storyline and organization of the Book.
If you plan to read the Book of Mormon
individually and/or as a family as part of Come, Follow Me with the rest
of the faithful Saints in the Church in 2020 (And I hope you do!), this is
probably how you should read it.
May I suggest three possibilities
for how to pace yourself or your family as you read?
First, you can divide the
number of pages in the Book of Mormon (531) by the number of days in the year
2020 (366– it’s a leap year) and determine that you need to read 1.45
pages/day, or about 1½ pages each day. That will work fine.
I have created a “Book of Mormon
Reading Calculator” in Microsoft Excel that you are welcome to adapt for your
own use to track your reading of the Book of Mormon this year. (Send me an
email to the address below and I will send you the Excel file.)
I have also created this calculator
in Google Sheets. Here is the link: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1SCPiEj4hiF_Uvm5YtKoGKzDNrS4wYZAJ76ycjKf1ALQ/edit?usp=sharing
You are welcome to go to this link
in Google Sheets and copy the calculator into your own new Google Sheet. Copy
and paste this link into the address bar of a browser and it will take you to
Google Sheets. Then open a new Google Sheet for yourself and copy this
calculator to your own sheet so you can track your own progress. Make sense? If
not, email (rsboyer46@gmail.com) or
call me (801-891-9931) and I’ll talk you through it.
Second, you can create a
Study Plan in the Gospel Library App. On the “Library” page of the Gospel
Library, you will see an option for “Study Plans”. Touch that link and follow
the directions to create a study plan in Gospel Library for reading the Book of
Mormon in 2020. It’s easy. You can create your own study plan in less than 5
minutes. I did this today with our teenage grandchildren. They did it faster
than I did. (No surprise there!) The Study Plan will give you daily reminders
at a time you specify. With it you can track your progress for the whole year.
I suggest you use the option to allow chapters to be split. Notice that choosing
to read the Book of Mormon (from the scriptures tab) will include the
supplementary material at the beginning of the Book before 1st Nephi. That’s helpful
because that supplementary material is what we will study in the first week of Come,
Follow Me. Again, if you can’t figure it out, email or call me or ask a
teenager to help you.
Third, you can follow the Come,
Follow Me – For Individuals and Families manual and read the chapters
indicated for each week in the manual. You can do this with either the print or
online (Gospel Library) version. This will work well because you will be in
sync with Sunday School classes through the year. There will be some weeks when
you’ll need to read more and some weeks when you will read less to stay in
sync, so you’ll have to be more flexible in what you read each day and each
week to stay on schedule.
Reading topically
Another way to read the Book of
Mormon is to read it topically – following the themes of key doctrines as they
are taught in the Book. For instance, the Index to the Triple Combination under
the heading of “Jesus Christ, Atonement through” contains about 40 references
in the Book of Mormon that relate to the Atonement of Jesus Christ. It also
contains 11 other subheadings about Jesus Christ that expand our understanding
of His Atonement. Finally, there are about 15 cross references to other topics
in the Index that relate to Jesus Christ and His Atonement. For those who are
comfortable with the story line and organization of the Book of Mormon,
studying it topically will yield an understanding of the depth and breadth of
the doctrinal foundations of the Book of Mormon that is hard to appreciate
reading it sequentially from front to back.
A combination of both methods suggested by President
Nelson
A fascinating way to read the Book
of Mormon is a combination of the first two suggestions above (sequentially and
topically). This way is to read the Book from beginning to end (sequentially)
but to do so looking for a specific doctrine or teaching. Pres. Nelson asked
the sisters of the Church to do this in his talk to them in General Conference
October 2018. In that talk, given in the Women’s session of the Conference, he
invited the sisters to "read the Book of Mormon between now and the end of
the year. He went on to suggest to
the sisters,
As you read, I would encourage you to mark each verse that
speaks of or refers to the Savior. Then be intentional about talking of Christ,
rejoicing in Christ, and preaching of Christ with your families and friends. You
will be drawn closer to the Savior through this process. And changes, even
miracles, will begin to happen. (“Sisters’ Participation in the Gathering
of Israel”, Ensign, November 2018)
Some, perhaps many, of you followed
the Prophet’s advice and read the Book of Mormon in this way between General
Conference in October 2018 and the end of the year. I know you were blessed for
doing so. (I did and I was blessed. And I’m not even a “sister”!)
Combining both methods to read for inspired answers to
important questions
Our mission president in the
England Manchester Mission, President Stuart McReynolds, taught us a variation
of reading the Book of Mormon in this way (sequentially but following a specific
topic). He suggested to the missionaries, including ourselves, that we read the
Book of Mormon looking for answers to important questions on which we are
seeking inspired direction. He suggested we take a clean, inexpensive copy of
the Book of Mormon (We had a whole shelf full of them to give out as
missionaries.) and read it from beginning to end (sequentially) in a relatively
short period of time (i.e. 1 to 3 months) looking for the answers to a specific
question (topically) and marking the passages that relate to that question and provide
inspired answers. Pres. McReynolds told us that he has about 20 such copies of
the Book of Mormon each marked with the inspired answers to a different
question.
Lori and I each followed this
process at his suggestion. Lori has actually done it four times since he
suggested this approach, starting with a clean copy of the Book of Mormon each
time with each new question. She marked each passage that related to the
question for which she was seeking inspiration. She also made notes in the margins
of inspired insights and answers as they came to her. We shipped those copies
of the Book of Mormon home from England so that she can treasure them.
