Jacob
Tender and Stern
John Hilton III, "Jacob: Tender and Stern," in Voices of the Book of Mormon: Discovering Distinctive Witnesses of Jesus Christ (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book), 25–40.
Jacob’s life was filled with deep sorrows and tender mercies, similar to his elder brother Nephi’s.[1] And yet there were some differences that likely shaped who he was and the voice he had. Jacob never experienced the comfortable life in Jerusalem. Born in a desert to a mother who lived off raw meat and God’s grace, Jacob experienced challenging formative years. His initial social circle consisted of only his at-times troubled nuclear and extended family.
At a young age he sailed across the ocean; on this voyage he witnessed his parents “brought down . . . near to be cast with sorrow into a watery grave” and was “grieved because of the afflictions of [his] mother” (1 Nephi 18:18–19). In his “childhood [he] suffered afflictions and much sorrow, because of the rudeness of [his brothers]” (2 Nephi 2:2). At the same time, Jacob knew “the greatness of God” and “beheld in [his] youth” the glory of Jesus Christ (2 Nephi 2:2, 4).
Toward the end of his life, he reflected that his years had “passed away like as it were a unto us a dream, [his people] being a lonesome and solemn people, wanderers, cast out from Jerusalem, born in tribulation, in a wilderness, and hated of our brethren, which caused wars and contentions” (Jacob 7:26). On the other hand, he reverently acknowledged God’s greatness and mercy (see Jacob 4:8; 6:4), knew of Christ, and had hope of his coming (see Jacob 4:4). Whether the duality of his experience and faith informed Jacob’s tender and thoughtful spirit or the other way around, it’s clear that Jacob was coming from a complicated place of hardship, empathy, faith, and love.
Jacob’s varied experiences may connect with a duality in his voice, which is stern yet tender, boldly rebuking while lovingly testifying and inviting. Jacob records some 8,500 of his own words, placing him as the seventh most frequently heard voice in the Book of Mormon.[2] However, he is sometimes underappreciated among Book of Mormon prophets. C. Terry Warner writes, “This is partly because his story is scattered over 125 pages of the Book of Mormon, and partly because he wrote little about himself. Nevertheless, from what we do know, a picture emerges of a shepherd of his people who also loved us, the Saints of future years, and who by that love calls forth our love for him.”[3]
Even though readers tend to focus more on major narrators such as Nephi or Mormon than they do Jacob, several scholars have written about Jacob’s contributions and distinctive voice. Deidre Nicole Green began her 2020 book Jacob: A Brief Theological Introduction by writing, “Jacob has a unique voice in the Book of Mormon.”[4] Writing some thirty years earlier, scholar John Tanner noted, “Jacob’s style is unique among Book of Mormon authors. He simply sounds different. He used a more personal vocabulary than most and took a more intimate approach to his audience.”[5]
Tanner highlighted specific words that are predominantly used by Jacob in the Book of Mormon. For example, Tanner pointed out that half of the eight references to anxiety in the Book of Mormon occur in Jacob’s words. In fact, Jacob is the only individual in the Book of Mormon to use this word more than once. At the outset of his discourse beginning in 2 Nephi 6, Jacob states, “I am desirous for the welfare of your souls. Yea, mine anxiety is great for you; and ye yourselves know that it ever has been” (2 Nephi 6:3). At the start of another significant sermon, given several years later, Jacob said, “I this day am weighed down with much more desire and anxiety for the welfare of your souls than I have hitherto been” (Jacob 2:3).[6] Thus not only does Jacob most frequently use the word anxiety, he also has a distinctive way of using it by describing his feelings before beginning important discourses.
