"Filthy This Day before God"

Jacob's Use of Filthy and Filthiness in His Nephite Sermons

Jan J. Martin

Jan J. Martin, "'Filthy This Day before God': Jacob's Use of Filthy and Filthiness in His Nephite Sermons," in Jacob: Faith and Great Anxiety, ed. Avram R. Shannon and George A. Pierce (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book), 191鈥216.

Jan J. Martin is an associate professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Young University.

The prophet Jacob, the second author in the Book of Mormon and the younger brother of the first author, Nephi, was a gifted man. His teachings, recorded on the small plates of Nephi, essentially consist of two sermons (2 Nephi 6鈥10; Jacob 2鈥3) and a treatise (Jacob 4鈥6).[1] Though they are not extensive, Jacob鈥檚 writings reveal a spiritual, intellectual, faithful, diligent, well-judging seer who also possessed unique literary abilities.[2] Like Nephi, Jacob spoke both plainly (see Jacob 2:11; 4:13鈥14) and boldly (see Jacob 2:7), though he occasionally expressed greater reluctance than Nephi about doing so (vv. 7鈥10, 23). Despite his diffidence, Jacob鈥檚 writings are full of vibrant, rich descriptions that are powerfully candid, such as the 鈥渁wful monster鈥 that is death and hell (2 Nephi 9:10), the 鈥減iercing eye of the Almighty God鈥 (Jacob 2:10), and hearts 鈥減ierced with deep wounds鈥 (Jacob 2:35). These examples and many more reveal his wonderfully moving and masterful command of language and imagery.[3]

However, in the midst of his many beautifully artistic phrases lurks the equally potent but less palatable adjective filthy and its noun filthiness. These words can mean 鈥渄irty; foul; unclean; nasty鈥 or 鈥減olluted; defiled by sinful practices; morally impure.鈥[4] Interestingly, Jacob is responsible for one-third of the thirty-four instances[5] of filthy/filthiness that appear throughout Book of Mormon, more than any other author except his brother Nephi, who also contributes a third. But unlike Nephi,[6] Jacob applies filthy/filthiness to people every time he uses the terms. In fact, Jacob is the first Book of Mormon author to apply filthy/filthiness directly to the Nephites as well as to the Lamanites, a practice that may be unsettling or even offensive to modern readers, especially when filthy or filthiness is interpreted as scornfully pejorative language indicative of feelings of Nephite racial superiority over the Lamanites.[7] Though there has been some scholarship devoted to Jacob and his sermons, the prophet鈥檚 use of filthy/filthiness has only been examined superficially, and no one has adequately explained why Jacob perceived the Nephites and Lamanites to be filthy.[8] This study hopes to fill those gaps. It will begin with a discussion of the animosity that existed between the Lamanites and the Nephites and how that animosity generated mutually unflattering stereotyping. Second, it will explore Jacob鈥檚 understanding of filthy/filthiness and it will demonstrate that he consistently understood the terms to refer to a spiritual condition resulting from unresolved violations of God鈥檚 laws, whether he applied the terms to general people or to specific groups like the Lamanites and Nephites. Third, it will show that Jacob perceived both the Lamanites and the Nephites to be filthy because they were each, in their different ways, violating the laws of God as given to Lehi and as outlined in the law of Moses. Finally, it will demonstrate that Jacob allowed for degrees of filthiness based on the quality of theological instruction that a person or group of people received, which is why he felt that Nephite filthiness was more egregious than Lamanite filthiness.

Animosity between the Nephites and the Lamanites

According to one scholar, Jacob[9] was 鈥渁 child of a house divided.鈥[10] From the day he was born as the fifth son to Lehi and Sariah in the Arabian desert after the couple fled from Jerusalem with their older children (ca. 600 BC) to the day he stood before the Nephites at a temple in the promised land as a priest (ca. 544 BC), Jacob suffered 鈥渁fflictions and much sorrow鈥 because of sibling rivalry and contention (2 Nephi 2:1).[11] The principal antagonists were two of his older brothers: Laman, who was the eldest son, and Nephi, who was the fourth son (see 1 Nephi 2:5). Though there were secondary issues, the principal bone of contention between Laman and Nephi was primogeniture. As the firstborn son, Laman claimed the right to lead the family after Lehi died (see 1 Nephi 16:37鈥38; 2 Nephi 5:3), while Nephi insisted that the Lord had chosen him to be Lehi鈥檚 successor (see 1 Nephi 2:22; 3:29; 2 Nephi 5:19). Probably due to Lehi鈥檚 presence as the undisputed head of the family, the power struggle between the two brothers largely simmered under the surface throughout the family鈥檚 journey to the promised land,[12] though there were some unforgettably dramatic incidents where the tension exploded into serious life-threatening altercations (see 1 Nephi 3:26鈥28; 7:6鈥19; 17:48鈥55; 18:9鈥20). Because Lehi died shortly after arriving in the promised land, the question of succession quickly came to a tumultuous climax that resulted in a complete breach between Nephi and Laman and those who supported their differing leadership claims (see 2 Nephi 4:13鈥14; 5:1鈥5).[13] After they separated, the brothers established their own colonies in independent locations. The people of Nephi, later known as Nephites (see Jacob 1:13鈥14), settled in a place they called Nephi, where they observed 鈥渢o keep the judgments, and the statutes, and the commandments of the Lord in all things, according to the law of Moses鈥 (2 Nephi 5:8鈥10). The people of Laman, later known as Lamanites (see Jacob 1:13鈥14), initially remained 鈥渋n the land of their first inheritance鈥 (Mosiah 10:13) with their own set of laws, the details of which are only hinted at in the Book of Mormon but will be discussed more fully below.

After establishing his own colony where his people 鈥渓ived after the manner of happiness鈥 (2 Nephi 5:27), Nephi records that the Lord commanded him to 鈥渕ake other plates鈥 upon which he was to write 鈥渢hat which [was] pleasing unto God鈥 (vv. 5:30, 32). One author has argued that the second set of plates was designed to provide 鈥渁 political tract or a 鈥榣ineage history鈥 documenting the legitimacy of Nephi鈥檚 rule and religious teachings.鈥[14] The historical narrative on the small plates contradicted the Lamanites鈥 claim that Nephi had wrongfully 鈥渢aken the ruling鈥 of the family 鈥渙ut of their hands鈥 and 鈥渞obbed them鈥 of the brass plates (Mosiah 10:15鈥16). The brass plates were an important item for a number of reasons (see 1 Nephi 4:14鈥16; Mosiah 1:3鈥5; Alma 37:8鈥10), but because they contained the genealogy of Lehi鈥檚 forebearers going back to Joseph of Egypt (see 1 Nephi 5:14), they provided both Laman and Nephi with the essential proof that kings of antiquity needed to establish their genealogical right to rule through legitimate descent.[15] When Nephi took the recorded genealogy away with him, along with the sword of Laban and the Liahona, which were two other important symbols of Old World kingship, he made a distinctly aggressive political move,[16] one that presumably left Laman with no traditionally convincing way to justify his position as a ruler of his own colony or for his descendants to do so after him. Moreover, because the brass plates contained a record of the law of Moses, they would have been very helpful to new leaders like Nephi and Laman with the practicalities of setting up fledgling governments, organizing communities,[17] and maintaining religious belief.[18] Nephi seems to have used the brass plates to great effect (see 2 Nephi 5:10, 12, 16, 18, 26鈥27), and his success may have exacerbated the 鈥渨ronged鈥 and 鈥渨rathful鈥 feelings the Lamanites already held towards Nephi because of what they felt to be his unlawful usurpation of authority and his underhanded theft of the plates (see Mosiah 10:15鈥16).[19]

Therefore, according to Nephite records, the Lamanites deliberately taught their children to perpetually hate, murder, rob, and destroy the Nephites (see Mosiah 10:17). These behaviors would go on to foster continually contentious feelings between the two communities, feelings that would make stereotyping and the use of unflattering descriptions of each other likely. The Book of Mormon candidly records instances where some of the Nephites expressed stereotypically unfavorable opinions of the Lamanites (see Alma 26:23鈥24) and where some of the Lamanites expressed stereotypically unfavorable opinions of the Nephites in return (see Alma 20:8鈥13). However, as we shall see below, Jacob鈥檚 application of filthy/filthiness to people in general, and to Nephites and Lamanites in particular, is not meant to be stereotypically unfavorable language because he consistently understood filthiness to be a spiritual condition created by violations of God鈥檚 laws.

