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  • 1 Nephi 20:12-17 & Isaiah 48 — LeGrand Baker — Joseph Smith’s role in a Heavenly Council

    1 Nephi 20:12-17 

    In this discussion I have divided First Nephi 20 and 21 into the following subsections:

    1. The premortal apostasy, 1 Nephi 20:1-11

    2. Joseph Smith’s role in a Heavenly Council.1 Nephi 20:12-17

    3. Apostasy preceding the Restoration, 1 Nephi 20:18 to 21:1a

    4. Those who will help the Prophet Joseph, 1 Nephi 21:1-6

    5. Joseph Smith restores the Temple services, 1 Nephi 21:7-11

    6. The Gathering of Israel, 1 Nephi 21: 12-26

    ———————————-

    12 Hearken unto me, O Jacob, and Israel my called, for I am he; I am the first, and I am also the last.

    This verse is the same in both the Bible and the Book of Mormon.

    “Hearken unto me, O Jacob, and Israel my called.” Isaiah is a name/title that denotes the covenants and covenant names found in the first verses of this chapter. However, he extends that by quoting the Lord in declaring his name/titles that denote the eternal validity of the covenant: “for I am he; I am the first, and I am also the last.”

    Jehovah is the first in birth, in rank, and in glory. His Father presided at the Council in Heaven, but he, Jehovah, conducted the affairs of the Council and made the assignments. {1} He was before the very beginning, as the Lord told Enoch:

    And I bowed down to the Lord, and the Lord spoke to me: Enoch, beloved, all that you see, all things that are standing finished I tell to you even before the very beginning, all that I created from non-being, and visible things from invisible. {2}

    Similarly, we read in Proverbs:

    22 The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way, before his works of old (Proverbs 8:22).

    The Lord is very explicit about his role before the foundation of the world and beyond. In the words, “I am the first, and I am also the last,” “last” does not mean until the conclusion of things, it means the uttermost. For example, he explained in the Doctrine and Covenants.

    1 Thus saith the Lord your God, even Jesus Christ, the Great I AM, Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the end, the same which looked upon the wide expanse of eternity, and all the seraphic hosts of heaven, before the world was made;
    2 The same which knoweth all things, for all things are present before mine eyes;
    3 I am the same which spake, and the world was made, and all things came by me (D&C 38:1-3).

    13 Mine hand hath also laid the foundation of the earth, and my right hand hath spanned the heavens. I call unto them and they stand up together.

    The King James Version reads:

    13 Mine hand also hath laid the foundation of the earth, and my right hand hath spanned the heavens: when I call unto them, they stand up together (Isaiah 48:1-22).

    The Book of Mormon’s “and” ties his calling to their standing together, and thus describes an event. We will soon discover that event was a meeting of the Council. The Bible’s “when” is imprecise and denotes no specific event. We will soon discover the meeting of the Council has been completely removed from the Bible’s version.

    In verses 12 and 13, with the words, “I am the first, and I am also the last. Mine hand hath also laid the foundation of the earth” the Lord identifies himself as the God of Creation. {3} In the New Year Festival drama it was necessary that he be defined that way because in the ancient Near East, the Creator God was also the God who controlled the weather. Thus, in the Elijah story, the ultimate test of strength between Jehovah and Baal is that Jehovah can stop the rain but Baal cannot start it again. So it is expected that Jehovah should begin this one verse self-definition by saying he is the God of Creation.{4}

    “Hand”{5} is used twice in these verses, and with two different meanings. The first is a symbol of the authority and power by which he created earth. Just as “word” is a name-description of the Savior in the Gospel of John, so “hand” is a similar name-description in the apocryphal The Book of the Secrets of Enoch. This book is the most detailed ancient description of a sode experience. It records that after Enoch had been dressed in sacred robes, the Lord said to him, “Enoch, beloved, all thou seest, all things that are standing finished I tell to thee even before the very beginning,” Enoch then saw the origin of all things. Then he showed him Adoil (translated “hand of God”) and the creation of all things.{6}

    The second use of “hand” in this verse is “and my right hand hath spanned the heavens.” It declares Jehovah’s role in the Council in Heaven. In the scriptures, the members of the Council are often called “stars” or “the heavens.”{7} An example is the Lord’s question to Job:

    4 Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? declare, if thou hast understanding.
    5 Who hath laid the measures thereof, if thou knowest? or who hath stretched the line upon it?
    6 Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? or who laid the cornerstone thereof;
    7 When the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy? (Job 38:1-7).

    The phrase, “my right hand hath spanned the heavens” tells a remarkable story when each word is understood in the fulness of its context. The writer is Isaiah, but the speaker is Jehovah who presided at the Council and gave assignments there. After defining himself as the Creator God, Jehovah describes his relationship with members of the Council in Heaven when he says: “and my right hand hath spanned the heavens.”

    The right hand is symbolically and ceremonially significant. For example, when Joseph took his two sons to his father, Jacob, to receive their patriarchal blessings, Jacob crossed his hands and placed the right hand on Ephraim and the left hand on Manasseh. Joseph corrected him, saying that Manasseh was the oldest. Jacob said he knew that and continued to give the blessing. In that story, the right hand conveyed the birthright blessing to Ephraim (Genesis 48:13-19). That same idea is expressed in Psalm 48 where “righteousness” is zedek—absolute correctness in priesthood and temple things.

    9 We have thought of thy lovingkindness [hesed or chesed], O God, in the midst of thy temple.
    10 According to thy name [covenant], O God, so is thy praise unto the ends of the earth: thy right hand is full of righteousness [zedek] (Psalms 48:9-10).

    Barton writes, “This term “fill the hand” is the term employed in the Book of Judges for the consecration of a priest (Judges 17:5-12).”{8} Those ideas are also beautifully expressed in these two other passages from the Psalms:

    Thou hast also given me the shield of thy salvation: and thy right hand hath holden me up, and thy gentleness hath made me great (Psalms 18:35).

    Into thine hand I commit my spirit: thou hast redeemed me, O Lord God of truth (Psalms 31:5, Luke 23:46).

    “Sacred space” is a place designated (either by men or by God) as being set apart from the rest of the world – a place where man can go to meet God. Eden, Sinai, Solomon’s Temple—it is any place where God is but where the “world” cannot come.

    The process of defining sacred space in this world begins when God gives the plan and the measurements to the prophet. The first step in creating sacred space (like a temple) is measuring where its foundations will be. To measure its limits is also to establish the limitations of the mundane space that surrounds it. When completed, its walls delineate what is sacred from that what is not.

    When prophets create sacred space, the first step is that God (through the prophet) defines what its measurements are to be. Thus, Jehovah gave Noah the measurements for his ark; gave Moses the measurements for the Tabernacle and the Ark of the Covenant; gave Joseph Smith the measurements for the Kirtland Temple; and when President Hinkley first received the revelation about building many smaller temples, he sat in his car and wrote down the dimensions. The reason measurements are necessary is that they denote where the walls will be, since the space within the walls is sacred. Thus, identifying through measurement is the first step in designating “sacred space.{9}

    People are defined as sacred in the same way that temples are.{10}

    Similarly, in Isaiah chapter 40, in the context of discussing the foreordained responsibilities of John the Baptist, the Savior, and others, the Lord asks this question: “Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of his hand, and meted out heaven with the span?” (Isaiah 40:12). This is not a rhetorical question, for a few verses later he reminds his readers, “Have ye not known? have ye not heard? hath it not been told you from the beginning? have ye not understood from the foundations of the earth?”(Isaiah 40:21).

    In our premortal existence, by at least one of those priesthood ordinances, we were measured and thereby designated as sacred space. “Span” is important in both Isaiah 40 and in 1 Nephi 20:13.

    In the statement, “My right hand hath spanned the heavens,” a span is the measurement. In the Oxford English Dictionary, a “span,” as a noun, is:

    1. a. The distance from the tip of the thumb to the tip of the little finger, or sometimes to the tip of the forefinger, when the “hand is fully extended; the space equivalent to this taken as a “measure of length, averaging nine inches.
    2. “The “hand with the thumb and fingers extended esp. as a means of measuring.”

    As a verb it is:

    1. “To measure by means of the outstretched hand; to cover with the hand in this way.”{11}

    The right hand is the hand of covenant and blessing. The Lord “spanned” the members of the Council in Heaven—measuring them to define them as sacred space—with his right hand—the hand of blessings, ordinances, ordinations, or covenants, or more probably of all four.{12} By placing his hand upon their heads, God measured, and thereby defined each of his children as sacred space—as “temples.” In this world, we do the same kind of thing when we place our hands upon someone’s head to give the gift of the Holy Ghost, ordain him to the priesthood, or give a blessing.{13}

    In 1 Nephi 20:13, the “heavens” are measured and called to a great meeting (the meeting is described more fully in the next few verses) where they make covenants. The verse does not mention the covenants, except to say that “they stand up together,” but that phrase almost certainly has to do with covenant making. Congregations stood to make covenants, as when “the king stood by a pillar [of the temple], and made a covenant before the Lord…. And all the people stood to the covenant” (2 Kings 23: 1-3).{14}

    Initially, when we think of a meeting in the premortal spirit world, we think of the Council in Heaven recorded in Abraham chapter 3, but this clearly is not that. As we read this account, it becomes apparent that this was not a time when people were presented two possible plans and asked to vote, as Abraham 3 is often described. At this meeting, the Savior was not the main speaker, and the fall and Atonement were not questions under consideration. The Lord’s servant who delivered the message was one who had been chosen before, probably in the earlier Grand Council. He had, and would again have, great responsibility and power. All the internal evidence supports the idea that the speaker at this council was the Prophet Joseph Smith. The following is a review of that evidence. Following that review we will carefully examine the rest of the material Nephi quoted.

    Two things are necessary to understand 1 Nephi 20 and 21. The first is that the chapter break is artificial and not a part of the text on the brass plates. Nephi saw this material as a single unit and not as two separate chapters. The second is that footnote 21:8a is correct, and provides a key to understanding the entire block of material Nephi quoted. 1 Nephi21:8 reads: ..and I will preserve thee, and give thee [Footnote a.] my servant for a covenant of the people.” The first reference of the footnote is: 2 Nephi 3:11 (6-15) that reads, “Joseph truly testified, saying: A seer shall the Lord my God raise up..and his name shall be called after me.”

    All of that simply means that this entire block of material Nephi quoted—both chapters 20 and 21—is talking about the Prophet Joseph Smith and his assignment, and about those who either oppose or assist him in fulfilling that assignment. If that is true, then the following is one way the Isaiah chapters can be understood:

    The setting is established in the fore part of the chapter. It is “in the beginning.” Satan’s challenge has been met and bested (v.11), Israel has been “called” (v. 12), the earth has been created (v.13) A great meeting has been assembled (v. 13), and the speaker (whom “the Lord hath loved” v. 14) has testified that he will fulfill his mission to overcome “Babylon” and the “Chaldeans” (standard Biblical code names for the evils of this world. v. 14).

    The next verse begins the account of the meeting held in the premortal spirit world. The meeting—but more especially its speaker—is lost from the Old Testament. The brass plates version in the Book of Mormon reads:

    14 All ye, assemble yourselves, and hear; who among them hath declared these things unto them? The Lord hath loved him; yea, and he will fulfil his word which he hath declared by them; and he will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall come upon the Chaldeans.

    The King James Version reads:

    14 All ye, assemble yourselves, and hear; which among them hath declared these things? The Lord hath loved him: he will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall be on the Chaldeans (Isaiah 48:14).

    Assemble yourselves and hear

    It is the account of this assembly, which has been removed from our Bible’s Cyrus version of Isaiah 48, that now becomes the focus of our attention.

    Because of the introduction that the Lord ordained (spanned) the “heavens,” it is reasonable to suppose that this was at the least a meeting of the members of the Council in Heaven. However, because the context is to thwart a general discontent and apostasy, it is more reasonable to suppose that this was a conference attended by all who are concerned.

    All ye, assemble yourselves, and hear; who among them hath declared these things unto them?

    and hear

    The command to hear is a directive to be cognizant of the words and to understand their meaning. Implicit also is a command to obey the instructions one hears.

    Who among them hath declared?

    who [the speaker].

    among them [The members of the Council].

    hath declared [Given the speech at the meeting].

    That question is not a rhetorical one: Who, among those who are assembled, has spoken? As if to say, When you consider who the messenger is, how can you doubt the truthfulness of the message? This speech was not a soft and fuzzy sermon. It was a solemn declaration.

    these things

    Because the speaker was the premortal Prophet Joseph Smith, it is likely that we have the essence of the speech in the next two chapters where Isaiah describes the Prophet’s mission, the restoration of the temple, and the gathering of Israel. Since the credibility of the speaker is emphasized here, it is likely that the issue before the Council meeting was the ultimate success of the proposed plan. Paul described the full sweep of the plan when he explained:

    8 Wherein he [Heavenly Father] hath abounded toward us in all wisdom and prudence;
    9 Having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself:
    10 That in the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth; even in him:
    11 In whom also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestinated according to the purpose of him who worketh all things after the counsel of his own will (Ephesians 1:8-11).

    How “in the dispensation of the fulness of times he might gather together in one all things in Christ” appears to have been the issue in the meeting described in 1 Nephi 20. The answer lay in the assignment given to the Prophet Joseph Smith and the Savior’s guarantee that through the integrity of the Prophet the Father’s will would be accomplished.

    About “these things” which were the subject of the Prophet’s discourse, Isaiah gives no details at this point, except by inference. But he soon will.

    unto them? [Those who are at the meeting.]

    The Lord hath loved him;

    It is clearly not Jehovah who is giving this speech. We learn in verse 17 that “the Lord” is “thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel.” As is clearly indicated in the next chapter, the person whom the Lord loves and who is giving the speech is the Prophet Joseph.

    The declaration, “the Lord hath loved him,” is the key to these two chapters. Not only does it describe the relationship between the Savior and this servant, it also teaches us about the reason for the message and the motive of both the Savior and his messenger. It says the same thing as Ephesians 1:4; The Father “hath chosen us in him [the Savior] before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love.” Whose love? Both ours and his. This helps us understand why the Savior could give assurance that the honesty of the message was attested by the integrity of the messenger. It also gives us insight into the power of the word “friend” as it was used by the Savior in this mortal world when he spoke to Joseph Smith and some of the other young leaders of the church.{15}

    63 Ye are they whom my Father hath given me; ye are my friends (D&C 84:63 and 88:2-3).

    When we read that, we might reflect upon the depth of the feelings of John the Beloved when he refereed to himself as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.”

    yea, and he [The speaker.] will fulfill his word

    He will have both the power and the integrity to do what he says he will do. The verse might be paraphrased as follows:

    Be assured, when Joseph goes to the earth, he will have the power, authority and integrity to fulfill the promises he has made at this assembly. He will overcome, then supplant, the kingdoms of that future world, characterized as Babylon and the Chaldeans.

    which he hath declared by them

    By them seems to appear out of nowhere, and with no apparent referent. If it had said, “declared to them,” then it would be easy to understand; but it does not say “to,” it says “by.” It is no good going to the Bible for help, because that phrase is one that was removed from the Bible’s Isaiah. So the question remains, who or what is the “them”? There seems to be two possible answers. We like them both, but favor the second.

