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INTERPRETER
A Journal of Mormon Scripture
Volume 22 · 2016 · Pages vii-xii
The Small Voice
Daniel C. Peterson
Offprint Series
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The Small Voice
Daniel C. Peterson
Abstract: Revelation comes in various forms, some of them spectacular
and some of them extremely subtle. The scriptures and the history of the
Restoration offer numerous examples across the entire spectrum. Whatever
its form, however, divine revelation remains divine revelation, and it is
the avowed mission of the Interpreter Foundation to thoughtfully ponder
such revelation, to try to explicate its meaning, and to illustrate its richness.
In turn, such examination can itself provide an opportunity for personal
revelation—both for the examiners and, we hope, for those who read or
hear the results of their work.
I
ntertextuality is a fancy word that many contemporary literary
scholars use to describe ways in which various texts refer to, or play off
of, each other. Often, writers do this without explicitly indicating it; in
such cases, only fairly sophisticated (or, at least, well informed) readers
will notice. But it isn’t always subtle. To choose an example essentially
at random, a 2012 book by Satinder Dhiman was titled Seven Habits of
Highly Fulfilled People, alluding unmistakably to Stephen Covey’s famous
1989 bestseller, The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People.1 Sometimes,
though not always, subsequent authors hope that their audiences will
have prior texts in mind as they read.
1 Satinder Dhiman, Seven Habits of Highly Fulfilled People: Journey from
Success to Significance (Fawnskin, CA: Personhood Press, 2012); Stephen Covey,
The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People: Restoring the Character Ethic (New
York: Simon and Schuster, 1989).
viii • Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture 22 (2016)
The Book of Mormon contains numerous such examples, and
probably quite a few remain to be discovered.2 Perhaps I may suggest
two additional illustrations here.
The first involves the famous passage in which Alma the Younger
expresses his yearning to reach all humanity with the message of the
gospel:
O that I were an angel, and could have the wish of mine heart,
that I might go forth and speak with the trump of God, with
a voice to shake the earth, and cry repentance unto every
people! Yea, I would declare unto every soul, as with the voice
of thunder, repentance, and the plan of redemption, that they
should repent and come unto our God, that there might not
be more sorrow upon all the face of the earth.3
Alma’s expression of his desire seems plainly based upon his own
personal conversion experience, in which an angel appeared to him
who “spake as it were with a voice of thunder, which caused the earth
to shake,” and who summoned him to repentance. “Doth not my voice
shake the earth?” the angel asked, rhetorically. “He spake unto us, as it
were the voice of thunder, and the whole earth did tremble beneath our
feet.”4
In fact, Alma felt guilty about his desire for an angelic voice. If God
had willed such a thing, he realized, it would be so. That it isn’t typically
the case is clear evidence that God doesn’t wish to convince us by means
of dramatic special effects.5
The second proposed example suggests a reliance upon the Old
Testament story of Elijah, presumably available to the Nephites via
the brass plates that Lehi brought with him from the Old World.
(John Sorenson, incidentally, has suggested on other grounds that the
brass plates originated in the northern kingdom of Israel, where Elijah
lived and prophesied.)6
2. Compare, for instance, 1 Nephi 1:8 and Alma 36:22, as well as Mosiah 3:8
and Helaman 14:12.
3 Alma 29:1–2.
4 See Mosiah 27:10–15; Alma 36:6–11.
5 See Alma 29:3–8.
6 John L. Sorenson, “The ‘Brass Plates’ and Biblical Scholarship,” Dialogue:
A Journal of Mormon Thought 10/4 (Autumn 1977): 31–39. See http://www.
dialoguejournal.com/wp-content/uploads/sbi/articles/Dialogue_V10N04_33.pdf.
