
04-15-2008, 12:06 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skalenfehl
"And my father dwelt in a tent."
The fact that he "dwelt in a tent" was mentioned three more times. Anyone ever notice this?
1 Ne. 9: 1
And all these things did my father see, and hear, and speak, as he dwelt in a tent, in the valley of Lemuel, and also a great many more things, which cannot be written upon these plates.
1 Ne. 10: 16
And all these things, of which I have spoken, were done as my father dwelt in a tent, in the valley of Lemuel.
1 Ne. 16: 6
Now, all these things were said and done as my father dwelt in a tent in the valley which he called Lemuel.
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It is these curious topics that makes us look deeper into our study of the scriptures.
Someone mentioned Professor Nibley. Well, he commented on this very subject:
Quote:
The Tent
It is most significant how Nephi speaks of his father's tent; it is the official center of all administration and authority. First the dogged insistence of Nephi on telling us again and again that "my father dwelt in a tent" (1 Nephi 2:15; 9:1; 10:16; 16:6). So what? we ask, but to an Oriental that statement says everything. Since time immemorial the whole population of the Near East have been either tent-dwellers or house-dwellers, the people of the bait ash-sha'r or the bait at-tin, "houses of hair or houses of clay." It was Harmer who first pointed out that one and the same person may well alternate between the one way of life and the other, and he cites the case of Laban in Genesis 31, where "one is surprised to find both parties so suddenly equipped with tents for their accommodation in traveling," though they had all along been living in houses. Not only has it been the custom for herdsmen and traders to spend part of the year in tents and part in houses, but "persons of distinction" in the East have always enjoyed spending part of the year in tents for the pure pleasure of a complete change.
It is clear from 1 Nephi 3:1; 4:38; 5:7; 7:5; 21-22; 15:1; and 16:10 that Lehi's tent is the headquarters for all activities, all discussion and decisions
(Hugh Nibley, An Approach to the Book of Mormon, 3rd ed., p.243-)
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