The Lost 116 Pages Reconstructing The Bo
The Lost 116 Pages Reconstructing The Bo
The Lost 116 Pages Reconstructing The Bo
com/products/the-lost-116-pages
Bradley Greg Kofford Books
The
The Lost 116 Pages: Reconstructing the Book of Mormon’s Missing Stories
On a summer day in 1828, Book of Mormon scribe and witness Martin Harris was
emptying drawers, upending furniture, and ripping apart mattresses as he desperately
looked for a stack of papers he had sworn to God to protect. Those pages containing
the only copy of the first three months of the Joseph Smith’s translation of the golden
Lost 116
plates were forever lost, and the detailed stories they held forgotten over the ensuing
years—until now.
In this highly anticipated work, author Don Bradley presents over a decade of
historical and scriptural research to not only tell the story of the lost pages but to
reconstruct many of the detailed stories written on them. Questions explored and
Pages
answered include:
• Was the lost manuscript actually 116 pages?
• How did Mormon’s abridgment of this period differ from the accounts in Nephi’s
small plates?
• Where did the brass plates and Laban’s sword come from?
• How did Lehi’s family and their descendants live the Law of Moses without the
temple and Aaronic priesthood?
• How did the Liahona operate?
• Why is Joseph of Egypt emphasized so much in the Book of Mormon?
• How were the first Nephites similar to the very last?
• What message did God write on the temple wall for Aminadi to translate?
• How did the Jaredite interpreters come into the hands of the Nephite kings?
• Why was King Benjamin so beloved by his people?
Despite the likely demise of those pages to the sands of time, the answers to these
questions and many more are now available for the first time in nearly two centuries
in The Lost 116 Pages: Reconstructing the Book of Mormon’s Missing Stories.
Reconstructing the
Book of Mormon’s Missing Stories
Greg Kofford Books
www.gregkofford.com Greg
Kofford
Books
Don Bradley
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The
Lost 116
Pages
Reconstructing the
Book of Mormon’s Missing Stories
Don Bradley
__________________________________________________
Library of Congress Control Number available upon request.
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Contents
Bibliography, 293
Scripture Index, 305
Subject Index, 311
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INTRODUCTION
1. Lavina Fielding Anderson, ed., Lucy’s Book : A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack
Smith’s Family Memoir, 414–16.
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2. While brief, this chapter was also extraordinarily useful, providing an initial
starting point for my research. John A. Tvedtnes, The Most Correct Book: Insights from
a Book of Mormon Scholar, 37–52.
3. For a description and examples of work on the textual strands within the Pentateuch,
see Richard Elliott Friedman’s Who Wrote the Bible? and The Hidden Book in the Bible. For
work on “Q,” see James M. Robinson, Paul Hoffmann, and John S. Kloppenborg, eds.,
The Critical Edition of Q: Synopsis including the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, Mark and
Thomas with English, German, and French Translations of Q and Thomas.
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4. See, for example, the papers by Mark L. Damen discussed and cited below.
5. For details on this Herculean task and the emperor who decreed it, see Mark C.
Elliott, Emperor Qianlong: Son of Heaven, Man of the World . Regarding similar efforts
in the nineteenth century and today to reconstruct historic Chinese texts, see Edward
L. Shaughnessy, Rewriting Early Chinese Texts, 195, 256; Robert F. Campany, To Live
as Long as Heaven and Earth: A Translation and Study of Ge Hong’s Traditions of Divine
Transcendents; and T. H. Barrett, “On the Reconstruction of the Shenxian zhuan,” 229–35.
6. Lawrence I. Conrad, “Recovering Lost Texts: Some Methodological Issues,”
258–63; and Ella Landau-Tasseron, “On the Reconstruction of Lost Sources.”
7. S. Kent Brown, “Lehi’s Personal Record: Quest for a Missing Source,” 19–42.
8. Campany, To Live as Long as Heaven and Earth, 127n29.
9. Mark L. Damen, “Translating Scenes: Plautus’ Adaptation of Menander’s
Dis Exapaton,” 205–31; and Mark L. Damen, “Reconstructing the Beginning of
Menander’s Adelphoi (B),” 67–84. Dr. Damen graciously corresponded with me about
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Every study has its limitations. One limitation of this book is the neces-
sary stylistic infelicity that the methodology of reconstruction requires that
some evidence used in earlier reconstructions must be repeated again in later
reconstructions where it is relevant. Another limitation is that the reasonable
size of a single volume prevents me from laying out fully everything that can
be gleaned about the Book of Mormon’s lost text from the sources I have
examined thus far.