Peterson, The Small Voice • ix
In the Old Testament’s First Book of Kings, we read of Elijah’s
experience in the wilderness (perhaps in the Sinai or else across the Gulf
of Aqaba in what is today Saudi Arabia) that
the Lord passed by, and a great and strong wind rent the
mountains, and brake in pieces the rocks before the Lord;
but the Lord was not in the wind: and after the wind an
earthquake; but the Lord was not in the earthquake: And
after the earthquake a fire; but the Lord was not in the fire:
and after the fire a still small voice.7
Somehow, the Lord was “in” that “still small voice,” and he was “in”
it in a sense that he wasn’t “in” the wind, the earthquake, or the fire.
Similarly, the account of the destructions in 3 Nephi 8–11 tells of
a great “storm,” “tempest,” “thunder” and “whirlwinds,” as well as of
fire and of an earthquake that broke the rocks, ultimately followed by
a “small voice” heralding the Savior’s appearance. Such literary crafting
suggests that its author wanted us to think, while reading it, of the story
of Elijah:
And it was not a harsh voice, neither was it a loud voice;
nevertheless, and notwithstanding it being a small voice it did
pierce them that did hear to the center, insomuch that there
was no part of their frame that it did not cause to quake; yea,
it did pierce them to the very soul, and did cause their hearts
to burn.8
And this is what it said:
Behold my Beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased, in whom
I have glorified my name — hear ye him.9
Once again, in a very real sense, God was “in” that voice.
Strikingly, though, the people — and remember that these were
the more righteous among the Nephites; the wicked had died in the
destructions that had just occurred — understood the voice only the
third time.10
7 1 Kings 19:11–12.
8 3 Nephi 11:3. It may be significant that the voice itself is described as
piercing, quake-inducing, and burning — plain metaphorical analogues to the
physical destruction that had just occurred.
9 3 Nephi 11:7.
10 3 Nephi 10:12–13; 11:3–6.
x • Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture 22 (2016)
This is the manner in which revelation is typically given and
received. While the scriptures, distilling the experiences of prophets
and apostles and saints over millennia, might seem to suggest that
glorious manifestations are common with such people, that would be a
misapprehension.
As Elder Spencer W. Kimball put it just months before he
unexpectedly became president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints,
The burning bushes, the smoking mountains, … the
Cumorahs, and the Kirtlands were realities; but they were
the exceptions. The great volume of revelation came to
Moses and to Joseph and comes to today’s prophet in the
less spectacular way — that of deep impressions, without
spectacle or glamour or dramatic events. Always expecting
the spectacular, many will miss entirely the constant flow of
revealed communication.11
“The Spirit does not get our attention by shouting or shaking us
with a heavy hand,” Elder Boyd K. Packer explained in 1983. “Rather it
whispers. It caresses so gently that if we are preoccupied we may not feel
it at all.”12
Sometimes, of course, revelation does come in spectacular ways.
Immediately after the Nephites that gathered about the temple in
Bountiful understood what that “small voice” was announcing to them,
they were granted what surely ranks among the grandest Christophanies
or appearances of Christ in human history:
And it came to pass, as they understood they cast their
eyes up again towards heaven; and behold, they saw a Man
descending out of heaven; and he was clothed in a white robe;
and he came down and stood in the midst of them; and the
eyes of the whole multitude were turned upon him, and they
durst not open their mouths, even one to another, and wist
not what it meant, for they thought it was an angel that had
appeared unto them.
And it came to pass that he stretched forth his hand and spake
unto the people, saying:
