Seminary
2 Nephi 2:26–30: Free to Choose


“2 Nephi 2:26–30: Free to Choose,” Book of Mormon Student Manual (2024)

“2 Nephi 2:26–30,” Book of Mormon Student Manual

2 Nephi 2:26–30

Free to Choose

young men at a party

Throughout your life, you will be faced with choices. Some of the choices you make will have lasting, sometimes even eternal, consequences. Lehi taught that because of Jesus Christ, everyone is “free to choose liberty and eternal life” or “captivity and death” (2 Nephi 2:27). This lesson can help you to use your agency to follow Jesus Christ.

Making choices

Consider why different people may decide to do or not do the following:

  • pray regularly

  • attend church

  • repent

  • obey the Word of Wisdom

  • forgive others

Contemplate your own reasons for choosing to do or not do these actions. Also consider other commandments included in the gospel of Jesus Christ. As you study this lesson, seek help from the Holy Ghost to understand how you are using your agency in ways the Lord approves of and how you may want to improve.

Free to choose

Toward the end of his life, the prophet Lehi taught his family about key parts of Heavenly Father’s plan of salvation. His teachings included the Fall, the Savior’s Atonement, and agency.

Read 2 Nephi 2:26, looking for what Lehi taught about these three parts.

  • What did you learn?

  • How do the Fall and the Savior’s Atonement make it possible for us to have agency?

Read 2 Nephi 2:27. Draw a simple diagram to show what the verse teaches, or summarize it in your own words.

icon, record2 Nephi 2:27 is a doctrinal mastery passage. Consider marking doctrinal mastery passages in a distinctive way so you can locate them easily. You will have an opportunity in the next lesson to practice applying the doctrine taught in this passage to a question or situation.

The following is one way to represent this verse:

Free to Choose diagram

One way you might summarize the Savior’s teaching in verse 27 is that we are free to choose liberty and eternal life through Jesus Christ or to choose captivity and death.

Notice that just above the box titled “Free to Choose,” the arrows begin close to each other. Some people might feel that exercising our agency to follow Jesus Christ limits our choices and actually takes away our freedom.

icon, record
  1. Answer the following four questions:

    • Why might some people feel that following Jesus Christ restricts our freedom?

    Notice how this diagram shows that as we follow Jesus Christ, the arrows open wider. In reality, following Jesus Christ grants us more choices and greater liberty.

    • In what ways does following Jesus Christ lead to liberty?

    Notice that on the other side of the diagram, the arrows begin far apart and then come closer together.

    • Why might some people feel that disobeying Jesus Christ leads to freedom?

    • How does choosing to disobey Jesus Christ lead to captivity?

Elder D. Todd Christofferson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles described why disobeying the Lord leads to less freedom:

Satan … promotes conduct and choices that limit our freedom to choose by replacing the influence of the Holy Spirit with his own domination (see D&C 29:40; 93:38–39). Yielding to his temptations leads to a narrower and narrower range of choices until none remains and to addictions that leave us powerless to resist. (D. Todd Christofferson, “Moral Agency,” Ensign, June 2009, 49)

To see an example of the truth you learned, consider watching “Leave the Party” (6:26), available at ChurchofJesusChrist.org.

6:26

Read 2 Nephi 2:28–30, and take a few minutes to ponder how you are choosing to exercise your agency.

Ponder your answers to the following questions:

  • How are your choices to follow Jesus Christ leading you to liberty and eternal life? How is the Lord blessing you for your efforts?

  • How might some of your choices be leading you to captivity? What can be your first step to change? How might the Lord help you?