The certainty of the conclusions that I can draw from those sources var-
ies, with some—such as Ishmael’s lineage from the tribe of Ephraim—ap-
proaching complete certainty, and others—such as the presence of the land of
Sidom in the lost manuscript—being less certain. All historical reconstruction
is probabilistic, and some facets of the past can be reconstructed with greater
certainty than others. Because the models used in this book are probabilistic,
they are capable of being improved indefinitely, and doubtless will be over
time—including by some readers of this book.
Addressing Both Latter-day Saint
and Non-Latter-day Saint Audiences
Writing as a Latter-day Saint, expecting to be read to a good extent by
other Latter-day Saints, and yet wanting this work to also be accessible to
non-Latter-day Saints and contribute to wider scholarship involves decisions
on how to balance various audiences and concerns. Given my own faith, and
that this faith will be shared by many of my readers, I have elected to write
about a work we mutually embrace as scripture in the language of faith. I
speak of the golden plates as real physical objects, of Joseph Smith translat-
ing those plates, and of Mormon as a real voice speaking from the narrative
in those plates. For non-Latter-day Saint readers, this particular language of
faith may be a foreign tongue. Yet in other ways I have framed the work with
these readers in mind.
As a scholar of religious studies and an historian of religion specializing in
nineteenth-century America, rather than an archaeologist or historian of the
ancient world, my methods are best suited to getting at the Book of Mormon
text rather than to getting behind the text. Recognizing that my own expertise
is focused in this way, and that a number of my readers will not be Latter-
day Saints, I have made every effort to limit my work to reconstructing the
Book of Mormon’s lost contents using evidence compelling for both Latter-
day Saints and non-Latter-day Saints.12 This means omitting certain kinds of
12. Thus, for instance, when I include arguments in this book hinging on the
Hebrew meaning of the name Benjamin in Chapter 15, I have first verified that this
meaning, “son of the right hand,” would have been available in biblical commentaries
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potential evidence and focusing on other kinds. So, for instance, there may be
Mesoamerican cultural practices that (given a Mesoamerican setting for the
Book of Mormon) could illuminate the Book of Mormon’s descriptions of the
Nephite discovery of (the scrying instrument) the interpreters. Yet, since that
Mesoamerican context is not one that all readers can agree is relevant, I have ex-
cluded such arguments. To present arguments that will work for readers across a
range of worldviews, I have attempted to substantially limit, and where possible
omit, from my arguments a presumed context of origin—something on which
readers of various stripes will not agree. A seeming exception to this is that I
frequently place the Book of Mormon in the world of the Bible. However, since
it seems to me incontrovertible that the Book of Mormon both begins within
the Bible and emerged in a world where the Bible was well known, this strikes
me as both a well-grounded and a necessary context in which to examine it.
My methodology for reconstructing the Book of Mormon’s lost text does
assume that this text was consistent and coherent—an assumption that is
both necessary13 and warranted.14 Yet, since that methodology only attempts
to get at the text and not behind it, it does not require the reader to adopt
a particular worldview as a precondition for understanding what was in the
Book of Mormon’s lost manuscript.
In this way, my approach in this volume is similar to that of textual critics
of the Bible. A textual critic working on the Resurrection narrative at the end
of the Gospel of Mark can take the reader to what the earliest text said, but
cannot take the reader beyond what the earliest text said, to the actual Easter
events behind it. I have endeavored to similarly take the reader to the account
offered in the lost manuscript.15
16. The dearth of sources on the lost manuscript’s middle contents is probably due
to what are known as serial position effects in memory, including the primacy effect
and the recency effect, by virtue of which people tend, respectively, to recall early or
later items in a series or narrative better than middle items. My thanks to Nicholas
Bradley for contributing to this insight.
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17. Note that Joseph Smith Sr. in my narrative will always be designated as such. Joseph
Jr. will only be designated as such when necessary to distinguish him from Joseph Sr.
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Scripture is cited frequently in this book, so it is necessary to spell out that all
Bible quotations below are from the King James Version unless otherwise noted,
and all italics in scriptural quotations are my own. Books of scripture cited par-
enthetically are abbreviated according to standard abbreviations used in the pub-
lished standard works of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
For ease of distinction, this book follows standard conventions of capi-
talizing certain terms from the Bible, such as Exodus, Tabernacle, Promised
Land, and Conquest. Using these conventions will help distinguish Lehi’s
exodus from the biblical Exodus, the Nephite promised land from the biblical
Promised Land, and so forth.
The Purposes of this Book
As should be clear from everything said above, this book is a work of
scholarship and not of inspiration. My conclusions, like all empirical conclu-
sions, are subject to revision as the evidence grows. We will learn to make bet-
ter use of the sources we have, including closer reading of our available Book
of Mormon text. New sources will also be found that will require revision of
existing interpretations—and also enable the confirmation and expansion of
those interpretations. Already some of these working models for interpreting
the evidence provide powerful explanatory tools in accounting for the data
and integrating our understandings of the Book of Mormon.
