Evidence #46 | September 19, 2020

Book of Mormon Evidence: Symbolism of 10

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Scripture Central

Abstract

The Book of Mormon repeatedly uses the number ten (or ten-fold repetitions of key words or phrases) in ways that evoke the number’s ancient symbolic meanings, as found in Israel and other Near Eastern societies.

In various ways, the number ten seems to be emphasized in the Book of Mormon. While its authors may have had their own reasons for seeing this number as symbolic or sacred, several clues suggest that their understanding of its significance stemmed from an ancient Near Eastern worldview, especially as found in ancient Israel.

Worthiness before God

When standing trial before King Noah and his priests, Abinadi recited the Ten Commandments (see Mosiah 12:34–35; 13:12–24). This action draws out ten’s association with being worthy before God. John W. Welch observed that “if the priests of Noah were not keeping these commandments, they themselves were not worthy even to enter their own temple. To a modern reader, Abinadi’s recitation of the Ten Commandments seems rather naive and elementary. But to an ancient ear, these ten measuring words would have sounded much more imposing and ominous .”1

Plan of Salvation

When teaching his son Corianton, Alma referred to the plan of redemption (or its variants, such as plan of salvation or plan of happiness) precisely ten times.2 Perhaps Alma did this to emphasize the perfection of God’s plan, seeing that perfection is associated with the number ten in the Bible and broadly throughout the ancient Near East.3  

Alma teaching Corianton. Image via churchofjesuschrist.org.

Interestingly, another tenfold repetition of the word “plan” can be found in Alma 12. In that case, the first three uses of the term are in reference to Zeezrom’s “subtle plan” to deceive the people and turn them against Alma and Amulek (Alma 12:4–5), whereas the last seven uses (seven itself being a sacred number)4 all refer to the “plan of redemption” (see Alma 12:25–33). The occurrence of negative repetitions of a word or phrase being supplanted or overpowered by a greater number of positive usages, with their total equaling a sacred or symbolic number, is not an isolated phenomenon and can be found elsewhere in the Book of Mormon.5

Consecration and Sacrifice

Paying a tithe—a tenth part of one’s income or property—is a well-established practice in the Bible.6 “The practice of paying tithing to the gods or their temples,” wrote Welch, “is also found in ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian civilizations,²² and it is extolled in the Book of Mormon (see Alma 13:15; 3 Nephi 24:8–10).”7 In this context, the number ten evokes the laws of consecration and sacrifice. Welch suggested that King Noah may have been exacting a royal tithe and a priestly tithe (two counts of 10%) when requiring a “fifth part” of all that his people possessed (see Mosiah 11:3).8

Testing and Trials

A number of biblical stories, such as the account of the ten plagues that preceded the Israelite exodus from Egypt, associate the number ten with testing, trials, or woes.9 The Book of Mormon appears to make this same association. For instance, on one occasion the prophet Jacob declared unto his people ten woes, which seem to be modeled after the Ten Commandments and yet adapted for his people’s needs.10 

Welch explains, “Appropriately, the tenth and final wo includes the word all, signifying the perfect totality of this cursing. … Reflecting a similar tone of warning, the book of 3 Nephi ends with a tenfold call to repentance, listing nine evils in particular and concluding with an all-embracing tenth” (see 3 Nephi 30:2).11 An additional list of ten sins, followed once again by an all-encompassing prohibition at the end, can be found in 2 Nephi 26:29–32. Each of these lists, with the concluding element highlighted in red, are presented side by side in the following chart:

 

Interestingly, a similar all-encompassing admonition follows two lists of ten sins in an early Christian text known as the Didache: “May you be saved, Oh children, from all of these!” (emphasis added). In his translation of the Didache, Aaron Milivek numbered and formatted these lists side by side, with the concluding element spanning them both, as follows:12

Judicial and Religious Administration

After showing a number of biblical narratives that invoke the number ten in settings of judicial or religious administration, Welch noted that in 2 Nephi 27 the word “read” is repeated ten times in relation to reading the scriptures. A major event in this chapter is that witnesses would be provided to testify of the Book of Mormon (2 Nephi 27:14, 22). The judgment context evoked by such a book is made clear in 3 Nephi 27:25–26: “out of the books which shall be written shall the world be judged.”

Reverence for God and Supplication in Prayer

Similar to what can be seen in the Bible,13 several Book of Mormon authors distinctively repeated the name of God or other key terms in contexts of prayer or worship. This pattern can possibly be seen in Nephi’s Psalm (2 Nephi 4),14 one of Jacob’s sermons (2 Nephi 9),15 King Benjamin’s speech (Mosiah 3–5),16 Alma’s high priestly prayer (Alma 31),17 the petitions of Nephi, son of Helaman (Helaman 11),18 and in what Welch described as a “poem of Zenos” (Alma 33).19

Conclusion

In ways both overt and subtle, it appears that the authors of the Book of Mormon perpetuated the various symbolic meanings of the number ten, as it was understood by ancient Israelites and surrounding nations. While it is impossible to conclusively demonstrate that any given ten-fold repetition of key words or phrases was intentional, there are enough good candidates in the Book of Mormon to accept that the text intentionally utilizes this number in symbolic ways. Welch concluded, “Detecting these tenfold occurrences in the Book of Mormon uncovers a previously unnoticed ancient quality of Nephite scripture that was probably more obvious to ancient minds than it is to modern readers.”20

Further Reading
Endnotes
Culture
Sacred Numbers
The Number 10
Book of Mormon

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