Hugh Nibley - Scriptural Perspectives On How To Survive The Calamities of The Last Days
Hugh Nibley - Scriptural Perspectives On How To Survive The Calamities of The Last Days
Hugh Nibley - Scriptural Perspectives On How To Survive The Calamities of The Last Days
PERSPECTIVES ON
How to Survive
the Calamities
of the Last Days
by Hugh W. Nibley
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except those days be shortened, there should none of their flesh
be saved…” (20) There is no point to foretelling woes from
which there is no deliverance and the Lord does not leave the
people helpless, but tells them specifically what they are to do.
In the first place those who live in the Judean area are to
do what they had always done in such an emergency, they
are to flee to the mountains with their hundreds of caves and
gorges a few short miles from the city (v. 13). But unlike the
other times, they were under no conditions to go back to the
city again; no one was to “return to take anything out of his
house; neither let him who is in the field return back to take
his clothes” (14-15); it was not to be the usual return to the
city after the trouble had passed; there are no arrangements
whatsoever for returning. The Lord gives fair warning that
pregnant women should be got out of the city before it was
too late (16); not to wait for winter, which would be a bad
time to flee (17), and of course things should be so arranged
as not to flee on the Sabbath (17).
So it was foretold and so it happened. The Lord then
describes the next End, the end of the Church, which is to
take place “after the tribulation of those days which shall fall
on Jerusalem…” (21) At that time people will come claiming
to have the Gospel but they are not to be believed (21). The
saints, “who are the elect according to the covenant,” will be
led astray by “false Christs, and false prophets (22). To pre-
pare them for this cruel blow which “must come to pass” the
Lord is giving them an explanation ahead of time – ”see that
ye be not troubled…behold, I have told you before” (23-24).
The next verse anticipates the sectaries of the desert and the
secret conventicles which flourished in the second century;
the saints were to join none of them, “…go not forth…believe
it not” (25).
Next comes the restoration of the Gospel and some vivid
imagery is used. First, “the morning breaks the shadows flee”;
“for as the light of the morning cometh out of the east…and
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covereth the whole earth” so should it be in the time of “the
coming of the Son of Man” (26). Now comes one of the most
disturbing parables in the Bible which in the true context as
given here is perfectly clear. The manner of the gathering we
are told will be in the same miraculous and mysterious way as
the gathering of eagles to a carcass lying in the desert – they
appear suddenly and inexplicably in the four quarters of the
sky and come together from vast distances to that single spot
(27). Just as the breaking of the light from the East describes
the manner of the restoration, with no reference to geography,
so this passage describes the manner of the gathering – no
other comparison is implied in introducing such an unsavory
object as a carcass.
It will be a terrible time with “wars and rumors of wars”
(28), with world unrest, “nation against nation…famines, and
pestilences, and earthquakes…” (29). “And again…iniquity
shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold…” (30) Yet at
that very time “this Gospel of the Kingdom shall be preached
in all the world for a witness unto all nations and then shall the
end come…” (31) A thick pall of dust and smoke covers the
earth, “the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give
her light…(33). The generation in which these things happen
will see the final end (34): unlike all the other great destruc-
tions this one involves the entire globe when “all the tribes of
the earth mourn” (36) Then the Son of Man shall come, but
first “He shall send his angels before him with the sound of a
trumpet” for a last gathering – ”and they shall gather together
the remainder of his elect…from the four winds…” (37) “As
it was in the days of Noah,” it will be business as usual right
up until the end which shall come suddenly and unexpect-
edly – ”they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in
marriage and knew not until the flood came and took them all
away; so shall also the coming of the Son of Man be.” (42–43)
Again an interesting comparison when the Lord likens himself
to a thief in the night which has no criminal connotations but
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is used purely to describe the manner of his coming – it will
be a complete surprise. How does one prepare for it then?
One does not. Jesus makes it very clear that the only prepara-
tion is to live every day as if the Lord were coming on that
day. In striking contrast to the Jerusalem situation he gives
no specific instructions but explains that when “that shall be
fulfilled which is written, that in the last days, two shall be in
the field, the one shall be taken and the other left; two shall
be grinding at the mill, the one shall be taken and the other
not” (44-45). Which means that there is no point to devising
ingenious schemes for survival, there being but one real course
of escape. What you’re supposed to do is to watch yourselves
at all times (46); be found doing good all the time (49); do not
act as if it were going to be business as usual indefinitely, as if
the great event belonged to a vague and indefinite future (51).
The one thing you can be sure of is that it will be “in such an
hour as ye think not” (48). So the only preparation is to do
what? To abstain from taking advantage of others, oppressing
the poor, and living in luxury (52).
Each of these ends is expressly called the end of the world
with the explicit statement of what is meant by the expression
‘…the end of the world, or the destruction of the wicked, which
is the end of the world.” (4:31;55) This is followed by the most
important explanation of all, namely, that the end of these
dispensations is not the destruction of the globe, for “the end
of the earth is not yet but by and by,” i.e. at some unspecified
future date. Just as we do not believe that the creation of the
world was the instantaneous beginning of everything, neither
do we suppose a Star Wars ending. What we are plainly told
is that the expression End of the World refers expressly to the
destruction of the wicked. So who are the “wicked”, and how
“destroyed”? The Book of Mormon is the complete handbook
on the subject. Twenty times it tells us of the great overburn
and each time assures us that while the wicked shall burn as
stubble the righteous need not fear. The question that con-
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cerns us then, is not how such a miracle can be arranged – that
is quite beyond our imagination at present – but who are the
righteous and who are the wicked? We may think we have
an easy answer to that one, but it is not the answer that the
scriptures give us.
