Enos 1:8 Textual Variants

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because of thy faith in Christ whom thou hast [not >js never before 1|not A|never before BCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST] heard nor seen

In his editing for the 1837 edition, Joseph Smith changed the original not here in Enos 1:8 to never before, perhaps because Enos had already heard the voice of the Lord—that is, just a moment before. Of course, such a clarification in the reading relies upon a very fine distinction in timing. Perhaps Joseph Smith wanted to eliminate any hint of contradiction.

This emendation also seems to rely on identifying the speaker as God the Son rather than God the Father. Yet one can readily interpret this conversation as being between God the Father and Enos, which would eliminate any need to edit the text here. In this conversation (up through verse 18 of the book of Enos), the Lord continually refers to Christ as a distinct person, not only here in verse 8 but also in verse 15: “whatsoever thing ye shall ask in faith believing that ye shall receive in the name of Christ ye shall receive it”. If the Son had been talking with Enos, we might expect him to have used the phraseology “in my name” in verse 15, as he does when he speaks to Alma near the end of the book of Mosiah:

In other places in the Book of Mormon text, when Christ is clearly identified as the speaker, the phraseology is always “in my name” rather than “in the name of Christ”:

In a single passage in 2 Nephi 31, Nephi separately quotes the Father and the Son; the Father uses the phrase “in the name of my Beloved Son” while the Son uses “in my name”:

This difference in usage thus argues that in the book of Enos, the Lord is God the Father rather than God the Son.

Ultimately, however, such a distinction between personages is not crucial to understanding the original reading in Enos 1:8. Even if the Son is the one speaking to Enos, we can readily interpret “not heard nor seen” as meaning ‘not heard nor seen until now’. The critical text will restore the earliest reading, especially since it appears to be intended.

Summary: Restore in Enos 1:8 the original text (“because of thy faith in Christ whom thou hast not heard nor seen”); in order to accept the earliest reading as the original text, it is not necessary to decide whether the speaker is God the Father or God the Son.

Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, Part. 2

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