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Aminadab ( /əˈmɪnədæb/ ) [1] is a person in the Book of Mormon who appears in the Book of Helaman. He had been a member of the Nephite church but left it and became associated with the Lamanites. [2] In the Book of Helaman, after Nephi abdicates the Chief Judgment Seat to Cezoram, he and his brother Lehi go to preach to the Lamanites, who imprison them. After a heavenly incident, Aminadab clarifies to the surrounding Lamanite captors that Nephi and Lehi are conversing with angels.
Latter-day Saint (LDS) commenters on the Book of Mormon write that it is likely that Aminadab was a Zoramite, or a part of the Nephites who elected to follow Zoram. This idea comes from Aminadab saying that he had been taught by Alma, Amulek, and Zeezrom, who taught the Zoramites together earlier in the Book of Mormon. The parallels between Helaman 5 and Alma 34 also support the idea that Aminadab was a Zoramite. In the journal Religious Educator, LDS teachers of seminary and institute invite readers to use the story of Aminadab to show that students sometimes look to their peers rather than their instructors for information, and as an example of someone who left the church but returned to teach the gospel afterwards.
In the Book of Helaman, the brothers Nephi and Lehi are imprisoned for preaching to the Lamanites. Helaman 5:23 describes them being "encircled about as if by fire". [3] [4] A voice from heaven calls prison guards to repentance. When Nephi and Lehi look upwards and speak, Aminadab explains that they are speaking with angels of God, and encourages the prison guards to repent and cry "unto the voice". [3] After the prison guards "cry unto the voice," the holy spirit fills them and they hear a voice praising his "well beloved". [3] [5]
In A Pentecostal Reads the Book of Mormon, John Thomas cites Aminadab's explanation as evidence that angels converse with humans in the Book of Mormon. [6] In his series Second Witness: Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon, LDS scholar Brant Gardner writes that Aminadab knew that Nephi and Lehi were speaking with angels because of his Nephite background, even though he himself could not see the angels at this point in the narrative. [7]
Aminadab's name is an alternate spelling of Amminadab, a name found in the Bible as a minor character referred to in the Book of Genesis. [8]
In the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies, Michael F. Perry, an LDS lawyer, considers how Aminadab tells his fellow onlookers to "have faith in Christ, who was taught unto you by Alma, and Amulek, and Zeezrom." [9] The only time that Alma, Amulek, and Zeezrom appear together on a mission in the Book of Mormon is when they visit the Zoramites in Alma 31:6. While the Book of Mormon's compiler, Mormon, alludes to many events that are not described in the book, Perry believes that Mormon chose to include the mission that Aminadab references within the text. However, Aminadab's appearance occurs fifty years after this mission in the text. Perry presents the possibility that Aminadab is an older first-generation Zoramite, and concludes that it is not definite that Aminadab referred to the mission of Alma, Amulek, and Zeezrom mentioned earlier in Alma. [9] In The Annotated Book of Mormon, Grant Hardy states that the Nephite dissenters present in Helaman 5, including Aminadab, must have been Zoramites. He noted the parallels of the text in Helaman with the teachings of Alma, Amulek, and Zeezrom in Alma 34 in the questions of "what shall we do?" and the responding advice to "cry unto" the voice. [10]
Writing to an audience of Latter-day Saint (LDS) seminary and institute teachers, John Hilton III, an employee of the Church Educational System, suggested using Aminadab's story as scriptural example of how sometimes students will ask questions about religion to their peers rather than their teachers. [11] Another article in Religious Educator by seminary teacher Daniel J. Prestwich used Aminadab as a scriptural example of an individual who had previously dissented from the church, but "chose to become a missionary" when he taught his fellow onlookers to "cry unto the voice". [12]
The Book of Helaman is one of the books that make up the Book of Mormon, a text held sacred by churches within the Latter Day Saint movement, including the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The book continues the history of the Nephites and the Lamanites from approximately 50 BC to 1 BC. It discusses political unrest among the Nephites and the formation of a group of secret dissenters called the Gadianton Robbers. Helaman, son of Helaman leads the Nephites for a time, and his sons Nephi and Lehi go on a successful mission to the Lamanites. When Nephi returns home, he correctly identifies the murderer of the chief judge using his prophetic powers, and sends a famine to the Nephite which lasts three years. After a digression from Mormon, the book of Helaman ends with Samuel the Lamanite's prophecy of the signs that will precede Christ's birth and death. Helaman deals with themes of external and internal conflict, hidden information, Nephite racism, and Mormon's views of history as deduced by his redaction of it.