The righteous are whoever are repenting, and the wicked
whoever are not repenting. “Two men went into the temple
to pray,” the one a Pharisee who gave thanks to God that he
was not a crook or a lecher; he fasted twice a week and paid a
full tithe and was very strict in his religious observances. All
this was perfectly true. (luke 18:10 ff) The other man was a
tax collector and rather ashamed of some of the things he had
done, and instead of thanking God by way of boasting, only
asked him to be merciful to him a sinner (13). The surprise is
that the sinner was the righteous one because he was repenting;
the other one who “exalteth himself shall be abased” – because
he was not repenting (14). “None but the truly penitent are
saved”, and that is who the righteous are (alma 42:22–24).
What do you repent of and how do you repent? It is all
a matter of seeking: when you repent you turn from seeking
some things to seeking others. What you seek are “the desires
of your heart” as Alma says and by them alone you will be
judged. “Now the cause of the wickedness of the people was
this: Satan had great power unto the stirring up of the people
tempting them to seek for power and authority and riches and
the vain things of this world” (3rd ne. 6:15) The condition
is first laid out by Nephi and often repeated throughout the
Book of Mormon as he sums up his experience: all who seek
“to get gain, and…to get power and…to become to popular…
and those who seek the lusts of the flesh and the things of the
world…they are those who must be brought low in the dust…
who must be consumed as stubble and this according to the
words of the prophets.” (1 ne. 22:23) The first commandment
given to the Church was “seek not for riches but for wisdom”
(dc 6:7, 11:7), the Lord well knowing what most people are
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prone to seek. We need not expand on how those four things
are inseparably joined “in one specious and glittering mass”
as Gibbon says of the Romans; the appeal of the prime-time
tv show would be defective and our joy would not be full if
any of the four were lacking in Dallas, Dynasty or Falconcrest.
The Nephites of old had their own idea of who are righ-
teous and who are wicked, as we do, which conveniently avoid-
ed the necessity of repentance until they were forced to it by
violent events. And we are warned to “…beware of pride lest
ye become as the Nephites of old,” who, the same verse tells
us, sought the wrong kind of riches – that was their wicked-
ness (dc 38:39).
Very well, what do the righteous seek? Isn’t “wisdom” rather
vague? The righteous in the Book of Mormon seek “to live
after the manner of happiness” (2nd ne. 5:27), and in at least
five instances succeeded. It is their example we should follow,
but I don’t think we will until we get rid of our own definition
of who are the good guys and who are the bad guys.
All the writers in the Book of Mormon are worried men.
Nephi ended his days disappointed, discouraged and saddened.
He had once led a society that lived “after the manner of hap-
piness,” but all that had changed. “…Now after I have spoken
these words if ye cannot understand them it will be because ye
ask not…wherefore ye are not brought to the light but must
perish in the dark… (2 ne. 32:4) And now I Nephi cannot
say more; the spirit stoppeth mine utterance, and I am left to
mourn because of the wickedness and the ignorance, and the
stiffneckedness of men; for they will not search knowledge,
nor understand great knowledge when it is given unto them
in plainness, even as plain as word can be…it grieveth me that
I must speak concerning this thing,” etc. (7–8). His last words
show us the old Nephi, upright, passionate, obedient till the
last: “…these words shall condemn you at the last day…for
thus hath the Lord commanded me, and I must obey.” (2 ne.
33:14-15)
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If Nephi’s last words are neither happy nor hopeful, the
first words of Jacob, to whom he turns over the record, are
positively alarming as he begins on a note of “great anxiety,”
because he has been shown what is going to happen (jacob
1:5). Jacob and his descendants are religious leaders, not kings,
working their heads off to forestall a growing trend, trying “to
persuade the people not to rebel against God” (7,8). Already
under Nephi the Second, they “began to grow hard in their
hearts,” indulging “somewhat” in Solomon’s luxurious vices
and “lifted up somewhat in pride” – that “somewhat” still leaves
the door open to repentance (jacob 1:15). But they do all this
in the odor of sanctity, justifying themselves by the scriptures
(jacob 2:23). Jacob is very reluctant to speak about this sort
of thing (2:2), he “shrinks with shame” at it (2:6); but things
are definitely getting worse: “This day [I] am weighed down
with much more anxiety…than I have hitherto been” (2:3).
“I can tell your thoughts…ye are beginning to labor in sin…”
(2:5) At the launching of a new civilization which is to last for
a thousand years things must not get out of hand and Jacob is
desperate to control the situation. He is plainly embarrassed
(2:11) to bring up their sins (5), wickedness (6) crimes (9) and
abominations (10) under which the people are beginning to
labor – just what are these vices? we begin to wonder, and the
answer is loud and clear: “…now this is the word…that many
of you have begun to search for gold” (12) They have not been
opposed in this, he tells them, for God means the riches of
the Promised Land to be enjoyed (12), but what he does not
like is the invidious comparison of a competitive economy:
“…because some of you have obtained more abundantly than…
your brethren ye are lifted up in pride…ye suppose that ye
are better than they” (2:13). It is inequality that the prophets
deplore throughout the Book of Mormon; pride stands at the
head of every one of those many lists of crimes that beset the
society. Above all this reverence for wealth will not do, Jacob
tells the people (14); do they have any idea how contemptible
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this thing is in God’s sight? If you value his opinion you will
not set up your own artificial scale of values (16). There is
nothing wrong with having plenty, but let’s all be rich! “…be
familiar with all and free with your substance, that they may
be rich like unto you.” (17) Then comes a classic statement
on equality: “Ye were proud…of the things which God hath
given unto you, what say ye of it? Do ye not suppose that such
things are abominable unto him who created all flesh? And the
one being is as precious in the sight as another” (21).