Scholar Marilyn Arnold similarly points to the tender nature of Jacob’s writing, suggesting that his words stand in contrast to those of others. She writes, “Although Jacob is gifted in language and solid in his testimony, to me he seems unusually tender, even a bit fragile, in his emotional makeup.”[7]
In pointing to Jacob’s unique writing style, Tanner identifies several specific words that are used either exclusively or predominantly by Jacob in the Book of Mormon. Tanner writes that half of the occurrences of “shame” come from Jacob and notes that “he is the only person to have used delicate, contempt, and lonesome. Likewise, he is the only Book of Mormon author to have employed wound in reference to emotions; and he never used it, as everyone else did, to describe a physical injury. Similarly, Jacob used pierce or its variants frequently (four of the ten instances in the Book of Mormon), and he used it exclusively in a spiritual sense. Such evidence suggests an author who lived close to his emotions and who knew how to express those emotions.”[8]
Part of Tanner’s overall thesis is that individual Book of Mormon authors, such as Jacob, have distinctive writing styles. He writes, “I do not believe that God’s co-authorship normally eradicates an individual’s voice, since the Lord speaks through his servants ‘in their weakness, after the manner of their language’ (Doctrine and Covenants 1:24).”[9] The purpose of this chapter is to deepen our understanding of Jacob, the person and prophet, by further examining distinctive aspects of his words.
In this chapter I will identify and briefly discuss several phrases that collectively illustrate Jacob’s unique voice. As we will see, Jacob has distinctive ways he speaks of Deity. He also emphasizes harsh words and phrases such as “angels to a devil,” “monster,” “fire and brimstone,” and “awful guilt” (2 Nephi 9:9, 10, 16, 46). At the same time, he tenderly focuses on the power of Christ’s Atonement in unique ways as he teaches of the Lord’s “great condescensions,” “the power of the resurrection,” “the pleasing word of God,” and Christ’s ability to raise us from death and bring us “into the eternal kingdom of God” (Jacob 4:7; 2 Nephi 9:12; Jacob 2:8; 2 Nephi 10:25).
I first identify the specific passages where we hear Jacob’s voice. Next, I discuss Jacob’s references to Deity, followed by distinctive phrases from Jacob found in both 2 Nephi and Jacob. Finally, I examine selected phrases that are unique to Jacob but used in only one of the pericopes—that is to say, sections of text—in which he speaks.
Jacob’s Words in the Book of Mormon
There are two sections in the Book of Mormon where we hear Jacob’s voice in first person. The first is found in a sermon Jacob gives at Nephi’s behest in 2 Nephi 6, 9–10.[10] Although Jacob quotes from others in these chapters, most of the words belong to him.[11] The second pericope is the book of Jacob, which, other than a large quotation from Zenos, is nearly entirely written in Jacob’s voice.[12] When all of Jacob’s words are collected, they account for approximately 3 percent of the text of the Book of Mormon.
It is particularly noteworthy when patterns for Jacob’s words hold across his speech in 2 Nephi 6, 9–10 and the book that bears his name. Because nearly forty pages of text separate 2 Nephi 10 from Jacob 1, we might expect the text from 2 Nephi 6, 9–10 be closer to Nephi’s voice in 2 Nephi 4–5, 11 than to the book of Jacob. However, in several instances Jacob’s distinctive voice can be heard in both pericopes, suggesting that in fact Jacob was indeed a separate author from Nephi.
Jacob’s References to Deity
John W. Welch has pointed out some unique aspects of Jacob’s descriptions of Deity, noting that Jacob uses the word Creator more than any other author (four out of ten total Book of Mormon references), and he accounts for two of the six Book of Mormon uses of the word Maker.[13] Jacob is the only author to refer to Jesus as the “great Creator,” and he does so three times (2 Nephi 9:5, 6; Jacob 3:7). Jacob both numerically and proportionally uses the title “the Holy One of Israel” more than any other author.[14] All of these distinguishing characteristics appear both in 2 Nephi 6, 9–10 and in the book of Jacob, adding credibility to the thesis that Jacob is the unique author of both pericopes.
An easy-to-overlook yet fascinating aspect of Jacob’s references to Deity was pointed out to me by my son Joseph when he was eleven years old. Joseph had been inspired by President Russell M. Nelson’s invitation to find every reference to Jesus Christ in the Book of Mormon.[15] While doing so, Joseph created a spreadsheet of each title and where it occurred. He discovered that Nephi was much more likely than Jacob to use the word Lord but that Jacob was much more likely than Nephi to use the word God. Using the Voices of the Book of Mormon Database, I verified this finding by counting the number of times that Nephi and Jacob each used the words Lord and God. The results are summarized in table 2.1.
