Sunday, May 2, 2010

Humility: An Important Ingredient to a Person’s Intelligence

Let me preface that what I am about to say is based on nothing but pure speculation. However, let me also say that I think it falls completely in line with LDS Theology, even though I am obviously not some kind of spokesperson for the LDS Faith.
From my reading of The Book of Mormon, it seems like The Book of Heleman and the first part of The Third Book of Nephi seem to focus on the pride theme more than any other section. Recently I was reading in Heleman, Chapter 12, where Mormon gives his famous treatise on Pride. After stating that men are “quick to do iniquity” and “slow to remember the Lord their God”, Mormon compares men to the natural elements of wind, water, earth, etc. and says that these elements are far more obedient than man is (Hel 12:4-5). He then says something that, at first glance, looks like an aside to what he is really talking about. In Heleman 12: 15, he states the following:

And thus, according to his word the aearth goeth back, and it appeareth unto man that the bsun standeth still; yea, and behold, this is so; for surely it is the earth that moveth and not the sun.

I stopped after reading this verse, because I had so many questions going through my head: Why is Mormon going off on astronomy? Was a geocentric view that the earth was the center of the Universe common on the ancient American continent? (It was certainly common for a lengthy period in Europe, given the way philosophers, astronomers, the clergy and many others persecuted Galileo for asserting a Hellenistic view of the Universe.) It then hit me that maybe Mormon was ahead of his time. Maybe he was an incredible scholar in addition to being the Lord’s prophet. It was not that I have ever doubted his intelligence or anything, but the thought just had not occurred to me before. Now that it has, it makes perfect sense. If The Modern-Day Leadership of the Church is composed of men who have been doctors, lawyers, professors, scientists, etc. then why not the same thing in the ancient world?
Finally, maybe it’s not a coincidence that Mormon’s intelligence comes through in a chapter on Pride. I think there’s a very general but still common misconception out there that people who believe in God or belong to organized religion stifle their minds by worshipping a Being more intelligent than themselves and by humbling themselves before him. Yet, it is just the opposite. When men follow God and humbly keep his commandments, their ability to think, analyze, synthesize, and create are enhanced. Whether or not Mormon had this intent in mind when he wrote this chapter, it still serves as a good example of how people’s minds expand when they humbly and consistently recognize the source of all Light and Truth.

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