With seeking for wealth goes a “grosser” attendant vice
of licentious living (22 ff). God does not bring people to the
Promised Land for a repeat of the Old World Follies; here he is
determined “to raise up unto me a righteous branch of the fruit
of the loins of Joseph. Wherefore, not suffer that this people
shall do like unto them of old” (25-26). God’s people may
never enjoy the luxury of living “after the manner of the world”
(dc 105:3-5). The promised land is a testing ground offering
both great opportunity and corresponding risk: “wherefore
this people shall keep my commandments…or cursed be the
land for their sakes” (29). In the Old World are civilizations
which were ancient at the time Lehi left Jerusalem, and they
still survive, but of those in the land of promise we are told that
when they are ripe in , iniquity, when the cup is full, they shall
be swept off from the land. Compared with other continents
this one has no history, no surviving cultures, though far and
wide civilizations whose identity remains a complete mystery
have left their ruins and their scattered descendants.
The Nephites always fancied themselves to be good people
because the Lord had brought them to the Land of Promise
and accordingly styled their enemies as the wicked. And in-
deed the enemy was a real and constant element in all their
operations. The dangerous illusion that the populace may be
classified simply as the good guys (our side) and the bad guys
(their side) becomes the main theme of the Book of Jacob as
of the Book of Mormon itself. While Jacob spares no words in
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describing the wickedness and depravity of the Lamanites he
can declare of his own people at that early date. “Behold, ye
have done greater iniquities than the Lamanites” (jac. 2:35).
Where does that leave us? With a polarized world that emerges
in Jacob Chapter 3. “…except ye repent the land is cursed for
your sakes; and the Lamanites…nevertheless they are cursed
with a sore curse, shall scourge you even unto destruction.
And the time speedily cometh that except ye repent they shall
possess the land of your inheritance…the Lamanites, your
brethren, whom ye hate because of their filthiness, are more
righteous than you…the Lord will not destroy them, but will
be merciful unto them” (jac. 3:3-6). So later: “I will not utterly
destroy them but…concerning the people of the Nephites: If
they will not repent… I will utterly destroy them” (he. 15:16
f). Bad guys? …how much better are you than they, in the sight
of your great creator” (7). As Isaiah told the Jews at Jerusalem,
it is not for them to decide who are God’s people – that is for
God to decide ( is. 1:2).
Throughout the Book of Mormon the wicked have a per-
fectly beautiful self-image, to which Jacob now refers, “…a
commandment I give unto you, which is the word of God,
that ye revile no more against them because of the darkness of
their skins…because of their filthiness; but ye shall remember
your own filthiness, and…that their filthiness came because
of their fathers” (jac. 3:9), while ‘your filthiness (may) bring
your children unto destruction” (10). Even Nephi in his youth
recognized and combatted the natural tendency to put one’s
self on the right side: “Yea, why should I give away to tempta-
tions, that the evil one have place in my heart to destroy my
peace and afflict my soul? Why am I angry because of mine
enemy? Awake, oh my soul! No longer droop in sin. Rejoice,
oh my heart, and give place no more for the enemy of my soul.
Do not anger again because of mine enemies” (2 ne 4:27-29)
He recognizes that no matter how vicious his enemies were
they were not responsible for his condition. We cannot re-
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pent for our enemies – what do we know about their personal
lives? ‘Repent” is a reflexive verb, “I do repent me…” I can
sorrow for the wickedness of another but I cannot repent of it
unless I have caused it. For Nephi the perennial tension was
laid down as a condition of life for his people, “inasmuch as
ye shall keep my commandments, ye shall prosper and shall
be led to a land of promise, choice above all other lands, and
inasmuch as thy brethren (the Lamanites) shall rebel against
thee they shall be cut off from the presence of the Lord (1 ne.
2:20)…and in that day (fulfilled in jacob 3:3)–I will curse them
even with a sore cursing and they shall have no power over
thy seed except they shall rebel against me also (23). And if it
so be that they rebel against me they shall be a scourge unto
thy seed to stir them up in the ways of remembrance” (24).
Thus it was God’s intention to keep the “Bad Guys” in place
permanently and it would be no use for the Nephites to try
to get rid of them, since they could be rendered harmless by
their own righteousness.
The same message came to Jacob’s son Enos: “I will visit
thy brethren according to their diligence in keeping my com-
mandments. I have given unto them this land, and it is a holy
land; and I curse it not save it be for the cause of iniquity”
(en. 10). With this goes a vivid description of just how thor-
oughly bad the Lamanites were; every effort of approach or
conciliation by the Nephites was rebuffed, “…our labors were
in vain; their hatred was fixed, and they were led by their
evil nature that they became wild, and ferocious, and blood
thirsty people…and they were continually seeking to destroy
us” (20) – perfect type-casting for the Bad Guys. And yet Enos
declares that this dangerous confrontation was exactly what the
Nephites needed! They would not behave themselves without
being thoroughly scared and admonished: “…nothing save
it were exceeding harshness, preaching and prophesying of
wars…and continually reminding them of death” could have
the desired effect of “stirring them up continually to keep them
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in fear of the Lord” (23). The prophecy of Nephi was being
fulfilled, “they shall be a scourge unto thy seed to stir them
up unto remembrance of me; and inasmuch as they will not
remember me, and hearken unto my words, they shall scourge
them, even unto destruction” (2 ne. 5:25). Isn’t that all a bit
severe? Not with “a stiffnecked people hard to understand”
(en. 22). Jarom, the son of Enos, tells how “the prophets of
the Lord did threaten the people of Nephi, according to the
word of God, that if they did not keep the commandments…
they should be destroyed off the face of the land” (jarom 10);
and Jarom explains that it was “by so doing they kept them
from being destroyed from off the face of the earth; for they
did prick their hearts with the word, continually stirring them
up unto repentance” (jarom 12) – Nephi’s formula again.