My reconstructions of the lost manuscript are obviously not scripture, yet
they may, and hopefully will, shed light on scripture. I personally believe that
key pieces of the lost manuscript’s content (most obviously those in the small
plates but also those given in an interview by the Prophet’s father, and oth-
ers) were providentially preserved for that very purpose—so we could better
understand the Book of Mormon text we have.
On one level, this is a book about the Book of Mormon’s lost text, an
attempt to satisfy some of my own thirst and that of others for knowl-
edge about Joseph Smith’s earliest recorded revealed text—the lost half of
Mormon’s abridgment. On another level this is a book about the Book of
Mormon’s familiar text, the canonized text that we as Latter-day Saints read,
study, pray about, share with others, and seek to apply in our lives. The more
we know about the missing first part of Mormon’s book, the better we will
grasp the portion we have. My greatest hope in presenting this book to the
world is that better understanding the lost manuscript will enable us to better
comprehend, appreciate, delve into, and live out this other testament of Jesus
Christ, the Book of Mormon.
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Chapter 13
And as one generation hath been destroyed among the Jews because of iniquity,
even so have they been destroyed from generation to generation according to
their iniquities; and never hath any of them been destroyed save it were foretold
them by the prophets of the Lord. (2 Ne. 25:9; cf. Amos 3:7)
And he raiseth up a righteous nation, and destroyeth the nations of the wicked.
And he leadeth away the righteous into precious lands, and the wicked he de-
stroyeth, and curseth the land unto them for their sakes. (1 Ne. 17: 37–38)
We are told in the small plates of warnings to the people of Nephi a
century in advance of the year 320 (Jarom 1:10), but we are not specifically
informed on how and by whom they were warned on the eve of their destruc-
tion. Mormon’s later abridgment, however, gives us a strong candidate for a
prophet on whom the burden of this final warning fell: Aminadi.
Amulek’s Forefather Aminadi
A man of commerce who became a prophet, Amulek had been a long-
time inhabitant of the city of Ammonihah before Alma2, high priest over
the church, arrived to preach repentance. Amulek and Alma2 were the
two prophets who gave a final warning of destruction to Ammonihah, an
American sister city to Sodom and Gomorrah, sharing both their wickedness
and their fate. In introducing himself as a preacher of repentance to his fellow
citizens, Amulek emphasized his stature in the community as “a man of no
small reputation” who had “acquired much riches by the hand of my indus-
try” and had “many kindreds and friends” (Alma 10:4). But before appealing
to his individual merits he grounded his status in a recitation of his lineage,
highlighting his descent from Aminadi:1
I am Amulek; I am the son of Gidanah, who was the son of Ishmael, who was a
descendant of Aminadi; and it was that same Aminadi who interpreted the writing
which was upon the wall of the temple, which was written by the finger of God.
And Aminadi was a descendant of Nephi, who was the son of Lehi, who came out
of the land of Jerusalem, who was a descendant of Manasseh, who was the son of
Joseph who was sold into Egypt by the hands of his brethren. (Alma 10:2–3)
Amulek’s emphasis on his ancestor Aminadi and explanation that his
Aminadi was “that same Aminadi” who interpreting the writing on the wall
show that the story was a familiar one and that Aminadi was a man of stat-
ure in Nephite history—as Brant Gardner put it, “an illustrious ancestor
(Aminadi) known by name to all those present.” Despite having known but
little of religion previous to Alma2’s arrival, Amulek was keenly aware of his
ancestor’s role in the writing-on-the-wall incident (Alma 10:5). Aminadi’s
role in the incident was also sufficiently renowned that even the citizens of
Ammonihah, an irreligious people on whose hearts “Satan had gotten great
hold” and who rejected as “foolish traditions” the tenets of the church, could
be assumed to know it (Alma 8:9, 11).
Just what is the story of Aminadi that was familiar to the Nephites but
only touched on in our surviving Book of Mormon text? As scant as the
mention of Aminadi’s story is in our text, even this brief allusion provides
information with which we can begin to place Aminadi in his proper time,
place, and circumstance to recover his prophetic message.