Filthy in Jacob鈥檚 First Recorded Sermon

Shortly before he died, Lehi prophesied that Jacob, his 鈥渇irstborn鈥 in the days of his 鈥渢ribulations in the wilderness鈥 (2 Nephi 2:1),[20] would spend his future life 鈥渋n the service鈥 of God (v. 3). This prophecy came to fruition in Jacob鈥檚 mid-twenties.[21] After Nephi and his followers established themselves as a separate colony (see 2 Nephi 5:6鈥9), Nephi appears to have served as both the spiritual and secular leader of the community (see 2 Nephi 5:10鈥18).[22] He consecrated Jacob to be both a priest[23] and teacher to the Nephites (see v. 26), presumably to work in the temple that Nephi built (see v. 16),[24] and to serve as a second special witness of the truth.[25] As a priest under the law of Moses, which the Nephites strictly practiced until the coming of Christ (see 1 Nephi 4:15; 5:10; Jarom 1:5; Alma 30:3; 3 Nephi 9:17, 19), Jacob was a mediator between the Nephites and God. As such, he officially represented the people in worship and in sacrifice and taught them the law (see Numbers 18:1鈥5; Deuteronomy 33:10; Leviticus 10:11, 17; 2 Nephi 9:44; Jacob 1:19).[26] Sometime after his consecration, Jacob delivered his first recorded sermon to the Nephites (see 2 Nephi 6鈥10), a composition that one scholar has described as 鈥渙ne of the most powerful passages of scripture in the Book of Mormon.鈥[27] By the time Jacob gave this discourse, Lehi鈥檚 family had been driven out of Jerusalem, their ancestral promised land (see 1 Nephi 1:20; 1 Nephi 2:1鈥4), and Nephi鈥檚 followers had been driven out of the land of their first inheritance in the New World (see 2 Nephi 5:1鈥7). These two traumatic expulsions may have caused the Nephites to feel 鈥渃ut off and isolated from God鈥檚 promises because they lacked a permanent land of inheritance.鈥[28] As directed by his brother Nephi (see 2 Nephi 6:4), Jacob sought to address this important concern in his first sermon. 鈥淭he discourse was so long that it took Jacob two days to deliver it,鈥[29] but Nephi valued his younger brother鈥檚 words so much that he recorded some of Jacob鈥檚 teachings on the small plates. As we will see, Jacob utilizes filthy three times during his discourse.

Beginning with an explication of what we would call Isaiah chapters 49 through 52, Jacob expertly discusses the scattering and gathering of Israel (see 2 Nephi 6:5鈥2 Nephi 8) to show that even though the descendants of Lehi and the followers of Nephi have been driven out of their lands of inheritance, the covenantal promises that God made with the house of Israel remain viable for the Nephites (see 2 Nephi 9:1鈥3). Jacob hoped that the certainty of the Lord鈥檚 covenants and promises would encourage the Nephites to raise their heads and rejoice (see v. 3). He then masterfully switches to the Fall of Adam and Eve and explains how 鈥渢he great Creator鈥檚鈥 infinite atoning sacrifice overcomes the physical and spiritual deaths brought about by the Fall (vv. 4鈥14). Jacob teaches that because of the Atonement, all humankind will be resurrected and will 鈥渁ppear before the judgment seat of the Holy One of Israel鈥 to be 鈥渏udged according to the holy judgment of God鈥 (v. 15). But he also makes it clear that the Resurrection is more than a reunification of the spirit and the body into an immortal, incorruptible state. Jacob explains that in the Resurrection, the spirit and the body will be 鈥渞estored to itself again鈥 (v. 13), meaning that 鈥渢hey who are righteous shall be righteous still, and they who are filthy shall be filthy still鈥 (v. 16).[30] Those who are righteous will 鈥渉ave a perfect knowledge of [their] enjoyment, and [their] righteousness, being clothed with purity,鈥 while those who are filthy will have 鈥渁 perfect knowledge of all [their] guilt, and [their] uncleanness, and [their] nakedness鈥 (v. 14). To avoid any misinterpretation of what he means by righteous, Jacob helpfully identifies the righteous as 鈥渢he saints of the Holy One of Israel, they who have believed in [him], they who have endured the crosses of the world, and despised the shame of it鈥 (v. 18) and they who 鈥渓ove the truth鈥 (v. 40). He also adds that those who want to be 鈥渟aved in the kingdom of God鈥 must 鈥渞epent and be baptized in his name, having perfect faith in the Holy One of Israel鈥 (v. 23).

The filthy, on the other hand, are 鈥渢he devil and his angels鈥 (2 Nephi 9:16), though this explanation is not as straightforward as Jacob鈥檚 previous identification of the righteous.[31] In English, the 鈥渨ord angel derives from the Greek aggelos, which means 鈥榤essenger.鈥欌[32] Aggelos is based on the root verb aggello, which means 鈥渢o tell, to inform.鈥[33] In Hebrew, which is one of the languages mentioned in the Book of Mormon (see 1 Nephi 1:2; Mormon 9:32鈥34), the word for angel is 尘补濒鈥檃肠丑, meaning 鈥渙ne who is sent forth, usually with a message.鈥[34] Because 鈥渢he Greek aggelos and the Hebrew 尘补濒鈥檃肠丑 make no distinction between heavenly or earthly messengers,鈥[35] and because 鈥渢he bulk of [2 Nephi] 9 is concerned with the personal worthiness of the Nephites鈥[36] and what will happen to them at judgment day if they do not repent (see 2 Nephi 9:45鈥46), Jacob seems to be utilizing angels in its broadest sense to include those mortals who 鈥測ield[ed] to the enticings鈥 of the devil and became carnally minded, willfully transgressing the laws of God, pridefully setting aside his counsel, foolishly wasting the days of their mortal probation, and tragically dying in their sins (see vv. 27鈥39). Thus in Jacob鈥檚 first sermon, filthy is a term that represents a spiritual condition brought about by the violation of God鈥檚 laws. Jacob appears to share this understanding with his older brother Nephi, who also utilized filthy and filthiness to describe a spiritual condition and who may have influenced Jacob鈥檚 understanding and use of those same terms.

Remarkably, it is an angel who first utilizes filthy in the Book of Mormon, as he responds to a young Nephi鈥檚 sincere desire to 鈥渟ee, and hear, and know鈥 for himself (1 Nephi 10:17) the things his father Lehi had experienced in a dream that is commonly known today as the vision of the tree of life (see 1 Nephi 8). Lehi鈥檚 dream seems to be 鈥渁n allegory of the spiritual history of God鈥檚 children on earth,鈥[37] the central feature being the tree of life, which is a representation of 鈥渢he love of God鈥 (1 Nephi 11:21鈥22), and the central question being whether or not God鈥檚 children will partake of the fullness of that love and remain committed to him (see 1 Nephi 8:11鈥33). As the angel guides Nephi to behold and interpret the different symbolic elements his father saw, such as the iron rod, the straight and narrow path, and the great and spacious building, he says, 鈥淏ehold the fountain of filthy water . . . ; yea, even the river of which [Lehi] spake; and the depths thereof are the depths of hell鈥 (1 Nephi 12:16).[38] Though it isn鈥檛 immediately clear how the angel understands filthy, his subsequent explanation that the depths of the filthy river are the 鈥渄epths of hell鈥 suggests that filthy represents a condition that comes from disobedience to God鈥檚 laws, since it is 鈥渟ins and iniquities鈥 that cause one to experience 鈥渢he pains of hell鈥 (Alma 36:13; see also Jacob 3:11). Later, when Nephi discusses the dream with Laman and Lemuel and answers their question about the meaning of the 鈥渞iver of water鈥 (1 Nephi 15:26), Nephi confidently declares that the 鈥渨ater which [their] father saw was filthiness鈥 (v. 27). He goes further, calling it 鈥渁n awful gulf, which separated the wicked from the tree of life, and also from the saints of God鈥 (v. 28) and 鈥渁 representation of that awful hell, which the angel said unto me was prepared for the wicked鈥 (v. 29). Thus, for Nephi the terms filthy and filthiness describe the spiritual condition of those who 鈥渉ave sought to do wickedly in the days of [their] probation鈥 (1 Nephi 10:21), who die 鈥渋n their wickedness鈥 (1 Nephi 15:33), and who are 鈥渇ound unclean before the judgment-seat of God鈥 (1 Nephi 10:21)鈥攊deas that are identical to those Jacob shared in his first sermon. As we move into an examination of Jacob鈥檚 second sermon, we will see that he maintains this spiritual understanding of filthy over time.[39]

