There are few geographic locations in the Land of Promise mentioned as
often as the Sidon River, which is listed thirty-five times—34 times in
Alma, and once in Mormon.
This river, is mentioned so many times, and located within lands which
are also located directionally, that we get a clear understanding that the
river Sidon begins in the south (north of the Land of Nephi, but south of the
Land of Zarahemla) within the narrow strip of wilderness (Alma 22:27), and runs
northward by the Land of Zarahemla (Alma 2:15) and past the city of Zarahemla
(Alma 6:7), and flows to the sea (Alma 3:3; 42:22).
The point of this post is to show that Rod L. Meldrum, the President of The Firm Foundation for Indigenous Research
and Mormonism, and creator of his “Heartland Theory” of the Land of Promise
tries to twist the scriptural record in an attempt to show that the river Sidon
flows in the opposite direction than the scriptural references describe in order to
maintain his belief that the Mississippi River was the river Sidon.
The headwaters of the
Mississippi River is located at 1475 feet elevation, beginning “as a small
trickle over some rocks flowing out of Lake Itasca” in Minnesota on its way to
its mouth, 2552 miles away in the Gulf of Mexico
To straighten this misconception out through the scriptural record, let’s
take a look at Meldrum’s comments, beginning with the question he asks on his
website:
Meldrum: “What is the
"Head" of a river?” He then goes on to answer his own question with,
“Alma 22:29 indicates that the head of the
Sidon River was in the north as it states "the
Nephites had taken possession of all the northern parts of the land bordering
on the wilderness, at the head of the river Sidon, ..." This is completely congruent with the
proposed geography outlined in the Heartland Model presentations.”
Response: Unfortunately for
Meldrum and his theory, he completely misstates the scriptural meaning of this
issue, which is quite clear when comparing ALL of the scripture involved, and not
just the one verse he uses. First of all, Mormon is inserting an extensive
statement into Alma’s record about the land the Lamanite king controls,
beginning with verse 27, and continuing through the end of the chapter, verse
34, with verse 35 stating “And now I, after having said this, return again to
the account of Ammon and Aaron, Omner and Himni, and their brethren.” In those
eight verses, Alma gives his future reader an understanding of the land that a
proclamation the Lamanite king is being sent “throughout
all the land, amongst all his people who were in all his land, who were in all
the regions round about, which was bordering even to the sea, on the east and
on the west, and which was divided from the land of Zarahemla by a narrow strip
of wilderness, which ran from the sea east even to the sea west” (Alma 22:27).
Ammon was led by the Spirit to the Land of Nephi, and their experiences with the king and his conversion led to his sending out a proclamation to everyone in his land
This
land that the Lamanite king controls is, of course, the Land of Nephi where
Ammon was led by the Spirit (see Alma 22:21 to begin this series of events that
leads to Mormon’s inserted explanation).
Mormon
then goes on to describe this land. Since the king controls the Land of Nephi,
he then moves northward, stating his Land of Nephi “which was divided
from the land of Zarahemla by a narrow strip of wilderness, which ran from the
sea east even to the sea west, and round about on the borders of the seashore,
and the borders of the wilderness which was on the north by the land of
Zarahemla, through the borders of Manti, by the head of the river Sidon,
running from the east towards the west -- and thus were the Lamanites and the
Nephites divided” (Alma 22:27).
Thus,
the Land of Nephi in the south ran from the “sea on the east and on the west”
and was separated from the Land of Zarahemla, which was north of the Land of
Nephi, by a narrow strip of wilderness, which also ran from the sea east to the
sea west.
Now
here is the important part. In this narrow strip of wilderness was the
headwaters, or “head of the river Sidon,” or where the river Sidon began. This
river Sidon “ran by the land of Zarahemla” (Alma 2:14), which was north of the narrow
strip of wilderness, and was on the east
of the city of Zarahemla, running between the city of Zarahemla and the land of
Gideon (Alma 6:7). Thus, there was a “line between the Nephites and the
Lamanites, between the land of Zarahemla and the land of Nephi, from the west
sea, running by the head of the river Sidon -- the Nephites possessing all the
land northward, yea, even all the land which was northward of the land
Bountiful (Alma 50:11). Consequently, north of the Land of Nephi, which the
Lamantie king controlled, were the 1) narrow strip of wilderness; 2) the Land
of Zarahemla; 3) the Land of Bountiful; and 4) all the land that was north of
Bountiful.
