Category: 3 Nephi

  • 3 Nephi 10:3-6 — LeGrand Baker — under the cherubim wings

    3 Nephi 10:3-6 — LeGrand Baker — under the cherubim wings

    3 And it came to pass that there came a voice again unto the people, and all the people did hear, and did witness of it, saying:
    4 O ye people of these great cities which have fallen, who are descendants of Jacob, yea, who are of the house of Israel, how oft have I gathered you as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and have nourished you.
    5 And again, how oft would I have gathered you as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, yea, O ye people of the house of Israel, who have fallen; yea, O ye people of the house of Israel, ye that dwell at Jerusalem, as ye that have fallen; yea, how oft would I have gathered you as a hen gathereth her chickens, and ye would not.
    6 O ye house of Israel whom I have spared, how oft will I gather you as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, if ye will repent and return unto me with full purpose of heart.

    I grew up on a farm where we had chickens and all sorts of other animals. The hens had an interesting relationship with their little ones. When the chicks were old enough to learn to scratch, he would take them to likely place, cluck and then start to scratch the dirt. They would come and pick in the freshly overturned dirt for what bugs and worms they could find there. Those who got behind her at the wrong angle were scooped off the ground by her fast moving feet and tossed head over heels like a little fuzzy ball. It didn’t hurt them and they were soon up and at it again, but they had learned something important about those feet.

    One day I heard her squawk loudly, this was not a loving clucking sound. She squatted down, lifted her wings. The chicks, almost as one, fled to the cover of her wings. She settled down protectively over their little bodies and raised all her feathers giving her the appearance of being twice as big as she really was. She was looking toward the sky and my eyes followed hers. There was a hawk making a wide circle around the farm yard. We both watched, the hen and I, until the hawk flew away. Then she made a gentle cluck and the little ones came out from under her wings, scattering themselves about to find whatever bugs looked good to eat.

    I was out in the yard one cloudy day when I heard her squawk again. This one was different. It seemed to lack the sense of panic but it was severe and not to be misunderstood. Again the chicks ran to their squatting mother and tucked themselves under her outstretched wings. This time when she settled herself over them, she folded here feathers down flat against her body like a shield and ducked her head under a wing. I was surprised when the hail began to fall all around me. Some hit the chicken and bounced off of her tightened wings. I wasn’t so interested that I wanted to wait and see what happened next, but made a dash to the house to get out of the storm. I did not know that the hail was coming, but that wise mother hen knew just what to expect.

    For many years after that, when I read what the Savior said about being invited under the wings, I remembered those scenes and thought that was what he was referring to. Perhaps he was, but now I think that was not the only thing he was trying to say, and it probably was not even the thing the Nephits were thinking about when they heard his words.

    In the Holy of Holies of Solomon’s Temple — and since the Nephite temples were patterned after Solomon’s, this would have been true of Nephite temples also — the throne representing the throne of God sat against the back wall. It was overshadowed by the wings of two large cherubim. I think that when he spoke to the Nephites, the Savior was inviting them, as sacral kings and priests, to sit upon that throne under the security of those wings. Stephen and I discussed that in Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord. This is what we wrote:

    —————————-

    At the conclusion of the coronation ceremony of the ancient Israelite Feast of Tabernacles temple drama, the veil of the temple was parted the king entered the Holy of Holies, the most sacred of all earthly sacred space. It, like its predecessor in the Tabernacle, was a perfect cube. It contained no furniture except a throne on the back wall.
    In the Tabernacle, Moses had built a small prototype of God’s throne on the lid of the Ark of the Covenant, with two Cherubim whose wings stretched over the invisible throne, called the Mercy Seat. Below the lid, in the Ark itself, he placed the stone tablets on which the Lord had written the Ten Commandments, the staff of Aaron which was a symbol of his priesthood, and a jar of manna which represented the bread of life—the law (kingship), the staff (priesthood), and the bread of life (power of salvation).
    Solomon’s Temple throne was like that, but much larger. In the Temple’s Holy of Holies, on either side of the throne were two great golden cherubim. Their wings touched the sides of the walls and made a kind of canopy that stretched over the throne; over whoever sat upon that throne; and over the Ark of the Covenant which now sat in front of the throne as its footstool (1 Kings 6:24, 8:6-7). The phrases that God “dwellest between the cherubims (Psalm 80:1 and Isaiah 37:16), and “sitteth between the cherubims” (Psalm 99:1), are references to God sitting on his throne, either in his heavenly or in his earthly temple.
    The throne was patterned after a chariot (1 Chronicles 28:1-21), representing God’s ability to move among the clouds, and the symbolism of cherubim’s overshadowing wings represented the powerful wings of the celestial cherubim, upon whose majesty God himself is also said to have ridden. For, “he rode upon a cherub, and did fly: yea, he did fly upon the wings of the wind” (Psalm 18:10 and 2 Samuel 22:11). And upon whose wings he invites his children to ride also. “But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint” (Isaiah 40:31).
    Josephus’s description of the interior of the Temple is the most complete. He writes:

    “Now when the king had divided the temple into two parts, he made the inner house of twenty cubits every way, to be the most secret chamber, but he appointed that of forty cubits to be the sanctuary; and when he had cut a door-place out of the wall, he put therein doors of Cedar, and overlaid them with a great deal of gold, that had sculptures upon it. He also had veils of blue, and purple, and scarlet, and the brightest and softest linen, with the most curious flowers wrought upon them, which were to be drawn before those doors. He also dedicated for the most secret place, whose breadth was twenty cubits, and length the same, two cherubim of solid gold; the height of each of them was five cubits they had each of them two wings stretched out as far as five cubits; wherefore Solomon set them up not far from each other, that with one wing they might touch the southern wall of the secret place [the Holy of Holies], and with another the northern: their other wings, which joined to each other, were a covering to the ark, which was set between them; but nobody can tell, or even conjecture, what was the shape of these cherubim. He also laid the floor of the temple with plates of gold; and he added doors to the gate of the temple, agreeable to the measure of the height of the wall, but in breadth twenty cubits, and on them he glued gold plates. And, to say all in one word, he left no part of the temple, neither internal nor external, but what was covered with gold. He also had curtains drawn over these doors in like manner as they were drawn over the inner doors of the most holy place; but the porch of the temple had nothing of that sort” (History of the Jews 8:3).

    It was there, in the Holy of Holies, at the throne of God, that the final scenes of the festive drama were conducted.

    The cherubim who surround the celestial throne of God are represented as having wings, by Isaiah (6:2), Ezekiel (1:6-11), Daniel (7:4-6), and John (Revelation 4). But we were told by the Prophet Joseph that “wings are a representation of power, to move, to act, etc.” (D&C 77:4). That is also probably a way of describing their priesthood power.
    Because the throne and its overshadowing wings were symbolic of the reality and power of priesthood and kingship, they were also symbolic of the invitation to receive the gift of eternal life. The Savior used that symbolism repeatedly, as a lament addressed to those who would not accept the invitation. He said:

    37 O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!
    (Matthew 23:37, see Luke 13:34, 3 Nephi 10:4-6, D&C 43:24).

    And also as a promise to those who would:

    2 [The Savior] will gather his people even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, even as many as will hearken to my voice and humble themselves before me, and call upon me in mighty prayer (D&C 29:2, see 10:65).

    Nephi’s statement, resounding as it does with the clarity of the ancient enthronement ordinances, is a testimony of the validity of those ordinances, and an example of their fulfilment:

    25 And upon the wings of his Spirit hath my body been carried away upon exceedingly high mountains. And mine eyes have beheld great things, yea, even too great for man; therefore I was bidden that I should not write them (2 Nephi 4:25).

    The wings have a further and expected symbolism. It is the association of the ideas of enthronement with the promise of security and peace, as Nephi prophesied

    Behold, they will crucify him; and after he is laid in a sepulchre for the space of three days he shall rise from the dead, with healing in his wings; and all those who shall believe on his name shall be saved in the kingdom of God. Wherefore, my soul delighteth to prophesy concerning him, for I have seen his day, and my heart doth magnify his holy name (2 Nephi 25:13).

    After his ordination and anointing, the king was a living messiah—not the “Messiah,” but rather a “messiah,” meaning an anointed one, a king of righteousness, and the legitimate “son” and heir of God. He had been crowned with a “crown of pure gold” and accepted God’s invitation to sit upon his own throne in the earthly Temple. Mowinckel observes,

    We know that Solomon had furnished the Temple with an (empty) cherub’s throne, which was certainly understood to be the throne of Yahweh. In the very old Psalm 110 Yahweh is the king, sitting on his throne and offering to his ‘son’, the earthly king, the seat of honor at his right side. In the likewise very old Psalm 68 the worshiper calls Yahweh ‘his king and his god.’ ( Psalms in Israel’s Worship, 1:125)

  • 3 Nephi 9:21-22 — LeGrand Baker– ‘as a little child’

    3 Nephi 9:21-22 — LeGrand Baker– ‘as a little child,’ and also Ether 12:26-39 — meaning of humility

    3 Nephi 9:21-22
    21 Behold, I have come unto the world to bring redemption unto the world, to save the world from sin.
    22 Therefore, whoso repenteth and cometh unto me as a little child, him will I receive, for of such is the kingdom of God. Behold, for such I have laid down my life, and have taken it up again; therefore repent, and come unto me ye ends of the earth, and be saved.

    The Savior’s words in these two sentences has much to teach us: “to bring redemption unto the world,” is his primary purpose and “to save the world from sin” is the way the Savior accomplishes that redemption.

    The word “therefore” creates the relationship between the Savior’s purposes and our responsibilities described in the second sentence.

    “Therefore, whoso repenteth”is the method we must use to enable the redemption: “and cometh unto me as a little child” is the ultimate consequence of true repentance. Those two parallel structures create a one-to-one relationship between redemption and being as a little child.

    “Redeem”has different meanings in the Old Testament and the New Testament, and often a still different one in the Book of Mormon. Elsewhere I have shown that, in the Book of Mormon, to be redeemed frequently means to be brought into the presence of the Savior (see Ether 3:10-13, 2 Nephi 2:3-4, 2 Nephi 1:15, Alma 58:41).

    It is my observation that the most frequent quoted scripture used to define what it means to “become as a little child is this one:

    19 For the natural man is an enemy to God, and has been from the fall of Adam, and will be, forever and ever, unless he yields to the enticings of the Holy Spirit, and putteth off the natural man and becometh a saint through the atonement of Christ the Lord, and becometh as a child, submissive, meek, humble, patient, full of love, willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father (Mosiah 3:19-20).

    The interesting to me is that King Benjamin’s list of the characteristics of “a little child” map remarkably well to the sequence of the Savior’s Beatitudes (see the chapters in Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord). and contain the same ideas as Peter’s sequence of how to make one’s calling and election sure (2 Peter 1:1-11).

    In the Mosiah scripture, the emphasis is usually focused on “willing to submit to all things which the Lord seeth fit to inflict upon him, even as a child doth submit to his father.” The thing that bothers me is that emphasis also suggests the helplessness of the child to do anything except submit. That problem would be solved if we shifted our thinking from a child who had no other choice to the spiritually mature person described in the Beatitude: “And blessed are all they who are persecuted for my name’s sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven”(3 Nephi 12:10).

    Another evidence that Benjamin was describing a quality of spiritual maturity is this from the Savior to the brother of Jared:

    14 Behold, I am he who was prepared from the foundation of the world to redeem my people. Behold, I am Jesus Christ. I am the Father and the Son. In me shall all mankind have life, and that eternally, even they who shall believe on my name; and they shall become my sons and my daughters (Ether 3:14).

    That asks a question: If we shift the meaning of “childlike” from the helplessly immature to the spiritual mature, then how do we define “as a little child”? The Savior was again talking about the quality of person when he uses a child as an example. He says, “Verily I say unto you, Whosoever shall not receive the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not enter therein” (Mark 10:15 & Luke 18:17, see 3 Nephi 11:37-38).

    Matthew reads differently and adds an important criterion: “Whosoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:4).

    Humble is one of the characteristics mentioned by King Benjamin, and here, in the Savior’s statement, “humble himself as this little child” becomes the key to our understand. The best discussion of humillity that I know is in the Book of Mormon. But before we discuss that, may I tell you a short story.

    One day I stopped to visit my daughter and her family. Little two-year-old Chelsea was in the tub having a bath. She heard my voice and came running into the living room to meet me. “Grandpa,” she shouted, all dripping wet, holding out her arms, wanting to be picked up and hugged. As I held her in my arms, wetness and all, I understood what it means to be like a little child in the Kingdom of God. The little girl in my arms was completely, simply, Chelsea. She needed no clothing to define who she was. At that moment she was only herself; trusting, but not noticing she trusted; vulnerable, but unaware of her vulnerability because it did not concern her; loving, and finding fulfillment and identity in the moment of her giving her love. In her unabashed dripping-wetness Chelsea was wholly free to be herself–to express her love–to BE the expression of her love.

    I suppose we are all like that. When we are stripped of all the masks and facades of the artificial needs and fears by which we define our Selves, then we may kneel naked, vulnerable, and unashamed before our loving Heavenly Father. When one is childlike in that nakedness, he is free. He knows and loves the voice of Him by whom he walks. Nothing can bribe him because in his Saviour all of his needs are satisfied. Nothing can threaten him because in the arms of his Saviour he can find no fear. He may not have all the information he needs all the time, but his Friend has, and one can always ask when one does not know. When one is naked in that way, one may begin to know as he is known and see as he is seen. Only when one is comfortable with that kind of nakedness may he be clothed in a “robe of righteousness” and become one who may “inherit the kingdom of God.”

    The quality of one’s soul that permits him to be humble enough that he can be simply himself matures into the power of celestial glory. In describing his vision, the Prophet Joseph mentioned first humility and then the attribute of knowing and being oneself:

    92 And thus we saw the glory of the celestial, which excels in all things—where God, even the Father, reigns upon his throne forever and ever;
    93 Before whose throne all things bow in humble reverence, and give him glory forever and ever.
    94 They who dwell in his presence are the church of the Firstborn; and they see as they are seen, and know as they are known, having received of his fulness and of his grace (D&C 76:92-94).

