Jeremiah鈥檚 Imprisonment and the Date of Lehi鈥檚 Departure

David Rolph Seely and S. Kent Brown

S. Kent Brown and David R. Seely, 鈥淛eremiah鈥檚 Imprisonment and the Date of Lehi鈥檚 Departure,鈥 Religious Educator 2, no. 1 (2001): 15鈥32.

S. Kent Brown was Professor of Ancient Scripture and Director of Ancient Scripture Studies at BYU, and David Rolph Seely was Associate Professor of Ancient Scripture at BYU when this was published.

"Lehi and Sariah leaving Jerusalem"Lehi and Sariah left Jerusalem early in King Zedekiah's reign. C.C.A. Christensen, Out in the Wilderness, by Intellectual Reserve, Inc. Used by permission.

When introducing his account on the small plates, Nephi pens the following chronological note: 鈥淔or it came to pass in the commencement of the first year of the reign of Zedekiah, king of Judah.鈥 This note raises several questions. Let us explain. Nephi goes on to say that 鈥渋n that same year there came many prophets, prophesying unto the people that they must repent, or the great city Jerusalem must be destroyed鈥 (1 Nephi 1:4). Next, Nephi records the call and prophetic ministry of his father, Lehi, apparently as one of the 鈥渕any prophets鈥 who came to Jerusalem prophesying its destruction (1:4). Nephi then writes that his father prophesied to the people but was rejected and that the Jews in Jerusalem 鈥渟ought his life鈥 (1:5鈥20). Therefore, the Lord commanded Lehi to take his family into the wilderness, which Lehi did (2:1鈥4).

Since Nephi never explicitly specified the period of time between the call of Lehi in the first year of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign and the moment when Lehi and his family left Jerusalem, most readers of the Book of Mormon have assumed that Lehi led his family into the wilderness in the opening year of the reign of Zedekiah. This view finds evident confirmation from no less an author than Mormon, who declares in the heading to the book of 3 Nephi that Lehi 鈥渃ame out of Jerusalem in the first year of the reign of Zedekiah鈥 (3 Nephi, heading). But this picture is not as clear as it looks on the surface. Another piece in this chronology of events adds complexity to the precise dating of this period.

While in the wilderness, Lehi dreamed a dream that led him to prophesy that 鈥渟ix hundred years from the time that [he] . . . left Jerusalem, a prophet would the Lord God raise up among the Jews鈥攅ven a Messiah, or, in other words, a Savior of the world鈥 (1 Nephi 10:4). On this basis, one seems justified in assuming that Lehi left Jerusalem six hundred years before the birth of Jesus Christ. Although the internal chronology of the Book of Mormon is carefully kept, which dates events from Lehi鈥檚 departure from Jerusalem, these two notes concerning the first year of the reign of Zedekiah and the prophecy of the coming of the Messiah in six hundred years are the only concrete chronological evidences in the Book of Mormon that help to correlate Book of Mormon chronology with established biblical chronology.

Based on Babylonian records that can be correlated with astronomical events, biblical scholars date the first year of the reign of Zedekiah to 597 B.C.[1] Therefore, six hundred years after 597 equates to A.D. 3 or 4. No scholarly consensus exists on the birthdate of Christ; scholars usually argue for several dates ranging from 8 B.C. to 1 B.C.[2] Because Herod most likely died in 4 B.C. and because he is a major figure in the narratives of the birth of Jesus recorded in the Gospels, most scholars argue for a date of 5鈥4 B.C. for the birth of the Savior. This dating allows for only 593 or 592 years between the beginning of the reign of Zedekiah and the birth of the Messiah. This discrepancy between the first year of the reign of Zedekiah in 597 B.C. and the prophesied six hundred years to the birth of the Messiah remains an issue that has not been solved. A.D.

In 1993 and 1998, Randall P. Spackman published two important studies[3] on this question in which he hypothesized that the best way to explain the six-hundred-year prophecy is to assume the Nephites adopted a lunar calendar (of about 354 days) that did not adjust itself through intercalation鈥攖hat is, through adding a thirteenth month every three years or so鈥攖o catch up to the solar year (of about 365 days). Thus, the seventy-two-hundred lunar months of the six-hundred lunar years would equal 592 solar years, and this would fit with a birthdate of Jesus in 5 B.C. If scholars are to make this calculation fit the evidence in the Book of Mormon, however, they must postulate that Lehi and his family left Jerusalem between 588 and 587 B.C.鈥攖en years later than the first year of the reign of Zedekiah and during the period of the Babylonian siege and capture of Jerusalem.

Spackman identifies two significant Book of Mormon passages that give evidence for his argument. [4] The first passage is 1 Nephi 7:14 in which Nephi noted an imprisonment of Jeremiah, after Lehi and his family had left Jerusalem, when Nephi and his brothers were escorting the family of Ishmael from Jerusalem to the first camp of Lehi and Sariah near the Red Sea. According to Spackman鈥檚 reading of the biblical evidence, Jeremiah went to prison once and once only, and this imprisonment occurred in the tenth year of the reign of Zedekiah. (See Jeremiah 32:1-2; 37:4, 12-21.) Thus, the timing of Jeremiah鈥檚 imprisonment should illumine the date of departure for the family of Lehi and Sariah, who had fled to their camp from Jerusalem.