Table 2.1. Comparing Nephi’s and Jacob’s uses of the words Lord and God.
| Speaker | Total uses of Lord | Uses of Lord per 1,000 words | Total uses of God | Uses of God per 1,000 words |
| Nephi | 271 | 9.6 | 203 | 7.2 |
| Jacob | 50 | 5.9 | 107 | 12.6 |
These data clearly show different frequency patterns in the ways Nephi and Jacob use the words Lord and God. Nephi is much more likely to use the word Lord than Jacob is, whereas Jacob is more likely to use the word God.[16]
Jacob’s distinctive use of the word God holds true both in 2 Nephi 6, 9–10 and in the book of Jacob, again emphasizing that Jacob’s distinctive voice remains intact in the chapters attributed to his voice. Although many modern readers might consider the words Lord and God synonymous, Nephi and Jacob use the word God with distinctively different frequencies that are statistically measurable.[17] One commonly accepted measure of statistical significance in corpus linguistics is log-likelihood (LL). The higher the LL, the less likely that differences in word use between two texts are due to chance.[18] An LL score of 6.63 is equivalent to a p value < .01, indicating statistical significance. When comparing Jacob’s words to Nephi’s, the LL values for “God” and “Lord” are respectively 20.5 and 11.0, making it extremely unlikely that their distinctive usages of these words occur by chance. It is also interesting to note that the word God, which Jacob has a penchant for using, does not appear in Jacob 5. This chapter, the longest in the book of Jacob, is almost entirely a quotation from a different voice—that of Zenos.
Distinctive Phrases in Both 2 Nephi and Jacob
In addition to his descriptions of Deity, there are other phrases that are distinctively used by Jacob across his words in 2 Nephi and the book of Jacob. In this section, I briefly identify and discuss these phrases; my purpose is not to exhaustively analyze each case but rather to broadly illustrate the distinctive phrases used by Jacob.
Fire and brimstone and endless torment
The phrase “fire and brimstone” appears ten times in the Book of Mormon, six of which are in the words of Jacob.[19] The first time it occurs in the Book of Mormon is in 2 Nephi 9, where it appears three times. In this stern discourse Jacob warns of the torment that awaits those who are filthy. Jacob specifically identifies the filthy as “the devil and his angels” and says their torment “is as a lake of fire and brimstone, whose flame ascendeth up forever and ever and has no end” (2 Nephi 9:16). He also twice highlights a merciful Savior who “delivereth his saints from . . . that lake of fire and brimstone, which is endless torment” (2 Nephi 9:19; compare 2 Nephi 9:26).
As in 2 Nephi 9:16, the next time Jacob uses the phrase “fire and brimstone,” it is connected with the devil’s angels. In Jacob 3:11 he exhorts, “Arouse the faculties of your souls; shake yourselves that ye may awake from the slumber of death; and loose yourselves from the pains of hell that ye may not become angels to the devil, to be cast into that lake of fire and brimstone which is the second death.”
Jacob’s final two uses of the phrase “fire and brimstone” occur in Jacob 6:10, where he writes that those who reject the words of Christ “must go away into that lake of fire and brimstone, whose flames are unquenchable, and whose smoke ascendeth up forever and ever, which lake of fire and brimstone is endless torment.” This highlights another distinctive Jacob phrase. In both 2 Nephi 9:19 and 2 Nephi 9:26, Jacob defines the “lake of fire and brimstone” as “endless torment,” something he reiterates in Jacob 6:10. The phrase “endless torment” appears six times in the Book of Mormon (Jacob accounts for half of those usages). The only other individual who connects “fire and brimstone” with “endless torment” is Nephi (see 2 Nephi 28:23).[20]
Angels to the devil
There are six instances in the Book of Mormon that specifically refer to the devil’s angels, and half of them come from Jacob (see 2 Nephi 9:9, 16; Jacob 3:11).[21] In addition to the passages described in the previous section, Jacob teaches that without God’s mercy and grace, we would “become devils, angels to a devil, to be shut out from the presence of our God” (2 Nephi 9:9). Jacob is the only author on the small plates to talk about the devil’s angels.[22] He is also the only Book of Mormon author to connect the devil’s angels with fire and brimstone.[23]
Awful guilt
The word awful and its derivatives appear forty-nine times in the Book of Mormon; thirteen of these occurrences (27 percent) come from Jacob. Jacob speaks of the “awful” state of the wicked (2 Nephi 9:27), the “awfulness of yielding to the enticings” of the devil (2 Nephi 9:39), and the “awful consequences” of “every kind of sin” (Jacob 3:12). Jacob’s use of “awful monster” (discussed in a later section of this chapter) is unique to his sermon in 2 Nephi; his use of the phrase “awful guilt” is also unique to Jacob and appears in both pericopes where he speaks.
