Mormon 5:24 Textual Variants

Royal Skousen
therefore repent ye and humble yourself before him lest he shall come out in justice against you lest a remnant of the seed of Jacob shall go forth among you as a lion and tear you in pieces and there is none to deliver

Heather Hardy (personal communication, 12 November 2007) suggests that the word justice here could be an error for judgment, especially given the two instances elsewhere in the text of “to come out in judgment against someone” (but no others of “to come out in justice against someone”):

It should be noted that both these passages, along with Mormon 5:24, refer to God’s judgment or justice in a negative context.

If justice is an error for judgment here in Mormon 5:24, it must have occurred during the dictation of the text, either as a misreading by Joseph Smith or as a mishearing by Oliver Cowdery (the presumed scribe in 𝓞 for this part of the text). Since both 𝓟 and the 1830 edition are firsthand copies of 𝓞 for this passage and they both read justice, 𝓞 itself undoubtedly read as justice. There is scribal evidence for miswriting justice in place of judgment, namely, once when

Oliver Cowdery was copying the text from 𝓞 into 𝓟:

Despite this evidence from scribal practice and usage elsewhere in the text, there is clear evidence that the Book of Mormon sometimes associates the word justice with judgment. In one passage, the association is with the more specific righteous judgment and is found in a parallel structure:

And in two cases, the single words justice and judgment are closely associated. One case is in a quote from the King James Bible where both words are used in a positive context:

The other case is found in a negative context:

There is also plenty of support for the semantic relatedness of justice and judgment in the Old Testament, as in the following examples that refer to the people, kings, and the Lord as exercising justice and judgment, sometimes in parallel constructions:

Don Brugger (personal communication) provides the following citation from , which gives the title for an anonymously written book published in London in 1649:

Thus the expression “to come out in justice against someone” is possible and will therefore be maintained in Mormon 5:24. To be sure, justice could be an error for judgment in this passage, but it is also possible that it is correct.

Summary: Retain the word justice in Mormon 5:24; usage elsewhere in the Book of Mormon and the King James Old Testament argues that justice and judgment are closely associated semantically.

Analysis of Textual Variants of the Book of Mormon, Part. 6

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