The second passage is found in 2 Nephi 25:10, where Nephi prophesies that the destruction of Jerusalem should occur 鈥渋mmediately after my father left Jerusalem.鈥 Spackman appeals to both of these passages as evidence (1) that Lehi prophesied for almost a decade in Jerusalem before he finally went into the wilderness, (2) that the imprisonment of Jeremiah noted in the Book of Mormon is the same one mentioned in the Bible in the tenth year of the reign of Zedekiah, and (3) that the word 鈥渋mmediately鈥 refers to the imminence of the Babylonian destruction in 587.

In contrast to those who accept a date for the departure of Lehi and Sariah from Jerusalem within the first year or so of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign,[5] Spackman opts for a later date. He concludes that Lehi鈥檚 prophetic ministry lasted about ten years, beginning early in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign (1 Nephi 1:4) until nearly its end. He further suggests that, even though the Babylonian army had begun its siege of Jerusalem before Lehi and Sariah left, an opening of at least five months allowed them not only to flee but even to send their sons back to the city twice. How so? The Babylonians had been forced to lift their initial siege when an Egyptian army moved up the Mediterranean coast to assist the beleaguered city (Jeremiah 37:5). The frame of Spackman鈥檚 views rests on the observation鈥攁pparently solid鈥攖hat Jeremiah suffered imprisonment only once, occurring very late in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign. Spackman appeals both to Jeremiah鈥檚 record and to the evident five-month hiatus in the siege noted by Ezekiel (Ezekiel 29:1鈥16; 30:20鈥26; 31:1鈥18)鈥攁s well as to a notation of Nephi that reads: 鈥淲herefore, it hath been told [the people of Judah] concerning the destruction which should come upon them, immediately after my father left Jerusalem; nevertheless, they hardened their hearts; and according to my prophecy they have been destroyed鈥 (2 Nephi 25:10; emphasis added).

In Spackman鈥檚 reading, two key elements are found in this passage. The first is the phrase immediately after my father left Jerusalem, which evidently points to an imminent destruction of the city. Presumably, this would not have been the case if Lehi and Sariah had left early in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign and if the destruction were an event several years in the future. The second consists of the phrase according to my prophecy (2 Nephi 25:10), which Spackman attaches to 1 Nephi 7:13鈥14 where Nephi declared the following: 鈥淸Nephi鈥檚 brothers and others] shall know at some future period that the word of the Lord shall be fulfilled concerning the destruction of Jerusalem. . . . For behold, the Spirit of the Lord ceaseth soon to strive with them [the inhabitants of the city]; for behold, they have rejected the prophets, and Jeremiah have they cast into prison.鈥

For those who may hold the view of a late departure for Lehi and Sariah, the emphasis in this passage rests on the word soon. As we hope to show, however, these key passages do not introduce all the evidence that bears on the subject. Indeed, other passages in the Book of Mormon apparently point to an earlier departure of Lehi and Sariah, the emphasis in this passage rests on the word soon. As we hope to show, however, these key passages do not introduce all the evidence that bears on the subject. Indeed, other passages in the Book of Mormon apparently point to an earlier departure of Lehi and Sariah. Moreover, other observations based on the text of Jeremiah tend in a similar direction.

Spackman exhibits acquaintance with a passage in 3 Nephi where Mormon writes that Lehi 鈥渃ame out of Jerusalem in the first year of the reign of Zedekiah鈥 (3 Nephi, heading). But Spackman concludes that this must be an error on Mormon鈥檚 part, as Mormon did not have access to all the records of the Jews at the time and assumed, like many modern readers, that Lehi left Jerusalem in the same year that he received his prophetic calling-in the first year of the reign of Zedekiah. Spackman has produced a well-wrought work of scholarship arguing for his ingenious solution to the six-hundred-year problem. We believe, however, that a considerable amount of evidence exists, regarding these passages and other passages as well, that has not been considered and that argues for Lehi and his family leaving Jerusalem in the first year rather than during a later year of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign.

The Imprisonment of Jeremiah: 1 Nephi 7:14

Evidence exists that the imprisonment of Jeremiah noted in the Book of Mormon may not be the one mentioned in the Bible in the tenth year of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign but rather may be an earlier imprisonment. Let us make some important observations.

First, prophecies and narrative sections in the Book of Jeremiah are not organized chronologically. Many prophecies and some of the narrative are difficult to date. It is relevant to our discussion that 鈥渢here are 2 periods of roughly 7 years each, 604鈥597, and 594鈥588 [B.C.], during which we have no definite knowledge of Jeremiah鈥檚 activities.鈥[6] Therefore, if there were an imprisonment either at the end of the reign of Jehoiakim (609鈥598 B.C.) or at the beginning of the reign of Zedekiah, a period that would agree with an earlier departure date for Lehi and Sariah, we would not expect to find record of it in the book of Jeremiah. Even so, we note the following.

We recall that Jeremiah had nothing good to say about King Jehoiakim. Jeremiah condemned the king for building luxurious quarters for himself, for fostering violence and dishonesty, and for not caring for the poor (Jeremiah 22:13鈥17). Jeremiah also prophesied a shameful death for Jehoiakim that would not be mourned in Judah (22:18鈥19). In this connection, there are two accounts of Jehoiakim 鈥渞estraining鈥 Jeremiah. Moreover, as an example of Jehoiakim鈥檚 vicious response to opponents, he executed the prophet Urijah, who had prophesied against Jerusalem as Jeremiah did (26:20鈥23).

