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Gideon

The strong man who draws his sword against king Noah, spares him on the tower, serves king Limhi as the king’s captain, clears Limhi’s people in the daughters-of-the-Lamanites crisis, devises the escape from bondage through the back pass — and, an old man in the first year of the reign of the judges, is slain by Nehor’s sword while “withstand[ing] him with the words of God.” A valley and a city are named after him; the land of Gideon becomes a recurring stage in the book of Alma.


Account

The sword and the tower

Gideon enters the record amid the unraveling of king Noah’s reign, when “the forces of the king were small, having been reduced, and there began to be a division among the remainder of the people” (Mosiah 19:2) and “the lesser part began to breathe out threatenings against the king” (Mosiah 19:3). His introduction is blunt: “And now there was a man among them whose name was Gideon, and he being a strong man and an enemy to the king, therefore he drew his sword, and swore in his wrath that he would slay the king” (Mosiah 19:4). The text supplies no genealogy, homeland, or backstory.

The duel goes Gideon’s way: “he fought with the king; and when the king saw that he was about to overpower him, he fled and ran and got upon the tower which was near the temple” (Mosiah 19:5). (For the tower itself and its place in Noah’s building program, see King Noah.) The pursuit is interrupted by what the king sees from the top: “Gideon pursued after him and was about to get upon the tower to slay the king, and the king cast his eyes round about towards the land of Shemlon, and behold, the army of the Lamanites were within the borders of the land” (Mosiah 19:6).

Noah’s plea names Gideon directly: “Gideon, spare me, for the Lamanites are upon us, and they will destroy us; yea, they will destroy my people” (Mosiah 19:7). The narrator immediately undercuts the plea’s framing while recording Gideon’s response: “And now the king was not so much concerned about his people as he was about his own life; nevertheless, Gideon did spare his life” (Mosiah 19:8). The text does not state Gideon’s reasons for sparing him.


Gideon’s men in the wilderness

After the Lamanite invasion scatters the people and the captives are returned to tribute terms, Gideon acts again — this time as an organizer rather than a swordsman: “Gideon sent men into the wilderness secretly, to search for the king and those that were with him” (Mosiah 19:18). His men become the information link between the two halves of the scattered people: the men who had fled with Noah “were about to return to the land of Nephi, and they met the men of Gideon. And the men of Gideon told them of all that had happened to their wives and their children” (Mosiah 19:22, see Land of Nephi); in return, “the people told the men of Gideon that they had slain the king” (Mosiah 19:23), and on returning “they told Gideon what they had done to the king” (Mosiah 19:24). Noah’s death by fire (Mosiah 19:20) thus enters the record through Gideon’s network.


The king’s captain

When Gideon next appears, his standing has changed. After the priests of Noah abduct twenty-four daughters of the Lamanites (Mosiah 20:5) and the Lamanite king wages war on the people of Limhi under the mistaken belief that “it was the people of Limhi” (Mosiah 20:6), Limhi vows an internal search: “I will search among my people and whosoever has done this thing shall perish” (Mosiah 20:16). Gideon intervenes — and the verse carries his new title: “Now when Gideon had heard these things, he being the king’s captain, he went forth and said unto the king: I pray thee forbear, and do not search this people, and lay not this thing to their charge” (Mosiah 20:17).

⚖️ Interpretation — weigh this. Gideon’s two introductions use the same epithet construction with reversed content: “he being a strong man and an enemy to the king” (Mosiah 19:4) — the king being Noah — and “he being the king’s captain” (Mosiah 20:17) — the king being Limhi. The text never narrates how the man who drew his sword against one king came to hold command under that king’s son; it simply re-introduces him on the other side of the formula. The reversal of standing is the fact offered for weighing; the “he being…” construction itself is common narrative idiom in the record (it introduces Ammon, Zeniff, Alma the Younger, and others) and carries no evidential weight of design. The kings differ, and the appointment is never narrated.

