Come Follow Me: Alma 32-34

I open today with the structure of the text we’re covering. Alma 30-34 are really one unit, which we break up. In the 1830 Book of Mormon, they constitute one chapter, Alma XVI. Presumably, we’re breaking these up because of their doctrinal nature; we want to slow down and spend time on them.

Today we cover Alma 32-34, which looks like thisin the rough big-picture outline.

32– Alma continues preaching at Antionum; “faith sermon” on the hill Onidah.

33– Crowd’s negative response; Alma continues his sermon.

34– Amulek takes over, and preaches to the crowd on the hill.

Surprisingly, not a ton has been written about Alma 32 from an

Thomas Benjamin Kennington, Orphans. Public domain

Thomas Benjamin Kennington, Orphans.
Public domain

analytical (as opposed to devotional/Ensign-style) perspective.

A few notes, then, on Alma 32-

First, a comment based on Hebrew and the Hebrew Bible. There, “faith” and a whole series of words come from the same root, ‘mn (aleph, mem, nun). In KJV English, words translated from the various verbal and noun forms of that root would include faith, faithful, trust, trustworthy, reliable, truthtrue, to believeto establish, assurance, to verify or be verified, pillar/support (apparently in 2Ki 18:16) and amen or more accurately, ‘amēn, which came into English transliterated from Hebrew.  Note all of these seem to get at ideas of reliability, certainty, firmness.

When the KJV reads “verily verily” (unique to John’s gospel) what Jesus is saying is “amen amen,” which other translations read as “most assuredly,” “very truly,” “I assure you,” “I can guarantee this truth” and “yes indeed!”

Isa 7:9 uses two forms of ‘mn to make a wordplay of sorts.

KJV “If ye will not believe (‘mn), surely ye shall not be established (i.e. made firm, ‘mn)”

NRSV- “If you do not stand firm in faith, you shall not stand at all.”

The prophet calls for the king to “pull himself together,” to strengthen his faith, as a necessary condition to being confirmed in office by the Lord and by his people. – Word Biblical Commentary.

Is this the concept of faith that Alma understands? He’s several hundred years removed from native Israelite Hebrew speakers, and we don’t know what language he’s speaking. Alma distinguishes between knowledge and certainty in chapter 32. Knowledge has to do with seeing, as is also backed up by the mention of the unseen in Heb 11:1 and the connection with seeing in Eth 3:19. Is faith, for Alma, certainty without demonstrable proof? This was the question I tried to answer in my smpt presentation, but I found it too ambiguous to conclude one way or the other. I strongly suspect, however, that the conception of faith varies throughout our scriptures, differing from our modern conception as well.


Two things about this chapter are almost funny to me. Remember that the people come to present Alma with a problem, that they can’t get in to the synagogue. You would expect the high priest and prophet to solve the problem… but he doesn’t. After Alma finishes, the people are still poor, still not permitted in the synagogue, and moreover, they’re confused. We really elevate Alma 32, but when you try to read it as The Solution to Their Problem (at least as they understand it), the solution doesn’t work very well. Alma finishes preaching and the response of the crowd is, paraphrased, “uh, ok. That’s great and all about faith, but what should we do?”

they sent forth unto him desiring to know whether they should believe in one God, that they might obtain this fruit of which he had spoken, or how they should plant the seed, or the word of which he had spoken, which he said must be planted in their hearts; or in what manner they should begin to exercise their faith. (Alma 33:1)

In other words, Alma doesn’t answer the question they ask in 32:5 Instead, he questions the assumptions the question is founded on.

Sometimes the answer to a problem is to question and rethink why we consider it a problem.


Alma says,

now behold, my beloved brethren, I say unto you, do not suppose that this is all; for after ye have done all these things, if ye turn away the needy, and the naked, and visit not the sick and afflicted, and impart of your substance, if ye have, to those who stand in need– I say unto you, if ye do not any of these things, behold, your prayer is vain, and availeth you nothing, and ye are as hypocrites who do deny the faith. Alm 34:27-28

But remember who he’s talking to! These are the poor people in town, kept out because they can’t afford the “right” clothes for synagogue worship! In essence, Alma says righteousness doesn’t come from attendance to Church every Sunday, attending the synagogue, and wearing a white shirt. It comes in keeping the commandments as part of our covenantal relationship with God. (See here.)

Our relationship with God (which, again, in some sense is what  “righteousness” is, a right-relationship with God) is often most visible in our relationships with people. How do we treat the poor, sick, and afflicted? How do we treat our enemies? Are we generous with our offerings? Alma reminds me here both of Deuteronomy, which nails this topic repeatedly, but also James.

NRSV James 1:27 Religion that is pure and undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to care for orphans and widows in their distress, and to keep oneself unstained by the world.


Tidbits

  • When Amulek preaches about the death of Jesus as atonement in Alma 34:10, he says

    it is expedient that there should be a great and last sacrifice; yea, not a sacrifice of man, neither of beast, neither of any manner of fowl; for it shall not be a human sacrifice; but it must be an infinite and eternal sacrifice.

    One of BYU’s resident Mesoamericanists reads this and verse 11 in terms not of the Law of Moses, but of Mesoamerican bloodletting by divine kings and sacrifice of actual humans.

  • Alm 34:15 uses the phrase “bowels of mercy.” Again, while we don’t know about the language on the plates, the idea of “bowels” as deep-seated feelings is a Hebrew bible and Israelite culture. A serious of related words that originally meant “inner organs” came to mean the inner self, womb, and mercy/love/compassion.  See Gen. 43:30, 1 Kings 3:26. Jeremiah 4:19. Jeremiah 31:20.
  • Alma 34:34- You need continue reading to v. 35 &36 to understand what “spirit” v. 34 is referring to.

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1 Comment

  1. I love the insight about Alma 32 not really responding to the poor Zoramites’ main concerns. I have often thought that as well, especially because of the way the crowd responds (like you mention). It almost seems like Alma has someone totally different in mind with his discourse on faith, and I wonder if it’s Korihor. There seems to be a specific callback to Korihor in chapter 32 verse 17, and the whole discussion has undertones of being a second attempt at a refutation of Korihor’s philosophy by emphasizing the active knowledge of the “experiment” Alma describes over the logical proofs of Korihor. I would guess that the encounter with Korihor left Alma with a lot to think about and that it therefore really influenced his teachings among the Zoramites.