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Ammonihah

Ammonihah (/ˌæməˈnhɑː/)[1] is a city mentioned in the Book of Mormon described as governed by lawyers and judges. When the Book of Mormon prophet Alma visits Ammonihah as part of a preaching tour, the city becomes the setting of "one of the most disturbing episodes"[2] of the text in which Ammonihah's governing elite imprison him, exile any men converted by his preaching, and kill women and children associated with his mission by fire.

City of Ammonihah
The Martyrdoms at Ammonihah (John Held Sr., 1888), depicting Alma 14:8, in which those converted by the prophet Alma are "cast into the fire".
First appearanceAlma 8:6
Last appearanceAlma 49:15
RulerAntionah (chief judge)
LocationWestern Nephite lands
NicknameDesolation of Nehors

Background edit

Nephite Christian Church edit

There are a few different versions of the Nephite Christian church that exist throughout the story..

Book of Mormon edit

The Book of Mormon is the primary religious text of the Latter Day Saint movement.[3] In the book's narrative, a family flees first Temple period Jerusalem, prophetically directed to escape the Babylonian captivity. Led by God, they arrive in the Americas and establish a society which, due to a feud, splits into two: the Nephites and the Lamanites. Despite preceding the birth of Jesus, the Nephites have a society with Christian churches and prophets preaching about Christianity.[citation needed] The majority of the story is framed as the retrospective work of its principal narrator, Mormon, a Nephite who lives near the end of the chronological narrative and reflexively[citation needed] describes creating the text that is the Book of Mormon by abridging and quoting from Nephite history.[4]

Book of Alma edit

The Book of Mormon is divided into fifteen internal books, named after prophets in the text in a manner reminiscent of the prophetic books of the Bible.[5] The ninth book is the book of Alma, named after Alma, a prophet whose father founded a Christian church that replaced an earlier version of the Nephites' Christian church established by King Benjamin and King Mosiah in a previous arc. In this book, Mormon narrates Alma's ministry and that of his son Helaman during the "reign of the judges",[clarification needed] a period in which rule by judges has replaced monarchy in Nephite society.[6]

The book of Alma structurally divides into four quarters that alternatively parallel each other. In the first and third quarters (Alma 1–16 and 30–44), Alma encounters dissent among Nephites and responds; in the second and fourth quarters (Alma 17–29 and 45–63), Mormon narrates Nephite–Lamanite interactions.[7]

The Ammonihah narrative is framed by an inclusio spanning Alma 9–16.[8][a]

Nephite dissenters and Alma edit

Prior to the Ammonihah narrative, the Book of Mormon describes a series of dissident movements in Nephite society whose participants reject the Nephite church's beliefs that everyone needs a Redeemer.[9][clarification needed] The first of these are called "unbelievers", and, at first, Alma is an unbeliever who convinces "many of the people to do after the manner of his iniquities"[citation needed]. Alma's life drastically changes when an angel appears and commands him to repent. Alma repents in a way that is reminiscent of Paul the Apostle's conversion in the New Testament[citation needed], and goes on to become high priest of the Nephite church[citation needed].

In addition to being high priest of the church, Alma spends some time ruling as chief judge of the Nephites. Early in his career, Alma hears the case of a man named Nehor who, during a debate about religion, murders a Nephite church member. Nehor is also the founder of a new church whose teachings are similar to the ideas of the unbeliever movement. Alma sentences Nehor to death for the murder. Nehor's ideas spread among some Nephites, and Ammonihah is a community that accepts the teachings of Nehor.[10]

Setting edit

The Book of Mormon describes Ammonihah as a city founded by (and named after) a man also called Ammonihah.[11] Relative to the Nephite capital of Zarahemla, Ammonihah lies beyond the city of Melek,[12] and it is located in the western portion of Nephite territory. As a community, Ammonihah is politically and religiously[clarification needed] separated from the rest of Nephite society, as they have their own judges and are followers of Nehor's teachings.[13] A group of judges and lawyers, unique in the Book of Mormon to Ammonihah,[b] govern the city.[15] The city's residents are called Ammonihahites.