His argument to Limhi is a deduction from known facts: “For do ye not remember the priests of thy father, whom this people sought to destroy? And are they not in the wilderness? And are not they the ones who have stolen the daughters of the Lamanites?” (Mosiah 20:18). He then moves straight to policy: “tell the king of these things, that he may tell his people that they may be pacified towards us; for behold they are already preparing to come against us; and behold also there are but few of us” (Mosiah 20:19), warning that “except the king doth pacify them towards us we must perish” (Mosiah 20:20).

In the middle of this tactical counsel, Gideon reads the crisis prophetically: “For are not the words of Abinadi fulfilled, which he prophesied against us—and all this because we would not hearken unto the words of the Lord, and turn from our iniquities?” (Mosiah 20:21). Gideon is thus the speaker who first declares Abinadi’s words fulfilled; the connection between this declaration and Abinadi’s recorded prophecies is treated on Abinadi’s page. His counsel ends by ranking survival above liberty: “it is better that we should be in bondage than that we should lose our lives; therefore, let us put a stop to the shedding of so much blood” (Mosiah 20:22). Limhi follows the deduction — he “attributed the carrying away of their daughters to” the priests (Mosiah 20:23) — and the Lamanite king is pacified (Mosiah 20:24).


”I will be thy servant” — the escape plan

After Ammon’s arrival, when “Ammon and king Limhi began to consult with the people how they should deliver themselves out of bondage” (Mosiah 22:1) and force is ruled out (Mosiah 22:2), Gideon steps forward a third time: “Gideon went forth and stood before the king, and said unto him: Now O king, thou hast hitherto hearkened unto my words many times when we have been contending with our brethren, the Lamanites” (Mosiah 22:3).

His petition is courtly and conditional: “And now O king, if thou hast not found me to be an unprofitable servant, or if thou hast hitherto listened to my words in any degree, and they have been of service to thee, even so I desire that thou wouldst listen to my words at this time, and I will be thy servant and deliver this people out of bondage” (Mosiah 22:4). The one-time enemy of a king now styles himself a king’s servant — in his own words, not just the narrator’s.

“And the king granted unto him that he might speak” (Mosiah 22:5). The plan rests on local knowledge and a habit of the guards: “Behold the back pass, through the back wall, on the back side of the city. The Lamanites, or the guards of the Lamanites, by night are drunken” (Mosiah 22:6). Gideon volunteers for the decisive step himself: “And I will go according to thy command and pay the last tribute of wine to the Lamanites, and they will be drunken; and we will pass through the secret pass on the left of their camp when they are drunken and asleep” (Mosiah 22:7) — turning the tribute that marked the people’s bondage into the instrument of their escape. The route: “we will depart with our women and our children, our flocks, and our herds into the wilderness; and we will travel around the land of Shilom” (Mosiah 22:8). The verdict is one line: “And it came to pass that the king hearkened unto the words of Gideon” (Mosiah 22:9).


The escape executed

The execution follows the plan, with one flourish the narrator credits to Limhi: “he sent the tribute of wine to the Lamanites; and he also sent more wine, as a present unto them; and they did drink freely of the wine which king Limhi did send unto them” (Mosiah 22:10). That night, “the people of king Limhi did depart by night into the wilderness with their flocks and their herds, and they went round about the land of Shilom in the wilderness, and bent their course towards the land of Zarahemla, being led by Ammon and his brethren” (Mosiah 22:11). The pursuing Lamanite army “could no longer follow their tracks; therefore they were lost in the wilderness” (Mosiah 22:16), and the people “arrived in the land of Zarahemla, and joined Mosiah’s people, and became his subjects” (Mosiah 22:13).

Gideon’s own name does not appear in the execution verses; the record leaves him at “the king hearkened unto the words of Gideon” (Mosiah 22:9).


The death scene — slain by Nehor

The record concerning Gideon resumes in the book of Alma, in “the first year of the reign of the judges over the people of Nephi” (Alma 1:1) — a span of years after the escape from bondage. The man who killed him is introduced first, unnamed: “a man who was large, and was noted for his much strength” (Alma 1:2), who “had gone about among the people, preaching to them that which he termed to be the word of God, bearing down against the church” (Alma 1:3) and teaching “that all mankind should be saved at the last day” (Alma 1:4) for support and money (Alma 1:5). (This man is Nehor; his teaching, his trial before Alma the Younger, and his execution are treated in Nehor’s entry. This page reports only his collision with Gideon.)

