Zions Redemption Book Store.

Zions Redemption Book Store. My dream is to one day stop driving semi trucks and own a used book store. I want to sale mostly LDS

The Measure of True SacrificeA Restoration Analysis of Shane Baldwin’s “Law of Sacrifice” Revelation and the Doctrine of...
05/26/2026

The Measure of True Sacrifice

A Restoration Analysis of Shane Baldwin’s “Law of Sacrifice” Revelation and the Doctrine of Cleansing

Written by

Mark Tyson Trent Lichtenwalter

What is the difference between honoring sacrifice and granting salvation?
Can a revelation contain genuine spiritual truths while still introducing doctrinal instability?
How should covenant believers test new revelations that sound scriptural on the surface but subtly alter established doctrine beneath?
And does true revelation expand prior scripture, or must it remain harmonized with what God has already revealed?

These questions stand at the center of Restoration theology.

The Prophet Joseph Smith taught that God continues to reveal truth.[1] The heavens are not closed. The Restoration itself is founded upon ongoing revelation. Yet the same Restoration also teaches that revelation must be tested.[2] Spirits must be tried.[3] Doctrine must harmonize with the revelations already given unless God unmistakably establishes new light through divine authority and prophetic order.

The issue examined here is Shane Baldwin’s alleged revelation concerning the law of sacrifice. At first reading, the revelation contains themes deeply rooted in Restoration scripture: Adamic sacrifice, obedience before understanding, broken hearts and contrite spirits, humility, sanctification, and surrender before God. Many portions echo the language and themes of the Book of Moses, 3 Nephi, and the Doctrine and Covenants.

Yet as the revelation progresses, it moves beyond scriptural expansion into doctrinal formulations that create serious tension with canonized Restoration theology.

The revelation begins with one of its strongest sections:

“From the beginning it was known, and from the foundation of the world it was prepared, that all who come unto me must do so with a willing heart and a living offering.”

This harmonizes closely with Restoration scripture. Sacrifice did not originate with the Law of Moses. Adam, Abel, Noah, Abraham, and the patriarchs all offered sacrifice before Sinai.[4] The revelation correctly identifies sacrifice as primordial and rooted in the plan of redemption itself.

The strongest scriptural parallel comes directly from Moses 5:

“And after many days an angel of the Lord appeared unto Adam, saying: Why dost thou offer sacrifices unto the Lord? And Adam said unto him: I know not, save the Lord commanded me.”[5]

Shane Baldwin’s revelation accurately reproduces this theological pattern. Adam obeyed before understanding. He acted in faith before explanation was given. The angel then revealed the meaning behind the ordinance:

“This thing is a similitude of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten of the Father.”[6]

This portion of the revelation is solidly Restoration-oriented. The revelation also correctly emphasizes that the true sacrifice was not merely outward ritual, but inward surrender:

“Adam offered not merely the beasts of the field, but his heart, yea, even a broken heart and a contrite spirit.”

This aligns strongly with Christ’s words in 3 Nephi:

“Ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit.”[7]

Likewise, the revelation correctly critiques empty outward worship divorced from inward transformation. Scripture repeatedly condemns sacrifice without humility.[8]

However, the revelation becomes unstable when it begins redefining the source and nature of cleansing.

The central doctrinal problem emerges in verses 25–29:

“I sanctify their offering, for they give of themselves, even their blood and their tears and their water, that life may continue… Therefore they are declared clean… Thus they are pronounced clean before me.”

At first glance, this sounds emotionally moving and reverent toward motherhood and female sacrifice. Scripture absolutely teaches that God honors hidden sacrifice, service, and suffering.[9]

Yet the wording creates a profound theological problem.

The revelation does not merely say God honors women. It says they are “declared clean” and “pronounced clean” because of their biological and sacrificial suffering connected to bringing forth life.

This moves beyond honoring sacrifice into salvific language.

In Restoration scripture, cleansing comes through Christ’s atoning blood, repentance, covenant, sanctification, and the Holy Ghost.[10]

Christ Himself taught:

“Whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit, him will I baptize with fire and with the Holy Ghost.”[11]

Moroni taught:

“By the blood of Christ ye may be purified.”[12]

Helaman declared:

“There is no other way nor means whereby man can be saved, only through the atoning blood of Jesus Christ.”[13]

The revelation’s wording therefore risks turning biological suffering into a kind of cleansing ordinance.

This becomes clearer when the implications are followed consistently. If women are “declared clean” because they suffer and give life, then theoretically even an unrepentant immoral woman who later bears children could still be viewed as “pronounced clean” through maternal suffering itself.

That is not Restoration doctrine.