In the case of King Zedekiah, Jeremiah was critical of him as well. In a prophecy dated to 鈥渢he beginning of the reign of Zedekiah the son of Josiah鈥 (27:1),[7] Jeremiah warned the king against mounting a revolt against Babylon. This warning would be an early spark in the conflict that grew up between Zedekiah and Jeremiah and would have offered the king an excuse to punish the already intractable Jeremiah at the beginning of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign. Although it appears, in fact, that Zedekiah did not pursue the revolt against Babylon, this incident reveals conflict between Zedekiah and Jeremiah that could easily have resulted in imprisonment of the prophet.

Another point has to do with several passages in Jeremiah that may be interpreted as references to imprisonment either before or during the early stages of the reign of Zedekiah. One early instance occurred in 605 B.C. when Jeremiah declared, 鈥淚 am shut up鈥 (36:5), referring to the fact that he was restricted from going into the temple area. Although the Hebrew word he used, ttt 鈥榓蝉.没谤, is ambiguous, it is usually rendered 鈥渋mprisoned鈥 or 鈥渋n custody.鈥 Significant for our discussion, this same word appears in Jeremiah 33:1, referring to the prophet鈥檚 imprisonment in Zedekiah鈥檚 tenth year 鈥渨hile he was yet shut up in the court of the prison.鈥 We should note, not incidentally, that Jeremiah suffered two kinds of imprisonment during the tenth year of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign鈥攊n a dungeon and 鈥渋n the court of the prison鈥 (32:2; 33:1; 37:16, 21). When Jeremiah was 鈥渟hut up in the court of the prison, which was in the king of Judah鈥檚 house鈥 (32:2), he may have been under a kind of protective custody, as he retained some privileges. But in 37:16, the situation was different. Jeremiah was put into a 鈥渄ungeon鈥 from which the king delivered him to the 鈥渃ourt of the prison鈥 (37:21). A further factor is the statement itself, 鈥淚 am shut up鈥 (36:5). Even though this expression could mean that Jeremiah was merely 鈥渄ebarred鈥 from the temple, it may instead have involved some kind of formal or informal imprisonment. In this light, the imprisonment of the prophet in Zedekiah鈥檚 tenth year may not have been the first and only such occasion.

A later instance occurred in 601 B.C. Jeremiah was punished by being put in 鈥渢he stocks鈥 (20:1鈥6). The Hebrew term here is also rather unclear. Some translators take it to mean 鈥渋mprisoned.鈥 The Hebrew word is mahpeket, and it occurs in the Bible only in Jeremiah 20:2, 3 and 29:26 and 2 Chronicles 16:10. In the Chronicles passage, the phrase 鈥渉ouse of stocks鈥 suggests that stocks were associated with a prison. The Greek translation renders this term ttt 办补迟补谤谤补办迟炉别蝉, which means 鈥渢rapdoor,鈥 possibly leading to an underground chamber for confinement (see 2 Kings 7:2). The Aramaic Targum reads 办别辫丑迟补鈥, which can mean either 鈥渧ault,鈥 therefore 鈥減rison,鈥 or 鈥渃eiling,鈥 or some kind of wooden 鈥渃ollar鈥 for confinement.[8]

To conclude, although we cannot solve the issue at hand simply on the basis of other probable confinements of Jeremiah, it is clear that the prophet did not get along with two kings. On two occasions, when the Babylonians were politically on the rise and threatening Jerusalem, Jehoiakim had Jeremiah restrained in some way. We think it likely that Jeremiah, who was accused of being pro-Babylonian, was imprisoned during the last year of the reign of Jehoiakim, who by then had revolted against the Babylonians. Jeremiah鈥檚 imprisonment would have been for the same reasons that he was imprisoned later by Zedekiah when that king revolted against the Babylonians (Jeremiah 37鈥38). In this light, it is possible that Nephi was referring to an imprisonment that began during the last year of the reign of Jehoiakim and continued into the early months of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign. As we have seen, because evidence exists for conflict between Zedekiah and Jeremiah at the commencement of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign, that conflict may well have also resulted in imprisonment, as happened late in Zedekiah鈥檚 kingship. However, because we do not possess a record of Jeremiah鈥檚 activities during this critical period, we cannot demonstrate decisively an imprisonment in the first year of Zedekiah. Even so, elements are in place that would not contradict and, indeed, that would support the possibility that Jeremiah had been imprisoned late in Jehoiakim鈥檚 kingship or early in Zedekiah鈥檚. These elements are the forceful repression of public dissent by the two kings, open conflict between the prophet and the kings, and occasions when Jeremiah suffered official restraint. The Book of Mormon, therefore, may be referring to an early imprisonment. Let us next examine the second relevant passage from that work.

鈥淭he Spirit of the Lord Ceaseth Soon鈥: 1 Nephi 7:14

The declaration of Nephi, 鈥淭he Spirit of the Lord ceaseth soon,鈥 matches a key statement uttered by the Lord to Jeremiah. And the date of the Lord鈥檚 statement to Jeremiah may add a piece to solving our puzzle. The essential details are as follows.

After King Jehoiakim had destroyed the first version of Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecies by fire (Jeremiah 36), the Lord responded by issuing a blueprint for the destruction of the kingdom of Judah and the city of Jerusalem. Heretofore, the Lord had been warning the royal house and the citizens of a distant devastation if they did not repent. After the burning of the scroll, matters hardened. We note not only the tenor of the Lord鈥檚 words but also their devastating content: 鈥淭hus saith the Lord of Jehoiakim king of Judah; He shall have none to sit upon the throne of David. . . . And I will punish him and his seed and his servants . . . and I will bring upon them, and upon the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and upon the men of Judah, all the evil that I have pronounced against them鈥 (Jeremiah 36:30鈥31).

