Tim wrote:In both cases, in the space of a few verses, the commonalities are (1) a host of bad guys comes to war against the (2) good guys in a fort. The good guys are (3) prepared, the good guys (4) slaughter the bad guys, whose bodies (5) fill up the ditch around the fort, and the surviving bad guys (6) flee into the forest/wilderness.
Tim, I also noted your impressive work. As you see, I'm deeply disturbed by the book of Alma. In fact, Nightlion just made a stunning observation, that all the dates recorded are pretty much in Alma. His observation blew me away, because I was contemplating how all the kingmen-freemen material is basically in Alma, as well as every instance of the word "freedom". While one might expect that hey, if the Kingmen stuff was limited to Alma, then maybe that just goes hand in hand with "freedom". But that the explication of dates is almost entirely an Alma phenomena as well, which has nothing to do with "freedom" and both matters having everything to do with Late War, and "freedom" never appearing in the Bible, it's quite shocking. And now you are also seeing the very close stories and themes from Alma in Late War.
If you have the time, go back to the Bible and make sure that this isn't a story that appears there too, as many of the battles in the Book of Mormon are lifted from the Bible, and Late War is also lifting from the Bible.
As an example, the "stripling issue", well, David in the KJV is referred to as a "stripling". That's obviously the common source for the Book of Mormon young warriors and the Bible talk of Late War. Add in the reference to 2000 and it gets more interesting; but must keep the KJV as a control. Even if it is in the Bible it's interesting, but the points that are very interesting are what go above and beyond.