Filthy in Jacob鈥檚 Second Recorded Sermon

Shortly before his death, Nephi divided the community鈥檚 leadership responsibilities, conferring the civic government upon one man (who became known as 鈥渟econd Nephi鈥; see Jacob 1:9, 11) and the church government upon another, seemingly Jacob (see Jacob 1:18; 2:2鈥4), though the small plates are not explicit.[40] Thus Jacob delivered his second recorded sermon (Jacob 2鈥3) to the Nephites at the temple as a fifty-year-old priest.[41] In his second sermon Jacob utilizes filthy twice and filthiness five times, applying the terms to the Nephites in three instances and to the Lamanites in four. A cursory examination of the second sermon shows that all of Jacob鈥檚 applications of filthy/filthiness appear towards the end of the address, beginning with an important warning showing that his understanding of filthy has remained consistent over time. Jacob declares, 鈥淏ut, wo, wo, unto you that are not pure in heart, that are filthy this day before God鈥 (Jacob 3:3). Thanks to the introductory information provided at the beginning of the second sermon, we know that the pronoun you in Jacob鈥檚 warning refers to those Nephites (see Jacob 2:1) who are 鈥渂eginning to labor in sin鈥 (v. 5). In the body of the second sermon, Jacob helpfully identifies what those sins are: pride (see vv. 13鈥16), economic prejudice and persecution (see vv. 13, 17鈥21), whoredoms (see vv. 23鈥28), and the demolition of the divinely-ordained family structure and its accompanying relationships (see vv. 30鈥35). Within this context, Jacob 3:3 reads, 鈥渨o, wo unto you [Nephites] that are not pure in heart, that are filthy this day before God [because of pride, economic prejudice and persecution, whoredoms, and participation in an unsanctioned family structure that is breaking hearts and wrecking filial confidence].鈥 With the Nephite temple standing conspicuously in the background,[42] Jacob鈥檚 woeful references to the impure hearts and sinful behavior of the Nephites seem to be a subtle but unmistakable reminder that those who 鈥渁scend into the hill of the Lord鈥 and 鈥渟tand in his holy place鈥 should have both 鈥渃lean hands, and a pure heart鈥 (Psalm 24:3鈥4).[43]

Because Jacob鈥檚 first application of filthy is to his own people rather than to the Lamanites, and because he doesn鈥檛 apply filthy to the Nephites until after a thorough discussion of their many violations of God鈥檚 laws, filthy cannot rightly be interpreted as a reference to a physical state or to a racially inherited condition. For Jacob, filthy refers to a spiritual condition generated by disobedience, a meaning he further confirms by reminding the Nephites that repentance, an agency-driven return to God鈥檚 laws that involves a willing change of heart and behavior (see Jacob 6:5鈥6), is the appropriate remedy for their filthy state (see Jacob 3:3). Jacob鈥檚 second application of filthy follows quickly on the heels of the first, and it too conveys a spiritual condition, but this time Jacob applies the term to emphasize differences between the Nephites and the Lamanites.

Jacob boldly prophesies of the consequences that will come to the Nephites if they remain in their filthy state: 鈥淓xcept ye repent the land is cursed for your sakes; and the Lamanites, which are not filthy like unto you, nevertheless they are cursed with a sore cursing, shall scourge you even unto destruction鈥 (Jacob 3:3). Jacob further warns that the Lamanites will completely 鈥減ossess the land鈥 of Nephite inheritance even as the Lord leads the righteous among the Nephites elsewhere (v. 4). In this prophecy, Jacob鈥檚 second use of filthy does two important things. First, it confirms his previous claim that the Nephites are filthy; and second, it introduces primacy in commandment-keeping and gradation in culpability as it compliments the Lamanites for not being 鈥渇ilthy鈥 in the same way as the Nephites. Even though the Lamanites are under their own divine condemnation, described by Jacob as 鈥渁 sore cursing,鈥[44] the prophet feels that they are 鈥渕ore righteous鈥 than the Nephites for three reasons: first, 鈥渢hey have not forgotten the commandment . . . that they should have one wife, and concubines they should have none鈥 (Jacob 3:5); second, they have remembered that 鈥渢here should not be whoredoms committed among them鈥 (v. 5); and third, 鈥渢heir husbands love their wives, and their wives love their husbands; and their husbands and their wives love their children鈥 (v. 7). In other words, no matter what other divine laws the Lamanites may be violating and no matter what other divine laws the Nephites may be keeping, respecting and protecting the divinely ordained monogamous family structure (see v. 27), the precious relationships between a husband, a wife, and their children (see Jacob 2:31鈥32, 35; 3:7), and the sacred powers of procreation (see Jacob 2:28) take divine precedence.[45] For their willful violation of these sacred laws, laws that Lehi had taught them previously (see v. 34), the Nephites are guilty of 鈥済reater iniquities than the Lamanites鈥 (v. 35; see also Jacob 3:3鈥4) and are under 鈥済reat condemnation鈥 (Jacob 2:34).[46] The family-centered Lamanites, on the other hand, are entitled to the Lord鈥檚 patience, mercy, and help (see Jacob 3:6), three important blessings that the Nephites are risking principally with their violations of the laws of monogamy and chastity (see Jacob 2:25鈥29; 3:3鈥4). This is a weighty comparison, one in which Jacob consistently indicates that filthy is a spiritual condition created by violations of God鈥檚 laws. Jacob uses this comparison to elevate the Lamanites to a better spiritual condition than the Nephites.[47] As Jacob continues his comparison of the Nephites and Lamanites, he begins utilizing filthiness rather than filthy. In English, the adjective filthy is nominalized into the noun filthiness by adding the suffix -ness. Because this type of grammatical change does not alter the meaning of filthy, Jacob鈥檚 use of filthiness remains constant: it is a spiritual condition created by violations of God鈥檚 laws.

Filthiness in Jacob鈥檚 Second Recorded Sermon

Unlike Jacob鈥檚 first two applications of filthy, which were to the Nephites, Jacob鈥檚 first and second applications of filthiness are to the Lamanites. Jacob continues his second discourse by describing the inner Nephite landscape of prejudice against the Lamanites: 鈥淏ehold, the Lamanites your brethren, whom ye hate because of their filthiness [a spiritual condition brought about by violations of God鈥檚 laws]鈥 (Jacob 3:5). A few verses later, Jacob commands the Nephites to stop acting on their hateful feelings. They are to cease reviling 鈥渁gainst [the Lamanites] because of their filthiness [a spiritual condition brought about by violations of God鈥檚 laws]鈥 (v. 9). Hate[48] and revile[49] are strong emotional words that carry several meanings. However, for the purposes of remaining focused on understanding filthiness, I will argue that the presence of hate and revile, however they are defined, show that the Nephites were decidedly interested in (and perhaps even overly occupied with) observing, discussing, and reacting to Lamanite disobedience to God鈥檚 laws. A law-oriented perspective is hardly surprising given the repeated admissions throughout the Book of Mormon that the Nephite community strictly observed the law of Moses (see 2 Nephi 5:10; Jarom 1:5; Alma 30:3), but such an intense Nephite concern about Lamanite disobedience is intriguing and raises an important question: which laws did the Nephites believe that the Lamanites were violating?

