“Alma 36: ‘I Could Remember My Pains No More,’” Book of Mormon Student Manual (2024)
“Alma 36,” Book of Mormon Student Manual
Alma 36
“I Could Remember My Pains No More”
Sharing tender spiritual experiences with those we love can be a source of strength for them and us. Speaking to his son Helaman, Alma recounted his experience seeing an angel, feeling the torment of his sins, and finding deliverance through Jesus Christ. This lesson is intended to help you turn to Jesus Christ in faith and feel the joy of His deliverance.
Opposites
Copy the following in your study journal. After the arrow, write what you think the opposite of each is.
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Pain →
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Regret →
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Sadness →
Ponder when you may have sinned and experienced a feeling on the left. Has that feeling ever become what you listed on the right? What happened to make that transition possible?
When negative feelings are caused by sin, only the Lord can help us transform those feelings into their positive opposites.
Ponder how true the following statements are for you:
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When I have sinned, I know how to turn to the Lord to receive forgiveness, peace, and hope.
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I have confidence that with the Lord’s help I can change.
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I turn to the Lord regularly for this help.
Today you will study how Alma the Younger’s feelings of deep agony over his sins were turned to feelings of joy and peace as he cried out to the Savior. As you study, look for how you can seek the Lord’s help to overcome sin and its effects and experience joy through Jesus Christ.
Alma’s mighty change
After rejecting the gospel that was taught to them, the Zoramites joined the Lamanites to stir them up in anger against the Nephites. The Zoramites and Lamanites then attacked the Nephites, leading to a great war. Many of the Nephites’ hearts also “began to wax hard” against God’s word (Alma 35:15). In response to the spiritual decline of the Nephites, Alma called his sons together to “give unto them every one his charge, separately, concerning the things pertaining unto righteousness” (Alma 35:16). He first spoke with his son Helaman and recounted his conversion experience.
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What do you remember about Alma the Younger and what is depicted in this picture?
Read Alma 36:6–11 and look for details you may have missed.
Marking scripture passages can help you better understand and remember what the scriptures are teaching. It can help you visualize patterns or comparisons in the scriptures more easily. It can also make significant passages easier to find later. Marking can include underlining, circling, and highlighting words and phrases.
Read Alma’s description of what he experienced and felt during the three days he couldn’t move in the following sets of verses. Consider marking what is suggested.
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Alma 36:12–16: words or phrases that describe how Alma felt about his sins
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Alma 36:17–18: words or phrases that indicate what Alma remembered and did that led to his change
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Alma 36:19–21: words or phrases that describe Alma feeling something opposite to or contrasting with what he initially experienced
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What impresses you about what led to Alma’s change?
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What truths can we learn from his experience?
One truth we can learn is that Jesus Christ has power to deliver us from the pain of our sins and fill us with joy.
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How did Alma invite the Savior’s power of deliverance?
Read the following statements, and think about how they help you further understand the truths we learn from Alma’s experience. You might copy a phrase you want to remember into the notes or margins of your scriptures.
President Boyd K. Packer (1924–2015) of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles explained:
You need not know everything before the power of the Atonement will work for you. Have faith in Christ; it begins to work the day you ask! (Boyd K. Packer, “Washed Clean,” Ensign, May 1997, 10)
Elder Neil L. Andersen of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles taught:
As we honestly confess our sins, restore what we can to the offended, and forsake our sins by keeping the commandments, we are in the process of receiving forgiveness. With time, we will feel the anguish of our sorrow subside, taking “away the guilt from our hearts” and bringing “peace of conscience.” (Neil L. Andersen, “Repent … That I May Heal You,” Ensign or Liahona, Nov. 2009, 42)
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What additional insights did you gain from the statements?
Take a moment to reflect on your own situation and how today’s lesson could apply to your life. Consider one thing you might do today to turn to the Savior and invite His power of deliverance into your life.