From Deseret News archives:
Mormon author Hugh Nibley honored with BYU lecture series
PROVO — Latter-day Saints don't need to lock themselves in a library and pore over ancient Greek and Latin texts the way Hugh Nibley did.
But knowing why they believe what they do is the first step to carrying on his prolific scholarly legacy.
"Having a testimony is a wonderful place to start, but it really is only a place to start," said BYU religion professor Robert Millet, who spoke about Nibley and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints as part of a lecture series celebrating Nibley's birth 100 years ago this March.
"We've got to begin getting serious about having Latter-day Saints who not only know the gospel's true, but they know the gospel," Millet finished.
And while that doesn't mean that everyone should study papyri manuscripts, it does require continual curiosity and a thirst for knowledge, said BYU religion professor C. Wilfred Griggs , who also worked with Nibley.
"If we ... only care about this world, we neglect the world to which we want to go," Griggs said. "What (Nibley) was really after was trying to get ... both feet into the world for which we strive. That's what he tried to get us to do, expand our horizon beyond the narrowness of our own view."
Beyond his work as a scholar and prolific writer, Millet said Nibley was at his best as a "social critic" — someone who could poke and prod members of the LDS church yet still remain an adamant defender of the faith.
Nibley criticized members for being too "Babylon-like" and spending their energy on gaining riches, Millet said. He stressed the importance of grace and gratefulness, and the need to be pure in heart, not just pure in appearance.
As a professor at BYU, Nibley often commented about the attitudes he saw in students, especially as it related to "whether we will seek the kingdom of God first, foremost and finally," Millet said.
"Almost all the young people I know today want to believe that we do not have to make such a drastic choice as between trusting in God entirely and working for money in the bank," Millet said, quoting Nibley. "May I remind you, the choice was deliberately designed to be a hard and searching one."
Nibley believed, as Millet explained, that seeking the kingdom of God first is not an item that can be done once then checked off a list, thus allowing the person to seek for riches and worldly things. Instead, it is a continual, life-long process.
"(Nibley) once remarked, 'The greatest appeal of the gospel in every age has been that it is frankly wonderful, one glorious surprise after another,' " Millet said
A few other 'Niblets,' according to Robert Millet:
The restored gospel is worth and worthy of a lifetime of study.












