“Alma 29: The Desires of Our Hearts,” Book of Mormon Student Manual (2024)
“Alma 29,” Book of Mormon Student Manual
Alma 29
The Desires of Our Hearts
How can you tell if your desires for your life are in harmony with what the Lord wants for you? Alma 29 records the desire of Alma’s heart and his reflection on whether his desires are in line with what God wants for him. This lesson can help you evaluate your own desires and align them with the Lord’s.
Wishes for my life
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When you were a child, what were some of your greatest desires?
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Now that you are older, how have your desires changed? How might your desires change in the future?
On one side of a page in your study journal, write down several of your desires for your life. (You will use the other side later in the lesson.)
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How do our desires influence our lives?
As we grow and mature in the gospel and come closer to God, some of our desires may change and align more with what He wants for us.
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How can we tell if our desires are in harmony with what God wants for us?
As you study this lesson, ponder your desires. Look to identify desires that align with God’s and those that may need to mature or change.
Aligning our desires with the Lord’s will
In Alma 29, Alma recorded one of his desires. Read Alma 29:1–2, looking for what he described.
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Why did Alma desire to be an angel? What does that tell you about him?
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What do you know about Alma’s past that could have inspired his desire to be an angel? (see Mosiah 27:11–17).
The following image might help you remember an important experience from Alma’s earlier life.
Understanding the context of the verses can give us additional insight. In the chapters before Alma 29, the Lord commanded Ammon to bring the Anti-Nephi-Lehies to live with the Nephites for their protection (see Alma 27:4–12). The Nephites gave the Anti-Nephi-Lehies the land of Jershon to settle in and promised to protect them. The wicked Lamanites followed the Anti-Nephi-Lehies and began a battle. The Nephites defended themselves and their families against the Lamanites. As a result, “tens of thousands of the Lamanites were slain and scattered … and there was a tremendous slaughter among the people of Nephi” (Alma 28:2–3).
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How can this context help you understand why Alma may have wanted to boldly call people to repentance and prevent sorrow?
Read Alma 29:3–6, looking for what Alma understood about desires.
One principle you may have identified is that God allows us to make choices based on our desires.
Look at both sides of your page. Note that the Lord wants us to center our desires on loving and serving Him and our fellow man. Ponder how well your desires align with God’s desires for you.
Though his desire to share the gospel was good, Alma recognized that desiring to share the gospel like an angel to the whole world did not completely align with where and how God had called him to serve. Consider underlining any phrases in Alma 29:3–6 that show that Alma wanted to align his desires with God’s will.
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What do you think it means to be content with what the Lord has allotted us?
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Why, like Alma, do you think we should seek to align our desires with the Lord’s?
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How can we align our desires with God’s will when we may receive a calling to serve in a way other than our own preference?
Later in the chapter, Alma explained that he did not need to be an angel to speak to all the earth because God would teach all nations in His wisdom and timing (see Alma 29:7–8). Read Alma 29:9, 13, looking for what Alma gloried in and how he felt as he aligned his desires with God’s.
The importance of desires
Take a moment to ponder how this lesson applies to you. Write in your study journal what you can do to strengthen your righteous desires and seek the Lord’s help to align any other desires with His will.