
1 Nephi 8-11 includes Lehi's version of the Tree of Life followed by Nephi’s personal vision of same.
For nineteenth century readers, these chapters would have connected to the
intense individualism within American thought in the early nineteenth century.
The nineteenth century is the era of de Tocqueville, who arrived in the United
States and observed separation of church and state in action. “Good
golly,” he exclaimed (I am summarizing), “when religion is not imposed
by the state, people are, what do you know, more religious!”
The American Revolutionary also supplied an ongoing narrative of intense
individualism—rebellion against (or exodus from) the corruptness of the Old World. Even Puritan thought, which now strikes
modern people as rather dictatorial, was about individual salvation, a single person coming to understand God’s grace through lifelong, intense personal analysis.
It is difficult to entirely capture—we
are
products of the early C.E. era, after all—the break here from communal
sin and suffering that permeates social orders in antiquity. That
urge remains, of course, what with Witch Trials and their modern
equivalents:
one bad apple rots the entire barrel! Twitter or whatever it is called now appears to be the ultimate expression of badgering everyone everywhere into some kind of compliant order.
But even Twitter is the product of individual offerings.
Individualism existed in antiquity and forms the basis of most legends and myths, but the social order—and therefore the social role—of
populations was entirely presupposed. Kings were not scribes. Scribes
were not peasants. Peasants weren’t anybody. If the king is saved, you
are all saved. Might as well get on-board.
The Common Era concept of the individual as agent, who works
out an individual salvation, is something that nineteenth-century
readers would have entirely comprehended and embraced and that modern
folks rather take for granted, even when they criticize the ideology.
Lehi’s
Tree of Life rests on the premise of the individual agent. Although the
“strait and narrow” path gives rise to images of
intolerance and exclusivity, in Lehi’s dream it is a path that each
person must walk alone, even if there are others ahead and behind: each
of Lehi’s children and even his wife are referenced separately; at one point, he watches them struggle separately. The path
is a person’s integrity or personal path in life—choice of profession,
artistic endeavor, prophetic calling (see Joseph Smith)—whatever
self-definition a person embraces and endures and sacrifices for.
The
“great and spacious building”—on the other hand—is the ultimate
collective. People get there individually but they stay in the “safe”
Borg-like “in-group” that mocks individuals and scorns the difficult
pathway that each individual treads.
Consequently, the “great and spacious building” houses detractors,
sneerers, people who love labels, mockers, revilers, obnoxious
cliques—those who prefer to watch others drown rather than make a life
for themselves. (All members of the great and spacious building point in
the same direction, as a mob would.)
There are other possible interpretations, of course, including the
search for a single path to God’s grace, a search that was dear to
the Smith family and many others. Although communal living was all the rage,
early nineteenth-century readers still would have perceived such a search in
individual terms, one that this group, this community carries out for the sake of each
member. (Despite the Donner party haunting American mythology, many pioneers movements were quite successful: successful pioneers moved west within specific groups—religious groups,
town groups, family groups.)
And few nineteenth-century readers would have balked at the fruit of
the tree being happiness, love, and joy (as opposed to discipline,
humiliation, and subjugation). Gotta love those Americans and their
life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness mindsets! (Even the Puritans perceived the happiness and beauty of nature as the key to comprehending God’s grace.)