When it comes to the Book of Mormon, there is a lot of information that is simply unknown. Many different aspects of life are left out, as well as names, quantity of people, and roles in society. One group of people that is consistently left out of description in The Book of Mormon is the women. Women are in every Book of Mormon story, they are just not always mentioned. The women are there; they help prepare for hard times, they raise up children, and they have testimonies and spiritual journeys. The problem is that not much is known about those testimonies and spiritual journeys. The church teaches that women are just as important as men, but there is not nearly as much female representation in the scriptures as this idea may suggest. It …show more content…
Nephi possibly references biological sisters in 2 Nephi 5, but there is no further evidence of their existence (Fronk 7). Additionally, a Lamanite queen is mentioned in Alma 47 after Amalickiah murdered the king of the Lamanites. Many other individual women are mentioned briefly after performing deeds or being converted (Bowens and Williams). The Biblical women mentioned are Eve, Sarah, and Mary, the three of them being the most important mothers in …show more content…
Their responsibilities resided in the home and to their husbands (Williams 70). Children were precious to righteous women and it was of utmost importance that mothers be there for them, especially when fathers were off fighting wars (Williams 73). In the church, women held callings andtestimonies and helped to convert others to the gospel (Bowens and Williams). Socially, women were considered equal to men in the righteous communities of Nephites and Lamanites; different, but equal (Fronk 6). Women were highly valued in these righteous societies, but when the people turned wicked the women were abused, raped, and killed. In many cases the extent of trials the people in the Book of Mormon went through, or the extent of wickedness of the people, were measured by how much the women and children suffered (Williams 78). Marriage was expected in Nephite society and wives were expected to have children. Plural marriages and the use of concubines, however, were not allowed as men were expected to stay faithful to their wives (Bowen and