In 2 Nephi 9:46 Jacob says, “Prepare your souls for that glorious day when justice shall be administered unto the righteous, even the day of judgment, that ye may not shrink with awful fear; that ye may not remember your awful guilt in perfectness, and be constrained to exclaim: Holy, holy are thy judgments, O Lord God Almighty—but I know my guilt; I transgressed thy law, and my transgressions are mine; and the devil hath obtained me, that I am a prey to his awful misery.” For Jacob, “awful guilt” connects to the day of judgment when, in front of God, we acknowledge our sins.
This same structure appears in Jacob’s other use of this phrase. As he draws to the conclusion of his book, Jacob tells those who reject prophetic words that “the power of the redemption and the resurrection, which is in Christ, will bring you to stand with shame and awful guilt before the bar of God” (Jacob 6:9).
To modern ears, sermons on “fire and brimstone,” “endless torment,” becoming “angels to a devil,” and “awful guilt” sound extremely severe. In the following generation, Jacob’s son Enos tells readers, “There was nothing save it was exceeding harshness, preaching and prophesying of wars, and contentions, and destructions, and continually reminding them of death, and the duration of eternity, and the judgments and the power of God, and all these things—stirring them up continually to keep them in the fear of the Lord. . . . Nothing short of these things . . . would keep [the people] from going down speedily to destruction” (Enos 1:23). Based on Enos’s words, we can see that Jacob likely used such intense phrases to “stir up” the people to repentance.
The power of the resurrection
The phrase “power of [. . .] resurrection” occurs seven times in the Book of Mormon, and five of these instances come from Jacob.[24] Jacob consistently focuses on Jesus Christ as the source of the power of resurrection. Jacob speaks of “the power of the resurrection of the Holy One of Israel” (2 Nephi 9:12) and twice refers to “the power of the resurrection which is in Christ” (Jacob 4:11; see also Jacob 6:9). Although Jacob emphasizes the centrality of the “power of the resurrection” in overcoming death, he also points out that for those who have rejected God’s word, “the power of the redemption and the resurrection, which is in Christ, will bring you to stand with shame and awful guilt before the bar of God” (Jacob 6:9).
Beloved brethren
The phrase “beloved brethren” appears seventy-two times in the Book of Mormon, and nobody uses it more than Jacob. Jacob is the first individual to use this phrase; he does so by beginning his speech in 2 Nephi 6 with the statement “Behold, my beloved brethren” (verse 2). After completing a lengthy quotation from Isaiah, he resumes speaking by stating, “And now, my beloved brethren” (2 Nephi 9:2). After taking a break for the evening, Jacob again begins speaking by saying, “And now I, Jacob, speak unto you again, my beloved brethren” (2 Nephi 10:1). Similarly, as Jacob begins his later discourse to the Nephites, the first words he says are “Now, my beloved brethren” (Jacob 2:2).