As William Holladay has pointed out, this divine decree represented 鈥渁 crucial change鈥 in the Lord鈥檚 relationship with His people. Although the dating of this utterance depends on which manuscript of Jeremiah one appeals to, it came to Jeremiah by at least November/ December 601 B.C., clearly before Zedekiah鈥檚 accession to the throne and before Lehi鈥檚 call.[9]

As we return to Nephi鈥檚 statement about the Lord鈥檚 Spirit ceasing 鈥渟oon to strive with鈥 the inhabitants of Jerusalem, it seems reasonable to place it closer in time to Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecy in Jeremiah 36:30鈥31 than farther away. If we say it another way, the messages from the Lord to Jeremiah and to Lehi or Nephi are similar both in content and in timing. It does not seem reasonable that the Lord would tell Jeremiah something in 601 B.C. and then wait more than ten years to inform Lehi and Nephi.

Nephi鈥檚 Prophecy: 2 Nephi 25:10鈥11

We first turn to the issue of Nephi鈥檚 鈥減rophecy鈥 in 2 Nephi 25:10, which reads in part: 鈥淲herefore, it hath been told [the people of Judah] concerning the destruction which should come upon them, immediately after my father left Jerusalem; nevertheless, they hardened their hearts; and according to my prophecy they have been destroyed.鈥

Spackman tied reference to this prophecy to Nephi鈥檚 much earlier warning that Jerusalem and its inhabitants would suffer destruction (1 Nephi 7:13鈥14). This proposal exhibits an attractive side, chiefly because both passages warn of Jerusalem鈥檚 approaching horrible fate. But we consider the connection only tentative at best because Nephi clearly marks out his prophecy and because it stands entirely within the book of 2 Nephi, not in 1 Nephi 7.

We do not know when Nephi received inspiration for this prophecy. He may well have copied it from his fuller record on the large plates. But whether it came from the large plates or was a fresh prophetic statement that he added to the small plates, its date of composition remains unknown. Nephi opens it in 2 Nephi 25:4 by declaring that 鈥淚 give unto you [those in his colony] a prophecy, according to the spirit which is in me.鈥 He immediately emphasized his point by restating his intent: 鈥淚 shall prophesy according to the plainness which hath been with me from the time that I came out from Jerusalem with my father.鈥 Significantly, this prophecy consists of the rest of 2 Nephi 25 and all of 2 Nephi 26鈥30. How do we know this? Because Nephi opened 2 Nephi 31 with these words: 鈥淎nd now I, Nephi, make an end of my prophesying unto you, my beloved brethren鈥 (31:1). Hence, his prophecy occupies almost the whole of six chapters, 2 Nephi 25鈥30. And the chief topics focus on the futures of 鈥渙ur children鈥 (25:26, 27), the Gentiles, and the House of Israel. Only one tiny part has to do with the pending destruction of Jerusalem (25:10鈥11). And Nephi鈥檚 prophetic assurance of this devastating event seems to form the opening of his discussion of the future and thus serves mainly as a jumping-off point. Of course, we hasten to add that one should not minimize the importance of Nephi鈥檚 words about the fate of Jerusalem simply because of the broader themes of Nephi鈥檚 extended remarks. Even so, one must see them for what they are鈥攖hat is, the beginning point for discussing everything in the following six chapters of 2 Nephi.

We now turn back briefly to Nephi鈥檚 statement of emphasis. As we have seen, he said, 鈥淚 shall prophesy according to the plainness which hath been with me from the time that I came out from Jerusalem with my father鈥 (2 Nephi 25:4). On the face of it, Nephi鈥檚 reference to 鈥渕y father鈥 is odd. The expression seems to indicate that Lehi was not among the listeners. If so, he may already have been dead,[10] thus hinting that the date of composition of this 鈥減rophecy鈥 of Nephi fell after Lehi鈥檚 family arrived in the New World. If so, the language of 25:10鈥斺渋mmediately after my father left Jerusalem鈥濃攍oses some of its importance for dating Lehi鈥檚 departure from the city. But the case is not completely firm one way or the other.

Because the date of the original composition of this long prophecy is unknown, we cannot appeal to it to solve the issue of when Lehi鈥檚 party left Jerusalem. It is tempting, of course, to seize on Nephi鈥檚 words and see them saying that Lehi and Sariah had fled virtually on the eve of the destruction of the city. But because many details surrounding the composition of 2 Nephi 25鈥30 remain unknown (for example, its date of composition and the occasion that brought it forth), we must resist making this text agree with any predispositions. This is particularly true because of the way that Nephi opens his prophecy, referring to his father as if Lehi had already passed away. Hence, we cannot rest much weight on Nephi鈥檚 statements here when seeking to solve our dating dilemma.

Laban as Record Keeper

Laban, a distant relative of Lehi, was the custodian of the plates of brass until Nephi took them, as the Lord had directed. After Nephi and his brothers arrived back in camp with the brass plates in hand, Lehi and Nephi went carefully through the record and apparently made an inventory on the spot, as Nephi鈥檚 summary hints (1 Nephi 5:10鈥16). The summary of the contents of the plates is important because not only did Nephi mention that it included 鈥渕any prophecies . . . of Jeremiah鈥 but also twice he wrote that the record was complete only 鈥渄own to the commencement of the reign of Zedekiah鈥 (5:12鈥13). The key phrase鈥攔epeated鈥攊s to the commencement of, meaning 鈥渢o the beginning of.鈥 The two parts of the record that had been completed 鈥渄own to the commencement of the reign of Zedekiah鈥 were 鈥渁 record of the Jews鈥 and 鈥渢he prophecies of the holy prophets.鈥 These two sections of the record were evidently open ended鈥攖hat is, they were being added to as time went on.[11]

At this point, one naturally asks whether Laban had been a faithful keeper of the record. If he was, then the double notation of Nephi about the beginning of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign surely carries implications for the date of his father鈥檚 departure from Jerusalem. On this view, the record would have been complete up to the beginning of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign, and nothing further had been recorded because nothing further had yet occurred. This explanation is the simpler of two alternatives. Let us explain.