    1) The “them” may be the ordinances and covenants mentioned in the beginning of the chapter. That would be consistent with Alma 12:30 which says people were instructed “according to their faith and repentance and their holy works.”

    2) The “them” may refer to helpers in the pre-earth life spirit world who assisted Joseph in proselyting this most important message. Because much of what follows in the next chapter can be read as a long and rather detailed discussion of “Israel” who were foreordained to assist Joseph in this mortal world, we are inclined to believe that this “them” and that “Israel” may represent the same people. In other words, what this is saying is that the people (which includes us) who accepted the assignment to assist in Joseph’s mission here also assisted him there.

    and he [the speaker] will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall come upon the Chaldeans.

    will do his pleasure: His pleasure is to convert, not to destroy.

    on Babylon:

    The Assyrians at Nineveh, not Babylon, were the threat to the world in the time of Isaiah and Hezekiah. In this chapter, even Babylon is not the place, but rather it is a symbol, as it has always been, of the evils of this world. For example, the Lord uses Isaiah to describe the evils of our time:

    5 Go ye out from Babylon. Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.
    6 Call your solemn assemblies, and speak often one to another. And let every man call upon the name of the Lord.
    7 Yea, verily I say unto you again, the time has come when the voice of the Lord is unto you: Go ye out of Babylon; gather ye out from among the nations, from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other (D&C 133:5-7).

    and his arm shall come upon the Chaldeans. (Chaldea and Babylon were essentially the same place.)

    The arm that “comes upon the Chaldeans” is clearly a symbol of power. The purposes of that power were described by Daniel when he interpreted Nebuchadnezzar’s dream:

    44 And in the days of these kings shall the God of heaven set up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed: and the kingdom shall not be left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand for ever.
    45 Forasmuch as thou sawest that the stone was cut out of the mountain without hands, and that it brake in pieces the iron, the brass, the clay, the silver, and the gold; the great God hath made known to the king what shall come to pass hereafter: and the dream is certain, and the interpretation thereof sure (Daniel 2:44-45).

    As the hand can be symbolic of both majesty and love, so the arm is symbolic of both judgment and mercy. The promise that “he will do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall come upon the Chaldeans” assures the destruction of the kingdoms of this world, but his “pleasure” is to bring salvation, not vendetta; and his arm brings judgment so there may be mercy.

    The “arm” of the Lord connotes his integrity in keeping his covenants. Whether expressed as the power to destroy or as the power to save, it is the same. The Psalmist rejoicing, “Thou hast broken Rahab in pieces, as one that is slain; thou hast scattered thine enemies with thy strong arm” (Psalms 89:10), acknowledges the Lord’s power to interced that he might do “according to his good pleasure which he hath purposed in himself.”

    Ultimately his purpose is to bless, however severe the intercession may appear at the time. The Lord explained that the severity of the language was so people would understand the seriousness of the sins. He said:

    6 Nevertheless, it is not written that there shall be no end to this torment, but it is written endless torment.
    7 Again, it is written eternal damnation; wherefore it is more express than other scriptures, that it might work upon the hearts of the children of men, altogether for my name’s glory (D&C 19:6-7, emphasis changed).

    I believe that it is true that our loving Heavenly Father has never punished anyone. If he had, then part of his personality would include a vendetta, and that cannot be. Rather, he warns us of the consequence of sin, teaches us to repent, and provides an Atonement to enable us to be forgiven. Nevertheless, as Alma explained, it is “the law” not God which inflicts the punishment when the law is broken (Alma 42:22-23).

    15 Also, saith the Lord; I the Lord, yea, I have spoken; yea, I have called him to declare, I have brought him, and he shall make his way prosperous.

    The King James Version reads:

    15 I, even I, have spoken; yea, I have called him: I have brought him, and he shall make his way prosperous. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    Also, saith the Lord; I the Lord, yea, I have spoken; yea, I have called him to declare,

    Jehovah’s declaration, “Yea, I have spoken,” conveys the message that he is the beginning—the moving power of all creation. Even though the whole burden of his message is an invitation to us to come to him, the immutable law remains: he works through his servants, and those who will not follow his servants cannot come to where he is. The law in the premortal spirit world was the same as the law now:

    4 And the voice of warning shall be unto all people, by the mouths of my disciples, whom I have chosen in these last days.
    5 And they shall go forth and none shall stay them, for I the Lord have commanded them.
    6 Behold, this is mine authority, and the authority of my servants….

    38 What I the Lord have spoken, I have spoken, and I excuse not myself; and though the heavens and the earth pass away, my word shall not pass away, but shall all be fulfilled, whether by mine own voice or by the voice of my servants, it is the same.
    39 For behold, and lo, the Lord is God, and the Spirit beareth record, and the record is true, and the truth abideth forever and ever. Amen (D&C 1:1-6, 38-39).

    and he [Josephshall make his [own] way prosperous.

    Jehovah testifies of the Prophet Joseph’s integrity as well as of his power: the Savior called him, and with the Savior’s help Joseph cannot fail. This poses another question: Who is this Joseph Smith, that his integrity is so great that the Savior can promise, “and he shall make his way prosperous?” We know, at least, that he was “among the noble and great ones who were chosen in the beginning to be rulers in the Church of God” (D&C 138:53-56).

    The mission which Joseph would accomplish was eternal in its burden. Benjamin F. Johnson tells a story that shows how completely Joseph understood his own mission. About a year before Joseph was killed, he was in the Johnson home when, with a deep-drawn breath, Joseph said, “Oh! I am so tired—so tired that I often feel to long for my day of rest.” Johnson wrote:

    His words to me were ominous, and they brought a shadow as of death over my spirit, and I said, “Oh, Joseph! how could you think of leaving us? How as a people could we do without you?” He saw my feelings were sorrowful and said kindly, “Bennie, if I was on the other side of the veil I could do many times more for my friends than I can do while I am with them here.”{16}

    Orson Pratt testified:

    The Lord did not raise up this boy, Joseph, for nothing, or merely to reveal a few of the first principles of the Gospel of Christ; but he raised him up to reveal the hidden mysterious things, the wonders of the eternal worlds, the wonders of the dispensation of the fullness of times, those wonders that took place before the foundation of the world; and all things, so far as it was wisdom in God, were unfolded by this personage….{17}

    Wilford Woodruff assures us:

    The Prophet Joseph Smith held the keys of this dispensation on this side of the vail, and he will hold them throughout the countless ages of eternity.{18} The brass plates contain a reference to the commission to speak.

    16 Come ye near unto me; I have not spoken in secret; from the beginning, from the time that it was declared have I spoken; and the Lord God, and his Spirit, hath sent me.

    The Old Testament is about something different from that.

    16 Come ye near unto me, hear ye this; I have not spoken in secret from the beginning; from the time that it was, there am I: and now the Lord God, and his Spirit, hath sent me (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    Come ye near unto me;

    This verse must be understood in the context of the previous one. The “Lord” in verse 15 is Jehovah, so the “Lord God” in verse 16 must be Elohim. If read that way, then verse 16 is the Savior testifying of Joseph’s calling.

    I have not spoken in secret; from the beginning, from the time that it was declared have I spoken;

    “The beginning” may be a reference to the Council in Heaven described in Abraham 3, but seems in this context to be to the time before that, in “the first place,” as described in Alma 13.

    There never was a time when we were not wholly dependent upon the Savior. His invitation, “come unto me,” was the first heard by us as cognizant intelligences.{19} It has been repeated in each step in our progression, as often as we have forgotten. Like a clarion call in the night, it leads the one first to the way then to the summit. And the way is always the same: Faith unto repentance and the remission of sins, and reception of the Holy Ghost; holding to the rod while moving to partake of the fruit of the Tree. He is and has always been the Way, the Rod, and the Fruit of the Tree at the summit of salvation.

    and the Lord God, and his Spirit, hath sent me.

    That relationship has never changed. The Savior is the “me” and is is identified in the next verse as “the Lord, thy Redeemer.” So we must conclude that “the Lord God” is his Father, and “his Spirit” is the Holy Ghost. It has always been important that we understand that relationship. The events of Jesus’s baptism were an affirmation of their oneness. That oneness is the key to our own. If we are to be one with the Father, we must first be one with the Son, obeying the Father as he does. He instructed his American disciples:

    13 Behold I have given unto you my gospel, and this is the gospel which I have given unto you—that I came into the world to do the will of my Father, because my Father sent me. …
    18 And this is the word … no unclean thing can enter into his kingdom ….
    20 Now this is the commandment: Repent, all ye ends of the earth, and come unto me…
    21… this is my gospel; and ye know the things that ye must do in my church; for the works which ye have seen me do that shall ye also do; for that which ye have seen me do even that shall ye do (3 Nephi 27:13-21).

    Again, the brass plates emphasize the importance of the relationship between the Savior and the speaker, while the Old Testament version removes the speaker altogether:

    17 And thus saith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I have sent him, the Lord thy God who teacheth thee to profit, who leadeth thee by the way thou shouldst go, hath done it.

    The King James Version reads:

    17 Thus saith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I am the Lord thy God which teacheth thee to profit, which leadeth thee by the way that thou shouldest go. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    And thus saith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel;

    Isaiah leaves no doubt about who is speaking these words about the one who is giving the lecture. It is Jehovah—the Lord, Redeemer, Holy One of Israel. The word “Redeemer” includes the idea of kinsman, and suggests that he will bring us from where we are to where he is.

    I [Jehovah] have sent him [Joseph Smith],

    The Prophet, having been “called” and “brought” (v. 15), now may be “sent.” We understand from church history and from these scriptures that it was/is Joseph Smith’s burden to overthrow the kingdoms of the world, both in this physical world and in the post-earth-life spirit world where people reside who have died without receiving the gospel. His assignment was/is to establish, in the place of those worldly kingdoms, the kingdom of God. To do that he must teach the way whereby every individual may come to Christ.

    But what were Joseph’s responsibilities in the world before this one? Was the purpose of that meeting only to promise things to come in our present world? Or is this world patterned like the last one in more than form and features? Are Joseph’s responsibilities here a continuation of his responsibilities there?

    Another way of asking that question is this: Joseph is the head of this last dispensation. That included both administrative and judicial (kingly and priestly) responsibilities to establish the Church and Kingdom of God and to oversee its progression even after he died and went into the post-earth-life spirit world. The Prophet Joseph taught,

    The head God called together the Gods and sat in grand council to bring forth the world. The grand councilors sat at the head in yonder heavens and contemplated the creation of the worlds which were created at the time.”{20}

    The question is: Did he, in the pre-earth-life spirit world, also have similar responsibilities during the planning and developing stages preparatory to the establishment of this last dispensation? President J. Reuben Clark explained,

    The priesthood is an everlasting endowment. Some, at least, who have come to the earth had it before they came here.”{21}

    On another occasion he elaborated more fully:

    I would like to read what the Prophet Joseph has said, some of the things he has said, about the Priesthood:

    “The Priesthood,” said the Prophet “is an everlasting principle, and existed with God from eternity and will to eternity, without beginning of days or end of years.” Adam (I am taking isolated sentences and passages) . . . Adam stands next to Christ, who is the great High Priest. Adam obtained his Priesthood “in the Creation, before the world was formed.”

    And the following statement of the Prophet is, to me, most significant:

    Every man who has a calling to minister to the inhabitants of the world”—note that—“Every man who has a calling to minister to the inhabitants of the world was ordained to that very purpose in the Grand Council of heaven before this world was. I suppose (said the Prophet) that I was ordained to this very office in that Grand Council.{22}

    I like to think that not alone did such men as Adam and the Prophet Joseph receive the Priesthood before they came here. I like to think, I can give you no scripture for it, I like to think that those of us who are set apart, chosen and set apart, to come forth in this the last dispensation of time, which is to draw together all other dispensations, had a like conferring of Priesthood though not perhaps a like setting apart. The Prophet continues,

    If a man gets a fullness of the priesthood of God, he has to get it in the same way that Jesus Christ obtained it, and that was by keeping all the commandments and obeying all the ordinances of the house of the Lord. ….

    It (the Priesthood) is the channel through which the Almighty commenced revealing His glory at the beginning of the creation of this earth, and through which He has continued to reveal Himself to the children of men to the present time, and through which He will make known His purposes to the end of time.”{23}

    President Wilford Woodruff was equally explicit:

    Here is a kingdom of Priests raised up by the power of God to take hold and build up the kingdom of God. The same Priesthood exists on the other side of the veil. Every man who is faithful in his quorum here will join his quorum there. When a man dies and his body is laid in the tomb, he does not lose his position. The Prophet Joseph Smith held the keys of this dispensation on this side of the veil, and he will hold them throughout the countless ages of eternity. He went into the spirit world to unlock the prison doors and to preach the Gospel to the millions of spirits who are in darkness, and every Apostle, every Seventy, every Elder, etc., who has died in the faith as soon as he passes to the other side of the veil, enters into the work of the ministry, and there is a thousand times more to preach there than there is here.{24}

    President John Taylor explained the same doctrine:

    Now then come the twelve and all the other authorities. We believe that they [Joseph, the Twelve, and others] are ordained of God, that they are part of his economy and government, all these various quorums as they exist on the earth, and that, by and by, when we get through in this world, we shall all assume our proper position and proper Priesthood, with Joseph Smith at the head of this dispensation, and that we shall be associated there with that Priesthood that we have been connected with here.{25}

    Erastus Snow gave it an even wider application:

    Paul tells us concerning the Melchizedek Priesthood, that it is after the order of an endless life, without beginning of days or end of years; or, in other words, that it is eternal; that it ministers in time and also in eternity. Peter, James and John and their fellow-laborers still minister in their Priesthood on the other side of the veil; and Joseph Smith and his fellow-brethren still minister in their office and calling under the counsel and direction of the same Peter, James and John who ministered on earth, and who conferred upon Joseph the keys of their Priesthood; and all the Elders of this dispensation who prove faithful and magnify their calling in the flesh will, when they pass hence, continue their labors in the spirit world, retaining the same holy character and high responsibility that they assume here.{26}

    Alma taught the same doctrine. He took us back to the earliest time. Rather than projecting priesthood callings from the present into the future, he projected them from the eternal past into the earthly present, then beyond..