Narrative edit

Ministry edit

The Ammonihah narrative begins in what the Book of Mormon calls the tenth year of the reign of the judges[16] with Alma on a preaching tour throughout Nephite cities after having stepped down as chief judge. Ammonihah is the fourth city he preaches in, after doing so in Zarahemla, Gideon, and Melek.[17] When Alma arrives at Ammonihah, the people refuse to give him an audience, aggressively mock him and the Nephite church, and turn him out from the city, a response to his role in the execution of Nehor. Alma leaves, but once he is outside the city, an angel directs him to return and preach repentance to Ammonihah.[18] The angel warns Alma that Ammonihah is not only doctrinally heterodox but also plotting political sedition, as some "study at this time that they may destroy the liberty of thy people".[19]

Alma's metaphor

"I say unto you then cometh a death, even a second death, which is a spiritual death; then is a time that whosoever dieth in his sins, as to a temporal death, shall also die a spiritual death; yea, he shall die as to things pertaining unto righteousness.

"Then is the time when their torments shall be as a lake of fire and brimstone".

Alma, Book of Mormon, Alma 12:16–17

When Alma reenters the city, he meets Amulek, a resident of Ammonihah. Having been commanded by an angel to host Alma, Amulek offers Alma food and a place to stay, which Alma accepts. Alma blesses Amulek's home and family,[20] and they begin preaching in Ammonihah as a pair.[18] The Book of Mormon goes on to stress, eight times, Amulek's house as a setting for his hospitality, highlighting by contrast with Amulek's welcoming attitude the inhospitable reception Ammonihah initially gave to Alma.

Ammonihah lawyers and judges confront Alma and Amulek, accusing the pair of trying to undermine the political order. Among these interlocutors are the lawyer Zeezrom and the chief judge Antionah. When Zeezrom addresses Amulek, he foregoes asking questions and attempts to bribe Amulek into denying the existence of God[21] by offering him six onties, or about forty-two days' wages as a judge.[22] Amulek rejects the bribe and retorts that Zeezrom values money more than God.[23]

Alma preaches and engages Ammonihahite lawyers in public debates. In a sermon, he warns that for those who experience "spiritual death" because they do not repent, their "torments shall be as a lake of fire and brimstone, whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever".[24]

Some residents of Ammonihah respond to Alma and Amulek's preaching by repenting and reading the scriptures[clarification needed].[25] Others, however, are outraged, and these eventually seize the pair and imprison them. Alma and Amulek are accused of having "reviled against the law [in Ammonihah], and their lawyers and judges", and threatening to undermine Ammonihah's government.[26] The plot escalates into a mass persecution as Amulek specifically warned the Ammonihahites that God "will come out against you" if they "cast out the righteous". The Ammonihah majority drive male converts to Alma's preaching out of the city, arrest their wives and children, and seized scriptures in their possession.

The chief judge echoes the metaphor

"Now it came to pass that when the bodies of those who had been cast into the fire were consumed, and also the records which were cast in with them, the chief judge of the land came and stood before Alma and Amulek, as they were bound; and he smote them with his hand upon their cheeks, and said unto them: After what ye have seen, will ye preach again unto this people, that they shall be cast into a lake of fire and brimstone?"

Book of Mormon, Alma 14:14

Martyrdoms edit

After gathering scriptures and prisoners, the people of Ammonihah create a fire in which they destroy scriptures[clarification needed] and burn women and children alive as an intentional and distorted reference to Alma's sermon.[27][clarification needed] Any who believed Alma and Amulek's teachings or listened to them at all are burned alive.[28] Ammonihahites bring Amulek and Alma to the "place of martyrdom" and force them to watch, and Ammonihah's chief judge asks, "After what ye have seen, will ye preach again unto this people, that they shall be cast into a lake of fire and brimstone?"

 
The Deliverance of Alma and Amulek by John Held Sr., 1888, depicting Alma 14:27–28

The people of Ammonihah keep Alma and Amulek imprisoned, and the jailers take away their clothing, mock them, starve them, and beat them. After days spent in this manner, Alma and Amulek finally escape through miraculous deliverance when the prison, in response to a prayer by Alma, spontaneously collapses without harming them, whereupon they leave Ammonihah and reunite with survivors in a place called Sidom.[25][clarification needed] In Sidom, a community of Nephites are sheltering surviving refugees from Ammonihah. This is the first occurrence in the Book of Mormon of a community taking in religious refugees, which goes on to become a recurring trope for the rest of the book.[citation needed]

In Sidom, Alma and Amulek encounter an ailing Zeezrom, who has survived and converted to Alma's religion, and Alma miraculously heals him.[25] Amulek is no longer in possession of any of the wealth he had while living in Ammonihah, and his immediate family is implied to have died in the fires.[c] The story closes with Alma taking Amulek into his home where he "did administer unto him in his tribulations".[30]

Aftermath edit

Some time after Alma and Amulek leave Ammonihah, Lamanites attack the city and destroy it. As the narrator of the book and the compiler in the framing narrative, Mormon places Ammonihah's destruction in the context of an unexpected Nephite–Lamanite war, casting the leveling of the city and its people as divine retribution for the violence committed in the narrative.[31] The Nephites repel the Lamanite invasion, but Ammonihah is destroyed, with the scale of death so immense the resulting odor discourages reoccupation of the area for years.[32] Because the Ammonihahites were followers of Nehor, the ruins are called the "Desolation of Nehors".

