Photo by Štěpán Vraný
on Unsplash
The story is told in The Book of Mormon of a
kingdom rich in freedom, freedom from want, freedom from oppression, with much
freedom of opportunity. What could go
wrong?
The generation that participated in building that freedom—it
did not come free—yielded to a generation led by a dissolute king. Under his leadership the society neglected the
defense of that freedom. That was a
great danger. The kingdom was encompassed
and its people greatly outnumbered by enemies who nursed a centuries-deep
hatred reinforced by an ideology of grievances of perceived victimhood.
Alluringly prosperous, the kingdom was a tempting
honeypot to its much poorer neighbors, and yet for more than a generation it kept
its enemies at bay. That success stemmed
from the intertwined combination of strenuous exertion and divine help from
their faith in Christ. Each time
attacked—by overwhelming numbers—the people drew all of their might into the muster,
on one occasion placing young and old into the ranks. Appealing to and blessed by God, who
strengthened their arms and demoralized their foes, the people of the kingdom
repelled the invaders.
Their new king followed a different formula. Governed by his appetites and the mirage of perpetual
security, he taxed the people and he taxed his army, diverting resources to feed
the wanton consumption of his court. The
people came to tolerate and then ape this corruption. The generation that had deep faith in Christ
and reliance upon that faith, passed on to one that at first kept up the forms
of religious observance but without the spirituality in worship or soul. Their focus shifted from heaven to the
transient things of mortality. They had
plenty of reason to be unhappy with the king, from the escalation in taxes, to
the perversion of the religious leadership, to the degradation in public
morals, including the whoredoms and drunkenness. Yet while there may have been dissatisfaction
at first, the lavish public spending and the example of undisciplined revelry
became popular, as it so often can.
The situation fit the pattern mentioned by Adam Smith in The
Wealth of Nations, “What Dercyllidas said of the court of Persia may be
applied to that of several European princes, that he saw there much splendour
but little strength, and many servants but few soldiers.” (Adam Smith, The
Wealth of Nations, Vol. I, p.392)
The enemies began to notice, too. Overcoming years of intimidation from their
inexplicable defeats, the very proximate hordes commenced a series of minor
raids. As the scripture record relates,
And it came to pass that [they]
began to come in upon his people, upon small numbers, and to slay them in their
fields, and while they were tending their flocks. And [the] king . . . sent guards round about
the land to keep them off; but he did not send a sufficient number, and [their
enemies] came upon them and killed them, and . . . began to destroy them, and
to exercise their hatred upon them. (Mosiah
11:16, 17)
The king responded to the raiders by sending his army,
which “drove them back for a time; therefore, they returned rejoicing . . . saying
that their fifty could stand against thousands” (Mosiah 11:18, 19). Their enemies took them up on the boast. “And now behold, the forces of the king were
small, having been reduced . . .” (Mosiah 19:2)
Their enemies, though, came with their thousands, and the fifty, indeed
the king’s entire army, fled at his command; the people exchanged freedom for
bondage and poverty.
The message is clear, as intended. Freedom for the people and for the nation,
any nation, resides in the people doing all that they can and should for their
defense, and a reliance upon God to reinforce their efforts. That has been the formula for the United
States, from the Revolution to now. It
is the duty of each generation to take the handoff of the responsibility from
the previous one and pass it on secure to the next. Hubris for accomplishments in the past will
little overcome provocative weakness. Maintaining
freedom is a gift from God, who will help us to the extent we seek His help and
demonstrate that we will do what we can to help ourselves.
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