The second possibility is to see Laban as a slothful keeper of the record. That is, he and/or his scribe(s) had been derelict in his/their duties to keep a more or less up-to-date account of events and prophecies that affected citizens of Jerusalem. If this were the case, we could urge that Lehi and Nephi found themselves examining a record that was rather out of date in the two sections where additions might be expected. And if this is true, there are immediate consequences for our discussion here. For the door would be flung open to understanding that Lehi and Sariah had left well after the beginning of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign, perhaps as much as ten years later, as Spackman suggests. But this view is the more complex of the alternatives to reconstruct and thus is harder to accept if one uses the rule of seeing a simpler explanation as more likely. Moreover, there is another key consideration. When Nephi and his father inventoried the plates of brass, Nephi recorded no surprise at a presumed lapse on the part of Laban as record keeper. And one must assume such a lapse to sustain a later date for the departure of Lehi and Sariah. However, there is every appearance that Lehi and Nephi were satisfied with the state of the record as they found it on the plates.

Thus far, the weight of the evidence rests on the side of an early departure rather than a later one simply because the two ongoing parts of the record on the plates of brass were complete only 鈥渄own to the commencement of the reign of Zedekiah鈥 and no further.

There is an ancillary issue that may or may not bear in the larger question before us. It takes the following form. When Nephi noted that the plates of brass included 鈥渕any prophecies which have been spoken by the mouth of Jeremiah鈥 (1 Nephi 5:13; emphasis added), his emphasis seemed to rest on the oral basis of the recorded prophecies rather than on a written source for them. As a result, it is our view that we cannot know whether the source of these prophecies was oral or written. For example, a scribe in the employ of Laban, or Laban himself, could have written down Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecies based on what one or both of them had heard directly (or indirectly) from Jeremiah. Alternatively, Laban or his scribe could have copied from the second, already extant, written record of those prophecies dictated by Jeremiah to his friend and scribe Baruch鈥攖he first record had been burned by king Jehoiachim (Jeremiah 36). In either case, however, we would have to see Laban as a faithful keeper of the record. For, in this role, he would have either sought out those who had heard Jeremiah preach to write down the prophet鈥檚 words, or he would have made the effort to find Baruch or Jeremiah himself to obtain a written copy of Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecies.[12] Either case points to an active, attentive record keeper.

Jeremiah鈥檚 Record

Dating Jeremiah鈥檚 record seems inconclusive for the purposes of trying to date the departure of Lehi and Sariah from Jerusalem. The initial command from the Lord for Jeremiah to write his prophecies came to the prophet 鈥渋n the fourth year of Jehoiakim the son of Josiah king of Judah鈥 (Jeremiah 36:1). The year was 605 B.C. Jeremiah was to obtain 鈥渁 roll of a book, and write therein all the words that I [the Lord] have spoken unto thee against Israel, and against Judah, and against all the nations . . . unto this day鈥 (36:2). The tone of those words is decidedly negative. In one of the most famous passages in prophetic literature, Jeremiah then 鈥渃alled Baruch the son of Neriah: and Baruch wrote from the mouth of Jeremiah all the words of the Lord鈥 (36:4). About a year later, during a national fast in the winter, Baruch read aloud 鈥渢he words of Jeremiah鈥 in the temple, 鈥渁t the entry of the new gate of the Lord鈥檚 house鈥 (36:10). The year was 604 B.C. Later, after 鈥渁ll the princes鈥 heard what Baruch had read in the temple, for he read Jeremiah鈥檚 words again for them, the princes advised Baruch to hide himself and the prophet, while they reported the existence of the book to king Jehoiakim. The king, perhaps out of curiosity, asked a man named Jehudi to read the words written on the roll. As Jehudi 鈥渞ead three or four leaves鈥 of the roll, the king 鈥渃ut it with a penknife, and cast it into the fire,鈥 thus destroying the initial copy of Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecies (36:12, 15, 19, 23).

But the Lord would not be put off by a mere king. He then commanded Jeremiah to dictate 鈥渁ll the former words that were in the first roll鈥 (Jeremiah 36:28). So Jeremiah 鈥済ave鈥 another roll 鈥渢o Baruch the scribe鈥 and then dictated 鈥渁ll the words of the book which Jehoiakim king of Judah had burned . . . and . . . added besides unto them many like words鈥 (36:32). It was in this way that Jeremiah鈥檚 prophetic book, as we know it, was born.

It is possible, perhaps even probable, that Laban or his scribe had copied this version of Jeremiah鈥檚 prophecies onto the plates of brass, which was incomplete because more prophecies were to come. But we must also remain open to the possibility that the version on the brass plates was a different copy. For when Nephi mentioned the work on the brass plates that bore Jeremiah鈥檚 name, he spoke of 鈥渕any prophecies . . . of Jeremiah鈥 (1 Nephi 5:13), almost as if the book were incomplete or not properly arranged. In any event, there are more questions than answers.