Strictly speaking, there are no good guys, “ …all men are
in a state of nature…a carnal state…in the bonds of iniquity;
they are without God in the world…” (alma 41:11). Hence,
“this is my doctrine…that the Father commandeth all men,
everywhere, to repent and believe in me” (3 ne. 11:32). It is as
pointless, then, to ask, Who are the Good Guys and who are
the Bad Guys? as it is to ask who should repent. The answer
is always the same: I am the sinner, and I must repent. How
much? Until, like the Son of Man, I am “full of grace and
truth.” When will that be? Not in this life! Here, all one can
hope for is a passing grade.
Jacob’s warnings of destruction take on an ominous note
when his son Enos prays the Lord that “if it should so be that
my people, the Nephites, should…by any means be destroyed”
he would preserve their record for the Lamanites (enos 13, 16).
This nervous future-less-vivid condition is supplanted by an
alarming future indicative when Enos’ son Jarom flatly states,
“…these things are written for the intent of the benefit of our
brethren the Lamanites” (jarom 2). The most hopeful thing
that he can say for his own people is that “God is exceedingly
merciful unto them and has not yet swept them off from the
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face of the land,” in spite of “the hardness of their hearts, and
the deafness of their ears, and the blindness of their minds,
and the stiffness of their necks…” (3). Were the Lamanites,
then, so deserving? At that time, Jarom tells us, they “loved
murder and would drink the blood of beasts…” (6). The best
Jarom could hope for was to postpone the tragic end, and
there were many righteous people among the Nephites who
set themselves to the task: “…the prophets did threaten the
people of Nephi…if they should fall into transgression, they
should be destroyed from off the face of the lands” (10).
Why this constant insistence on destruction – can’t the
people simply be punished or corrected? The ceaseless labors
of prophets, priests and teachers was all that “kept them from
being destroyed…for they did prick their hearts with the word,
continually stirring them up to repentance” (12). Apparently
the severe penalty clause for those who fail to meet conditions
of survival in the Promised Land comes with the territory.
And who are the righteous in this land of backsliding
Nephites and depraved Lamanites? The answer is written all
over the Book of Mormon, the righteous are whoever are re-
penting. “…I say unto you that as many of the Gentiles as will
repent are the covenant people of the Lord; and as many of the
Jews will not repent shall be cast off; for the Lord covenanteth
with none save it be with them that repent…” (2 ne. 30:2).
Nephi is here repeating a lesson earlier given to his brethren
Laman and Lemuel who assumed that they were the Good
Guys and that the traditional enemies of Israel, the Amorites
who formerly inhabited the land, were the Bad Guys. “Not
at all!” says Nephi, “…do ye suppose that the children of this
land who are in the land of promise, who were driven out by
our fathers, do ye suppose that they were righteous? …Do you
suppose that our fathers would have been more choice than
they if they had been righteous? I say unto you nay. Behold,
the Lord esteemeth all flesh in one; he that is righteous is
favored of God. …They were ripe in iniquity…and the Lord
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did curse the land…against them unto their destruction, and
he did bless it unto our fathers…” (1 ne. 17:34-35). The
same land is blessed and cursed depending entirely on how
the people behave, “And he leadeth away the righteous into
precious lands and the wicked he destroyeth, and curseth the
land unto them for their sakes” (17:38). And now Nephi tells
them it was the Jews’ turn to come under the curse: “And now…
the time has come that they have become wicked, yea, nearly
unto ripeness; and…the day must surely come that they must
be destroyed” (17:43).
Laman and Lemuel being patriots weren’t having any of
that; for them the Jews were ipso facto the Good Guys: “We
know that the people…in the land of Jerusalem were a righ-
teous people; for they kept the statutes and judgments of the
Lord…according to the Law of Moses; wherefore we know
that they are a righteous people and our father hath judged
them…” (17:22). It is this very argument to which Isaiah gave
such a stinging rebuke. Jarom’s son Omni admits that he is a
wicked man and has spent his time fighting Lamanites rather
than keeping “the statutes and commandments of the Lord
as I ought to have done” (omni 2). Omni’s son, Amaron, an-
nounces the fulfillment of the prophecy in his own day when
“the more wicked parts of the Nephites were destroyed” (omni
5): “For the Lord would not suffer, after he had led them out
of the land of Jerusalem and kept and preserved them from…
their enemies…that the words should not be verified which ye
spake unto our fathers…Wherefore the Lord did visit them
in great judgement; nevertheless he did spare the righteous
that they should not perish…” (Omni 6–7). How was it pos-
sible to be so selective in times of war and confusion? It was
done by the process of leading the righteous away. When the
lights went out and the grandson of Amaron could report that
there was “no revelation…neither prophecy” in his day (omni
11), then the righteous man Mosiah was “warned of the Lord
that he should flee out of the land of Nephi,” taking any who
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would go with him – it was Lehi all over again, another society
of saints in the wilderness.
