As stated in an earlier post, when evil men lead, they bring
suffering and pain to all the people, by 1) providing opportunities for people
to sin through being shown it is all right to live evil lives, and 2) by
allowing and even joining into the evil practices that people begin to live.
It is as though people feel chained to good behavior and
righteous living because of the nature of society in general, and for some
reason feel they need to be free from such a life, though that life has
always proven, for individuals and societies, to the best option. However when
that society breaks down, many of those people who had been living good lives
and were better off, revert to evil practices and embrace an entirely new way
of life that is always in the long run a worse path to take.
When king Noah chose not to follow the righteous path of his
father, Zeniff, who had been leading the Nephites on a better course, had
driven the Lamanites out of their land, the people lived free of those wars,
evidently without being taxed, were led by righteous and morale priests, who
believed in the sanctity of marriage and family, where planting and harvesting
one’s own crops and produce was a standard part of life.
All of this, then, was replaced by extremely high (20%) taxes,
wars with the Lamanites, by evo;and idolatrous priests, and were forced to labor
exceedingly to support iniquity—they now had kings and rulers with multiple
wives and concubines, the welfare of the people was immaterial and their
leaders were lifted up in the pride of their hearts (Mosiah 11:1-7).
Yet, the people, or a large portion of them, followed king
Noah into his evil world, evidently without a murmur. They could have objected,
they could have insisted on the righteous paths of the past, but they did not.
They followed him willingly!
When Noah planted vineyards round about in the land and
built wine-presses, and made wine in abundance, becoming a wine-bibber
(drunkard) and also his people, they were not forced into this path, but
followed it willingly.
Despite warnings and calls to repentance, the people
continued in their evil ways, mirroring, as people often do, the evil of their
leaders. Rather than maintain the righteous living of king Zeniff, they
followed Noah. The Lord had warned the king and his people that “except they
repent and turn to the Lord their God, behold, I will deliver them into the
hands of their enemies; yea, and they shall be brought into bondage; and they
shall be afflicted by the hand of their enemies” (Mosiah 11:21). It was Abinadi, who warned Noah and his
priests in his dying moments, “Ye shall suffer, as I suffer, the pains of death
by fire” (Mosiah 17:18). While that promise was fulfilled, another remained:
“Ye shall be smitten on every hand, and shall be driven and scattered to and
fro, even as a wild flock is driven by wild and ferocious beasts” (Mosiah
17:17).
Now, with the example of Abinadi who sealed his testimony
with his life, they at last rid themselves of a wicked king. But they had yet
to suffer the penalty of their own sins—affliction at the hands of the
Lamanites.
A warrior named Gideon lived among the Nephites at this
time—a time of desperation, evil and death. They had chosen to follow king Noah
of their own volition—they were not forced to do so. They chose to give up
their earlier righteous paths and followed the evil of their new king. Gideon,
on the other hand, was not of that ilk.
He was evidently born in the Land of Nephi, either in the
city of Nephi or the city of Shimlon. He had no hand in the martyrdom of
Abinadi, was not involved in any of Noah’s evil deeds, and as a faithful
Nephite leader, he was a strong man and an enemy to King Noah (Mosiah 19:4-8). He
is one of those men who did not follow in the evil paths of his fellow Nephites
after king Zeniff’s death. This is even more remarkable when we realize that
Gideon was the Captain of the King’s Guard, involved as a military leader, and
evidently a key figure in the Nephite victory over the Lamanites after Noah’s
death.
He not only was
blessed with much courage and valor, he was a just man and wise. He became an
instrument in the hands of God in delivering the people of Limhi out of
bondage. When he became aware of what Noah planned, leaving the women and
children while effecting an escape with the men and his guard and priests, Gideon
drew his sword in anger to threaten king Noah, who had already put Abinadi to
death and sent his guards to search out and kill Alma.
Being the coward he
was, king Noah fled, choosing what he thought was the safety of the tower next
to the temple that was about eight stories high with evidently a winding
staircase of which being on higher stairs, Noah envisioned obtaining the
advantage. But Gideon was unconcerned as he pursued the king up the stairs to
the tower lookout point where the king now stood, no doubt terrified for his
life and casting his eyes about for some means of escape from this entrapped
position.
Obviously, Satan was
not through with him yet, and in the distance, Noah saw a huge Lamanite army
approaching from the Land of Shemlon and were actually already within the
borders of the Land of Nephi.
This tower near the
temple, one of several that had been built in the land, was a “very high tower,
even so high that one could stand upon the top thereof and overlook the land of
Shilom, and also the land of Shemlon, the latter possessed by the Lamanites; and
he could even look over all the land round about” Mosiah 11:12).
Seeing this, and
hoping for his salvation, Noah cried out in the anguish of his soul, drawing
Gideon’s attention to the distant army: “Gideon, spare me, for the Lamanites
are upon us, and they will destroy us; yea, they will destroy my people”
(Mosiah 19:7).
However, “the king
was not so much concerned about his people as he was about his own life”;
nevertheless, Gideon, finding himself betwixt and between, “did spare his life”
(Mosiah 19:8).
One of king Noah’s
sons had stayed behind to defend the women and children. Though he was not like
his father, he “was desirous that his father should be not be destroyed”
(Mosiah 19:17). One
wonders how a righteous man like Limhi survived to adulthood in Noah’s court.
What did Limhi go through as a boy, watching his father assemble a harem,
promote drunkenness, squander the people’s money, and corrupt the laws of the
kingdom? Perhaps Limhi knew his grandfather, Zeniff, before he died. Certainly
Limhi’s life more closely followed that of his grandfather. Perhaps he read
Zeniff’s own record, and learned from him that the people must depend on the
Lord, and that it is the king’s place to serve his people, not to profit from
them.
As the son of the king, albeit an evil king, the kingdom was
conferred upon him by the people. And also Limhi, being the son of the king,
having the kingdom conferred upon him by the people, made oath unto the king of
the Lamanites that his people should pay tribute unto him, even one half of all
they possessed.
So here were a people who paid no taxes and were subject to
only themselves and their king under Zeniff, but wanted to be free.
In their choice, they chose their kind of “freedom” under the
evil king Noah, which resulted in paying tribute to the Lamanites and being
subject to the Lamanite king the rest of their lives if they remained in the
city of their forefathers. It is not unlike the kinds of choices we have each
day, and all mankind has—choose freedom under the Lord, or choose the shackles
that Satan calls “freedom” under him.
Whatever Limhi’s life had been like before, he was such a
man that the people, defeated and in bondage, chose him to be their king. His
reign began as he “made oath unto the king of the Lamanites that his people
should pay tribute unto him, even one half of all they possessed” (Mosiah
19:26). Such is this thing some people call “freedom.”
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