MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 02, 2026 9:12 pmCommentary on 2 Nephi 2:13 showing internal consistency with the ancient world. (source:CoPilot AI)
Below is a structured, side‑by‑side comparison showing how 2 Nephi 2:13 uses the same rhetorical devices found throughout the Hebrew Bible and Second Temple literature. When you see them next to each other, the pattern becomes unmistakable: hyperbolic conditional collapse, modal negation, and cosmic‑dependency rhetoric.
1. “If X were not, nothing could exist” — a standard ancient rhetorical form
This pattern appears repeatedly in ancient scripture. It is not literal metaphysics; it is covenantal rhetoric meant to show dependence on divine order.
2 Nephi 2:13
“If ye shall say there is no law, ye shall also say there is no sin… no righteousness… no happiness… no God… and if there is no God… all things must have vanished away.”
Psalm 104:29
“If you hide your face, they are troubled; if you take away their breath, they die, and return to dust.”
Not literal: God “hiding His face” is not a metaphysical mechanism. It’s rhetorical collapse.
Job 34:14–15
“If He set His heart upon man… all flesh shall perish together, and man shall turn again unto dust.”
Again, not literal metaphysics. It’s a rhetorical “remove God → everything collapses.”
Wisdom of Solomon 11:25
“If you hated anything, you would not have made it.”
This is modal logic, not temporal logic: “If God were not benevolent, creation could not be.”
Pattern match:
All use hypothetical negation to show dependence on God, not to describe literal disappearance.
2. “Vanished away” as modal impossibility, not temporal sequence
Ancient writers often use “vanish,” “melt,” “flee,” or “dissolve” to describe non‑being, not literal destruction.
2 Nephi 2:13
“All things must have vanished away.”
Psalm 46:6
“The earth melted.”
Not literal melting; it means “could not stand without God.”
Isaiah 34:4
“The heavens shall be rolled together as a scroll.”
Not literal astrophysics; it’s modal collapse.
2 Esdras 7:33
“The world shall be turned into the old silence.”
Meaning: “Without God’s sustaining order, the world would revert to non‑being.”
Pattern match:
“Vanished away” = “could not exist,” not “once existed and then disappeared.”
3. Hyperbolic conditional chains
Ancient texts frequently build cascading hypotheticals to emphasize dependence on divine law.
2 Nephi 2:13
Law → sin → righteousness → happiness → misery → God → creation → existence
Deuteronomy 28
Obedience → blessing → prosperity → peace
Disobedience → curse → famine → destruction → exile
Not a logical proof; a rhetorical escalation.
Job 8:11–13
If no water → no reeds
If no reeds → no growth
If no growth → no life
So are all who forget God
A chain of consequences meant to persuade, not to prove.
Ben Sira 33:13–15
Good is the opposite of evil, life the opposite of death…
Look at all the works of the Most High; they come in pairs, one the opposite of the other.
This is the exact same “opposition in all things” logic.
Pattern match:
Chains of negation are a rhetorical device, not a formal syllogism.
4. “Without God, creation collapses” — a common ancient theme
The idea that God’s existence is the condition for all existence is widespread.
2 Nephi 2:13
“If there is no God… neither the earth… for there could have been no creation.”
Psalm 33:6
“By the word of the LORD were the heavens made.”
Hebrews 1:3
“He upholds all things by the word of his power.”
Wisdom of Solomon 1:7
“The Spirit of the Lord fills the world and holds all things together.”
Pattern match:
Creation depends on God’s sustaining presence; remove God → remove creation.
5. Why this matters for the “contradiction”
When 2 Nephi 2:13 is read as ancient rhetoric, not modern analytic logic, the apparent contradiction disappears:
“Vanished away” = modal impossibility (“could not exist”), not temporal disappearance.
The chain is persuasive rhetoric, not a literal metaphysical proof.
The structure matches Hebrew wisdom literature, not Greek logical argumentation.
Your critique is valid only if the text is forced into a genre it was not written in.