Jacob uses the phrase “beloved brethren” twenty times, more than 25 percent of the total occurrences in the Book of Mormon. The only speaker to come close to Jacob’s usage is Nephi, who uses the phrase sixteen times. Given that Nephi speaks more than three times as many words as Jacob, we see a statistically significant difference in the frequency with which Jacob and Nephi use this phrase.[25]
Shame and cross
The words shame and cross collocate (appear together) two times in the Book of Mormon,[26] both in the words of Jacob. In 2 Nephi 9:18, Jacob says that “they who have endured the crosses of the world, and despised the shame of it” will “inherit the kingdom of God, . . . and their joy shall be full forever.” Later Jacob writes of his deep desire to persuade all people to “believe in Christ, and view his death, and suffer his cross and bear the shame of the world” (Jacob 1:8). Deidre Green notes, “Jacob is the only Book of Mormon figure besides Christ himself to explicitly call on followers of Christ to suffer Christ’s cross and thereby to make suffering with Christ a required task of discipleship.”[27]
God’s great condescensions
The word condescension and its variants appear only five times in the Book of Mormon. The angel guiding Nephi twice speaks of “the condescension of God” (1 Nephi 11:16, 26), and Nephi speaks of the Lord’s “condescension unto the children of men” (2 Nephi 4:26). Jacob uniquely uses the adjective great to describe God’s condescensions on two separate occasions. In 2 Nephi 9:53 he says, “Behold how great the covenants of the Lord, and how great his condescensions unto the children of men.” Similarly, he later writes that it is by the Lord’s
“grace, and his great condescensions unto the children of men,” that he has power to perform miracles (Jacob 4:7).
Counseling with God
The ideas of counseling with God and receiving/
Jacob’s Unique Phrases
In addition to the distinctive phrases that Jacob used in both 2 Nephi and the book of Jacob, he authored many unique phrases that do not appear elsewhere in the Book of Mormon. In this section, I briefly identify and discuss two of these phrases, although many more could be added.[29]
Hell and the awful monster
The word hell appears fifty-nine times in the Book of Mormon, and ten of those occurrences are in the words of Jacob. Thus Jacob, writing just 3 percent of the total words in the Book of Mormon, disproportionally accounts for 17 percent of the instances of “hell.” Jacob uses the word hell more than any other individual in the Book of Mormon.
Jacob not only speaks of hell frequently, he also talks about it in unique ways. More than any other author, Jacob collocates death and hell in his descriptions of what happens to the wicked. He is also the only scriptural author to collocate “monster” with “hell” and the only scriptural author to use the phrase “awful monster,” which he does three times in 2 Nephi 9.[30] In verse 10, Jacob refers to “death and hell” as an “awful monster,” which he calls “the death of the body, and also the death of the spirit.”[31] On two additional occasions in this discourse, Jacob speaks similarly, praising the Holy One of Israel who “delivereth his saints from that awful monster the devil, and death, and hell” (2 Nephi 9:19), and explaining that those who do not receive the law “are delivered from that awful monster, death and hell” (2 Nephi 9:26).
As a point of contrast in how the word hell is used by Book of Mormon authors, Alma (who proportionally speaking is the second-highest user of “hell”) frequently refers to the “chains of hell,” whereas Jacob never uses this phrase.[32] Jacob uses the phrase “death and hell” four times, and he refers to hell as an “awful monster” three times, but these phrases are never used by Alma.[33]
The pleasing word of God
The word pleasing occurs twelve times in the Book of Mormon; half of these occurrences come from Jacob’s words. As Jacob draws his book to a close, he writes, “I bid you farewell, until I shall meet you before the pleasing bar of God” (Jacob 6:13). It appears that Moroni uses this phrase from Jacob in his final words, writing, “I bid unto all, farewell. . . . [I will] meet you before the pleasing bar of the great Jehovah” (Moroni 10:34).[34]
Jacob uses the phrase “the pleasing word of God” three times and is the only author to use this phrase (see Jacob 2:8, 9; 3:2).[35] He uses it during his speech to Nephite men in Jacob 2–3. He tells the Nephites that the “pleasing word of God . . . healeth the wounded soul” (Jacob 2:8). Jacob also encourages listeners to “receive the pleasing word of God, and feast upon his love” (Jacob 3:2). As with other Jacobean sayings discussed throughout this chapter, this distinctive phrase indicates his unique authorial voice.
Therefore, What?
Jacob is a key figure in the Book of Mormon, and his words had a lasting impact—not only in their original form but also in how later Book of Mormon prophets echoed his words (see chapter 7). In this chapter, I have focused on Jacob’s distinctive words and phrases, such as “God,” “fire and brimstone,” “endless torment,” “angels to a devil,” “awful guilt,” “power of resurrection,” “beloved brethren,” and others. These words and phrases are disproportionately used by Jacob and appear in his words in both 2 Nephi and the book of Jacob. While these phrases do not provide definitive evidence that Jacob is a separate author from Nephi, the fact that several phrases appear to be uniquely used by Jacob certainly suggests two distinct voices.
