Jacob 2:10 Textual Variants

Royal Skousen
I must do according to the strict [commands 1ABCEFGHIJKLMNOPQRST|commandments D] of God

Here the typesetter for the 1841 British edition accidentally replaced the word commands with commandments. Normally, the text refers to “the commandments of God” or to “the commandments of the Lord”, but Jacob himself sometimes uses the more immediate and forceful expression “the commands of God”:

The only other occurrence of “the commands of God” in the current text is an error:

In this instance, Oliver Cowdery is responsible for miscopying commandments as commands. (See Alma 30:7 for further discussion of this example, plus a list of other cases where Oliver accidentally wrote commands instead of commandments in the manuscripts.) Of course, commands is generally used to refer to the orders of military generals, but Jacob is the only Book of Mormon writer who uses the plural commands to refer to the commandments of God. There are other references to the command of God (that is, in the singular), although all but one of these refer to something being done “at God’s command”:

Summary: Maintain in Jacob 2:10 Jacob’s distinctive use of the expression “the commands of God”.

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

References