Jacob has already indicated that the Lamanites were obeying some critically important divine laws, but he gives very little detail about Lamanite violations of divine law other than his mention of their 鈥渦nbelief鈥 and 鈥渉atred鈥 towards the Nephites (Jacob 3:7). To appreciate Jacob鈥檚 comparison of Lamanite and Nephite filthiness more fully, additional information is needed. Because the Book of Mormon is a record largely focused upon the Nephite community, it is not as explicit about Lamanite departures from the laws of God as it is about Nephite departures, but there are a handful of helpful hints scattered throughout the text that facilitate greater understanding of Lamanite behavior and Nephite objections to it. I have chosen to concentrate on four Nephite portrayals of the Lamanites that are recorded on the small plates because together they are comprehensive and because later Nephite descriptions of the Lamanites largely repeat concepts from these earlier accounts.[50] Even though these early descriptions have been interpreted by some modern readers as evidence of Nephite denigration of the Lamanites for what appears to be a different, more primitive lifestyle,[51] a closer look at the descriptions will show that they are better understood as the Nephite recordkeepers鈥 way of indicating which divine laws the Lamanites were violating and the process by which the violations developed.

Table 1. Nephite portrayals of Lamanite behavior with key descriptive words

VerseKey Descriptors

2 Nephi 5:24

And because of their cursing which was upon them they did become an idle people, full of mischief and subtlety, and did seek in the wilderness for beasts of prey.

Idle 

Full of mischief and subtlety

Seek for beasts of prey

Jacob 7:24

And it came to pass that many means were devised to reclaim and restore the Lamanites to the knowledge of the truth; but it all was vain, for they delighted in wars and bloodshed, and they had an eternal hatred against us, their brethren. And they sought by the power of their arms to destroy us continually.

Delighted in wars and bloodshed

Eternal hatred [for Nephites]

Sought to destroy [Nephites]

Enos 1:20

But our labors were vain; their hatred was fixed, and they were led by their evil nature that they became wild, and ferocious, and a blood-thirsty people, full of idolatry and filthiness; feeding upon beasts of prey; dwelling in tents, and wandering about in the wilderness with a short skin girdle about their loins and their heads shaven; and their skill was in the bow, and in the cimeter, and the ax. And many of them did eat nothing save it was raw meat; and they were continually seeking to destroy us.

Hatred [towards Nephites]

Evil nature

Wild, ferocious, bloodthirsty

Full of idolatry and filthiness

Feeding upon beasts of prey

Wandering about in the wilderness

Skill in bow, cimeter, ax

Ingesting raw meat

Continually seeking to destroy [Nephites]

Jarom 1:6

And they were scattered upon much of the face of the land, and the Lamanites also. And they were exceedingly more numerous than were they of the Nephites; and they loved murder and would drink the blood of beasts.

Loved murder

Drank the blood of beasts

The first column in table 1 displays each of the Lamanite descriptions in their entirety. Column 2 identifies the specific words and phrases the Nephite authors applied to the Lamanites. As the words and phrases are highlighted and studied in close proximity it becomes evident that Nephite authors are accentuating Lamanite attitudes towards animal and human life. For instance, 2 Nephi 5:24 mentions Lamanites seeking for 鈥渂easts of prey.鈥 Enos 1:20 talks about Lamanites 鈥渇eeding upon beasts of prey,鈥 鈥渨andering about in the wilderness鈥 with the 鈥渂ow, . . . the cimeter, and the ax,鈥 hunting and eating 鈥渞aw meat.鈥[52] Jarom 1:6 describes the Lamanites as drinking 鈥渢he blood of beasts.鈥 These accounts unmistakably and repeatedly refer to animals and to what the Lamanites are doing with them. Similarly, Jacob 7:24 depicts the Lamanites as delighting 鈥渋n wars and bloodshed,鈥 nursing an 鈥渆ternal hatred鈥 for the Nephites, and continually seeking 鈥渢o destroy鈥 them by physical prowess. Enos 1:20 describes hate-filled, 鈥渨ild,鈥 鈥渇erocious,鈥 鈥渂lood-thirsty鈥 Lamanites who are 鈥渃ontinually seeking to destroy鈥 the Nephites. Jarom 1:6 adds that the Lamanites love 鈥渕urder.鈥 These phrases emphasize both a lack of self-control and a lack of respect for human life. When taken together, the Nephite recordkeepers鈥 portrayals seem to be much more concerned about Lamanite attitudes towards animal and human life than anything else,[53] attitudes that the dietary laws of Moses were specifically designed to confront, correct, and sanctify. Thus the Nephite descriptions of the Lamanites may not reflect feelings of Nephite superiority or prejudice but rather show their sincere desire to carefully illustrate what happened to the Lamanites as they abandoned living according to the law of Moses. Jacob especially recognized that part of his role as priest and teacher was to teach 鈥渢he consequences of sin鈥 (2 Nephi 9:48; see also Jacob 3:12) so that people could wisely avoid them (see Jacob 6:12).

visual of a flow chart of arrowsFigure 1. A visual representation of the pattern presented in 2 Nephi 5:24.

Scholars have shown that the dietary laws of Moses were much more than hygienic necessities or safeguards to prevent Israel from adopting the idolatrous practices of their neighbors. They were principally designed by God to tame the killer instinct that lurks in human nature, an instinct that craves and pursues power and may, in the process of attaining power, selfishly and indiscriminately tamper with, and even take, animal and human life.[54] The killer instinct may have been what Enos was referring to when he described the Lamanites as having an 鈥渆vil nature鈥 (Enos 1:20). When the Mosaic dietary laws were kept with the right spirit,[55] they subjugated the killer instinct while inculcating a deep, ethical reverence for both animal and human life by restricting which animals could be used for food (see Leviticus 11:1鈥8, 13鈥20, 27); requiring humane slaughtering practices (see Leviticus 17:1鈥10; Deuteronomy 12:21);[56] and prohibiting human ingestion of blood, which was the symbolic representative of life, so that it could be consciously and respectfully consecrated back to God, the giver of life (see Leviticus 3:17, 7:26鈥27; 17:10鈥14). Jacob Milgrom notes that the ultimate reason for the dietary laws, a reason that is stated with greater frequency in the dietary laws themselves than anywhere else in the law of Moses, was to sanctify the people and make them holy (see Leviticus 11:44鈥45). He explains, 鈥渙nly through a daily regimen of disciplines which remind man that life is sacred can man aspire to a way of life fully informed by other ethical virtues. The dietary laws are rungs on the ladder of holiness, leading to a life of pure thought and deed, characteristic of the nature of God.鈥[57]

visual of a flow chart of arrowsFigure 2. A visual representation of the pattern presented in Jacob 7:24.

That the Nephite recordkeepers had the dietary laws of Moses in mind as they described the Lamanites seems evident, not only because of their repeated emphasis on Lamanite attitudes and behavior towards animal and human life but also because each of their descriptions contains a progressive pattern showing how a lack of respect for life ultimately manifests itself in the treatment of animals and humans. For example, Nephi records that the Lamanites became 鈥渁n idle people, full of mischief and subtlety鈥 who sought 鈥渋n the wilderness for beasts of prey鈥 (2 Nephi 5:24; see fig. 1).[58] This seemingly random collection of ideas could be Nephi鈥檚 attempt to illustrate his belief that regularly hunting wild animals without also applying the best practices outlined in the law of Moses (see Leviticus 17:13; Deuteronomy 12:21鈥24), potentially even seeking to kill carnivorous predators, helped the Lamanites become comfortable with taking life. In Nephi鈥檚 interpretation, the Lamanites鈥 mischievous and subtle killer instinct, their appetite for animal flesh, was no longer being disciplined and subdued by diligent, sincere, daily obedience to the dietary laws of Moses.[59] A dutiful and industrious Nephi, ever attentive to the laws of God, may have identified the Lamanites鈥 neglectful abandonment of the dietary laws of Moses, laws that required significant daily effort, with the term idle.[60]

visual of a flow chart of arrowsFigure 3. A visual representation of the pattern presented in Enos 1:20.

Similarly, Jacob writes that the reason the Lamanites were continually seeking 鈥渢o destroy鈥 the Nephites, an activity that shows no respect for human life, was because they 鈥渄elighted in wars and bloodshed鈥 and 鈥渉ad an eternal hatred鈥 towards the Nephites (Jacob 7:24). In other words, inward feelings (hatred) created outward priorities (wars and bloodshed) indicative of a highly developed, undisciplined killer instinct that then led to continually seeking Nephite destruction (see fig. 2).

visual of a flow chart of arrowsFigure 4. A visual representation of the pattern presented in Jarom 1:6.

