Difference between revisions of "Jacob 1:1-5"
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Revision as of 02:05, 16 April 2011
The Book of Mormon > Jacob > Chapter 1
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Questions
- What does anxiety mean in the context of v. 5?
- Is a similar anxiety found in other scriptural accounts where revelation is received?
- In v.4, Jacob says that he has been instructed to record the dominant and important parts (heads) of any sacred revelation, preaching, prophecy, etc...He states at the end of the verse that he should do this for the sake of his people (Nephites, I assume) and for Christ's sake. Why does he say that this should be done for Christ's sake, when the Nephites would be the principle beneficiaries of the recorded prophecies?
Lexical notes
Verse 5
The words great anxiety are surprisingly strong and we may wonder if anxiety at the time the Book of Mormon was translated had less edge than it does today. In fact though Webster's 1828 dictionary definition seems to be just as harsh
- concern or solicitude respecting some event, future or uncertain, which disturbs the mind, and keeps it in a state of painful uneasin[ess]. it expresses more than uneasiness or disturbance, and even more than trouble or solicitude. it usually springs from fear or serious apprehension of evil, and involves a suspense respecting an event, and often, a perplexity of mind, to know how to shape our conduct.
Exegesis
Click the edit link above and to the right to add exegesis
Related links
- Click the edit link above and to the right to add related links
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