In the rest of the Book of Mormon, Ammonihah briefly reappears twice. The first time is in Alma 25, when Mormon recapitulates its destruction as part of an overlapping plot involving war and politics, portraying Ammoniha's destruction earlier in the book as not wholly sudden but the result of other Nephite–Lamanite tensions.[33] The last appearance is set ten years later in Alma 49:15, in which the city of Ammonihah—described as having been rebuilt with fortifications under the direction of Nephite military leader Captain Moroni—repels a Lamanite attack.

Intertextuality edit

Amulek's hosting of Alma at the command of an angel resembles the story of Lot hosting angels in Sodom: for both Amulek and Lot, providing hospitality to divinely sent messengers (a prophet in Amulek's case and angels in Lots) against the grain of the inhospitable surrounding community (Ammonihah or Sodom) comes at a terrible cost to them and their families, as the mob of Sodom attacks Lot's daughters while Ammonihah kills Amulek's family.[citation needed]

When Alma justifies God not intervening to save the martyrs at Ammonihah, he says "the Lord receiveth them [the martyrs] up unto himself, in glory".[relevant? ]

Alma's and Amulek's divinely-enabled escape from the Ammonihah prison resembles the New Testament's prison deliverance stories: the liberation of Peter in Acts 12 and that of Paul and Silas in Acts 16.[34] The prayer Alma gives that precipitates his and Amulek's deliverance alludes to Samson's prayer in Judges 16.

Interpretation edit

Literary scholar Kylie Nielson Turley writes that the Ammonihah story is "one of the most disturbing episodes in the Book of Mormon" on account of its graphic violence and the twisted, personal motives behind that violence.[35]

Fire imagery edit

Ammonihah marks a turning point in the Book of Mormon's vocabulary. In the Book of Mormon before and during the Ammonihah arc, "lake of fire and brimstone" is a relatively common metaphor for hell and spiritual death.[36] However, after Alma and Amulek escape Ammonihah, the phrase "lake of fire and brimstone" is never repeated for the remainder of the book.[importance?]

 
Front cover of The Story of the Book of Mormon.

Artistic depictions edit

Artistic depictions of scenes of Ammonihah appear in George Reynolds's 1888 The Story of the Book of Mormon, a book containing what Noel Carmack identifies as "the first published attempt at illustrating the Book of Mormon".[37] John Held Sr., an engraver and the father of cartoonist John Held Jr., created The Martyrdoms at Ammonihah and The Deliverance of Alma and Amulek (both pictured above) as woodblock prints. Carmack calls Martyrdoms Held's "strongest, most skillful piece" created for Story of the Book of Mormon and considers its "complex, action-filled" scene rare even in contemporary Book of Mormon art.[38]

American painter Minerva Teichert renders the Ammonihah prison deliverance scene in her The Earthquake (c.1949–1951), showing Alma and Amulek's chains breaking as an earthquake collapses the building on their captors.[39]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Inclusio is the "use of the same word or phrase at the end of a passage as appeared at the beginning, thus rounding off or completing it".
  2. ^ Professor of scripture Dan Belnap calls "the employment of lawyers" an "Ammonihahite innovation" in the setting.[14]
  3. ^ Charles Swift and Grant Hardy both note that while the Ammonihah story does not overtly narrate what happens to Amulek's earlier-mentioned family, as written the content implies they die. See their assessments as follows: "What has happened to Amulek's wife and children? The narrator does not speak of them, but apparently Alma and Amulek watch the deaths all of the women and children who are murdered… It is quite possible that his family is martyred before Amulek’s eyes, since the wicked people are killing those who were taught as well as those who believed and it is unlikely that his family was not taught when Alma was in their home or when the two taught the crowd";[29] "Amulek moves into Alma's house alone, even though there was a reference earlier to his wife and children (10.11). If they had been among those burned at Ammonihah… his loss may explain his continuing tribulations".