    6 And thus being called by this holy calling, and ordained unto the high priesthood of the holy order of God, to teach his commandments unto the children of men, that they also might enter into his rest—
    7 This high priesthood being after the order of his Son, which order was from the foundation of the world; or in other words, being without beginning of days or end of years, being prepared from eternity to all eternity, according to his foreknowledge of all things—
    8 Now they were ordained after this manner—being called with a holy calling, and ordained with a holy ordinance, and taking upon them the high priesthood of the holy order, which calling, and ordinance, and high priesthood, is without beginning or end—
    9 Thus they become high priests forever, after the order of the Son, the Only Begotten of the Father, who is without beginning of days or end of years, who is full of grace, equity, and truth. And thus it is. Amen (Alma 13:6-9).

    If Joseph was ordained to his mission in the Grand Council, did he also function in that calling and priesthood between the time of his ordination and the time he came to this world? Or did he actually begin before that, as B.H Roberts’s musings imply?

    Do these higher intelligences of the stellar universe and planetary systems have so developed in themselves the quality of love that makes it possible to think of them as being willing to sacrifice themselves–to empty themselves in sacrifice to bring to pass the welfare of others whom they may esteem to be the undeveloped intelligences of the universe and may they not be capable of giving the last full measure of sacrifice to bring to pass the higher development of the “lowly” when no other means of uplift can be serviceable? Is the great truth operative among these untold millions of intelligences that greater love hath no intelligence for another than this, that he would give his life in the service of kindred intelligences when no other means of helpfulness is possible?{27}

    the Lord thy God who teacheth thee to profit,

    How profit? For Isaiah, as for Nephi and others, the Lord’s promise of the riches of the earth is symbolic of the promise of eternal life. Three examples are:

    1)The Savior’s saying that the meek will inherit the earth, in the 3 Nephi 12:5, Psalm 25:9-14, Psalm 37:11, and Doctrine and Covenants 88:17-18.

    2) The symbolism in the Book of Mormon which equates being in the “promised land” with being in the presence of God. See 1 Nephi 2:19-22 for example.

    3) The symbolism which equates the fruit of the vine and the richness of the earth with the waters and the fruit of life, which he uses, in turn, to represent the saving ordinances of the temple.

    who leadeth thee by the way thou shouldst go, hath done it.

    “Way” and “path” often refer to the series of ordinances by which one ascends the “mountain.” It probably means that in this case also. The Savior is the Way and the Word.

    In the Savior’s declaration, “I have sent him,” he places Joseph’s mission squarely in the context of the temple. If one is ever to understand the Prophet Joseph Smith, one must understand him in the light of the temple.

    The phrase “leadeth thee by the way thou should go” suggests all the things Lehi’s vision teaches us that Christ is the word on which we may hold to lead us through the darkness, through the ordinances and the veil of Solomon’s Temple, until we reach the tree. It seems that he is saying no less about this world than he might say about that one.

    ———————————–
    FOOTNOTES

    {1} For a discussion of the Council in Heaven see above, Lehi’s sode experience in 1 Nephi 1:8-15.

    {2} Secrets of Enoch 24:2.

    {3} God does things in a perfectly natural way. The things he tells us in the scriptures are who he is and how to return to him, and those are the most important things of all. Prophets live in real worlds with real academic and cultural environments, and they speak to the people of their own time. All of their accounts of the creation were written to audiences who had none of the scientific questions we have—and, for that matter, none of the scientific answers. The prophets taught what was important: that God is the God of Creation. That the heavens and the earth were made and are controlled by him, and that his purpose was to bring about the exaltation of his children. That is what mattered to them, and that is the way they told the story. If we read what they wrote in that light, then their message is absolutely true.
    If we try to superimpose modern scientific theory onto their stories, it doesn’t work. So our response is very simple: Accept each for what it is.

    {4} A mirror image of this verse is Isaiah 40:12. There the chronology is different so the creation comes second.

    {5} For a discussion of the ceremonial significance of the hand see Lynn M. Hilton, The Hand as a Cup in Ancient Temple worship. A paper presented at the Thirtieth Annual Symposium on the Archaeology of the Scriptures, held at BYU on 26 September 1981.

    The power of the symbolism of the hand became evident to Baker soon after he came to BYU, he had the privilege of spending an afternoon alone in the study of the late Bible scholar and translator, Dr. George M. Lamsa. He sat at his desk, reading some of his unpublished manuscripts, taking some notes as he read. The following is from those notes:
    “On page 34 of his unpublished work, ‘Origin of the Alphabet,’ Dr. Lamsa wrote about the significance of the letter ‘Y,’ which, he said, was the stylized drawing of an outstretched hand–fingers on one side, thumb on the other. Dr. Lamsa says that to the Biblical people, except for the eye, the hand is the most important member of the body. It is the hand which is most often exposed to danger; when any other part of the body is threatened, especially the eye or head, the hand rushes to protect it, without having any thought of its own safety. The hand feeds and washes the body; and, when necessary, tries to comfort and heal it. Thus, symbolically, the hand represents sensitive protection and love, but it also represents militant protection, power and domination. In a man’s relationship with other people, it is the hand that usually serves as the connecting point. It signifies friendship, and is used to ‘transfer a blessing.’ In our relationships with others it symbolizes both authority and reverent submission.”

    {6}  Secrets of Enoch 25:1-2. For the quote in context see, R.H. Charles, The Apocrypha and Pseudepigrapha of the Old Testament, Vol. II, .443-445. See also John 1:1-4, Revelation 12:1-9, 1 Nephi 1:9-10, Moses 2:1-8, D&C 93:1-13.

    {7} Stars and heavens are frequently used to represent the members of Council in Heaven. In some scriptures the word “heavens” refers to the place where God and the Council reside. Examples are: Genesis 2:1, 22:17; Exodus 32:11-15; Job 38:1-14; Psalms 8:1-3, 19:1-4, 33:6-9, 50:1-8, 57:2-11, 89:1-6, 96:1-13, 103:2-22, 104:1-35, 115:1-7; Isaiah 1:1-2, 14:1-16 (compare Jude 1:12-13), 40:20-25, 44:21-25, 45:11-19, 48:11-15, 49:13; Mark 1:10-11; Acts 7:54-60; 2 Peter 3:1-18; Revelation 1:1-20, 12:1-14.
    1 Nephi 1:9-10, 20:13-17 (different from Bible’s Isaiah), 21:13 (not in Bible’s Isaiah); 2 Nephi 2:14, 24:12-17, 29:5-7; Alma 18:26-30; 3 Nephi 9:15; Ether 3:1-2, 4:7-9; Moroni 7:27-28, 9:25-26.
    D&C 14:9, 45:1, 49:5-7, 60:4, 67:2, 76:1, 84:42, 104:14, 107:17-19, 110:10-12,128:23; 132:29-33, 137:1-4.
    Moses 1:36-39, 6:41-45, 7:1-4; Abraham 3:21, 4:1-6, 5:1-4.

    {8} George A. Barton, The Religion of Ancient Israel (New York: 1961), 159. See Ezekiel 10:1-7.

    {9} Two other examples are Ezekiel, who carefully gives the measurements of the temple he saw in vision; and John, in the last chapters of Revelation, who gives the measurements of the city where celestial people will live.

    {10} See J. Lyman Redd, “Aaron’s Consecration: Its Nature, Purpose, and Meaning,” Thy People Shall Be My People and Thy God My God: The 22d Annual Sidney B. Sperry Symposium (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1994), 120 – 121.

    {11} The Compact Edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, 2 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press), 1988, 2:2938.

    {12} For examples in both ancient and modern scripture of the significance of the Lord’s right hand, see: Psalms 20:6, 63:7-8, 73:23-24; -28; Isaiah 41:10-13 -29; Acts; Revelation 1:13-18; D&C 109:71. Donald W. Parry, ed., Temples of the Ancient World: Ritual and Symbolism (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1994). The book contains several papers written by Parry that discuss sacred space. They are: “Introduction: The Meaning of the Temple,” xiii; “Garden of Eden: Prototype Sanctuary,” 126; “The Temple according to Judaism,” 414; “Temple Imagery in the Epistles of Peter,” 492.

    {13} The idea of delineating by covering is also important in the definition of sacred space. When the Lord gave the revelations telling the prophets the dimensions of the ark of the covenant, the tabernacle, or a temple, he did not just give the floor plan. He also instructed the prophets how sacred space was to be covered. Covering defines and protects sacred space just as the smoke covered and defined Mt. Sinai when the Lord was there, protecting it and keeping away the gaze of unsanctified eyes. When the Lord told Moses how to build the tabernacle, he instructed Moses to laterally clothe it in a garment of skins.

    {14} “Stand” is sometimes read as code for making a covenant, as in Psalm 8:1,8 and Abraham 3:23.

    {15} As in D&C 84:63 and 88:2-3, and
    in John the Beloved’s describing himself as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.”

    {16} Benjamin F. Johnson, My Life’s Review (Independence, Mo.: Zion’s Printing & Publishing Co., 1947), 97-98.

    {17} Orson Pratt, Journal of Discourses, 26 vols. (London: Latter-day Saints’ Book Depot, 1854-1886), 17: 187.

    {18} Wilford Woodruff, Journal of Discourses, 22: 334.

    {19} For a discussion of intelligences see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 801-64; Second edition, p. 564-86.

    {20} Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 348, King Follett discourse.

    {21} President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., Conference Report, October 1948, 178-79.

    {22} Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 305.

    {23} President J. Reuben Clark, Jr., Conference Report, April 1953, General Priesthood Meeting, 53-54.

    {24} Wilford Woodruff, Journal of Discourses, 22: 334.

    {25} John Taylor, Journal of Discourses, 18: 81.

    {26} Erastus Snow, Journal of Discourses, 23:188.

    {27} B. H. Roberts, The Truth, The Way, The Life (Provo, Utah, BYU Studies, 1994), 98.

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  • 1 Nephi 20:1-11 & Isaiah 48 — LeGrand Baker — The premortal apostasy

    Nephi 20:1-11 & Isaiah 48  

    In this discussion I have divided First Nephi 20 and 21 into the following subsections:

    1. The premortal apostasy, 1 Nephi 20:1-11

    2. Joseph Smith in the Council in Heaven, 1 Nephi 20:12-17

    3. Apostasy preceding the Restoration, 1 Nephi 20:18 to 21:1a

    4. Those who will help the Prophet Joseph, 1 Nephi 21:1-6

    5. Joseph Smith restores the Temple services, 1 Nephi 21:7-11

    6. The Gathering of Israel, 1 Nephi 21: 12-26

    ———————————-

     1 Hearken and hear this, O house of Jacob, who are called by the name of Israel, and are come forth out of the waters of Judah, or out of the waters of baptism, who swear by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, yet they swear not in truth nor in righteousness.

     The King James Version reads:

    1 Hear ye this, O house of Jacob, which are called by the name of Israel, and are come forth out of the waters of Judah, which swear by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, but not in truth, nor in righteousness. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    The speaker in this chapter is Jehovah himself. That is made clear by a number of passages.

    Examples are: “Behold, I have declared the former things from the beginning” (v. 3) ; “For mine own sake, yea, for mine own sake will I do this, for I will not suffer my name to be polluted, and I will not give my glory unto another” (v. 11) ; “And thus saith the Lord, thy Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel; I have sent him” (v. 17). Thus, it is Jehovah who commands, “Hearken and hear this, O house of Jacob, who are called by the name of Israel.”

    “Called” denotes a new covenant name.{1} There is always a new name with a new covenant. Moses explained that the covenant name of Israel was first established in the Council in Heaven.

    7 Remember the days of old, consider the years of many generations: ask thy father, and he will shew thee; thy elders, and they will tell thee.
    8 When the most High divided to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the people according to the number of the children of Israel (Deuteronomy 32:7-8).

    The name and the covenant associated with it are an eternal identity of those who serve the Lord. The covenants are eternal and apparently so are the ordinances associated with them. Nephi used the phrase “one eternal round” to explain the consistency in the way God teaches us. He wrote,

    19 For he that diligently seeketh shall find; and the mysteries of God shall be unfolded unto them, by the power of the Holy Ghost, as well in these times [Nephi’s present] as in times of old [at the Council], and as well in times of old as in times to come [from the beginning to the end]; wherefore, the course of the Lord is one eternal round (1 Nephi 10:19).

    Nibley understood that “one eternal round” is “typified by the Sun in its course. But instead of an eternal return to the starting point, the course is depicted as an ever-mounting spiral—eternal progression.”{2}

    Another way of visualizing it is as a series of ever-expanding concentric circles with oneself at the center, and where the ordinances and covenants are not repeated but made again and again—each the same yet different, because each time they are specifically relevant to the circumstances in which we then find ourselves. In this world, for example, we are inclosed in a veil of forgetfulness. Our memories are obscured but not obliterated. In the ordinances and covenants we make anew with God, we re-commit to keeping the commandments that have brought us this far so that we may progress yet further. Imbedded deeply at the root of all those covenants, ordinances, and commandments is the understanding that eternal growth comes from the giving and receiving the triad of truth, light, and love. That is, as we attain more truth, we exude more light, and the light we exude is love. If this ever ceases to be so, then we cease to grow. Eternal progression is an eternal assimilation of more and more truth that thereby we may be more and more “a light to this people.” But that light is not and can never be a self-aggrandizing symbol of self. Rather it must be a union with others, an acceleration of light with light, an embrace of love. A function of the commandments, ordinances, and covenants is to help us to be empowered to do that.

    The dominant theme of 1 Nephi 20 is the covenants we made with God and he made with us while we were in the spirit world, while we could still remember and in preparation to our coming to this physical earth. Interwoven into that theme are some important details about the “war in heaven”{3} and more specifically about the part the Prophet Joseph Smith played in that struggle. Then, as now, the contest between good and evil was not so much a battle of power and will as it was of faithfulness, integrity, and testimonies of those who kept their covenants.{4}

    Every child in Seminary knows the basic details of the story of the war in heaven, and as adults, we still know little more than those basic details. The scriptures tell that there was a war, who the main players were, what principles were at stake, and what the outcome was, but other than that, they say very little.

    God explained to Moses that there were two major principles. One was the agency of man and the other was who would get the glory.

    1 And I, the Lord God, spake unto Moses, saying: That Satan, whom thou hast commanded in the name of mine Only Begotten, is the same which was from the beginning, and he came before me, saying—Behold, here am I, send me, I will be thy son, and I will redeem all mankind, that one soul shall not be lost, and surely I will do it; wherefore give me thine honor.
    2 But, behold, my Beloved Son, which was my Beloved and Chosen from the beginning, said unto me—Father, thy will be done, and the glory be thine forever.
    3 Wherefore, because that Satan rebelled against me, and sought to destroy the agency of man, which I, the Lord God, had given him, and also, that I should give unto him mine own power; by the power of mine Only Begotten, I caused that he should be cast down;
    4 And he became Satan, yea, even the devil, the father of all lies, to deceive and to blind men, and to lead them captive at his will, even as many as would not hearken unto my voice (Moses 4:1-4).