The killing is recorded in three verses. Nehor, “going, to preach to those who believed on his word… met a man who belonged to the church of God, yea, even one of their teachers; and he began to contend with him sharply, that he might lead away the people of the church; but the man withstood him, admonishing him with the words of God” (Alma 1:7). Only then is the man named, and named by the very deed this page has tracked from its start: “Now the name of the man was Gideon; and it was he who was an instrument in the hands of God in delivering the people of Limhi out of bondage” (Alma 1:8) — the back-pass escape of Mosiah 22, recalled by the narrator as Gideon’s identifying act. The death itself: “because Gideon withstood him with the words of God he was wroth with Gideon, and drew his sword and began to smite him. Now Gideon being stricken with many years, therefore he was not able to withstand his blows, therefore he was slain by the sword” (Alma 1:9).

Two facts the text states plainly and this page records as fact: Gideon’s weapon in this last scene is “the words of God” (Alma 1:7, 1:9), not the sword he once drew; and his age is the reason he falls — “stricken with many years… not able to withstand his blows” (Alma 1:9). The narrator’s verdict on the dead man, spoken later by Alma to his killer, is “a righteous man, yea, a man who has done much good among this people” (Alma 1:13).

⚖️ Interpretation — weigh this. Gideon’s record opens and closes on a drawn sword, with the roles reversed. His first narrated act is to draw a sword in wrath against a king — “he drew his sword, and swore in his wrath that he would slay the king” (Mosiah 19:4) — a killing he then declines, sparing Noah on the tower (Mosiah 19:8). His last is to fall under a sword drawn in wrath against him — Nehor “was wroth with Gideon, and drew his sword and began to smite him… therefore he was slain by the sword” (Alma 1:9). The reading offered for weighing is that the record frames the strong young swordsman who spared a king as ending, old (“stricken with many years”) and defending himself only “with the words of God,” under the same gesture he once made — sword answered by “the words of God” (Alma 1:9). Against the reading: “drew his sword” is recurring narrative idiom in the record for an attack in wrath — it stands the same way at Alma 19:22 and Alma 20:16, unrelated scenes — and carries no evidential weight of design; the two Gideon verses are roughly a generation and a book apart, and the text never juxtaposes them or comments on the symmetry. The bookend is the reader’s construction from the cited verses, not a claim the narrator makes.


The valley and the city of Gideon

Gideon’s name outlives him as a place. After the Amlicite war, when “Alma could pursue the Amlicites no longer he caused that his people should pitch their tents in the valley of Gideon, the valley being called after that Gideon who was slain by the hand of Nehor with the sword” (Alma 2:20). The naming is the narrator’s own gloss, and it ties the place directly to the death scene above — the Gideon, the one Nehor killed. The army camps there overnight and then “departed out of the valley of Gideon towards their city, which was the city of Zarahemla” (Alma 2:26).

A city follows the valley. When Alma left Zarahemla to preach, “he… went over upon the east of the river Sidon, into the valley of Gideon, there having been a city built, which was called the city of Gideon, which was in the valley that was called Gideon, being called after the man who was slain by the hand of Nehor with the sword” (Alma 6:7). The verse names both at once — a city of Gideon inside a valley of Gideon — and repeats the naming-gloss nearly verbatim from Alma 2:20: Alma 2:20 reads “called after that Gideon who was slain by the hand of Nehor with the sword,” Alma 6:7 “called after the man who was slain by the hand of Nehor with the sword” — the shared tail identical, the opening phrase the one difference. The record is exact and consistent about why the name is there.


The land of Gideon as a stage

After the naming, “the land of Gideon” becomes a recurring setting in the book of Alma, and on two occasions the record this wiki hosts elsewhere runs through it:

In each case the land of Gideon is the setting, not Gideon the man — he is decades dead — but the place keeps his name in the record long after his death.