Citations edit

  1. ^ churchofjesuschrist.org: "Book of Mormon Pronunciation Guide" (retrieved 2012-02-25), IPA-ified from «ăm-a-nī´hä»
  2. ^ Turley 2019, p. 1.
  3. ^ Shipps 1985, pp. 26–33.
  4. ^ Bushman 2005, pp. 85–87.
  5. ^ Bushman 2008, p. 23.
  6. ^ Thomas 2016, p. 18.
  7. ^ Spencer 2017, pp. 273–282.
  8. ^ Turley 2019, pp. 8–10.
  9. ^ Clark 2002, pp. 18–25.
  10. ^ Clark 2002, p. 25, 108n27, 108n29; Belnap 2014, p. 114.
  11. ^ Gee 2023, p. 222.
  12. ^ For Zarahemla as the Nephites' capital city, see Gardner 2007, p. 139.
  13. ^ Belnap 2014, pp. 107n10, 108n10, 109, 114.
  14. ^ Belnap 2014, p. 115.
  15. ^ Belnap 2014, p. 115.
  16. ^ Gardner 2007, p. 139.
  17. ^ Belnap 2014, p. 109.
  18. ^ a b Thomas 2016, p. 91.
  19. ^ Belnap 2014, p. 115 Quotation is Alma 8:17.
  20. ^ Turley 2019, p. 11.
  21. ^ Gardner 2007, p. 183–186.
  22. ^ Gardner 2007, p. 183.
  23. ^ Gardner 2007, p. 186.
  24. ^ Turley 2019, p. 20. Quotation is Alma 12:17.
  25. ^ a b c Thomas 2016, p. 93.
  26. ^ Belnap 2014, pp. 114–115. Quotation is Alma 14:5.
  27. ^ Turley 2019, pp. 1, 20.
  28. ^ Swift 2012, p. 95.
  29. ^ Swift 2012, p. 97
  30. ^ Swift 2012, p. 100. Quotation is Alma 15:18.
  31. ^ Hardy 2010, p. 116.
  32. ^ Belnap 2014, p. 129.
  33. ^ Hardy 2010, pp. 117–119.
  34. ^ Vogel 2004, p. 219.
  35. ^ Turley 2019, pp. 1, 13, 20–21.
  36. ^ Turley 2019, pp. 20, 38.
  37. ^ Carmack 2008, pp. 115, 130–131.
  38. ^ Carmack 2008, p. 130.
  39. ^ "Minerva Teichert's Book of Mormon Paintings: A Come, Follow Me Study Supplement". BYU Museum of Art. Retrieved February 3, 2024.

Sources edit

  • Belnap, Dan (2014). "'And it came to pass…': The Sociopolitical Events in the Book of Mormon Leading to the Eighteenth Year of the Reign of the Judges". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 23: 101–139. doi:10.5406/jbookmormstud2.23.2014.0101. ISSN 2374-4766.
  • Bushman, Richard Lyman (2005). Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-1-4000-4270-8.
  • Bushman, Richard Lyman (2008). Mormonism: A Very Short Introduction. Very Short Introductions. Vol. 183. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-531030-6.
  • Carmack, Noel A. (2008). "'A Picturesque and Dramatic History': George Reynolds's Story of the Book of Mormon". Brigham Young University Studies. 47 (2): 115–141. ISSN 0007-0106. JSTOR 43044637.
  • Clark, John L. (2002). "Painting Out the Messiah: The Theologies of Dissidents". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 11: 16–27, 107–8. doi:10.5406/jbookmormstud.11.1.0016. eISSN 2168-3158. ISSN 1065-9366.
  • Gardner, Brant A. (2007). Second Witness: Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon. Vol. 4, Alma. Greg Kofford Books. ISBN 978-1-58958-044-2.
  • Gee, John (2023). "Book of Mormon Names: Beyond Etymology". In Oaks, Dallin D.; Baltes, Paul; Minson, Kent (eds.). Perspectives on Latter-day Saint Names and Naming: Names, Identity, and Belief. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781003325000. ISBN 9781032350431.
  • Hardy, Grant (2010). Understanding the Book of Mormon: A Reader's Guide. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199745449.
  • Shipps, Jan (1985). Mormonism: The Story of a New Religious Tradition. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-01159-7.
  • Spencer, Joseph M. (2017). "The Structure of the Book of Alma". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 26: 273–283. doi:10.18809/jbms.2017.0116.
  • Swift, Charles (2012). "When Less Is More: The Reticent Narrator in the Story of Alma and Amulek". Religious Educator. 13 (1): 89–101.
  • Thomas, John Christopher (2016). A Pentecostal Reads the Book of Mormon: A Literary and Theological Introduction. CPT Press. ISBN 9781935931553.
  • Turley, Kylie Nielson (2019). "Alma's Hell: Repentance, Consequence, and the Lake of Fire and Brimstone". Journal of Book of Mormon Studies. 28: 1–41. doi:10.5406/jbookmormstud2.28.2019.0001.
  • Vogel, Dan (2004). Joseph Smith: The Making of a Prophet. Signature Books. ISBN 978-1-56085-179-0.

