One thing that the Lord asks prophets to do is to warn about the consequences of sin. For Old Testament prophets, this often meant telling the rulers of mighty kingdoms that they needed to repent. It was a dangerous task, but Isaiah was fearless, and his warnings to the kingdoms of his day—including Israel, Judah, and surrounding nations—were bold (see Isaiah 13–23).
However, Isaiah also had a message of hope. Even though the prophesied destructions did come upon these kingdoms, Isaiah foresaw a chance for restoration and renewal. The Lord would invite His people to return to Him. He would make “the parched ground … become a pool, and the thirsty land springs of water” (Isaiah 35:7). He would perform “a marvellous work and a wonder” (Isaiah 29:14), restoring to Israel the blessings He had promised them. Neither Isaiah nor anyone else alive at that time lived to see this marvelous work. But we are seeing it today. In fact, we are part of it.
Ideas for Learning at Home and at ChurchIn Isaiah’s day, Babylon was a mighty kingdom with a powerful ruler. Now Babylon is ancient history. So why is Isaiah’s message to Babylon, in Isaiah 13–14, important to us today? Because Babylon symbolizes pride, greed, and sin, things that still surround us today. Think about this symbolism as you read Isaiah 13:1–11, 19–22; 14:1–20. You might consider questions like these:
What similarities do you see between the pride of the Babylonian king and the pride of Satan? (see Isaiah 14:4–20; Moses 4:1–4). What warnings do you find for yourself in these verses?
How does the Savior provide “rest from thy sorrow, and from thy fear”? (Isaiah 14:3).
The teachings of Isaiah often refer to the Savior’s mission, including His atoning sacrifice, Resurrection, and Second Coming. What aspects of His mission come to mind as you read these verses: Isaiah 22:22–23; 24:21–23; 25:6–8; 26:19; 28:16? What other passages do you find that remind you of the Savior?
Give learners opportunities to bear testimony of Jesus Christ. “To be a teacher of Jesus Christ’s gospel means to help others understand and rely on His teachings, redeeming power, and perfect love” (Teaching in the Savior’s Way, 8). One simple way to do that every time you teach is to ask a question like “What did you find in the scriptures this week that taught you something about the Savior?” Then let learners share their experiences and strengthen each other’s faith.
In His mercy, the Lord sent Isaiah to warn the covenant people that they were straying from Him. See if you can find the spiritual warning signs of this in Isaiah 24:5; 29:13; 30:8–12. Why are these attitudes and actions spiritually dangerous?
To warn about the consequences of turning away from the Lord, Isaiah used some memorable comparisons. As you study them, ask yourself how turning away from the Lord is like:
A sad, empty earth (Isaiah 24:1–12).
Drunkenness (Isaiah 28:7–8).
Hunger and thirst (Isaiah 29:7–10).
A broken wall or vessel (Isaiah 30:13–14).
Why is it important to you to stay close to the Lord?
Have you ever lost something that you thought you would never find again? Or maybe something broke, and you worried that it could never be repaired. When we turn away from the Lord, Satan wants us to think that we can never return or be healed. However, Isaiah described some of the marvelous things the Lord will do to help us return to Him. What do you learn from Isaiah 29:13–24; 30:18–26; 35 about the Lord, His love, and His power? Perhaps you could find a phrase in these passages that gives you hope when you need healing. You could also look in Sister Amy A. Wright’s message “Christ Heals That Which Is Broken” (Liahona, May 2022, 81–84).
One way the Lord manifests His power and mercy is through the Restoration of His gospel. Isaiah 29 contains several passages that have parallels with events of the Restoration. For example:
Compare Isaiah 29:11–12 with 2 Nephi 27:6–26 and Joseph Smith—History 1:63–65.
Compare Isaiah 29:13–14 with Doctrine and Covenants 4 and Joseph Smith—History 1:17–19.
Compare Isaiah 29:18–24 with the title page of the Book of Mormon.
In your opinion, why are “marvellous” and “wonder” (Isaiah 29:14) good words to describe the Lord restoring His gospel? How can you help fulfill the prophecies about the Restoration? For ideas, look in Elder Gerrit W. Gong’s message “All Nations, Kindreds, and Tongues” (Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2020, 38–41).
See also “The Restoration of the Fulness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ: A Bicentennial Proclamation to the World” (Gospel Library); “The Morning Breaks,” Hymns, no 1.
For more, see this month’s issues of the Liahona and For the Strength of Youth magazines.
As teachers of Jesus Christ’s gospel, we help others understand and rely on His teachings, power, and love.
Nothing you do as a teacher will bless learners more than helping them know Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ and feel Their love (see John 17:3). Think of experiences that have helped you come to know and love Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. What have you done to learn about Their attributes, power, and love? How has your love for Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ brought you joy? Then think of what Their love and power can do for each person you teach. (See Alma 26:16; Moses 5:11.)
Our ultimate goal in this life is to become more like our Heavenly Father and return to Him. The way we accomplish that goal is by coming unto Jesus Christ (see John 14:6). This is why, as the prophet Nephi taught, “we talk of Christ, we rejoice in Christ” (2 Nephi 25:26).
Every child of God needs the light and truth that comes from the Savior and can choose to respond to it. To be a teacher of Jesus Christ’s gospel means to help others understand and rely on His teachings, redeeming power, and perfect love. Consider how the following ideas can help you inspire others to better know Jesus Christ and follow Him.
It’s good to know about the Savior’s love, power, and mercy, but we also need to experience it. Seeing how He blessed and healed people in the scriptures helps us develop greater faith that He can bless and heal us. For example, learning about the experiences of Daniel is incomplete if it doesn’t inspire us to trust the Lord when we face our own figurative den of lions.
