Rick Grunder wrote: ↑Mon Jun 16, 2025 1:48 am
Wang Chung notes: "The Book of Mormon 'chiasmus' are of varying and non-matching size, which is a clue that these are not real chiasmus."
And that is the trouble with Alma 36 in the context of this discussion. If, for example, a diagram of faith-promoting chiasms were to leave out an element of major importance from its source text - such as a vision of God - because it does not fit the chiastic pattern claimed, would that not be a problem?
Please see my color coding of Alma 36 in
Mormon Parallels, pp. 737-740, available as a free PDF download of my Gilbert Hunt entry, here:
https://www.rickgrunder.com/parallels/mp193.pdf
Modern studies of Hebrew rhetoric show that in long, complex chiasms, not every narrative or doctrinal element must be paired or included at the same rhetorical level. Ancient chiasms often organize content into hierarchical, subordinate units, and not all important details are necessarily mirrored in the structure’s surface-level pairs. The absence of a direct pairing for a specific element does not automatically invalidate the presence of a deliberate chiastic form.
All elements do not need to fill in neatly into a chiastic pattern for the structure to be authentic. In reality, even in biblical chiasms, there is often variation in the size, length, and content of paired units. Some sections may be longer, shorter, or contain unique material, and reverse polarity (where paired elements contrast rather than repeat) is a well-documented feature. Scholarly analysis of Alma 36 recognizes these features and does not require mechanical symmetry for legitimacy.
Some critics of Alma 36’s chiasm sometimes point out that some diagrams focus only on select verses or omit certain content. However, defenders have shown that using multi-level rhetorical analysis, the entire chapter—including all major themes—can be integrated into the structure without omitting key elements. The critique that important content is “left out” often arises from a surface-level or overly rigid expectation of chiastic form.
https://rsc.BYU.edu/give-ear-my-words/r ... ng-alma-36
Recent studies demonstrate that every word in Alma 36 can be integrated meaningfully into its multilevel chiastic structure, including all central events and themes. The structure is not created by omitting major elements, but rather by recognizing that not every detail needs to be paired at the same rhetorical level, as is typical in ancient chiasmus.
The most important turning point—Alma’s appeal to Jesus Christ and the atonement—is placed at the very center of the chiasm, not omitted or minimized. The narrative of his conversion, including his visionary experience, is present within the structure.
Genuine ancient chiasms, especially in longer texts, often feature subordinate units of varying size and do not require every element to be mirrored exactly. This means that some details may not have a direct counterpart, but this does not invalidate the structure or require omission of major content.
https://scripturecentral.org/archive/me ... -alma-36-0
https://interpreterfoundation.org/cfm-b ... ing-point/
https://www.ldsscriptureteachings.org/2 ... -the-text/
https://archive.bookofmormoncentral.org ... lma_36.pdf
Regards,
MG