    To Abraham, the Lord explained that Satan tried to negate the efficacy of the Atonement:

    27 And the Lord said: Whom shall I send? And one answered like unto the Son of Man: Here am I, send me. And another answered and said: Here am I, send me. And the Lord said: I will send the first.
    28 And the second was angry, and kept not his first estate; and, at that day, many followed after him (Abraham 3:27-28).

    In Doctrine and Covenants 76, the Prophet Joseph wrote that the ultimate principle was who should rule. It says Satan “rebelled against God, and sought to take the kingdom of our God and his Christ.”

    25 And this we saw also, and bear record, that an angel of God who was in authority in the presence of God, who rebelled against the Only Begotten Son whom the Father loved and who was in the bosom of the Father, was thrust down from the presence of God and the Son,
    26 And was called Perdition, for the heavens wept over him—he was Lucifer, a son of the morning.{5}
    27 And we beheld, and lo, he is fallen! is fallen, even a son of the morning!
    28 And while we were yet in the Spirit, the Lord commanded us that we should write the vision; for we beheld Satan, that old serpent, even the devil, who rebelled against God, and sought to take the kingdom of our God and his Christ—
    29 Wherefore, he maketh war with the saints of God, and encompasseth them round about (D&C 76:25-48).

    In his poem, A Vision, the Prophet Joseph said it a little differently:

    And I saw and bear record of warfare in heaven;
    For an angel of light, in authority great,
    Rebcll’d against Jesus and sought for his power,
    But was thrust down to woe from his godified state.
    And the heavens all wept, and the tears dropp’d like dew,
    That Lucifer, son of the morning, had fell!
    Yea, is fallen! is fallen and become, oh, alas!
    The son of perdition, the devil of hell!{6}

    John describes Satan as a great red dragon,{7} and gives us much information about the conflict.

    3 And there appeared another wonder in heaven; and behold a great red dragon, having seven heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon his heads.
    4 And his tail drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth….
    7 And there was war in heaven: Michael and his angels fought against the dragon; and the dragon fought and his angels,
    8 And prevailed not; neither was their place found any more in heaven.
    9 And the great dragon was cast out, that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world: he was cast out into the earth, and his angels were cast out with him.
    10 And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.
    11 And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death (Revelation 12:1-17, emphasis added).

    When the seventy returned from their mission,

    18 And he [the Savior] said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven (Luke 10:18).

    From Jude we learn:

    6 And the angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day (Jude 1:1-25).

    The Lord described the sons of perdition at the time of judgment as those who will suffer the same fate. He said:

    27 And the righteous shall be gathered on my right hand unto eternal life; and the wicked on my left hand will I be ashamed to own before the Father;
    28 Wherefore I will say unto them—Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels.
    29 And now, behold, I say unto you, never at any time have I declared from mine own mouth that they should return, for where I am they cannot come, for they have no power (D& C 29:27-29).

    Isaiah described Satan’s final fate as that of a total failure:

    12 How art thou fallen from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! Art thou cut down to the ground, which did weaken the nations!
    13 For thou hast said in thy heart: I will ascend into heaven, I will exalt my throne above the stars of God; I will sit also upon the mount of the congregation, in the sides of the north;
    14 I will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the Most High.
    15 Yet thou shalt be brought down to hell, to the sides of the pit.
    16 They that see thee shall narrowly look upon thee, and shall consider thee, and shall say: Is this the man that made the earth to tremble, that did shake kingdoms?
    17 And made the world as a wilderness, and destroyed the cities thereof, and opened not the house of his prisoners?
    18 All the kings of the nations, yea, all of them, lie in glory, every one of them in his own house.
    19 But thou art cast out of thy grave like an abominable branch, and the remnant of those that are slain, thrust through with a sword, that go down to the stones of the pit; as a carcass trodden under feet.
    20 Thou shalt not be joined with them in burial, because thou hast destroyed thy land and slain thy people; the seed of evil-doers shall never be renowned (Isaiah 14:12-20 as recorded in 2 Nephi 24:12-20).

    The description of the principles behind the war in heaven that is described in 1 Nephi 20 are different from those described elsewhere. In this version the confrontation is not directly between God and Satan; rather, it is between the premortal prophets and Satan’s followers. The major issue is that they do not keep their covenants they have made with God, but that they do keep the covenants the rebellious have made with Satan in the name of God!{8}

    That theme in 1 Nephi 20 begins with the question of the validity of covenant names. There it is apparent, as it is in other places, that Isaiah is making an important distinction between the name designations “Jacob” and “Israel.” The key to understanding that distinction seems to be this: Jacob’s name was Jacob before he covenanted to be the servant of the Lord; then, as an evidence of the covenant, the Lord changed his name to Israel.

    Even though the context of Isaiah’s words in this chapter is our premortal world, it is useful, in order to learn what Isaiah is talking about, to read how Jacob’s name was changed in this world. There are two accounts in the Old Testament. The first is a story filled with symbolism. It begins,

    And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day (Genesis 32:24).

    But it concludes by identifying the “man” as God.

    And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved (Genesis 32:30).

    The story that is bracketed by those two verses is about names and covenants.

    27 And he [God] said unto him, What is thy name? And he said, Jacob.
    28 And he said, Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.
    29 And Jacob asked him, and said, Tell me, I pray thee, thy name. And he said, Wherefore is it that thou dost ask after my name? And he blessed him there.
    30 And Jacob called the name of the place Peniel: for I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved Genesis 32:27-30).

    Those verses do not say that covenant names were exchanged, only that Jacob told God his name. However, when it happened a second time, Jacob’s name was changed and he was also told God’s name-title: “God Almighty.” Along with his new name, Jacob was also given the priesthood birthright blessings of Abraham.

    9 And God appeared unto Jacob again, when he came out of Padan-aram, and blessed him.
    10 And God said unto him, Thy name is Jacob: thy name shall not be called any more Jacob, but Israel shall be thy name: and he called his name Israel.
    11 And God said unto him, I am God Almighty: be fruitful and multiply; a nation and a company of nations shall be of thee, and kings shall come out of thy loins;
    12 And the land which I gave Abraham and Isaac, to thee I will give it, and to thy seed after thee will I give the land (Genesis 35:8-12).

    Psalm 105 makes an interesting distinction between the blessings given to “Jacob” and those given to “Israel.” The implication seems to be that to Jacob he gave a law which needed to be followed, then to Israel was given a covenant of its fulfillment. However, this may only be an example of synonymus parallism.

    6 O ye seed of Abraham his servant, ye children of Jacob his chosen.
    7 He is the Lord our God: his judgments are in all the earth.
    8 He hath remembered his covenant for ever, the word which he commanded to a thousand generations.
    9 Which covenant he made with Abraham, and his oath unto Isaac;
    10 And confirmed the same unto Jacob for a law, and to Israel for an everlasting covenant (Psalm 105:6-10).

    Psalm 135 suggests the same thing.

    4 For the Lord hath chosen Jacob unto himself, and Israel for his peculiar treasure.
    5 For I know that the Lord is great, and that our Lord is above all gods (Psalm 135:4-5).

    Isaiah explains the symbolism of that relationship.

    He shall cause them that come of Jacob to take root: Israel shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit (Isaiah 27:6).

    That symbolism is further explained by Isaiah in his magnificent Messianic prophecy.

    6 For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.
    7 Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform this.
    8 The Lord sent a word into Jacob, and it hath lighted upon Israel (Isaiah 9:6-8).

    The meaning of the word “Israel” is best understood from Genesis 32 where it says, “For as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.” But probably the full meaning would include all the blessings of the Abrahamic covenant in chapter 35.

    In addition to covenants in the premortal world, we know that there were ordinances performed: foreordinations (Alma 13), and the Savior was anointed (D&C 138:42). President Joseph Fielding Smith quoted Paul to show that there was also a church there, with all the implications that “church” implies. Of the premortal church, President Smith wrote,

    It is reasonable to believe that there was a Church organization there. The heavenly beings were living in a perfectly arranged society. Every person knew his place. Priesthood, without any question, had been conferred and the leaders were chosen to officiate. Ordinances pertaining to that pre-existence were required and the love of God prevailed. Under such conditions it was natural for our Father to discern and choose those who were most worthy and evaluate the talents of each individual. He knew not only what each of us could do, but also what each of us would do when put to the test and when responsibility was given us. Then, when the time came for our habitation on mortal earth, all things were prepared and the servants of the Lord chosen and ordained to their respective missions. Paul said to the Ephesian Saints:

    Blessed be the God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ:
    According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before him in love. –Eph. 1:3-4.{9}

    We probably learn the name of that church from Paul, who wrote,

    22 But ye are come unto mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of angels,
    23 To the general assembly and church of the firstborn, which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men made perfect (Hebrews 12:22-23).

    The Prophet Joseph, in his description of the three degrees of glory, also wrote of the church of the firstborn. And, like Paul, his description is a projection into the future eternities. However, he describes it in much the same way Paul describes the premortal ordinances of the church. Paul wrote,

    3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ (Ephesians 1:3).”

    D&C 76 reads,

    54 They are they who are the church of the Firstborn.
    55 They are they into whose hands the Father has given all things … all are theirs and they are Christ’s, and Christ is God’s (D&C 76: 54-59).

    Paul wrote, “ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,” and explains that the sealing was an “earnest of our inheritance (Ephesians 113-14).” An earnest is a conditional contract. But the D&C says they have “overcome by faith, and are sealed by the Holy Spirit of promise (v 53)” .

    The D&C goes on to explain,

    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;
    95 And he makes them equal in power, and in might, and in dominion (D&C 76:94-95).

    In the context of John’s testimony which is about the premortal Savior (John 1:1-13 and D&C 93:1-18), the Lord promised,

    3 Wherefore, I now send upon you another Comforter, even upon you my friends, that it may abide in your hearts, even the Holy Spirit of promise; which other Comforter is the same that I promised unto my disciples, as is recorded in the testimony of John.
    4 This Comforter is the promise which I give unto you of eternal life, even the glory of the celestial kingdom;
    5 Which glory is that of the church of the Firstborn, even of God, the holiest of all, through Jesus Christ his Son (D&C 88:3-5).

    Further confirmation of that is found in Section 78, which reads,

    2 And listen to the counsel of him who has ordained you from on high, [then instructions are given and the Savior concludes,]
    ….
    20 Wherefore, do the things which I have commanded you, saith your Redeemer, even the Son Ahman, who prepareth all things before he taketh you;
    21 For ye are the church of the Firstborn, and he will take you up in a cloud, and appoint every man his portion.
    22 And he that is a faithful and wise steward shall inherit all things. Amen (D&C 78:2, 20-22 ).

    Thus it appears that “they who dwell in his presence are the church of the Firstborn (D&C 76:94), whether they are there before or after this earth life—or both. The conformation of that is found in Doctrine and Covenants 93 which reads,

    21 And now, verily I say unto you, I was in the beginning with the Father, and am the Firstborn;
    22 And all those who are begotten through me are partakers of the glory of the same, and are the church of the Firstborn.
    23 Ye were also in the beginning with the Father; that which is Spirit, even the Spirit of truth (D&C 93:21-23).

    As Alma 13 makes it clear that the foreordinations included the High Priesthood, we can know that the members of the premortal church had the Melchizedek Priesthood. That fact also makes this statement in Section 107 relevant to church members in all stages of our existence.

    18 The power and authority of the higher, or Melchizedek Priesthood, is to hold the keys of all the spiritual blessings of the church—
    19 To have the privilege of receiving the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, to have the heavens opened unto them, to commune with the general assembly and church of the Firstborn, and to enjoy the communion and presence of God the Father, and Jesus the mediator of the new covenant (D&C 107:1-37).{10}

    Knowing that there was a fully organized church in the spirit world, it now becomes very reasonable to believe that spirit people living on a premortal spirit earth should make covenants in order to avail themselves of the blessings of the Atonement. Therefore, the next statement in 1 Nephi 20 is more understandable:

    and are come forth out of the waters of Judah, or out of the waters of baptism, who swear by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, yet they swear not in truth nor in righteousness (1 Nephi 20:1).

    The words “or out of the waters of baptism” seem not to have been written by Isaiah and, accordingly, were probably not on the Brass Plates. They did not appear in the first (1830), second (1837), or the first European (1841) editions of the Book of Mormon. (The 1841 European edition was based on the 1837 rather than on the 1840 American edition.) However, in 1840, when the third American edition was published, and more than two years after the Saints in Nauvoo had been doing vicarious baptisms for their dead, Joseph added these words, “or out of the waters of baptism,” in parenthesis.{11} Thereby making it clear that these people about whom Isaiah was speaking had actually been baptized. That phrase, “or out of the waters of baptism,” remain in the present edition of the Book of Mormon, but the parenthesis which were around it have been removed.

    The idea of pre-earth spirit people being baptized in the waters of their “pre-existence” spirit world might cause some eyebrows to be lifted. “Can spirit people be baptized in spirit water?” is the question. The answer in the first instance is “yes,” but in the second instance is “no.” The problem is that the question itself is muddled by a correct understanding of the need for proxy baptism being performed on this physical earth for those who have died and are now in a post-mortal world of spirits. We understand that even though a person dies and leaves this mortal life, if he was “accountable” here, his physical body must still be baptized by proxy in the physical waters of this world, and there can be no “acceptable” baptism in lieu of that. The “dead” spirit person cannot be baptized in the waters of the spirit world to which he goes when he lives on this mortal earth. The principle, as far as we understand it, is this: If in this life we are “accountable,” then before our physical bodies can be raised to eternal glory, they must first have been baptized (either in fact or by proxy) in the physical waters of this world upon which they were born. As far as we can tell, the revelations from the Lord leave no question about that point.

    The question of baptism in the premortal spirit world is different from that. The premortal spirit world was like this one. “For I, the Lord God, created all things, of which I have spoken, spiritually, before they were naturally upon the face of the earth. [Moses 3:5]” It seems reasonable that people who lived on that spirit world should be baptized in the water of that spirit world. Our verse, 1 Nephi 20:1, as the Prophet Joseph modified it, seems to insist that is so.

    President Joseph Fielding Smith apparently concurred. He wrote that ordinances in the premortal existence were important, just as they are here.