External links edit

  • Chapter 24 of The Story of the Book of Mormon which depicts Ammonihah in prose and with John Held Sr.'s accompanying prints, on the Internet Archive
  • Alma 8, the chapter of Ammonihah's first appearance in the Book of Mormon, on Wikisource

ammonihah, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, provides, insufficient, context, those, unfamiliar, with, subject, please, help, improve, arti. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject Please help improve the article by providing more context for the reader March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ammonihah news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Ammonihah ˌ ae m e ˈ n aɪ h ɑː 1 is a city mentioned in the Book of Mormon described as governed by lawyers and judges When the Book of Mormon prophet Alma visits Ammonihah as part of a preaching tour the city becomes the setting of one of the most disturbing episodes 2 of the text in which Ammonihah s governing elite imprison him exile any men converted by his preaching and kill women and children associated with his mission by fire City of AmmonihahThe Martyrdoms at Ammonihah John Held Sr 1888 depicting Alma 14 8 in which those converted by the prophet Alma are cast into the fire First appearanceAlma 8 6Last appearanceAlma 49 15RulerAntionah chief judge LocationWestern Nephite landsNicknameDesolation of Nehors Contents 1 Background 1 1 Nephite Christian Church 1 2 Book of Mormon 1 3 Book of Alma 1 4 Nephite dissenters and Alma 2 Setting 3 Narrative 3 1 Ministry 3 2 Martyrdoms 3 3 Aftermath 4 Intertextuality 5 Interpretation 5 1 Fire imagery 6 Artistic depictions 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Citations 10 Sources 11 External linksBackground editNephite Christian Church edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2024 There are a few different versions of the Nephite Christian church that exist throughout the story Book of Mormon edit The Book of Mormon is the primary religious text of the Latter Day Saint movement 3 In the book s narrative a family flees first Temple period Jerusalem prophetically directed to escape the Babylonian captivity Led by God they arrive in the Americas and establish a society which due to a feud splits into two the Nephites and the Lamanites Despite preceding the birth of Jesus the Nephites have a society with Christian churches and prophets preaching about Christianity citation needed The majority of the story is framed as the retrospective work of its principal narrator Mormon a Nephite who lives near the end of the chronological narrative and reflexively citation needed describes creating the text that is the Book of Mormon by abridging and quoting from Nephite history 4 Book of Alma edit The Book of Mormon is divided into fifteen internal books named after prophets in the text in a manner reminiscent of the prophetic books of the Bible 5 The ninth book is the book of Alma named after Alma a prophet whose father founded a Christian church that replaced an earlier version of the Nephites Christian church established by King Benjamin and King Mosiah in a previous arc In this book Mormon narrates Alma s ministry and that of his son Helaman during the reign of the judges clarification needed a period in which rule by judges has replaced monarchy in Nephite society 6 The book of Alma structurally divides into four quarters that alternatively parallel each other In the first and third quarters Alma 1 16 and 30 44 Alma encounters dissent among Nephites and responds in the second and fourth quarters Alma 17 29 and 45 63 Mormon narrates Nephite Lamanite interactions 7 The Ammonihah narrative is framed by an inclusio spanning Alma 9 16 8 a Nephite dissenters and Alma edit Prior to the Ammonihah narrative the Book of Mormon describes a series of dissident movements in Nephite society whose participants reject the Nephite church s beliefs that everyone needs a Redeemer 9 clarification needed The first of these are called unbelievers and at first Alma is an unbeliever who convinces many of the people to do after the manner of his iniquities citation needed Alma s life drastically changes when an angel appears and commands him to repent Alma repents in a way that is reminiscent of Paul the Apostle s conversion in the New Testament citation needed and goes on to become high priest of the Nephite church citation needed In addition to being high priest of the church Alma spends some time ruling as chief judge of the Nephites Early in his career Alma hears the case of a man named Nehor who during a debate about religion murders a Nephite church member Nehor is also the founder of a new church whose teachings are similar to the ideas of the unbeliever movement Alma sentences Nehor to death for the murder Nehor s ideas spread among some Nephites and Ammonihah is a community that accepts the teachings of Nehor 10 Setting