Motherhood is sacred. Childbirth is sacred. Sacrifice is sacred. But suffering itself is not the Atonement. Bloodshed alone does not sanctify the soul. If suffering itself cleansed sin, then every wounded soldier, every abused victim, and every suffering mortal would automatically stand justified before God apart from Christ.

Scripture does not teach this.

Rather, scripture teaches:

“No unclean thing can enter into his kingdom.”[14]

And the means of cleansing remains constant throughout all dispensations: Christ, repentance, covenant, sanctification, and the Holy Ghost.[15]

Another major weakness appears in the revelation’s treatment of Cain and Abel.

The revelation says Cain’s offering was rejected because:

“He believed that his labor alone would earn my favor.”

This is partially true, but it significantly softens the scriptural account.

Moses 5 does not merely portray Cain as prideful or self-reliant. It states:

“Cain loved Satan more than God.”[16]

It further says:

“Satan commanded him, saying: Make an offering unto the Lord.”[17]

This is crucial because the Restoration presents Cain not merely as an arrogant worshipper, but as the prototype of counterfeit religion and false sacrifice operating under satanic influence.

Shane Baldwin’s revelation transforms Cain into primarily a moral lesson about ego and self-sufficiency. Scripture presents Cain as something darker: rebellion against divine order itself.

The revelation also states:

“The token matters not without the heart.”

Again, this is only partially true.

Scripture absolutely teaches that ordinances without humility are empty.[18] Yet Restoration theology also teaches that God governs worship through appointed ordinances, covenants, and divine order.[19]

Cain’s offering was not rejected merely because his heart was wrong. It was also contrary to what God had appointed in similitude of Christ’s sacrifice.[20]

Thus the revelation risks implying:

sincerity alone sanctifies worship.

But Restoration scripture teaches:

both inward condition and divine order matter.

The revelation’s treatment of the Atonement is more subtle, but still problematic.

Verse 41 states:

“While I hung upon the cross, I had already accomplished the Atonement through the power of the Holy Ghost.”

This statement must be handled carefully.

Restoration scripture absolutely emphasizes Christ’s suffering in Gethsemane.[21] Doctrine and Covenants 19 teaches that Christ suffered until He “bled at every pore.”[22]

Thus it would be unfair to argue that Baldwin’s statement is entirely foreign to Restoration thought.

However, the revelation becomes doctrinally imbalanced because it appears to minimize the theological role of the cross itself. Restoration scripture consistently presents Christ’s suffering, crucifixion, death, blood, and resurrection as one unified redemptive work.[23]

Paul declared:

“We preach Christ crucified.”[24]

Nephi taught:

“The God of our fathers… shall be lifted up upon the cross.”[25]

Thus the problem is not acknowledging Gethsemane. The problem is treating the cross as though the Atonement was already essentially complete before Christ’s death.

The revelation’s Holy Ghost language also requires caution.

The revelation says:

“I gave up the ghost freely.”

In scripture, this phrase ordinarily means Christ died.[26] Yet Shane Baldwin’s surrounding commentary interprets this as Christ “releasing the Holy Ghost” in connection with broader speculative theology concerning the Holy Ghost’s future embodiment.

Now it is true that Joseph Smith reportedly taught that the Holy Ghost may one day receive a body and pass through a course “similar” to the Son.[27] Thus the mere concept is not automatically anti-Restoration.

However, Baldwin’s theological construction goes beyond the canonized scriptures by intertwining the Holy Ghost directly into the mechanics of the Atonement in a way not clearly established in scripture.

This becomes an important distinction between speculative theology and binding revelation.

Finally, the literary cadence of the revelation itself deserves consideration.

Canonized Restoration revelation tends to be compressed, declarative, abrupt, and authoritative.[28] It often speaks with overwhelming prophetic force while leaving symbolic tension unresolved.

By contrast, Baldwin’s revelation repeatedly explains itself in smooth devotional language:

“Not as punishment, but as power.”

“They do it in silence and with courage.”

These phrases sound emotionally reflective and sermonic rather than revelatory in the scriptural sense.

The revelation frequently reads less like divine dictation and more like theological meditation written in scriptural vocabulary.

This does not automatically prove insincerity. A person may genuinely feel spiritual emotion while still producing doctrinally unstable conclusions. Yet sincerity alone is not the measure of revelation.

The Restoration standard remains doctrinal harmony with the revelations already given.

And by that standard, Shane Baldwin’s revelation contains both genuine Restoration themes and serious theological instability.

Its strongest portions are those closest to established scripture: Adamic sacrifice, broken hearts, humility, surrender, sanctification, and inward consecration.

Its weakest portions are those that shift cleansing away from Christ and toward biological suffering, soften Cain’s counterfeit worship into moral symbolism, and treat the cross as though it were secondary to an Atonement already completed beforehand.

The issue is not whether sacrifice matters. It absolutely does.