    I suspect when one know one’s Self in term of the Savior’s love, then the question of one’s obedience will become moot because the question of his motive will have no practical meaning. Obedience will simply be one of the fruits of love, and his absolute obedience the simple expression of his absolute freedom to BE.

    Now lets read those verses in the in the Book of Mormon that teach us what humility means there. In these passages, Moroni has expressed his concern because of his weakness in writing, and says he fears the Gentiles will mock.

    26 And when I had said this, the Lord spake unto me, saying: Fools mock, but they shall mourn; and my grace [probably hesed] is sufficient for the meek [those who keep the covenants they made at the Council in Heaven (Psalm 25)], that they [the meek] shall take no advantage of your weakness;

    27 And if men come unto me [veil—same meaning as elsewhere in the Book of Mormon] I will show unto them their weakness [singular]. I give unto men weakness [singular] that they may be humble; and my grace is sufficient for all men that humble themselves before me [veil]; for if they humble themselves before me [veil], and have faith [pistis] in me, then will I make weak things [plural] become strong unto them [the covenant of invulnerability]. (Ether 12:26-27)

    We get a key to understand what the weakness is in the next verse:

    28 Behold, I will show unto the Gentiles their weakness [still singular], and I will show unto them that faith, hope and charity bringeth unto me—the fountain of all righteousness.

    Here, “bringeth unto me” appears to be the source of strength to replace the weakness. That is confirmed a little later on.

    37 And it came to pass that the Lord said unto me: If they have not charity it mattereth not unto thee, thou hast been faithful; wherefore, thy garments shall be made clean. And because thou hast seen thy weakness [singular] thou shalt be made strong, even unto the sitting down in the place which I have prepared in the mansions of my Father.

    If being “made strong” is “sitting down in the place which I have prepared in the mansions of my Father”— that is if strength is being in God’s presence as it says here and implies in verse 28— then our weakness [singular] is being outside of God’s presence.

    Moroni continues:

    38 And now I, Moroni, bid farewell unto the Gentiles, yea, and also unto my brethren whom I love, until we shall meet before the judgment-seat of Christ, where all men shall know that my garments are not spotted with your blood.

     39 And then shall ye know that I have seen Jesus, and that he hath talked with me face to face, and that he told me in plain humility, even as a man telleth another in mine own language, concerning these things (Ether 12:25-41)

    Now we have the key to understanding what humility means to this prophet. It has to be defined in such a way that it satisfies both his usage in verse 27 (“for all men that humble themselves before me ”), and also his usage in verse 39 where he writes that the Savior spoke to him in “plain humility.”

    One cannot imagine the Savior’s talking to Moroni in a subservient way like a child would talk to his father. So if the New Testament and the Book of Mormon are using humility the same way, then being humble as a little child must mean something different from being submissive as we think of a child as submissive.

    The key to the meaning is in Moroni’s explanation: “even as a man telleth another in mine own language.” When I envision that conversation, I see two people talking as friends (hesed)— no airs, no facade, no masks— just two friends, with no more pretenses then a naked child, souls exposed as they discuss the most sacred of all things.

    If that’s what humility means, then we might read verse 27 this way:

    27 And if men come unto me [veil—same meaning as elsewhere in the Book of Mormon] I will show unto them their weakness [the contrast between being in and being outside my presence]. I give unto men weakness [take them out of my presence] that they may be humble [come to know themselves as they really are]; and my grace is sufficient for all men that humble themselves before me [same as Moroni didl]; for if they humble themselves [have no masks] before me [veil], and have faith [pistis] in me, then will I make weak things [plural — all the things that get in the way of our being ourselves] become strong unto them [the covenant of invulnerability]. (Ether 12:27)

    It seems to me that is what it means to become as a little child: to just be oneself — to become again as pure as we were before we came here, our soul as naked as a little child.

  • 3 Nephi 9:19-20 — LeGrand Baker — ‘with fire and the Holy Ghost’

    3 Nephi 9:19-20 — LeGrand Baker — ‘with fire and the Holy Ghost’

    3 Nephi 9:19-20
    19 And ye shall offer up unto me no more the shedding of blood; yea, your sacrifices and your burnt offerings shall be done away, for I will accept none of your sacrifices and your burnt offerings.
    20 And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit. And whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit, him will I baptize with fire and with the Holy Ghost, even as the Lamanites, because of their faith in me at the time of their conversion, were baptized with fire and with the Holy Ghost, and they knew it not.

    In this passage the Savior was referring to is one of the most remarkable events recorded in the Book of Mormon. It is when Nephi and Lehi were in the Lamanite prison. The account reads:

    43 And it came to pass that when they cast their eyes about, and saw that the cloud of darkness was dispersed from overshadowing them, behold, they saw that they were encircled about, yea every soul, by a pillar of fire.
    44 And Nephi and Lehi were in the midst of them; yea, they were encircled about; yea, they were as if in the midst of a flaming fire, yet it did harm them not, neither did it take hold upon the walls of the prison; and they were filled with that joy which is unspeakable and full of glory.
    45 And behold, the Holy Spirit of God did come down from heaven, and did enter into their hearts, and they were filled as if with fire, and they could speak forth marvelous words.
    46 And it came to pass that there came a voice unto them, yea, a pleasant voice, as if it were a whisper, saying:
    47 Peace, peace be unto you, because of your faith in my Well Beloved, who was from the foundation of the world.
    48 And now, when they heard this they cast up their eyes as if to behold from whence the voice came; and behold, they saw the heavens open; and angels came down out of heaven and ministered unto them.
    49 And there were about three hundred souls who saw and heard these things; and they were bidden to go forth and marvel not, neither should they doubt (Helaman 5:43-49).

    That story asks a number of questions. They are interesting to explore even if we don’t really know the answers. For example:

    When the Savior referred to this event, why did he say, “and they knew it not.” The answer cannot be because they did not know the experience was real, but they probably did not know what it was. There was nothing in their religion that taught them to anticipate such an event. Therefore their language would have contained no word to describe it as a magnificent spiritual experience. It would have to have been after the fact, when they were taught both the gospel and the powers associated with it, that they could understand the full meaning of their own conversion experience.

    Another question is “Why them?” After all, they were a wicked lot and had done nothing to merit such a powerful ordinance. The only answer I am satisfied with is the same as the answers to: Why Alma? and Why Paul?

    I believe that the most reasonable answer is that at the Council in Heaven they made some very serious covenants, but (like the rest of us) those covenants had to be fulfilled when they were in their second estate, when they had no memory of the covenants, and no knowledge of how to fulfill them. So they lived their lives unaware of who they really were. Then, when the time was right, they were told in a way they could not fail to understand that the time for fulfilling the covenants had come.

    The light the Lamanites saw had been seen by other. A similar story is in Acts 2:1-4: On the day of Pentecost “there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire, and it sat upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost.”

    The Lord promised a Pentecost-like experience when the Kirtland Temple was dedicated.. “For verily this generation shall not all pass away until an house shall be built unto the Lord, and a cloud shall rest upon it, which cloud shall be even the glory of the Lord, which shall fill the house (D&C 84:5). Many witnesses testify that the covenant was fulfilled.

    The premortal covenants are very real. Therefore, to a much less dramatic degree, the church just now is full of people who have had life changing experiences as they have met missionaries and the Spirit has taught them that their premortal covenants included listening to those young men or young women.

    It is a matter of some interest to note that the phrase used by the Savior, “baptized by fire and the Holy Ghost,” is only rarely used in the scriptures.

    We find it in Matthew 3:11 and Luke 3:16 where John the Baptist promises that the Savior will baptize the people with fire and the Holy Ghost. In Mark 1:8 and John 1:33 it simply says “with the Holy Ghost.” However, in both of those instances, in the Inspired Version of the Bible, the Prophet Joseph changed them to read “with fire, and the Holy Ghost.”

    Reiterating the John’s promise in the New Testament, the Savior promised the Nephites: “…after that ye are baptized with water, behold, I will baptize you with fire and with the Holy Ghost; therefore blessed are ye if ye shall believe in me and be baptized, after that ye have seen me and know that I am (3 Nephi 12:1).”

    It is likely that the fire mentioned by the Savior is what scholars call the shechinah (pronounced sha-ke-na). Shechinah means “the presence.” It is “a word used by the later Jews and borrowed from by the Christians to denote the cloud of brightness and glory that marked the presence of the Lord” (Quote is from the dictionary at the back of the LDS Bible).

    The Shechinah is the veil that separates man from the presence of God. It was represented in Solomon’s Temple by the great veil that separated the Holy Place from the Holy of Holies. It is the first thing the prophets see, and sometimes the only thing they mention, when they are brought into the presence of God. It is described many ways, but always as a bright light—sometimes a fire, sometimes a cloud.

    In the story of the exodus it was both: “In the daytime also he led them with a cloud, and all the night with a light of fire (Psalms 78:14).”

    For Ezekiel, it was like a tornado: “I looked, and, behold, a whirlwind came out of the north, a great cloud, and a fire infolding itself, and a brightness was about it, and out of the midst thereof as the color of amber, out of the midst of the fire” (Ezekiel 1:4).

    Another example is Lehi’s report that “there came a pillar of fire and dwelt upon a rock before him” (1 Nephi 1:6). Another is Moses’s experience when “the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire out of the midst of a bush: and he looked, and, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush was not consumed.” (Exodus 3:2).

    Another example is the story in Ether where “Lord came down and talked with the brother of Jared; and he was in a cloud, and the brother of Jared saw him not….and did talk with them as he stood in a cloud, and gave directions whither they should travel”[a third time] “the Lord came again unto the brother of Jared, and stood in a cloud and talked with him” (Ether 2:4-5, 14)
    The forth time, the cloud is not mentioned. When the brother of Jared carried the stones to the top of the mountain and presented them to the Lord, “behold, the Lord stretched forth his hand and touched the stones one by one with his finger. And the veil was taken from off the eyes of the brother of Jared, and he saw the finger of the Lord (Ether 3:6).

    A much more recent example is the Prophet Joseph’s “I saw a pillar of light exactly over my head, above the brightness of the sun, which descended gradually until it fell upon me” (Joseph Smith-History:16). Joseph’s making a point of describing the Shechinah in connection with his account of the First Vision is another evidence that he was telling the truth.

    Joseph also mentioned it in conjunction with the appearance o the Angel Moroni:

    30 While I was thus in the act of calling upon God, I discovered a light appearing in my room, which continued to increase until the room was lighter than at noonday, when immediately a personage appeared at my bedside, standing in the air, for his feet did not touch the floor (Joseph Smith-History 1:30).

    Similarly, when the angel appeared to Alma and his friends, Mormon mentions the shechinah as a cloud.
    11 And as I said unto you, as they were going about rebelling against God, behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto them; and he descended as it were in a cloud; and he spake as it were with a voice of thunder, which caused the earth to shake upon which they stood (Mosiah 27:11).

    Joseph mentioned it again in connection with his ordination to the Aaronic Priesthood:

    68 … While we were thus employed, praying and calling upon the Lord, a messenger from heaven descended in a cloud of light, and having laid his hands upon us, he ordained us, saying (Joseph Smith-History:1:68).

    In the New Testament it is an important part of the account of the Mount of Transfiguration:

    5 While he yet spake, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them: and behold a voice out of the cloud, which said, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye him (Matthew 17:5).

    7 And there was a cloud that overshadowed them: and a voice came out of the cloud, saying, This is my beloved Son: hear him (Mark 9:7).

    34 While he thus spake, there came a cloud, and overshadowed them: and they feared as they entered into the cloud.
    35 And there came a voice out of the cloud, saying, This is my beloved Son: hear him (Luke 9:33-36).

    The shechinah was there again when the Savior ascended up to heaven:

    9 And when he had spoken these things, while they beheld, he was taken up; and a cloud received him out of their sight.
    10 And while they looked stedfastly toward heaven as he went up, behold, two men stood by them in white apparel;
    11 Which also said, Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have seen him go into heaven (Acts 1:8-13).

    Have you ever driven in a snow storm with the brights on? The brightness of the shining snow is so intense that you cannot see beyond what appears to be its surface. I suspect the shechinah cloud is something like that. That might account for why the people in 3 Nephi could not see the Savior when he left them.

    37 And the multitude heard not the words which he spake, therefore they did not bear record; but the disciples bare record that he gave them power to give the Holy Ghost. And I will show unto you hereafter that this record is true.
    38 And it came to pass that when Jesus had touched them all, there came a cloud and overshadowed the multitude that they could not see Jesus.
    39 And while they were overshadowed he departed from them, and ascended into heaven. And the disciples saw and did bear record that he ascended again into heaven (3 Nephi 18:37-39).

    Just as the Savior left this world in a cloud in these verses and in Acts 1:9, so shall he return again “in a cloud with power and great glory (Luke 21:27 and D&C 34:7). The Prophet Joseph’s revelation expresses it even more clearly:

    1 For I say unto you, that ye shall not see me henceforth and know that I am he of whom it is written by the prophets, until ye shall say: Blessed is he who cometh in the name of the Lord, in the clouds of heaven, and all the holy angels with him. Then understood his disciples that he should come again on the earth, after that he was glorified and crowned on the right hand of God….
    26 For as the light of the morning cometh out of the east, and shineth even unto the west, and covereth the whole earth, so shall also the coming of the Son of Man be….
    36 And, as I said before, after the tribulation of those days, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken, then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven, and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn; and they shall see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven, with power and great glory (Joseph Smith-Matthew:1, 26, 36).

    The shechinah is a prominent part of the Savior’s second coming. He will come in a cloud of light.

    44 And then they shall look for me, and, behold, I will come; and they shall see me in the clouds of heaven, clothed with power and great glory; with all the holy angels; and he that watches not for me shall be cut off.
    45 But before the arm of the Lord shall fall, an angel shall sound his trump, and the saints that have slept shall come forth to meet me in the cloud (D&C 45:44-46).

    Both the dead and the living Saints will rise to meet him, will join him in within that veil of light: “That when the trump shall sound for the dead, we shall be caught up in the cloud to meet thee, that we may ever be with the Lord (D&C 109:75).” “For ye are the church of the Firstborn, and he will take you up in a cloud, and appoint every man his portion (D&C 78:1-22).