Mosiah became a king in the land of Zarahemla where his
son the righteous King Benjamin was able to establish the sem-
blance of a decent society by using “much sharpness because
of the stiffneckedness of the people,” speaking “the words of
God with power and authority” (words of mormon 17). At
the time he handed over the crown to his son King Mosiah
the conventional great assembly of the nation, a “panegyris”
was held after the manner of the ancients everywhere “I have
not commanded you to come up here to trifle with words
which I shall speak,” he tells them (mosiah 2:9). Benjamin
was the idol of his people to whom his courage and skill had
brought victory and prosperity. The meeting was in an ecstasy
of patriotic fervor. But what did the king do? He studiously
threw cold water over every spark of national pride. When
he saw that in response to his words “they had fallen to the
earth, for the fear of the Lord had come upon them” (Mos.
4:1), he congratulated them on being “awakened to a sense of
your nothingness, and you worthless and fallen state… (4:5),
believe that you must repent of your sins and forsake them, and
humble yourselves before God…I would that ye should always
retain in remembrance the greatness of God, and your own
nothingness…you unworthy creatures…humble yourselves
even in the depths of humility” (10-11).
Why this relentless suppression of every impulse to self
congratulation? It was to prepare the people’s minds to receive
the doctrine of the Atonement and the Redemption which
otherwise appear strange and alien to prosperous people, and
to prepare them to receive the Covenant. Only those who
are aware of their lost and fallen state can take the mission of
the Savior seriously, and before one can embrace it in terms
of the eternities it must be grasped on the level of common
everyday reality – Benjamin’s people knew that they were in
real danger a good deal of the time and thanks to his teachings
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knew that there was only way they could get through. And
now he wishes to bring home to them the need for a Savior
and Redeemer as something even more real and urgent than
holding off the Lamanites. Their righteousness must be put
to a very practical test: “…ye will administer your substance
unto him that standeth in need…perhaps thou wilt say the
man has brought upon himself his misery; therefore I will stay
mine hand and will not give unto him of my food, nor impart
to him of my substance…” (mosiah 4:16–17). This equating
of busy acquisition with righteousness is a great sin accord-
ing to Benjamin (cf. al. 4:6), and unless one who commits
it “repenteth of that which he hath done he perishes forever,”
for he has denied our common dependence on God, “and
hath no interest in the Kingdom of God. For behold are we
not all beggars?” (mosiah 4:18-19). He wants them to realize
that this dependence applies at every level: “…if God…doth
grant unto you whatsoever you ask that is right…O then, how
ye ought to impart of your substance to one another” (4:21).
The essence of Benjamin’s preaching is to purge the people if
possible of their flattering self-image as Good Guys.
It was in the time of Mosiah that Zeniff was sent on patrol
to spy out the weak points of the Lamanite defenses, “that our
army might come upon them and destroy them – but when I
saw that which was good among them, I was desirous that they
should not be destroyed” (mosiah 9:1). For this treason the
leader of the patrol, “being an austere and bloodthirsty man (a
real commando) commanded that I should be slain” – mustn’t
be soft on the Bad Guys! After all Zeniff tells us the Lama-
nites really “were a lazy and an idolatrous people; therefore
they were desirous to bring us into bondage’ (mosiah 9:12),
what is more they “taught their children to have an eternal
hatred toward the children of Nephi” (10:17). How can you
deal with such people? That problem was solved in the proper
way at a later time by the mightiest warrior of the Nephites,
the great Ammon.
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One might expect Ammon the super-swordsman of the
Book of Mormon to whom no man or platoon of men could
stand up, to wade in and teach the Lamanites a lesson; so
when he proposed to go with a few companions among the
Lamanites as a missionary everybody “laughed us to scorn,”
as he reports it (Alma 26:23) “for they said to us: do ye sup-
pose that ye can bring the Lamanites to the knowledge of
truth?…convince them of the incorrectness of the traditions
of their fathers, as stiffnecked a people as they are; whose
hearts delight in the shedding of blood…transgressors from
the beginning, etc., etc. This was their language” (al. 26:24).
Of course everybody was for the standard solution: “let us take
up arms against them that we destroy them and their iniquity
out of the land lest they over run us and destroy us” – the
only realistic solution (Alma 26:25). But not for the mighty
Ammon! “We came into the wilderness not with the intent
to destroy our brethren, but with the intent that perhaps we
might save some few of their souls” (Alma 26:26). And so
the terrible warrior “traveled from house to house,” patiently
suffering every privation, “relying…alone upon the mercies of
God” (26:28), teaching the people in their houses and in their
streets, being “cast out, and mocked, and spit upon, and smote
upon our cheeks…and stoned, and bound…cast into prison…
suffering all manner of afflictions, and all this that perhaps we
might be the means of saving some soul” (26:29-30). And that
is the way you deal with the Bad Guys.
The result of that effort was a body of converts who ac-
cepted Ammon’s own philosophy, who “buried their weapons
of war, and they feared to take them up lest by any means
they should sin…” (mel. 15:9), the righteous People of Am-
mon who spent their days repenting of the murders they had
committed as acts of war and refusing to fight the Bad Guys
under any circumstances (alma 24:5-30).