As you help learners recognize the Lord’s “tender mercies” (1 Nephi 1:20), both in the scriptures and in their own experiences, they will feel and know that the Lord is with them and will lovingly stand by them (see Doctrine and Covenants 68:6). They will see and feel the reality of the Lord’s love and mercy in their personal needs and circumstances.
Teachers can help learners experience the Savior’s love, power, and mercy.
The purpose of teaching and learning about Jesus Christ is to help each person draw closer to Him and our Heavenly Father. Help the people you teach to never lose sight of that purpose. Encourage them to strengthen their relationship with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ by studying the scriptures, repenting continually, speaking with the Father in prayer, and testifying of the Father and Son. Teach learners by word and example how making and keeping covenants binds us to Them. Help them know how precious and beloved we are to Them. Strengthen their faith that Jesus Christ, by virtue of His perfect Atonement, is the only way back to our Father. Provide opportunities for learners to receive a witness from the Holy Ghost, “which beareth record of the Father and the Son” (Moses 5:9).
Ultimately, learning about Jesus Christ inspires us to become more like Him. But becoming like Him happens only as we act in faith, both in and out of class, making intentional choices to follow His example and receive His grace. Invite learners to seek the help of the Holy Ghost to identify ways they can become more like the Savior. Offer guidance and support as learners make striving to be like Him a lifetime pursuit.
Jacob taught that “all things which have been given of God from the beginning of the world” can teach us about Jesus Christ (2 Nephi 11:4). Your teaching can be one of those things. Place Jesus Christ at the center of each teaching and learning experience. As you and the learners “talk of Christ, … rejoice in Christ, … preach of Christ” (2 Nephi 25:26), the Holy Ghost can plant a witness of the Savior deep in each person’s mind and heart. As you help your learners come to know Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ for themselves, they will be more likely to turn to Them for help, hope, and healing throughout their lives.
In this video, a Sunday School teacher invites learners to share what they are learning about Jesus Christ from their personal scripture study.
By Amy A. Wright
Second Counselor in the Primary General Presidency
A few years ago, at a family gathering, my then-eight-year-old nephew William asked our oldest son, Briton, if he would like to play ball with him. Briton enthusiastically responded, “Yes! I would love to!” After they had been playing for quite some time, a ball got away from Briton, and he accidentally broke one of his grandparents’ antique pots.
Briton felt awful. As he began picking up the broken pieces, William walked over to his cousin and lovingly patted him on the back. He then comforted, “Don’t worry, Briton. I broke something at Grandma and Grandpa’s house once, and Grandma put her arm around me and said, ‘It’s OK, William. You are only five.’”
To which Briton responded, “But, William, I’m 23!”
We can learn much from the scriptures about how our Savior, Jesus Christ, will help us successfully navigate the things in our lives that are broken, no matter our age. He can heal broken relationships with God, broken relationships with others, and broken parts of ourselves.
While the Savior was teaching in the temple, a woman was brought to Him by the scribes and Pharisees. We do not know her full story, just that she was “taken in adultery.” Often the scriptures give only a small portion of someone’s life, and based on that portion, we sometimes tend to exalt or condemn. No one’s life can be understood by one magnificent moment or one regrettable public disappointment. The purpose of these scriptural accounts is to help us see that Jesus Christ was the answer then, and He is the answer now. He knows our complete story and exactly what we suffer, as well as our capabilities and vulnerabilities.
Christ’s response to this precious daughter of God was “Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more.” Another way to say “go, and sin no more” could be “go forth and change.” The Savior was inviting her to repent: to change her behavior, her associations, the way she felt about herself, her heart.
Because of Christ, our decision to “go forth and change” can also allow us to “go forth and heal,” for He is the source of healing all that is broken in our lives. As the great Mediator and Advocate with the Father, Christ sanctifies and restores broken relationships—most important, our relationship with God.
The Joseph Smith Translation makes it clear that the woman did follow the Savior’s counsel and changed her life: “And the woman glorified God from that hour, and believed on his name.” It is unfortunate that we do not know her name or other details about her life after this moment because it would have required great determination, humility, and faith in Jesus Christ for her to repent and change. What we do know is she was a woman who “believed on his name” with the understanding that she was not beyond the reach of His infinite and eternal sacrifice.
In Luke chapter 15 we read a parable of a man who had two sons. The younger son asked his father for his inheritance, took his journey into a far country, and wasted his substance with riotous living.
“And when he had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in want.
“And he went and joined himself to a citizen of that country; and he sent him into his fields to feed swine.
“And he would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him.
“And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of my father’s have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!
“I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before thee,
“And am no more worthy to be called thy son: make me as one of thy hired servants.
“And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him.”
The fact that the father ran to his son, I believe, is significant. The personal hurt that the son had inflicted upon his father was surely deep and profound. Likewise, the father may have been genuinely embarrassed by his son’s actions.
So why didn’t the father wait for his son to apologize? Why didn’t he hold out for an offering of restitution and reconciliation before extending forgiveness and love? This is something I have often pondered.
The Lord teaches us that forgiving others is a universal commandment: “I, the Lord, will forgive whom I will forgive, but of you it is required to forgive all men.” Extending forgiveness can take tremendous courage and humility. It can also take time. It requires us to put our faith and trust in the Lord as we assume accountability for the condition of our hearts. Here lies the significance and power of our agency.
With the depiction of this father in the parable of the prodigal son, the Savior emphasized that forgiveness is one of the noblest gifts we can give one another and most specifically ourselves. Unburdening our hearts through forgiveness isn’t always easy, but through the enabling power of Jesus Christ, it is possible.