    During the ages in which we dwelt in the premortal state we not only developed our various characteristics and showed our worthiness and ability, or the lack of it, but we were also where such progress could be observed. It is reasonable to believe that there was a Church organization there….Priesthood, without any question, had been conferred and the leaders were chosen to officiate. Ordinances pertaining to that pre-existence were required and the love of God prevailed.{12}

    Does “baptism” actually mean “baptism”? We suspect so. Joseph Smith said the ordinances of the priesthood are as unchanging as the priesthood itself.

    Ordinances instituted in the heavens before the foundation of the world, in the priesthood, for the salvation of men, are not to be altered or changed. All must be saved on the same principles.

    It is for the same purpose that God gathers together His people in the last days, to build unto the Lord a house to prepare them for the ordinances and endowments, washings and anointings, etc. One of the ordinances of the house of the Lord is baptism for the dead. God decreed before the foundation of the world that the ordinances should be administered in a font prepared for the purpose in the house of the Lord….

    If a man gets a fullness of the priesthood of God he has to get it in the same way that Jesus Christ obtained it, and that was by keeping all the commandments and obeying all the ordinances of the house of the Lord.

    Where there is no change of priesthood, there is no change of ordinances, says Paul.{13}

    Isaiah understood that the spirit bodies we had before we came to this physical earth also had to be “redeemed” through appropriate ordinances. And that one of those ordinances was baptism in the waters of the spiritual earth on which it was created. That idea seems to be perfectly consistent with other scriptures which refer to ordinances and ordinations during our pre-earth life. In the scriptures we not only find mention of a premortal church (D&C 93:21-25), but also of ordination to the priesthood (Alma 13:1-3), anointing (Isaiah 61:1-3, with Luke 4:16-30 and D&C 138:42), gatherings or meetings, some with singing (Isaiah 6, 1 Nephi 1:8), receiving a calling and being “sealed with that holy Spirit of promise” (Ephesians chapter 1) and temples (Isaiah 6:1; Alma 13:1 with Alma 12:29-35; see also Hebrews 8:2; 9:11-12, 24; Revelation 7:15. These latter references to temples are not necessarily premortal, but they do suggest the temples are a permanent fixture of the heavens.). All this suggests that when we were in that premortal spirit world, and before we could be born into this present world as clean and innocent babies, free from any past sin or transgression, we had to “trust in Christ,” and formally accept the blessings of the Atonement{14} through covenants and ordinances, just as we do here.

    Then, as now, the ordinances were both an evidence of the covenants and a method of instruction. The Prophet Joseph explained:

    The organization of the spiritual and heavenly worlds, and of spiritual and heavenly beings, was agreeable to the most perfect order and harmony: their limits and bounds were fixed irrevocably, and voluntarily subscribed to in their heavenly estate by themselves, and were by our first parents subscribed to upon the earth. Hence the importance of embracing and subscribing to principles of eternal truth by all men upon the earth that expect eternal life.
    .        I assure the Saints that truth, in reference to these matters, can and may be known through the revelations of God in the way of His ordinances, and in answer to prayer.{15}

    To “swear” means to take an oath, or to participate in making a covenant. To swear by the name of the Lord is to make a sacred oath. Isaiah accuses these people of mentioning “the God of Israel” (a very important name-title here) yet the oath they take is neither an act of truth nor of righteousness (zedek)—they are not only being deceitful about it, but they are not even doing it in the right way or with the right authority.

    Nevertheless, they call themselves of the holy city, but they do not stay themselves upon the God of Israel, who is the Lord of Hosts; yea, the Lord of Hosts is his name.

    The King James Version reads:

    For they call themselves of the holy city, and stay themselves upon the God of Israel; The Lord of hosts is his name. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

     The holy city is Zion. Notwithstanding the apostasy described in verse one, these people are still claiming to be Zion. That is typical. Apostate people usually claim it is not themselves, but the church leaders who have strayed from the truth.

    Even though they wish to identify themselves as those who made and honored their covenants, these people do not stay/anchor/secure themselves upon the God with whom they have made their covenants.

    The ancient Jewish editors removed the words “do not” from the text—and that tells us a good deal about the spiritual condition of the editors.

    The words “do not” in the second verse indicates that these same people had already broken the covenants they had made, but were still using their sacred oaths as a mask behind which they hoped to hide their deception.

    The name, knowing the name, living true to the name, are all code for keeping the covenants that are represented by the name. Alma explained to the people of Zarahemla,

    38 Behold, I say unto you, that the good shepherd doth call you; yea, and in his own name he doth call you, which is the name of Christ; and if ye will not hearken unto the voice of the good shepherd, to the name by which ye are called, behold, ye are not the sheep of the good shepherd.
    39 And now if ye are not the sheep of the good shepherd, of what fold are ye? Behold, I say unto you, that the devil is your shepherd, and ye are of his fold; and now, who can deny this? Behold, I say unto you, whosoever denieth this is a liar and a child of the devil.
    40 For I say unto you that whatsoever is good cometh from God, and whatsoever is evil cometh from the devil.
    41 Therefore, if a man bringeth forth good works he hearkeneth unto the voice of the good shepherd, and he doth follow him; but whosoever bringeth forth evil works, the same becometh a child of the devil, for he hearkeneth unto his voice, and doth follow him.
    42 And whosoever doeth this must receive his wages of him; therefore, for his wages he receiveth death, as to things pertaining unto righteousness, being dead unto all good works (Alma 5:38-42).

    Here, Isaiah makes a double point of saying that Jehovah’s name is “Lord of Hosts.” It is his covenant name and the one most relevant to the context of this story. The covenant names are very significant here. In the name “Lord of Hosts,” “Lord” is Jehovah who was anointed at the Council in Heaven as King of premortal as well as mortal Israel.{16} The word “hosts” is translated from the Hebrew word that means armies, either preparing for or engaging in war. We were told in the previous verse that the people were “called by the name of Israel.” So we know both covenant names and from that we can deduce the terms of the covenant.

    The exact meaning of Israel is uncertain. In various sources we find that Israel means “One who prevails with{17} God or God prevails”;{18} “he shall rule as God.{19} The sense of all the definitions is the same, that is, Israel is one who acts in God’s behalf so that God may prevail. Given the other covenant name, Lord of Hosts, it apparently implies that Israel will support God in battle. Another definition of Israel is simply “God fighteth.”{20}

    If that is correct, then in these two new names it is easy to identify the nature of the covenant. God is master of the armies, the people will assist him in securing his objective. In this “War in Heaven” setting, God’s covenant name, Lord of Hosts (Commander of the armies) has an obvious relationship with their name, Israel, “God prevails.”

    The meanings of these names suggest that the covenant in question has to do with war, specifically, with that war which is a struggle against Satan for the souls of men, which was waged in the spirit world before we came to this earth, and continues here.

    Behold, I have declared the former things from the beginning; and they went forth out of my mouth, and I showed them. I did show them suddenly.

    The King James Version reads:

    3 I have declared the former things from the beginning; and they went forth out of my mouth, and I shewed them; I did them suddenly, and they came to pass (Isaiah 48:1-22).

    Because verse 3 in the Bible is clearly in past tense, it is seen by scholars as a major evidence that “Second Isaiah” was written during or after the Babylonian captivity.

    Since verses 1 and 2 deal with ordinances, specifically baptism and covenant names, it seems logical that the “former things” are the ordinances and covenants he has referred to.

    These ordinances and covenants were “declared…from the beginning.

    The context leaves little question about which “beginning” it is talking about. Except for the actual creation story in Genesis, even the 48th chapter of Isaiah has a greater concentration of phrases like “the beginning” than in almost any other place in the Bible. Examples include: v. 3, 5, 7, 16 “from the beginning;” v. 13 “the foundation of the earth;” v. 8, “a transgressor from the womb;” v. 11, “and I will not give my glory unto another [a clear reference to the same event as Moses 4:1-4];” and in v. 1, 12, 15, and 21:1 “called” meaning fore-ordained.

    The phrase “the beginning” has a meaning that is consistent throughout much of the scriptures. For example: “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth,” Genesis 1:1; “In the beginning was the Word…and without him was not any thing made that was made,” John 1:1-3; “from the beginning…before the world was,” Abraham 3:21-2; and “I saw his glory, that he was in the beginning, before the world was,” in Doctrine and Covenants 93:7. Thus “the beginning” appears to designate a place in time (or if not in time at least in the sequence of events of our “age”) which is clearly defined and consistently used in the scriptures. It means “before the foundation of the earth.” Its foundation was the spirit world which was first created under the direction of Jehovah. This physical earth was created after the pattern of that spirit world. So in this kind of context, “before the foundation” means at the Council held in Kolob.{21} before either the spiritual or physical earth was created. It may go back even further, as in D&C 76: “those things which were from the beginning before the world was, which were ordained of the Father, through his Only Begotten Son, who was in the bosom of the Father, even from the beginning (D&C 76:13 see also 93:7).

    Some of the proceedings of that Council are described in Abraham 3:22-28. During those meetings the Plan was finalized and Satan was expelled. Thereafter, “they, that is the Gods, organized and formed the heavens and the earth.” (Abraham 4:1).

    and they [instructions about the ordinances and covenants] went forth out of my mouth, and I showed them. I did show them suddenly.

    The Hebrew translated “suddenly” does not mean quickly, it means without hesitation. The way “these commandments” were “shown” is described in Alma 12:29-35.

    And I did it [I revealed the ordinances] because I knew that thou art obstinate, and thy neck is an iron sinew, and thy brow brass;

    The King James Version reads:

    4 Because I knew that thou art obstinate, and thy neck is an iron sinew, and thy brow brass; (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    The words, “And I did it” are a reference to showing the ordinances and covenants. Those words are removed from the Bible just as “show” is removed from v. 3.

    The people about whom Isaiah was complaining are exceedingly proud. He just described them as having a neck which is an iron sinew, and brow of brass. That is, they will neither bow the head nor be delighted with the truth.

    And I have even from the beginning declared to thee; before it came to pass I showed them thee; and I showed them for fear lest thou shouldst say—Mine idol hath done them, and my graven image, and my molten image hath commanded them.{26}

    The King James Version reads:

    5 I have even from the beginning declared it to thee; before it came to pass I shewed it thee: lest thou shouldest say, Mine idol hath done them, and my graven image, and my molten image, hath commanded them. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    The referent for “them” is the true ordinances and covenants from which they have apostatized.{22} Our knowing that puts this and the next verses in their proper context and makes them much easier to understand.

    “Even from the beginning” the plan was “declared.” Here, as elsewhere, “the beginning” refers to the beginning of this system’s creation by the Savior and the Council held in Kolob,{23} as detailed in the Book of Abraham 3:22-5:7. “Declared” is a stronger word than “taught.” It suggests both teaching and bearing testimony. This message was also “showed.” There are several examples in the Book of Mormon of how the principles of the gospel might be both taught and shown. One is in Alma where he reminds Zeezrom of the covenants he had made (Alma 12:1-35). Another is when the Savior appeared in 3 Nephi. A third is in Moroni 10:28-31.

    Isaiah writes that this instruction was declared and shown “from the beginning,” so those who refused to obey would be without excuse. They could not attribute either the Plan or the ordinances and covenants associated with it to the false god whom they had chosen to worship. Isaiah continues to quote God,

    and I showed them for fear lest thou shouldst say–mine idol hath done them, and my graven image, and my molten image hath commanded them.

    The idea that these people in the premortal world worshiped a false god is an amazing one, yet it must be true, for “his tail drew the third part of the stars of heaven, and did cast them to the earth” (Revelation 12:4). The struggle continues even now. As Paul wrote, “the god of this world hath blinded the minds of them which believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should shine unto them” (2 Corinthians 4:4).

    The extended power of that false god is known by Jude who says that some of his followers were “ordained” to come to this earth to become part of the true church with the object of trying to destroy it from the inside (Jude 1:1-6, John 8:43-45, Moses 5:22-24).

    6 Thou hast seen and heard all this; and will ye not declare them? And that I have showed thee new things from this time, even hidden things,{24} and thou didst not know them.

    The King James Version reads:

    6 Thou hast heard, see all this; and will not ye declare it? I have shewed thee new things from this time, even hidden things, and thou didst not know them. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    The “hidden things” are, of course, the ordinances and covenants associated with the premortal temple services. There is ample evidence that before we came here we not only were foreordained to the priesthood and to fulfill certain responsibilities while in this world, but we also made covenants and ordinances relating to the enabling powers of the Atonement. Examples are:

    The Savior was anointed at the Council in Heaven. Psalm 45:7-8,{25} Isaiah 61:1, D&C 138:42.
    Baptism in the premortal spirit world: 1 Nephi 20:1.
    King and queen foreordained at the Council: Psalm 45:3-5, 10-12.{26}
    The covenant of the law of consecration at the Council: Psalm 82.{27}
    Isaiah receives an assignment at the Council: Isaiah 6:8-12 and 2 Nephi 16:8-12.{28}
    Premortal priesthood in Alma 13.{29}
    The meek are those who keep their premortal covenants in Psalm 25.{30}
    Premortal temple services in Psalm 23:3.{31}

    “And that I have showed thee new things from this time, even hidden things.” In this context it appears that the hidden things have to do with the ordinances he has been discussion. These are things that have been hidden from the foundation of the world. They were hidden then, they are hidden now, and will always be—but they are only hidden from those who do not obey God’s commandments. Then he adds that he has “shown you” the mysteries of godliness, which are the key to understanding all else, and you have chosen not to understand—“and thou didst not know them.” After one is shown hidden things, to choose not to know them is very dangerous, as Alma warned Zeezrom, “Now this [choosing to not know the mysteries] is what is meant by the chains of hell (Alma 12:10-13).

    6. Thou hast seen and heard all this [all the things that had been taught from the beginning] ; and will ye not declare them?{32}

    The Lord’s accusation against these people is severe: You have seen and heard all these magnificent things from the beginning, even hidden things; you have covenants regarding your deportment toward them, yet you will not acknowledge/testify/teach/declare them, even though you have covenanted to do so.

    7 They are created now, and not from the beginning, even before the day when thou heardest them not they were declared unto thee, lest thou shouldst say— Behold I knew them.

    The King James Version reads:

    7 They are created now, and not from the beginning; even before the day when thou heardest them not; lest thou shouldest say, Behold, I knew them. (Isaiah 48:7)

    Since “they” were not created from the beginning, the referent must be to the false ordinances of the false god. In the next phrase, “even before the day when thou heardest them not they were declared unto thee,” the referent to “them” returns to the true ordinances. So the verse reads:

    7 They [the counterfeit ordinances and covenants] are created now, and not from the beginning, even before the day when thou heardest them [the true ordinances and covenants] not they were declared unto thee, lest thou shouldst say—Behold I knew them.