editThe Book of Mormon describes Ammonihah as a city founded by and named after a man also called Ammonihah 11 Relative to the Nephite capital of Zarahemla Ammonihah lies beyond the city of Melek 12 and it is located in the western portion of Nephite territory As a community Ammonihah is politically and religiously clarification needed separated from the rest of Nephite society as they have their own judges and are followers of Nehor s teachings 13 A group of judges and lawyers unique in the Book of Mormon to Ammonihah b govern the city 15 The city s residents are called Ammonihahites Narrative editMinistry edit The Ammonihah narrative begins in what the Book of Mormon calls the tenth year of the reign of the judges 16 with Alma on a preaching tour throughout Nephite cities after having stepped down as chief judge Ammonihah is the fourth city he preaches in after doing so in Zarahemla Gideon and Melek 17 When Alma arrives at Ammonihah the people refuse to give him an audience aggressively mock him and the Nephite church and turn him out from the city a response to his role in the execution of Nehor Alma leaves but once he is outside the city an angel directs him to return and preach repentance to Ammonihah 18 The angel warns Alma that Ammonihah is not only doctrinally heterodox but also plotting political sedition as some study at this time that they may destroy the liberty of thy people 19 Alma s metaphor I say unto you then cometh a death even a second death which is a spiritual death then is a time that whosoever dieth in his sins as to a temporal death shall also die a spiritual death yea he shall die as to things pertaining unto righteousness Then is the time when their torments shall be as a lake of fire and brimstone Alma Book of Mormon Alma 12 16 17 When Alma reenters the city he meets Amulek a resident of Ammonihah Having been commanded by an angel to host Alma Amulek offers Alma food and a place to stay which Alma accepts Alma blesses Amulek s home and family 20 and they begin preaching in Ammonihah as a pair 18 The Book of Mormon goes on to stress eight times Amulek s house as a setting for his hospitality highlighting by contrast with Amulek s welcoming attitude the inhospitable reception Ammonihah initially gave to Alma Ammonihah lawyers and judges confront Alma and Amulek accusing the pair of trying to undermine the political order Among these interlocutors are the lawyer Zeezrom and the chief judge Antionah When Zeezrom addresses Amulek he foregoes asking questions and attempts to bribe Amulek into denying the existence of God 21 by offering him six onties or about forty two days wages as a judge 22 Amulek rejects the bribe and retorts that Zeezrom values money more than God 23 Alma preaches and engages Ammonihahite lawyers in public debates In a sermon he warns that for those who experience spiritual death because they do not repent their torments shall be as a lake of fire and brimstone whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever 24 Some residents of Ammonihah respond to Alma and Amulek s preaching by repenting and reading the scriptures clarification needed 25 Others however are outraged and these eventually seize the pair and imprison them Alma and Amulek are accused of having reviled against the law in Ammonihah and their lawyers and judges and threatening to undermine Ammonihah s government 26 The plot escalates into a mass persecution as Amulek specifically warned the Ammonihahites that God will come out against you if they cast out the righteous The Ammonihah majority drive male converts to Alma s preaching out of the city arrest their wives and children and seized scriptures in their possession The chief judge echoes the metaphor Now it came to pass that when the bodies of those who had been cast into the fire were consumed and also the records which were cast in with them the chief judge of the land came and stood before Alma and Amulek as they were bound and he smote them with his hand upon their cheeks and said unto them After what ye have seen will ye preach again unto this people that they shall be cast into a lake of fire and brimstone Book of Mormon Alma 14 14 Martyrdoms edit After gathering scriptures and prisoners the people of Ammonihah create a fire in which they destroy scriptures clarification needed and burn women and children alive as an intentional and distorted reference to Alma s sermon 27 clarification needed Any who believed Alma and Amulek s teachings or listened to them at all are burned alive 28 Ammonihahites bring Amulek and Alma to the place of martyrdom and force them to watch and Ammonihah s chief judge asks After what ye have seen will ye preach again unto this people that they shall be cast into a lake of fire and brimstone nbsp The Deliverance of Alma and Amulek by John Held Sr 1888 depicting Alma 14 27 28The people of Ammonihah keep Alma and Amulek imprisoned and