The Time of Aminadi
Commentators on Alma 10 who have attempted to locate the Aminadi
story chronologically and geographically have placed it at the temple in the
city of Nephi prior to Mosiah1’s exodus to Zarahemla. Nineteenth-century
Book of Mormon scholar George Reynolds argued that although Amulek’s
story gives no record of when Aminadi lived, “it must have been in the land
of Nephi before the Nephites migrated to Zarahemla as he was at least four
generations separated from Amulek.”2 Brant Gardner suggests that this event
may have “occurred before Mosiah1 led his people of out the city of Nephi.”3
And Verneil Simmons places it in the city of Nephi at a time when “destruc-
tion was imminent.”4
The text provides clues by which we can judge these surmises. First,
Aminadi’s role in the writing-on-the-wall incident logically places it in the
land of Nephi before the exodus to Zarahemla and the subsequent reign of
Mosiah1. Given Mosiah1 and his successors’ prophetic ability to interpret sa-
cred writings, there would have been no need for Aminadi to interpret the
writing on the temple wall during their reigns.
Second, Amulek’s personal and genealogical self-revelations imply a chro-
nology that would put his ancestor Aminadi in the land of Nephi before
Mosiah’s exodus. When he describes himself as having children (Alma 10:11)
and as “a man of no small reputation,” with “many kindreds and friends,” and
having “acquired much riches by the hand of my industry” (v. 4), Amulek
implies his age. A family, an extensive social network, and acquired wealth
are products of time, and Amulek’s possession of all these make him likely
not less than forty at the time of his preaching (around year 508 from Lehi’s
exodus, or 82 BC), placing his likely time of birth before year 479.
to drink wine from while they praised “gods of gold, and of silver, of brass,
of iron, of wood, and of stone” (Dan. 5:1–4). In an untimely crashing of the
sacrilegious merriment, there “came forth fingers of a man’s hand, and wrote
over against the candlestick upon the plaister of the wall of the king’s palace:
and the king saw the part of the hand that wrote” (v. 5). At the appearance of
the hand, the king cried out for “the wise men of Babylon.” “But,” the author
tells us, “they could not read the writing, nor make known to the king the in-
terpretation thereof ” (vv. 6–8). The king sent for Daniel, a Jew taken captive
from Jerusalem during the Babylonian conquest who had established his rep-
utation with Nebuchadnezzar for the “interpreting of dreams, and shewing
of hard sentences, and dissolving of doubts” (v. 12). Daniel then interpreted
the writing to portend Belshazzar’s death and the fall of his kingdom, both
of which occurred immediately “in that night” (vv. 13–31).7 This successful
prophecy, along with his previous interpretation of Nebuchadnezzar’s dream,
established Daniel as a prophet of God and the “revealer of secrets,” resulting
in him receiving a high political rank (2:47; 5:29).
The parallels between Daniel’s story and even the small amount we know
of Aminadi’s are substantial. In each, a supernatural hand appears and writes
on the wall with its finger or fingers. This writing cannot be understood by
ordinary persons or even the learned wise men and priests but must be inter-
preted by the prophet. These two appearances of supernatural writing, despite
their differing locations, also share a temple theme with one of them occurring
in the temple and the other being prompted by the profaning of temple relics.
Although Aminadi’s reported New World experience as a wisdom figure
strongly parallels Daniel’s experience in the Old World, both hark back to
much earlier biblical precedent established by Aminadi’s patriarchal ancestor
Joseph of Egypt.8 Joseph, who interpreted Pharaoh’s dream of seven fat cattle
and seven lean cattle to predict seven years of plenty followed by seven years
of famine, provided the earliest model of the prophet-interpreter (Gen. 41).
Aminadi’s story, even in the broad strokes with which it is sketched in our
Book of Mormon, follows Joseph’s blueprint. In each, a prophet is interpret-
ing for others a divine manifestation they could not interpret for themselves.
This parallel may account for Amulek’s decision to emphasize Joseph among
Aminadi’s ancestors, rather than patriarchs such as Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
7. The penalty of death follows naturally from the profaning of the temple relics.
Under the Law of Moses the priests were told that none but they were to have contact
with the temple vessels “that neither they, nor ye also, die” (Num. 18:3).
8. Although Daniel’s experience likely preceded Aminadi’s by some two and a half
centuries, neither Aminadi nor the audience of his prophetic warnings would have
been familiar with that earlier event, since it occurred after Lehi and his colony set
out from Palestine for the New World.
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9. Paralleling Joseph, as an interpreter Daniel did not limit his work to walls but
also read the meaning of dreams.
10. Abinadi’s trial was likely held either in King Noah’s palace or in the temple,
both potential gathering places for the king and priests. (See Mosiah 11:9–11.)
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they are not written in your hearts,” alluding again to God writing the Ten
Commandments on the tablets of Sinai by his finger (v. 11).11 Completing the
commandments, Abinadi preached the redemptive work of Christ and pre-
dicted the king’s death. His burden of prophecy delivered, Abinadi was burned
to death “because he would not deny the commandments of God” (17:20).