Significance

Within the book of Mosiah, Gideon appears in exactly three scenes, and in each he is the man whose initiative redirects the story: the sword-fight that drives Noah to the tower where the Lamanite invasion is sighted (Mosiah 19:5–6); the deduction that stops Limhi’s internal purge and pacifies the Lamanite king (Mosiah 20:17–23); and the back-pass stratagem that ends the bondage (Mosiah 22:3–9). His instruments change across the three scenes — sword, argument, plan — while the narrator’s epithets track his changed standing, from “an enemy to the king” (Mosiah 19:4) to “the king’s captain” (Mosiah 20:17).

He is also a reader of Abinadi inside the narrative: his “For are not the words of Abinadi fulfilled, which he prophesied against us” (Mosiah 20:21) is a character interpreting current events as prophecy fulfilled — and attributing the cause: “all this because we would not hearken unto the words of the Lord, and turn from our iniquities” (Mosiah 20:21).

⚖️ Interpretation — weigh this. Gideon’s two great speeches sit on opposite sides of the same word. In the daughters-crisis he counsels submission: “it is better that we should be in bondage than that we should lose our lives” (Mosiah 20:22). Two chapters later he authors the exit: “I will be thy servant and deliver this people out of bondage” (Mosiah 22:4). The reading offered for weighing is that the record presents a consistent counselor — bondage accepted when the alternative is annihilation (Mosiah 20:20), bondage ended when a bloodless way out exists (Mosiah 22:2, 22:6–8) — rather than a man who changed his mind. The text itself never juxtaposes the two speeches or comments on the shift; the arc is the reader’s construction from the cited verses.

The book of Alma adds the man’s end and his afterlife as a name. The death scene is the bookend to the sword-and-tower opening: the strong man whose first act was to draw a sword against a king (Mosiah 19:4) dies “stricken with many years” under another man’s sword, “withst[anding] him with the words of God” (Alma 1:9) — his instrument, last of all, the words rather than the blade. The narrator, who once introduced him only as “a man among them whose name was Gideon” (Mosiah 19:4), now identifies him by his finished work — “it was he who was an instrument in the hands of God in delivering the people of Limhi out of bondage” (Alma 1:8) — and through Alma calls him “a righteous man… a man who has done much good among this people” (Alma 1:13), the record’s one explicit verdict on his character. After his death his name passes to the land: a valley (Alma 2:20) and a city (Alma 6:7) “called after the man who was slain by the hand of Nehor with the sword,” and “the land of Gideon” recurs as a stage — Korihor’s second hearing (Alma 30:21) and Pahoran’s exile (Alma 61:5) both run through it. The man who three times redirected the story in Mosiah keeps redirecting it, after death, as a place-name on the map of Alma.

The text never gives Gideon a religious office, a genealogy, or a recorded prayer in these chapters; what it gives him is competence and a hearing — three times the record shows a king listening to him (Mosiah 19:8, 20:23, 22:9) — and, at the last, the church’s own teaching office: in his final scene he is “one of their teachers” (Alma 1:7), the first religious role the record assigns him.


Key references


King Noah · Limhi · Abinadi · Ammon (of Zarahemla) · Alma the Younger · Korihor · Pahoran · Bondage & Deliverance · Land of Nephi · Cited & Minor Figures · Index · Connections


Sources

The Book of Mormon (Mosiah 19–20, 22 for Gideon’s life; Alma 1 for his death; Alma 2, 6 for the valley and city named after him; Alma 30, 61 for the land of Gideon as a later stage).


Every quote on this page is lifted verbatim from raw/ (Mosiah 19, 20, 22; Alma 1, 2, 6, 30, 61). Textual facts are cited to their verse. The three [interpretive] callouts (the two Mosiah callouts and the sword-bookend) are flagged as new claims requiring a disprove-check and are offered for weighing, not asserted as settled. Gideon’s origins are out of scope: the text says only “there was a man among them whose name was Gideon” (Mosiah 19:4). His death, the place named for him, and the later scenes set in the land of Gideon are recorded from Alma 1, 2, 6, 30, and 61; Nehor’s own account is hosted on Cited & Minor Figures, Korihor’s Gideon hearing on Korihor, and Pahoran’s exile on Pahoran. This page’s survey stops at the close of Alma; the name recurs once in the book of Helaman, now in the corpus (“wo be unto the city of Gideon,” Helaman 13:15), and that material awaits the Helaman build.