Enos explains that the fixed hatred the Lamanites harbored towards the Nephites nourished their killer instinct, what he calls 鈥渢heir evil nature,鈥 which fostered wildness, ferociousness, bloodthirstiness, and a desire to devote a lot of time, talent, and energy to hunting鈥攁n activity which ultimately ended in Lamanite willingness to feed 鈥渦pon beasts of prey鈥 and to regularly ingest 鈥渞aw meat鈥 (v. 20; see fig. 3).[61]

Jarom too suggests that the Lamanite killer instinct, described by him as a love of murder, facilitated the Lamanites鈥 enjoyment of hunting, an enjoyment which eventually caused them to violate the Mosaic law鈥檚 fundamental prohibition against drinking blood (see Jarom 1:6; see fig. 4).[62]

Conclusion

With this increased understanding of where the Lamanites may have been going wrong in reference to divine law, we can more fully appreciate Jacob鈥檚 comparison of Nephite and Lamanite filthiness. On the one hand, the spiritually advantaged, covenant-making, theologically educated Nephites are struggling with pride (see Jacob 2:13鈥16); economic prejudice and persecution (see vv. 13, 17鈥21); whoredoms (see vv. 23鈥28); and the deliberate demolition of the divinely ordained family structure and its accompanying relationships (see vv. 30鈥35). On the other hand, the spiritually disadvantaged, covenant-deprived, theologically uneducated Lamanites are struggling with unbelief; with a tendency to hold and perpetuate generational grudges (see Jacob 3:7); and with an abandonment of the law of Moses, including its dietary guidance, resulting in a profound lack of respect for animal and human life. Within this candidly powerful juxtaposition, Jacob asks the Nephites to think about their future judgment day and where they will stand 鈥渋n the sight of [their] great Creator鈥 compared to the Lamanites (v. 7). Jacob insists that without Nephite repentance, judgment day may not be what some of the Nephites are expecting (see v. 8).[63]

As Jacob brings his second sermon to a close, he applies filthiness twice more, once to each colony, in an attempt to help the Nephites apply the Lord鈥檚 command to stop looking down upon the Lamanites for their disobedience. Rather than focusing on the Lamanites鈥 filthiness, or on their violations of God鈥檚 laws, Jacob instructs the Nephites to 鈥渞emember [their] own filthiness,鈥 a practice that would simultaneously invite humility and repulse oppressive self-righteousness (Jacob 3:7). And rather than being intolerant of or impatient with the Lamanites鈥 violations of divine law, Jacob admonishes the Nephites to 鈥渞emember that [the Lamanites鈥橾 filthiness [spiritual uncleanness] came because of their fathers鈥 (v. 9). This important exercise would restore sobering perspective about the origins of the Lamanites鈥 unbelief, hatred (see 2 Nephi 4:3鈥6), inferior theological education (see Mosiah 1:5), and subsequent abandonment of the dietary laws of Moses. It is with these past tragedies and deficiencies in mind that Jacob makes his final application of filthiness. He admonishes the Nephites to simultaneously learn from Lamanite history and look to their own future by remembering their own children and how they 鈥渉ave grieved their hearts because of the example that [they] have set before them鈥 (Jacob 3:10), an example that Jacob earlier declared to be a 鈥渂ad鈥 one (Jacob 2:35). Jacob then warns that because of their unresolved 鈥渇ilthiness鈥 the Nephites may, just like Laman and Lemuel before them (see 2 Nephi 4:6), bring their own children 鈥渦nto destruction鈥 and, like them, be held partially accountable for their children鈥檚 鈥渟ins . . . at the last day鈥 (Jacob 3:10).

Jacob concludes by pleading with the Nephites to 鈥渉earken unto [his] words鈥; to 鈥渁rouse the faculties of [their] souls鈥; to 鈥渟hake鈥 and 鈥渁wake鈥 themselves 鈥渇rom the slumber of death鈥; and to 鈥渓oose [themselves] from the pains of hell鈥 so that they 鈥渕ay not become angels to the devil鈥 (Jacob 3:11), which would be an ominous outcome indeed. The phrase 鈥渁ngels to the devil鈥 masterfully recalls Jacob鈥檚 first recorded sermon to the Nephites where he taught that without the 鈥渋nfinite atonement,鈥 the spirits of all humankind, who had been separated from their physical bodies at death, would have 鈥渂ecome devils, angels to a devil, to be shut out from the presence of God, and to remain with the father of lies, in misery鈥 (2 Nephi 9:7, 9). He also taught that the filthy who would stand before God at the judgment day were 鈥渢he devil and his angels鈥 (v. 16), a group that included those unto whom God gave his laws and commandments in mortality and who willfully transgressed them, dying in their sins (see vv. 27, 39). In other words, if the Nephites were not attentive to their own precarious spiritual condition, they could end up in this very group at judgment day.

Through his masterful command of language and imagery, and through his equally commanding understanding of the plan of salvation, we have seen how the prophet Jacob consistently utilized filthy and filthiness to refer to a spiritual condition created by unresolved violations of God鈥檚 laws and how he did not use the terms pejoratively in either of his sermons. We have also seen how Jacob recognized that both the Lamanites and the Nephites were filthy because they were each, in their different ways, violating the laws of God as given to Lehi and as outlined in the law of Moses. However, this articulate spiritual leader also knew that because the Nephites had greater access to theological instruction than the Lamanites, their filthiness was more egregious than Lamanite filthiness, an important fact that caused him to boldly call his own people to sincere and humble repentance.

Notes

[1] See John A. Tvedtnes, 鈥淭he Influence of Lehi鈥檚 Admonitions on the Teachings of His Son Jacob,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 3, no. 2 (1994): 34.

[2] See Robert J. Matthews, 鈥淛acob: Prophet, Theologian, Historian,鈥 in A Book of Mormon Treasury: Gospel Insights from General Authorities and Religious Educators (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2003), 173.

[3] Matthews has also noted Jacob鈥檚 descriptive talent; see 鈥淛acob: Prophet, Theologian, Historian,鈥 173.

[4] Noah Webster, American Dictionary of the English Language (1828), s. v. 鈥渇ilthy,鈥 https://webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/filthy.

[5] An angel is the first individual to utilize filthy in the Book of Mormon (see 1 Nephi 12:16).

[6] Nephi applies filthy to people four times (see 1 Nephi 12:23; 1 Nephi 15:33鈥34) and associates it with the kingdom of God twice (see 1 Nephi 15:33鈥34). He applies filthiness to water twice (see 1 Nephi 15:27), to works once (see 1 Nephi 15:33), and to a place once (see 1 Nephi 15:34).

[7] Sharon J. Harris has insisted that 鈥渢he word filthiness offers a window into one way that the Nephites developed a bias against the Lamanites鈥 and that it 鈥渟eems to have taken on racial connotations.鈥 Harris, Enos, Jarom, Omni: A Brief Theological Introduction (Provo, UT: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, Brigham Young University, 2020), 51, 56. Similarly, David M. Belnap has argued that 鈥淣ephite prejudice is manifest in the uncomplimentary descriptions of Lamanites鈥 and has included Jacob 3:3, 5, 8鈥9 as part of the uncomplimentary language. David Belnap, 鈥淭he Inclusive, Anti-Discrimination Message of the Book of Mormon,鈥 Interpreter 42 (2021): 220. Thomas Murphy has included filthy in his list of pejorative terms in the Book of Mormon. See Murphy, 鈥淟aban鈥檚 Ghost: On Writing and Transgression,鈥 Dialogue 30, no. 2 (1997): 117. Daniel L. Belnap argues that Jacob鈥檚 reference to the darkness of Lamanite skin, along with the use of the word filthiness, suggests that the Nephites were 鈥渆xhibiting racist prejudices against the Lamanites.鈥 Daniel Belnap, 鈥溾楢nd it Came to Pass . . .鈥: The Sociopolitical Events in the Book of Mormon Leading to the Eighteenth Year of the Reign of the Judges,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 23 (2014): 132.