the jailers take away their clothing mock them starve them and beat them After days spent in this manner Alma and Amulek finally escape through miraculous deliverance when the prison in response to a prayer by Alma spontaneously collapses without harming them whereupon they leave Ammonihah and reunite with survivors in a place called Sidom 25 clarification needed In Sidom a community of Nephites are sheltering surviving refugees from Ammonihah This is the first occurrence in the Book of Mormon of a community taking in religious refugees which goes on to become a recurring trope for the rest of the book citation needed In Sidom Alma and Amulek encounter an ailing Zeezrom who has survived and converted to Alma s religion and Alma miraculously heals him 25 Amulek is no longer in possession of any of the wealth he had while living in Ammonihah and his immediate family is implied to have died in the fires c The story closes with Alma taking Amulek into his home where he did administer unto him in his tribulations 30 Aftermath edit Some time after Alma and Amulek leave Ammonihah Lamanites attack the city and destroy it As the narrator of the book and the compiler in the framing narrative Mormon places Ammonihah s destruction in the context of an unexpected Nephite Lamanite war casting the leveling of the city and its people as divine retribution for the violence committed in the narrative 31 The Nephites repel the Lamanite invasion but Ammonihah is destroyed with the scale of death so immense the resulting odor discourages reoccupation of the area for years 32 Because the Ammonihahites were followers of Nehor the ruins are called the Desolation of Nehors In the rest of the Book of Mormon Ammonihah briefly reappears twice The first time is in Alma 25 when Mormon recapitulates its destruction as part of an overlapping plot involving war and politics portraying Ammoniha s destruction earlier in the book as not wholly sudden but the result of other Nephite Lamanite tensions 33 The last appearance is set ten years later in Alma 49 15 in which the city of Ammonihah described as having been rebuilt with fortifications under the direction of Nephite military leader Captain Moroni repels a Lamanite attack Intertextuality editAmulek s hosting of Alma at the command of an angel resembles the story of Lot hosting angels in Sodom for both Amulek and Lot providing hospitality to divinely sent messengers a prophet in Amulek s case and angels in Lots against the grain of the inhospitable surrounding community Ammonihah or Sodom comes at a terrible cost to them and their families as the mob of Sodom attacks Lot s daughters while Ammonihah kills Amulek s family citation needed When Alma justifies God not intervening to save the martyrs at Ammonihah he says the Lord receiveth them the martyrs up unto himself in glory relevant discuss Alma s and Amulek s divinely enabled escape from the Ammonihah prison resembles the New Testament s prison deliverance stories the liberation of Peter in Acts 12 and that of Paul and Silas in Acts 16 34 The prayer Alma gives that precipitates his and Amulek s deliverance alludes to Samson s prayer in Judges 16 Interpretation editLiterary scholar Kylie Nielson Turley writes that the Ammonihah story is one of the most disturbing episodes in the Book of Mormon on account of its graphic violence and the twisted personal motives behind that violence 35 Fire imagery edit Ammonihah marks a turning point in the Book of Mormon s vocabulary In the Book of Mormon before and during the Ammonihah arc lake of fire and brimstone is a relatively common metaphor for hell and spiritual death 36 However after Alma and Amulek escape Ammonihah the phrase lake of fire and brimstone is never repeated for the remainder of the book importance nbsp Front cover of The Story of the Book of Mormon Artistic depictions editArtistic depictions of scenes of Ammonihah appear in George Reynolds s 1888 The Story of the Book of Mormon a book containing what Noel Carmack identifies as the first published attempt at illustrating the Book of Mormon 37 John Held Sr an engraver and the father of cartoonist John Held Jr created The Martyrdoms at Ammonihah and The Deliverance of Alma and Amulek both pictured above as woodblock prints Carmack calls Martyrdoms Held s strongest most skillful piece created for Story of the Book of Mormon and considers its complex action filled scene rare even in contemporary Book of Mormon art 38 American painter Minerva Teichert renders the Ammonihah prison deliverance scene in her The Earthquake c 1949 1951 showing Alma and Amulek s chains breaking as an earthquake collapses the building on their captors 39 See also editChristian martyr Outline of the Book of Mormon Problem of evilNotes edit Inclusio is the use of the same word or phrase at the end of a passage as appeared at the beginning thus rounding off or completing it Professor of