Showing posts with label small beginnings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label small beginnings. Show all posts

Friday, September 19, 2014

The Start of Something Great

It requires a lot of faith to leave behind the known, and venture into the unknown.  I think that that is exactly what Orson F. Whitney wanted when he gave his speech, “Home Literature.” And that is exactly what Nephi Anderson took from it.  He took a leap of faith when he wrote Added Upon.  It was original and different from anything else that had been done up to that point; the beginning of something great. Yet I do not believe that Orson F. Whitney expected that the very first pieces of Mormon literature would be masterpieces comparable to the works of Milton and Shakespeare. 

“Small things are the seeds of great things, and, like the acorn that brings forth the oak, or the snowflake that forms the avalanche, God’s kingdom will grow, and on wings of light and power soar to the summit of its destiny.”  This phrase by Whitney helps us to understand that Added Upon, as one of the first books written by us and for us, was simply the first footstep on the trail that would lead to Mormon literary greatness.  And while in itself, Added Upon is somewhat cheesy, and curious in its literary form and in its content, it definitely follows Whitney’s instructions.

“Our literature must live and breathe for itself. Our mission is diverse from all others; our literature must also be.”  Anderson’s book is definitely different from may other examples of literature, but I feel that it fulfills its message in its themes; mainly being, the Plan of Salvation.  Our mission of drawing all men unto Christ is relevant in the book as it takes us step by step through the plan of salvation, and teaches us the importance of other themes like family, friendship, and genealogical work.  Anderson was taking a leap of faith in heeding an apostle’s call to preach the gospel to all people through original literary pieces.  "The writer of a book, is not he a preacher, preaching not to this parish or that, on this day or that, but to all men, in all times and places?" (Orson F. Whitney).