Here's the response I got, using what you said was your prompt of Commentary on 2 Nephi 2:13 showing internal consistency with the ancient world.
Copilot wrote:
2 Nephi 2:13 is one of the densest philosophical statements in the Book of Mormon, and it resonates strongly with patterns of ancient Near Eastern and Mediterranean thought. The verse argues that if there were no law, no sin, no righteousness, no punishment, and no happiness, then “all things must have vanished away.” In other words, the universe depends on meaningful opposites.
A concise takeaway: The logic of 2 Nephi 2:13 reflects an ancient worldview in which cosmic order, moral law, and the existence of opposites were inseparable. This makes the passage internally consistent with the intellectual world of the ancient Near East and the wider classical world.
Opposites as the Foundation of Reality
Ancient cultures often saw the world as structured by pairs of opposites—light/dark, order/chaos, life/death. These weren’t abstract ideas; they were the building blocks of existence.
Israelite thought: The Hebrew Bible frequently frames creation as God imposing order (ḥokmah, mishpat) on chaos (tohu va‑vohu). Without law, the world collapses back into nothingness.
Zoroastrian Persia: Moral dualism (asha vs. druj—truth vs. lie) was seen as essential to the functioning of the cosmos.
Greek philosophy: Pre‑Socratic thinkers like Heraclitus taught that “all things come to be in accordance with strife,” meaning opposites generate reality.
2 Nephi 2:13 fits naturally into this intellectual environment: if opposites disappear, the cosmos dissolves.
Law as Cosmic Order, Not Just Rules
In the ancient world, “law” was not merely legal code—it was the principle that held the universe together.
Egyptian Ma’at: A cosmic law of truth, justice, and order. Without Ma’at, creation collapses.
Israelite Torah: More than commandments; it was the sustaining order of life and covenant.
Mesopotamian me: Divine decrees that structured reality itself.
Lehi’s argument that without law “there is no God” reflects this worldview: a universe without divine order is a universe without a divine ruler.
Moral Consequences as Necessary Realities
The verse links law to sin, righteousness, punishment, and happiness. This chain reflects ancient assumptions:
Moral cause and effect was seen as woven into the fabric of the cosmos.
Blessings and curses in Deuteronomy operate on the same logic: remove the law, and moral categories collapse.
Wisdom literature (Proverbs, Job, Ecclesiastes) treats righteousness and wickedness as real forces with real consequences.
Lehi’s reasoning mirrors this: if moral categories vanish, meaningful existence vanishes.
“All Things Must Have Vanished Away”
This final claim echoes ancient creation theology:
In Genesis, without God’s ordering word, the world is “formless and void.”
In Ugaritic texts, the defeat of chaos monsters is required for creation to stand.
In Greek thought, removing the principles of form and distinction leads to apeiron—the undifferentiated void.
Lehi’s conclusion is consistent with this: a universe without distinctions collapses into non‑being.
Internal Consistency Within the Book of Mormon
2 Nephi 2 as a whole builds a coherent philosophical system:
Opposition is necessary (v. 11).
Agency requires law (v. 13).
Redemption requires agency (v. 26).
Christ’s atonement preserves agency (v. 27).
The logic is tight: remove one element, and the entire structure falls apart—mirroring ancient covenantal and cosmological thinking.
A Non‑Obvious Insight
The verse does more than argue for opposites—it argues for a universe that is morally intelligible. Ancient peoples feared chaos not because it was dangerous, but because it was meaningless. Lehi’s argument is essentially that meaning itself depends on structured moral reality, a deeply ancient idea.
If you want to explore this further, I can look at how this verse compares to specific ancient texts like the Instruction of Amenemope, the Enuma Elish, or the Dead Sea Scrolls’ dualism.
As I'm sure you can see, the two responses are quite different.
That's not even considering how you jimmied the response by asking for Copilot to argue your premise for you. A request for the AI to argue against it, provides the same kinds of 'proofs.'