Ultimately, the power of identifying Jacob’s distinctive voice may not be in its apologetic value but rather in its portrait of a faithful prophet. He knew both agony and abuse. As a child, Jacob “suffered afflictions and much sorrow, because of the rudeness of [his] brethren” (2 Nephi 2:1), and yet he taught that the “pleasing word of God . . . healeth the wounded soul” (Jacob 2:8). Although Jacob was concerned he would “stumble because of [his] over anxiety” (Jacob 4:18), he taught that through the Lord’s “grace, and his great condescensions unto the children of men,” weaknesses can be overcome (Jacob 4:7). He knew what it was like to hurt, to pray, to work, and to heal. He knew, in part, what many of us experience today. Jacob’s voice speaks to those who have suffered and points to the Savior as the source of healing.
Jacob’s distinctive phrases also provide rich doctrinal insights that reach beyond empathy and understanding to the power that can change lives. Although some of his words could be seen as severe or strict—like his teachings regarding an “awful monster,” “death and hell,” and “a lake of fire and brimstone”[36]—Jacob also offers tender words of hope that God will “raise [us] from death by the power of the resurrection, and also from everlasting death by the power of the atonement, that [we] may be received into the eternal kingdom of God” (2 Nephi 10:25). The undercurrent of Jacob’s words is one of hope and empowerment: God will keep his promises to his children, and it is within our power to keep our promises to him and live (see 2 Nephi 10:2, 17; Jacob 6:5–6).
Notes
[1] This chapter is a revised version of John Hilton III, “Jacob: A Distinctive Book of Mormon Author,” in Jacob: Faith and Great Anxiety, ed. Avram R. Shannon and George A. Pierce (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University; Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2024), pages forthcoming. Used with permission.
[2] In this chapter, when I use word counts of Jacob’s writings, I’m specifically referring to words directly attributed to Jacob in the text. Words that could be attributed to Zenos or the lord of the vineyard in Jacob 5 were not counted as belonging to Jacob.
[3] C. Terry Warner, “Jacob,” Ensign, October 1976, 25.
[4] Deidre Nicole Green, Jacob: A Brief Theological Introduction (Provo, UT: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2020), 2.
[5] John S. Tanner, “Jacob and His Descendants as Authors,” in Rediscovering the Book of Mormon, ed. John L. Sorenson and Melvin J. Thorne (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book; Provo, UT: FARMS, 1991), 58.
[6] Note that Jacob connects “desire” with “anxiety” in both passages. These words collocate four times in the Book of Mormon: twice in Jacob’s words, once in Lehi’s (see 2 Nephi 1:16), and once in Mormon’s (see Mosiah 28:12).
[7] Marilyn Arnold, “Unlocking the Sacred Text,” Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 8, no. 1 (1999): 52.
[8] Tanner, “Jacob and His Descendants as Authors,” 59.
[9] Tanner, “Jacob and His Descendants as Authors,” 58. John Tvedtnes points out that Jacob’s literary style may have been influenced by Lehi. He states, “An examination of Jacob’s two sermons and his treatise show that he was clearly influenced by the admonitions addressed to him by his father Lehi in 2 Nephi 2.” John A. Tvedtnes, “The Influence of Lehi’s Admonitions on the Teachings of His Son Jacob,” Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 3, no. 2 (1994): 35.
[10] 2 Nephi 7 and 8 are quotations from Isaiah.
[11] In 2 Nephi 6–10, Jacob quotes several sources, including Jesus Christ (textually identified as such), the Lord (textually identified as such), Isaiah, and an angel. For the purposes of analyzing Jacob’s words in the present study, I am examining only the words specifically attributed to him.
[12] In the book of Jacob, Jacob quotes from the Lord, Zenos, and Sherem. Again, in the present study I examine only words specifically attributed to Jacob.
[13] Maker appears six times in the Book of Mormon; it is used twice by Jacob, twice by the Lord, and once each by Enos and Mormon. For more information on distinctive titles for Christ used by different Book of Mormon authors, see John W. Welch, “Ten Testimonies of Jesus Christ from the Book of Mormon,” A Book of Mormon Treasury: Gospel Insights from General Authorities and Religious Educators (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 2003), 316–42.
