The war chapters in The Book of Mormon are incredible! I love how we are given exactly what we need
to know for these days to battle spiritually and win. I studied Alma 43-62 this week. I listened to John Bytheway’s talk, “Lessons
From The War Chapters” from BYU Education Week. After my personal study and
then watching it, I found so many insights I am excited to share. Brother Bytheway started by asking why there
are so many chapters on war. He gave
three reasons to think about. 1. The prophets saw our day and we are
constantly at war. 2. We are in a time of spiritual war. 3.
Mormon himself was a great warrior and understood battle. 1 Nephi 6:6 “Wherefore, I shall give
commandment unto my seed, that they shall not occupy these plates with things
which are not of worth unto the children of men.” Alma had this commandment. He wrote only things that would benefit
us. Do we pay attention as we read and
ask ourselves why this is written for us?
I want to do this more.
Brother Bytheway went through most of the chapters and gave
a lesson from each one he had time to address.
He started by listing Captain Moroni’s enemies “from Z to A.” Zerahemnah-who eventually swore an oath to
never attack Nephites again, Amalickiah and his brother Ammoron who were killed
by javelin by Teancum, the King Men who rebelled and were put down by
Moroni. Each one of these was a Nephite. Who were the most trouble for Nephites? Apostate Nephites. Who was the most trouble for Joseph Smith,
apostate members. It made me think of
who today is the most loudly opposed and causes the most problems, apostate
members. Brother Bytheway said that when
the Nephites dissented and became Lamanites, they didn’t change their lineage,
they became Lamanites according to their affiliations and beliefs. We need to be careful that our own beliefs aren’t
affiliated with anything that could slowly be leading us from truth.
Some of the lessons Brother Bytheway attributes to each
chapter are:
Alma 43: Prophets
will tell us where the enemy will strike.
Alma 44: Faith in
Christ is a power to be reckoned with – even in war.
Alma 45: It is
expedient that the word of God be declared.
Alma 46: Covenants
are power! Place reminders of your
covenants everywhere!
Alma 47: Don’t come
down from your mountain.
Alma 48: Spiritual
preparation first. Make covenants, then
swords.
Alma 49: If ye are
prepared ye shall not fear. Be prepared.
Alma 50: Build your
fortification and listen to the watchmen on the tower.
Alma 51: Beware of
pride. Pride within destroys.
Alma 52: Don’t leave
your stronghold.
Alma 53: If you know
the church is true, be true to the church.
Alma 54: Fear God
more than men. Meekness does not mean
weakness. Repentance is vital.
Alma 55: Be quick to
remember the Lord. Be cautious that no
poison should be administered to you.
That was all there was time for but I added a few of my own
observations at the top of each of the remaining chapters.
Alma 56: 2000
stripling warriors knew their mother knew and did not doubt
Alma 57: Have
faith. Trust in God continually.
Alma 58: Sometimes it
is expedient that we wait patiently for more strength.
Alma 59: It is easier
to keep a city than to retake it so beware dissentions. Wickedness is weakness.
Alma 60: The Lord
allows the righteous to be slain so that his justice and judgement come upon
the wicked
Alma 61: Do the will
of God. Fear not. God will deliver you.
Alma 62: Freedom is
worth fighting for with your life.
Remember the great things the Lord has done. Pray continually.
I have many heroes from these chapters and want to follow
their example. Moroni, Helaman, Teancum,
Lehi, and other leaders were all men of God who served Him and loved Him and
taught their people to trust the Lord.
Moroni is one of my heroes.
He is an inspiring example of courage and faith. As I read I noted things that struck me about
Moroni.
He was young and willing to follow the Lord.
He was humble.
He was a man of passion for the cause of Christ.
He was a man of great faith and inspired others to have
faith.
He always prepared spiritually first for war.
He was intelligent and used inspired stratagem to
conquer.
He taught men to defend their families even unto bloodshed.
He loved God, religion, freedom, peace and his wife and
children.
He had compassion and valued life.
He didn’t delight in shedding blood.
He was benevolent and a man of his word.
He gave the glory to the Lord for victory.
He inspired loyalty and duty in his men.
He inspired confidence and others followed him.
He was fair. He stood
up for righteousness.
He knew the Lord would deliver them if they were righteous.
He lived the basics:
faith, repentance, keep commandments, keep covenants.
I tried to look at the war chapters as an instruction manual
for our day as I read. I know that if we
follow the examples given and listen to the spirit we will be safe through the
spiritual battles of our day. It seems
to be more difficult in this time to obey and follow but we are blessed with
the spirit to guide us. I know that as
we pray and follow promptings we can teach our children to be more like our Savior
and that is where peace is. I loved that
the end of the war chapters ends in having them pray continually. Prayer is vital and what I am working
on. I am grateful for the opportunity to
learn from these war heroes. I know that
when we are righteous we are blessed. I
want to be like Moroni.
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