When Abinadi came with the usual message: “…except
they repent I will utterly destroy them from off the face of
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the earth” (mosiah 12:8), the people of King Noah said he
was crazy because they were the Good People: “and now O
king, what great evil hast thou done, or what great sins have
thy people committed, that we should be condemned of God
or judged of this man?…behold we are guiltless, and thou O
king hast not sinned…and behold, we are strong, we shall not
come into bondage…and thou hast prospered in the land, and
thou shalt also prosper” – peace and prosperity, standing tall
all the way (mosiah 12:13–15). In reply Abinadi pointed out
that while being actively religious they were doing the two
things so fervidly condemned by Jacob, “If ye teach the Law
of Moses why do ye not keep it: Why do ye set your hearts
upon riches? Why do ye commit whoredoms…and cause this
people to commit sin?” (Mosiah 3:13).
We must not forget those Book of Mormon super-good
guys, the Zoramites: hard working, independent, fiercely pa-
triotic, brave, smart, prosperous Zoramites, strictly attending
their meetings and observing proper dress standards. What a
perfectly wonderful self-image! “Holy God, we believe that
thou hast separated us from our brethren…we believe that
thou hast elected us to be thy holy children…and thou hast
elected us that we shall be saved, while all around us are elected
to be cast by thy wrath down to hell; for the which holiness, O
God, we thank thee…and again we thank thee, O God, that
we are a chosen and a holy people” (alma 31:17-18). To Alma
these quintessentially Good Guys were the wickedest people
he had ever known; “O Lord God, how long wilt thou suffer
that such wickedness and iniquity shall be among this people?…
give me strength…for I am infirm and such wickedness among
this people doth pain my soul” (alma (31:30). And yet instead
of condemning them he prays God to give him “strength to
bear his afflictions among them” (31:33), because “their souls
are precious” (35). And in what did the “gross wickedness” of
these people consist? In this, that “while they cry unto thee O
God, their hearts are swallowed up in their pride…puffed up,
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even to greatness, with the vain things of the world. Behold O
my God, their costly apparel…and all their precious things…
and behold, their hearts are set upon them, and yet they cry
unto thee and say we thank thee, O God, for we are a chosen
people unto thee, while others shall perish” (alma 31:27-28).
The prophet Nephi made the same charge against the
people of Zarahemla: “…ye have set your hearts upon riches
and the vain things of this world, for the which ye do murder,
and plunder, and steal, and bear false witness against your
neighbor” (hel. 7:21). But God is not going to put up with
it; he is withdrawing his protection: “The Lord will not grant
unto you strength…to withstand against your enemies. For
behold, thus saith the Lord: I will not show unto the wicked
of my strength, to the one more than the other, save it be
unto those who repent…it shall be better for the Lamanites
than for you except ye shall repent. For behold they are more
righteous than you, for they have not sinned against that great
knowledge which ye have received: therefore the Lord will…
lengthen out their days…even when thou shalt be utterly de-
stroyed except thou shalt repent” (hel. 7:22-24). How often
does this have to be repeated, why do you think such great
pains and sufferings have been experienced to get the message
of the Book of Mormon through to us? Nephi goes on, “Yea,
wo shall come unto you because of that pride…which has lifted
you up because of your exceeding riches!” (v. 26).
In the 12th Chapter of Helaman the demoralizing effect
of riches on society is stated as a general rule: “…at the very
time when he doth prosper his people…then is the time that
they do harden their hearts” (hel. 12:2). Why do they do it,
“O how great is the nothingness of the children of men” – thus
is their beautiful self-image rebuffed (hel. 12:7).
Jesus Christ visiting the Nephites personally saw to it
that the preaching of Samuel the Lamanite be included in
the record, from which it had been omitted, perhaps because
he was an alien or spoke too frankly. “For this cause,” said
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Samuel to the people of Zarahemla, “hath the Lord caused
that a curse should come upon the land and also upon your
riches…ye do cast out the prophets and do mock them (hel.
13:23), and now when ye talk, ye say: If our days had been
in the day of our fathers of old, we would have not slain the
prophets, we would not have stoned them and cast them out”
(hel. 13:24–25). Behold ye are worse than they… if a prophet
come among you and declareth unto you the word of the Lord
which testifies of your sins and iniquities you are angry with
him…you will say that he is a false prophet…of the devil…”
(26) They want to be told that they are the good people and
so when a man comes and tells them not what is wrong with
Zarahemla but what is right with Zarahemla they will “say that
he is a prophet…,” and reward him with large sums of money,
“because he speaketh flattering words anew and he saith that
all is well then you will not find fault with him” (28).
Giddianhi, the robber leader, insists that his followers
are the good guys who are only trying to protect their sacred
rights and property against the bad guys, “behold the many
wrongs which ye have done unto them…” (3 ne. 3:4). He is the
chief of the large and powerful “secret society of Gadianton;
which society and the works thereof I know to be good;”(3
ne. 3:9–10) and they are of ancient date and they have been
handed down to us. The chief is merely trying to “recover
their rights and government,” lost to them “because of your
wickedness in retaining from their rights, etc” (3 ne. 3:10). It
is the rigid tribal morality of the Mafia.
The shining hero of the Book of Mormon is Moroni, “…if
all men had been…like unto Moroni…the devil would never
have power over the hearts of the children of men…the very
powers of hell would have been shaken forever” (alma 48:17).