  • 3 Nephi 9:21-22 — LeGrand Baker — ‘redeem’ – to ‘come unto Christ’

    How about this! This body of mine finally got “old.” Its been trying to tell me that for quite a few years but the part of me that matters has a hard time taking it seriously. Collage students are still among my best friends and I still think of myself as their contemporary. But my body turned 75 last week, and people tell me that’s “old.”
    ——————————
    Scott Oberg have been friends since he was a student at BYU. He sent me this beautiful testimony this week, and I asked him if I could share it with you.

    LeGrand, Hello my friend. I just wanted to drop you a quick note to say that this week’s comments on a Broken Heart and Contrite Spirit resonated with me. I know we have talked about it before and referenced it before, but the last several discussions of 3 Nephi 9 has just helped make the entire experience and the meaning of of the message all come to life. The words are indeed poetic and descriptive, but as I think of the Savior speaking these words with all the energy of his heart hoping that we understand the love that this whole message is communicated in leaves these words so understated on the page. I have felt many times that as Mormon was compiling the book how many tears he must have shed as he too wished he could communicate the power of the words and the love that all of this is communicated to us in. I don’t know what to say other than I continue to be amazed at how wonderful this book really is.

    —————————-

    3 Nephi 9:21-22 — LeGrand Baker — ‘redeem’ – to ‘come unto Christ’

    21 Behold, I have come unto the world to bring redemption unto the world, to save the world from sin.
    22 Therefore, whoso repenteth and cometh unto me………..

    A Meaning of “Redeem”— to “Come Unto Christ”

    The entire message of the Book of Mormon revolves around a single concept. It is the same as the pivotal doctrine of the festival temple drama—the basic human need to return to the Garden and to the presence of God. All other discussions in those chapters are subsets of that most important doctrine. It is what Alma called “the plan of redemption” (Alma 12). In the Book of Mormon, the word “redeem” has a specific meaning rarely found in the Old Testament. The meaning is the conclusion of the Feast of Tabernacles temple drama which follows the pattern of the universal “cosmic myth— returning home triumphant.”
    For each person who participated, the entire ancient dramatic temple presentation was a review of one’s own eternal odyssey. Its purpose was, as Amulek assures us:

    32 For behold, this life is the time for men to prepare to meet God; yea, behold the day of this life is the day for men to perform their labors (Alma 34:32)

    The operative word here is “prepare.” For some this life is the time to meet God, but even for such, there are necessary preparations to be made. For the rest of us, that meeting will come later, and this life truly is the time to prepare. Speaking of our time, Nephi wrote,

    32….wherefore, they shall come to the knowledge of their Redeemer and the very points of his doctrine, that they may know how to come unto him and be saved (1 Nephi 15:14).

    That was the entire point of the ancient temple drama: to teach one how to come. As we approach the great mountain, those familiar with it’s heights can tell us that there is only one way to get to the top. We must walk that path, and that path only, or we will never reach the Holy of Holies at the summit. The path is described in brief this way:

    1 Verily, thus saith the Lord: It shall come to pass that every soul who forsaketh his sins and cometh unto me, and calleth on my name, and obeyeth my voice, and keepeth my commandments, shall see my face and know that I am (D&C 93:1).

    The way is described in much greater detail elsewhere. The following are examples:

    26 And now, my beloved brethren, I would that ye should come unto Christ, who is the Holy One of Israel, and partake of his salvation, and the power of his redemption. Yea, come unto him, and offer your whole souls as an offering unto him, and continue in fasting and praying, and endure to the end; and as the Lord liveth ye will be saved (Omni 1:26).

    The “power of his redemption” is the power to bring us back to him. In much of the Book of Mormon the realization of the drama’s crescendo—to become a son and heir of God, and return to his presence—is encapsulated in the single word “redeem.” For that reason, an analysis of the way the Book of Mormon often uses the word seems very much in order.
    “Redeem” has a number of different meanings in the scriptures, and its context determines what its meaning is. In both the New and the Old Testaments the words translated “redeem” or “redeemed” mean to purchase (as one would purchase something in the market place) or to ransom (as to pay to get another out of prison or out of bondage). The connotation is that through his Atonement, the Lord has ransomed or purchased us from the consequences and the bondage of sin and death.
    The primary difference between the meanings in the New and Old Testaments has to do with one’s relationship with the person who does the redeeming. In Hebrew thought, the debt is paid by a brother or other relative, and the family relationship is a necessary part of the word’s meaning. For example, when a man dies and leaves behind his widow and family, a “redeemer” might be a near kin who is obligated by law to care for the them. In the story of Ruth, Boaz married Ruth according to his family rights to redeem her in her widowhood because, as Naomi pointed out, he was their “kinsman.” It is significant that “kinsman” in that story, and “redeemer” in Job’s statement, “I know that my redeemer liveth” are translated from the same Hebrew word.
    In the New Testament, the Greek meanings of the words that are translated “redeem” carry no connotation of family responsibility. Consequently, the word “Redeemer” is not found in the New Testament. Even though the Greek words do not convey the idea of a family relationship, almost all of the ways the words “redeem” and “redeemed” are used in the New Testament focus on the ideas of one’s being a child and an heir of God.
    The most important meaning of the word in the Old Testament, and the one used by most writers of the Book of Mormon, is in the Book of Job:

    23 Oh that my words were now written!
    oh that they were printed in a book!
    24 That they were graven
    with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever!
    25 For I know that my Redeemer liveth,
    and that he shall stand at the latter day upon the earth:
    26 And though after my skin worms destroy this body,
    yet in my flesh shall I see God:
    27 Whom I shall see for myself,
    and mine eyes shall behold, and not another;
    though my reins be consumed within me (Job 19:23-27).

    Job’s testimony is that because his Redeemer lives, Job shall see God. That same meaning is also found in the psalms. For example, in the 49th Psalm where to be redeemed is to be brought from the grave and into the presence of God:

    14 Like sheep they are laid in the grave;
    death shall feed on them; and the upright shall have
    dominion over them in the morning;
    and their beauty shall consume in the grave from their dwelling.
    15 But God will redeem my soul from the power of the grave:
    for he shall receive me.(Psalm 49:14-15).

    Psalm 69 speaks of redemption before death comes. It reads:

    16 Hear me, O Lord; for thy lovingkindness is good:
    turn unto me according to the multitude of thy tender mercies.
    17 And hide not thy face from thy servant;
    for I am in trouble: hear me speedily.
    18 Draw nigh unto my soul, and redeem it:
    deliver me because of mine enemies (Psalm 69:16-18).

    That meaning is found throughout the Book of Mormon, where the words “redeem,” “redeemed,” and “Redeemer” usually mean the same thing as in Job: “yet in my flesh shall I see God.” It is the opposite of “second death,” which is to be excluded from the presence of God.
    In the Book of Mormon, the “Redeemer” is the One who makes that return possible, because he is the God to whom one first returns.
    The definition of “redeem” is given by Samuel the Lamanite when he said, “the resurrection of Christ redeemeth mankind, yea, even all mankind, and bringeth them back into the presence of the Lord.” The context in which he said that is as follows:

    14 And behold, again, another sign I give unto you, yea, a sign of his death.
    15 For behold, he surely must die that salvation may come; yea, it behooveth him and becometh expedient that he dieth, to bring to pass the resurrection of the dead, that thereby men may be brought into the presence of the Lord.
    16 Yea, behold, this death bringeth to pass the resurrection, and redeemeth all mankind from the first death—that spiritual death; for all mankind, by the fall of Adam being cut off from the presence of the Lord, are considered as dead, both as to things temporal and to things spiritual.
    17 But behold, the resurrection of Christ redeemeth mankind, yea, even all mankind, and bringeth them back into the presence of the Lord.
    18 Yea, and it bringeth to pass the condition of repentance, that whosoever repenteth the same is not hewn down and cast into the fire; but whosoever repenteth not is hewn down and cast into the fire; and there cometh upon them again a spiritual death, yea, a second death, for they are cut off again as to things pertaining to righteousness [zedek] (Helaman 14:14-18).

    If to be redeemed means to be brought into the presence of God, then the phrase “plan of redemption” means the plan whereby one can be brought back into God’s presence and has the same connotation as the frequently repeated invitation to “come unto Christ.”
    Nowhere is that more clearly explained than by the Savior when he introduced himself to the brother of Jared:

    13 And when he had said these words, behold, the Lord showed himself unto him, and said: Because thou knowest these things ye are redeemed from the fall; therefore ye are brought back into my presence; therefore I show myself unto you.
    14 Behold, I am he who was prepared from the foundation of the world to redeem my people. Behold, I am Jesus Christ. I am the Father and the Son. In me shall all mankind have life, and that eternally, even they who shall believe on my name; and they shall become my sons and my daughters (Ether 3:13-14).

    A beautiful example of the fruition of that invitation is the one spoken by Lehi:

    15 But behold, the Lord hath redeemed my soul from hell [past tense]; I have beheld his glory, and I am encircled about eternally in the arms of his love (2 Nephi 1:15).

    That is one of the most important verses in the Book of Mormon because it identifies a facet of the single most important doctrine of the gospel: by using the symbolism of an embrace it describes the Savior’s personal relationship with the righteous and incorporates into that same verse a number of other key words in addition to “redeemed.” The entire concept of this redemption is suspended on the past tense quality of the word “hath.” For Lehi, his redemption had occurred in his own past, but through the embrace it also continues as the vitality of his present and is the projected hope of his future.
    The final phrase in our verse, “and I am encircled about eternally in the arms of his love,” is a reference to a physical embrace, a present and eternal token of friendship—a “hope” that brings the future fulfillment of the covenant into the reality of the present until it changes the very nature of one’s eternal being. (That, by the way, is how the meaning of the word “hope” in Moroni 7may be understood.)
    The concept and the realization of “redemption” are together the most important doctrine of the gospel. It encompasses the power and meaning of the Atonement and of all our eternal relationships with the Savior—as a flower encompasses all of the promises of the seed that was planted, is the product of the stem and the hope of the nourishment from the roots and the leaves that grew from that seed – and that same flower is the promise of fruit which will produce other seeds, and thus the flower is both the glory of the past and the prefiguration of eternal lives in perpetuity. Redemption is the epitome of friendship, and the timeless light of all that is life. Another Book of Mormon example is Lehi’s blessing to his son Jacob:

    2 Nevertheless, Jacob, my first-born in the wilderness, thou knowest the greatness of God; and he shall consecrate thine afflictions for thy gain.
    3 Wherefore, thy soul shall be blessed, and thou shalt dwell safely with thy brother, Nephi; and thy days shall be spent in the service of thy God. Wherefore, I know that thou art redeemed, because of the righteousness of thy Redeemer; for thou hast beheld that in the fulness of time he cometh to bring salvation unto men.
    4 And thou hast beheld in thy youth his glory (2 Nephi 2:2-4a).

    Here again, the power of the concept is in the verb: “I know that thou art [present tense] redeemed,” for “thou hast [past tense] beheld” God. Another example is Nephi, writing about himself, his brother Jacob, and Isaiah:

    2 And now I, Nephi, write more of the words of Isaiah, for my soul delighteth in his words. For I will liken his words unto my people, and I will send them forth unto all my children, for he verily saw my Redeemer, even as I have seen him.
    3 And my brother, Jacob, also has seen him as I have seen him; wherefore, I will send their words forth unto my children to prove unto them that my words are true. Wherefore, by the words of three, God hath said, I will establish my word. Nevertheless, God sendeth more witnesses, and he proveth all his words (2 Nephi 11:2-3).

    In another place Nephi wrote:

    6 I glory in plainness; I glory in truth; I glory in my Jesus, for he hath redeemed my soul from hell [past tense].
    7 I have charity for my people, and great faith in Christ that I shall meet many souls spotless at his judgment-seat (2 Nephi 33:6-7).

    Alma left us with this testimony of being with God and thus being redeemed:

    23 And it came to pass after they had fasted and prayed for the space of two days and two nights, the limbs of Alma received their strength, and he stood up and began to speak unto them, bidding them to be of good comfort:
    24 For, said he, I have repented of my sins, and have been redeemed of the Lord [past tense]; behold I am born of the Spirit.
    25 And the Lord said unto me: Marvel not that all mankind, yea, men and women, all nations, kindreds, tongues and people, must be born again; yea, born of God, changed from their carnal and fallen state, to a state of righteousness, being redeemed of God, becoming his sons and daughters;
    26 And thus they become new creatures; and unless they do this, they can in nowise inherit the kingdom of God.
    27 I say unto you, unless this be the case, they must be cast off; and this I know, because I was like to be cast off.
    28 Nevertheless, after wading through much tribulation, repenting nigh unto death, the Lord in mercy hath seen fit to snatch me out of an everlasting burning, and I am born of God (Mosiah 27:23-28).

    A favorite example is the conclusion of Helaman’s letter to Moroni. It gives us a subtle insight into the foundation and fruition of the very intimate friendship shared by these two great prophets:

    41 And now, my beloved brother, Moroni, may the Lord our God, who has redeemed us and made us free [both past tense], keep you continually in his presence; yea, and may he favor this people, even that ye may have success in obtaining the possession of all that which the Lamanites have taken from us, which was for our support. And now, behold, I close mine epistle. I am Helaman, the son of Alma (Alma 58:41).

    Abinadi’s entire instructions to Alma rest upon the importance of one’s becoming a child of God. In that context, one may assume that in his statement, “For behold, did not Moses prophesy unto them concerning the coming of the Messiah, and that God should redeem his people?” Abinadi was using the word “redeem” to mean to be brought into the presence of God and also to teach Alma that one must become a child of Christ.
    If the whole plan of salvation were reduced to a single sentence, the first part of that sentence would be about the Savior’s Atonement, and the last part might read: “that one might return and remain in the presence of God.” That was the promise from the beginning. After Adam and Eve left the Garden, they were taught the meaning of sacrifice:

    9 And in that day the Holy Ghost fell upon Adam, which beareth record of the Father and the Son, saying: I am the Only Begotten of the Father from the beginning, henceforth and forever, that as thou hast fallen thou mayest be redeemed, and all mankind, even as many as will (Moses 5:9).

