I Have Questions wrote: ↑Mon Oct 27, 2025 4:42 pm
Limnor wrote: ↑Mon Oct 27, 2025 3:46 pm
Together the doubled Ammons, like the swapped royal names, mark the redactional hinge where authorship and authority passes from Rigdon to Joseph.
What looks like a simple error actually contributes to an understanding of what may have actually happened.
I think this is a very interesting train of thought.
Thank you IHQ, that’s exactly the thread I wanted to pull.
When viewed through the redactional framework described by both Joseph—through a convenient revelation to him—and Mormon’s words, the repeated Ammons and the Benjamin/Mosiah error reveal the shift in authorship and authority.
Rather than simple scribal confusion, these moments appear to intentionally maintain narrative continuity while indicating an editorial transition from Rigdon’s theological framework to Joseph’s emerging prophetic voice.
What seems like simple error may, in fact, be key evidence of the Joseph’s editing process itself.
That same pattern shows up in the “miraculous finding” of the Small Plates. The whole episode feels like a built-in justification for a narrative reset and the perfect way to drop the old record and bring in one that conveniently includes the translator’s own prophecy.
Within that frame, it’s not just patchwork, but a strategic narrative and editorial move that lets Joseph reposition himself inside the story in an attempt to preserve continuity while transferring authority.
We will probably never know for sure, but my guess is the original “lost” 116 pages had some veiled reference to Rigdon within them, and Joseph seized the opportunity to replace Rigdon with himself.
Joseph (within the Book of Mormon) speaking on behalf of “the Lord”:
2 Nephi 3:15 And his name shall be called after me; and it shall be after the name of his father. And he shall be like unto me; for the thing, which the Lord shall bring forth by his hand, by the power of the Lord shall bring my people unto salvation.
2 Nephi 3:18 And the Lord said unto me also: I will raise up unto the fruit of thy loins; and I will make for him a spokesman.
Traditionally, in my reading from Mormon historians, this “spokesman” is often considered to be Oliver Cowdery.
My proposal is Joseph considered that spokesman to be Sidney Rigdon, not cutting Rigdon completely out, but relegating his role to that of support to Joseph.