“Lesson 74—Doctrine and Covenants 60–62: ‘Hearken unto the Voice of Him Who Has All Power,’” Doctrine and Covenants Seminary Teacher Manual (2025)
“Doctrine and Covenants 60–62,” Doctrine and Covenants Seminary Teacher Manual
In August 1831, the Savior lovingly instructed a group of elders during their difficult journey from Missouri to Ohio. His counsel helped the elders understand His expectations and desires for them as they journeyed home. This lesson is intended to help students understand more about the Savior’s expectations and desires for them.
Possible Learning Activities
To begin class, consider displaying the following situations:
Imagine that two of your close friends are struggling in different ways with making decisions. One friend rarely seeks help or guidance from God and tries to make most decisions on her own. Another friend prays for guidance and is hesitant to move forward with any decision until she feels certain the Lord has answered her.
Invite the students to think about decisions they need to make in their lives and to consider whether they can relate to either of these situations. Encourage them to look for truths in today’s lesson that can help them with their decisions.
To help students understand the context for the teachings they will study today, read or summarize the information in the following paragraph.
In August 1831, Joseph Smith and several elders began a journey of more than 800 miles (1,287 km) to their homes in Kirtland, Ohio. They had spent the previous few weeks in Missouri, where the Lord had instructed them to work toward building a city of Zion. While traveling home, the group had questions about their method and direction of travel. For some decisions, the Lord encouraged them to use their best judgment and choose for themselves. For other decisions, He provided specific instructions and commandments to guide them.
Students could use the following chart to study the verses listed. Invite students to copy the chart into their study journals. Consider also copying it on the board and inviting various students to write in the answers after they have studied the verses. You could place students in groups and assign them to study one or all of the passages together.
What differences did you notice in these verses between what mattered to the Lord and what did not?
What are some ways you could apply the Lord’s teachings in these verses to situations you face in your life?
Read Doctrine and Covenants 62:8 , looking for the Lord’s counsel that can help us when we must make decisions without specific direction.
Invite students to share a truth they learned from the Lord’s counsel in this verse. They might express a principle similar to the following: The Lord expects us to make many decisions based on the directions of the Spirit and our own judgment.
You may want to invite students to read Doctrine and Covenants 58:26–29 , looking for teachings that can help them better understand how the Lord expects us to make decisions. Students could be invited to cross-reference or link these verses with Doctrine and Covenants 62:8 .
Focus on converting principles: For more practice on how to do this, see the training titled “Focus on truths that lead to conversion and build faith in Jesus Christ ” in Teacher Development Skills: Teach the Doctrine . Consider practicing the skill and asking questions that help students identify and state converting principles.
Consider inviting the students to share experiences where they have made decisions based on their own judgment and the directions of the Spirit. Invite them to share how the Lord blessed them in these situations. You might also consider sharing your own experiences.
The Savior teaches about Himself
During the journey to Ohio, the elders experienced uncertainty, fatigue, and some frightening situations. They also had disagreements and quarrels. To help them, the Savior shared many important teachings about Himself. These teachings can help us better understand who He is and what He can do for us.
To help students prepare to study the following verses, consider having them write Jesus Christ in the middle of a page in their study journals. You could also write this on the board. As students study the following scripture passages, they could write words or phrases describing the Savior around His name.
Read Doctrine and Covenants 60:1–4 ; 61:1–2, 36–39 ; 62:1–3, 9 . Pay attention to what you learn about Jesus Christ from these verses. Record your findings in your study journal.
Give students an opportunity to share what they learned and felt about Jesus Christ from this study activity. They could discuss questions like the following together as a class, in partnerships, or in small groups.
Conclude the lesson by inviting students to think about any promptings they may have received from the Holy Ghost based on what they have studied and discussed today. Encourage them to record their thoughts and impressions in their study journals.
Elder Richard G. Scott (1928–2015) of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles taught:
When [God] withholds an answer , it is to have us grow through faith in Him, obedience to His commandments, and a willingness to act on truth. We are expected to assume accountability by acting on a decision that is consistent with His teachings without prior confirmation. We are not to sit passively waiting or to murmur because the Lord has not spoken. We are to act.