11 Spencer W. Kimball, Munich Germany Area Conference, 1973, 77.
12 Boyd K. Packer, “The Candle of the Lord,” Ensign (January 1983): 53.
Peterson, The Small Voice • xi
Behold, I am Jesus Christ, whom the prophets testified shall
come into the world.13
Several years after assuming the presidency of the Church, Spencer
W. Kimball again warned us not to ignore, downplay, or dismiss
revelation when it arrives quietly and without fanfare, while humbly but
plainly bearing witness to his own calling:
Expecting the spectacular, one may not be fully alerted to the
constant flow of revealed communication. I say, in the deepest
of humility, but also by the power and force of a burning
testimony in my soul, that from the prophet of the Restoration
to the prophet of our own year, the communication line is
unbroken, the authority is continuous, a light, brilliant, and
penetrating, continues to shine. The sound of the voice of the
Lord is a continuous melody and a thunderous appeal.14
Thirteen months later, President Kimball received the revelation
on priesthood that is now commemorated in Official Declaration 2, in
the Doctrine and Covenants. The late historian Leonard J. Arrington
describes the event as follows:
Those in attendance said that as he began his earnest prayer,
they suddenly realized that it was not Kimball’s prayer, but the
Lord speaking through him. A revelation was being declared.
Kimball himself realized that the words were not his but the
Lord’s. During that prayer some of the Twelve — at least two
who have said so publicly — were transported into a celestial
atmosphere, saw a divine presence and the figures of former
presidents of the church … smiling to indicate their approval
and sanction. Others acknowledged the voice of the Lord
coming, as with the prophet Elijah, “through the still, small
voice.” The voice of the Spirit followed their earnest search for
wisdom and understanding.
At the end of the heavenly manifestation, Kimball, weeping
for joy, confronted the [other members of the First Presidency
and the Council of the Twelve], many of them also sobbing, and
asked if they sustained this heavenly instruction. Embracing,
all nodded vigorously and jubilantly their sanction. There had
13 3 Nephi 11:8–10.
14 Spencer W. Kimball, “Revelation: The Word of the Lord to His Prophets,”
Ensign (May 1977): 78.
xii • Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon Scripture 22 (2016)
been a startling and commanding revelation from God — an
ineffable experience.
Two of the apostles present described the experience as a “day
of Pentecost” similar to the one in the Kirtland Temple on
April 6, 1836, the day of its dedication. They saw a heavenly
personage and heard heavenly music. To the temple-clothed
members, the gathering, incredible, and without compare,
was the greatest singular event of their lives. Those I talked
with wept as they spoke of it. All were certain they had
witnessed a revelation from God.15
“Spectacular” revelations may come, in the Lord’s due time, to those
who demonstrate their willingness to follow the small voice of the Spirit.
One of the missions of the Interpreter Foundation is to take
canonized revelation — whether its origins are spectacular or to be
found in the merest divine whisper — with thoughtful, reflective, and
scholarly seriousness.
Daniel C. Peterson (PhD, University of California at Los Angeles) is
a professor of Islamic studies and Arabic at Brigham Young University
and is the founder of the University’s Middle Eastern Texts Initiative,
for which he served as editor-in-chief until mid-August 2013. He has
published and spoken extensively on both Islamic and Mormon subjects.
Formerly chairman of the board of the Foundation for Ancient Research
and Mormon Studies (FARMS) and an officer, editor, and author for
its successor organization, the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious
Scholarship, his professional work as an Arabist focuses on the Qur’an and
on Islamic philosophical theology. He is the author, among other things, of
a biography entitled Muhammad: Prophet of God (Eerdmans, 2007).
15 Leonard J. Arrington, Adventures of a Church Historian (Urbana and
Chicago: University of Illinois, 1998), 177. On the preceding page, Arrington
remarks that, “As a historian I sought to learn the particulars and record them
in my private diary. The following account is based on dozens of interviews with
persons who talked with church officials after the revelation was announced.
Although members of the Twelve and the First Presidency with whom I sought
interviews felt they should not elaborate on what happened, I learned details from
family members and friends to whom they had made comments.” Arrington’s entire
chapter on the subject, “The Long-Promised Day,” pp. 175–85, is of interest. It can
now be supplemented with the material gathered in Gregory A. Prince, Leonard
Arrington and the Writing of Mormon History (Salt Lake City: University of Utah
Press and Tanner Trust Fund, 2016): 306–27.