In Acts chapter 3 we learn about a man who was born lame and “whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful, to ask alms of them that entered into the temple.”
The lame beggar was over 40 years old and had spent his entire life in a seemingly never-ending state of wanting and waiting, for he was dependent on the generosity of others.
One day he saw “Peter and John about to go into the temple [and] asked an alms.
“And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us.
“And he gave heed unto them, expecting to receive something of them.
“Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk.
“And he took him by the right hand, and lifted him up: and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength.
“And he leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking, and leaping, and praising God.”
Oftentimes we can find ourselves, like the lame beggar at the gate of the temple, patiently—or sometimes impatiently—“wait[ing] upon the Lord.” Waiting to be healed physically or emotionally. Waiting for answers that penetrate the deepest part of our hearts. Waiting for a miracle.
Waiting upon the Lord can be a sacred place—a place of polishing and refining where we can come to know the Savior in a deeply personal way. Waiting upon the Lord may also be a place where we find ourselves asking, “O God, where art thou?”—a place where spiritual perseverance requires us to exercise faith in Christ by intentionally choosing Him again and again and again. I know this place, and I understand this type of waiting.
I spent countless hours at a cancer treatment facility, united in my suffering with many who were yearning to be healed. Some lived; others did not. I learned in a profound way that deliverance from our trials is different for each of us, and therefore our focus should be less about the way in which we are delivered and more about the Deliverer Himself. Our emphasis should always be on Jesus Christ!
Exercising faith in Christ means trusting not only in God’s will but also in His timing. For He knows exactly what we need and precisely when we need it. When we submit to the will of the Lord, we will ultimately receive substantially more than that which we had desired.
My dear friends, we all have something in our lives that is broken that needs to be mended, fixed, or healed. As we turn to the Savior, as we align our hearts and minds with Him, as we repent, He comes to us “with healing in his wings,” puts His arms lovingly around us, and says, “It’s OK. You are only 5—or 16, 23, 48, 64, 91. We can fix this together!”
I testify that there is nothing in your life that is broken that is beyond the curative, redeeming, and enabling power of Jesus Christ. In the sacred and holy name of He who is mighty to heal, Jesus Christ, amen.
Joseph Smith Translation, John 8:11 (in John 8:11, footnote c).
See Luke 15:11–13.
See Acts 4:22.
By Elder Gerrit W. Gong
Of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
Dear brothers and sisters, I recently officiated in a temple sealing, following COVID-19 guidelines. With the bride and groom, both faithful returned missionaries, were their parents and all their siblings. This was not easy. The bride is the ninth of ten children. Her nine siblings sat in order, oldest to youngest, socially distanced of course.
The family had sought to be good neighbors wherever they lived. However, one community had been unwelcoming—because, the bride’s mother said, their family were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
The family did everything to make friends at school, contribute, and be accepted, but to no avail. The family prayed and prayed hearts would soften.
One night, the family felt their prayers were answered, though in a very unexpected way. Their house caught fire and burned to the ground. But something else happened. The fire softened their neighbors’ hearts.
Their neighbors and local school gathered clothes, shoes, and other necessities needed by the family, who had lost everything. Kindness opened understanding. It was not the way the family hoped or expected their prayers to be answered. However, they express gratitude for what they learned through hard experiences and unexpected answers to heartfelt prayers.
Truly, for those with faithful hearts and eyes to see, the Lord’s tender mercies are manifest amidst life’s challenges. Faithfully met challenges and sacrifice do bring the blessings of heaven. In this mortality, we may lose or wait for some things for a time, but in the end we will find what matters most. That is His promise.
Our 2020 bicentennial proclamation begins with the profoundly inclusive promise that “God loves His children in every nation of the world.” To each of us in every nation, kindred, tongue, and people, God promises, covenants, and invites us to come partake of His abundant joy and goodness.
God’s love for all people is affirmed throughout scripture. That love encompasses the Abrahamic covenant, gathering His scattered children, and His plan of happiness in our lives.
In the household of faith there are to be no strangers, no foreigners, no rich and poor, no outside “others.” As “fellowcitizens with the saints,” we are invited to change the world for the better, from the inside out, one person, one family, one neighborhood at a time.
This happens when we live and share the gospel. Early in this dispensation, the Prophet Joseph received a remarkable prophecy that Heavenly Father desires everyone everywhere to discover God’s love and experience His power to grow and change.
That prophecy was received here, at the Smith family log home in Palmyra, New York.
Completed in 1998, the Smith home is reconstructed on its original foundation. The second-story bedroom occupies the same 18- by 30- by 10-foot (5.5 by 9 by 3m) physical space where Moroni, as a glorious messenger from God, came to the young Joseph on the evening of September 21, 1823.
You remember what the Prophet Joseph recounted:
“[Moroni] said … God had a work for me to do; and that my name should be had for good and evil among all nations, kindreds, and tongues. …
“[Moroni] said there was a book deposited, … that the fulness of the everlasting Gospel was contained in it.”
Here we pause. We worship God the Eternal Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, not the Prophet Joseph nor any mortal man or woman.
Yet consider how the prophecies God gives His servants are fulfilled. Some are fulfilled earlier, some later, but all are fulfilled. As we hearken to the Lord’s spirit of prophecy, we can become, in our own way, part of the fulfillment of His prophecies and promises—part of the gospel blessing the world.
In 1823, Joseph was an unknown 17-year-old boy living in an obscure village in a newly independent country. Unless it were true, how would he imagine to say he would be an instrument in God’s work and translate by God’s gift and power sacred scripture that would become known everywhere?
Yet, because it is true, you and I can witness that prophecy being fulfilled even as we are invited to help bring it to pass.