You do not expel evil from “the hearts of the children of men”
by shooting them or blowing them up or torturing them – the
Inquisition operated on that theory. Nor can “the powers of
hell be shaken” by heavy artillery or nuclear warheads. The
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devil does not care who is fighting or why, as long as there
is fighting; “he is the father of contention, and he stirreth
up the hearts of men to contend in anger one with another”
(3 ne. 11:29). “Behold this is not my doctrine to stir up the
hearts of men with anger, one against another; but this is my
doctrine that such things should be done away…I will declare
unto you my doctrine…that the Father commandeth all men,
everywhere, to repent and believe in me” (3 ne. 11:30-32).
There is no possibility of confrontation here between Good
and Bad. This is best shown in Alma’s duel with Amlici. The
Amlicites are described as coming on in all the hideous and
hellish trappings of one of our more colorful rock groups,
glorying in the fiendish horror of their appearance (alma 3:4-
6). Alma on the other hand was “the man of God” who met
the monster Amlici “with the sword face to face” (alma 2:29),
and of course won. Yet the Nephites considered that debacle
to be “the judgements of God sent upon them because of
their wickedness, and their abominations; therefore they were
awakened to a remembrance of their duty” (alma 4:3). The
moral is that whenever there is a battle both sides are guilty.
Nobody knew that better than Moroni whose efforts to
avoid conflict far exceeded his labors in battle. When he saw
trouble ahead he got ready for it by “preparing the minds
of the people to be faithful unto the Lord their God” (alma
58:7). His military preparations were strictly defensive and
he was careful to do nothing that would seem to threaten the
Lamanites; “we would never fight them,” he said, “if they did
not come up against us” (cf. moses 7:13); all of his battles
were fought on Nephite soil (alma 48:8-10). We are repeat-
edly reminded that Moroni was, “a man that did not delight
in bloodshed”. By him “the Nephites were taught to defend
themselves…and they were also taught never to give an of-
fense, and never to raise the sword except it were to preserve
their lives” (alma 48:14). Any thought of preemptive strike
was out of the question; Moroni even apologizes for espionage,
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for if they only had sufficient faith “God would warn them
to flee, or to prepare for war, according to their danger and…
make it known unto them whither they should go to defend
themselves” etc. This was a great load off their minds “and
Moroni’s heart did glory in it; not in the shedding of blood”
but “in keeping the commandments of God, yea and resisting
iniquity” (alma 48:15-16). Resisting iniquity where? In the
only place it can be resisted, in their own hearts. Not only was
a preventive strike out of the question but Moroni’s people
had to let the enemy attack at least twice before responding,
to guarantee that their own action was purely defensive (alma
43:46). The highest compliment that Alma can pay Moroni
was, “Behold he was a man like unto Ammon” (alma 48:18),
who, as we have seen, renounced all military solutions to the
Lamanite problem.
Later it was the decision of the Nephites after a series of
brilliant victories to take the initiative against the Lamanites,
and “cut them off from the face of the land” that made a con-
scientious objector of Mormon, their great leader, who “did
utterly refuse from this time forth to be a commander and
a leader” (mormon 3:10-11). “When they had sworn by all
that was forbidden them…that they would go up unto to their
enemies to battle and avenge themselves of the blood of their
brethren [a perfect John Wayne situation], behold the voice
of the Lord came (to Mormon) saying: vengeance is mine and
I will repay” (mormon 3:14-15). So Mormon from being top
brass becomes a detached observer and reporter for our express
benefit, “I did stand as an idle witness…therefore I write unto
you Gentiles, and also unto you House of Israel” (mormon
3:16-17). He explains that the fatal mistake of the Nephites
was to take the offensive: “And it was because the armies of the
Nephites went up unto the Lamanites that they began to be
smitten; for were it not for that the Lamanites could have no
power over them” (mormon 4:4). Then comes the bottom line:
“But behold, the judgments of God will overtake the wicked;
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and it is by the wicked that the wicked are punished; for it is
the wicked that stir up the hearts of the children of men unto
bloodshed” (mormon 4:5). The battle is not between good
and bad – ”the wicked shall destroy the wicked”.
Mormon places the Nephites and the Lamanites side by
side for our benefit. As the war between them continued each
sunk deeper and deeper into depravity. First, after a Nephite
victory there were four years of peace devoted not to repen-
tance but to warlike preparations as the Lord removed “his
beloved disciples from among them…because of their wick-
edness and unbelief” (moroni 1:11). The Lord even forbade
Mormon to preach repentance, which preaching would now
do no good, “because of the hardness of their hearts…the land
was cursed for their sakes” (moroni 1:17). They had passed
the point of no return. The people had begun to worry and
seek safe investments, to “hide up their treasures in the earth.”
But the Dow Jones kept going down as “their riches became
slippery…that they could not hold them, nor retain them again”
(moroni 1:18). It is interesting that amid all this military fury
riches still held the number one position in their minds. Then,
as at the end of the Antique World, total lack of security forced
people to turn in desperation to “sorceries, and witchcrafts, and
magics” – they felt haunted, helpless, “surrounded by demons!”
(1:19). “The land was filled with robbers,” insecurity was total
but “notwithstanding the great destruction which hung over
my people they did not repent…and it was one complete
revolution throughout the land” (mormon 2:8). Then come
those awful words, “and I saw that the day of grace was passed
with them” (mormon 2:15). Though Mormon relented under
extreme pressure and led the army to more victories (mormon
2:22 ff), “Nevertheless the strength of the Lord was not with
us; yea, we were left to ourselves” (mormon 2:26). The poor
fools after all the Lord had done for them “they did not realize
that it was the Lord that had spared them and granted unto
them a chance for repentance” – his arm was still stretched
out (mormon 3:3).
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Meanwhile, what were the bad guys up to? The Lamanites
had been sacrificing Nephite women and children (mormon
4:15), yet “notwithstanding the great abomination of the
Lamanites, it did not exceed that of our people,” who were
practicing cannibalism “for a token of bravery” (moroni 9:9).
When things reached this state Mormon says “I pray to God
to witness the return of his people…or their utter destruction;
for I know that they must perish except they repent” (moroni
9:22). “O the depravity of my people…without order and
without mercy” (Mormon 9:18). Mormon actually prays for
the destruction of the people he had loved and led (mormon
3:12 f). “And if they perish it will be like unto the Jaredites
because of the willfulness of their hearts seeking for blood and
revenge” (moroni 9:23).
And all this is meant for us: “…these things must surely
be made known…a knowledge of these things must come
unto a remnant of these people and also unto the Gentiles”
(Mormon 5:8), by being “hid up unto the Lord that they may
come forth in his own due time.” As to Mormon’s own people,
the Lord hath reserved their blessings, which they might have
received in the land, for the Gentiles who shall possess the
land (mormon 5:19). But they will have another chance, for
“after they have been driven and scattered by the Gentiles,
then the Lord will remember the covenant” (mormon 5:20).
Then it will be our turn to be concerned: “and then, O ye
Gentiles, how can ye stand before the power of God, except
ye shall repent and turn from evil ways?” (mormon 5:22)
That hardly describes us as good guys; there is only one hope
for them: “I prayed…that he would give unto the Gentiles
grace,” says Moroni, “that they might have charity” – that was
the only thing that could save them, unilateral generosity; if
I expect anything in return for charity except the happiness
of the recipient, then it is not charity. The Lord’s answer to
Moroni is chilling: “And the Lord said unto me: if they have
not charity it mattereth not unto thee…” (ether 12:36-37).
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Mormon was shown our generation, which he describes with
photographic accuracy: “Behold I speak unto ye as if ye were
present, and yet ye are not. But behold, Jesus Christ has shown
you unto me, and I know your doing” (mormon 8:35). He
then proceeds to describe a people immensely pleased with
themselves where “there are none save a few only who do
not lift themselves up in the pride of their hearts, unto the
wearing of very fine apparel, unto envying and strifes, and
malice and persecution, and all manner of iniquities,” the high
living fiercely competitive crime-ridden world of the 1980’s
(mormon 8:36). And then to the heart of the matter: “For
behold ye do love money, and your substance, and your fine
apparel, and the adorning of your churches [communists do
not adorn churches], more than ye do love the poor and the
needy, the sick and the afflicted” (mormon 8:37). Why, he asks,
do we allow the underprivileged to “pass by you and notice
them not”, while placing high value on “that which hath no
life” (8:39). All the meanness and smugness of our day speaks
in that phrase; and these very self-satisfied, church-conscious,
and wicked people are about to be destroyed by war: “Behold
the sword of vengeance hangeth over you; and the time soon
cometh that he avengeth the blood of the saints upon you, for
he will not suffer their cries any longer” (8:41).
We have not mentioned the case of the Jaredites; it should
hardly be necessary to tell the story of Shiz and Coriantumr,
each obsessed with the necessity of ridding the world of his
evil adversary. Both sides were exterminated. Not many years
ago all of this Book of Mormon extravaganza belonged even
for Latter-day Saints to the world of pure fantasy, of things
that could never happen in the modern civilized world – total
extermination of a nation was utterly unthinkable in those days.
But suddenly even within the past year or two a very ancient
order of things has emerged at the forefront of world affairs;
whoever would have thought it – the Holy War! The ultimate
showdown of the Good Guys with God on their side versus
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the Godless Enemy. It is the creed of the Ayatollah, the Jihad,
Dar-al-Islam versus Dar-al-Harb, the Roman ager pacatus
versus the ager hosticus. On the one side Deus vult, on the
other Bi’smi-llah; it is a replay of the 12th century, the only
way the Good People can be free i.e. safe, is to exterminate
the Bad People or as Mr. Lee counsels, to lock them up before
they do any mischief – that alone will preserve the freedom of
is Good People.
And now there is even talk of Armageddon with Gog and
Magog the two giants of the North ending in extermination.
There are those who insist that we are the Good Guys fight-
ing the Bad Guys at Armageddon, but there is no such affair
in the scriptures, where the only actual fighting mentioned is
when “every man’s sword is against his brother” – the wicked
against the wicked (ezek. 38:21). Then God intervenes with
pestilence, hailstones, fire, and brimstone (ezek. 38:22), with
much slaughter, but no mortal army has a hand in it (ezek.
39:11). In the New Testament version it all happens after the
Millenium, when fire comes out of heaven and destroys the
army besieging the saints, but there is no mention of a battle
anywhere (rev. 28:ff). We have seen that for us there is only
one way to prepare for the great events ahead (matt. 24:41
= js1:40–41), and that is to be found doing good whenever
the Lord comes with no one taking advantage of temporary
prosperity “to smite his fellow servants, and to eat and drink
with the drunken” (matt 48:50 = js 2:51–53).
Mormon’s message to us is not without a word of hope
and advice: “Behold speak unto you as though I spoke from
the dead; for I know that ye shall hear my words…give thanks
unto God that he hath manifest unto ye our imperfections,
that ye may learn to be more wise than we have been” (mor-
mon 9:30). His address is expressly to the inhabitants of “this
land” into whose hands “this book” shall come; specifically, it
is meant for us.
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