Though Abinadi diverged from the messages of the biblical wisdom fig-
ures Joseph and Daniel in that the divine manifestations he interpreted and
expounded were in scripture—that is, the prophecies of Isaiah and the com-
mandments given on Sinai—his story shares the structure of theirs. He, like
them, is a captive prophet displaying his revelatory power before the king,
interpreting what the king’s wise men cannot, and forewarning of catastro-
phe—including in this case, as in Daniel’s, the king’s death.
Abinadi also echoes his near-namesake predecessor among the Nephite
prophets, Aminadi. As Aminadi had prophesied in the original city of Nephi
before its destruction, Abinadi prophesied in the rebuilt city of Nephi (Mosiah
11:10–11). Also like Aminadi, Abinadi acts as a wisdom figure and a prophet-
ic interpreter. But the strongest links between Aminadi and Abinadi—how
their prophetic messages build on the giving of the Ten Commandments on
Sinai—will have to await full development later in this chapter.
That Aminadi strongly parallels each of these three other wisdom fig-
ures individually suggests that he also fits their shared narrative template. The
core narrative of all these other instances of interpretation by divine wisdom
would also be the narrative in which his interpretation of the writing on the
wall belongs: Aminadi was a captive who interpreted a divine manifestation
that the king’s wise men could not, and from this he forewarned of calamity.
Noting that Daniel’s writing on the wall “spelled doom and destruction
to the king of Babylon and his kingdom,” Book of Mormon commentator
Verneil Simmons perceptively asked, “Did the Lord warn the Nephites at
the temple in the City of Nephi by a similar method, that destruction was
imminent?”12 The unique parallel between the Aminadi and Daniel incidents
suggests that their warning experiences were given in similar circumstances
and for similar purposes; that is, Aminadi’s interpretation of the writing on
the wall gave a final warning of imminent doom to his king regarding both
the king’s fate and that of his kingdom.13
11. Grant Hardy, Understanding the Book of Mormon: A Reader’s Guide, 157–60.
12. Simmons, Peoples, Places and Prophecies, 161.
13. An even more forceful warning of destruction, in this case complete
annihilation, is given in the story of Amulek’s preaching in Ammonihah, where
the surviving reference to Aminadi is introduced. Alan C. Miner notes the parallel
“between the sudden destruction of the kingdom of Babylon” warned of by Daniel’s
interpretation of the writing on the wall “and the prophecies of Alma and Amulek
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A message about the temple in the writing read by Aminadi would account
for the place of its appearance (the temple wall) but not for its reported source
(the finger of God). This is the other significant difference between Daniel’s
interpreted text and Aminadi’s: what is said of the supernatural scribe. In the
Daniel incident, the writer’s identity is indefinite: the writing was done by the
miraculously appearing “fingers of a man’s hand,” with no indication whether
the hand belonged to God, an angel, another supernatural being, or perhaps
something more illusory. For the author of Daniel, it did not matter to whom
the hand belonged, only what it wrote. In the Aminadi incident, however, the
owner of the hand was unequivocally identified. The writing on the wall was
not made merely by “the fingers of a man’s hand” but “by the finger of God.”
Why was the message interpreted by Aminadi given in such a distinctive
way, written on the wall of the temple, and specifically by God’s finger? There
are numerous modes of revelation that could have been employed, such as
dreams, tongues, visionary symbolism, by one of the many gifts of the Spirit,
or by speaking God’s words: “Thus saith the Lord.” Instead it was delivered
through a visual message that Aminadi had to interpret and read out. Such
an unusual medium of prophecy might be resorted to when other methods
(like the spoken word) have not succeeded in getting the people’s attention
before the destroying armies or angels begin their work. This would account
for the drama of the experience but still not for its specific form. Why employ
writing by God’s finger instead of giving a sign in the heavens, speaking out
of a whirlwind (as God did to Job), sending an angel with a drawn sword (as
God did to Balaam), or any other distinctive medium?
The reason for using one medium over another is often that the me-
dium chosen to communicate a message can become part of the message itself
that sharpens, reinforces, and carries part of its content. In the case of God
speaking to Job out of a whirlwind, the form through which the message is
presented is tailored to the message itself. God demands to know of Job by
what right he questions God’s understanding and will as nature’s creator and
master, demonstrating the power of nature of which he speaks—and his own
mastery of it—by clothing himself in the whirlwind. In the case of the Lord’s
message to Balaam also, the medium—an angel with a drawn sword—rein-
forces the message that Balaam must act in the role of prophet only as the
Lord commands or he will be destroyed (Num. 22:21–35). After later using
his prophetic role to mislead the Midianites and Israelites into offering sac-
rifices to Baal at Peor (25:1–5; 31:8, 16) and thus ignoring the sword in the
hand of the angel, Balaam dies by a sword in the hand of an Israelite (31:1–8).