    This depicts a situation that is not at all unlike those in this world. The Lord knows how people will respond to his teachings, but his knowing that does not preclude his giving them a full opportunity to make that decision in their own time and own environment. Here he tells them, “I told you the true ordinances and covenants before you even heard about the false ones.”They were declared unto thee, lest thou shouldst say— Behold I knew them.”

    8 Yea, and thou heardest not; yea, thou knewest not; yea, from that time thine ear was not opened; for I knew that thou wouldst deal very treacherously, and wast called a transgressor from the womb.

    The King James Version reads the same way.

    “I knew (past tense) that thou wouldst (future tense) deal very treacherously, and wast (past tense) called a transgressor from the womb.” The Lord knew what they would do because of what they had done before they were born. Which born? is a very interesting question. Given the context in which this statement is made and the fact that their birth onto our physical earth had not happened yet, the conclusion must be that they were “called a transgressor” from before their birth as spirits—that is, they were rebellious even as intelligences.{33}

    The Lord’s accusation to those rebellious men and women in the premortal spirit world, “for I knew that thou wouldst deal very treacherously, and wast called a transgressor from the womb,” was based on his knowledge of their past as well as his foreknowledge of their attitudes in their own futures. But God never stops anyone from progressing. The decision to follow his commandments or not follow them must be their own. Even though he knows the outcome, he always gives each of us the absolute opportunity to choose.

    Nevertheless, for my name’s sake will I defer mine anger, and for my praise will I refrain from thee, that I cut thee not off.{41}

    The King James Version Reads:

    9 For my name’s sake will I defer mine anger, and for my praise will I refrain for thee, that I cut thee not off. (Isaiah 48:1-22).

    The conjunction “nevertheless” in the Book of Mormon continues the chain of ideas that is not found in the Old Testament.

    “Nevertheless, for my name’s sake”: There is always a new name associated with a new covenant or a change in status. As at the beginning of this chapter, Jehovah identified himself as “Lord of Hosts” and those with whom he made the covenant as “Israel.”

    “For my name’s sake” means for the sake of the covenant with which the name is associated. It is almost always true that when one finds the word “name” used like this in a temple setting, one can substitute the word “covenant” for the word “name” without changing the meaning of the sentence. Thus, it could read “for my covenant’s sake will I defer mine anger.”

    “And for my praise will I refrain from thee, that I cut thee not off.” The Hebrew word translated “praise” means to give praise or adoration,{34} and in the psalms is often used in conjunction with music and singing.{35}

    In 1 Nephi 20, even though the word hesed may also be written as chesed) is not used there, it is evident from the context that we are still in the chapter’s covenant/temple context. Therefore, the Lord said: “for my praise will I refrain from thee, that I cut thee not off.”

    10 For, behold, I have refined thee, I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction.{44}

    The King James Version reads:

    10 Behold, I have refined thee, but not with silver; I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction (Isaiah 48:1-22).

    Once again, the “for” in the Book of Mormon continues the chain of ideas. In the Old Testament, the “not with silver” pulls our minds away from the Atonement and makes it be our refining with physical burdens.

    From the Bible version in the Cyrus context, we get the clear message that the refining is our earthly problems that will ultimately be good for us. That is a good interpretation because what it asserts is often true. In the version that was on the brass plates, this was about the issues of the people in the premortal spirit world. Nevertheless, ultimately it is the furnace of Christ’s affliction, not of our own, in which we are refined. The Atonement happened in sacred and in linear time. In sacred time because it is infinite and eternal; in linear time because the event happened on this earth, in Gethsemane and on the cross. We get glimpses of the fire of that furnace in the scriptures:

    38 Then saith he unto them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death: tarry ye here, and watch with me (Matthew 26:38-39).

    35 And he went forward a little, and fell on the ground, and prayed that, if it were possible, the hour might pass from him.
    36 And he said, Abba, Father, all things are possible unto thee; take away this cup from me: nevertheless not what I will, but what thou wilt (Mark 14:35-36).

    44 And being in an agony he prayed more earnestly: and his sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the ground (Luke 22:42-44)

    18 Which suffering caused myself, even God, the greatest of all, to tremble because of pain, and to bleed at every pore, and to suffer both body and spirit—and would that I might not drink the bitter cup, and shrink—
    19 Nevertheless, glory be to the Father, and I partook and finished my preparations unto the children of men (D&C 19:18-19).

    11 For mine own sake, yea, for mine own sake will I do this, for I will not suffer my name to be polluted, and I will not give my glory unto another.{45}

    The King James Version reads:

    11 For mine own sake, even for mine own sake, will I do it: for how should my name be polluted? and I will not give my glory unto another. (Isaiah 48:1-22)

    Here again, the word “name” can be read “covenant” without changing the meaning. It would read: “I will not suffer my covenant to be polluted.”

    Even though this chapter is virtually peppered with phrases like “in the beginning,” it is this verse and the declaration, “I will not give my glory unto another” that most firmly plants the chapter’s context in the war in the heaven. It speaks to the same event as the book of Moses.

    1 And I, the Lord God, spake unto Moses, saying: That Satan, whom thou hast commanded in the name of mine Only Begotten, is the same which was from the beginning, and he came before me, saying—Behold, here am I, send me, I will be thy son, and I will redeem all mankind, that one soul shall not be lost, and surely I will do it; wherefore give me thine honor (Moses 4:1).

    The rebelliousness that was characteristic of some people in the premortal world continued into this world. In the time of Lehi, Jeremiah quoted the Lord, expressing his sorrow that his people had turned their backs on their own spiritual potential. He wrote,

    For as the girdle cleaveth to the loins of a man, so have I caused to cleave unto me the whole house of Israel and the whole house of Judah, saith the Lord; that they might be unto me for a people, and for a name, and for a praise, and for a glory: but they would not hear (Jeremiah 13:9-11).

    ———————————–
    FOOTNOTES

    {1} Examples are 3 Nephi 12:9 and Isaiah 61:3. For a discussion of the importance of new covenant names, and that a new name changes a person by giving him a new identity, see Bruce H. Porter, and Stephen D. Ricks. “Names in Antiquity: Old. New, and Hidden.” In By Study and Also by Faith: Essays in Honor of Hugh W Nibley on the Occasion of His Eightieth Birthday, 2 vols., edited by John M. Lundquist and Stephen D. Ricks. 1 :501-22. Salt Lake City: Deseret Book & FARMS, 1990.

    {2} Hugh Nibley, The Message of the Joseph Smith Papyri: An Egyptian Endowment (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1975), 184.

    {3} For a discussion of the pre-mortal war in heaven, see Neil Forsyth, The Old Enemy, Satan and the Combat Myth (Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1987).

    {4} That is shown by John the Beloved:
    10 And I heard a loud voice saying in heaven, Now is come salvation, and strength, and the kingdom of our God, and the power of his Christ: for the accuser of our brethren is cast down, which accused them before our God day and night.
    11 And they overcame him by the blood of the Lamb, and by the word of their testimony; and they loved not their lives unto the death (Revelation 12:10-11).

    {5} In both verses 26 and 27, Lucifer is called “a son of the morning.” In Isaiah 14:12 and 2 Nephi 24:12, he is called simply “son of the morning.” But nowhere in the scriptures is he called “the son of the morning.”

    {6} Joseph Smith, A Vision, published in Times and Seasons, February 1, 1843.

    {7} Enoch also describes him as “very red.” Secrets of Enoch 26:2.

    {8} We are told they “swear by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, yet they swear not in truth nor in righteousness” (1 Nephi 20:1).
    It is a time-honored tactic of Satan to represent himself as an emissary from God. He teaches men that it is God’s will that they should do evil. An example is: “And Cain loved Satan more than God. And Satan commanded him, saying: Make an offering unto the Lord” (Moses 5:18). In that example, Satan did not deny God or ask Cain to do so; rather, he simply told Cain there was an alternative way of keeping God’s commandments. We see that tactic used with great success all around us. Indeed, we see it used all over the world among many religions and in many nations.

    {9} Joseph Fielding Smith, Way to Perfection, 50-51.

    {10} For additional information about the Church of the Firstborn, see:
    Monte S. Nyman and Charles D. Tate, Jr., eds., Alma, the Testimony of the Word (Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center, 1992), 74.
    James E. Talmage, Articles of Faith (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1981), 83.
    Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, 8:154. “The ordinances of the house of God are expressly for the Church of the Firstborn.”
    Joseph Smith, Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1976), 237. “….so on to the highest order of the Melchizedek Priesthood, setting forth the order pertaining to the Ancient of Days, and all those plans and principles by which any one is enabled to secure the fullness of those blessings which have been prepared for the Church of the Firstborn, and come up and abide in the presence of the Eloheim in the eternal worlds.”

    {11} The phrase “or the waters of baptism” was first added to the text in the Nauvoo 1840 edition (Royal Skousen, ed., The Book of Mormon, The Earliest Text [New Haven and London, Yale University Press, 2009], 752.)
    Nibley says that it is reported that Parley P. Pratt made the suggestion to add the phrase. Since Cumorah, 133.

    {12} Joseph Fielding Smith, The Way to Perfection, Deseret Book, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1963, 50-51.

    {13} Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 308

    {14} The Lord told the Prophet Joseph:
    38 Every spirit of man was innocent in the beginning; and God having redeemed man from the fall, men became again, in their infant state, innocent before God (Doctrine and Covenants 93:38).

    {15} Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith 325. Italics added.

    {16} The name-titles Messiah and Jesus both mean “The Anointed One.” The Savior’s premortal anointing as King is is acknowledge in Psalm 45, where the earthly king does obeisance to Jehovah and says his garments are still fragrant with the perfumes of the anointing oil. Isaiah 61:1 mentions the anointing and D&C 138:42 quotes that verse and clarifies that it was Jehovah who was anointed.

    {17} The “with” is ambiguous. It could mean “against God” or “beside God in God’s behalf.” The Strongest Strong suggests the same ambiguity “he struggles with God.”

    {18} Dictionary in 1983 LDS Bible.

    {19} Strong # 3478.

    {20} Dictionary in 1953 LDS Bible. Neither the Anchor Bible Dictionary nor the Interpreters Dictionary of the Bible suggest a meaning for the word.

    {21} D&C 76:5-7 reads,

    5 For thus saith the Lord—I, the Lord, am merciful and gracious unto those who fear me, and delight to honor those who serve me in righteousness and in truth unto the end.
    6 Great shall be their reward and eternal shall be their glory.
    7 And to them will I reveal all mysteries, yea, all the hidden mysteries of my kingdom from days of old, and for ages to come, will I make known unto them the good pleasure of my will concerning all things pertaining to my kingdom.
    When the Prophet Joseph wrote that vision in poetic form, he rendered verses 6 and 7 as follows:

    That serve me in righteousness true to the end;
    Eternal’s their glory and great their reward.
    I’ll surely reveal all my myst’ries to them —
    The great hidden myst’ries in my kingdom stor’d;
    From the council in Kolob, to time on the earth,

    And for ages to come unto them I will show
    My pleasure and will, what the kingdom will do
    Eternity’s wonders they truly shall know.

    (The poem is called “A Vision” and was published in the Times and Seasons, February 1, 1843).
    For additional insights on the events in the premortal world see Abraham 3:22-4:1, Alma 13:1-9, and John Taylor’s editorial called “Origin, Object, and Destiny of Women” in The Mormon, New York, August 29, 1857.

    {22} “Them” is repeated twice in this verse, in sharp contrast to “it” in the Old Testament which is a reference to their pride in verse 4. Even though one could not discover the ordinances and covenants in the Old Testament wording, they were clearly shown on the brass plates.

    {23} See above, quotes from D&C 76:5-7 and Joseph Smith poem, “A Vision” for evidence that the Council was held in Kolob.

    {24} The “hidden things” in verses 6 and 7 are of the utmost importance to scholars who believe that this was written by “Second Isaiah.” In his Article on “Isaiah” in The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible (2:738-39), C. R. North explains why these verses from Isaiah 48 are the key to the scholars’ belief that the chapter was written in the sixth century B.C, that is, during the Babylonian captivity. He reasons,

    A prophecy of sixteen consecutive chapters, giving a detailed account of what was to happen two centuries after it was written, would be unique in the prophetical writings, and it is difficult to see what purpose it could serve for Isaiah’s contemporaries. Scholars who conclude that it dates from the sixth century B.C. are as devout and conscientious as those who believe it was written in the eighth, and they are equally persuaded that it is the “word of God.” Their case rests finally upon 48:6-7:

    From this time forth I make you hear new things,hidden things which you have not known.
    They are created now, not long ago; before today you have never heard of them.

    If the passage was written by the eighth-century Isaiah, and if the “new things” relate to the time of Cyrus, it could not be said: “You have never heard of them,” unless, of course, chs. 40-55 were “hidden” in the sense that they were not put into circulation but went “underground” for nearly two centuries, to be brought to light during the Exile. But the conception of “hidden things” as “sealed apocrypha” (cf. Dan. 8:26; 12:4,9; Rev. 10:4; 22:10) is, so far as we have any evidence, considerably later than the time of the pre-exilic Isaiah (Isa. 8: 16 does not refer to a sealed “book” but to oral “teaching”).

    {25} For a discussion of the Savior’s anointing in Council in Heaven in Psalm 45:7-8, see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 291-93; Second edition, p. 207-08.

    {26} For a discussion of the king and queen’s foreordination at the Council: Psalm 45.3-5, 10-12 see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 259-305; Second edition, p. 185-217.

    {27} For a discussion of the covenant of the law of consecration at the Council in Psalm 82. see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 227-55; Second edition, p. 162-74.

    {29} The one in 2 Nephi clarifies the one in Isaiah. For a discussion of sode experiences see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 195-208; Second edition, p. 139-48.

    {29} For a discussion of the premortal priesthood in Alma 13 see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 815-25; Second edition, p. 573-82.

    {30} For a discussion of the meek as those who keep their premortal covenants in Psalm 25 see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 525-43; Second edition, p. 378-90.

    {31} For a discussion of premortal temple services in Psalm 23:3 see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 618-24; Second edition, p. 443-45.

    {32} That is, will you not acknowledge, confess, teach, proclaim them? (Strong # 5046)

    {33} For a discussion of the nature of intelligences and their ability to choose right from wrong see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 801-64; Second edition, p. 564-607

    {34} Strong # 8416.

    {35} Examples are Psalms 66:1-4, Isaiah 63:7-9, Psalms 48:9-10, Isaiah 61:1-11.