Mormon鈥檚 Note in the Heading of 3 Nephi

One of the key ingredients in Spackman鈥檚 reconstruction consists of an adjustment, this one having to do with a notation written by Mormon at the beginning of 3 Nephi. Such adjustments, we must admit, are often part of attempted reconstructions of historical events. In a way, these adjustments also form an admission that the evidence one can assemble is somehow incomplete or contradictory and does not all lead to a definitive conclusion.

The statement in question is the following: 鈥淟ehi . . . came out of Jerusalem in the first year of the reign of Zedekiah, the king of Judah鈥 (3 Nephi, heading). At issue is Mormon鈥檚 reliability on this point because he was not an eyewitness to this event and depended on earlier sources, which he could have misread or not remembered correctly.

We happen to agree with Spackman that Nephi is a better witness than is Mormon, who lived a thousand years after the founding family fled Jerusalem. Nephi, after all, wrote of his personal experiences and was thus a witness of the first rank. Even so, one must not discount the fact that Mormon had access to the large plates of Nephi on which Nephi wrote 鈥渢he more part of all our proceedings in the wilderness鈥 (1 Nephi 19:2). Hence, presumably Mormon had read a fuller account of the family鈥檚 flight into the desert, including something akin to the actual date.

Circumstantial Considerations

We now turn to considerations based on how Nephi expressed certain features of his experience and how those features match what we know about both the situation of his family and that within the country. The first has to do with the five months when the Babylonian army lifted the siege of Jerusalem to face the Egyptian force approaching from the south. Spackman theorizes that it was during this five-month period, almost in the Babylonians鈥 dust, that Lehi鈥檚 family left the city, set up camp near the Gulf of Aqaba, and saw the sons go back to Jerusalem twice, initially for the record on the plates of brass and again for the family of Ishmael.

On the face of it, such an explanation presents more difficulties than an explanation theorizing that the family left early in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign when there was no Babylonian threat. Let us clarify.

The first difficulty is the period of five months. Although it is possible that all the business described in 1 Nephi 2鈥15 (the flight, the camp, etc.) took place within five months, it may have consumed more time. Although we are inclined to agree that it was only a short period of several months that passed between the family鈥檚 departure from Jerusalem and their movement south from the first camp,[13] not all students of the Book of Mormon agree. Moreover, to postulate that the family must have experienced all they did within a specified time鈥攆ive months鈥攖hat was filled with military conflict near their home asks readers to make too many assumptions. The following considerations are relevant.

After Lehi had sent his sons back to the city from the camp the first time to obtain the plates, their mother, Sariah, grew worried as she waited for her sons鈥 return that they 鈥渉ad perished in the wilderness.鈥 Moreover, in a pointed complaint against her husband, she accusingly said that he had 鈥渓ed us forth from the land of our inheritance鈥 (1 Nephi 5:2). In contrast, when the sons went back to Jerusalem a second time to convince Ishmael and his family to join them, Nephi recorded no such worries or complaints from his mother. What might all this mean? From what Nephi has recorded, his mother鈥檚 anxieties were not connected to the close proximity of a foreign army, such as the Babylonians. If, in fact, the Babylonians had just broken off their siege of the city before she and her family fled to the neighborhood of the Red Sea and if the subsequent clash between the Babylonians and Egyptians was not yet settled (on this view, it would have been ongoing while the family of Lehi and Sariah were in their camp), we would expect Nephi to record a different set of anxieties for his mother. Furthermore, since there was no guarantee that the Babylonians would not return to Jerusalem to create havoc there, why would she agree to her sons鈥 returning to the family home only to face possible danger at the very heart of the conflict? In addition, if the Babylonians had already once surrounded the city and if the family estate was not within the walls,[14] the Babylonian army would probably have already destroyed the family property as soldiers took control of the neighboring countryside. After all, both archaeology and the Lachish letters demonstrate that the Babylonians systematically destroyed all settlements within fifty miles of Jerusalem before beginning the initial siege.[15] If so, what would any members of her family return to?

This question raises to view an important pair of responses from members of Lehi鈥檚 family about their property at or near Jerusalem. After the family, now in company with Ishmael鈥檚 family, had trudged off into Arabia and had reached 鈥渢he place which was called Nahom,鈥 certain members of the party threatened to return the fourteen hundred or so miles back to the city (1 Nephi 16:34, 36). Later, after they had all arrived in their land of Bountiful, which was even farther away from home, some of the same persons bellowed that 鈥渨e might have enjoyed our possessions and the land of our inheritance; yea, and we might have been happy鈥 (17:21). If, in fact, the family estate of Lehi and Sariah had been destroyed or had even narrowly escaped destruction, when the Babylonian army showed up at Jerusalem to begin the siege, why would people in the party think they could return? Why would they believe that their 鈥減ossessions鈥 and their 鈥渓and of . . . inheritance鈥 were somehow still intact? The simplest answer is they had no reason to believe that all was not well at home. They had evidently departed while affairs in and around Jerusalem were reasonably peaceful rather than on a war-time footing. And they had heard nothing different.

This observation leads us to the evident lack of news of Jerusalem鈥檚 fall. It is certain that party members met people as they traveled from their first camp deeper into Arabia. They could not have avoided such contacts for the entire trip. One of the most important proofs that they met others is the phrase 鈥渢he place which was called Nahom鈥 (1 Nephi 16:34). Unlike all the other place names noted by Nephi in his narrative, which his father conferred on those spots, Nahom already had a name when they arrived. And they learned it from someone else.