As the medium was carefully tailored to the message in the cases of Job
and Balaam, so it was also in that of Aminadi. Writing by the finger of God
was not a neutral medium through which to communicate (if any ever is),
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but it was one laden with symbolic meaning and historical connections that
the audience would have recognized and that comprised part of the message
itself. To a pious Israelite, or anyone familiar with the Bible, the medium of
writing by the finger of God evokes the giving of the Ten Commandments,
which God inscribed in this way on stone tablets (Ex. 31:18; Deut. 9:10).
The use of the same medium to give this message as God had used to give
the Ten Commandments on Sinai has several functions or effects. First, it
confirms the story of the Ten Commandments having been given in that way,
reinforcing their divine authority. Second, it imparts to the new message the
same authority held by the Ten Commandments. Third, it connects the new
revelation to the theme of commandments, implying that it almost certainly
reiterated the perennial message of the prophets to the Nephites: keep the
commandments, because your spiritual well-being, material prosperity, and
ultimate survival depend on it.
The writing of this covenant on the temple wall by the finger of God would
have demonstrated that it was as divine in origin and immutable as the God-
inscribed commandments themselves. The temple of Nephi, which lacked
the actual stone tablets inscribed by God’s finger and held in the temple of
Solomon, would now possess an equivalent reminder of the commandments’
divine authorship and of God’s presence in the temple—a presence granted
conditionally, so long as his people did not pollute the temple and themselves
to the point that He would have to withdraw his Spirit and thus leave them
to destruction. Removing all room for doubt, these and other consequences of
breaking the commandments would have been literally spelled out and written
in stone—God’s word assuring that the Nephites could not prosper if they
did not keep his commandments would have been mercifully verified by this
miraculous message of warning before it was verified in their destruction.15
Aminadi, like Abinadi, delivered his message in a way that evoked (as
strongly as any could) the inscribing of the commandments on the stone
tablets of Sinai, because the purpose of Aminadi’s prophetic mission was the
same as Abinadi’s—to demonstrate to the king, priests, and people of the land
of Nephi the literal divine origin of the commandments and the necessity to
salvation and survival of keeping them. The people comprising the original
Nephite nation in the land of Nephi, however, did not heed this message, and
they were eventually destroyed for continued disobedience to the command-
ments—except for those led away by Mosiah1.
15. In the strongest reiteration of the Ten Commandments and God’s covenant
with the Nephites, his finger would have written both on the temple wall, along with
a specific warning that without repentance destruction was imminent.
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16. Gardner, Second Witness, 4:164. Commentator Daniel H. Ludlow has said of
Amulek’s mention of Aminadi: “This is the only time Aminadi is mentioned, and our
present Book of Mormon gives no further details concerning the writing upon the
wall of the temple written by the finger of God. Evidently an account of this incident
was recorded on the large plates of Nephi, but Mormon did not include it in his
abridgment.” Daniel H. Ludlow, A Companion to Your Study of the Book of Mormon,
198. Ludlow’s conclusion that the story of Aminadi, although on the large plates of
Nephi, must not have been included in Mormon’s abridgment since it is not in the
extant text fails to take into account that much of Mormon’s abridgment is lost.
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Aminadi’s identity beyond this brief mention, apparently assuming his readers
would know the significance of the writing on wall incident.17 Royal Skousen
notes the “abruptness” with which this name, like the name Muloch (Mulek)
in Mosiah 25:2, is introduced, and he posits that Aminadi therefore “may have
been mentioned” in the lost manuscript. Anita Wells similarly reasons that
Mormon had introduced Aminadi earlier in his abridgment, “otherwise one
might suppose he would have either explained the reference or not included it.”
I concur: given that Mormon was writing for an audience whose only knowl-
edge of the Nephites would be through his book, he could only assume the
reader’s familiarity with the story if he had included it earlier in his record.18
Mormon’s quotation of Amulek’s cryptic allusion to Aminadi without further
explanation thus attests that he had included the fuller story in the early, lost
portion of his abridgment.
Aminadi and the Nephite Temple
The most striking thing about the story of Aminadi and the writing on
the wall is what it reveals about the function of temples among the Nephites.
The temple, as seen here, is much more than a house of sacrifice. For the
Nephites, as it functions in the story of Aminadi, the temple is where God’s
presence resides and may be entered, where covenant relationship with God
is established or reaffirmed, and where hidden knowledge can be acquired.
