Here we have another example of the simple past-tense form serving as the past-participial form, namely, rose instead of the standard risen. This is the only example of rose being used as a past participle in the text. All the other instances of the past participle for the verb rise take the standard risen; five refer to Christ rising from the dead, but there are two more that refer to rising up in rebellion, and they are found earlier in this chapter:
The critical text will restore in Alma 61:7 the single instance of past-participial rose. Such nonstandard usage is quite common in the original text (see the example of had came under 1 Nephi 5:1, 4 as well as the general discussion under past participle in volume 3).
Summary: Restore in Alma 61:7 the original past-participial form rose (“those which have rose up in rebellion against us”), the reading of the earliest extant text.