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Lesson 20 - Life in the Desert, 3. Lehi's Dream
Title | Lesson 20 - Life in the Desert, 3. Lehi's Dream |
Publication Type | Manual Lesson |
Year of Publication | 1957 |
Authors | Nibley, Hugh W. |
Manual Title | An Approach to the Book of Mormon |
Lesson | 20 |
Pagination | 217-228 |
Publisher | The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints |
Place Published | Salt Lake City |
Keywords | Dream; Lehi (Prophet); Symbolism; Vision; Wilderness |
Abstract | Long ago Sigmund Freud showed that dreams are symbolic, that they take their familiar materials from everyday life and use them to express the dreamer’s real thoughts and desires. Lehi’s dreams have a very authentic undertone of anxiety of which the writer of 1 Nephi himself seems not fully aware; they are the dreams of a man heavily burdened with worries and responsibilities. The subjects of his unrest are two: the dangerous project he is undertaking, and the constant opposition and misbehavior of some of his people, especially his two eldest sons. It may be instructive for the student to look for these two themes in the dreams discussed here. This lesson is devoted to pointing out the peculiar materials of which Lehi’s dreams are made, the images, situations, and dream-scenery which though typical can only come from the desert world in which Lehi was wandering. These 13 snapshots of desert life are submitted as evidence for that claim. |
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