    Adam understood the full impact of “thou mayest be redeemed” and he said:

    10 Blessed be the name of God, for because of my transgression my eyes are opened, and in this life I shall have joy, and again in the flesh I shall see God (Moses 5:10).
    It is significant that the Savior emphasized that same relationship in the Beatitudes:

    Blessed are all the pure in heart, for they shall see God.
    And blessed are all the peacemakers, for they shall be called the children of God (3 Nephi 12:8-9).

    The prophet Abinadi’s testimony to the young prince Alma uses different words, but carries the same message:

    23 They are raised to dwell with God who has redeemed them; thus they have eternal life through Christ, who has broken the bands of death (Mosiah 15:23).

    In the 2007 October general conference, Elder David A. Bednar explained the importance of the phrase to “come unto Christ.”

    The risen Lord next explained the importance of coming unto Him. The multitude gathered together at the temple was invited literally to come forth unto the Savior “one by one” (3 Nephi 11:15) to feel the prints of the nails in the Master’s hands and feet and to thrust their hands into His side. Each individual who had this experience “did know of a surety and did bear record, that it was he” (v. 15), even Jesus Christ, who had come.
    The Savior also taught the people to come unto Him through sacred covenants, and He reminded them that they were “the children of the covenant” (3 Nephi 20:26).
    Repenting and coming unto Christ through the covenants and ordinances of salvation are prerequisite to and a preparation for being sanctified by the reception of the Holy Ghost and standing spotless before God at the last day.

    (This is taken from Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord)

  • 3 Nephi 9:19-20 — LeGrand Baker — broken heart and contrite spirit

    3 Nephi 9:19-20 — LeGrand Baker — broken heart and contrite spirit

    None of the ideas the Savior expressed when he spoke to the people would have been new or strange to those who heard them. After identifying himself, the Savior gave two sets of instructions. Both had to do with the temple and both may readily be seen as instructions to help participants prepare for the final acts of the Feast of Tabernacles temple drama. He said:

    19 And ye shall offer up unto me no more the shedding of blood; yea, your sacrifices and your burnt offerings shall be done away, for I will accept none of your sacrifices and your burnt offerings.
    20 And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit. And whoso cometh unto me with a broken heart and a contrite spirit…. (3 Nephi 9:19-20).

    The Savior had just reminded them of two psalms that were used in their Feast of Tabernacles temple service: :

    18 The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart;
    and saveth such as be of a contrite spirit (Psalm 34:18).

    16 For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it:
    thou delightest not in burnt offering.
    17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit:
    a broken and a contrite heart, O God,
    thou wilt not despise (Psalm 51:16-17).

    To sacrifice does not mean to lose something or to give it away; rather, it means to set something apart, to remove it from the profane and make it sacred. An example is tithing. Tithing is a sacrifice in that it is set apart to be used for sacred purposes. If one is to sacrifice a broken heart and contrite spirit, it does not mean that these things are somehow to be lost to ourselves, but rather that they are to be made sacred. The Hebrew word translated “broken” means the same as the English word. For example, if two pots are sitting on a shelf, one an earthen pot and the other made of plastic, and something bumps the shelf and causes them to fall, the plastic one will bounce, but the clay pot will shatter. The difference is not the height from which they fall, nor the floor they hit, but their ability to maintain their structure. The plastic pot stays as it was, the earthen pot is not a pot any more.

    In the ancient world, the heart is the cosmic center of the human being. It is the seat of both one’s intellect and of one’s emotions. That is easy to understand because when we learn something excitingly new, we do not feel the idea in our head, but in our heart, just as we feel all emotions in our chest area.(That is true of all emotions except pity or empathy. If you saw a puppy hit by a car, you would feel it right in the pit of your stomach. Thus the phrase, “the bowels of mercy.”)

    The plastic pot is as one whose attitudes, preconceptions, and prejudices are well established and will not change, like a kind of spiritual and intellectual rigor mortis. The earthen pot is as one who is still alive—whose mind is still open to new ideas and who has cleansed his emotions from the debility of prejudice. It is one who can see the world—and more especially the people in it—as God sees them, as they really are in sacred time. Thus the clay pot is broken, but its little pieces might be put together and restructured into something different. A broken heart is like that—subject to becoming different from what it was before.

    The word contrite is usually taken to mean downcast, or humble, but the meaning is much larger than that. The Hebrew and English words mean the same thing: to rub, to pulverize, or turn to powder. It is what a hammer would do to the clay pot, or what a new shoe would do to one’s heel during a long hike. It is not something the pot can do to itself because it can only be done by some external force.

    The spirit is the spirit—it is the Self that animates and gives life to the body. For one’s spirit to be contrite, it must be hurt by others. For one’s sacrifice to be a contrite spirit, one must willingly take upon oneself the pain and sorrow of other people. An example might be when one hears a juicy bit of gossip and does not pass it on. Or when Junior comes home and tells dad he has just mashed the car. The Dad might dump the whole burden of the situation—its guilt and its costs—upon the boy, or he might put his arm around his son and say something like, “Did I ever tell you about the time I did that to my dad’s car?” In the latter case, the father does not take away the responsibility, but he does take upon himself the burden of the guilt and the hurt. The car can be dealt with after the pain is gone.

    A broken heart might be likened to the Savior on the cross when all of his earthly and physical desires were subordinated to his need to die and accomplish the resurrection. A contrite spirit was when the Savior suffered for all of us in Gethsemane.

    In short, what the Savior requires of us is the same sacrifice that he made—but a sacrifice that is within the limits of our ability. To sacrifice one’s Self is to set one’s Self apart from the world and make one sacred. The sacrifice is accomplished when our preconceptions and prejudices are opened to the Savior’s light so we see that others have real value and we extend our Selves to try to take away some of the hurt this world imposes upon them. To make that sacrifice is to open one’s Self to the fulfillment of the Lord’s promise:

    26 A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an heart of flesh.
    27 And I will put my spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes, and ye shall keep my judgments, and do them (Ezekiel 36:26-27).

    Then will the prayer of the psalms be made reality:

    10 Create in me a clean heart, O God;
    and renew a right spirit within me.
    11 Cast me not away from thy presence;
    and take not thy holy spirit from me.
    12 Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation;
    and uphold me with thy free spirit (Psalm 51:10-12).

    That was all taken from Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, second (paperback) edition, “3 Nephi 12:8 – Pure in Heart,” 670-79.

  • 3 Nephi 9:18 — LeGrand Baker — ‘light and life of the world’

    3 Nephi 9:18 — LeGrand Baker — ‘light and life of the world’

    The Savior introduced himself to the Nephites by saying:

    3 Nephi 9:15-18
    15 Behold, I am Jesus Christ the Son of God. I created the heavens and the earth, and all things that in them are. I was with the Father from the beginning. I am in the Father, and the Father in me; and in me hath the Father glorified his name.
    16 I came unto my own, and my own received me not. And the scriptures concerning my coming are fulfilled.
    17 And as many as have received me, to them have I given to become the sons of God; and even so will I to as many as shall believe on my name, for behold, by me redemption cometh, and in me is the law of Moses fulfilled.
    18 I am the light and the life of the world. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end.

    “The light and the life of the world” is a nice phrase and easily read — and too easily read without thought — but its implications are so huge that they reach to both ends of our eternity.

    The Savior is the “Creator God” of the Old Testament as is clearly explained in the books of Moses and Abraham in the pearl of Great Price. And the Gospel of John also testifies:

    3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.
    4 In him was life; and the life was the light of men (John 1:3-4).

    D&C 93, which is an elaboration of John’s testimony, is even more explicit:

    8 Therefore, in the beginning the Word was, for he was the Word, even the messenger of salvation—
    9 The light and the Redeemer of the world; the Spirit of truth, who came into the world, because the world was made by him, and in him was the life of men and the light of men.
    10 The worlds were made by him; men were made by him; all things were made by him, and through him, and OF HIM (D&C 93:8-10).

    “Of him” means what it says— all things are made of him — not of his person but of the enormous aura of light that surrounds his person. That is, his light is the substance from which all things are made. D&C 888 states that without equivocation.

    5-6 Jesus Christ his Son — He that ascended up on high, as also he descended below all things, in that he comprehended all things, that he might be in all and through all things, the light of truth;
    7 Which truth shineth. This is the light of Christ. As also HE IS … the light of the sun, and … the light of the moon, and … also the light of the stars [we are talking galaxies here], and the power thereof by which they were made;
    11 And the light which shineth, which giveth you light, is through him who enlighteneth your eyes, WHICH IS THE SAME LIGHT THAT QUICKENETH YOUR UNDERSTANDINGS;
    12 Which light proceedeth forth from the presence of God TO FILL THE IMMENSITY OF SPACE —
    13 The light which is in all things, WHICH GIVETH LIFE TO ALL THINGS, which is the law by which all things are governed, even the power of God who sitteth upon his throne, who is in the bosom of eternity, who is in the midst of all things (D&C 88:5-13-45).

    Light, truth, and the Savior’s love each fill the immensity of space — that is, this entire universe. Therefore all three occupy the same space at the same time or they are different aspects of the same thing. The scriptures tell us they are equivalents and are the fundamental substance and energy of our existence.

    The light we are talking about is more than just photons. It is the fundamental element of which all things are made. Scientists call it “energy” because it is dynamic rather that static. Whether one uses Einstein’s famous E=mc2 or the more recent string theory, the basic conclusions are the same. The fact that all things are made of the Savior’s light is attested in many places in the scriptures.

    The word “word” has three doctrinal meanings in the scriptures: (1) It is the name/title of the Savior in John chapter 1. (2) It is the words of God’s the commandments, teachings, and covenants. (3) It is a way of describing priesthood because speaking words is the way priesthood was exercised from the beginning (God said, ‘let there by light’) to every blessing and covenant performed in this life.

    D&C 84 equates “the word of the Lord” with “truth,” and with “light,”and with “Spirit, even the Spirit of Jesus Christ.” It says:

    44 For you shall live by every word that proceedeth forth from the mouth of God.
    45 FOR THE WORD OF THE LORD IS TRUTH, AND WHATSOEVER IS TRUTH IS LIGHT, AND WHATSOEVER IS LIGHT IS SPIRIT, EVEN THE SPIRIT OF JESUS CHRIST.
    46 And the Spirit giveth light to every man that cometh into the world; and the Spirit enlighteneth every man through the world, that hearkeneth to the voice of the Spirit.
    47 And every one that hearkeneth to the voice of the Spirit cometh unto God, even the Father.
    48 And the Father teacheth him of the covenant which he has renewed and confirmed upon you, which is confirmed upon you for your sakes, and not for your sakes only, but for the sake of the whole world (D&C 84:44-48).

    This suggests that God’s word, which is his priesthood power, which is truth, which is light, which is Spirit are all the same thing. That may explain why Abraham and his descendants are personified as priesthood in this verse:

    11 And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse them that curse thee; and in thee (that is, in thy Priesthood) and in thy seed (that is, thy Priesthood), for I give unto thee a promise that this right shall continue in thee, and in thy seed after thee (that is to say, the literal seed, or the seed of the body) shall all the families of the earth be blessed, even with the blessings of the Gospel, which are the blessings of salvation, even of life eternal (Abraham 2:11).

    (That asks an intriguing question: Does the priesthood to which we were ordained in the premortal world remain an integral part of who and what we are?)

    We have seen that the Savior’s light, truth, love, priesthood, and Spirit fills “the emensity of space.” To know the magnitude of that, we have the Prophet Joseph’s personal testimony that I like so much and that I often quote. +It was he published in the Times and Seasons as part of a poem that he wrote after the pattern of D&C 76.

    And now after all of the proofs made of him,
    By witnesses truly, by whom he was known,
    This is mine, last of all, that he lives; yea, he lives!
    And sits at the right hand of God on his throne.

    And I heard a great voice bearing record from heav’n,
    He’s the Saviour and only begotten of God;
    By him, of him, and through him, the worlds were all made,
    Even all that careen in the heavens so broad.

    Whose inhabitants, too, from the first to the last,
    Are sav’d by the very same saviour of ours;
    and, of course, are begotten god’s daughters and sons
    By the very same truths and the very same powers.
    [“A Vision,” Times and Seasons, February 1, 1843]

  • 3 Nephi 9:15-18 — LeGrand Baker — ‘believe on my name’

    3 Nephi 9:15-18 — LeGrand Baker — ‘believe on my name’

    Verse 15, which we discussed last week, is a necessary introduction to verses 16-18.

    15 Behold, I am Jesus Christ the Son of God. I created the heavens and the earth, and all things that in them are. I was with the Father from the beginning. I am in the Father, and the Father in me; and in me hath the Father glorified his name.
    16 I came unto my own, and my own received me not. And the scriptures concerning my coming are fulfilled.
    17 And as many as have received me, to them have I given to become the sons of God; and even so will I to as many as shall believe on my name, for behold, by me redemption cometh, and in me is the law of Moses fulfilled.
    18 I am the light and the life of the world. I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end.
    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    16 I came unto my own, and my own received me not. And the scriptures concerning my coming are fulfilled. …
    17…and in me is the law of Moses fulfilled.

    The scriptures are “fulfilled” in the same way the Law of Moses is “fulfilled.” That is, the terms of a covenant or contract are completed and satisfied. Quite simply it means that up until that time, the Savior had finished all that the covenant required that he should do.

    17 And as many as have received me,

    “Receive” is an active verb and certainly does not have a passive or casual meaning here. To receive presupposes that a gift has been offered, and requires that the recipient affirms his acceptance of that gift. In gospel terms, that affirmation always requires both an ordinance and a covenant.

    to them have I given to become the sons of God; and even so will I to as many as shall believe on my name,

    It is significant that in this and the following examples, Jesus does not say “believe in me.” Rather he says “believe on my name.”
    There is always a new name with each new covenant (ss in baptism and the sacrament when we take upon ourselves the name of the Savior). Anciently, exchanging new covenant names was an evidence of the validity of the covenant. For example, when Peter was given the sealing power the Savior said:

    18And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it (Matthew 16:18).

    Sometimes during the covenant making process names are exchanged. There are several places in the D&C that seem to be the same sort of thing, but the covenant name is not always different from the given name. For example, the Lord said to Joseph:

    9 Behold, thou art Joseph, and thou wast chosen to do the work of the Lord, but because of transgression, if thou art not aware thou wilt fall (D&C 3:9).

