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Why Did the Savior Emphasize His Risen Body in the Nephite Sacrament?
3 Nephi 18:7
The Know
According to the apostle Paul, when the Savior first administered the sacrament to His disciples in Judea, He took the broken bread and said, “Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for you: this do in remembrance of me” (1 Corinthians 11:24, emphasis added). In his gospel account, Luke used somewhat softer language: “This is my body which is given for you: this do in remembrance of me” (Luke 22:19, emphasis added).1 Both, however, evoke the image of sacrifice. To the Old World disciples, the bread represented the body given and broken in sacrifice on their behalf.
In contrast, when the Lord first administered the sacrament to the Nephites, He instructed, “this shall ye do in remembrance of my body, which I have shown unto you” (3 Nephi 18:7, emphasis added). The body shown unto the Nephites was not the broken, sacrificed, mortal body of Jesus, but rather it was the resurrected, glorified body of the risen Lord. As John W. Welch noted, “when we partake of the bread, we should remember that we eat not only in remembrance of the body that has been broken for us—that’s the New Testament language” but also “in remembrance of the physical, tangible body” with which the Nephites had direct, physical experience.2
Here the Savior was calling the Nephites to remember His physical and painful sacrifice as well as His triumphant resurrection. As S. Kent Brown pointed out, “his body, of course, is the first thing he allows people access to,” but this access was “to touch the scars in his hands and his feet and his side,”3 all of which were physical reminders that His glorious body had been broken and sacrificed.
Furthermore, it seems that the Savior drew upon the Nephites’ cultural background in order to make the moment as memorable and impactful as possible. As Mark Wright has noted, “He bade them first to thrust their hands into his side, and secondarily to feel the prints in his hands and feet (3 Nephi 11:14).” In contrast, when appearing to His apostles after His resurrection, “he invited them to touch solely his hands and feet (Luke 24:39–40).”4 While this subtle detail may seem trivial, Wright explained that in Mesoamerican cultures, humans were sacrificed by having their hearts removed while alive, through “a large incision directly below the ribcage.”5
Thus, Wright explained, “To a people steeped in Mesoamerican culture, the sign that a person had been ritually sacrificed would have been an incision on their side—suggesting they had had their hearts removed.”6 While righteous Nephites themselves would not have participated in human sacrifice, its prevalence within surrounding cultures could well have had some effect on their processing of this amazing experience.7
Hence, Wright reasoned that by inviting the Nephites to first “thrust your hands into my side” (3 Nephi 11:14), Christ “may have been communicating with them according to their cultural language.”8 When being asked to remember the body shown unto them, surely the Nephites couldn’t help but recall this vivid experience, as they touched the tangible tokens that Jesus’s resurrected body still bore as a result of His infinite atoning sacrifice.
The Why
The Savior’s invitation to the Nephites to remember the body they were shown is another instance where He subtly yet appropriately adapted His instructions to reflect unique aspects of the Nephite experience. This adaption began at the very moment He showed His body to them—with the invitation to first feel the wound on His side thereby personalizing and maximizing the impact of their experience with His resurrected body.9
Perhaps as they thrust their hand into the Savior’s side, some Nephites remembered the words of Amulek, who taught the Atonement would “bring about the bowels of mercy, which overpowereth justice, and bringeth about means unto men that they may have faith unto repentance” (Alma 34:15).10 For followers of Christ today, the wound on Christ’s side, emphasized in 3 Nephi 11, can serve as a reminder that, as Elder D. Todd Christofferson taught “bring[ing] about the bowels of mercy” was “the intent of Christ’s suffering—the ultimate manifestation of His love.”11
The call to remember the body shown also evokes the Nephites as witnesses of the Resurrection. It was a physical, tangible body—which they had felt and experienced, one by one.12 He had not laid the body down after His ascension, as some Christians believe (cf. 3 Nephi 15:1). Thus, 3 Nephi, provides a scriptural witness that Jesus retained His physical body. Welch noted, “Now that’s incomparable, and there are a lot of things like that in 3 Nephi that we only get from 3 Nephi.”13
For Latter-day Saints today, the Savior’s administration of the sacrament to the Nephites is the ultimate source of the sacrament prayers heard each Sunday.14 Thus, when partaking of the bread and water each week, “we celebrate the sacrament, not only of the Lord’s supper, but also of the Lord’s appearance in 3 Nephi.”15 Book of Mormon readers, therefore, have the privilege of remembering not only the broken, sacrificed body, but also the victorious, risen body shown to the people at Bountiful.
