Zeezrom Attempts to Bribe Amulek

John W. Welch

Zeezrom offered a bribe to Amulek, "Behold, here are six onties of silver, and all these will I give thee if thou wilt deny the existence of a Supreme Being." That was the equivalent of forty-two days" work; it was a substantial bribe. In Exodus 23:1–8, there exists what I refer to as Jehovah’s Code of Judicial Justice. This comes at the end of the Covenant Code, which begins in Exodus 20. The prologue to the Covenant Code is the Ten Commandments, as is fairly obvious. But very few notice that Exodus 23 also has ten commandments at the end of the Covenant Code. They all deal with the justice system, and the last one is, "thou shalt not take a bribe."

Exodus 23 describes the judicial values that all men under the Law of Moses were obligated to enforce, and if you go down the checklist, every one of those judicial values was violated here in Ammonihah, showing the complete wickedness, unrighteousness, and injustice of the residents, justifying the fate that eventually falls upon them.

Further Reading

Book of Mormon Central, "Why Would Zeezrom Attempt to Bribe Amulek?" KnoWhy 118, (June 9, 2016).

John W. Welch, "Weighing and Measuring in the Worlds of the Book of Mormon," Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 8, no. 2 (1999): 36–45, 86: "Mormon’s break to introduce the Nephite monetary system makes sense in light of Zeezrom’s attempted bribe. To give readers a solid understanding of the gravity of the situation, and to help them better appreciate both the level of corruption in Ammonihah as well as the nature of Amulek’s temptation, Mormon provided his description of the monetary system at this place in the narrative. In short, by knowing the Nephite monetary system, readers would know how much Zeezrom’s bribe was worth–about 42 days of labor."

John W. Welch Notes

References