    Here are two examples where both covenant names are given:

    20 Behold, thou art Oliver….
    21 Behold, I am Jesus Christ, the Son of God…. (D&C 6:20-21).

    23 Behold thou art Hyrum, my son; …
    28 Behold, I am Jesus Christ, the Son of God. I am the life and the light of the world….
    30 But verily, verily, I say unto you, that as many as receive me, to them will I give power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on my name. Amen (D&C 11:23-30).

    Another example that uses even more explicit language is in a revelation given through Joseph Smith to Orson Pratt in 1830 — well before Orson was chosen to be an Apostle. It reads:

    1 My son Orson, hearken and hear and behold what I, the Lord God, shall say unto you, even Jesus Christ your Redeemer;….
    3 Who so loved the world that he gave his own life, that as many as would believe might become the sons of God. Wherefore you are my son…. (D&C 34:1-3)

    That sounds very much like the Lord’s covenant with Moses:

    3 And God spake unto Moses, saying: Behold, I am the Lord God Almighty, and Endless is my name; …
    4 And, behold, thou art my son;….(Moses 1:3-4)

    King Benjamin explained the significance of using the Savior’s name as a covenant name. He said:

    7 And now, because of the covenant which ye have made ye shall be called the children of Christ, his sons, and his daughters; for behold, this day he hath spiritually begotten you; for ye say that your hearts are changed through faith on his name; therefore, ye are born of him and have become his sons and his daughters (Mosiah 5:7).

    The Savior said essentially the same thing to the brother of Jared:

    14 Behold, I am he who was prepared from the foundation of the world to redeem my people. Behold, I am Jesus Christ. I am the Father and the Son. In me shall all mankind have life, and that eternally, even they who shall believe on my name; and they shall become my sons and my daughters (Ether 3:14).

    The Savior expressed the same principle in the Beatitudes:

    9 And blessed are all the peacemakers, for they shall be called [named] the children of God (3 Nephi 12:9).

    It is apparent that the phrase “believe on my/his name” is about believing in and acting on priesthood covenants and the ordinances associated with them. The Bible quotes John as writing:

    12 But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12).

    But the Prophet’s Inspired version is even more explicit:

    12 But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God; only to them who believe on his name (JS John 1:12).

    Here are a few examples where the word “name” can be replaced by the word “covenant” to clarify without changing the meaning of the scripture:

    26 And after that he came men also were saved by faith in his name; and by faith, they become the sons of God. And as surely as Christ liveth he spake these words unto our fathers, saying: Whatsoever thing ye shall ask the Father in my name, which is good, in faith believing that ye shall receive, behold, it shall be done unto you (Moroni 7:26).

    30 But verily, verily, I say unto you, that as many as receive me, to them will I give power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on my name. Amen (D&C 11:28-30)

    2 I am Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who was crucified for the sins of the world, even as many as will believe on my name, that they may become the sons of God, even one in me as I am one in the Father, as the Father is one in me, that we may be one (D&C 35:2).

    Perhaps the most striking example is D&C 45:8. It reads:

    8…unto as many as received me gave I power to do many miracles, and to become the sons of God; and even unto them that believed on my name gave I power to obtain eternal life.

    The context of that statement is the Savior’s own explanation of the Atonement. Here it is in that context:

    1 Hearken, O ye people of my church, to whom the kingdom has been given; hearken ye and give ear to him who laid the foundation of the earth, who made the heavens and all the hosts thereof, and by whom all things were made which live, and move, and have a being.
    2 And again I say, hearken unto my voice, lest death shall overtake you; in an hour when ye think not the summer shall be past, and the harvest ended, and your souls not saved.
    3 Listen to him who is the advocate with the Father, who is pleading your cause before him—
    4 Saying: Father, behold the sufferings and death of him who did no sin, in whom thou wast well pleased; behold the blood of thy Son which was shed, the blood of him whom thou gavest that thyself might be glorified;
    5 Wherefore, Father, spare these my brethren that believe on my name, that they may come unto me and have everlasting life.
    6 Hearken, O ye people of my church, and ye elders listen together, and hear my voice while it is called today, and harden not your hearts;
    7 For verily I say unto you that I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the light and the life of the world—a light that shineth in darkness and the darkness comprehendeth it not.
    8 I came unto mine own, and mine own received me not; but unto as many as received me gave I power to do many miracles, and to become the sons of God; and even unto them that believed on my name gave I power to obtain eternal life.
    9 And even so I have sent mine everlasting covenant into the world, to be a light to the world, and to be a standard for my people, and for the Gentiles to seek to it, and to be a messenger before my face to prepare the way before me (D&C 45:1-9).

  • 3 Nephi 9:15 — LeGrand Baker — Jesus’s autobiographical introduction

    3 Nephi 9:15 — LeGrand Baker — Jesus’s autobiographical introduction

    3 Nephi 9:15
    15 Behold, I am Jesus Christ the Son of God. I created the heavens and the earth, and all things that in them are. I was with the Father from the beginning. I am in the Father, and the Father in me; and in me hath the Father glorified his name.

    Wilfred Griggs once told me that he asked Hugh Nibley if he had ever considered writing a commentary on the gospel of John. Nibley replied that he had not because it would take 300 or 400 pages before he got to verse 6.

    This verse in the Savior’s self-introduction is like that. It reads like a review of Christ’s eternal mission which is the same as his eternal biography.

    15 Behold, I am Jesus Christ the Son of God.

    The Nephies would not have heard the English words “Jesus Christ.” They would have had no meaning for them. He would have used the Hebrew equivalent of “Jesus” which is “Joshua.” It means “Jehovah Saves,” or as our Bible dictionary says, “Savior.” “Christ” is equivalent to the Hebrew “Messiah” which means “The Anointed One.” What the Nephites would have heard is “I am the Savior Anointed, the Son of God.”

    Christ was anointed to be the Savior at the Council in Heaven. In the beginning, he was the First Born and Birthright Heir of his Heavenly Father, just as he was the Only Begotten Son and Heir in this world.

    I created the heavens and the earth, and all things that in them are.

    Those first five verses of John say it just a bit differently:

    1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
    2 The same was in the beginning with God.
    3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made.
    4 In him was life; and the life was the light of men.
    5 And the light shineth in darkness; and the darkness comprehended it not (John 1:1-5).

    The Prophet Joseph’s personal testimony says it still more powerfully:

    And now after all of the proofs made of him,
    By witnesses truly, by whom he was known,
    This is mine, last of all, that he lives; yea, he lives!
    And sits at the right hand of God on his throne.

    And I heard a great voice bearing record from heav’n,
    He’s the Saviour and only begotten of God;
    By him, of him, and through him, the worlds were all made,
    Even all that careen in the heavens so broad.

    Whose inhabitants, too, from the first to the last,
    Are sav’d by the very same Saviour of ours;
    And, of course, are begotten God’s daughters and sons
    By the very same truths and the very same powers.{1}

    I was with the Father from the beginning.

    Many scriptures testify this is true, but The Book of the Secrets of Enoch (an ancient apocryphal writing that may well have been written by Enoch) says it a more explicitly: “even before the very beginning.”{2}

    I am in the Father, and the Father in me;

    We have already discussed this beautiful doctrine as it is explained by Abinadi in Mosiah 15:1-7.

    and in me hath the Father glorified his name.

    That has multiple references from the Council in Heaven; To Christ as the Creator acting as his Father’s agent; To Christ’s life on this earth where John records the Father’s testimony:

    26 If any man serve me, let him follow me; and where I am, there shall also my servant be: if any man serve me, him will my Father honour.
    27 Now is my soul troubled; and what shall I say? Father, save me from this hour: but for this cause came I unto this hour.
    28 Father, glorify thy name. Then came there a voice from heaven, saying, I have both glorified it, and will glorify it again (John 12:26-28).

    To Gethsemane; to the cross, To the Savior’s authorizing the righteous spirits to teach the gospel To those in the spirit prison; To his resurrection; To his final coronation after his resurrection as recorded by Paul.

    19… according to the working of his [the Father’s] mighty power,
    20 Which he wrought in Christ, when he raised him from the dead, and set him at his own right hand in the heavenly places,
    21 Far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to come:
    22 And hath put all things under his feet, and gave him to be the head over all things to the church,
    23 Which is his body, the fulness of him that filleth all in all (Ephesians 1:19-23).

    A careful study of 3 Nephi 9:15 would take way more than 400 pages.

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    FOOTNOTES

    {1}The Vision, a poem by Joseph Smith published in the Times and Seasons, February 1, 1843.

    {2}Book of the Secrets of Enoch, in The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament in English, 2 vols. Translated and edited by R. H. Charles. 2: 431-69. Oxford: Clarendon, 1976. The quote is from 24:2.
    Enoch was considered as scripture in New Testament times: Jude 1:14-15 is a quote from The Book of Enoch 1:9.

  • 3 Nephi 6:18-30 — LeGrand Baker — they did willfully rebel

    3 Nephi 6:18-30 — LeGrand Baker — they did wilfully rebel

    3 Nephi 6:18-30
    18 Now they did not sin ignorantly, for they knew the will of God concerning them, for it had been taught unto them; therefore they did wilfully rebel against God.

    There are two kinds of apostasy. Both are dangerous, but one is more dangerous than the other.
    The first is to “dwindle in unbelief.”
    It may be a result of spiritual sluggishness. Boredom in reading the scriptures because we know the stories already; stop reading the scriptures; pray out of habit then not bothering to do so; refocus our lives on things that seem to be more important, more profitable, more enjoyable.

    Mormon describes one of those processes with amazing clarity.

    24 And now, in this two hundred and first year there began to be among them those who were lifted up in pride, such as the wearing of costly apparel, and all manner of fine pearls, and of the fine things of the world.
    25 And from that time forth they did have their goods and their substance no more common among them.
    26 And they began to be divided into classes; and they began to build up churches unto themselves to get gain, and began to deny the true church of Christ.
    27 And it came to pass that when two hundred and ten years had passed away there were many churches in the land; yea, there were many churches which professed to know the Christ, and yet they did deny the more parts of his gospel, insomuch that they did receive all manner of wickedness, and did administer that which was sacred unto him to whom it had been forbidden because of unworthiness…..
    34 Nevertheless, the people did harden their hearts, for they were led by many priests and false prophets to build up many churches, and to do all manner of iniquity. And they did smite upon the people of Jesus; but the people of Jesus did not smite again. AND THUS THEY DID DWINDLE IN UNBELIEF AND WICKEDNESS, FROM YEAR TO YEAR, even until two hundred and thirty years had passed away (4 Nephi 1:24-34).

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    The second kind of apostasy is to wilfully rebel. Again we turn to Mormon for clarification:

    35 And now it came to pass in this year, yea, in the two hundred and thirty and first year, there was a great division among the people…..

    38 And it came to pass that they who rejected the gospel were called Lamanites, and Lemuelites, and Ishmaelites; and THEY DID NOT DWINDLE IN UNBELIEF, BUT THEY DID WILFULLY REBEL AGAINST THE GOSPEL OF CHRIST; and they did teach their children that they should not believe, even as their fathers, from the beginning, did dwindle.

    39 And it was because of the wickedness and abomination of their fathers, even as it was in the beginning. And they were taught to hate the children of God, even as the Lamanites were taught to hate the children of Nephi from the beginning (4 Nephi 1:36-39).

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    Mormon uses that phrase twice more in his own autobiography — each time with an increasing sense of utter tragedy.

    16 And I did endeavor to preach unto this people, but my mouth was shut, and I was forbidden that I should preach unto them; for behold they had wilfully rebelled against their God; and the beloved disciples were taken away out of the land, because of their iniquity(Mormon 1:1-19).

    15 And it came to pass that my sorrow did return unto me again, and I saw that the day of grace was passed with them, both temporally and spiritually; for I saw thousands of them hewn down in open rebellion against their God, and heaped up as dung upon the face of the land. And thus three hundred and forty and four years had passed away (Mormon 2:1-29).

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    We can almost watch this apostasy happen in Nephi’s story of Laman and Lemuel:

    8 And now I, Nephi, being grieved for the hardness of their hearts, therefore I spake unto them, saying, yea, even unto Laman and unto Lemuel: Behold ye are mine elder brethren, and how is it that ye are so hard in your hearts, and so blind in your minds, that ye have need that I, your younger brother, should speak unto you, yea, and set an example for you?

    9 How is it that ye have not hearkened unto the word of the Lord?

    10 HOW IS IT THAT YE HAVE FORGOTTEN that ye have seen an angel of the Lord?

    11 Yea, and HOW IS IT THAT YE HAVE FORGOTTEN what great things the Lord hath done for us, in delivering us out of the hands of Laban, and also that we should obtain the record?

    12 Yea, and HOW IS IT THAT YE HAVE FORGOTTEN that the Lord is able to do all things according to his will, for the children of men, if it so be that they exercise faith in him? Wherefore, let us be faithful to him (1 Nephi 7:8-12).

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    As we read the epistles in the New Testament, we see that Paul, Peter, and John had no hope for the survival of the pristine doctrines of the gospel. John tells of one in authority (perhaps a stake president) who would excommunicate anyone who acknowledged the authority of the Twelve:

    9 I wrote unto the church: but Diotrephes, who loveth to have the preeminence among them, receiveth us not.
    10 Wherefore, if I come, I will remember his deeds which he doeth, prating against us with malicious words: and not content therewith, neither doth he himself receive the brethren, and forbiddeth them that would, and casteth them out of the church.
    11 Beloved, follow not that which is evil, but that which is good. He that doeth good is of God: but he that doeth evil hath not seen God (3 John 1:9-11).

    – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

    Satan’s willfully rebelled is the most striking example. It really bothers me when I hear people talk about Satan presenting an alternative plan. Such a statement exposes a total lack of rational thought on the part of those who parrot it. Satan did not present a plan that could exalt anybody. His assertions were a self-aggrandizing rebellion that utterly precluded his and his followers being able to remain in God’s presence.