The issue is whether sacrifice itself cleanses sin.

Restoration scripture answers that question clearly:

“There is no other way nor means whereby man can be saved, only through the atoning blood of Jesus Christ.”[29]

That remains the measure.

What happens when emotional spiritual language begins redefining established doctrine?
Can sincere religious meditation still produce theological error?
How should believers distinguish between poetic inspiration and binding revelation?
And in a world filled with competing prophetic claims, are the Saints still willing to test every spirit against the revelations God has already given?



Footnote Reference Section

[1] Doctrine and Covenants 1:38

“Whether by mine own voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same.”

Used to establish the Restoration principle of continuing revelation.

[2] Doctrine and Covenants 50:31

“He that is ordained of me… shall be able to discern all those spirits.”

Referenced to show that revelations must be spiritually tested.

[3] 1 John 4:1

“Try the spirits whether they are of God.”

Used as the biblical command to test revelatory claims.

[4] Genesis 4; Moses 5; Abraham 1

Referenced because sacrifice predates Sinai and the Mosaic system.

[5] Moses 5:6

“I know not, save the Lord commanded me.”

Used because Shane’s revelation directly builds upon this text.

[6] Moses 5:7

“This thing is a similitude of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten of the Father.”

Shows Adamic sacrifice pointed toward Christ.

[7] 3 Nephi 9:20

“Ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit.”

Foundation Restoration scripture on inward sacrifice.

[8] Isaiah 1:11–17

Referenced because scripture condemns empty ritual without repentance.

[9] Mark 14:8

“She hath done what she could.”

Used to support the valid doctrine that God honors hidden sacrifice.

[10] Moroni 6:4; 3 Nephi 27:19

Referenced because cleansing is consistently tied to Christ and covenant.

[11] 3 Nephi 9:20

Used because it directly connects cleansing to Christ and the Holy Ghost.

[12] Moroni 6:4

“By the blood of Christ ye may be purified.”

Direct Restoration teaching on purification.

[13] Helaman 5:9

“There is no other way nor means whereby man can be saved.”

Central Restoration scripture on salvation through Christ alone.

[14] 3 Nephi 27:19

“No unclean thing can enter into his kingdom.”

Used to establish universal need for cleansing through Christ.

[15] 2 Nephi 31:17

“By water ye keep the commandment; by the Spirit ye are justified, and by the blood ye are sanctified.”

Critical Restoration passage on sanctification.

[16] Moses 5:18

“Cain loved Satan more than God.”

Shows Cain’s rebellion was deeper than pride alone.

[17] Moses 5:18

“Satan commanded him, saying: Make an offering unto the Lord.”

Used to demonstrate counterfeit sacrifice.

[18] Isaiah 29:13

Referenced because outward worship without inward surrender is condemned.

[19] Doctrine and Covenants 132:8

“Mine house is a house of order.”

Used to establish divine order in ordinances and worship.

[20] Moses 5:5–8

Referenced because sacrifice was specifically appointed in similitude of Christ.

[21] Alma 7:11–13

Used because Restoration scripture emphasizes Christ’s premortal suffering.

[22] Doctrine and Covenants 19:18

“Which suffering caused myself, even God… to bleed at every pore.”

Referenced because Baldwin emphasizes pre-cross suffering.

[23] 1 Nephi 11:33; 2 Nephi 9:21; Alma 34

Used to show the unified nature of the Atonement.

[24] 1 Corinthians 1:23

“We preach Christ crucified.”

Shows the cross remains central in apostolic Christianity.

[25] 1 Nephi 11:33

“Lifted up upon the cross.”

Used because the Book of Mormon repeatedly emphasizes crucifixion.

[26] Matthew 27:50

“Jesus… yielded up the ghost.”

Shows the normal biblical meaning of the phrase.

[27] Franklin D. Richards account of Joseph Smith discourse, August 27, 1843

Referenced because Joseph Smith reportedly taught the Holy Ghost may one day receive a body.

[28] Doctrine and Covenants 1:1

“Hearken, O ye people of my church…”

Representative of the declarative cadence of Restoration revelation.

[29] Helaman 5:9

Final doctrinal anchor establishing Christ alone as the source of salvation and cleansing.

