Later, I started loving doctrine. Therefore, I started dreading the war chapters of Alma. I wanted to learn, not just be entertained.
This time through the Book of Mormon, though, I'm realizing how silly I am.
In the next few posts, I want to discuss some real doctrines and lessons that I have learned by applying the stories of the Alma War Chapters into my life.
For Part One of this series, click here.
For Part One of this series, click here.
Go Back the Way You Came
This one I'm going to go a little unorthodox. We are going to be the Lamanites. I know that isn't what you aspired to become in Primary, but go with it just this once.
In Alma 58, Helaman leads a little chess match. He is strongly outnumbered in a battle that he knows he can't avoid. (In fact, that's another great lesson... I might do that for my next post!!) After he receives comfort from the Lord, he gets together with Gid and Teomner and they come up with a strategy to lure the Lamanites out of their strongholds. While Gid and Teomner are hiding in the woods, Helaman takes a small army towards the Lamanite city Manti. The Lamanites, seeing that the Nephites "were not strong, according to [their] numbers," (Alma 58:15) thought it well to leave their fortresses and attack.
See that? The Lamanites left their fortresses. They left the place where they were strongest. Now, we could
use the analogy that that is leaving the Church. That would be detrimental. But I want to focus on more subtle abandonment of safe-places. When we lower our standards just a bit, we lose the Holy Ghost and are left largely alone. We leave the spiritual protection that has held us up. I could apply any number of commandments here, be it chastity, Word of Wisdom, Sabbath Day observance, the law of tithing, honoring our parents, raising an eternal family, pornography, backbiting, murmuring, and on and on and on. The principal is the same.
As you probably could foresee, Helaman calls for his army to retreat, right into the woods where Gid and Teomner are waiting with backup. Rather than just attacking the Lamanite force, though, the Nephites did even more. Gid and Teomner killed a few important stragglers in the army, then went right for the heart. Rather than paying any attention to the army now chasing Helaman, they went and overtook the entire city of Manti. Verse 22 explains this wonderfully:
Satan likes to lure us out of our fortresses by making the armies seem small.
"Everyone else is doing it."
In Alma 58, Helaman leads a little chess match. He is strongly outnumbered in a battle that he knows he can't avoid. (In fact, that's another great lesson... I might do that for my next post!!) After he receives comfort from the Lord, he gets together with Gid and Teomner and they come up with a strategy to lure the Lamanites out of their strongholds. While Gid and Teomner are hiding in the woods, Helaman takes a small army towards the Lamanite city Manti. The Lamanites, seeing that the Nephites "were not strong, according to [their] numbers," (Alma 58:15) thought it well to leave their fortresses and attack.
See that? The Lamanites left their fortresses. They left the place where they were strongest. Now, we could
use the analogy that that is leaving the Church. That would be detrimental. But I want to focus on more subtle abandonment of safe-places. When we lower our standards just a bit, we lose the Holy Ghost and are left largely alone. We leave the spiritual protection that has held us up. I could apply any number of commandments here, be it chastity, Word of Wisdom, Sabbath Day observance, the law of tithing, honoring our parents, raising an eternal family, pornography, backbiting, murmuring, and on and on and on. The principal is the same.
As you probably could foresee, Helaman calls for his army to retreat, right into the woods where Gid and Teomner are waiting with backup. Rather than just attacking the Lamanite force, though, the Nephites did even more. Gid and Teomner killed a few important stragglers in the army, then went right for the heart. Rather than paying any attention to the army now chasing Helaman, they went and overtook the entire city of Manti. Verse 22 explains this wonderfully:
"Now this was done because the Lamanites did suffer their whole army, save a few guards only, to be led away into the wilderness.""Led away." Alma had used that same phrase when counselling his son, Corianton. In Alma 39:11, Alma says, "Suffer not yourself to be led away by any vain or foolish things; suffer not the devil to lead away your heart."
Satan likes to lure us out of our fortresses by making the armies seem small.
"Everyone else is doing it."