  • 3 Nephi 5:12-18 — LeGrand Baker — 3 Nephi as a temple text

    3 Nephi 5:12-18 — LeGrand Baker — 3 Nephi as a temple text.

    12 And behold, I am called Mormon…
    13 Behold, I am a disciple of Jesus Christ, the Son of God. I have been called of him to declare his word among his people, that they might have everlasting life….
    18 And I know the record which I make to be a just and a true record; nevertheless there are many things which, according to our language, we are not able to write (3 Nephi 5:12-18).

    I believe Mormon intended Third Nephi to be a translucent–if not an altogether transparent rendition of the ancient Israelite New Year’s festival and enthronement ceremonies {footnote # 1} (This is the place for me to stop and remind you that these ideas are more fully developed in Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord.)

    It seems likely to me that Mormon followed the outline of the Feast of Tabernacles temple drama in order to accomplish two objectives. First, to show that Jesus fulfilled the Law. That is, in his coming to America, he did all the things he was supposed to do. Among other things it means that he was made King in precisely the way the Law prescribed. Second, to teach his readers how one might become a “son of god” and be enthroned in God’s presence. To do the latter, Mormon shows his readers the process by which the disciple Nephi, and others, experienced the real events which they would have recognized as having been depicted symbolically during the Israelite temple drama.

    To demonstrate what I mean, let me just review the events of what appears to be Jesus’ coronation ceremony at the temple at Bountiful.

    The story in 3 Nephi begins, as does the Israelite temple drama, with the heavens themselves testifying that Jesus is the Son of God, then there is a war where an alternate plan is proposed (3 Nephi 3). The enemies of righteousness are defeated by the powers of obedience, prayer, and testimony [war in heaven]. The Nephites enter a beautiful time where there is virtually no sin [Eden]. But their serenity is shattered as sin creeps in among them. Then Mormon tells us about himself and assures us that he has all the necessary priesthood and authority (3 Nephi 5:12-26). Then all of the forces of evil are marshaled to destroy the Church and the Saints. Whereupon the God of Israel asserted his military authority by destroying those enemies.

    In America, on the fourth day of the new year (3 Nephi 8:5-7) the earth shook and all the warning words of the prophets were fulfilled. {2} There followed three days of darkness, during which time the spirit of Jehovah descend to the world of the dead. In the Temple festival ceremonies it was the earthly king who was symbolically saved from the underworld by the power of Jehovah. But in the real story, Jehovah himself goes into the spirit world where he establishes his Kingdom among the “meek,” and conquers their immortal enemies: death and hell.

    During the chaos of the darkness, the people who survived heard the voice of the Lord.

    13 O all ye that are spared because ye were more righteous than they, will ye not now return unto me, and repent of your sins, and be converted, that I may heal you?
    14 Yea, verily I say unto you, if ye will come unto me ye shall have eternal life. Behold, mine arm of mercy is extended towards you, and whosoever will come, him will I receive; and blessed are those who come unto me. (3 Nephi 9:13-14)

    In those two verses the Lord sums up all of the drama so far. The best way to understand the phrase “come unto Christ” or “return unto me” is that it means what it says – for one to go to the place where he is. The place on earth where one goes to be closest to heaven is the temple. When one gets there, and after one has received the healing power of his grace, then He extends the arm of his mercy so that one can (symbolically at least) enter his presence. The symbolism of that gesture is an invitation to its reality. As he said, “if ye will come unto me ye shall have eternal life.”

    Having said that, the Saviour introduced himself with that apparently followed with remarkable exactitude the coronation sequences of the New Year’s drama.

    Our Book of Mormon records that the Saviour began, “I am Jesus Christ the Son of God,” however, that is a translation: He would have not have used the Greek forms of his names when he spoke to the people in America. “Jesus” is the Greek form of Joshua, which in Hebrew means “Jehovah saves,” or “Saviour.” “Christ” is the same as the Hebrew “Messiah” which means one who is anointed. {3} So I suppose what the Nephites actually heard was, “I am the Anointed Saviour, the Son of God.” If that is what they heard, they would have understood! Then he spoke of his own pre-earth life, in the beginning when he created the heavens and earth and all things, when he was with his Father. He spoke of his humiliation and ultimate triumph, of his authorship and ownership of the Law, and thus of his authority to fulfill the Law. He concluded by affirming that he is the light and life of the world, not only its beginning, but also its end.

    The Saviour then gave two instructions. Both had to do with the temple and both may readily be seen as necessary instructions for their preparations for the next New Year festival.

    The Saviour said, “in me is the law of Moses fulfilled,” but he apparently gave only one example of what that meant. That example had ramifications which would necessitate the remodeling of the temple court yard and perhaps part of the temple itself. He continued:

    19 And ye shall offer up unto me no more the shedding of blood; yea, your sacrifices and your burnt offerings shall be done away, for I will accept none of your sacrifices and your burnt offerings.
    20 And ye shall offer for a sacrifice unto me a broken heart and a contrite spirit… (3 Ne. 9:19-20)

    One can hardly wish for a stronger evidence than that, that the Nephites knew and understood the meaning of the Psalms in their ceremonies, for here the Saviour himself had just quoted Psalms 51:16-17. {4}

    “For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering. The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.” {5}

    The ramifications of the instruction that there should be no more sacrifices and burnt offerings were complex and very far reaching. The sacrifices the Lord mentioned pre-dated the Law of Moses, even though they were incorporated in the Law. The first sacrifice was preformed by Adam soon after he left the Garden, {6}Noah also sacrificed when he left the ark. {7}

    The reason that sacrifices could be done away was that, “The purpose of the sacrifice is to seal and to sanctify the covenant.” {8} But now the Saviour’s sacrifice had permanently sealed and sanctified the covenant, so no further symbolic sacrifice was necessary. What remained – indeed, what always had remained – was the sealing and sanctifying of the covenant on the people. The sacrificing of animals had symbolized the Saviour’s part, but the act of ratification on the part of the people remained. That ratification, too, had to be sealed and sanctified in the same way that the Saviour’s was. That was to be accomplished in the same way the Psalms suggest, by each individual sacrificing his own broken heart and contrite spirit.

    For the Saints in America, if sacrifices and burnt offerings were to be done away, then that would require that they make significant changes in the temple and temple grounds. For one thing, the great sacrificial altar which was no doubt in the court yard of the temple must be dismantled and removed. Blood would no longer be sprinkled in the temple and the Holy of Holies, and incense would no longer be burned since those practices were a part of the sacrificial ceremonies. The barns to hold the sacrificial animals would have to be removed, and many of the tools and implements that had been used in the services would have to be put away.

    The second instruction which the Saviour gave at that time also seems to have had something to do with the temple. But it is not explicit and would, no doubt, ultimately require additional revelation to the presiding High Priest before he could implement it. The Saviour said,

    21 Behold, I have come unto the world to bring redemption unto the world, to save the world from sin. Therefore, whoso repenteth and cometh unto me as a little child, him will I receive, for of such is the kingdom of God.
    22 Behold, for such I have laid down my life, and have taken it up again; therefore repent, and come unto me ye ends of the earth, and be saved. (3 Ne. 9:21-22)

    Such a statement may, of course, be read as only beautiful symbolic words, and not as instruction at all. But even so the symbolism alone is sufficient to bring one to the veil which separates man from God. The key phrase is “come unto me.” What implications that may have had on the remodeling of the interior of the temple, one cannot know.

    Almost a year passed. Mormon tells us nothing about the remodeling of the temple, perhaps because in the sequence of the New Year’s festival which he seems to be following with such care, the temple would have been remodeled only symbolically, and to include those details in the story would have disrupted the pattern he is trying to establish. Another possible reason the temple needed to be remodeled is the fact that there will soon be the establishment of the new government, and anciently such governmental changes required the building or the re-dedication of the temple. Mowinckel asserts that “Together with the enthronement of the god goes the building and construction of his temple.” {9} Lundquist explains why that is so.

    “In the Near East, temple building/rebuilding/restoring is an all-but-quintessential element in state formation and often represents the sealing of the covenant process that state formation in the ancient Near East presumes.” {10}

    One can expect that any major remodeling of the temple in Bountiful would have required a rededication, and if that were to occur it should probably have happened during the next New Year’s festival,{11} because that was the traditional time when temple’s are dedicated. {12} Snaith asserts that,

    “Solomon would have no choice as to the date when the Temple should be dedicated. he was bound to wait until the next annual feast after the completion of the building operations. It was in the proper month and at the proper full moon that the people would appear with their gifts.” {13}

    In Third Nephi, the Saviour was about to appoint Nephi to be the head of a new millennial-type state that was to last for the next four hundred years. Lundquist statement shows how relevant that is.

    “However, only with the completion of the temple in Jerusalem is the process of imperial state formation completed, making Israel in the fullest sense “like other nations” (1 Samuel 8:20). The ideology of kingship in the archaic state is indelibly and incontrovertibly connected with temple building and with temple ideology.” {14}

    When the Saviour came to the temple, he made the Twelve the leaders of the church and apparently the head of the new governing body of a new theocracy. If that was true in America, as it was in Palestine, then the remodeling of the temple was a necessary prerequisite to the establishment of the theocracy of Fourth Nephi. And if the temple at Bountiful were to be remodeled and rededicated, the most likely time for that ceremony (if Lundquist’s statement holds true here) would be during the New Year celebration.

    Lundquist gives us another bit of good circumstantial evidence that this was the time of a temple rededication. He wrote that on such occasions in antiquity, new kings would typically do the five important things. l) Cite their divine calling. 2) Issue new laws. 3) Ordain officers. 4) Erect monuments. 5) Enter into a new legal order by way of covenant with a ritually prepared community. {15}

    Mormon records that the Saviour did four of those five: l) Cite their divine calling – He introduced himself by saying, “Behold, I am Jesus Christ the Son of God.” 2) Issue new laws. That includes not only the Sermon at the Temple, but a whole new understanding of the gospel. 3) Ordain officers. The Saviour called and ordained Nephi and the rest of the Twelve. 4) Erect monuments. There is no evidence of monuments. 5) Enter into a new legal order by way of covenant with a ritually prepared community. The Saviour established the governmental system that is described in 4th Nephi.
    – – – – – – – – – –
    Having laid that background, now lets go back to where we left Mormon’s narrative, in the thick darkness which followed the earthquakes.

    After a long silence the people heard the voice of the Lord speak again. {16}

    This time the Saviour spoke of mercy and judgement. ( 3 Ne. 10:4-7.) Those statements reflect the most important characteristics of the Hebrew kings, for they are judges in Israel and until the institution of the office of the Chief Judge, the kings were also judges in America. This is also a type of celestial things, for in heaven, Jehovah was/is the judge among the gods at the Grand Council. {17}

    After the voice had spoken, the oppressive darkness remained for three days; after that, when morning came, and it was light again. {18}

    Mormon then inserts his own testimony that Jehovah has the right to judge the people, and he also uses this place to quote the prophecies of Zenos and Zenock and Jacob concerning the coming of Christ. (3 Ne. 10: 12-17.)

    By inserting these reminders, Mormon provided a kind of conjunction which allow his narrative to move from the events which began on the 4th day of the thirty-fourth year to “the ending of the thirty and fourth year” (3 Ne. 10:18) without a break in the continuity of his thought. So, even though a year had passed, and we are now at the beginning of a different New Year’s festival, he can pick up the sequence of the festival in the same place where he left it.

    Mormon tells us nothing about what happened during that year. He spares us all account of the aftermath of the wind, and fire, and earthquake. But he has introduced us to one of the most important elements of the New Year festival, the establishment of a new order and a new world–“the prime element of the enthronement festival being a new creation.” {19} A new world must, of necessity, follow the destruction of the old, and the central feature of that new creation must be a temple.

    “A community is made cosmic through the foundation of the temple. The elaborate ritual, architectural, and building traditions that lie behind temple construction and dedication are what allow the authoritative, validating transformation of a set of customary laws into a code.
    “The temple creates law and makes law possible. It allows for the transformation of a chaotic universe into a cosmos. It is the very capstone of universal order and by logic and definition creates the conditions under which law is possible….
    “Thus order cannot exist, the earth cannot be made cosmic, society cannot function properly, law cannot be decreed, except in a temple established on earth that is the authentic and divinely revealed counterpart of a heavenly prototype ….It is the creation of the temple, with its cosmic overtones, that founds and legitimizes the state or the society, which, in turn makes possessible the formal promulgation of law.” {20}

    These systems of thought, Mormon evokes with great grace, and, typically, without his calling undue attention to the fact that he is doing so. Coincidentally, Mormon tells us nothing about the changes in the temple and its immediate environs which, presumably, had been necessitated by the Saviour’s instructions that sacrifice and burnt offerings should no longer be performed.

    So when Mormon begins his narrative again, he tells us, simply,

    18 In the ending of the thirty and fourth year….
    1 a great multitude gathered together, of the people of Nephi, round about the temple which was in the land Bountiful; and they were marveling and wondering one with another, and were showing one to another the great and marvelous change which had taken place. (3 Ne. 10:18, 11:1)

    Mormon gives us no details whatever about who these people were, or why they had gathered to the Temple. Perhaps he thought he didn’t need to. In one sense he would have been correct, because there is a good deal we can know about them without his telling us.

    Moroni filled in some of the details when he wrote:

    7 For it was by faith that Christ showed himself unto our fathers, after he had risen from the dead; and he showed not himself unto them until after they had faith in him; (Ether 12:7)

    The Doctrine and Covenants, Section 93 lists the prerequisites necessary to seeing the Saviour and follows that with a statement which sounds very much like the way the Saviour introduced himself in America.