1. My son, thou hast inquired of the law of sacrifice. From the beginning it was known, and from the foundation of the world it was prepared, that all who come unto me must do so with a willing heart and a living offering.
2. In the days of Adam, when your first parents walked in the lone and dreary world, the man built an altar and offered sacrifice.
3. And when the angel of my presence came near him and asked why he did this thing, the man replied, “I know not, save the Lord commanded me.”
4. Yea, this pleased him me greatly, for Adam acted in faith.
5. And the angel said, “This is in the likeness of the sacrifice of the Only Begotten Son of the Father.”
6. Now hear, my son, that I own the earth and all that is upon it.
7. Man may build and labor and gather, yet the elements remain mine.
8. What then can he offer unto me?
9. Behold, I say unto thee, the only thing he truly owns is his will, his soul, his body, and the words of his mouth; and it is these that I desire.
10. Adam offered not merely the beasts of the field, but his heart, yea, even a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
11. His sacrifice was a living testimony that he would obey me in all things, even when he understood not.
12. This is what I accept.
13. And now I say unto thee: consider Abel and Cain.
14. For Abel was pure in heart, and his offering was full.
15. He gave the firstlings of his flock as a sign, but the true sacrifice was within him: his humility, his love, and his full devotion.
16. But Cain’s offering was empty.
17. Though he brought the fruit of his field, his heart was proud.
18. He believed that his labor alone would earn my favor.
19. He sought reward before surrender, and he placed value upon his works more than upon my word.
20. Thus I say unto thee: the law of sacrifice is not about the tokens placed upon the altar.
21. It is about the soul of the one who offers.
22. I require a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
23. Not as punishment, but as power.
24. For the broken shall be made whole, and the humble shall be lifted up.
25. And behold, my daughters also walk in the pattern of sacrifice from the beginning.
26. I sanctify their offering, for they give of themselves, even their blood and their tears and their water, that life may continue.
27. They suffer for the sake of others, and they do it in silence and with courage.
28. Therefore they are declared clean, and I do honor their sacrifice.
29. Thus they are pronounced clean before me.
30. Let the sons of men learn from this pattern.
31. Let them offer not for praise nor for gain, but in thanksgiving and love.
32. Let them give me their will, their mind, and their strength, not to be seen of men, but to be changed from within.
33. For this is the path of sanctification, and this is the foundation of the baptism of fire and of the Holy Ghost.
34. When a man or woman kneels before me with nothing to offer but themselves, truly they are clean.
35. And if they continue faithful, they shall be sanctified, and I will call them mine, yea, even my sons and my daughters.
36. This offering is greater than gold.
37. It is more pleasing to me than money, for it flows from gratitude, not from obligation.
38. It draws down the Spirit and brings about the rebirth of the soul.
39. And again I say unto you: if one offers the fruit of their labors in the spirit of Abel, with love, with reverence, and with no thought of reward, this too is acceptable of me.
40. For the token matters not without the heart.
41. Behold, while I hung upon the cross, I had already accomplished the Atonement through the power of the Holy Ghost.
42. The labor was done, and I gave up the ghost freely.
43. Yet even in my final moments I cared for my mother and forgave my persecutors.
44. This too was part of the sacrifice.
45. Therefore let all who call themselves my sons and my daughters consider my example.
46. Let them live lives of sacrifice, not of pain and punishment, but of purpose and purity.
47. For this is the law that governeth all holy orders.
48. Thus saith the Lord God.

This part grieves me because Shane’s revelation appears to teach one thing, while Restoration scripture teaches another.

In verses 25–29, Shane’s revelation says women are “declared clean” and “pronounced clean” because they give “their blood and their tears and their water, that life may continue.”

But scripture says we are made clean through Christ’s blood, repentance, a broken heart and contrite spirit, and baptism by fire and the Holy Ghost.

Verses 28–29 risk turning biological suffering into a kind of saving ordinance.

The gospel absolutely teaches that motherhood is sacred, sacrifice is honored, and suffering is seen by God. But none of those things replace the Atonement of Jesus Christ.

That is the difference.

God may honor a woman’s sacrifice, but only Christ can cleanse sin.

This video is not arguing against sacrifice, motherhood, or sincere spiritual experience.

The issue is much narrower and much more important:

Can suffering itself cleanse sin, or does cleansing come only through the Atonement of Jesus Christ?

That distinction matters.

God may honor sacrifice, but scripture consistently teaches that sanctification comes through Christ’s blood, repentance, covenant, and the Holy Ghost.

I encourage everyone watching to compare every claim directly against the scriptures themselves.

What if a revelation contains real scripture themes… but subtly shifts the meaning of salvation itself?

What happens when sacrifice begins replacing sanctification?

And how do you test a revelation that sounds deeply spiritual while quietly redefining established doctrine underneath?

Tonight we are going verse by verse through Shane Baldwin’s alleged revelation on the law of sacrifice and comparing it directly against Restoration scripture.

If this discussion helped you think more deeply about revelation, sacrifice, and doctrinal discernment, consider subscribing and sharing the video.

And I want to hear your thoughts:

Can sincere spiritual language still produce false doctrine?
Where is the line between inspired meditation and binding revelation?
And how should believers test revelations in the last days without rejecting genuine light from God?