Brothers and sisters, across the world, each of us participating in this October 2020 general conference is among the nations, kindreds, and tongues spoken of.
Today, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints live in 196 nations and territories, with 3,446 Church stakes in 90 of them. We represent both geographic breadth and centers of strength.
In 1823, who would have imagined that in the year 2020 there would be three countries each with more than a million members of this Church—the United States, Mexico, and Brazil?
Or 23 countries each with more than 100,000 members of the Church—three in North America, fourteen in Central and South America, one in Europe, four in Asia, and one in Africa?
President Russell M. Nelson calls the Book of Mormon “a miraculous miracle.” Its witnesses testify, “Be it known unto all nations, kindreds, tongues, and people.” Today, general conference is available in 100 languages. President Nelson has testified of Jesus Christ and His restored gospel in 138 nations and counting.
Beginning with 5,000 printed copies of the 1830 first edition of the Book of Mormon, some 192 million copies of all or part of the Book of Mormon have been published in 112 languages. Book of Mormon translations are also widely available digitally. Current Book of Mormon translations include most of the 23 world languages spoken by 50 million people or more, collectively the native tongues of some 4.1 billion people.
By small and simple means—in which we are each invited to participate—great things are brought to pass.
For example, at a stake conference in Monroe, Utah, population 2,200, I asked how many had served missions. Nearly every hand went up. In recent years, from that one stake, 564 missionaries have served in all 50 U.S. states and 53 countries—on every continent except Antarctica.
Speaking of Antarctica, even in Ushuaia, at the southern tip of Argentina, I saw prophecy being fulfilled as our missionaries shared the restored gospel of Jesus Christ in a place called “the end of the earth.”
The mural formed by the covers of our four volumes of Saints depicts a global tapestry of the fruits of gospel living coming to faithful Saints everywhere. Our Church history is anchored in the lived testimony and gospel journey of each member, including Mary Whitmer, the faithful sister to whom Moroni showed the Book of Mormon plates.
Coming in January 2021, our three new global Church magazines—the Friend, For the Strength of Youth, and the Liahona—invite all to belong and share experiences and testimony in our worldwide community of faith.
Brothers and sisters, as we increase our faith in Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ, receive the blessings found in living restored gospel truths and sacred covenants, and study, ponder, and share about the ongoing Restoration, we participate in fulfilling prophecy.
We are changing ourselves and the world in a gospel pattern that blesses lives everywhere.
An African sister says, “My husband’s priesthood service makes him more patient and kind. And I am becoming a better wife and mother.”
A now-respected international business consultant in Central America says before he discovered God’s restored gospel, he lived aimlessly on the street. Now he and his family have found identity, purpose, and strength.
A young boy in South America raises chickens and sells their eggs to help buy windows for the house his family is building. He pays his tithing first. He will literally see the windows of heaven open.
In Four Corners, a community in the southwestern United States, a Native American family grows a beautiful rose bush to blossom in the desert, symbolic of gospel faith and self-reliance.
A survivor of bitter civil war, a brother in Southeast Asia despaired that life had no meaning. He found hope in a dream in which a former classmate held a sacrament tray and testified of saving ordinances and the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
Heavenly Father invites us everywhere to feel His love, to learn and grow through education, honorable work, self-reliant service, and patterns of goodness and happiness we find in His restored Church.
As we come to trust God, sometimes through pleading in our darkest, loneliest, most uncertain moments, we learn He knows us better and loves us more than we know or love ourselves.
This is why we need God’s help to create lasting justice, equality, fairness, and peace in our homes and communities. Our truest, deepest, most authentic narrative, place, and belonging come when we feel God’s redeeming love, seek grace and miracles through His Son’s Atonement, and establish lasting relationships by sacred covenants.
Religious goodness and wisdom are needed in today’s cluttered, noisy, polluted world. How else can we refresh, inspire, and edify the human spirit?
Planting trees in Haiti is only one among hundreds of examples of people coming together to do good. The local community, including 1,800 members of our Church, which donated the trees, gathered to plant nearly 25,000 trees. This multiyear reforestation project has already planted over 121,000 trees. It anticipates planting tens of thousands more.
This united effort provides shade, conserves soil, abates future floods. It beautifies neighborhoods, builds community, satisfies taste, and nourishes the soul. If you ask Haitians who will harvest the fruit from these trees, they say, “Whoever is hungry.”
Some 80 percent of the world’s population are religiously affiliated. Religious communities readily respond to immediate needs after natural disasters as well as to chronic needs for food, shelter, education, literacy, and employment training. Across the world, our members, friends, and Church help communities support refugees and provide water, sanitation, handicap mobility, and vision care—one person, one village, one tree at a time. Everywhere, we seek to be good parents and good citizens, to contribute in our neighborhoods and societies, including through Latter-day Saint Charities.
God gives us moral agency—and moral accountability. Declares the Lord, “I, the Lord God, make you free, therefore [you] are free indeed.” In proclaiming “liberty to the captives,” the Lord promises His Atonement and gospel path can break temporal and spiritual bonds. Mercifully, this redemptive freedom extends to those who have passed from mortality.
Some years ago, a priest in Central America told me he was studying Latter-day Saint “baptism for deceased persons.” “It does seem just,” the priest said, “that God would offer every person opportunity to receive baptism, no matter when or where they lived, except little children, who ‘are alive in Christ.’ The Apostle Paul,” the priest noted, “speaks of the dead awaiting baptism and resurrection.” Vicarious temple ordinances promise all nations, kindreds, and tongues that no one need “remain a slave of death, of hell, or of the grave.”