    1 Verily, thus saith the Lord: It shall come to pass that every soul who forsaketh his sins and cometh unto me, and calleth on my name, and obeyeth my voice, and keepeth my commandments, shall see my face and know that I am;
    2 And that I am the true light that lighteth every man that cometh into the world;
    3 And that I am in the Father, and the Father in me, and the Father and I are one–
    4 The Father because he gave me of his fullness, and the Son because I was in the world and made flesh my tabernacle, and dwelt among the sons of men.
    5 I was in the world and received of my Father, and the works of him were plainly manifest. (D&C 93:1-5){21}

    Additional prerequisites to seeing the Saviour are emphasized in other scriptures. They include: One must be “pure in heart”; “follow peace with all men, and holiness”; and have the authority and the ordinances of the Melchizedek priesthood; and to have seen Christ, one must also have been “quickened by the Spirit of God.” One’s mind must be single to the God, and “the days will come that you shall see him; for he will unveil his face unto you, and it shall be in his own time, and in his own way, and according to his own will.” {22}

    Unless those prerequisites are irrelevant to this situation, the people who gathered at the temple that day were not those who just happened to be there. Each individual, in his or her own right, must have been worthy to see the Saviour. That fact strongly suggests that those who were present were there by invitation. That they had been spiritually prepared for the experience, and that no one who was not prepared had been invited. The next day, others would be invited to come also, but that does not suggest a diminution of the preparedness or qualifications of the people in either group. Those same qualifications have always been requisite. The Book of Enoch says,

    For from the beginning the Son of Man was hidden,
    And the Most High preserved him in the presence of His might,
    And revealed him to the elect.
    And the congregation of the elect and holly shall be sown.
    And all the elect shall stand before him on that day. {23}

    If the date Mormon gives us relative to the Saviour’s appearance at the Temple, then “In the ending of the thirty and fourth year,” means just before the next new year. {24} That helps us infer some other important things about the timing as well.

    When they met, they “were marveling and wondering one with another, and were showing one to another the great and marvelous change which had taken place.” (3 Ne. 10:18, 11:1) If substantial changes would have been made to the temple grounds, and perhaps to the temple itself in order to comply with the instructions that there were to be no more burnt offerings, and if these people were marveling when they saw those changes, it is reasonable to assume they had not been privy to the remodeling while that was going on. The most likely reason that might be so is that they lived some distance from Bountiful and had come to attend the re-dedication. Now, it seems reasonable to ask, “Is it possible that the people gathered at the temple had been invited to came just prior to the New Year’s festival in order to attend the first session of temple’s dedicatory services?” We cannot know the answer, of course. But if the question is reasonable, then it is also reasonable that its answer might be, “Yes.”

    If this really was a gathering preparatory to the New Year’s drama and festival, there would have been a number of other things on the people’s mind, as well. Only a year before, the officials who controlled an utterly corrupt civil government had mostly been killed when the earthquakes occurred. Nephi, as leader of the church, had, no doubt, taken command of the situation, but since a new civil government was created in conjunction with a new or remodeled temple, it is unlikely that any formal civil government had been established during that year. So, it is likely that the question of what to do about a new civil government was also a paramount consideration as the time approached for the New Year’s ceremonies. It is possible that if these people did come from a distance to be at the festival, they came as representatives of the people, with the intent of establishing a new government. If that is true, then they were the most appropriate people to whom the Lord should show himself when he arrived at the Temple, and the most appropriate people with whom he should conduct his business, when he established his Kingdom among them.

    The matter of a new government was not the only question that needed to be answered, and a gathering of priesthood leaders from all over the country was the appropriate time and place to seek to find the answers: If there were to be no more sacrifices, what was to be the status of the rest of the rules and regulations of the Law of Moses? What changes would need to be made in the Temple services?

    During the previous thirty-plus years, on the other side of the world, the Saviour’s life had been an actualization of the cosmic myth. At his birth angels and men had acknowledged him to be the Son of God, the creator of heaven and earth. He had been baptized, washed in the living waters of the Jordan River; anointed with light by the Holy Ghost; {25} and acknowledged as the “Beloved Son” by his Eternal Father. He had gone into the wilderness and confronted his nemesis, Satan, whom he had defeated by the rectitude of his own integrity. He had gone to the Mount of Transfiguration where he had endowed Peter, James, and John with power sufficient to bear off the Kingdom; then he had returned to teach the people the principles of obedience, personal sacrifice, care and support for those in the Kingdom, and charity. He had come as king in his triumphal entry to Jerusalem, then he showed them, in his own life and death, the meaning of obedience, sacrifice, kindness, and love.

    In describing part of the action of the New Year’s festival, Widengren wrote,

    “We have seen that the king acts in the ritual as the representative of the god, who is dead, but rises again, is conquered by his enemies, but is at last victorious over them, and returns in triumph to his temple, creating cosmos, fertilizing earth, celebrating his marriage, sitting enthroned in his holy Tabernacle upon the mountain of the gods. {26}

    The Saviour entered the underworld conquered death and hell; then, he returned to his Father, only to come again to his friends, teach them all they must know and lay the Kingdom squarely upon their shoulders. {27}

    In America the pattern was just as real, and Mormon apparently wrote his story to testify that it was real, emphasizing the symbolic significance of the cosmic myth.

    The stages to the Saviour’s enthronement which Mormon describes correspond remarkably with the ancient ritual stages of the enthronement of an ancient god, which Widengren recounts. I showed you that comparison in last week’s email. {28}

    6 And behold, the third time they did understand the voice which they heard; and it said unto them:
    7 Behold my Beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased, in whom I have glorified my name–hear ye him. (3 Nephi 11:6-7)

    As I mentioned last week, “son” is the royal new name given in the second Psalm, and it is also the name-title the Father uses other times when he introduces the Saviour. {29}

    If, as I believe, the Israelite New Year festival coronation rites and their liturgy had been preserved in Nephite usage, then the introduction, “this is my Beloved Son,” would have been understood by the people to be an announcement that Christ is God, but it also would have been understood as the ceremonial announcement that he is the High Priest and King of kings. Mowinckel believed that Jehovah was symbolically enthroned in his temple during the same ceremony as the coronation of the earthly king. (That would consist with the fact that Nephi was made earthly head of Christ’s kingdom, during the same ceremonies in which Jesus was enthroned.) [The numbers in the following quote are references to the ceremonies connected with the psalms, and are intended to be read this way: “(96. 13; 98. 9)” means “Psalm 96:13, and Psalm 98:9″]

    “Yahweh’s enthronement day is that day when he ‘comes’ (96. 13; 98. 9) and ‘Makes himself known’ (98.2), reveals himself and his ‘salvation’ and his will (93.5; 99. 7), when he repeats the theophany of Mount Sinai (97.3ff.; 99.7f), and renews the election (47.5) of Israel, and the covenant with his people (95.6ff..; 99. 6ff..). The mighty ‘deed of salvation’ upon which his kingdom is founded is the Creation, which is alluded to in a rather mythic guise (93.3f.).” {30}

    Mormon continues,

    And it came to pass, as they understood they cast their eyes up again towards heaven; and behold, they saw a Man descending out of heaven; and he was clothed in a white robe;

    It is possible Mormon calls attention to the robe because the people recognized it as the royal attire. In ancient Israel, the royal robe of the king of Israel was apparently the same as the temple robe of the High Priest with its miter hat as a crown. {31}

    The people were probably too awe struck to sing as they watched him descend, but one can wonder how many might have been reminded of the 93rd Psalm.{32} When the psalm says “Yahweh has conquered his adversaries and enthroned himself on high, it implies that all the universe is in perfect harmony….” {33}

    Mormon records,

    8 and he came down and stood in the midst of them; and the eyes of the whole multitude were turned upon him, and they durst not open their mouths, even one to another, and wist not what it meant, for they thought it was an angel that had appeared unto them. (3 Nephi 11:8)

    He stretched forth his hand and, as before, he introduced himself as both the Son of God and also as the King, saying,

    10 Behold, I am Jesus Christ, whom the prophets testified shall come into the world.
    11 And behold, I am the light and the life of the world; and I have drunk out of that bitter cup which the Father hath given me, and have glorified the Father in taking upon me the sins of the world, in the which I have suffered the will of the Father in all things from the beginning. (3 Nephi 11:10-11.)

    The people responded in the way one ought to respond, when receiving audience from a King

    12 And it came to pass that when Jesus had spoken these words the whole multitude fell to the earth; for they remembered that it had been prophesied among them that Christ should show himself unto them after his ascension into heaven. (3 Nephi 11:12)

    17 The way it is told about an earlier Lamanite king who came to know God, is probably a more complete description. He “did bow down before the Lord, upon his knees; yea, even he did prostrate himself upon the earth.” (Alma 22:17)

    To me, the scene that followed can most easily be visualized as it would have occurred at the conclusion of the New Year festival. The great doors of the temple are swung open, the curtains in front of the Holy of Holies are pulled back, and the king, with the Ark of the Covenant are brought into the sacred chamber. {34} On that occasion, as we have observed, Solomon seems to have actually sat upon the sacred throne and placed their feet on the footstool – the lid of Ark of the Covenant. Then, while seated on the throne of God, the king taught his people the Law. In my imagination, I see the same thing happening in Third Nephi: The Saviour’s not remaining in the courtyard, milling about with the people, but going into the Holy of Holies and sitting upon his own throne. It was his throne, after all, and “the throne in the sanctuary is considered as the image of the divine throne.” {35} His feet would rest upon a footstool which contained sacred objects which represented both kingship and priesthood authority. {36} There the people would come, one by one, to see and feel the wounds which testify of his reality and of the reality of his atonement. Then, as they lined up and waited their turn to come before the Saviour, the people might have sing, “God sitteth upon the throne of his holiness,” (Psalm 47:1-9.) just as they apparently did during the coronation rites of the Feast of Tabernacles. {37}

    This scene evokes, for me, the image of Isaiah’s words,

    7 How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that publisheth peace; that bringeth good tidings of good, that publisheth salvation; that saith unto Zion, Thy God reigneth! (Isaiah 52:7)

    13 And it came to pass that the Lord spake unto them saying:
    14 Arise and come forth unto me, that ye may thrust your hands into my side, and also that ye may feel the prints of the nails in my hands and in my feet, that ye may know that I am the God of Israel, and the God of the whole earth, and have been slain for the sins of the world.
    15 And it came to pass that the multitude went forth, and thrust their hands into his side, and did feel the prints of the nails in his hands and in his feet; and this they did do, going forth one by one until they had all gone forth, and did see with their eyes and did feel with their hands, and did know of a surety and did bear record, that it was he, of whom it was written by the prophets, that should come.
    16 And when they had all gone forth and had witnessed for themselves, they did cry out with one accord, saying:
    17 Hosanna! Blessed be the name of the Most High God! And they did fall down at the feet of Jesus, and did worship him. (3 Nephi 11:13-17) {38}

    It is significant that, when all who were present at the Bountiful temple had seen, touched, and knew, the Hosanna shout resounded through the temple.

    At a coronation ceremony, the first order of business is to acknowledge the king as king. In Third Nephi, even though Christ came as King, he is not going to stay. So the situation is as it was in the days of the first Israelite kings, God appointed someone to govern in his stead.

    18 And it came to pass that he spake unto Nephi (for Nephi was among the multitude) and he commanded him that he should come forth.
    19 And Nephi arose and went forth, and bowed himself before the Lord and did kiss his feet.
    20 And the Lord commanded him that he should arise. And he arose and stood before him.
    21 And the Lord said unto him: I give unto you power that ye shall baptize this people when I am again ascended into heaven.
    22 And again the Lord called others, and said unto them likewise; and he gave unto them power to baptize. (3 Nephi 11:18-22. see Moroni 2:1-3)

    What followed after that, also fits the pattern of the festival perfectly. While in the Temple, and presumably while seated upon his throne, the Saviour delivered a lecture on the law. When he had finished he blessed the people and instructed the Twelve to bring him food, that he could share it with the people. The food represented his own sacrifice. (3 Nephi 18) Similarly, on the 7th day of the Feast of Tabernacles, the king sat upon the throne of God and delivered a sermon on the law. Then there were sacrifices and feasting.

    The 8th and final day of the Feast of Tabernacles was the “great feast.” It was a day that symbolized the establishment of Zion and the beginning of an age of peace. In America, the day following the Saviour’s first appearance, he came again, established Zion, blessed the people and provided for them a great ceremonial feast.

    1 And it came to pass that he commanded the multitude that they should cease to pray, and also his disciples. And he commanded them that they should not cease to pray in their hearts.
    2 And he commanded them that they should arise and stand up upon their feet. And they arose up and stood upon their feet.
    3 And it came to pass that he brake bread again and blessed it, and gave to the disciples to eat.
    4 And when they had eaten he commanded them that they should break bread, and give unto the multitude.
    5 And when they had given unto the multitude he also gave them wine to drink, and commanded them that they should give unto the multitude.
    6 Now, there had been no bread, neither wine, brought by the disciples, neither by the multitude;
    7 But he truly gave unto them bread to eat, and also wine to drink.
    8 And he said unto them: He that eateth this bread eateth of my body to his soul; and he that drinketh of this wine drinketh of my blood to his soul; and his soul shall never hunger nor thirst, but shall be filled.
    9 Now, when the multitude had all eaten and drunk, behold, they were filled with the Spirit; and they did cry out with one voice, and gave glory to Jesus, whom they both saw and heard. (3 Nephi 20:1-46.)

    In my system of beliefs, all that story is summed up by Abinadi’s,

    18 And behold, I say unto you, this is not all. For O how beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of him that bringeth good tidings, that is the founder of peace, yea, even the Lord, who has redeemed his people; yea, him who has granted salvation unto his people; (Mosiah 15:18.)

    – – – – – – – – – – –

    ENDNOTES

    {1}Mormon is never so impolite as to suggest we might not already know what the festival was, or how vital it was to the Israelite community and religious life. So he never mentions the festival directly. Rather, Mormon presents us with an actualization of the events which the New Year’s festival only symbolically depicted, and, I believe, he expected us to understand the importance of what he is doing.
    Examples of the literary and scriptural retelling of the story behind the drama of the ancient temple ceremonies can be found everywhere. A splendid ancient example of that is the Hymn of the Pearl in the Acts of Thomas. Among the gospels, the best example is the gospel of John. The author of Job does the same thing. Isaiah 40 to the end follows the same pattern. They all begin at the Council in Heaven, then follow their subject through the difficulties and accomplishments of this world, and conclude with a final triumph of godliness.

    As we have observed, one of the first in depth discussions of the enthronement psalms as used in the ancient Israelite New Year’s festival is chapter five,”Psalms at the Enthronement Festival of Yahweh,” in Sigmund Mowinckel, translated by A.P. Thomas, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship, 2 Vols. (Abingdon, Nashville, 1962), vol. 1, p. 106-192.