Mobile phone version:

https://youtu.be/MC8q66KzbDw?si=xEE08YT-JZ-ZM9Gj

Full screen version:

https://youtu.be/-z8F7MbzZ0g?si=uzJjiFrGDmt0AkxU

This channel is dedicated to deep Restoration theology, scriptural analysis, prophecy, covenant doctrine, Zion, the Holy Order, the baptism of fire and the Holy Ghost, the mysteries of the kingdom, and the testing of modern claims against the standard of canonized scripture.

Here we examine difficult questions that many avoid:

What is true revelation?
What does it mean to become sanctified?
Has modern Christianity drifted from the ancient covenant path?
What did Joseph Smith actually teach?
What is the role of sacrifice, consecration, and Zion in the last days?
And how do believers discern between true light and counterfeit spiritual authority?

This channel is not built on emotionalism, institutional loyalty, or personality worship. Everything must be tested against scripture, revelation, and the doctrine of Jesus Christ.

Topics include:

* Restoration scripture
* Dead Sea Scrolls
* Isaiah
* The Book of Mormon
* Joseph Smith teachings
* Zion and consecration
* Temple symbolism
* Prophecy and apocalyptic themes
* Messiah ben Joseph traditions
* The heavenly order
* Spiritual discernment in the last days

If you are searching for serious theological discussion rooted in Restoration scripture and willing to ask difficult questions, subscribe and join the discussion.

The hour of declaration is come.

Does This Revelation Contradict the Gospel of Jesus Christ? Testing...

The Sifting Before Zion | Jeremiah and the False Prophets, Chapter 13 of The Hidden ServantWritten by Mark Tyson Trent L...
05/24/2026

The Sifting Before Zion | Jeremiah and the False Prophets, Chapter 13 of The Hidden Servant

Written by

Mark Tyson Trent Lichtenwalter

How covenant people can preserve religious structure, prophetic language, and preparation themes while quietly drifting away from the actual demands of Zion.



What happens when a covenant people continues speaking about preparing for the coming of Jesus Christ… but slowly stops becoming the kind of people Zion actually requires?

Can a society preserve temples, ordinances, covenants, prophetic language, and religious structure while quietly drifting toward Babylon in spirit?

Jeremiah faced this exact crisis before the destruction of Jerusalem.

In this deep theological and scriptural study, we examine how false prophetic systems often do not emerge through open rebellion against God, but through gradual religious adaptation that preserves outward stability while removing the harder requirements of covenant transformation.

Jeremiah warned the people that sacred structure alone would not save them. Yet many false prophets reassured the people with messages of peace, continuity, and confidence while judgment approached the gates.

This chapter explores:

• Why covenant decline often happens slowly and religiously
• The difference between symbolic preparation and actual Zion transformation
• Why “smooth things” become attractive during times of spiritual decline
• The relationship between Babylon, comfort, and covenant complacency
• Jeremiah as a type of the latter-day hidden servant
• Why true warning voices are usually rejected before judgment arrives
• How Zion requires consecration, sacrifice, equality, holiness, and unity
• Why the remnant must learn to hear God above institutional reassurance
• The prophetic connection between Jeremiah 6, Isaiah 30, and 2 Nephi 28
• Why God allows competing voices as part of the sifting process

This chapter also examines the warnings of Joseph Smith regarding false spirits, spiritual blindness, and the necessity of becoming a true Zion people rather than merely maintaining outward religion.

Scriptures discussed include:

• Jeremiah 6–7
• Jeremiah 28
• Isaiah 30
• 2 Nephi 28
• Doctrine and Covenants 105
• Moses 7
• Deuteronomy 13
• 1 Kings 22
• 2 Thessalonians 2

* Can a people prepare for Christ outwardly while resisting Zion inwardly?
* What if the greatest latter-day deception is not abandoning religion… but preserving religion without transformation?
* Why do covenant people repeatedly prefer reassuring voices over warning voices?
* What does scripture actually teach about becoming Zion?
* Could “All is well in Zion” be one of the most dangerous prophetic warnings in scripture?

Mobile phone version:

https://youtu.be/wIgmivb2k_0?si=pE7jGAhya7NohJaM

Full screen version:

https://youtu.be/_0KFuAv7A_w?si=WqplBFmYFOmBae93

If you are interested in deep scripture study, Restoration theology, Isaiah, the remnant, Zion, the hidden servant, prophecy, and the patterns surrounding the last days and the coming of Jesus Christ, subscribe to The Davidic Remnant.

This channel explores scripture, theology, covenant patterns, prophetic symbolism, and the restoration of Zion through

The Sifting Before Zion | Jeremiah and the False Prophets, Chapter 13 of The Hidden ServantWritten by Mark Tyson Trent LichtenwalterHow covenant people can p...

OBEDIENCE ON THE LIPS — BABYLON IN THE HEARTReckless Living, Corporate Religion, and the Collapse of Zion Consciousness ...
05/21/2026

OBEDIENCE ON THE LIPS — BABYLON IN THE HEART

Reckless Living, Corporate Religion, and the Collapse of Zion Consciousness in Modern Covenant Society

Written by Mark Tyson Trent Lichtenwalter

What happens when a people publicly claim to honor God, obey the laws of the land, and build Zion… while simultaneously becoming financially, culturally, and spiritually dependent upon Babylon?

Why do so many proclaim obedience while casually violating the laws they dislike every single day?

Why do religious institutions preach separation from the world while investing sacred tithing funds into the very corporate systems scripture repeatedly identifies with Babylon the Great?

This video explores the growing contradiction between covenant language and covenant behavior.

We examine:
• The normalization of reckless and lawless conduct among professed believers
• The scriptural warnings about Babylon the Great
• Joseph Smith and early Restoration teachings on wealth and consecration
• The disappearance of the United Order and Zion economics
• The difference between building Zion and financing Babylon
• Why scripture warns that judgment begins first at the house of God
• The danger of becoming spiritually comfortable inside systems God commanded His people to flee from

Scriptures and early Church leaders repeatedly warned that covenant people could become wealthy, proud, spiritually blind, and fully integrated into Babylon while still believing themselves chosen.

But are we seeing that happen now?

If Zion means “no poor among them,” why do modern religious systems celebrate billion-dollar accumulation while the actual law of consecration is almost never practiced?

If God commanded His people to “come out of Babylon,” what does that mean when sacred offerings are invested directly into the systems of Babylon itself?

And perhaps the hardest question of all:

Have modern believers learned how to feel spiritually safe while fully dependent upon the world system scripture warned would eventually fall?

This is not merely a discussion about money.

It is a discussion about loyalty, identity, covenant, and whether modern covenant people still recognize the difference between Zion and Babylon.

If this video challenges you, consider why.

Truth does not fear examination.

And neither should we.

OBEDIENCE ON THE LIPS, BABYLON IN THE HEART

Reckless Living, Corporate Religion, and the Collapse of Zion Consciousness in Modern Covenant Society

The Hidden Servant

Isaiah, the Remnant, and the Hidden Pattern Behind Zion’s Redemption

Written by Mark Tyson Trent Lichtenwalter

What does it mean when a people publicly proclaim obedience to God while privately conforming themselves to the spirit of Babylon?

What happens when covenant language remains, but covenant behavior disappears?

What happens when people loudly defend “law and order,” yet casually violate the laws they personally dislike every single day? What happens when sacred offerings given in the name of God are absorbed into the financial bloodstream of the very world system scripture repeatedly commands the saints to flee from?

These are uncomfortable questions.

But scripture repeatedly warns that one of the great signs of spiritual decline among covenant people is not merely open wickedness. It is hypocrisy. It is the appearance of righteousness without the substance of it. It is honoring God with the lips while the heart becomes fully integrated into the spirit of the world.[A]

The problem is not merely individual sin.

The deeper problem is the normalization of contradiction.

Modern religious culture often speaks endlessly about sustaining the laws of the land. Articles of faith are quoted. Loyalty language is repeated. Respectability is elevated almost to a sacrament. Yet the same people who speak constantly about obedience frequently drive recklessly, speed habitually, tailgate aggressively, violate traffic laws casually, and justify it simply because “everyone else does it.”

That may appear small on the surface.

But spiritually, it reveals something much larger.

Scripture teaches that Zion people are supposed to be governed by internal righteousness, not social conformity. The excuse “everyone else does it” has never once been accepted by God as justification for disobedience.[B]

The broad road has always been crowded.

The narrow path has always been lonely.

Christ Himself declared:

“Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat.”[C]

Yet modern society—including religious society—has normalized the exact opposite mentality. If the majority does something, it becomes acceptable. If culture approves of something, conscience becomes silent. If enough people violate the law together, people stop even recognizing rebellion as rebellion.

This same contradiction appears not only in daily conduct, but increasingly within institutional religion itself.

When Sacred Things Finance Babylon

One of the most sobering teachings associated with early Restoration theology is the repeated warning against building up Babylon through economic participation and worldly accumulation.[D]

Joseph Smith declared:

“God had often sealed up the heavens because of covetousness in the Church. Said he, ‘How many will it take to save them? We want the riches of eternity, and will not spare the earthly things.’”[E]

The issue was never merely wealth itself.

The issue was attachment to Babylon’s systems.

The issue was trusting financial structures more than God.

The issue was gathering wealth while failing to establish Zion.