In the Book of Mormon, the Nephites are one of four groups said to have settled in the ancient Americas. The term is used throughout the Book of Mormon to describe the religious, political, and cultural traditions of the group of settlers.
In the Book of Mormon, the Lamanites are one of the four peoples described as having settled in the ancient Americas in the Book of Mormon. The Lamanites also play a role in the prophecies and revelations of the Doctrine and Covenants, another sacred text in the Latter Day Saint movement.
The Book of Mormon mentions three men named Helaman. The first was the son of King Benjamin, king of the united Nephite-Zarahemla kingdom who lived in the 2nd century BC. Besides his genealogy, information about the first Helaman is limited. His brother, Mosiah, became heir to the throne.
King Noah is a Nephite king in the Book of Mormon who appears in the Book of Mosiah. Noah rules over a colony of Nephites who come from Zarahemla and settle in the land of Lehi-Nephi, succeeding his father, Zeniff. In the Book of Mosiah, King Noah distances from his father's teachings, committing what the text calls "all manner of wickedness." Noah and his priests sentence a prophet named Abinadi, who prophesies of his kingdom's downfall if they did not repent, to death by fire. During a Lamanite invasion, Noah and some of his people flee the land, and those who remain are subjected to Lamanite control. Noah attempts to forbid his men from returning to their families, and they burn him at the stake. Noah is succeeded by his son, Limhi.
Mulek, according to the Book of Mormon, was the only surviving son of Zedekiah, the last King of Judah, after the Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem. The Book of Mormon states that after escaping from Judah, Mulek traveled to the Americas and established a civilization there.
In the Book of Mormon, Alma, the son of Alma is a Nephite prophet often referred to as Alma the Younger to distinguish him from his father, who is often referred to as Alma the Elder. These appellations, "the Younger" and "the Elder," are not used in the Book of Mormon; they are distinctions made by scholars, useful because both individuals were prominent during the same time period in the Book of Mormon's story and filled a similar cultural and religious role. Alma is the namesake of the Book of Alma.
In the Book of Mormon, Ammon is a prominent Nephite missionary and a son of King Mosiah. He originally opposes the church, but along with his brothers and Alma the Younger, is miraculously converted. Following his conversion he serves a mission to the Lamanites and converts Lamoni and his people.
Ammonihah 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" 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.
According to the Book of Mormon, the Anti-Nephi-Lehies were an ethnic group of Lamanites formed around 90 BC in the Americas, after a significant religious conversion. They made a covenant that they would not participate in war, and buried their weapons. Eventually they changed their name to the people of Ammon, or Ammonites. During a later period of warfare, the young men of the group who had not made the pacifist covenant became a military unit known as the two thousand stripling warriors, and were protected by divine intervention.
According to the Book of Mormon, the plates of Nephi, consisting of the large plates of Nephi and the small plates of Nephi, are a portion of the collection of inscribed metal plates which make up the record of the Nephites. This record was later abridged by Mormon and inscribed onto gold plates from which Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon after an angel revealed to him the location where the plates were buried on a hill called Cumorah near the town of Palmyra, New York.
This chronology outlines the major events in the history of the Book of Mormon, according to the text. Dates given correspond to dates in the footnotes of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints edition of the Book of Mormon and to a Jaredite timeline proposed by Latter-Day Saint scholar John L. Sorenson.
According to the Book of Mormon, Moronihah was the son of Captain Moroni who had defeated the armies of Zerahemnah, stopped the king-men, and restored the Nephites' cities to their possession. When Moroni got too old to lead an army any longer, Moronihah received command of his father's armies.
In the Book of Mormon, Zeezrom is a Nephite lawyer who, through deceit and money, seeks to gain power among the Nephites through his vocation. Alma the Younger and his missionary companion Amulek teach Zeezrom in Ammonihah. At first he resists, but is ultimately converted to the Nephite religion.
In the Book of Mormon, Zenock is a prophet who predates the events of the book's main plot and whose prophecies and statements are recorded upon brass plates possessed by the Nephites. Nephite prophets quote or paraphrase Zenock several times in the course of the narrative.
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to the Book of Mormon: