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Larry Barkdull
Wednesday, June 20 2012

The Destructive Nature of the Spirit of Contention

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(Click here (www.pillarsofzion.com) to download FREE copies of the Pillars of Zion series.)

Perhaps to warn Latter-day Saints of a coming plague of contention, Mormon recounted the story of the abduction of twenty-four Lamanite daughters by King Noah’s wicked, disenfranchised priests. The reaction of the Lamanites and their king is telling:


And it came to pass that when the Lamanites found that their daughters had been missing, they were angry with the people of Limhi, for they thought it was the people of Limhi. Therefore they sent their armies forth; yea, even the king himself went before his people; and they went up to the land of Nephi to destroy the people of Limhi.[1]

 

No attempt to fact-find, no investigation, no questions, the Lamanites simply reacted to what they perceived as evidence, assumed the worst, made an emotional decision, added to it anger, leveled harsh accusations, and rushed to judgment. The result? “The battle became exceedingly sore;” “they fought like lions for their prey.”[2]Peace was shattered; pride and competition held sway over reason, and many lives were lost.

 

What fatal mistake had the Lamanites made? They “at-oned” with the spirit of contention.

 

At-one-ment

To at-one is the tendency of something or someone to join with and become one with something or someone of a similar spirit: like joining with like. We commonly associate the phenomenon of at-oneing with Christ’s great At-one-ment by which Jesus resolved our weaknesses, sins and challenges, and cleared every obstacle that stood between us and becoming at-one with him and the Father.

 

The spirit of contention works on the same premise but destroys rather than saves. The spirit of contention is a fundamental hindrance to the At-one-ment and to the establishment of Zion. Consequently, Jesus condemned it: “For verily, verily I say unto you, he that hath the spirit of contention is not of me, but is of the devil, who is the father of contention, and he stirreth up the hearts of men to contend with anger, one with another.”[3]

 

We learn about the universal principle of “at-one-ment” in D&C 88: “For intelligence cleaveth unto intelligence; wisdom receiveth wisdom; truth embraceth truth; virtue loveth virtue; light cleaveth unto light.”[4] Notice the descriptive verbs when at-one-ment is allowed to properly play out: “cleaveth,” “receiveth,” “embraceth,” “loveth.” The opposites are true of the spirit of contention: it tears apart, rejects, resists and despises.

 

At-one-ment implies ownership of a thing or an individual: “Mercy hath compassion on mercy and claimeth her own; justice continueth its course and claimeth its own.”[5] We are owned by the spirit that we at-one with. We cannot avoid the pros and cons of the law governing the principles of at-one-ment; the makeup of the universe and our individual nature will always cause like spirits to seek each other out and pair up.

 

Understanding the Spirit of Contention

Think of the spirit of contention as a dark entity, for it is certainly that. As examples, we read of the “spirit of the most bitter persecution and reviling,”[6] “spirit of an unclean devil,”[7] “spirit of infirmity,”[8] “spirit of bondage,”[9] “spirit of fear,”[10] “spirit of error,”[11] “spirit of jealousy”[12] “spirit of whoredoms,”[13] “spirit of anti-Christ,”[14] and Paul speaks of “a certain damsel possessed with a spirit of divination.”[15] These spirits seek opportunity to “stir up the hearts of the people to contention.”[16]

 

The descriptions of these satanic beings are not meant to be metaphorical but rather intended to detect the various dark spirits and expose their diabolical assignments and offices. When we give them an audience or mimic their actions--whether these spirits are manifesting through another person or they tempt us to react and behave according to their assignment--we at-one with them. We forfeit a portion of our agency, give them leave to enter and act upon our bodies, and allow them to have their way with us. Suddenly, “the devil has power over [us]…and we become “carnal, sensual and devilish.”[17]

 

The best of us steps into this snare, often easily. How does it happen? One reason is ignorance.

 

Things to Act and Things to Act Upon

Satan is in possession of a piece of information about the physical body that we might not fully understand, and he would like to keep that secret to himself. The physical body is like the artist’s canvas: its sole purpose is to be “acted upon” by the artist, who uses it to give tangible reality to the picture in his mind. Similarly, the physical body is uniquely designed to be “acted upon” by the spirit, who has the power “to act.”[18]

 

But other spirits can influence the physical body. We exist in a continuous tug-of-war of competing influences: on the one hand there are myriad evil and unclean spirits; on the other hand there are the righteous spirits who receive their assignments from the Lord, for instance, “spirits of just men made perfect,”[19] “spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord,”[20] “spirit of prophecy,”[21] and many others.[22] Sometimes these titles refer to gifts of the Spirit, but often they describe spirits on assignment.

 

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