scripture Dan Belnap calls the employment of lawyers an Ammonihahite innovation in the setting 14 Charles Swift and Grant Hardy both note that while the Ammonihah story does not overtly narrate what happens to Amulek s earlier mentioned family as written the content implies they die See their assessments as follows What has happened to Amulek s wife and children The narrator does not speak of them but apparently Alma and Amulek watch the deaths all of the women and children who are murdered It is quite possible that his family is martyred before Amulek s eyes since the wicked people are killing those who were taught as well as those who believed and it is unlikely that his family was not taught when Alma was in their home or when the two taught the crowd 29 Amulek moves into Alma s house alone even though there was a reference earlier to his wife and children 10 11 If they had been among those burned at Ammonihah his loss may explain his continuing tribulations Citations edit churchofjesuschrist org Book of Mormon Pronunciation Guide retrieved 2012 02 25 IPA ified from ăm a ni ha Turley 2019 p 1 Shipps 1985 pp 26 33 Bushman 2005 pp 85 87 Bushman 2008 p 23 Thomas 2016 p 18 Spencer 2017 pp 273 282 Turley 2019 pp 8 10 Clark 2002 pp 18 25 Clark 2002 p 25 108n27 108n29 Belnap 2014 p 114 Gee 2023 p 222 For Zarahemla as the Nephites capital city see Gardner 2007 p 139 Belnap 2014 pp 107n10 108n10 109 114 Belnap 2014 p 115 Belnap 2014 p 115 Gardner 2007 p 139 Belnap 2014 p 109 a b Thomas 2016 p 91 Belnap 2014 p 115 Quotation is Alma 8 17 Turley 2019 p 11 Gardner 2007 p 183 186 Gardner 2007 p 183 Gardner 2007 p 186 Turley 2019 p 20 Quotation is Alma 12 17 a b c Thomas 2016 p 93 Belnap 2014 pp 114 115 Quotation is Alma 14 5 Turley 2019 pp 1 20 Swift 2012 p 95 Swift 2012 p 97 Swift 2012 p 100 Quotation is Alma 15 18 Hardy 2010 p 116 Belnap 2014 p 129 Hardy 2010 pp 117 119 Vogel 2004 p 219 Turley 2019 pp 1 13 20 21 Turley 2019 pp 20 38 Carmack 2008 pp 115 130 131 Carmack 2008 p 130 Minerva Teichert s Book of Mormon Paintings A Come Follow Me Study Supplement BYU Museum of Art Retrieved February 3 2024 Sources editBelnap Dan 2014 And it came to pass The Sociopolitical Events in the Book of Mormon Leading to the Eighteenth Year of the Reign of the Judges Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 23 101 139 doi 10 5406 jbookmormstud2 23 2014 0101 ISSN 2374 4766 Bushman Richard Lyman 2005 Joseph Smith Rough Stone Rolling Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 1 4000 4270 8 Bushman Richard Lyman 2008 Mormonism A Very Short Introduction Very Short Introductions Vol 183 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531030 6 Carmack Noel A 2008 A Picturesque and Dramatic History George Reynolds s Story of the Book of Mormon Brigham Young University Studies 47 2 115 141 ISSN 0007 0106 JSTOR 43044637 Clark John L 2002 Painting Out the Messiah The Theologies of Dissidents Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 11 16 27 107 8 doi 10 5406 jbookmormstud 11 1 0016 eISSN 2168 3158 ISSN 1065 9366 Gardner Brant A 2007 Second Witness Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon Vol 4 Alma Greg Kofford Books ISBN 978 1 58958 044 2 Gee John 2023 Book of Mormon Names Beyond Etymology In Oaks Dallin D Baltes Paul Minson Kent eds Perspectives on Latter day Saint Names and Naming Names Identity and Belief Routledge doi 10 4324 9781003325000 ISBN 9781032350431 Hardy Grant 2010 Understanding the Book of Mormon A Reader s Guide Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199745449 Shipps Jan 1985 Mormonism The Story of a New Religious Tradition University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01159 7 Spencer Joseph M 2017 The Structure of the Book of Alma Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 26 273 283 doi 10 18809 jbms 2017 0116 Swift Charles 2012 When Less Is More The Reticent Narrator in the Story of Alma and Amulek Religious Educator 13 1 89 101 Thomas John Christopher 2016 A Pentecostal Reads the Book of Mormon A Literary and Theological Introduction CPT Press ISBN 9781935931553 Turley Kylie Nielson 2019 Alma s Hell Repentance Consequence and the Lake of Fire and Brimstone Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 28 1 41 doi 10 5406 jbookmormstud2 28 2019 0001 Vogel Dan 2004 Joseph Smith The Making of a Prophet Signature Books ISBN 978 1 56085 179 0 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Ammonihah City of in A Dictionary of the Book of Mormon 1891 Chapter 24 of The Story of the Book of Mormon which depicts Ammonihah in prose and with John Held Sr s accompanying prints on the Internet Archive Alma 8 the chapter of Ammonihah s first appearance in the Book of Mormon on Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ammonihah amp oldid 1214472413, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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