The writing on the wall by God’s finger at the temple of Nephi demon-
strated his presence there, the sacredness of the place, and that it was to be
kept holy. In the temple manifestation for which Aminadi acted as divine
interpreter, the Lord affirmed the oaths he had spoken to Lehi and Nephi
blessing the land to those who keep the commandments and cursing it to
those who break them, and He did so by writing this covenant with his finger
just as He had Israel’s covenant at Sinai. Here, the temple is also a place for
inquiring after and receiving hidden knowledge. While a distinctive feature of
the narrative is the medium employed to deliver the divine message—namely,
the finger of God writing on the temple wall—the most distinctive aspect of
this revelation is that while its message was delivered publicly, the content of
the message remained hidden until interpreted by Aminadi. Thus, the revela-
tion was unfolded in two stages: first a presentation of symbols, and only
17. Verneil W. Simmons similarly observed, “When Mormon wrote the words of
Amulek he apparently felt no further need to explain them.” Simmons, Peoples, Places
and Prophecies, 161.
18. Royal Skousen, Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, 3:1465.
Anita Cramer Wells, “Lost—But Not Forgotten—116 Pages: What the Book of
Mormon Might Have Included,” 8.
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19. A similar revelatory pattern may be found in the corresponding gifts of tongues
and the interpretation of tongues, the two requiring each other, in sequence, to
impart a full divine revelation (1 Cor. 12:10, 30; 14:5, 13–15, 26–28).
20. Donald W. Parry, “Sinai as Sanctuary and Mountain of God,” 482–500.
21. “Discourse, 1 May 1842, as Reported by Willard Richards.”
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22. M. Catherine Thomas, “The Brother of Jared at the Veil,” 388–98; P. Scott
Ferguson, “Mahonri’s Model for Temple Worship: Rending the Veil of Unbelief,” 37–45.
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displeasure the people would have none of it (Ex. 19:10, 20:18–21). Instead,
the Lord touched the stone tablets, transmitting something of Himself—both
a symbolic presence and an actual holiness—into them. These tablets then
not only represented His presence, they embodied it, as if a portion of divinity
inhered in the grooved stone so that He was understood to be near when the
Ark of the Covenant bearing those tablets was at hand. The temple was built
to be a house for God by housing the stone tablets of the Law that He had
touched. It was this presence through the stone tablets that made the Ark the
site of the mercy seat, God’s throne on earth (Ex. 25:22).
The giving of the commandments by the finger of God on Sinai was
regarded as a binding covenant on the children of Israel (Deut. 5:2, 29:1; 1
Kgs. 8:9; 2 Chr. 5:10; Gal. 4:24). Before giving the commandments, the Lord
pledged to them, “if ye will obey my voice indeed, and keep my covenant,
then ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto me above all people . . . and ye shall
be unto me a kingdom of priests, and an holy nation.” In response, “all the
people answered together, and said, All that the Lord hath spoken we will
do” (Ex. 19:5–8; Deut. 26:16–19). Contingent on their obedience to this
covenant at Sinai to keep the Lord’s commandments was their prosperity and
prolonged life on the land of their inheritance (Deut. 5:2, 30–33).
In the traditional biblical story of the Ten Commandments, Moses broke
the tablets in his wrath over his people’s worship of the golden calf. God
then provided a replacement, writing the same words again on new tablets
(Ex. 34:1–2; Deut. 10:1–2). However, in Joseph Smith’s prophetic revision
of Deuteronomy 10:2, the passage instead has God withholding from the
second set of tablets things that had been written on the first but for which
the Israelites had shown themselves unworthy: “And I will write on the tables
the words that were in the first tables which thou brakest, save the words of the
everlasting covenant of the holy priesthood” (JST Deut. 10:2).23
These same themes that play out in the story of Aminadi at the temple
of Nephi and that of Moses on Mount Sinai appear again in the story of the
brother of Jared on Mount Shelem. Just as Moses took the second set of stone
tablets that he had hewn to Mount Sinai for inscription by God’s touch, the
brother of Jared took the stones he manufactured up Mount Shelem for il-
lumination by his touch. At Shelem, as in the temple of Nephi in Aminadi’s
day, the Lord reached His hand through the veil. He then touched the stones
one by one with his finger, imparting holiness and power to them as he had
to Moses’s stone tablets. In the process, the brother of Jared saw the Lord’s
hand, provoking a dialogue with the Lord that tested the brother of Jared’s
23. The italicized words are those added in the Joseph Smith Translation.
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knowledge and faith; he was then admitted into the Lord’s presence and thus
redeemed from the Fall.
Shelem is also associated with covenant in the brother of Jared story. The
Jaredites are described as having a covenant similar to that of the Nephites,
through which the Lord promises that they will prosper if they serve him but
threatening their destruction if they take the opposite course (Ether 2:15).24
It is unclear in the narrative when this covenant was made, though Moroni’s
abridgement of the Jaredite record first introduces the covenant in the pas-
sages immediately preceding the Jaredites’ arrival at the place they called
Moriancumer that adjoined Mount Shelem (v. 15).