Most often what we have chosen to do is right. He will confirm the correctness of our choices His way. That confirmation generally comes through packets of help found along the way. We discover them by being spiritually sensitive. They are like notes from a loving Father as evidence of His approval. If, in trust, we begin something that is not right, He will let us know before we have gone too far. We sense that help by recognizing troubled or uneasy feelings. (Richard G. Scott, “Agency and Answers: Recognizing Revelation ,” Ensign , Jun. 2014, 50)
Elder Gary E. Stevenson of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles taught:
13:15
As a member of the Church, you have opportunities to bear your spoken testimony in formal Church meetings or in less formal, one-on-one conversations with family, friends, and others.
Another way you share your testimony is through righteous behavior. Your testimony in Jesus Christ isn’t just what you say—it’s who you are.
Each time you bear vocal witness or demonstrate through your actions your commitment to follow Jesus Christ, you invite others to “come unto Christ” [Moroni 10:32 ]. (Gary E. Stevenson, “Nourishing and Bearing Your Testimony ,” Liahona , Nov. 2022, 112)
The Lord’s words in Doctrine and Covenants 61:5–19 do not prohibit Latter-day Saints from traveling on or swimming in the water. In describing the curse on the waters in the last days, the Lord may have been referring to passages in the book of Revelation in which the Apostle John describes destruction that will occur in the waters prior to the Second Coming of Jesus Christ (see Revelation 8:8–11 ;16:1–6 ). In Doctrine and Covenants 61 , the Lord refers specifically to the danger of “these waters,” meaning the Missouri River (see Doctrine and Covenants 61:5, 18 ).
President Dallin H. Oaks of the First Presidency declared:
15:54
Our Savior experienced and suffered the fulness of all mortal challenges “according to the flesh” so He could know “according to the flesh” how to “succor [which means to give relief or aid to] his people according to their infirmities” [Alma 7:12 ]. He therefore knows our struggles, our heartaches, our temptations, and our suffering, for He willingly experienced them all as an essential part of His Atonement. And because of this, His Atonement empowers Him to succor us—to give us the strength to bear it all. (Dallin H. Oaks, “Strengthened by the Atonement of Jesus Christ ,” Ensign or Liahona , Nov. 2015, 61–62)
Explain that when the elders of the Church were first commanded to leave their homes in Ohio and travel to Missouri, they were commanded to preach the gospel along the way (see Doctrine and Covenants 52:9–10, 21–23, 25–27 ).
Invite students to read Doctrine and Covenants 60:1–3 , looking for the Savior’s words to some of these men.
To help students see how these teachings can relate to their lives, consider asking questions like these:
What can make it difficult for us to open our mouths to share the Savior’s gospel?
How can the Savior help us overcome the obstacles we face?
What are some examples of ways we can open our mouths to share the gospel today?
Students may benefit from a discussion on the Lord’s commandment to “not idle away thy time” (Doctrine and Covenants 60:13 ).
Explain that part of the Lord’s counsel recorded in Doctrine and Covenants 60 was to those who would be coming to Missouri to help build up the city of Zion.
Invite students to read Doctrine and Covenants 60:13 , looking for what He commanded some of these Saints. It may be helpful to explain that the word idle means to avoid work or participate in things of little value.
Consider inviting students to study a few other scriptures that could help them better understand how the Lord wants us to use our time. Examples include Alma 34:32–33 ; Doctrine and Covenants 58:27 ; 75:3–4 ; 88:124 .
Invite students to consider some ways they might be idling away their time and to set a goal for improvement.
Students may benefit from examining what the Savior taught in Doctrine and Covenants 62:1 about Himself and His ability to help us. Consider inviting students to read this verse and cross-reference it with Alma 7:11–13 . You could give them a few moments to quietly ponder how the Savior has succored them or their loved ones. Encourage them to record experiences and feelings in their journals, and share with them the statement by President Dallin H. Oaks in “Additional Resources.” Invite a few willing students to share ways the Savior is strengthening and supporting them through their weaknesses and trials.