[8] Harris has published the most recent treatment of Jacob鈥檚 use of filthy/filthiness in Enos, Jarom, Omni. Without examining either of Jacob鈥檚 two sermons in which he utilizes filthy/filthiness multiple times, she mistakenly argues that filthiness is a 鈥渂uzzword鈥 for Jacob, something he uses for 鈥渟hock value鈥 because it is an 鈥渆motionally fraught label that is especially effective for grabbing the Nephites鈥 attention鈥 as he rebukes them for sin. Then, based upon a cursory mention of Jacob 3:5, she proposes that 鈥淛acob鈥檚 record shows that the idea of filthiness has settled into Nephite culture as a derogatory signifier for the Lamanites.鈥 See Harris, Enos, Jarom, Omni, 55鈥56. With greater attention to the broader contents of Jacob鈥檚 second sermon than Harris, Steven L. Olsen concludes that Jacob used filthiness metaphorically to represent moral impurity and that he attributed Lamanite filthiness to their fathers. See Olsen, 鈥淭he Covenant of the Chosen People: The Spiritual Foundations of Ethnic Identity in the Book of Mormon,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 21, no. 2 (2012): 20.

[9] Scholars believe that Lehi named his son Jacob after the Old Testament patriarch Jacob. See Matthews, 鈥淛acob: Prophet, Theologian, Historian鈥; and S. Kent Brown, 鈥淲hat Is Isaiah Doing in First Nephi? Or, How Did Lehi鈥檚 Family Fare So Far from Home?鈥 in From Jerusalem to Zarahemla: Literary and Historical Studies of the Book of Mormon (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1998), 16.

[10] John S. Tanner, 鈥淟iterary Reflections on Jacob and His Descendants,鈥 in The Book of Mormon: Jacob through Words of Mormon, To Learn with Joy, ed. Monte S. Nyman and Charles D. Tate Jr. (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, 1990), 264.

[11] Deidre Nicole Green argues that Jacob felt physically unsafe with his family. See Green, Jacob: A Brief Theological Introduction (Provo, UT: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, Brigham Young University, 2020), 11.

[12] The brothers did have productive conversations over the course of their journey and settlement in the promised land (see 1 Nephi 3:15鈥23; 7:20鈥22; 15:1鈥16:5; 19:22鈥24) and they were able to work successfully together many times (see 1 Nephi 7:1鈥5; 18:1鈥6).

[13] 鈥淲hen Lehi died, Nephi must have known that the long-forestalled crisis was now inevitable鈥攁nd in the New World there were no larger institutions nor higher authorities to protect Nephi and his family from his brothers鈥 barbarism.鈥 Tanner, 鈥淟iterary Reflections on Jacob,鈥 254.

[14] Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淭he Political Dimension in Nephi鈥檚 Small Plates,鈥 BYU Studies Quarterly 27, no. 4 (Fall 1987): 15.

[15] Gordon C. Thomasson has shown that the Nephite national treasure, consisting of the records, the sword of Laban, and the Liahona, were important symbols of legitimate power and rule. See Thomasson, 鈥淢osiah: The Complex Symbolism and Symbolic Complex of Kingship in the Book of Mormon,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 2, no. 1 (1993): 26. Brett L. Holbrook has focused specifically on the symbolism of the sword of Laban. See Holbrook, 鈥淭he Sword of Laban as a Symbol of Divine Authority and Kingship,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 2, no. 1 (1993): 39鈥72.

[16] See Thomasson, 鈥淐omplex Symbolism,鈥 25鈥32; and Holbrook, 鈥淭he Sword,鈥 41鈥45.

[17] John W. Welch has pointed out that 鈥渢he law of Moses did more than regulate the priestly ordinances or ritual aspects of ancient Israel. It embraced both religious and secular, cultic and civil law.鈥 Welch, 鈥淟ehi鈥檚 Last Will and Testament: A Legal Approach,鈥 in The Book of Mormon: Second Nephi, The Doctrinal Structure, ed. Monte S. Nyman and Charles D. Tate Jr. (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1989), 63.

[18] The brass plates may have been equally valuable to Laman for establishing and maintaining his version of the Israelite faith. Grant Hardy has noted that Laman and Lemuel seemed to accept 鈥渟criptural interpretations that were defensible, conservative, and held by the majority of the religious establishment of the time,鈥 making them 鈥渙rthodox, observant鈥 Israelites. Hardy, Understanding the Book of Mormon: A Reader鈥檚 Guide (New York: Oxford University Press, 2010), 39.

[19] Neal Rappleye argues that Laman and Lemuel may have believed in specific Deuteronomic ideologies that conflicted with Lehi and Nephi鈥檚 beliefs. See Rappleye, 鈥淭he Deuteronomist Reforms and Lehi鈥檚 Family Dynamics: A Social Context for the Rebellions of Laman and Lemuel,鈥 Interpreter 16 (2015): 98鈥99.

[20] John A. Tvedtnes believes that Lehi used the phrase 鈥渇irst-born in the wilderness鈥 to imply that he considered Jacob as a replacement for his rebellious eldest son Laman. See Tvedtnes, 鈥淢y First-Born in the Wilderness,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 3, no. 1 (1994): 207.

[21] C. Terry Warner, 鈥淛acob,鈥 Ensign, October 1976, 25鈥30.

[22] Avram R. Shannon argues that the Nephite king was 鈥渁 sacred person鈥 who, from Nephi1 to Alma1, 鈥渨as at the head of the Nephite priestly organization.鈥 Shannon, 鈥淎fter Whose Order? Kingship and Priesthood in the Book of Mormon,鈥 BYU Studies Quarterly 60, no. 4 (2021): 82, 90鈥91.

[23] Because Lehi was not a member of the tribe of Levi, the tribe for whom the Aaronic Priesthood was reserved under the law of Moses (see Exodus 28:1鈥4; 29:1鈥46; Doctrine and Covenants 84:18, 26鈥27), it appears that the Nephites officiated as priests through the authority of the Melchizedek Priesthood. Jacob鈥檚 reference to God鈥檚 鈥渉oly order鈥 may be a shortened version of the original name of the Melchizedek Priesthood, which was 鈥渢he Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of God鈥 (Doctrine and Covenants 107:3). Shannon suggests that 鈥渢he Nephites may have functioned in the priestly order that modern Latter-day Saints call the Melchizedek Priesthood鈥 but believes 鈥渋t cannot be shown from the Book of Mormon鈥 because the record 鈥減resents priesthood through a lens of ancient temples and kingship.鈥 Shannon, 鈥淎fter Whose Order?,鈥 91. For a thorough explanation of how the Nephites were able to offer legitimate animal sacrifices away from Jerusalem, see David R. Seely, 鈥淟ehi鈥檚 Altar and Sacrifice in the Wilderness,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 10, no. 1 (2001): 62鈥69.

[24] David E. Bokovoy also notices that Jacob鈥檚 consecration as priest is mentioned in the same literary unit that describes the temple that Nephi built. See Bokovoy, 鈥淎ncient Temple Imagery in the Sermons of Jacob,鈥 in Temple Insights: Proceedings of the Interpreter Matthew B. Brown Memorial Conference, ed. William J. Hamblin and David Rolph Seely (Orem, UT: Interpreter Foundation; Salt Lake City: Eborn Books, 2014), 171鈥86.

[25] See Warner, 鈥淛acob,鈥 25鈥30. Jacob 鈥渂eheld鈥 Israel鈥檚 Redeemer as a youth, and this is what makes him a special witness on par with Nephi (2 Nephi 2:4).

[26] Shannon explains that 鈥淛acob and Joseph would have been responsible for the various offerings required under the law of Moses.鈥 Shannon, 鈥淎fter Whose Order?,鈥 82. See also Bible Dictionary, 鈥淧riests,鈥 https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/scriptures/bd/priests. The dual roles of mediating and instructing might explain why Nephi designated Jacob as both a priest and a teacher, rather than merely a priest.

[27] Daniel Belnap, 鈥溾業 Will Contend with Them That Contendeth with Thee鈥: The Divine Warrior in Jacob鈥檚 Speech of 2 Nephi 6鈥10,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 17, no. 1 (2008): 21.

