Keywords
Brother of Jared, Book of Ether, anti-Babel polemic
Abstract
Within the text of the Book of Mormon, the name of Jared’s brother is never revealed. Various reasons have been offered for the lack of a name, but nothing conclusive has been offered. Taking a cue from the polemical nature of Old Testament theology, this paper argues that the opening of the book of Ether is a polemic against Babel, with the brother of Jared being contrasted against the people and ruler of Babel. Led by the mighty hunter Nimrod, the people of Babel refused God’s command to multiply and fill the earth. Instead, they gathered together, built a tower to reach the heavens, and explicitly sought to make a name for themselves. In response, the Lord confounded their language and scattered them abroad. In contrast, the brother of Jared was a mighty, unnamed man who communed with the heavens on top of a high mountain. The language of his people was spared, and they spread across the face of the promised land. Moroni’s abridgement of Ether thus may present the anti-Babel origins of the Jaredites.
Recommended Citation
Wright, Walker
(2024)
"The Man with No Name: The Story of the Brother of Jared as an Anti-Babel Polemic,"
Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship: Vol. 62, Article 13.
Available at:
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/interpreter/vol62/iss1/13