One of the strongest themes of the story of the brother of Jared at Mount
Shelem is that of hidden knowledge. There is a public portion of his revelation
and a hidden one. Correspondingly, the Book of Ether tells of two records of
his experience on the mountain: the one we read in the Book of Ether, and the
one withheld from us and contained only in the sealed portion of the golden
plates. The brother of Jared was told to write and seal up the panoramic vision
he was given of the full story of humankind, past, present, and future (Ether
3:22, 27). Moroni, though granting his reader a particle of that world-encom-
passing revelation in his record, was similarly told to seal up the full account of
this vision, which he had transcribed onto the golden plates (4:5).
Moroni’s plates, containing the sealed record, were to be hidden up and
withheld because of unbelief (Ether 4:3). If the sealed plates could be found
today, they would still be in an unreadable script lost after the tower of Babel
to all but the now extinct Jaredites, an esoteric language originally “given by
the finger of God” (Moses 6:46) and comprehensible only to the few who
can read it through the interpreters given to the brother of Jared (Ether 3:22).
There are thus two types of plates, or tablets, containing material from the
brother of Jared—unsealed and sealed, paralleling the two sets of tablets given
at Sinai: one manifest, one hidden. The unsealed plates parallel the second,
unbroken set of stone tablets, which contained only the lesser law. The sealed
plates parallel the broken (and therefore perhaps unreadable) tablets contain-
ing the higher law, the texts of each unavailable because of the collective
unrighteousness of their intended audiences.
Yet even for the reader who cannot read a sealed book, a book hid up
and conveyed in an unknown tongue, Moroni promises that its content can
someday be made available through repentance and faith like that demon-
strated by the brother of Jared (4:6–7, 13–15). Until then the reader must
24. On the Jaredite covenant, see Lee L. Donaldson, “The Plates of Ether and the
Covenant of the Book of Mormon,” 69–79.
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abide the lesser portion of the revelation, in hope of obtaining those “greater
things” (4:4–14; 3 Ne. 26:9–10).
With this review of these temple-related narratives of the finger of God,
we can better discern the temple’s functions in the story of Aminadi and
other Restoration scriptures as a place of entering the divine presence, making
covenants, and acquiring hidden knowledge. The writing on the wall of the
temple in the Aminadi story by the finger of God symbolizes and actualizes
his presence in the temple and further imbues it with divinity. By this writing
he signifies that he had been there, was there yet, and would remain unless or
until forced by the sanctuary’s pollution to withdraw his presence. It further
demonstrates that the temple was to be kept holy in how it was treated and by
those who entered there keeping themselves holy by keeping his command-
ments and thus abiding their end of the covenant.
God’s intention for Israel, as revealed at Sinai, was to bring all his people
into his presence. This did not happen to them collectively, but in the parallel
story of the brother of Jared we see it happen to him individually through a
temple ordeal or test by which he obtained a sure knowledge of God and was
redeemed out of the human condition of separation from God. By the light of
the Sinai story, the writing by the finger of God on the wall of the temple of
Nephi can be seen to recreate the covenant context in which the Law was given
and to reaffirm both the Lord’s covenant with Lehi and Nephi and also his
original covenant with Israel that if they kept the commandments, they would
prosper and see their days prolonged on the promised land (Deut. 5:30–33).
Placing the Aminadi temple incident in the context of the other events
in which the finger of God plays a role, we can see that it involved both lower
and higher levels of revelation. The lower-level (but vital) message to all was
essentially that God was present—that the temple of Nephi, like Sinai, was
a sacred place and must treated as such, giving implicit warning against any-
thing or anyone impure entering the temple. The higher-level message was
the specific content of God’s word as revealed through Aminadi’s interpreta-
tion thereof—his affirmation of his covenant with their fathers and whatever
other meaning he chose to convey.
In each of the three incidents in Latter-day Saint scripture involving the
finger of God, there is a temple context and revelatory knowledge given in
lower and higher levels or degrees, the lesser things, which are available to all,
and the greater things, which are esoteric—withheld from those, including
the mass of the people, who are unprepared for them. The lesser portions
of these revelations point to and require further revelation, either inspired
interpretation plumbing their deep or hidden, meanings, or additional revela-
tion supplementing and completing them. Such deeper meanings and higher
truths, though hidden from world, are potentially available to those who pu-
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rify themselves and inquire—like Lehi, the brother of Jared, and Aminadi—
at a temple and in faith.
Sadly, the example of Aminadi was lost on the generations that followed
after him. These did not grow in spiritual light, but ripened in iniquity. But
before the harvest, the Lord would send another messenger into the vineyard,
one who like Aminadi would warn, like Moses would deliver, and the like the
brother of Jared would attain to the presence of God: Mosiah1.