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  • 1 Nephi 20 & Isaiah 48 — LeGrand Baker — An Historical Introduction

    1 Nephi 20 & Isaiah 48 

    After this introduction, I have divided First Nephi 20 and 21 into the following subsections:

    1. The premortal apostasy, 1 Nephi 20:1-11

    2. Joseph Smith in the Council in Heaven, 1 Nephi 20:12-17

    3. Apostasy preceding the Restoration, 1 Nephi 20:18 to 21:1a

    4. Those who will help the Prophet Joseph, 1 Nephi 21:1-6

    5. Joseph Smith restores the Temple services, 1 Nephi 21:7-11

    6. The Gathering of Israel, 1 Nephi 21: 12-26

    ———————————-

    Notwithstanding the eternal nature of the covenant that God made with the house of David, Isaiah is reported to have prophesied that God would break that covenant and give the kingship to a non-Israelite. This is the story behind Isaiah’s purported prophecy:

    It is almost universally accepted by Biblical scholars that the second half of Isaiah, beginning with chapter 40, was written by a different author from the first half. There are two major reasons for this belief. The first reason is that the second half, called by them “Second Isaiah,” is different in its subject and approach. While the first half deals with nations that are contemporary with Isaiah, “Second Isaiah” is heavily dependent of the Psalms and follows a pattern that begins with the events in the Council in Heaven and continues to the Millennial reign.

    The second reason is that most scholars believe that “Second Isaiah” was written during the Babylonian captivity. This is evinced by that fact that the part which deals with Cyrus the Persian was written with past tense verbs, indicating that the prophesied events had already happened.

    Cyrus is mentioned by name twice in Isaiah, in the last verse of chapter 44 and the first verse of chapter 45. In these passages God is reported to be using the same kind of covenantal phrases to describe his relationship with Cyrus as he once used to describe his covenant with the House of David, thereby passing the kingship of Judah from the House of David to the non-Israelite Cyrus and negating God’s own covenant with David. Isaiah 48 is the conclusion of that section that clearly deals with Cyrus.

    However, we have a version of Isaiah 48 that was on the brass plates and therefore predates the Babylonian version. That pre-Babylonian version is 1 Nephi 20 and is substantially different from the one in the Bible. It does not support the idea that what Isaiah wrote was originally even about the Persian king. We find these differences between the two versions to be compelling evidence that the name of Cyrus and references to his kingship over Israel were secondary insertions by the later Jews, and that it was not Isaiah who wrote that Jehovah intended to break his covenant with the House of David.

    First Nephi 20 appears at first glance to be only slightly different from Isaiah 48 in the King James Version, but upon close examination it becomes evident that the two chapters are about entirely different subjects. To understand the differences, it is helpful to place the Bible version in its historical context.

    In 588 B.C., not long after Lehi and his family left Jerusalem, Nebuchadnezzar and the Babylonian army invaded Judah. The following year they defeated the Jews; destroyed Jerusalem and its Temple; executed many of the political, military, and religious leaders; and deported others to Babylon, leaving only the poorest people behind. The political and religious elite of the Jews were now captive slaves in or near Babylon. The period of their exile was rather humane. They were permitted to live as families, farm and engage in other business pursuits. Some even became wealthy and had political influence at court.

    From Jerusalem, Jeremiah sent a letter to them urging that they take full advantage of their opportunities (Jeremiah 29:4-7).

    Because Babylonian policy permitted the Jews to retain a coherent community life, they were able to preserve some of their culture. But the ease with which they were permitted to assimilate into Babylonian society threatened the integrity of their religion. The leaders sought to preserve their Law by modifying it and rewriting their history to conform with their new views of religion and kingship. They kept the Sabbath and continued circumcision, but they had lost their temple and could no longer practice their most important ordinances—especially those connected with the Feast of Tabernacles temple drama. It was probably during that time that the books of Moses were severely edited and the historical books in the Old Testament were written.{1}

    Nebuchadnezzar’s son and grandson were not competent political or military leaders. The Persians defeated a Babylonian army in a battle on the Tigris River, and then, a few weeks later, they simply walked into the city of Babylon without a fight. The Persian king, Cyrus, was a Zoroastrian and one of the most enlightened monarchs of the ancient world. He commanded his army to respect the city’s inhabitants and their property, and was greeted by the people as a deliverer rather than as a conqueror. Cyrus soon began to free captives and to send the people whom the Babylonians had displaced back to their original homelands, along with their looted temple treasures. A condition of their being permitted to return home was that they acknowledge Cyrus as king and remain subservient to the their Persian rulers.

    The Jews wanted to return to Jerusalem, but their covenants with Jehovah virtually precluded it. Their religion insisted that Jehovah had made an eternal covenant that David and his descendants would remain on the Jewish throne “forever.”

    Psalm 89 celebrates and gives the conditions of the covenant between Jehovah and the house of David. It reads in part:

    34 My covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of my lips.
    35 Once have I sworn by my holiness that I will not lie unto David.
    36 His seed shall endure for ever, and his throne as the sun before me.
    37 It shall be established for ever as the moon, and as a faithful witness in heaven.

    Isaiah understood that covenant would never be broken, but would remain valid until the end of time. He wrote:

    3 Incline your ear, and come unto me: hear, and your soul shall live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with you, even the sure mercies of David.
    4 Behold, I have given him for a witness to the people, a leader and commander to the people (Isaiah 55:3-4).

    Notwithstanding the eternal nature of the covenant that God made with the house of David, Isaiah is reported to have prophesied that God would break that covenant and give the kingship to a non-Israelite. This is the story behind Isaiah’s purported prophecy:

    It is almost universally accepted by Biblical scholars that the second half of Isaiah, beginning with chapter 40, was written by a different author from the first half. There are two major reasons for this belief. The first reason is that the second half, called by them “Second Isaiah,” is different in its subject and approach. While the first half deals with nations that are contemporary with Isaiah, “Second Isaiah” is heavily dependent of the Psalms and follows a pattern that begins with the events in the Council in Heaven and continues to the Millennial reign.

    The second reason is that most scholars believe that “Second Isaiah” was written during the Babylonian captivity. This is evinced by that fact that the part which deals with Cyrus the Persian was written with past tense verbs, indicating that the prophesied events had already happened.

    Cyrus is mentioned by name twice in Isaiah, in the last verse of chapter 44 and the first verse of chapter 45. In these passages God is reported to be using the same kind of covenantal phrases to describe his relationship with Cyrus as he once used to describe his covenant with the House of David, thereby passing the kingship of Judah from the House of David to the non-Israelite Cyrus and negating God’s own covenant with David. Isaiah 48 is the conclusion of that section that clearly deals with Cyrus.

    However, we have a version of Isaiah 48 that was on the brass plates and therefore predates the Babylonian version. That pre-Babylonian version is 1 Nephi 20 and is substantially different from the one in the Bible. It does not support the idea that what Isaiah wrote was originally even about the Persian king. We find these differences between the two versions to be compelling evidence that the name of Cyrus and references to his kingship over Israel were secondary insertions by the later Jews, and that it was not Isaiah who wrote that Jehovah intended to break his covenant with the House of David.

    Because the covenant was so much a part of Jewish theology, it could not easily be swept away. However, political necessity required that the terms of that covenant had to be modified just enough for the Jews to acknowledge that Cyrus, who was not an Israelite, could now be their king. Fortunately for them, just when it was most needed, the Jewish leaders in Babiylon “discovered” a document that said everything they needed it to say. It was claimed to have been written almost 200 years earlier by Isaiah, one of the most renowned prophets. There is no surviving explanation about how the document remained unknown to the Jews during all the time they were at Jerusalem and then turned up two centuries later in faraway Babylon. In the document was a “secret vision.” Isaiah was said to have prophesied that God would transfer the terms of the Davidic covenant of kingship from the house of David to a non-Israelite king. It even named Cyrus by name and said he had been chosen by Jehovah in the Council in Heaven to be king and liberator of the Jews.

    The “secret vision” was of the utmost importance, because such an acknowledgment of Cyrus on the part of the Jews and their prophet was a necessary pre-condition for their return to Jerusalem. It also meant that there could never be another Jewish king and consequently that there could be no celebration of the Feast of Tabernacles temple coronation drama.

    Josephus tells how the Jews used their newly discovered manuscript to convince Cyrus to send them and their temple treasures back to Jerusalem:

    This [claim that Cyrus was chosen by Jehovah] was known to Cyrus by his reading the book which Isaiah left behind him of his prophecies; for this prophet said that God had spoken thus to him in a secret vision: “My will is, that Cyrus, whom I have appointed to be king over many and great nations, send back my people to their own land, and build my temple.” This was foretold by Isaiah one hundred and forty years before the temple was demolished. Accordingly, when Cyrus read this, and admired the Divine power, an earnest desire and ambition seized upon him to fulfill what was so written; so he called for the most eminent Jews that were in Babylon, and said to them, that he gave them leave to go back to their own country, and to rebuild their city Jerusalem, and the temple of God, for that he would be their assistant, and that he would write to the rulers and governors that were in the neighborhood of their country of Judea, that they should contribute to them gold and silver for the building of the temple, and besides that, beasts for their sacrifices.{2}

    The verse in the King James Version that introduces the Cyrus chapters reads:

    That saith of Cyrus, He is my shepherd, and shall perform all my pleasure: even saying to Jerusalem, Thou shalt be built; and to the temple, Thy foundation shall be laid (Isaiah 44:28).

    About that verse, McKenzie observes,

    This is the first time Cyrus is named in the prophecy. He is called “my shepherd”; shepherd is a common title of kings in the OT and in other ancient Near Eastern literature; it is also a title of Yahweh. Cyrus is thus given the title of an Israelite king.{3}

    The next verse reads,

    Thus saith the Lord to his anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have holden, to subdue nations before him; and I will loose the loins of kings, to open before him the two leaved gates; and the gates shall not be shut (Isaiah 45:1).

    About that verse, McKenzie observes,

    “The anointed of Yahweh” is the title given the Israelite king from Saul and David onward, and in particular to kings of the dynasty of David. The ceremony of anointing consecrated an object or a person. The title “anointed” passes into English as Messiah, and through the Greek as Christ. Cyrus is given the place in the history of salvation which in pre-exilic Israel was given to the king.{4}

    Thus, the secret prophecy of Isaiah was claimed to have transferred the kingship of Israel from David and the seed of Abraham to a gentile king. This transfer presents a glaring problem, for it violates the Lord’s covenants with David and all of his successor kings and makes God’s “eternal covenants” only as tentative as it proves to be expedient.

    After they had lost their right to have a king, and the Jewish kingship was transferred to a non-Israelite monarch, the Jewish High Priests assumed the religious and ceremonial roles that had once been an integral part of Israelite kingship. Mowinckel explains,

    In the post-exilic age the High-priests became in many respects the heirs of the kings. … In the post-exilic age it was established that the cult was the exclusive privilege of the priesthood; and the High-priest claimed kingly status through his anointing and the wearing of the diadem.{5}

    While Cyrus accepted the manuscript as the legitimate writings of the Prophet Isaiah, modern scholars do not. The Cyrus passages, more than anything else, are the bases for the scholars’ dividing the book of Isaiah into at least two, and often four, separate parts, each with their own author, and only the first part being written by the original Isaiah.

    Because the Book of Mormon quotes from the second half of Isaiah as it was written on the brass plates, we can be sure that those parts really were written by the prophet Isaiah. However, because of differences between the biblical version and the Book of Mormon version, we can be equally sure that part of that second half was written after Lehi left Jerusalem and was subsequently added to the original text.

    Most Bible scholars believe that the dividing line between First and Second Isaiah is chapters 36-39 that deal with Hezekiah. That seems reasonable because the subject matter, and in places the writing style, of the second half is different from the first. In the view of these scholars, an “anonymous author” called Second Isaiah, is credited with writing chapters 40-55, and is believed to have written his work sometime after the fall of Jerusalem, that is, during the Babylonian captivity.{6} Some scholars attribute the remaining chapters, 56-66, to a third and even a fourth Isaiah. Even though scholars insist such authors lived and wrote, they acknowledge that they know nothing about them, as North wrote:

    Nothing is known of the author, who is generally referred to as Second Isaiah, or Deutero-Isaiah, occasionally the “Babylonian Isaiah.” It is probable that he lived in Babylonia, though Palestine, and even Lebanon or Egypt, have been suggested.{7}

    A quick review of the last half of Isaiah shows how it was so easy to insert the Cyrus chapters. Isaiah 40 clearly takes place in the premortal Council in Heaven. Its first two verses are instructions by Elohim to the members of the Council, and that is immediately followed by the assignment given to John the Baptist to prepare the way of the Lord. With that context already established, the Cyrus chapters seem to fit very nicely.

    In the Bible, Isaiah 44:28 through chapter 48 deals with the foreordination of Cyrus, king of Persia, identifying him by name and outlining his mission to free the Jews from Babylon and permit them to return to Jerusalem to build the temple. But in the Book of Mormon, where Nephi quotes the Brass Plates version of Isaiah 48, that chapter is not about Cyrus but is about something else altogether.

    For example, in addition to the transfer of kingship to a non-Israelite king, there are some other very troubling aspects to the Bible’s Cyrus chapters. One of the most obvious is in chapter 48 which reads:

    I have declared the former things from the beginning; and they went forth out of my mouth, and I shewed them; I did them suddenly [“Suddenly” means without hesitation, rather than quickly], and they came to pass (Isaiah 48:3).

    This verse is one of the many passages that is used to support the proposition that there was a “Second Isaiah” who wrote the latter half of the book of Isaiah sometime during the Babylonian captivity. In this and similar passages, the action is described in the past tense, meaning that it had already been accomplished before or during the lifetime of the author. The implication is that the author had already watched it happen and that it is a report of a past event rather than a prophecy of the future. The Book of Mormon rendition of that verse does not present that problem. It reads,

    Behold, I have declared the former things from the beginning; and they went forth out of my mouth, and I showed them. I did show them suddenly (1 Nephi 20:3).

    This rendition really is a prophecy. It says that an event was foretold—declared and shown in “the beginning.” There is no indication that the action had already been accomplished.

    The fact that Isaiah 48 was on the brass plates and quoted by Nephi is sufficient evidence that at least that portion of the Cyrus chapters was not written during the Babylonian captivity. However, the differences between the two posit that after Lehi and the brass plates left Jerusalem that chapter was altered just enough to make it be about Cyrus.{8} Still, LDS scholars have treated 1 Nephi 20 as though it were about Cyrus.

    Our approach will be to make a careful comparison between Isaiah 48 and 1 Nephi 20 to show how different they are, but also to demonstrate that version in the in the Book of Mormon is not the foreordination of Cyrus but rather the premortal role of the Prophet Joseph Smith.

    In the following analysis we will examine 1 Nephi 20 as it is. However, in the footnotes we will compare the wording of the Book of Mormon with translations of the Hebrew version in the Bible.{9}
    ———————————–
    FOOTNOTES

    {1} For a discussion of that Jewish apostasy see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 45-74; Second edition, p. 47-65.

