Idolatry
in the Book of Mormon
By John A. Tvedtnes
Describing the wickedness of his time, Mormon wrote that the
Lamanites marched “against the city
Teancum, and did drive the inhabitants forth out of her, and
did take many prisoners both women and children, and did offer
them up as sacrifices unto their idol gods” (Mormon 4:15; see also verse 16). In a subsequent battle, when
the Lamanites “had come the second
time, the Nephites were driven and
slaughtered with an exceedingly great slaughter; their women
and their children were again sacrificed unto idols” (Mormon
4:21; Mormon also mentions the “unbelief and idolatry” of
the Lamanites in Mormon 5:15).
Though Lehi was a prophet of God
and angels had appeared to his four sons, idolatry appeared
among them early in their history. Nephi’s brother Jacob spoke
of “those that worship idols, for the devil of all devils
delighteth in them” (2 Nephi 9:37).
Jacob’s son Enos noted that the
Lamanites “were led by their evil
nature that they became wild, and ferocious, and a blood-thirsty
people, full of idolatry and filthiness” (Enos
1:20). The Nephite king Zeniff
wrote that “they were a lazy and an idolatrous people” (Mosiah
9:12). Strangely, Zeniff’s son Noah
and his priests “were supported in their laziness, and in
their idolatry, and in their whoredoms,
by the taxes which king Noah had put upon his people; thus
did the people labor exceedingly to support iniquity. Yea,
and they also became idolatrous, because they were deceived
by the vain and flattering words of the king and priests;
for they did speak flattering things unto them” (Mosiah
11:6-7).
Even in Zarahemla
King Noah may have been influenced by his Lamanite neighbors in turning to idolatry, but this does not
explain how, at the same time, in the land of Zarahemla,
“the sons of Mosiah were numbered
among the unbelievers; and also one of the sons of Alma was
numbered among them, he being called Alma, after his father;
nevertheless, he became a very wicked and an idolatrous man
(Mosiah 27:8).
This Alma was converted
to the Lord when falling into a trance-like state following
the appearance of an angel to chastise him and the sons of
Mosiah. Ultimately, he became high
priest over the church in Zarahemla,
where some were still idolatrous: “For those who did not belong
to their church did indulge themselves in sorceries, and in
idolatry or idleness” (Alma 1:32). In a discourse delivered
in the city of Gideon, Alma said, “I trust that ye are not
in a state of so much unbelief as were your brethren [in Zarahemla]
. . . yea, I trust that you do not worship idols, but that
ye do worship the true and the living God” (Alma 7:6).
Alma’s record notes that the Lamanites
“were a very indolent people, many of whom did worship idols”
(Alma 17:15), and that the Zoramites,
a dissident Nephite group, “were
perverting the ways of the Lord, and that Zoram,
who was their leader, was leading the hearts of the people
to bow down to dumb idols” (Alma 31:1). Many Nephites,
too, had become idolators: “for it has been their quarrelings
and their contentions, yea, their murderings,
and their plunderings, their idolatry,
their whoredoms, and their abominations, which were among themselves,
which brought upon them their wars and their destructions”
(Alma 50:21).
In the days of Alma’s grandson Helaman,
Satan “had got great hold upon the hearts of the Nephites;
yea, insomuch that they had become exceedingly wicked; yea,
the more part of them had turned out of the way of righteousness,
and did trample under their feet the commandments of God,
and did turn unto their own ways, and did build up unto themselves
idols of their gold and their silver. And it came to pass
that all these iniquities did come unto them in the space
of not many years, insomuch that a more part of it had come
unto them in the sixty and seventh year of the reign of the
judges over the people of Nephi” (Helaman
6:31-32).
Finding the Source
One may wonder how people who accepted the ancient Israelite
scriptures and had followed prophets of God could have turned
to idolatry. To be sure, one might expect apostasy, the establishment
of false churches, even denial of God and turning to atheism,
but how can such an enlightened people come to believe in
idols made by the hands of men? Is it reasonable to expect
that people who turn from God would replace him with idols?
The best explanation, I believe, is that Lehi’s
posterity lived among other peoples who already inhabited
the New World, and that these people were idol-worshipers.
We know that the Maya and the later Aztecs and other inhabitants
of Mesoamerica sacrificed to their gods, many of whom are
depicted in wall reliefs.
That there were already idolatrous peoples living in the New
World at the time the people of Jared migrated from their
homeland is also suggested in Moroni’s
abridgment of the Jaredite record. He wrote that “in the reign of Shule there came prophets among the people, who were sent
from the Lord, prophesying that the wickedness and idolatry
of the people was bringing a curse upon the land, and they
should be destroyed if they did not repent … And because the
people did repent of their iniquities and idolatries the Lord
did spare them, and they began to prosper again in the land”
(Ether 7:23).
Just as it seems illogical that Nephites
and Lamanites should turn to idols
without some kind of outside influence, the Jaredites,
too, probably got their idolatrous ways from their neighbors.
Thus, the Book of Mormon provides one more piece of evidence
for the existence of other natives not specifically named
in the Nephite and Jaredite record.