As we discover God, sometimes unexpected answers to prayers take us from the street, bring us to community, chase darkness from our souls, and guide us to find spiritual refuge and belonging in the goodness of His covenants and abiding love.
Great things often begin small, but God’s miracles are manifest daily. How grateful we are for the supernal gift of the Holy Ghost, the Atonement of Jesus Christ, and His revealed doctrine, ordinances, and covenants found in His restored Church, called in His name.
May we joyfully accept God’s invitation to receive and help fulfill His promised and prophesied blessings in all nations, kindreds, and tongues, I pray in the sacred and holy name of Jesus Christ, amen.
“All your losses will be made up to you in the resurrection, provided you continue faithful” (Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith [2007], 51).
See Mosiah 2:41.
“The Restoration of the Fulness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ: A Bicentennial Proclamation to the World,” ChurchofJesusChrist.org; see also, for example, Alma 26:37.
See Revelation 14:6; 1 Nephi 19:17; 22:28; 2 Nephi 30:8; Mosiah 3:20; 15:28; Alma 37:4–6; 3 Nephi 28:29; Doctrine and Covenants 42:58; 133:37.
See John 3:16–17; 15:12; Romans 8:35, 38–39.
See 1 Nephi 22:3, 9; Doctrine and Covenants 45:24–25, 69, 71; 64:42.
See Ephesians 2:19.
A few hundred yards from the Smith home back door is a grove of trees, which became our Sacred Grove “the morning of a beautiful, clear day, early in the spring of eighteen hundred and twenty” (Joseph Smith—History 1:14).
Being in the specific, physical location of a known historical event can powerfully connect time and place. Still, our testimony of the sacred events surrounding Moroni’s appearance to the young Prophet Joseph is spiritual.
Church statistics as of September 3, 2020; “nations and territories” include entities such as Guam, Puerto Rico, and American Samoa.
The 23 countries are the United States, Mexico, Brazil, the Philippines, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Guatemala, Ecuador, Bolivia, Colombia, Canada, the United Kingdom, Honduras, Nigeria, Venezuela, Australia, Dominican Republic, Japan, El Salvador, New Zealand, Uruguay, and Nicaragua. Australia and New Zealand are included in the four countries in Asia with over 100,000 members. Paraguay has over 96,000 Church members and may be next to join the 100,000-member group.
Russell M. Nelson, “The Book of Mormon: A Miraculous Miracle” (address given at the seminar for new mission presidents, June 23, 2016).
“The Testimony of Three Witnesses” and “The Testimony of Eight Witnesses,” Book of Mormon.
Additional translations continue the promise that every man and woman will “hear the fulness of the gospel in his [or her] own tongue, and … language” (Doctrine and Covenants 90:11).
The titles of the four volumes of Saints come from the inspired testimony declaration of the Prophet Joseph in the Wentworth letter—The Standard of Truth; No Unhallowed Hand; Boldly, Nobly and Independent; and Sounded in Every Ear.
See Saints: The Story of the Church of Jesus Christ in the Latter Days, vol. 1, The Standard of Truth, 1815–1846 (2018), 70–71.
See First Presidency letter, Aug. 14, 2020.
See Gerrit W. Gong, “Seven Ways Religious Inputs and Values Contribute to Practical, Principle-Based Policy Approaches” (address given at the G20 Interfaith Forum, June 8, 2019), newsroom.ChurchofJesusChrist.org.
See Jason Swensen, “LDS Church Celebrates 30 Years in Haiti by Planting Thousands of Trees,” Deseret News, May 1, 2013, deseretnews.com.
See Pew Research Center, “The Global Religious Landscape,” Dec. 18, 2012, pewforum.org. This “comprehensive demographic study of more than 230 countries and territories … estimates that there are 5.8 billion religiously affiliated adults and children around the globe, representing 84% of the 2010 world population of 6.9 billion.”
Religious virtues and values anchor and enrich civil society; inspire community, civil engagement, social cohesion, service, and volunteerism; and foster justice, reconciliation, and forgiveness, including helping us to know when and how to hold on and to let go, to know when and what to remember and to forget.
In addition to their contributions to Latter-day Saint Charities (see latterdaysaintcharities.org), which serves as the humanitarian arm of the Church, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints join their neighbors and communities in giving of time and means through service in JustServe or Helping Hands projects (see justserve.org and ChurchofJesusChrist.org/topics/humanitarian-service/helping-hands) and through the donation of fast offerings (see “Fasting and Fast Offerings,” Gospel Topics, topics.ChurchofJesusChrist.org). Each of these efforts takes the significant generosity of Church members and friends to bless thousands across the world.
Isaiah 61:1; see also John 8:36; Galatians 5:1; Doctrine and Covenants 88:86.
This hope of freedom includes those seeking to overcome debilitating habits or addictions, self-defeating behaviors, intergenerational guilt, or any sorrow.
Moroni 8:12; see also Doctrine and Covenants 137:10.
See 1 Corinthians 15:29.
“While of These Emblems We Partake,” Hymns, no. 173, verse 3.
Text:Parley P. Pratt, 1807–1857
Scripture Helps
Isaiah warned the people of Jerusalem and its neighbors of the destruction that was coming if they did not repent. He also foretold the overthrow of both the Assyrian and Babylonian empires. He taught about the Great Apostasy, the Restoration of the gospel, the coming forth of the Book of Mormon, and the gathering of Israel in the last days. He prophesied that the wicked would be destroyed and the righteous would receive great blessings at the Savior’s return.
Note: The citation of a source not published by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints does not imply that it or its author is endorsed by the Church or represents the official position of the Church.