And yet modern religious institutions increasingly function almost indistinguishably from massive corporate financial entities. Sacred tithes and offerings—funds donated by ordinary believers sacrificing in faith—are often invested into the same global economic systems scripture repeatedly identifies with Babylon: multinational banking structures, defense contractors, pharmaceutical corporations, investment portfolios, real estate empires, hedge funds, and massive market-based wealth accumulation systems.

The contradiction becomes staggering when compared directly against scripture.

The Book of Mormon repeatedly warns that the latter-day Gentiles would become “lifted up in the pride of their hearts above all nations” and become “full of all manner of lyings, and of deceits, and of mischiefs.”[F]

The Doctrine and Covenants commands:

“Go ye out from Babylon. Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.”[G]

The book of Revelation gives the same warning:

“Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues.”[H]

Yet what does it mean to “come out of Babylon” if covenant institutions themselves become financially intertwined with Babylon’s systems?

Can a people truly claim separation from Babylon while simultaneously profiting from Babylon’s machinery?

Can Zion be built through the investment strategies of the world?

These are not attacks against individuals trying to survive economically. Nearly everyone is trapped to some degree inside Babylon’s systems. The deeper question is whether the people of God are attempting to escape Babylon spiritually—or mastering the art of becoming comfortable inside it.

The Forgotten Law of Consecration

Perhaps one of the clearest signs of this contradiction is the near-total disappearance of serious discussion surrounding the law of consecration and the United Order.

Modern religious culture often speaks of tithing constantly while rarely speaking of consecration at all.

But scripture does not present consecration as optional symbolism.

It presents it as the economic foundation of Zion.[I]

The Doctrine and Covenants declares:

“It is not given that one man should possess that which is above another, wherefore the world lieth in sin.”[J]

The book of Moses describes Zion with unmistakable clarity:

“And the Lord called his people Zion, because they were of one heart and one mind, and dwelt in righteousness; and there was no poor among them.”[K]

Not fewer poor.

No poor.

That is not merely charity.

That is an entirely different economic consciousness.

Brigham Young taught:

“My greatest fear for this people is that they will get rich in this country, forget God and His people, wax fat, and kick themselves out of the Church.”[L]

That warning now sounds almost prophetic.

Because modern covenant culture increasingly mirrors the exact patterns scripture warns about: wealth accumulation without consecration, prosperity without equality, religious branding without Zion economics, and institutional expansion without the actual establishment of a covenant society where “there [are] no poor among them.”

The early Saints at least attempted forms of consecration.

Modern religious society often treats the entire concept as impractical idealism while simultaneously celebrating massive institutional financial growth as evidence of divine favor.

But scripture never teaches that financial accumulation is proof of righteousness.

Babylon is wealthy too.

Justice Without Mercy and Law Without Truth

The contradictions become even darker when legal systems begin punishing victims while empowering perpetrators.

Isaiah warned:

“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil.”[M]

Moroni warned that in the latter days societies would become filled with secret combinations seeking power, gain, and control.[N]

When justice systems become corrupted, when truth becomes secondary to political convenience, and when prosecutors target the vulnerable while protecting institutional interests, society enters spiritually dangerous territory.

Law itself becomes detached from righteousness.

And once that separation happens, civilization begins collapsing from within even while maintaining outward appearances of order.

Scripture repeatedly shows that judgment begins first with covenant people—not the heathen nations.[O]

Why?

Because greater light brings greater accountability.

The Real Danger: Becoming Spiritually Comfortable in Babylon

The greatest danger facing modern religious people may not be atheism.

It may not even be open wickedness.

The greatest danger may be learning how to feel spiritually safe while fully integrated into Babylon’s mindset.

Babylon is not merely a city.

Babylon is a consciousness.

It is the belief that wealth equals blessing.

It is the belief that corporate power equals divine approval.

It is the belief that external respectability matters more than inward holiness.

It is the belief that systems matter more than revelation.

It is the belief that economic security matters more than truth.

And once covenant people begin measuring success through Babylon’s standards, Zion slowly disappears while everyone continues using Zion language.

That is the terrifying part.

The vocabulary remains.

The structures remain.

The branding remains.

But the spirit changes.

And scripture repeatedly warns that this condition eventually ripens societies for judgment.[P]

The question is no longer whether scripture warned about these things.

The question is whether modern covenant people can still recognize Babylon when they are financially, culturally, socially, and psychologically dependent upon it.

Because eventually every generation must decide:

Do we truly want Zion?

Or do we merely want a slightly moralized version of Babylon?



Footnote Reference Section

[A] Isaiah 29:13 — “This people draw near me with their mouth, and with their lips do honour me, but have removed their heart far from me.”

