[S. Kent Brown in Andrew C. Skinner and Gaye Strathearn, eds., Third Nephi: An Incomparable Scripture. Salt Lake City: Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, 2012, 381].
I want to say
    something about text. . . . Jesus
    himself is the text because he bears in his body the proof of the atonement.
    And his body, of course, is the first thing he allows people access to—to
    touch the scars in his hands and his feet and his side. But when one thinks
    about ancient texts, one thinks about texts that are inscribed on stone, clay
    tablets, metal, wood, eventually papyri, which is a softer, more perishable
    material. Each one of those kinds of surfaces can be destroyed, but the
    resurrected, glorified body of Jesus cannot. And it bears, as it were, witness
    of itself, and it carries, in its own way, the text of his suffering and death
    and resurrection. In a concrete way, the immediate and eternal text is the
    Risen Jesus, bearing in his body marks that will never go away. 
 
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