The word burden can refer to a “prophetic oracle” or “prophetic pronouncement.” The “burden of Babylon” is the first of a series of judgments Isaiah pronounced against various nations that opposed God and His people. In Isaiah’s time, Babylon was still under the dominion of the Assyrian empire. Yet Isaiah foresaw Babylon’s rise to power and its oppression of the Kingdom of Judah. He also prophesied of Babylon’s destruction at the hands of the Medes and Persians.
Like many of Isaiah’s prophecies, this one has multiple fulfillments. The scriptures often use Babylon as a symbol of the wickedness of the world. The Lord has declared that prior to His Second Coming, “Babylon the great … shall fall.”
“The day of the Lord” is a phrase sometimes used by Old Testament prophets to describe a particular time when the Lord brings judgment to the wicked and salvation to the righteous. The phrase finds its ultimate fulfillment in the Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
Part of Isaiah’s prophecy about the downfall of Babylon contains a mock lament for Babylon’s king. Many of Isaiah’s words about the fallen king are also true of Satan. Isaiah referred to the king as “Lucifer, son of the morning.” The name Lucifer means “Shining One” or “Lightbearer.” Latter-day revelation teaches that Satan was known as Lucifer in the premortal world.
Isaiah 22 contains Isaiah’s prophecies about two men—Shebna and Eliakim—who served King Hezekiah. Shebna, the steward of Hezekiah’s household, had become prideful about Jerusalem’s wealth. Isaiah prophesied that Shebna would be taken captive by enemies and that much of Jerusalem’s treasure would be taken away. His position would then be given to Eliakim.
Isaiah’s prophecies about Eliakim parallel many aspects of Jesus Christ and His Atonement. For example, Isaiah said that Eliakim would have the government committed into his hand, be a father to his people, and hold the key to the house of David and that the glory of his father’s house would be upon him.
A particularly significant prophecy was that Eliakim would be fastened “as a nail in a sure place,” indicating that his position and power would be secure. The phrase “nail in a sure place” can remind us of the Savior’s Crucifixion. It is also a symbol of Jesus Christ Himself. President Jeffrey R. Holland explained: “In terms of our salvation, Christ is the Nail in a Sure Place—never failing, never faltering, ever the most certain and reliable force in eternity. For this we surely ‘hang upon him all the glory of his father’s house’ [Isaiah 22:24].”
Leviathan is often associated with a cosmic sea monster from Canaanite mythology. It is sometimes used in the Old Testament as a symbol of evil and chaos. In Isaiah 27, leviathan appears to symbolize the nations that opposed God and His people during Isaiah’s time. Ultimately, Jesus Christ will triumph over leviathan—a symbol of Satan—and all wickedness at His Second Coming.
The phrase “line upon line, precept upon precept” is used three times in Restoration scripture. In each case, it illustrates how God imparts truth gradually and incrementally. While it is possible that this same meaning applies to Isaiah 28:9–13, it is important to note that biblical scholars have long found these verses difficult to interpret and translate. One challenge is determining whether Isaiah is speaking or if it is the drunken priests and prophets, who are mocking him. Additionally, the King James phrase “precept upon precept; line upon line” is translated from Hebrew terms that may not even be real words; nonsense words could have been used to illustrate how truth can seem like gibberish to those who are unwilling to listen.
Isaiah referred to Jerusalem as “Ariel.” This name could mean “lion of God,” a symbol for the tribe of Judah. It might also mean “altar hearth.” Isaiah may have used this name to imply that God’s destruction of Jerusalem would turn the city into nothing more than a stone altar on which sacrifices have been burned.
Isaiah prophesied that Jerusalem would be invaded and conquered and Jerusalem’s voice would no longer be a voice among the living. Instead, its inhabitants would “speak” or “whisper” out of their graves. The phrase “familiar spirit” comes from a Hebrew word that refers to a ghost or spirit of the deceased. By saying that Jerusalem’s voice would be as one with “a familiar spirit,” Isaiah may have been referring to a common ancient belief that the spirits of the dead could communicate with the living through faint sounds that could be understood by a spiritual medium.
The prophet Nephi likened Isaiah’s words to his own people, whose words would literally come forth out of the ground. He prophesied that after their destruction, the Nephites would speak “out of the ground” and “whisper out of the dust.” President Russell M. Nelson asked, “Could any words be more descriptive of the Book of Mormon, coming as it did ‘out of the ground’ to ‘whisper out of the dust’ to people of our day?”
Anciently, official documents were often written on scrolls made of papyrus, which were rolled up and sealed. The seal was made from soft wax or clay, into which a ring or signet was pressed. One purpose of a seal was to prevent any unauthorized person from reading the document. Isaiah likely used the imagery of a sealed scroll to illustrate how his revelations were incomprehensible to the people of Judah because of their spiritual blindness.
Another significant fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy occurred in our dispensation. In February 1828, Martin Harris traveled to New York City with a transcription of some characters from the Book of Mormon plates. He intended to show them to experts in ancient languages. One scholar he spoke with was Charles Anthon, a professor of Latin and Greek. After examining the characters, Professor Anthon gave Martin a certificate verifying their authenticity.
However, after learning that the plates had been delivered to Joseph Smith by an angel, Professor Anthon tore the certificate into pieces. He told Martin that if Joseph wanted the plates translated, he should bring them to New York City and let a scholar translate them. When Martin explained that a portion of the plates were sealed and that Joseph was not allowed to show them to anyone, Professor Anthon replied, “I cannot read a sealed book.” Martin and Joseph later spoke of the visit to Anthon as a fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy.
