At the beginning.
The 6 questions with the first set of beliefs:
The questions to answer on each master are:
1. How do the actions of that master demonstrate ‘A’?
2. In what order does the master do ‘B’?
3. How important was it that the order of actions, ‘C’, be done the way they were?
4. How does ‘C’ show the masters’ belief in ‘A’?
5. What other beliefs does that master demonstrate through his/her actions and words?
6. What else have I learned from the beliefs, actions and words of that master?
belief set 1
A That God is a supreme being to be loved and worshiped
B Worshiped God in some way
C Fasting for a purpose, prayer, and meditation, was devoutly spiritual in an observable way. Made and attended churches, made priests to teach, praised and adored God
D (Moroni 10:32) {memorization # 2, 18}
What Jedi Master have you chosen?
Keep in mind that the answers to belief set 1 can be entirely different depending on your personal emphasis and point of view.
Getting started - Ammon
- MavrikManna
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Getting started - Ammon
#45~ Jedi Master Manna
“Walk with the prophets. Learn from the masters. Ask. Receive. Overcome.”
Begin the journey!
“Walk with the prophets. Learn from the masters. Ask. Receive. Overcome.”
- MavrikManna
- Grand Master
- Posts: 47
- Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2025 6:55 pm
- Location: USA, WA
- Contact:
Re: Getting started - Ammon
#46Your answers can be the same or different. you answer in your own journals according to how you see it. The answers are not for comparison, although you may share if you like.
Here is one answer set for the Qs for belief set 1 using Ammon:
Jedi Master Ammon – The Lone Servant Who Transformed a Nation
“He chose to walk into enemy territory—alone—with a servant’s heart.”
1. How do the actions of that master demonstrate ‘A’?
(That God is a supreme being to be loved and worshiped)
Ammon worshiped God not by preaching from a pulpit, but by stepping into danger alone, led only by love and the Spirit. His willingness to live among the Lamanites—not to conquer, but to serve—was an act of trust and adoration toward a God he knew was greater than any earthly fear.
2. In what order does the master worship God (‘B’)?
(Worshiped God in some way)
1. He turns away from sin and begins to seek God (Mosiah 27).
2. He refuses the throne and chooses a missionary path (Mosiah 29).
3. He enters enemy territory alone, trusting only in the Lord (Alma 17:7–11, 13).
4. He fasts, prays, and prepares spiritually (Alma 17:9).
5. He serves as a humble servant, not a preacher or warrior (Alma 17:25).
6. He defends with power, teaches with the Spirit, and glorifies God—not self (Alma 18–26).
3. Why was the order of ‘C’ (Ammon’s actions) so important?
The order mattered because it revealed his heart:
Ammon didn’t enter with a sermon—he entered alone, as a servant, and without expecting praise or protection.
If he had led with power, he would’ve been rejected. But his humble service earned trust. His spiritual preparation came before any visible miracles.
Like a true Jedi, Ammon trained in the quiet, trusted the Master, and only revealed his strength when absolutely needed.
4. How do Ammon’s actions (‘C’) show his belief in God (‘A’)?
He believed God was supreme—worthy of abandoning comfort, power, and protection.
He didn’t need an army. He didn’t need validation.
He needed only the Spirit—and that was enough.
“I will be thy servant.” (Alma 17:25) — a powerful declaration of faith in a God who lifts the lowly.
5. What other beliefs did he demonstrate through his actions and words?
• That he knew he could rely on his spiritual gifts as long as he remained righteous.
• That strength is meant for protection, not domination.
• That spiritual preparation matters more than title or position.
• That miracles follow those who trust in God as they walk alone with the Spirit.
6. What else have I learned from this master’s lonely, faithful path?
Ammon shows me that sometimes the greatest acts of faith happen in isolation.
He wasn’t surrounded by his own people—he stood alone, in enemy territory, offering service instead of resistance. That is true spiritual mastery.
A Jedi in spirit, a disciple in truth.
His strength was not only in his arm—but in his submission to God.
Scripture Echo:
“I desire to dwell among this people for a time; yea, and perhaps until the day I die.”
(Alma 17:23)
Here is one answer set for the Qs for belief set 1 using Ammon:
“He chose to walk into enemy territory—alone—with a servant’s heart.”
1. How do the actions of that master demonstrate ‘A’?
(That God is a supreme being to be loved and worshiped)
Ammon worshiped God not by preaching from a pulpit, but by stepping into danger alone, led only by love and the Spirit. His willingness to live among the Lamanites—not to conquer, but to serve—was an act of trust and adoration toward a God he knew was greater than any earthly fear.
2. In what order does the master worship God (‘B’)?
(Worshiped God in some way)
1. He turns away from sin and begins to seek God (Mosiah 27).
2. He refuses the throne and chooses a missionary path (Mosiah 29).
3. He enters enemy territory alone, trusting only in the Lord (Alma 17:7–11, 13).
4. He fasts, prays, and prepares spiritually (Alma 17:9).
5. He serves as a humble servant, not a preacher or warrior (Alma 17:25).
6. He defends with power, teaches with the Spirit, and glorifies God—not self (Alma 18–26).
3. Why was the order of ‘C’ (Ammon’s actions) so important?
The order mattered because it revealed his heart:
Ammon didn’t enter with a sermon—he entered alone, as a servant, and without expecting praise or protection.
If he had led with power, he would’ve been rejected. But his humble service earned trust. His spiritual preparation came before any visible miracles.
Like a true Jedi, Ammon trained in the quiet, trusted the Master, and only revealed his strength when absolutely needed.
4. How do Ammon’s actions (‘C’) show his belief in God (‘A’)?
He believed God was supreme—worthy of abandoning comfort, power, and protection.
He didn’t need an army. He didn’t need validation.
He needed only the Spirit—and that was enough.
“I will be thy servant.” (Alma 17:25) — a powerful declaration of faith in a God who lifts the lowly.
5. What other beliefs did he demonstrate through his actions and words?
• That he knew he could rely on his spiritual gifts as long as he remained righteous.
• That strength is meant for protection, not domination.
• That spiritual preparation matters more than title or position.
• That miracles follow those who trust in God as they walk alone with the Spirit.
6. What else have I learned from this master’s lonely, faithful path?
Ammon shows me that sometimes the greatest acts of faith happen in isolation.
He wasn’t surrounded by his own people—he stood alone, in enemy territory, offering service instead of resistance. That is true spiritual mastery.
A Jedi in spirit, a disciple in truth.
His strength was not only in his arm—but in his submission to God.
“I desire to dwell among this people for a time; yea, and perhaps until the day I die.”
(Alma 17:23)
~ Jedi Master Manna
“Walk with the prophets. Learn from the masters. Ask. Receive. Overcome.”
Begin the journey!
“Walk with the prophets. Learn from the masters. Ask. Receive. Overcome.”
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