[28] Daniel Belnap, 鈥溾業 Will Contend,鈥欌 21.

[29] Matthews, 鈥淛acob: Prophet, Theologian, Historian,鈥 181.

[30] Elder Milton R. Hunter, then a member of the first quorum of the Seventy, further explains this principle:

The fact that we die doesn鈥檛 change us one iota. You and I are dual personages, possessing a spirit body which dwells in a physical body. Death is the separation of that spiritual body from the physical body. All of our good deeds, our bad deeds; the knowledge we have attained; our habits, our evil and good inclinations, are resident in the spirit. The spirit personage contains the personality, or, in other words, the spirit is the real individual. Having an understanding of this doctrine, therefore, we know that when we die we take with us to the other world exactly what we have made of ourselves while living in mortality. Hunter, 鈥淚mmortality and Eternal Life,鈥 in Conference Report, April 1949, 68.

Dallin H. Oaks taught, 鈥淭he principle of restoration also means that persons who are not righteous in mortal life will not rise up righteous in the resurrection.鈥 Oaks, 鈥淩esurrection,鈥 Ensign, May 2000, 16.

[31] Larry E. Dahl interprets 鈥渢he devil and his angels鈥 strictly as Satan and those spirits who followed him in premortality. See Dahl, 鈥淭he Concept of Hell,鈥 in Book of Mormon Treasury, 262鈥79.

[32] Taylor Halverson, 鈥淭he Path of Angels: A Biblical Pattern for the Role of Angels in Physical Salvation,鈥 in The Gospel of Jesus Christ in the Old Testament, The 38th Annual BYU Sidney B. Sperry Symposium (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2009), 153. In a similar vein, Elder Holland said, 鈥淲e are reminded that not all angels are from the other side of the veil. Some of them we walk with and talk with鈥攈ere, now, every day.鈥 Holland, 鈥淭he Ministry of Angels,鈥 Ensign or Liahona, November 2008, 30.

[33] The Cambridge Greek Lexicon (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021), s. v. 鈥aggelos.鈥

[34] The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon, 9th ed. (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2005), s. v. 鈥湷静贡翕檃肠丑.鈥

[35] Halverson, 鈥淧ath of Angels,鈥 153.

[36] Daniel Belnap, 鈥溾業 Will Contend,鈥欌 33.

[37] Sarah Jane Weaver, 鈥淎 Shared Vision: Lehi鈥檚 Dream of the Tree of Life,鈥 Church News, February 3, 1995, https://www.thechurchnews.com/1995/2/3/23255910/a-shared-vision-lehis-dream-of-the-tree-of-life-2.

[38] For a discussion of the meaning of hell in the Book of Mormon, see Dahl, 鈥淐oncept of Hell.鈥

[39] Harris acknowledges that Nephi understands filthiness to be a state of being that excludes individuals from the kingdom of God, but misses the fact that Jacob has the same understanding as Nephi. See Harris, Enos, Jarom, Omni, 51鈥55.

[40] John S. Tanner has argued that Jacob 鈥渆xercised dominant priestly authority, equivalent to that of presiding high priest.鈥 Tanner, 鈥淟iterary Reflections on Jacob,鈥 256. (The specific duties of the high priest under the law of Moses are outlined in Exodus 28:6鈥42; 29:6; 39:27鈥29; Leviticus 6:19鈥23; 21:10.) Shannon believes differently, arguing that 鈥渢he Book of Mormon conception of priesthood is based on Judahite notions of kingly priesthood and ideas firmly rooted in the biblical law of Moses and the Sinai Covenant鈥 and that reading the Book of Mormon 鈥渁gainst Latter-day Saint ecclesiology and priesthood鈥 can lead to 鈥渁 misreading of what is going on within the thought-world presented by the Book of Mormon.鈥 Shannon, 鈥淎fter Whose Order?,鈥 75鈥76.

[41] See Warner, 鈥淛acob,鈥 26; and Monte S. Nyman, These Records Are True: A Teaching Commentary on Jacob through Mosiah, vol. 2 (Orem, UT: Granite Publishing, 2003), 16.

[42] Nephi says that he built the temple 鈥渁fter the manner of the temple of Solomon鈥 (2 Nephi 5:16). Monte Nyman postulates that Jacob鈥檚 sermon was given on the temple grounds, not in the temple itself, since Nephite wives and children were present and they would not have been allowed inside the temple. See Nyman, These Records Are True, 18, 21.

[43] David Bokovoy notes that Jacob quotes temple-related verses from the Old Testament in his second sermon, especially from the Psalms. See Bokovoy, 鈥淎ncient Temple Imagery,鈥 in Temple Insights, 171鈥86.

[44] Jacob鈥檚 description of the 鈥渟ore cursing鈥 matches Nephi鈥檚 earlier reference to 鈥渁 sore cursing鈥 in 2 Nephi 5:21. I have argued that the 鈥渟ore cursing鈥 is a reference to the consequences attached to breaking the Lehitic covenant that are clearly outlined in 2 Nephi 1:7, 10鈥12, 18. See Jan J. Martin, 鈥淭he Prophet Nephi and the Covenantal Nature of Cut Off, Cursed, Skin of Blackness, and Loathsome,鈥 in They Shall Grow Together: The Bible in the Book of Mormon, ed. Charles Swift and Nicholas J. Frederick(Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2022), 112.

[45] The Family Proclamation is a modern-day confirmation that God cares very much about family structure, family relationships, and the sacred powers of procreation. See 鈥淭he Family, A Proclamation to the World,鈥 ChurchofJesusChrist.org. For a study of the positive treatment of Nephite women in the Book of Mormon under the law of Moses, see Carol Pratt Bradley, 鈥淲omen, the Book of Mormon, and the Law of Moses,鈥 Studia Antiqua 3, no. 2 (2003): 125鈥71. For a less positive perspective on the treatment of Nephite women in the Book of Mormon, see Joseph Spencer, 鈥淲omen and Nephite Men: Lessons from the Book of Alma,鈥 in Give Ear to My Words: Text and Context of Alma 36鈥42, ed. Kerry M. Hull, Nicholas J. Frederick, and Hank R. Smith (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2019), 235鈥53.

[46] John W. Welch argues that Jacob鈥檚 second sermon was designed 鈥渢o remind the Nephites of covenants they had previously made to eschew adultery and to consecrate the riches of the promised land back to the Lord of that land,鈥 and that violating these covenants made the Nephites 鈥渨orse off than the Lamanites.鈥 Welch, 鈥淭he Temple in the Book of Mormon,鈥 in Temples of the Ancient World: Ritual and Symbolism, ed. Donald W. Parry (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: FARMS, 1994), 338.

[47] Green believes that 鈥淛acob uses divine inspiration to instruct his people to look to the archetypal other in order to learn how to live.鈥 Green, Jacob, 44.

[48] Webster鈥檚 1828 dictionary generally defines hate as meaning 鈥渢o dislike greatly; to have a great aversion to鈥 but gives a scriptural definition as 鈥渢o love less.鈥 Webster, American Dictionary, s. v. 鈥渉ate,鈥 https://webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/hate. David E. Bokovoy has shown that scriptural hate has a specific legal meaning that indicates 鈥渢he status of an individual outside a covenant relationship.鈥 Bokovoy, 鈥淟ove vs. Hate: An Analysis of Helaman 15:1鈥4,鈥 Insights 22, no. 2 (2002): 2鈥3. I have argued that loathsome, as used by Nephi in 2 Nephi 5:22, is synonym for hate and may bear hate鈥檚 legal meaning as being perceived outside the covenant relationship. See Martin, 鈥淐ovenantal Nature of Cut Off,鈥 125鈥27.

[49] Webster鈥檚 1828 dictionary defines revile as meaning 鈥渢o reproach; to treat with opprobrious and contemptuous language.鈥 Webster, American Dictionary, s. v. 鈥渞evile,鈥 https://webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/revile.

