Narrative in the Book of Mormon
Zeezrom lives in the land of Ammonihah, whose inhabitants participate in wicked deeds. Alma and Amulek try to preach to the people of Ammonihah, but they are countered by Zeezrom. With 42 days' wages ( six onties), Zeezrom attempts to bribe Amulek to deny the existence of a God. Among other things, Zeezrom and other lawyers try to convince the people that Alma and Amulek are criticizing the law. The missionaries' words confound him and eventually he is convinced of his misdeeds. Now on the missionaries' side, he attempts to revoke his words; displeased, the people of Ammonihah chase him out of the city with stones before burning the other believers who were converted while listening to the missionaries. He later leaves the practice of law, becoming missionary companions with Alma, Amulek, and others.Interpretation
Law in Ammonihah
In the introduction of a book discussing Book of Mormon theology, Latter-day Saint editors Matthew Bowman and Rosemary Demos conclude that the deceptive behavior of Ammonihah's lawyers was connected with the city's poor political and social systems. Judges were paid per case and thus tended to encourage conflict among the people, according to two religious scholars Fatimah Salleh and Margaret Hemming. The chief cases the record describes involved debt, though, according to History and Religious Studies professor Grant Hardy, the judges handled a variety of situations. Protestant and theologist John Thomas also points out that the people were influenced by the philosophies ofConversion
In an article for ''Journal of Book of Mormon Studies,'' Pennsylvania State sociology professor Stephen Robert Couch draws upon the work of other researchers in discussing the sophist, or introspective-resistant, ways of Ammonihah's lawyers; in contrast, Alma and Amulek were able to help Zeezrom reflect and recognize his mistakes. Matthew Scott Stenson, a literature professor at Tennessee Tech University, says that the citizens' weakness was rooted in arrogance. Because the Ammonihahites were angry with Zeezrom for believing the missionaries' words, he sought refuge in Sidom with others who had been driven from Ammonihah. While there, Zeezrom fell deathly ill. The Book of Mormon account attributes the cause to the intense guilt he felt about his past,Missionary efforts
Zeezrom becomes a very active missionary. He teaches in the land of Melek and joins Alma on his mission to the Zoramites in Antionum. In later times he is held up as one of the key teachers in spreading the Nephite religion, along with Alma and Amulek.City of Zeezrom
The Lamanites captured the City of Zeezrom in the land of Manti around 66 B.C., which was during the years-long war between the Nephites and Lamanites. It took the Nephites five years to handle the invasion, but the ''Book of Mormon Reference Guide'' states that the city may have eventually been deserted by the Lamanites.References
Works cited
* * * * *{{Cite Q, Q123363520, ref={{sfnref, Bingman, 1978 Book of Mormon people