The latter-day fulfillment of Isaiah’s prophecy includes the Restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ and the coming forth of the Book of Mormon. Elder Ronald A. Rasband taught: “Ancient prophets of God, when moved upon by the Holy Ghost, prophesied of the Restoration and what was to come in our day, the last dispensation and the fulness of times. The very work ‘fired the souls’ of the early seers [Teachings of Presidents of the Church: Joseph Smith (2007), 515]. Through generations of time, they foretold, dreamed, envisioned, and prophesied of the future of God’s kingdom on earth, what Isaiah called ‘a marvellous work and a wonder’ [Isaiah 29:14].”
Toward the end of her life, Emma Smith, who briefly served as scribe for Joseph as he translated the Book of Mormon, shared how the coming forth of the Book of Mormon was a marvelous work and a wonder:
“[Joseph] had neither manuscript nor book to read from [as he was translating]. …
“If he had had anything of the kind he could not have concealed it from me. …
“Joseph Smith … could neither write nor dictate a coherent and well-worded letter; let alone dictating a book like the Book of Mormon. And, though I was an active participant in the scenes that transpired, … it is marvelous to me, ‘a marvel and a wonder,’ as much so as to any one else. …
“My belief is that the Book of Mormon is of divine authenticity—I have not the slightest doubt of it. I am satisfied that no man could have dictated the writing of the manuscripts unless he was inspired; for, when acting as his scribe, [Joseph] would dictate to me hour after hour; and when returning after meals, or after interruptions, he would at once begin where he had left off, without either seeing the manuscript or having any portion of it read to him. This was a usual thing for him to do. It would have been improbable that a learned man could do this; and, for one so ignorant and unlearned as he was, it was simply impossible.”
Isaiah 35 is a prophecy of the redemption and restoration of God’s covenant people. As part of this redemption, Isaiah prophesied that “the desert shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose.” This imagery symbolizes not only God’s healing of the land but also the spiritual renewal of the house of Israel. At various points in history, Israel’s spiritual state resembled a barren and desolate wilderness. But through the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, Israel will once again flourish.
Isaiah also prophesied that the Lord would provide a path for scattered Israel to return to their promised lands. He called this path a “highway” or the “way of holiness.” In our day the “way of holiness” is often referred to as the “covenant path.” President Russell M. Nelson taught, “The covenant path is the only path that leads to exaltation and eternal life.”
Ronald A. Rasband, “Right Before Our Eyes,” Liahona, May 2025, 13–17
Ronald A. Rasband, “Fulfillment of Prophecy,” Ensign or Liahona, May 2020, 75–78
Ulisses Soares, “The Coming Forth of the Book of Mormon,” Ensign or Liahona, May 2020, 32–35
Neal A. Maxwell, “By the Gift and Power of God,” Ensign, Jan. 1997, 36–41
D. Todd Christofferson, “Why the Covenant Path,” Liahona, May 2021, 116–19
Isaiah’s Vision of the Destruction of Babylon, by Paul Gustave Doré
Martin Harris and Professor Anthon, by William Whitaker
Tremper Longman III and Mark L. Strauss, eds., The Baker Expository Dictionary of Biblical Words (2023), “Oracles,” 565.
See Isaiah 15:1; 17:1; 19:1; 21:11, 13; 23:1; Donald W. Parry and others, Understanding Isaiah (1998), 130, note on Isaiah 13:1.
See Isaiah 14:2–6.
See Isaiah 13:11–17. See also Parry and others, Understanding Isaiah, 137–38, note on Isaiah 13:17.
See Doctrine and Covenants 133:14. See also Guide to the Scriptures, “Babel, Babylon,” Gospel Library.
Doctrine and Covenants 1:16. See also Isaiah 13:11; 21:9; Revelation 18:2–4, 10, 20–21; Doctrine and Covenants 133:5–7, 14–15.
See Earl D. Radmacher and others, eds., NKJV Study Bible, 3rd ed. (2018), 977, note on Isaiah 2:12. Examples of how this phrase is used include Isaiah 2:12; Jeremiah 46:10; Ezekiel 30:3; Joel 2:1; and Malachi 4:5.
For example, compare Isaiah 14:12–15 with Moses 4:1–4. See also Aaron P. Schade and Matthew L. Bowen, The Book of Moses: From the Ancient of Days to the Latter Days (2021), 168–71.
Guide to the Scriptures, “Lucifer,” Gospel Library. The name “Lucifer” only appears in scripture in Isaiah 14:12; 2 Nephi 24:12; and Doctrine and Covenants 76:26.
See Bible Dictionary, “Eliakim.”
See Isaiah 22:15–20.
See Shon D. Hopkin, “Christ, Covenants and the Caph,” in The Gospel of Jesus Christ in the Old Testament (2009), 143–46. See also Terry B. Ball, “Isaiah and the Messiah,” in Jesus Christ: Son of God, Savior, ed. Paul H. Peterson and others (2002), 87–89. Eliakim’s name means “God shall cause to arise” (see Isaiah 22:20, footnote a).
See Isaiah 22:21–22. Compare Isaiah 9:6; Philippians 2:5–11; Revelation 3:7.
See Kerry Muhlestein, Learning to Love Isaiah (2021), 191, note on Isaiah 22:23.
Jeffrey R. Holland, Witness for His Names (2019), 113.
See Harold W. Attridge and others, eds., The HarperCollins Study Bible: New Revised Standard Version, Including Apocryphal/Deuterocanonical Books (2006), 945, note on Isaiah 27:1. See also “Job 40:15–32; 41:1–34. What are Behemoth and Leviathan?”
See Kenneth L. Barker and others, eds., NIV Study Bible, Fully Revised Edition (2020), 1191, note on Isaiah 27:1.
See Parry and others, Understanding Isaiah, 241, note on Isaiah 27:1.