In this connection, camel caravans had been carrying incense out of southern Arabia into the Mediterranean world and into Mesopotamia long before the fall of Jerusalem. Those caravans carried goods north and brought news back to people in the south. If the Babylonians had captured and ravaged Jerusalem within, say, a few months after Lehi鈥檚 party had traveled farther into Arabia, we would expect such news to reach the travelers somehow. Even though the party probably avoided contact with others as much as possible, as some details in Nephi鈥檚 narrative hint (for example, 1 Nephi 17:12), they would certainly have learned of events connected to the wider world, including Babylonia鈥檚 military actions. In fact, news of Jerusalem鈥檚 fall would eventually have even traveled by boat around Arabia as far as Bountiful, which lay on the southeast coast.[16] But Nephi offers no hint of such news before the party departed on its ship for the New World. Because the fall of the city had formed an important part in Lehi鈥檚 prophetic ministry (1:13, 18) and because it was also a part of Nephi鈥檚 prophesying (2 Nephi 25:9鈥10), it would be an omission of first magnitude if Nephi had failed to record the moment when party members heard the news of Jerusalem鈥檚 destruction.

Another issue centers on the ages of Sariah and her eight children. The matter attaches initially to two claims of Nephi about himself. First, he assured readers that he wrote his record 鈥渁ccording to my knowledge鈥 (1 Nephi 1:3). Thus, we can reasonably conclude that Nephi was old enough to pay attention to events at the beginning of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign, the starting point of his record (1:4). Second, after Nephi鈥檚 family had set up camp near the Red Sea and he and his brothers had gone back to Jerusalem for the brass plates, he described himself as 鈥渆xceedingly young, nevertheless . . . large in stature鈥 (2:16; cf. 4:31).[17] If Nephi had indeed been old enough to pay close attention to matters when Zedekiah came to power and if ten years had then passed before his family traveled to the Red Sea, his remark that he was 鈥渆xceeding young鈥 would make little sense. Let us explain.

In an important study on the family of Lehi and Sariah, John Sorenson has plausibly suggested that Nephi was no older than seventeen when his family went to the Red Sea, a point in accordance with the fact that none of his older brothers were yet married.[18] Furthermore, Sariah鈥檚 child-bearing years also come into play here. Her situation takes the following form. If her fourth son, Nephi, were, say, in his early teens when Zedekiah became king of Judah and if the family had remained in Jerusalem for another ten years, Nephi would have been in his early twenties when the family departed to the Red Sea. Such a view would mean that Nephi鈥檚 oldest brother, Laman, was close to thirty years of age when the family went to the Red Sea. (We do not know whether Laman was Sariah鈥檚 oldest child because she also gave birth to at least two daughters [2 Nephi 5:6], and we do not know where they fit in the order of Sariah鈥檚 births.) If Sariah had borne Laman when she was, say, fifteen or sixteen years old, a plausible age, she would have been in her mid forties when she and Lehi departed Jerusalem, assuming they had remained there for ten years after Lehi鈥檚 prophetic ministry began. The problem at this point becomes obvious. She eventually gave birth to two more sons, Jacob and Joseph. But if she were already, say, forty-three or forty-four when she moved to the Red Sea, her biological clock would have almost expired. Hence, it is simpler, more plausible, to postulate an earlier departure when Sariah was a younger woman.

As a final note, we want to point to another pair of details in Nephi鈥檚 narrative that evidently support the earlier departure date. Both details tie to the fateful night when Nephi entered Jerusalem to seek the brass plates and later exited the city with both the plates and the man Zoram (1 Nephi 4). The two details concern the apparent ease with which Nephi at first entered and then left the city after dark. Let us explain. If we accept the later date for Lehi鈥檚 departure and hypothesize that the first Babylonian siege had just been lifted a few weeks before so that the Babylonian army could meet the Egyptian army threatening from the south, we would expect that Jerusalem authorities would have still been worrying about a possible return of the Babylonian forces. Therefore, at night, the gates of the city would have been shut鈥攐r at least carefully watched. But Nephi offers no hint that he encountered difficulty at the gate where he entered. To be sure, he writes that he 鈥渃rept into the city鈥 (4:5). But Nephi鈥檚 caution seems to grow out of the two recent altercations with his kinsman Laban and that man鈥檚 henchmen rather than a need to avoid sentries at the gate (see 3:10鈥14, 22鈥27).

The second detail, that of Nephi鈥檚 exit from the city, offers a similar picture. In fact, when he writes of leaving Jerusalem with Zoram, it is as though the two of them strode out of the walls without sentries challenging them. They certainly were conversing in a way that guards would have heard them (see 1 Nephi 4:22鈥27). In addition, the two of them would have been quite visible in the strong light of the moon whereby Nephi had earlier examined the unusually fine features of Laban鈥檚 sword (see 4:9). In light of the evident laxness at the city gate, therefore, we are inclined to see Nephi鈥檚 nighttime entry and exit as occurring during a period of relative peace鈥攖hat is, early in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign.

Lehi鈥檚 Vision

On balance, it appears that members of Lehi鈥檚 party possessed no firm knowledge of the fall of Jerusalem while they were on the trail in Arabia鈥攐r even after they had reached Bountiful. Such an observation weighs against a view that Lehi and Sariah left Jerusalem late in Zedekiah鈥檚 reign. Rather, it was evidently only through a vision, after they had reached the New World, that they learned of the fulfillment of prophecies about the city鈥檚 destruction. The receiver was Lehi.