In
addition, this narrow strip of wilderness, and the Land of Nephi to the south,
was higher in elevation than the Land of Zarahemla. This is seen when the
Nephites, after fortifying their cities to the north of the Land of Nephi (Alma
50:22), awaited an attack from the entire Lamanite army, which could not “march down against the city of Zarahemla,
neither durst they cross the head of Sidon, over to the city of Nephihah (Alma
50:25, emphasis mine).
Mormon describes this part of the Land Southward in three
parts: 1) the Land ofNephi in the South; 2) The Land of Zarahemla in the north;
and 3) A narrow strip of wilderness in between
Thus,
we find Meldrum’s quote used to imply an inaccurate direction, when he stated
above: “the
Nephites had taken possession of all the northern parts of the land bordering
on the wilderness, at the head of the river Sidon, ..." It is obvious
that the Nephites controlled everything north of the narrow strip of
wilderness, from the head of the river Sidon northward, including the entire
Land of Zarahemla, Land of Bountiful, narrow neck, Desolation, and the entire Land Northward.
First, “these northern parts of
the land” is referring to all the land north of the narrow strip of wilderness.
Second, “at the head of the river Sidon” has reference to that area where the
Nephites did not control within the narrow strip of wilderness which separated
the Land of Zarahemla from the Lamanite controlled Land of Nephi. Third, Meldrum
tries to create a false understanding that the head of the river Sidon was in
the north, but as can be seen from the entire scriptural reference here, the
headwaters of the river Sidon was in the narrow strip of wilderness between the
Lamanite controlled Land of Nephi and the Nephite controlled Land of Zarahemla.
Thus, his statement that “Alma
22:29 indicates that the head of the Sidon River was in the north”
is completely inaccurate and misleading. He goes on to write:
Meldrum:
“If the place of
first landing was the Gulf Coast of North America and the proposed
location for Zarahemla (according to the Heartland Model) is across the
Mississippi River from Nauvoo, IL…then certainly the 'head' was in the northern
parts of the land [and] the Book of Mormon textual references to the River
Sidon works very well in this geography, once a more
complete understanding of what the 'head' of the river Sidon might mean.”
Response: First, the word “IF” as
used here is a very big “IF.” However, that issue will have to wait for another
time and has already been dealt with in these posts numerous times, as has
Zarahemla being the city mentioned in D&C as being in Iowa. The point here
for this post is in the meaning of the word “head” as in head of a river.
Meldrum: “As regarding the Sidon River there is a very simple explanation that
lies in the definition of 'head' of a river. In Noah Webster's 1828 dictionary,
the reference dictionary in Joseph Smiths time, the word 'head' as relating
to a river is defined thus. 'Head…The principal source of a stream; as the
head of the Nile.'”
Response: First, his reference, mshaffer.com is
an Internet Information Services site. Second, under Meldrum’s reference there
is no listing for Head, 18. The principal source of a
stream; as the head of the Nile.' http://1828.mshaffer.com/d/search/word,head;
however, in going directly to (http://webstersdictionary1828.com/), which is Noah Webster’s 1828 American
Dictionary of the English Language (of which I have an original copy
published in its entirety by the Foundation
for American Christian Education, complete with Webster's 16-page explanation of
his work, beliefs and motivation, plus an 86-page explanation of the dictionary
itself) which Meldrum accurately states would be the correct “reference
dictionary in Joseph Smiths time” (though there is no suggestion the Smith's would have owned one, we find:
Head:
“the principal source of a stream; as the head of the Nile.” But we also find
two other definitions from Webster: 1) “The part most remote from the mouth or
opening into the sea; as the head
of a bay, gulf or creek” and 2) “to have its source, as a river.”
And
under source, we find: “Properly, the
spring or fountain from which a stream of water proceeds, or any collection of
water within the earth or upon its surface, in which a stream originates. This is called also the head of the stream
[italics mine}. We call the water of a spring, where it issues from the earth,
the source of the stream or
rivulet proceeding from it. We say also that springs have their sources in
subterranean ponds, lakes or collections of water. We say also that a large
river has is source in a
lake. For example, the St. Lawrence has its source
in the great lakes of America.”
The headwaters of the Missouri River is
found in Three Forks, Montana, and runs east and then south for 2341 miles
before entering the Mississippi River north of St. Louis. The “head” or
“headwaters” does not change merely because it enters another river, nor does
the “head” or “headwaters of the Mississippi River change merely because the
Missouri flows into it
Thus,
the word “head” relating to a river, is defined as the beginning or source of
that river. However, Meldrum does not accept his own source for a definition.
He goes to another.
(See
the next post, “In Search of the Sidon River –
Part II,” for more of Meldrum’s fanciful explanations as he tries to change the
flow of the river Sidon and make it the Mississippi River)
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