See Terry B. Ball, “‘Precept upon Precept, Line upon Line’: An Approach to Understanding Isaiah 28:7–13,” in Prophets and Prophecies of the Old Testament, ed. Aaron P. Schade and others (2017), 79–80.
See Muhlestein, Learning to Love Isaiah, 231–32, note on Isaiah 28:9.
See Adele Berlin and Marc Zvi Brettler, eds., The Jewish Study Bible, 2nd ed. (2014), 822, note on Isaiah 29:1.
See Genesis 49:9.
See Muhlestein, Learning to Love Isaiah, 242, note on Isaiah 29:1–2.
See Robert A. Cloward, “Isaiah 29 and the Book of Mormon,” in Isaiah in the Book of Mormon, ed. Donald W. Parry and John W. Welch (1998), 193.
See Parry and others, Understanding Isaiah, 261–62, note on Isaiah 29:4.
See Robert Alter, The Hebrew Bible: A Translation with Commentary (2019), 2:713, note on Isaiah 29:4. See also Terry B. Ball, “Isaiah and the Latter-day Temple,” in An Eye of Faith: Essays in Honor of Richard O. Cowan, ed. Kenneth L. Alford and Richard E. Bennett (2015), 31–32.
2 Nephi 26:16. See also Mormon 8:23, 26; Moroni 10:27; Joseph Smith—History 1:30–34, 51–52, 59.
Russell M. Nelson, “Scriptural Witnesses,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2007, 44.
See John H. Walton and others, The IVP Bible Background Commentary: Old Testament (2000), 620–21, note on Isaiah 29:11.
See J. D. Douglas and Merrill C. Tenney, Zondervan Illustrated Bible Dictionary, rev. ed. (2011), “Seal,” 1302–3. See also 1 Kings 21:8; Revelation 5:1.
See Radmacher and others, NKJV Study Bible, 1012, note on Isaiah 29:11, 12. See also Joseph M. Spencer, “The Book, the Words of the Book: What the Book of Mormon Says about Its Own Coming Forth,” Religious Educator, vol. 17, no. 1 (2016), 70–71.
See Joseph Smith—History 1:63–65. See also Saints: The Story of the Church of Jesus Christ in the Latter Days, vol. 1, The Standard of Truth, 1815–1846 (2018), 46–48.
See Church History Topics, “Martin Harris’s Consultations with Scholars,” Gospel Library. See also Saints, 1:72.
See Russell M. Nelson, “Scriptural Witnesses,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2007, 44, note 26. See also 1 Nephi 22:8; 2 Nephi 25:17; 27:6–26; 3 Nephi 21:1–7; Doctrine and Covenants 4:1; 6:1; 11:1; 12:1; 14:1.
Ronald A. Rasband, “Fulfillment of Prophecy,” Liahona, May 2020, 75.
Emma Smith, in “Last Testimony of Sister Emma,” Saints’ Herald, Oct. 1, 1879, 289–90.
See Parry and others, Understanding Isaiah, 317, note on Isaiah 35:1. In our dispensation, the Prophet Joseph Smith prophesied, “Before the great day of the Lord shall come, Jacob shall flourish in the wilderness, and the Lamanites shall blossom as the rose” (Doctrine and Covenants 49:24).
Russell M. Nelson, “The Power of Spiritual Momentum,” Liahona, May 2022, 98. See also “Isaiah 11:16. What might the ‘highway for the remnant’ represent?”
Words:Virginia Maughan Kammeyer, 1925–1999. © 1989 IRI
Come, Follow Me Resources for Children: Old Testament 2026
September 21–27
You can use these additional resources for children to help teach from each week to study the Old Testament using Come, Follow Me. Choose whichever stories, activities, or videos work best for you.
Music: “He Died That We Might Live Again”
“Jesus Christ Protects Us”
Music: “The Priesthood Is Restored”
How will you help your children see the Savior in the writings of Isaiah? You might help them find phrases that remind them of Him in Isaiah 14:3; 25:8; or 28:16. They could also match these verses from Isaiah with other verses that teach about the Savior, such as Matthew 11:28–30; 1 Corinthians 15:53–57; Helaman 5:12. What great things has the Lord done for us?
After reading Isaiah 25:8–9 together, you could look at pictures of the Savior in Gethsemane, on the cross, and after His Resurrection. Let your children talk about what is happening in the pictures and why they love Jesus and “rejoice in his salvation” (verse 9).
You might choose to tell your children about the sadness you felt when someone you love passed away. Testify of the comfort you receive because of Jesus Christ. Maybe your children could draw a crying face and then erase the tears as you read Isaiah 25:8 together.
Have you and your children ever experienced the blessing of safe shelter during a storm or shade on a hot summer day? Or have you enjoyed a good meal when you were hungry? Talk about these experiences as you read Isaiah 25:4–6. How is Jesus like these things?
As you and your children read Isaiah 29:14, share with them other words that mean the same thing as “marvellous” and “wonder.” Let them help you find objects or pictures that represent some of the Lord’s marvelous works during the latter days. These might include a copy of the Book of Mormon, a picture of a temple, or a picture of the First Vision (there’s one at the beginning of this outline). Then your children could choose an item and share why it is marvelous to them.
A song about the Restoration of the gospel could go well with Isaiah 29, such as “On a Golden Springtime” (Children’s Songbook, 88). And perhaps a personal experience could help the children understand what restoration means. For example, you and your children could talk about something that you lost and how you found it. Help your children compare this to the Restoration of the gospel. According to Isaiah 29:13–15, why do we need the Restoration? What marvelous works is the Lord doing to restore His gospel? (see this week’s activity page).
For more, see this month’s issue of the Friend magazine.