Further Reading
Daniel C. Peterson, John W. Welch, Robert L. Millet, Richard Dilworth Rust, Grant Hardy, and S. Kent Brown, “3 Nephi Conference Panel Discussion,” in Third Nephi: An Incomparable Scripture, ed. Andrew C. Skinner (Salt Lake City and Provo, UT: Deseret Book and Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2012), 373–391.
John W. Welch, “Our Nephite Sacrament Prayers,” in Reexploring the Book of Mormon: A New Decade of Research, ed. John W. Welch (Salt Lake City and Provo, UT: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1992), 286–289.
- 1. Both Matthew and Mark merely said, “Take, eat; this is my body” (Matthew 26:26; Mark 14:22).
- 2. John W. Welch, in “3 Nephi Conference Panel Discussion,” in Third Nephi: An Incomparable Scripture, ed. Andrew C. Skinner (Salt Lake City and Provo, UT: Deseret Book and Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2012), 381–382.
- 3. S. Kent Brown, in “3 Nephi Conference Panel Discussion,” 381.
- 4. Mark Alan Wright, “Axes Mundi: Ritual Complexes in Mesoamerica and the Book of Mormon,” Interpreter: A Journal of Mormon 12 (2014): 91. In John, Thomas demanded that he would not believe unless he could feel the prints from the nails and thrust his hand into Jesus’s side, which he was allowed to do (John 20:25–28). Notice that thrusting his hand into Jesus’s side, however, comes after first feeling the nail marks in the hands and feet. In 3 Nephi Jesus takes the initiative and invites all first to thrust their hands into his side, then to feel the prints of the nails in his hands and feet.
- 5. Wright, “Axes Mundi,” 89.
- 6. Wright, “Axes Mundi,” 91.
- 7. See Book of Mormon Central, “Why Must There Be an Infinite and Eternal Sacrifice? (Alma 34:12),” KnoWhy 142 (July 13, 2016).
- 8. Wright, “Axes Mundi,” 90–91.
- 9. Feeling the imprints of the nails in his hands and feet might have attested to the fulfillment of prophecies, long known to the Nephites, that the Lord Jesus Christ would suffer death by crucifixion. See 1 Nephi 11:33; 19:10, 13.
- 10. For the ancients, emotion was not felt in the heart, but rather in your gut, or your bowels (splanchnizomai means to feel compassion or pity, and it comes from splanchna, or the inwards parts and entrails). So Christ showing the incision in his side not only declares his ritual sacrifice, but it demonstrates his emotional and loving sacrifice.
- 11. D. Todd Christofferson, “Abide in My Love,” Ensign, November 2016, forthcoming online at lds.org.
- 12. See Book of Mormon Central, “Why Did Jesus Minister to the People One By One? (3 Nephi 17:21),” KnoWhy 209 (October 14, 2016).
- 13. Welch, in “3 Nephi Conference Panel Discussion,” 378: “he still has his body when he said this, and that was after the ascension. We have a scripture that tells us that. Now that’s incomparable, and there are a lot of things like that in 3 Nephi that we only get from 3 Nephi.”
- 14. John W. Welch, “Our Nephite Sacrament Prayers,” in Reexploring the Book of Mormon: A New Decade of Research, ed. John W. Welch (Salt Lake City and Provo, UT: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1992), 286–289.
- 15. Welch, in “3 Nephi Conference Panel Discussion,” 381.
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