It's General Conference this weekend, so this lesson won't be taught for about 2 weeks. Thinking about General Conference makes some of the parts of this lesson more real. How would I feel, for example, if this Saturday, president Monson reads off a list of people who are being assigned to pack up and move somewhere to establish a community? Or what if I were called to leave my family and go to China on a mission of indeterminate length?
In 1870 they formed the "Retrenchment Society." The first name of the young women's organization described what it taught - frugal living. I often wonder whether we would be in the financial trouble that we are in (speaking of the nation and the current economic recession) if more people relied less on expected income and more on frugal choices in their lifestyle. Our current housing crisis was created in large part by people buying homes larger than they could afford and counting on increasing values to make the purchase wise in hindsight. Other major contributing factors include people trying to make money off those speculating in real estate. If the first group had purchased homes that were modest, affordable, and that were purchased for use rather than investment, then few would have needed to sell so suddenly and much of the recession could have been avoided.
D&C 64:34 Behold the Lord requireth the heart and a willing mind; and the willing and obedient shall eat the good of the land of Zion in these last days. The Lord doesn't require an able mind, but both the willing and the obedient will be blessed. See Mosiah 4:24. The sad thing is that the good of the land of Zion for those first couple of years was pretty meager. It would be tough to be starving to death and read this scripture. I'd probably cry out, "where's the good of Zion?"
D&C 89:18-21 This is the promise from the Word of Wisdom. How does it relate to the desert blossoming? I'm not sure but I've always loved that it is concerned with marrow in their bones. Bone marrow wasn't recognized as super valuable at the time this was written.
D&C 93:1 Every soul who forsaketh his sins and cometh unto me, and calleth on my name, and obeyeth my voice, and keepeth my commandments shall see my face and know that I am. (First of all, that's a very liberal use of commas.) So that's interesting. The reward you get for doing all of those things is simply to know that God is. Wouldn't it take at least a strong belief that He is in order to do the things in the list? Perhaps he's talking about the more sure word of prophesy, or having your calling and election made sure. A knowledge of God's existence that is undeniable, and therefore, conclusive evidence of your assured salvation.
D&C 130:19-21 Intelligence rises with us in the resurrection; blessings are tied to laws and when we receive a blessing, it is because we kept a law. Elder Ballard gave a talk about this and he said that if there is a blessing we want from the Lord, we should search the scriptures and find the law upon which that blessing is predicated and strive to more fully keep that law. I don't think he was talking about being blessed with a million dollars, but real blessings, like faith, inspiration, and other spiritually valuable blessings.
So this lesson's title is about the desert rejoicing and blossoming, but the scriptures it includes are all about obedience. Obedience is the first law of heaven. In the story where Saul was commanded to go and destroy the Amalekites in 1 Samual 15, Saul was told to utterly destroy all that they have and spare them not; but slay both man and woman, infant and suckling, ox and sheep, camel and ass. He went and destroyed everything that was vile and refuse but kept out the best of hte shep and the oxen and of the fatlings, and the lambs, and all that was good. He later claimed that he did so in order to sacrifice them at the temple, in the same sentence, recognizing that they should have been destroyed.
The story has always intrigued me because I think about what he must have been thinking. He's looking at his people, who could use this stuff to improve their lives, he's thinking about the way the Lord said to destroy everything, and I'm sure in his mind, it made a lot of sense to think that the Lord was trying to punish the Amalekites, not their sheep--the sheep didn't do anything, and it meant material benefit for his people which improves his stature as their king. I think we often try to think through the commandments of the Lord and decide when and where to keep them. Let's take the Sabbath Day. We'll buy gas and some treats when we're traveling on Sunday because "surely the Lord doesn't mean keep the sabbath day holy if you are traveling. What does he want you to do--not travel?" Sunday meetings when they interfere with your child's napping schedule. Home teaching when you are really busy. What are the commandments where we look at it and just say, "Surely He doesn't mean it literally." Because we're wrong. I think he does mean it literally. Obedience is the first law of heaven and to obey is better than sacrifice.