Why this quote is used:
This scripture establishes the central thesis of the article: outward religious language does not necessarily reflect inward covenant loyalty. Isaiah directly condemns performative religion divorced from genuine transformation.



[B] Exodus 23:2 — “Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil.”

Why this quote is used:
This passage directly confronts the modern justification that social normalization excuses disobedience. Scripture rejects majority behavior as a moral standard.



[C] Holy Bible Matthew 7:13–14.

Full Quote:
“Enter ye in at the strait gate: for wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be which go in thereat.”

Why this quote is used:
Christ warns that truth and righteousness are rarely found in majority culture. The article uses this to contrast covenant obedience against modern conformity.



[D] Doctrine and Covenants 1:16

Full Quote:
“They seek not the Lord to establish his righteousness, but every man walketh in his own way, and after the image of his own god.”

Why this quote is used:
This verse supports the article’s argument that societies frequently create spiritual systems shaped around worldly priorities rather than God’s order.



[E] Joseph Smith Jr., History of the Church, Vol. 5, p. 517.

Full Quote:
“God had often sealed up the heavens because of covetousness in the Church.”

Why this quote is used:
This statement demonstrates that early Restoration leadership viewed materialism and covetousness as spiritually destructive to revelation and covenant standing.



[F] Book of Mormon 3 Nephi 16:10.

Full Quote:
“At that day when the Gentiles shall sin against my gospel… and shall be lifted up in the pride of their hearts above all nations.”

Why this quote is used:
This prophecy is used to frame latter-day covenant societies potentially falling into pride, materialism, and spiritual corruption.



[G] Doctrine and Covenants 133:5

Full Quote:
“Go ye out from Babylon. Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.”

Why this quote is used:
This command forms one of the article’s central themes: separation from Babylon is not symbolic rhetoric alone but an actual covenant expectation.



[H] Book of Revelation Revelation 18:4.

Full Quote:
“Come out of her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins.”

Why this quote is used:
This passage establishes the theological warning that participation in Babylon eventually results in shared judgment.



[I] Doctrine and Covenants 42:30–39

Why this citation is used:
These sections contain foundational revelations regarding consecration, stewardship, equality, and care for the poor within Zion society.



[J] Doctrine and Covenants 49:20

Full Quote:
“It is not given that one man should possess that which is above another, wherefore the world lieth in sin.”

Why this quote is used:
This scripture directly critiques extreme inequality and forms one of the article’s strongest textual arguments regarding Zion economics.



[K] Pearl of Great Price Moses 7:18.

Full Quote:
“And the Lord called his people Zion, because they were of one heart and one mind, and dwelt in righteousness; and there was no poor among them.”

Why this quote is used:
This verse provides the clearest scriptural definition of Zion society and contrasts sharply against modern economic disparity.



[L] Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Vol. 19, p. 47.

Full Quote:
“My greatest fear for this people is that they will get rich in this country, forget God and His people, wax fat, and kick themselves out of the Church.”

Why this quote is used:
This quote is used to show that even early LDS leadership feared prosperity would spiritually corrupt covenant people.



[M] Holy Bible Isaiah 5:20.

Full Quote:
“Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil.”

Why this quote is used:
Isaiah’s warning supports the article’s criticism of moral inversion within legal, political, and institutional systems.



[N] Book of Mormon Ether 8:23.

Full Quote:
“Suffer not that these murderous combinations shall get above you.”

Why this quote is used:
Moroni warns covenant societies against systems of hidden power, corruption, and control that eventually dominate nations.



[O] Holy Bible 1 Peter 4:17.

Full Quote:
“For the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of God.”

Why this quote is used:
This scripture reinforces the article’s argument that covenant people bear greater responsibility because of greater spiritual light.



[P] Doctrine and Covenants 112:24–26

Why this citation is used:
These verses warn of judgment beginning among the Lord’s covenant people when they reject correction and become spiritually hardened.

Mobile Phone Version:

https://youtu.be/SDLdVgz-tiA?si=MVmOe4yKD5ZSVO6z

Full Screen Version:

https://youtu.be/vRts5mxWl4M?si=OpHgHPwaYVdEddWA

If you enjoy deep scriptural analysis, Restoration theology, Dead Sea Scroll research, prophetic patterns, and discussions concerning Zion, the Servant, Isaiah, and the latter days, subscribe to The Davidic Remnant.

This channel is dedicated to long-form research, scriptural depth, historical citations, and asking difficult questions many are afraid to ask.

The purpose is not outrage.

The purpose is awakening.

OBEDIENCE ON THE LIPS — BABYLON IN THE HEARTReckless Living, Corporate Religion, and the Collapse of Zion Consciousness in Modern Covenant SocietyWritten by ...

Address

Cleveland, UT
84518

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Zions Redemption Book Store. posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share

Category