Continuing with the
meaning of words and statements as used in the scriptural record, but seldom
interpreted correctly by theorists because they do not fit within their own pet
theories.
In this case, Nephi
tells us twice that his ship was “driven
forth before the wind.” The first time, is when he describes their ship’s
motivation, or form of movement, and direction (1 Nephi 18:8), and the second
when showing that this was the continual pattern of movement, not just upon
entering the water (1 Nephi 18:9).
In those two
statements, as brief as they are, Nephi tells us:
1. The wind was the
driving force or motivation of his ship;
2. His ship had a
sail(s);
3. The wind was
behind him, pushing or driving his ship forward;
4. The sail(s) of his
ship was fixed (the wind pushed him forward);
5. His ship could not
tack;
6. This was the way
his ship moved upon the water, both upon entering and throughout the voyage.
Ships with fixed sail rigging. The yardarm
(horizontal brace) suspends the sail, which is pulled tight by a bottom brace,
or by rigging, providing a sort of “wing” for the wind to blow against and push
the vessel forward
In addition, the sail
of his ship, being fixed, was most likely square mounted on a type of yardarm
perpendicular to the boat's hull, since that is a very effective and efficient
design for downwind (driven forth) sailing. Such design dominated the ancient
Mediterranean and spread to Northern Europe, and were independently invented in
China and Ecuador, all much later than 600 B.C.
Later, Nephi tells us
he steered his ship. This means that his ship had a rudder and could be
“steered,” that is, moved off a straight course but only within the band the
wind was moving, i.e., he could not sail cross wind, tack, “come about,” jibe,
beat to, or sail close to, the wind, or basically change the course of the ship
while the wind was blowing. In a slow moving current, or when the wind died
down, steerage would allow a gradual movement toward shore.
When the yardarm is fixed, that is unmovable
except for up and down, the sail merely hangs from it—it is the slight steering
available that allows the ship to be maneuvered so the wind billows (fills) out
the sail and provides the forward momentum
Today, a sail can be
shaped, altered, moved, swung around, etc., to allow for a number of formations
to catch the wind at almost any angle; however, until almost the end of the Age
of Sail, around the 20th century, fixed sails were considered the
most aerodynamically efficient running rig known and stayed popular on
ocean-going sailing ships for many centuries. Even with steel hulls, the
“windjammer” preferred the square rigging of fixed sails even into the mid 20th
century.
Coming back to
Nephi’s statement of being “driven forth before the wind,” let’s take a look at
the meaning of this. First of all, “before the wind” is a nautical expression
meaning running (sailing) downwind toward an objective—in this case, the Land
of Promise.
This means that once
entering the ocean, that is the sea Lehi called Irreantum (1 Nephi 17:5), in
their vessel (1 Nephi 18:8), they were subject to the winds and currents to drive
their vessel in the direction they were intended to travel. Nephi calls it
“driven forth before the wind,” meaning “downwind” or in the direction the wind
was blowing (the wind at your back). Off the southern Arabian coast blow the
monsoons, coming out of the northeast (across India and into the Indian Ocean),
which would have been in a southerly course or direction for Nephi’s ship. When
Nephi wrote that they went down into the ship, he describes a willingness to
go, with an orderliness about it, and a trust in the Lord that this ship would
carry them across the “many waters.”
If one has never
stood on the sands of Salalah or the
hills above Khor Rori, along the
southern Arabian coast and looked out across the thousands of miles of open
sea, one may not immediately capture the anxiety, pathos and fear that might
have been felt by these souls, some far more trusting than others, taking their
children and possessions and trusting their lives to this ship and its
construction to carry them across this great deep.
This would require a
constant wind and speed factor found typically only in the trade winds, and on
a southerly course “running before the wind” from the northeast monsoons. In
moving off the coast in the monsoon winds, they headed “downwind,” as the ship
was caught in strong winds blowing distinctive currents in the Sea of Arabia as
well as the Indian Ocean. The first encountered would be the North Indian Ocean
Gyre, the second the South Indian Ocean Gyre, the former moving clockwise and
the latter moving counter-clockwise. Consequently, as the ship entered the Sea
of Arabia, it was moved along by the northeast monsoons moving from inland out
to sea, swung into the north gyre in a southerly direction for several days
before the storm hit.
Just before this
time, Nephi’s natural concern and tender feelings toward the Lord caused him to
become upset with the lack of respect of his older brothers and the sons of
Ishmael along with their wives toward the Lord when they began to make merry,
singing and dancing “and speaking with much rudeness” they even forgot “by what
power they had been brought thither yea, they were lifted up unto exceeding
rudeness”(1 Nephi 18:9).
Nephi could see the
pending judgments of the Lord and he tried to intervene on behalf of his
brothers for their own good. He spoke to his brothers, but they reacted with
typical childishness and Jewish anger toward those who tried to preach to them.
Immediately, his
brothers tied Nephi up and as quickly, the liahona
stopped working, which brought fear into the hearts of the rebellious for they
“knew not whether they should steer” (1 Nephi 18:13). Steering the ship had
become increasingly important since they moved out into the currents, for the
winds at this point blow strong currents across a wide path, with the inside
band closer to the storm’s path and the inner swing of the north gyre, while
staying to the outside band swinging out and connecting with the south gyre
which was necessary to pick up the counter-clockwise edge that would continue the southerly course and
bend the direction of travel to the southeast and eventually pick up the
Southern Ocean and the West Wind Drift that would take the vessel to the east
and the Western Hemisphere.
Storms in this area,
like the one Nephi describes, are typically cyclonic, approaching with a
northerly wind followed by a southerly wind as the center of the depression
passes. This would have backed the sail (slowed forward progress), and they
would have brailed the sail (pulled in small lines on the sail to curl or leech
the corners) to reduce head wind pressure, and rigged a sea anchor, which would
have kept the vessel’s head into the wind, while at the same time drifting
downwind or northward hence the words “driven back.”
(See the next post, “Meaning
of Words and Statements Part VI: Driven Forth Before the Wind PtII,” for the
rest of this regarding the meaning of being "driven forth before the wind" and
its impact on the location of the Land of Promise)
No comments:
Post a Comment