On the occasion of his last blessings to his children and grandchildren, he announced, 鈥淚 have seen a vision, in which I know that Jerusalem is destroyed; and had we remained in Jerusalem we should also have perished鈥 (2 Nephi 1:4).[19] Presumably, Lehi meant that they would have perished either when the Babylonian army was ravaging the countryside before beginning the siege or after the Babylonians had penetrated the gates of the city and slaughtered people who had fled within the walls for protection. Indeed, because it came as a vision, Lehi may have actually seen the fall of the city as the prophet Nahum did the fall of Nineveh. Further, from Lehi鈥檚 words, it seems clear that neither he nor anyone else in the party had known for certain that the city had fallen until this announcement from the Lord. This observation, too, weighs against a notion that Lehi鈥檚 prophetic ministry had lasted ten years, to the end of Zedekiah鈥檚 reign, virtually on the eve of Jerusalem鈥檚 fall.

Conclusion

This review, as far as it has gone, inclines us to believe that Lehi and Sariah left Jerusalem early in King Zedekiah鈥檚 reign rather than near its end. The reason? There are fewer problems if one accepts the earlier date. To be sure, each position faces challenges. But there seem to be fewer such challenges if one postulates an earlier departure.

Notes

[1] Jack Finegan, Handbook of Biblical Chronology, rev. ed. (Peabody, Massachusetts: Hendrickson, 1998), 257鈥60.

[2] Ibid., 291鈥302.

[3] Randall P. Spackman, 鈥淚ntroduction to Book of Mormon Chronology: The Principal Prophecies, Calendars, and Dates,鈥 FARMS Preliminary Studies (Provo, Utah: Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1993) and 鈥淭he Jewish/Nephite Lunar Calendar,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 7, no.1 (1998), 48鈥59.

[4] Spackman, 鈥淚ntroduction to Book of Mormon Chronology,鈥 6鈥14; 鈥淭he Jewish/Nephite Lunar Calendar,鈥 57鈥59.

[5] For example, George Reynolds and Janne M. Sjodahl, Commentary on the Book of Mormon, vol. 1 (Salt Lake City: Deseret News, 1955), 57; Lynn M. and Hope Hilton, In Search of Lehi鈥檚 Trail (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1976), 48.

[6] Jack R. Lundbom, 鈥淛eremiah,鈥 Anchor Bible Dictionary, David Noel Freedman et al., eds., 6 vols. (New York: Doubleday, 1992), 3:689.

[7] The King James Version following the Massoretic Text reads 鈥渞eign of Jehoiakim.鈥 But the context and the manuscript evidence weigh in favor of 鈥渞eign of Zedekiah.鈥 See William L. Holladay in Jeremiah 2: A Commentary on the Book of the Prophet Jeremiah Chapters 26鈥52 (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1989), 112鈥13.

[8] See the discussion of these passages by William L. Holladay in Jeremiah 1: A Commentary on the Book of the Prophet Jeremiah Chapters 1鈥25 (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1986), 542鈥43.

[9] Ibid., 4鈥5.

[10] Consult the references to 鈥渢heir fathers鈥濃攖hat is, the generation that came out from Jerusalem, which makes one think that this generation had died off among the Lamanites (Jacob 3:7, 9; also cf. Enos 1:18; Jarom 1:2, 9; etc.).

[11] Nephi hints that he鈥攐r perhaps his father Lehi鈥攗pdated his own record annually, a feature that John Sorenson has pointed out in private correspondence. This explanation solves the rather awkward notations of dates that are joined in 1 Nephi 1:4: 鈥渋n the commencement of the first year of the reign of Zedekiah . . . in that same year.鈥 If Nephi and/or Lehi by custom updated records each year, this might offer a clue to the frequency of Laban鈥檚 scribal activity.

[12] The first written record of Jeremiah鈥檚 words is termed 鈥渢he words which Baruch wrote at the mouth of Jeremiah,鈥 perhaps underscoring the oral base of the dictated text (Jeremiah 36:27; emphasis added).

[13] For example, see S. Kent Brown, 鈥淎 Case for Lehi鈥檚 Bondage in Arabia,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 6, no. 2 (fall 1997): 206. 14. Hugh Nibley estimates between one and three years, see Lehi in the Desert, The Collected Works of Hugh Nibley (Provo and Salt Lake City: Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies and Deseret Book, 1988), 5:60. Lynn and Hope Hilton estimate between two and three years (In Search of Lehi鈥檚 Trail, 50).

[14] The family estate seems to have been located outside the walls of Jerusalem because Nephi wrote as if it were some distance away (1 Nephi 3:22鈥23).

[15] For a brief rehearsal of the fall of the city, including the ravishing of the countryside, see John Bright, A History of Israel, 3d ed. (Philadelphia: Westminster, 1981), 327鈥30.

[16] Although no written records exist of ancient Arabs sailing around the Arabian Peninsula, no less an authority than George F. Hourani concludes that they were doing so centuries before Hellenistic culture reached Arabia in the third century B.C. (Arab Seafaring [Princeton: Princeton University, 1951], 11). Further, references to Solomon鈥檚 navy in the Red Sea point to ancient seafaring activity along Arabia鈥檚 coasts (1 Kings 9:26鈥28; 2 Chronicles 8:17鈥18).

[17] The importance of these two passages and the ages of family members were pointed out by John Sorenson in private correspondence.

[18] John L. Sorenson, 鈥淭he Composition of Lehi鈥檚 Family,鈥 in By Study and Also by Faith, ed. John M. Lundquist and Stephen D. Ricks, 2 vols. (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1990), 2:174鈥96, esp. 175鈥79.

[19] Later, Jacob, Lehi鈥檚 son, also received a vision of the destruction of Jerusalem in 2 Nephi 6:8.