Jebediah Springfield |
Originally Published at Modern Mormon Men
February 28, 2014
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I recently came across a couple of neologisms (newly coined words) that expanded my vocabulary in a good way. It certainly isn't the only time that The Simpsons was the source of my inspiration. The words are: "embiggens" and "cromulent".
As it turns out, the town motto for
Springfield comes from Jebediah Springfield who said: "A noble spirit embiggens the smallest man". When Mrs.
Krabappel said she had never heard the word embiggens before moving to
Springfield, her fellow teacher Miss Hoover said “I don’t know why. It’s a
perfectly cromulent word.” I therefore can't resist waxing eloquent about other
cromulent uses of the word embiggens.
The first thing the word embiggens did
for me was make me miss George W. Bush who had a penchant for inadvertent
neologisms and malapropisms (here for an old post on
Bushisms). This longing is undoubtedly heightened by our
current political woes.
But secondly I thought of Alma's great
sermon on faith in which he likens the word of God to a seed. When planted in
our hearts and nurtured by faith, a good seed enlarges our soul and enlightens
our understanding (Alma 32:28).
As we cultivate the word, we may expect to see the seed yield fruits that
include gentleness, meekness, love unfeigned, kindness and pure knowledge.
These will "greatly enlarge the soul" (D&C 121:41-42; see also Alma 5:9).
When we taste this fruit, it is delicious, satisfying and ennobling. We could
cromulently say that we are embiggened.
If he would aspire to greatness, a man
must plant in his heart the word of God. Then, as he carefully cultivates it,
he will be embiggened as God ennobles his spirit.
How is that for a fauxcabulary lesson?
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