[14] This title appears forty times in the Book of Mormon and is used seventeen times by Jacob; ten times by Nephi; six times by Isaiah; two times each by Zenos, Amaleki, and Lehi; and once by the Lord. Welch notes that Nephi and Lehi use it most frequently after Jacob and points out that “after the time of the small plates, this title drops out of Nephite usage—perhaps because the temple service declined in prominence as people knew that its sacrifice merely typified the only meaningful sacrifice—Christ’s—or perhaps because the Nephites, over time, became less inclined to identify personally with a remote and by then unfamiliar land of Israel.” Welch, “Ten Testimonies,” 325–26.
[15] See Russell M. Nelson, “Sisters’ Participation in the Gathering of Israel,” Ensign, November 2018, 69–70. Joseph’s insight was a significant inspiration for writing this chapter, which was in fact a catalyst for bringing this book to fruition.
[16] Nephi uses the phrase “Lord God” 39 times (1.4 times per 1,000 words spoken), while Jacob uses it 13 times (1.5 times per 1,000 words spoken). Although they use “Lord God” with essentially the same frequency, this is not the case with the titles “Lord” and “God.”
[17] While Nephi and Jacob use the words Lord and God distinctively, it is not clear whether Nephi and Jacob saw these words as having different meanings or simply preferred one word over the other. For an overview of the meanings of various names for God in the Old Testament, see Dana M. Pike, “The Name and Titles of God in the Old Testament,” Religious Educator 11, no. 1 (2010): 17–32.
[18] Scholar Daniel Allington provides additional background to this statistical technique: “In corpus analysis, it is customary to compare word frequencies within the language corpus under analysis with word frequencies within a ‘reference corpus’ considered typical of language use more generally, with log-likelihood generally being considered the best measure of statistical significance. The log-likelihood of a lexical item is referred to as its ‘keyness,’ which is customarily treated as a measure of the item’s overuse or underuse relative to its expected frequency of occurrence in the corpus under analysis, taking its frequency within the reference corpus as the assumed norm. Thus, while a log-likelihood of 6.63 is sufficient to indicate significance at the level of p < 0.01, log-likelihood is also conventionally used to compare the relative importance of items within a corpus: the higher the log-likelihood, the more ‘key’ an item’s presence or absence is assumed to be.” Daniel Allington, “‘It Actually Painted a Picture of the Village and the Sea and the Bottom of the Sea’: Reading Groups, Cultural Legitimacy, and Description in Narrative (with Particular Reference to John Steinbeck’s The Pearl),” Language and Literature 20, no. 4 (2011): 320. I note that most of the distinctive phrases I discuss in this book do not occur with sufficient frequency to merit statistical analysis. In this chapter, one other phrase, discussed below, will be statistically analyzed.
[19] The other four uses are by Nephi, Alma, the chief judge of Ammonihah, and the Lord (all one time each).
[20] The phrase “fire and brimstone” collocates with the word “torment(s)” in Mosiah 3:27 and Alma 12:17.
[21] The other three occur in the words of Jesus Christ (see Mosiah 26:27; 3 Nephi 9:2) and Mormon (Moroni 7:17).
[22] Both Lehi and Jacob talk about the devil himself as an angel (see 2 Nephi 2:17; 9:8). Korihor speaks of the devil appearing “in the form of an angel” (Alma 30:53).
[23] In Mosiah 26:27, Jesus Christ says that those who never knew him “shall depart into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels.” This is the only other Book of Mormon reference outside of Jacob’s words that collocates “fire,” “devil,” and “angels.”
[24] The other two are in 2 Nephi 2:8 and Moroni 7:41. Four additional verses that speak of Christ’s “power” in terms of the “resurrection” (without using the specific phrase “power of [. . .] resurrection”) are Mosiah 15:20; 18:2; Alma 4:14; 41:2.
[25] The LL for “beloved brethren” between Nephi and Jacob is 17.49. Between Jacob and the Book of Mormon as a whole, the LL for this phrase is 60.8. Speaking probabilistically, this means it is extremely unlikely that Jacob’s heavy use of this phrase is due to chance.