[50] Later descriptions of the Lamanites鈥攅ither those taken directly from Zeniff鈥檚 record or those interjected by Mormon as he abridged the large plates of Nephi鈥攎aintain the same two concerns about the Lamanites鈥 lack of respect for animal and human life (see Mosiah 9:12; 10:11鈥17; 24:4鈥7; Alma 17:14鈥15, 18:7; 25:1鈥2, 26:24, 47:36; Mormon 4:14; Moroni 9:8). Lamanite anger, theft of property, and desire to enslave and destroy the Nephites are consistent themes, as are idolatry and indolence. These last two themes can both be references to the abandonment of the dietary laws of Moses, since the worship of idols often involved eating unclean animals that were sacrificed to idols and since indolence could mean a failure to participate in the daily exertions necessary for clean food preparation. For more on this topic, see Jacob Milgrom, 鈥淭he Biblical Diet Laws as an Ethical System,鈥 in Studies in Cultic Theology and Terminology (Leiden: Brill, 1983), 105, 111鈥113. Brant A. Gardner has similar ideas about idolatry; see Gardner, Second Witness: Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon, Volume 3: Enos through Mosiah (Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2007), 15鈥19.

[51] See, for example, Harris, Enos, Jarom, Omni, 42; David Belnap, 鈥淚nclusive, Anti-Discrimination Message,鈥 218; and Gardner, Second Witness, 3:15鈥19.

[52] Enos also mentions 鈥渋dolatry and filthiness.鈥 Idolatry may refer to the dietary laws of Moses as explained in note 40. Filthiness may be a reference to Lamanite disobedience to the dietary laws of Moses, but it may also be referring to violations of God鈥檚 laws in general. Both Nephi and Jacob consistently use filthy/filthiness to refer to a spiritual condition generated by disobedience, and there is reason to believe that Enos鈥檚 understanding of filthiness would be similar to theirs. Enos says that Jacob taught him 鈥渋n the nurture and admonition of the Lord鈥 (Enos 1:1) and that the 鈥渨ords which [he] had often heard [his] father speak concerning eternal life, and the joy of the saints, sunk deep into [his] heart鈥 (v. 3). Jacob鈥檚 recorded sermons show that in his teachings about eternal life he utilized filthy/filthiness to explain the differences between the wicked and the righteous, so it is likely that Enos learned about filthy/filthiness from his father. Harris also notes the significant impact that Nephi and Jacob had on Enos, remarking that 鈥淓nos reads those scriptures and thinks about Nephi and Jacob鈥檚 teachings鈥 and that Enos鈥 own 鈥渨ords reflect the language of prior prophets.鈥 Harris, Enos, Jarom, Omni, 22, 24. Gardner also posits that Jacob鈥檚 teachings had an important impact on Enos, though he doesn鈥檛 believe Enos had much interaction with the small plates themselves. See Gardner, Second Witness, 3:5鈥10.

[53] Gardner argues that the Nephite descriptions of the Lamanites deliberately contrast the differing cultures of each community and that the Nephites felt their culture was superior. See Gardner, Second Witness, 3:15鈥19.

[54] See Milgrom, 鈥淏iblical Diet Laws,鈥 104鈥18.

[55] Edward J. Brandt explains, 鈥淭he law of Moses could not influence a person鈥檚 life unless that person had some measure and portion of the Spirit of the Lord in his or her life. The lack of that spiritual influence caused great difficulties in ancient Israel. They lost the spirit of the law, which is why the law turned into such a burden.鈥 Brandt, 鈥淭he Law of Moses and the Law of Christ,鈥 in Sperry Symposium Classics: The Old Testament,ed. Paul Y. Hoskisson (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2005), 133.

[56] See Milgrom, 鈥淏iblical Diet Laws,鈥 104.

[57] Milgrom, 111.

[58] It is not clear what 鈥渂easts of prey鈥 means. Milgrom explains that within the dietary laws of Moses, 鈥渢he choice of animal food is severely limited. Considering the variety of fauna that roam the earth, it is startling to realize how few, comparatively, are for man鈥檚 table, and that these are of the domesticated-herbivorous species only.鈥 He also states that 鈥渙nly domesticated animals, and not beasts of prey, are acceptable upon the Temple altar.鈥 Milgrom, 鈥淏iblical Diet Laws,鈥 104. Though Gardner does not provide a source or other rationale for his conclusions, he argues that 鈥渂easts of prey鈥 should be understood as hunting wild animals rather than keeping domesticated animals. See Gardner, Second Witness, 3:16. In the Webster鈥檚 1828 dictionary, 鈥減rey鈥 is defined as 鈥渟poil; booty; plunder; goods taken by force from an enemy in war. . . . That which is seized or may be seized by violence to be devoured.鈥 Additionally, in the same definition, an 鈥渁nimal or beast of prey is a carnivorous animal; one that feeds on the flesh of other animals.鈥 Webster, American Dictionary, s. v. 鈥減rey,鈥 https://webstersdictionary1828.com/Dictionary/prey.

[59] Nephi and his brothers regularly hunted wild animals for food during their journey from Jerusalem to Bountiful (see 1 Nephi 16:14鈥18, 31鈥32). They also obtained the brass plates from Laban so they could 鈥渒eep the commandments of the Lord according to the law of Moses鈥 (1 Nephi 4:15), so it is presumed that the brothers followed the law鈥檚 humane hunting practices over the course of their journey through the wilderness and that Laman and Lemuel鈥檚 departure from those practices happened after the brothers separated (see 2 Nephi 5:5鈥10).

[60] A more specific meaning for idle than 鈥渓azy鈥 seems likely because, given other detailed descriptions of Lamanite civilization contained in the Book of Mormon, the Lamanites must have had a work ethic. J. Christopher Conkling has noted that the Lamanites 鈥渉ad highways, transportation, government, religious buildings, [and] planned cities.鈥 Conkling, 鈥淎lma鈥檚 Enemies: The Case of the Lamanites, Amlicites, and Mysterious Amalekites,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 14, no. 1 (2005): 115.

[61] Gardner believes that wild, ferocious, and bloodthirsty are value judgments that are designed to contrast the 鈥渦ncivilized Lamanites with the civilized Nephites,鈥 who are not just 鈥渆nemies but opposites.鈥 He also says it is 鈥渜uestionable whether the Lamanites actually ate raw meat,鈥 though he gives no justification for this claim. Gardner, Second Witness, 3:16. Ralph Gower explains that 鈥渕eat was normally boiled as part of a stew because this naturally followed the draining of blood that was required鈥 in the dietary law, but 鈥渕eat could be roasted鈥 over an open fire to remove the blood. Gower, The New Manners & Customs of Bible Times (Chicago: Moody, 1987), 52. For more details on the process of 鈥渒oshering,鈥 or preparing meat, see Rela Mintz Geffen, 鈥淒ietary Laws,鈥 Encyclopedia Judaica, Encyclopedia.com, https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/dietary-laws. Nephi recorded that as his family journeyed in the wilderness, the Lord promised to make their food 鈥渂ecome sweet,鈥 so that they didn鈥檛 need to cook it (1 Nephi 17:12). It is unclear what 鈥渟weet鈥 means here, but perhaps the Lord miraculously removed the blood from the meat so the family could eat it without violating the prohibition against ingesting blood (see Leviticus 3:17).

[62] Milgrom explains, 鈥淢an has no right to put an animal to death except by God鈥檚 sanction. Hence, he must eschew the blood, drain it, and return it, as it were, to the Creator.鈥 Milgrom, 鈥淏iblical Diet Laws,鈥 106.

[63] I have argued that the Lamanite skin of blackness is a self-inflicted tattoo that physically represents the Lamanites鈥 desire to be a separate people, a people outside the Lehitic covenant who do not belong to Jehovah. See Martin, 鈥淐ovenantal Nature of Cut Off,鈥 119鈥25. If my interpretation is correct, the Nephites came to interpret nontattooed skin, what they called 鈥渨hite鈥 skin, as an indication of Jehovah鈥檚 ownership. Thus Jacob鈥檚 reference to the Lamanites having 鈥渨hiter鈥 skin than the Nephites is not a racial reference but a covenantal reference, because it suggests that the tattooed Lamanites were closer to being accepted as Jehovah鈥檚 people than the untattooed Nephites were unless the Nephites repented.