Gadianton wrote: ↑Fri Nov 07, 2025 1:42 pm
Limhi was again filled with joy on learning from the mouth of Ammon that King Benjamin had a gift from God
Limhi must have been exceptionally gullible. Not even MG would believe it if let's say, an ambassador reported that Kim Jong Un wields a gift to translate records.
Limnor wrote:Most of you are aware of this issue,
First time I've heard of it, I don't know much about Mormon history or the production of the Book of Mormon.
The problem
believers like MG and Skousen have with the "slip up" theory is that it's not just a name change, but the individual bearing the name has this fantastic gift of translation. So now we're not talking about confusing Fred, the brilliant engineer who discovered zero-point energy with Flint, Fred's son, but confusing Fred with Flint, who also discovered zero-point energy. Skeptics can more consistently accept the change, however, they still have somewhat of a challenge because why not also ditch the rest of the description that seems to still indicate Ben? Or why not say, oops, he died 30 years later?
I think other interpretations are possible. However, I'm not following why Mosiah 1 maps to Rigdon and Mosiah 2 maps to Joseph, or why the text would reveal a conflict between Rigdon and Joseph. I do not know enough about what was going on to even speculate. The little I've picked up over the years suggests that Joseph dictated the Book of Mormon orally and his scribes wrote it down. So any theory about different people writing or influencing different parts of the text needs to include a theory of either a) how joseph was influenced to dictate the Rigdon part or b) explain how the manuscript wasn't merely a product of Joseph's dictation and explain how it was put together.
I absolutely love how your mind works, Gad.
I’d ask you to consider the following:
The Benjamin–Mosiah “slip-up” isn’t just a swapped name — it’s a continuity failure tied to who supposedly had the gift of translation.
It’s not like confusing Fred with his son Flint; it’s like confusing two people who both invented zero-point energy.
If Benjamin and Mosiah each translate sacred records, then switching names mid-stream collapses the logic of authorship and revelation.
It was either one or the other.
That’s why Skousen’s fix—stretching Benjamin’s lifespan or calling it an “interpretive issue”—quietly admits the text was edited by human hands because it exposes that the text behaves like a work in progress, not a continuous dictation.
You can see the redaction layers in the plates vs records language: early sections talk about “records” being kept, copied, and abridged (a very human scribal process), while later ones elevate those same records into “plates.”
So the question isn’t whether Joseph dictated; it’s whether what he dictated was his own revelation or an alteration of pre-written material shaped by others (Rigdon’s theology included).
Either way, the seams show, and it is probably enough to highlight the error, but to me, it is a major clue into how the book was composed.