What we found is that the Book of
Mormon is like a beautiful tapestry created by weaving lovely but unique threads
together, each thread representing the answers to an inspired question that
weaves its way through the Book of Mormon. The combination of all the threads
woven together produces a lovely picture of the Doctrine of Christ which is taught
in greater fulness in the Book of Mormon than anywhere else in the scriptures. Try
this approach sometime – if not this year, maybe another year.
By the way, you can use this
approach in the Gospel Library app instead of using a paper copy of the Book.
Just choose a different highlighting color for each question or topic as you
read the Book of Mormon each time looking for inspired answers. You can also
tag important passages and create notes about important passages and save them
in specific note files for later reference.
You don’t have to read at all!
Actually,
you don’t have to read the Book of Mormon at all to be blessed by it. You can
listen to it very conveniently in the Gospel Library App. Just touch the headphones
icon in the lower right corner of any page in the Book of Mormon and you can
listen while you work at home, drive in the car, work out, bike, ski, shovel the walks or whenever
you want. It’s magic! You can choose whether to listen to a male or female
voice and even choose which language you would like to hear it in. There are dozens
of options from Afrikaans to Zulu! (I chose English for obvious reasons.)
I remember the first time I
listened to the Book of Mormon all the way through. I was a resident in medical
training in the Los Angeles area in the 1970’s and had a long commute from
Torrance to UCLA for a rotation of 4 months. I had a box of cassette tapes of the
Book of Mormon which were read by a man with a rich, deep male voice. I played
them on a small tape player in my ’67 VW bug as I drove. I still remember
feeling the Spirit and loving the Book as I drove the San Diego Freeway to and
from work. It is a great antidote for road rage! Sometimes I would drive around
the block when I got home just to finish a chapter! It was a wonderful and spiritually
powerful way to experience the Book of Mormon.
Sister Lisa L. Harkness had a
somewhat similar experience listening to the Book of Mormon. She told of her experience
in the Women’s Session of the recent General Conference. She said:
Not long ago, I was listening to
the Book of Mormon. In the last chapter of 2 Nephi, I heard Nephi
say something that I had never read the same way before. All
throughout his record, he teaches and testifies of the “Redeemer,” the “Holy
One of Israel,” the “Lamb of God,” and the “Messiah.” But as he closed his
account, I heard him say these words: “I glory in plainness; I glory in truth;
I glory in my Jesus, for he hath redeemed my soul.” When I heard
these words, my heart rejoiced and I had to listen over and over again. I
recognized and responded to that verse just as I recognize and respond to my
own name. (“Honoring His Name”, Ensign November 2019)
Don’t get bogged down in methodology!
Having made
all of the above suggestions, the most important thing is to not get bogged
down by reading goals, schedules, calculators or different techniques. Don’t
overthink this and make it too hard. Remember, the power is in the Book, not in
any of the aids that help us read it or track our progress. So just start
wherever you are and do the best you can. Don’t beat yourself up for what you don’t
do or because you can’t do it like someone else. We always want to compare
ourselves to someone else (parent, child, sibling, spouse, friend, ward member,
leader, etc.) and seldom if ever feel better for doing so.
In her
article “Have the Greatest Year with the Greatest Book” in the January 2020
issue of the Ensign, Church Magazines staff author, Onnastasia Cole,
gives some excellent suggestions for how to get more out of reading the Book of
Mormon as a family in the coming year. After doing so, she writes, Don’t
overthink it; don’t give up. Family study shouldn’t be complicated. You know
your family’s circumstances and individual needs, so prayerfully consider what
will work best for you and try different approaches. If one week doesn’t go as
planned, try not to get discouraged! Simple seek Heavenly Father’s guidance on
what adjustments to make. Then try again and watch the blessings flow.
Don’t let Satan win!
This is
wonderful advice! Satan doesn’t want you to read the Book of Mormon so he will
throw every obstacle in your path that he can. Don’t let him win. Just say, “Get
thee behind me, Satan!” (Matt. 16:23) ‘Get off my covenant path. I’m going to
follow the Prophet and read the Book of Mormon this year and we’re going to do
our best as a family to do so. And you can’t stop us!’
Most of my life I have just read the Book of Mormon sequentially, but the last few years I've been a bit more creative. I used my iphone to ask Siri for a random number between 1 and 531, and then read that page, or the nearest unread page if I already read that one. I also posted a quote from the page and my thoughts about on social media for a while. More recently, Pres. Nelson's challenge coincided with a gift from Bishop McPhie of a journal edition of the Book of Mormon, with extra wide margins for notes. So I wrote something I learned about the Savior on each page as I read the book. Then I re-read it and transcribed my notes into a document that I shared with my family. Since going to Italy last year for a mission reunion, I've also been reading a chapter a day in Italian.
ReplyDeleteI love these ideas! Usually I just read chronologically, but this year I’ve also decided to start highlighting all the references to and evidences of God’s mercy. I’m only in 2 Nephi and it’s been amazing so far. I’ve also been highlighting ways to access that mercy by acting in faith. It’s been so eye opening to see how acting in faith not only brings blessings, it IS a blessing because it gives us direct access to God’s mercy and love. I’ve already learned so much and I’m really excited to use this method of studying throughout my life with different topics and questions.
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