Liahona
What More Could I Learn from the Book of Mormon? A Lot!
January 2024


Digital Only: Young Adults

What More Could I Learn from the Book of Mormon? A Lot!

I thought I knew everything about the Book of Mormon—turns out I was wrong.

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Illustrated figure building steps on top of a Book of Mormon

During my mission in Kentucky, I taught many people about the Book of Mormon. I saw people reject it and others accept it fully.

I also had a life-changing experience with this book.

Because of the Book of Mormon, I came to know Jesus Christ, “the Lord Omnipotent” (Mosiah 3:5). I learned about His eternal sacrifice for me, the boundless power of His grace, and His and the Father’s infinite love for all of us.

By the time I returned home from my mission, I believed I knew everything there was to know about the Book of Mormon. I never admitted that out loud, of course—but looking back, this attitude influenced how I approached the scriptures after my mission.

And not in a good way.

From Burning Testimony to Complacency

When I studied the scriptures, I often found myself returning to familiar passages over and over again—mostly to recall and reaffirm the things I’d learned before. I definitely tried to keep pondering the scriptures to learn something new, but I never felt like I was making any discoveries. The enthusiasm I once had for the Book of Mormon started to dwindle.

Soon after returning home, I also started a new job, and my scripture study time shrank from the full hour I had studied on my mission to 30 minutes. Then I received a calling, and those 30 minutes became 15. Then over the summer I served as an FSY counselor. And I used most of my study time to review a handful of verses that I repeatedly shared with youth week after week.

I knew that Heavenly Father loved any time I set aside to study His word. But, frankly, I didn’t feel like I was following Nephi’s invitation to “feast upon the words of Christ” (2 Nephi 32:3). I convinced myself that there couldn’t be anything new to learn. Instead of feasting on the Book of Mormon, I was barely nibbling.

This attitude of complacency continued into my first semester at Brigham Young University, during which I attended a Book of Mormon class. On the first day, my professor stood up at the head of our classroom. Fixing us with a friendly but piercing gaze, he said, “My goal in this class is to convince you that you don’t know the Book of Mormon—at all.”

I was intrigued by this, but it seemed more like the sort of sharp one-liner professors say to get your attention rather than an actual promise.

Thankfully, I turned out to be totally wrong.

A Refreshing View

As part of the class, my professor assigned us to read the Book of Mormon. Not just open it and scan the words or gloss over a chapter to recall the same story we may have consumed a million times.

He wanted us to actually read.

For example, he taught us about how the original manuscript of the Book of Mormon didn’t include punctuation at all—and he had us add in punctuation to a long, confusing passage from Alma 13 to teach us about the difference that commas and periods can make. He had us read a single verse alongside an 1828 Webster’s dictionary, looking up keywords that held radically different meanings than I’d first assumed.

The class challenged a lot of my basic assumptions about what the Book of Mormon even was. I’d never realized, for example, that Nephi wrote 1 Nephi years after he and his family had journeyed to the promised land (see 1 Nephi 9:1–5; 2 Nephi 5:28–31).

I also discovered how many of the deep flaws of the Nephite culture have startling parallels to the challenges our own cultures face today.

I came to understand the careful, deliberate messages that Mormon, Moroni, and others had implanted specifically for us—and how deeply anxious they were that we didn’t get caught up in the radical skepticism and doubt of the world.

President Russell M. Nelson has testified that “the Book of Mormon is truly the word of God. It contains the answers to life’s most compelling questions. It teaches the doctrine of Christ. It expands and clarifies many of the ‘plain and precious’ [see 1 Nephi 13:29–33] truths that were lost through centuries of time and numerous translations of the Bible.

“The Book of Mormon provides the fullest and most authoritative understanding of the Atonement of Jesus Christ to be found anywhere.”1

My whole perception and testimony of this book started to change as I pondered these truths.

There’s Always More to Learn

Through truly feasting on its words, I discovered that the Book of Mormon reveals who Jesus Christ is—not just doctrinally, but personally and intimately. The book bears His signature on every page. It’s an enduring record that testifies how He hasn’t forgotten His covenant people and He never will.

President Nelson also taught: “Something powerful happens when a child of God seeks to know more about Him and His Beloved Son. Nowhere are those truths taught more clearly and powerfully than in the Book of Mormon.”2

I don’t have all the answers to life. But I’ve come to understand that I didn’t learn everything there was to know about the Book of Mormon from my mission—there is always more to learn and to add to our faith.

Our busy schedules can make it easy to become complacent with our scripture study. We can quickly assume that we’ve learned all there is to know. But I have come to know that the Book of Mormon can continually offer us so much more. If you want to refresh your view of the scriptures, make studying a priority. Keeping an open heart and mind to deepen your conversion to Jesus Christ and to further your knowledge will help you truly “feast” on the word of God. It has for me.