    Emerton describes some of the early scholarly work this way:

    “If Mowinckel’s theory be accepted–and it must suffice here to express the opinion that it is essentially right, however much it may need to be modified in details–then it can hardly be denied that Dan vii reflects the imagery of the festival. The beasts rising from the sea, the salvation of Israel, and the act of receiving kingship all suggest the complex of ideas of the enthronement festival. Dan. vii is an eschatological form of the situation at that festival.” Then, after analyzing the Daniel passage carefully, he concludes, “Thus, the coming of the Son of Man, his enthronement, the judgment of the evil, and the deliverance of the just all fit the background of the enthronement festival.” J. A. Emerton, “The Origin of the Son of Man Imagery,” in The Journal of Theological Studies, New Series (vol. 9, pt. 2, October 1958), 231, 236.

    {2} For an interesting discussion of the dating of the Saviour’s coming to America see, S. Kent Brown and John A. Tvedtnes, with an introduction by John W. Welch, “When Did Jesus Appear to the Nephites in Bountiful?” Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, Provo, Utah, 1989. For a discussion of the Nephite calendar see, John L. Sorenson, “Seasonality of Warfare in the Book of Mormon and in Mesoamerica,” in Stephen D. Ricks and William J. Hambllin, eds., Warfare in the Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City, Deseret Book Company and F.A.R.M.S., 1990) 448-453.

    {3} “Jesus” is the Greek form of Joshua, which in Hebrew means “Jehovah saves,” or “Saviour.”
    Mowinckel explained,
    “‘Messiah’ (Greek, Messias) represents the Aramaic Mesiha, Hebrew ham-masiah, ‘the Anointed One’….’Jesus Messiah’, or in Greek ‘Jesus Christ’, were His name and His title in the speech of the community, until the term ‘Christ’ also came to be regarded as a personal name.” (Sigmund Mowinckel, He that Cometh [New York: Abingdon Press, 1954], p. 3.) See also: Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967, p. 1.

    Isaiah 61:1 speaks of the anointing of Christ in the pre-existence, and Peter testified that at the time of Jesus’ baptism, “God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost and with power.” Acts 10:34-48.

    {4} Not all scholars believe the psalms were actually a part of the pre-exilic Temple rites. For the argument (though in my opinion not a very convincing one) that the Psalms were not a part of the ancient liturgy see Norman H. Snaith, Studies in the Psalter (Epworth Press, London, 1934).

    {5} See also Psalm 34. The Hebrew words for the English “broken” and “contrite” are very similar in meaning. For example the Anchor Bible reads, “The finest sacrifices are a contrite spirit: a heart contrite and crushed.” Mitchell Dahood, translator, The Anchor Bible, Psalms II, 51-100, Doubleday & Company, Inc., Garden City, New York, 1979, p. 2.

    However the Hebrew words from which they are translated are quite different. Broken means shattered – like what would happen to a clay pot if it fell off a shelf and was not able to retain its structure. (The “heart” in the ancient world was both the seat of both intellect and the emotions. So to sacrifice a “broken” heart, would mean to make sacred a self whose intellectual and emotional self was not firm and unchangeable.) The Hebrew word translated “contrite” means to pulverize – the thing that would to the pot if one beat it with a hammer – it can’t happen to the pot by its just falling off a shelf, it takes a pounding by someone else to turn it to powder. (“Spirit” is spirit, that also must be sacrificed – set apart, made holy.) A broken heart was essentially what happened to the Saviour on the cross, a contrite spirit may be a description of his experience in the Garden. What he asks of us, is to do – within the limits of our abilities – the same thing he did.

    {6} Moses 5:5-7. Jubilees: 3:26-27.

    {7} Genesis 8:20-21. For a discussion of the significance of Noah’s sacrifice to the ceremonies of Solomon’s Temple, see: Hayward, C.T.R., The Jewish Temple, Routledge, London, 1996, p. 166.

    {8} John M. Lundquist, “Temple, Covenant, and Law in the Ancient Near East and in the Old Testament,” in A. Gileadi, ed., Israel’s Apostasy and Restoration (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1988), p. 300.

    {9} Sigmund Mowinckel, translated by A.P. Thomas, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship, 2 Vols.(Nashville, Abingdon, 1962), vol. 1: 132.

    {10} Lundquist, John M., “The Legitimizing Role of the Temple in the Origin of the State” in Donald W. Parry, ed., Temples of the Ancient World (Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1994), p. 180.

    Runnalls’ assertions that the building or restoration of temples was such an important part of the overall enthronement process that Jesus’ claim to the messiahship would not have been complete had he not cleansed the temple, can readily be adapted to fit the situation described in Third Nephi. See, Donna Runnalls, “The King as Temple Builder, A Messianic Typology,” in, E. J. Furcha, ed., Spirit Within Structure, Essays in Honor of George Johnston Allison Park, Pennsylvania, Pickwick Publications, 1983), 19, 30.

    {11} Eli Borowski, “Cherubim: God’s Throne?” in Biblical Archaeology Review (21/4, July/August, 1995), 36.

    {12} 2 Chronicles 7:8-10. Widengren, Geo, “King and Covenant” in Journal of Semitic Studies, Vol. II, No. I, 1957, p. 8-9; Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967), p. 54. Sigmund Mowinckel, translated by A.P. Thomas, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship, 2 Vols.(Nashville, Abingdon, 1962), vol. 1:127.

    {13} Norman H. Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival (Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, London, 1947), p. 52 (see also p. 46). 1 Kings 8:2. Jack Finegan, Light from the Ancient Past ( Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1959), p. 296-297. Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967), p. 54-58.

    Snaith’s statement might be a bit strong. One supposes that Solomon might have done what Nabonidus, king of Babylon (Belshazzar’s father), did about 60 years after Lehi left Jerusalem. He built a new temple and forbade the celebration of the New Year’s festival until the building was completed. See: E. A. Wallis Budge, Babylonian Life and History (Religious Tract Society, London, 1925), p. 53.) Be that as it may, the New Year’s festival was the occasion for dedicating Solomon’s temple, and probably would have been the occasion of the dedication of a Nephite temple as well. [Don’t think any the less of Budge because of the name of the organization that published his work. It was a scholarly organization, and he was one of the greatest English biblical scholars of his time.]

    {14} John M. Lundquist, “The Legitimizing Role of the Temple in the Origin of the State,” in Donald W. Parry, ed., Temples of the Ancient World (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and F.A.R.M.S., 1994), 181. See pages 179-235.

    {15} John M. Lundquist, “Temple, Covenant, and Law in the Ancient Near East and in the Old Testament,” in A. Gileadi, ed., Israel’s Apostasy and Restoration (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1988), p. 293-305.

    {16} The idea of silence not only has the connotation of awe and reverence, but it also has an ancient priesthood meaning. “…the proper attitude of the highest heavenly beings in the face of the Divine Presence is a silent worship of God in their uttering the prescribed formula of blessing.” C.T.R. Hayward, The Jewish Temple (Routledge, London, 1996), p. 33-36.

    {17} Raymond E. Brown, The Semitic Background of the Term “Mystery” in the New Testament (Fortress Press, Philadelphia, 1968), p. 3, f.n. 8.

    {18} 3 Ne. 10:10.
    This is also consistent with the events of the Temple ceremonies. “…it is at daybreak that He brings succour to His people,” Johnson observes when he comments about Psalm 29 and 48. Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967), p. 93.

    {19} Engnell, Ivan, Studies in Divine Kingship in the Ancient Near East (Oxford, 1967), p. 34.

    {20} John M. Lundquist, “Temple, Covenant, and Law in the Ancient Near East and in the Old Testament,” in A. Gileadi, ed., Israel’s Apostasy and Restoration (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House, 1988), pages 299 & 302.

    {21} D&C 93:1-5; see also: 3 Nephi 12:8; D&C 97:16; Hebrews 12:14)

    {22}3 Nephi 12:8; D&C 97:16; Hebrews 12:14; D&C 84:19-22 & Psalms 17:15; D&C 67:11; D&C 88:66-68.

    {23} Book of Enoch, 62:7-8 in R. H. Charles, The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament in English, 2 vols. (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1976), Vol. 2, 228.

    {24} For the argument that Christ probably came during one of the Israelite New Year festival celebrations see: John W. Welch, The Sermon at the Temple and the Sermon on the Mount (Deseret Book Company, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1990), p. 29.

    {25} Acts 10:34-48. See, Geo Widengren, “King and Covenant” in Journal of Semitic Studies, Vol. II, No. I, 1957, p. 31.

    {26} Geo Widengren, “Early Hebrew Myths and their Interpretation,” in S. H. Hooke, ed., Myth, Ritual, and Kingship (Oxford, 1958), p. 199.

    {27} John 20-21.
    An example of scholars who have observed that the pattern of his life fits perfectly pattern of the cosmic myth is S. G. F. Brandon, “The Myth and Ritual Position Critically Considered,” in S. H. Hooke, ed., Myth, Ritual, and Kingship (Oxford, 1958), p.279 ff.

    For a discussion of the Saviour’s activities and teachings during his Forty-day ministry see, Hugh Nibley, “Evangelium Quadraginta Dierum: The Forty-day Mission of Christ–The Forgotten Heritage, in Mormonism and Early Christianity (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and F.A.R.M.S.), p. 10-44; S. Kent Brown and C. Wilfred Griggs, “The 40-Day Ministry, What happened after the resurrection? Apocryphal documents give accounts–some reliable, some not,” Ensign, August, 1975, p. 6-12.

    {28} This list is found in Geo Widengren, The Ascension of the Apostle and the Heavenly Book (Uppsala Universitets Arsskrift, 1950), p. 18.

    {29} See: Matthew 17:5; Mark 1:11, 9:7; Luke 3:22, 9:35, 20:13; 1 Corinthians 4:17; 2 Timothy 1:2; 2 Peter 1:17; 2 Nephi 31:11; Section 93:15; Moses 4:2; J Smith-History 1:17.

    {30} Sigmund Mowinckel, translated by A.P. Thomas, The Psalms in Israel’s Worship, 2 Vols. (Abingdon, Nashville, 1962), vol. 1: 118. He defines “election,” as he uses it here, as “of the deliverance from Egypt, of the miracle at the Reed Lake and of the Covenant of Kadesh-Sinai and the victory over the natives after the settlement, in short the election.” (vol. 1: 140)

    {31} Frederick H. Borsch, The Son of Man in Myth and History, p. 185, 194.

    Ivan Engnell, Studies in Divine Kingship in the Ancient Near East (Oxford, 1967), p. 62-63.

    Stephen D. Ricks, “The Garment of Adam in Jewish, Muslim, and Christian Tradition” in Donald W. Parry, ed., Temples of the Ancient World (Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1994), p. 716, 720.

    Geo Widengren, “King and Covenant” in Journal of Semitic Studies, Vol. II, No. I, 1957, p. 21.

    Ricks, Stephen D., “The Garment of Adam in Jewish, Muslim, and Christian Tradition” in Donald W. Parry, ed., Temples of the Ancient World (Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1994), p. 705-739.

    {32} For a discussion of the 93rd Psalm see, David M. Howard, Jr., The Structure of Psalms 93-100 (Winona Lake, Indiana, Eisenbrauns, 1997), 34-41.

    {33} Widengren, Geo, “Early Hebrew Myths and their Interpretation,” in S. H. Hooke, ed., Myth, Ritual, and Kingship (Oxford, 1958), p. 197. Widengren gives his translation of the 93rd Psalm on pages 196-197.

    {34} When Christ died on the cross, the veil of the temple tore from top to bottom. The idea that this rending of the temple veil was an appropriate conclusion to Saviour’s “triumphal entry” into Jerusalem a few days before his death, has been considered by several scholars. In the New Year festival, at the conclusion of the procession around the city, the king and the Ark of the Covenant (representing the presence of God) entered the Holy of Holies. The veil would have had to been pulled back (probably dividing from the center) for them to enter. For discussions suggesting that the tearing of the veil at the Saviour’s death, was symbolic of the parting of the veil at the coronation ceremony of the festival, see, Harry L. Chronis, “The Torn Veil: Cultus and Christology in Mark 15:37-39,” in Journal of Biblical Literature (101, no. 1, March 1982), 97-114. There Chronis asserts that Mark’s telling about the veil was Mark’s affirmation of Jesus’s kingship.

    The idea that the torn curtain was symbolic of the triumph of the Saviour, “confirming that he is one with the gods.” is supported in Thomas Schmidt, “Jesus’ Triumphal March to Crucifixion, The Sacred Way as Roman Procession,” in Bible Review (13/1, 1997), 37.

    The idea that the tearing of the veil “indicates a consistent concern with the continued but transformed role of the temple” is found in Joel B. Green, “The Death of Jesus and the Rending of the Temple Veil (Luke 23:44-49): A Window into Luke’s Understanding of Jesus and the Temple,” in Eugene H. Lovering, Jr., ed., Society of Biblical Literature 1991 Seminar Papers (Atlanta, Georgia, Scholars Press, 1991), 543-557.

    The opinion, but without conclusive evidence, that it was the outer veil which was torn is expressed in David Ulansey, “The Heavenly Veil Torn: Mark’s Cosmic Inclusio,” in Journal of Biblical Literature (110/1, Spring 1991, 123-125n .

    {35} Arert Jan Wensinck, The Ideas of the Western Semites concerning the Navel of the Earth (Amsterdam: Johannes Muller, 1916), p. 55.

    {36} For a discussion of the Ark of the Covenant as a footstool see, Nahum M. Sarna, Exploring Exodus (New York, Schocken Books, 1986), p. 210-211.

    {37} They might also appropriately have sung Psalms 24, 7, 95, 99, and 111. A discussion of these coronation psalms can be found in, Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967), p. 68-70.

    {38} See also: Hugh Nibley, The Prophetic Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and F.A.R.M.S, 1989), ch. 19, “Christ among the Ruins,” p. 407-434. Johnson points out that the words translated in verse “save now,” which he translates, “grant salvation,” “has been made familiar through the Greek of the New Testament as ‘Hosanna!’” Aubrey R. Johnson, Sacral Kingship in Ancient Israel, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1967, p. 126-127.

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