What dedication does the Lord expect from us?

Certainly not as in Numbers 6 where you don't drink wine or grapes, cut your hair or go near a dead person even if it's your own family. (vowing to be a Nazarite).
Why did the Lord I want the children of Israel to stay away from deceased and dead people. Maybe it was because how easily bacteria could spread if the person died of unknown causes or disease.

Question, what does it mean in the scripture: D&C 59:21 "And in nothing doth man offend God, or against none is his wrath kindled, save those who confess not his hand in all things, and obey not his commandments."

The Savior sums up the counsel given “according to law and the prophets” (D&C 59:22) by declaring that the root of many of our sorrows is a lack of acknowledgement of the Lord’s hand in our lives and a lack of appreciation for the blessings He has given to us. As the Saints in Missouri entered into their great experiment in consecration, the Lord reminded them that the central tenet of that law was that nothing is really consecrated to God because everything already belongs to Him. Rather, we make our blessings holy by recognizing the holy source of our blessings. Like the Saints in Zion did, we live in a world filled with challenges and complexity. President Russell M. Nelson reminded the Saints that “there is no medication or operation that can fix the many spiritual woes and maladies that we face.” He added, “There is, however, a remedy—one that may seem surprising—because it flies in the face of our natural intuitions . . . nevertheless, its effects have been validated by scientists as well as men and women of faith. I am referring to the healing power of gratitude. Counting our blessings is far better than recounting our problems” (“The Prophet Releases a Message on the Healing Power of Gratitude,” churchnewsroom.org).

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