[26] These words also collocate in Hebrews 12:2.
[27] Green, Jacob, 21.
[28] See 1 Nephi 19:7; 2 Nephi 9:28–29; 28:30; Jacob 4:10; Alma 29:8; 37:12, 37; and Helaman 12:5–6. It is possible that Alma was influenced by Jacob’s words regarding “counsel[ing] in wisdom” (Jacob 4:10; compare Alma 29:8; 37:12). For additional information on how later Book of Mormon authors use Jacob’s words, see chapter 7 herein.
[29] Additional words or phrases unique to Jacob in the Book of Mormon but not discussed herein include the following: “merciful plan” (2 Nephi 9:6), “father of lies” (2 Nephi 9:9), “angel of light” (2 Nephi 9:9), “captive spirits” and “captive bodies” (2 Nephi 9:12), “delivereth his saints” (2 Nephi 9:19), “not [. . .] shaken” (2 Nephi 9:40; Jacob 7:5), “hearken diligently” (2 Nephi 9:51), “hang down” (2 Nephi 10:20), “cheer up” (2 Nephi 10:23), “grace divine” (2 Nephi 10:25), “responsibility” (Jacob 1:19; 2:2), “labor in sin” (Jacob 2:5), “wounded soul” (Jacob 2:8), “piercing eye” (Jacob 2:10), “hand of Providence” (Jacob 2:13), “be familiar with all” (Jacob 2:17), “sobbings” (Jacob 2:35), “slumber of death” (Jacob 3:11), “thankful hearts” (Jacob 4:3), “beyond the mark” (Jacob 4:14), and “power of justice” (Jacob 6:10).
[30] For more details on Jacob’s use of the word monster, see Daniel Belnap, “‘I Will Contend with Them That Contendeth with Thee’: The Divine Warrior in Jacob’s Speech of 2 Nephi 6–10,” Journal of the Book of Mormon and Restoration Scripture 17, nos. 1–2 (2008): 20–39.
[31] Two verses later, Jacob explains that “spiritual death is hell” (2 Nephi 9:12). Jacob is the only scriptural author to explicitly equate “spiritual death” with “hell.”
[32] The phrase “chains of hell” appears six times in the Book of Mormon and is nearly unique to Alma (see Alma 5:7, 9–10; 12:11; 13:30). Ammon uses it one time in Alma 26:14.
[33] The phrase “death and hell” appears six times in the 2013 edition of the Book of Mormon—four times in Jacob’s words and twice in Nephi’s (see 2 Nephi 28:23, where the phrase comes twice in quick succession). Royal Skousen suggests that one of the phrases attributed to Nephi is a duplicate and was not present in the earliest text. See Royal Skousen, “Some Textual Changes for a Scholarly Study of the Book of Mormon,” BYU Studies Quarterly 51, no. 4 (2012): 99–117. If Skousen is correct, this makes Jacob’s use of this phrase even more unique. Given that Nephi’s writings in 2 Nephi 28 take place after Jacob’s sermon in 2 Nephi 9, it is possible that Nephi is drawing on Jacob’s words.
[34] Royal Skousen suggests that both Jacob 6:13 and Moroni 10:34 should read “pleading bar.” But given Jacob’s unusual penchant for using the word pleasing and the fact that he never uses the word pleading, it is certainly possible that “pleasing bar” is in fact the correct reading and that Moroni was alluding to Jacob’s words. For further discussion, see Royal Skousen, Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon: Part Two; 2 Nephi 11–Mosiah 16 (Provo, UT: FARMS, 2005), 1047–52.
[35] The shorter phrase “pleasing word” only appears in these same three verses as part of the phrase “the pleasing word of God.”
[36] On a personal note, my first encounter with Jacob’s words came when I was ten years old. While I was certainly not wicked, I could be quite mischievous at times. One Monday night we had a home evening and read from 2 Nephi chapter 9. Jacob’s teachings regarding fire, brimstone, and hell motivated me to make some changes. I am not suggesting I was an evil ten-year-old, nor that the best reason to be righteous is fear; I am simply illustrating in a personal way the influence Jacob’s words can have.