    {2} Flavious Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews, Book XI, Chapter 1.

    {3} John L. McKenzie, The Anchor Bible, Second Isaiah (Garden City, New York, Doubleday, 1968), 72.

    {4} McKenzie, Second Isaiah, 76.

    {5} Sigmund Mowinckel, He that Cometh, 5.

    {6} McKenzie, Second Isaiah, xxiv-xxv.

    {7} C. R. North, “Isaiah” in The Interpreter’s Dictionary of the Bible (2:738-39).

    {8} The fact that L.D.S. Bible scholars recognize that the Bible’s Cyrus chapters are continued into Isaiah 48 is evidenced by footnote 14a in the L.D.S. Bible which explains, “Cyrus will do his desire, or wish.”
    Some LDS scholars who have addressed the question of Second Isaiah are:
    John Bytheway, Isaiah for Airheads (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 2006); Kent P. Jackson, ed., Studies in Scripture, Vol. 4, 1 Kings to Malachi (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1993), 80-85; Victor L. Ludlow, Isaiah, Prophet, Seer, and Poet (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1982), 97, 375-389, 541-548; Hugh Nibley, Since Cumorah, 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City and Provo, Utah: Deseret Book, FARMS, 1988), 121-125, 198-201; Glenn L. Pearson and Reid E. Bankhead, Building Faith with the Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City, Bookcraft, 1986), 41; Mark E. Petersen, Isaiah for Today (Salt Lake City, Deseret Book, 1981), 140-42; Sidney B. Sperry, Book of Mormon Compendium (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1968), 493-512; James E. Talmage, Conference Report, April 1929, Afternoon Meeting 45-47; Monte S. Nyman, Great are the Words of Isaiah (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1980), 253-57; Brigham H. Roberts, “Higher Criticism and the Book of Mormon,” Improvement Era, 1911, Vol. XIV. June, 1911. No. 8; Andrew C. Skinner, “Nephi’s Lessons to His People, The Messiah, the Land, and Isaiah 48-49 in 1 Nephi 19-22″ in Donald W. Parry and John W. Welch, eds., Isaiah in the Book of Mormon (Provo, Utah: FARMS, 1998), 95-122.

    {9} In the following footnotes, the words in bold italics are different in the Bible and in the Book of Mormon. To show that the differences are between the brass plates and the work of the ancient editors, rather than just between the brass plates and the King James translators, we will sometimes also include translations from the Tanakh, The Holy Scriptures (Philadelphia and Jerusalem: The Jewish Publication Society, 1985); and from John L. McKenzie, The Anchor Bible, Second Isaiah, Introduction, Translation, and Notes (Garden City, New York: Doubleday,1981), 99-100.
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  • 1 Nephi 19:17-22 — LeGrand Baker — Nephi’s Testimony

    1 Nephi 19:17-22  

    17 Yea, and all the earth shall see the salvation of the Lord, saith the prophet; every nation, kindred, tongue and people shall be blessed.
    18 And I, Nephi, have written these things unto my people, that perhaps I might persuade them that they would remember the Lord their Redeemer.
    19 Wherefore, I speak unto all the house of Israel, if it so be that they should obtain these things.
    20 For behold, I have workings in the spirit, which doth weary me even that all my joints are weak, for those who are at Jerusalem; for had not the Lord been merciful, to show unto me concerning them, even as he had prophets of old, I should have perished also.
    21 And he surely did show unto the prophets of old all things concerning them; and also he did show unto many concerning us; wherefore, it must needs be that we know concerning them for they are written upon the plates of brass.
    22 Now it came to pass that I, Nephi, did teach my brethren these things; and it came to pass that I did read many things to them, which were engraven upon the plates of brass, that they might know concerning the doings of the Lord in other lands, among people of old.

    When human history is seen in bits and pieces—an empire here, a kingdom there; a battle, the Renaissance, or a natural disaster—it is sometimes difficult to see the hand of God in it or the premortal decisions of the Council in Heaven being played out according to plan.

    One of the reasons we tend not to see that is that it seems difficult to square with our strong sense of the importance of free agency. For some people there is an ideological conflict between the idea that God can move through linear time and know all things as they are, were, and will be, with the doctrine that we are each free to act according to our own wills and desires. The apparent conflict between God’s knowing and our agency is not real because we do not remember who we were then, what assignments we agreed to. Neither do we remember who our friends were there nor what role they played in the Council. Because we have no memory of our past, we are free to make independent decisions in the present. Those decisions are the product of our innate integrity rather than of an actual memory of our commitments to God and our premortal friends. Therefore, we are “placed in a state to act according to [our individual] wills and pleasures, whether to do evil or to do good” (Alma 12:31). As Jacob admonished, “ Therefore, cheer up your hearts, and remember that ye are free to act for yourselves—to choose the way of everlasting death or the way of eternal life” (2 Nephi 10:23).

    This life is a time when we can define our Selves as though we were in a vacuum of time where only the present exists. But God moves through sacred time, and because he knows, he can accommodate for human weakness and well as for human strengths.

    An easy example is Nephi’s being instructed to write the small plates “for a wise purpose” that God knew but that Nephi did not. About 2,400 years later someone stole the translated manuscript of 116 pages, and that material had to be replaced by the information on the small plates. That shows that God knew there would be a problem. It implies that he knew who would be responsible. There were people who had the opportunity to assist the Prophet but who chose to betray him instead. But it does not presuppose that anyone was forced or predestined to participate in the conspiracy that resulted in those pages being lost from Joseph’s possession. Mrs. Harris had the freedom to act as she chose. God knew what her choice would be and made arrangements to thwart her designs, but he did not force her nor her husband to participate in the attempt to prevent the Prophet from fulfilling his mission. God only made arrangements so that each person could act according to his or her own will but still could not upset the overall progress of the restoration of the gospel.{1}

    Similar stories are told throughout the scriptures. In each instance, God gives men and women their full agency, even though he knows the source and consequences of their evil designs.

    The scriptures also teach that it would be a mistake to believe those persons of integrity were limited to just a few who became prophets. Alma says of the people who lived in the days of Melchizedek, “there were many, exceedingly great many, who were made pure and entered into the rest of the Lord their God” (Alma 13:10-12).

    When we speak of foreordination, that presupposes a responsibility one has accepted and which one has been commissioned to perform. That concept also presupposes that the time, place, circumstances, obstacles and blessings associated with that foreordination were foreknown by the Father, Jehovah, and members of the Council.

    To understand that continuum, we must understand it as the prophets understood it. That is, not as a history of the mortal world but as a history of our whole existence including this experience in this mortal world.
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    FOOTNOTE

    {1} For a discussion of the loss of the 116 pages and the probability that Mrs. Harris was involved see my Joseph and Moroni 52-74.
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  • 1 Nephi 19:10-17 — LeGrand Baker — Zenos and Zenock

    1 Nephi 19:10-17 

    10 And the God of our fathers, who were led out of Egypt, out of bondage, and also were preserved in the wilderness by him, yea, the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, yieldeth himself, according to the words of the angel, as a man, into the hands of wicked men, to be lifted up, according to the words of Zenock, and to be crucified, according to the words of Neum,{1} and to be buried in a sepulchre, according to the words of Zenos,{2} which he spake concerning the three days of darkness, which should be a sign given of his death unto those who should inhabit the isles of the sea, more especially given unto those who are of the house of Israel.

    One of the tantalizing questions raised by the Book of Mormon is, Who were the Old Testament prophets quoted in the Book of Mormon, but not mentioned in the Bible? Nephi gives us some clues about who two of the prophets are whom he is quoting.

    Jacob, gives his source. It is the prophet Zenos, who lived long ago in Palestine, not in the new world. He is introduced in the Book of Mormon a number of times as representative of the long line of messianic prophets who suffered persecution for his messianic teachings. He was no minor prophet; he’s cited in the Book of Mormon more than any other prophet but Isaiah.{3}

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    FOOTNOTES

    {1} Nibley writes that in the old world the names of Zenock and Neum have “disappeared without a trace.” Hugh Nibley, Temple and Cosmos: 245.

    {2} Nibley has shown that Zenos was an Israelite prophet who lived before the time of Lehi. “The Story of Zenos,” in: Hugh Nibley, Since Cumorah, 2nd ed. (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book and FARMS, 1988), 278-82 is the most detailed account. Other statements about Zenos can be found in:
    Hugh Nibley, Nibley on the Timely and the Timeless (Provo: BYU Religious Studies Center, 1978), 156.
    Hugh Nibley, Of All Things! Classic Quotations from Hugh Nibley, 2nd ed., rev. and expanded, compiled and edited by Gary P. Gillum (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book Co., Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1993), 90.
    Hugh Nibley, Old Testament and Related Studies, edited by John W. Welch, Gary P. Gillum, and Don E. Norton (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book Co., Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1986), 250.
    Hugh Nibley, The Prophetic Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City and Provo: Deseret Book Co., Foundation for Ancient Research and Mormon Studies, 1989), 252.
    Hugh Nibley, Ancient Documents and the Pearl of Great Price, edited by Robert Smith and Robert Smythe (n.p., n.d.), 10.

    {3} Nibley, Temple and Cosmos, 245.
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  • 1 Nephi 19:9 — LeGrand Baker — Testimony of the Savior

    1 Nephi 19:9  

    9 And the world, because of their iniquity, shall judge him to be a thing of naught; wherefore they scourge him, and he suffereth it; and they smite him, and he suffereth it. Yea, they spit upon him, and he suffereth it, because of his loving kindness and his long-suffering towards the children of men.

    “Lovingkindness” is usually written as one word in the Psalms, and is often found in tandem with the phrase “tender mercies.” The word translated as “lovingkindnesses” is from the Hebrew word hesed.{1} The Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament shows the power of that friendship/relationship:

    We may venture the conjecture that even in cases where the context does not suggest such mutuality it is nevertheless implicit, because we are dealing with the closest of human bonds.”{2} An explanation and clarification of their phrase, “dealing with the closest of human bonds,” is found in a new version of Strong’s Concordance. It reads, “hesed, unfailing love, loyal love, devotion. kindness, often based on a prior relationship, especially a covenant relationship.”{3}

    Even though the hesed relationship described in this psalm is between the king who speaks the words and Jehovah to whom he addresses them, it must be remembered that in the Israelite temple drama the king represented every man in the congregation. Therefore, the hesed relationship described here also evokes the terms of the covenant between Jehovah and each worthy man. That being so, it follows that this same hesed relationship also exists as an eternal, fraternal bond of each man with Jehovah, perhaps with their prophet/king, and most certainly each other. Consideration of the this-worldly continuation of those fraternal relationships brings us back to Peter’s assurance that “brotherly kindness” (philadelphia) is prerequisite to making one’s calling and election sure (2 Peter 1:1-11).

    6 Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses [hesed, plural]; for they have been ever of old (Psalm 25:6).

    Here is another example of where the phrase “of old” is a reference to the Council.{4} The prayer bears testimony that he knows that his and Jehovah’s hesed relationship is now even as it was in the beginning, at the Council in Heaven, and remains forever—unchanged:

    The ancient Israelites and early Christians prayed with their arms lifted heavenward. Psalm 143 associates such prayer with the Lord’s hesed:

    6 I stretch forth my hands unto thee: my soul thirsteth after thee, as a thirsty land.
    7 Hear me speedily, O Lord: my spirit faileth: hide not thy face from me, lest I be like unto them that go down into the pit.
    8 Cause me to hear thy lovingkindness [hesed] in the morning; for in thee do I trust: cause me to know the way wherein I should walk; for I lift up my soul unto thee (Psalm 143:6-8).

    In the Psalms, that power is often associated with the Israelite king’s temple and coronation rites.{5} In the 36th Psalm it is the “fountain of life.”

    5 Thy mercy [hesed], O Lord, is in the heavens; and thy faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds.
    6 Thy righteousness is like the great mountains; thy judgments are a great deep: O Lord, thou preservest man and beast.
    7 How excellent is thy lovingkindness [hesed], O God! therefore the children of men put their trust under the shadow of thy wings.
    8 They shall be abundantly satisfied with the fatness of thy house; and thou shalt make them drink of the river of thy pleasures.
    9 For with thee is the fountain of life: in thy light shall we see light.
    10 O continue thy lovingkindness [hesed] unto them that know thee; and thy righteousness to the upright in heart (Psalms 36:5-10).

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    FOOTNOTES

    {1} Katherine Doob Sakenfeld of Princeton University Seminary wrote a dissertation on “hesed” in which she argued that it meant “to do what is expected of one.” With regard to the covenant, God does what is expected (keep his covenant promises); man should also maintain “hesed” (keep his covenant promises).
    Katherine Doob Sakenfeld, The Meaning of Hesed in the Hebrew Bible: A New Inquiry (Missoula, Montana; Scholars Press for the Harvard Semitic Museum, 1978).

    {2} G. Johannes Botterweck and Helmer Ringgren, eds., trans. David E. Green, Theological Dictionary of the Old Testament, 15 vols. (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1986), article about hesed, 5:45-48).

    {3} John R. Kohlenberger III and James A. Swanson, The Strongest Strong’s, Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2001), Hebrew dictionary # 2617.

    {4} Examples of scriptures that use the phrase “of old” as reference to events in the Council in Heaven are: Deuteronomy 32:7-8; Psalms 25:6-7, 68:32-33, 93:1-2, 102:24-25, Micah 5:2 is another example. The most convincing modern example is D&C 76:6 “from days of old” and its parallel “from the council in Kolob” in Joseph Smith, A Vision, Times and Seasons, February 1, 1843.

    {5} Other psalms were hesed is translated as lovingkindness are: Psalm 17:6-8, 48:9-10, 51:1; 36:5-10; 40:2, 11; 63:3; 69:11, 16, and 103:1-4. In Psalm 25: 7, 10 hesed is also translated as mercy.
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  • 1 Nephi 19:7 — LeGrand Baker — “they set him at naught”

    1 Nephi 19:7 

    7 For the things which some men esteem to be of great worth, both to the body and soul, others set at naught and trample under their feet. Yea, even the very God of Israel do men trample under their feet; I say, trample under their feet but I would speak in other words—they set him at naught, and hearken not to the voice of his counsels.

    Nephi mentions this important doctrine here, but it is most unequivocally expounded by Alma. In the prayer that began “O that I were an angel, and could have the wish of mine heart,” Alma bemoans the sorry condition of those who choose to do evil (Alma 29:4-5). It is always so with prophets and other righteous men. In the beatitudes, after bringing his audience through the sequence{1} that concluded “for they shall be called [new name] the children of God” Jesus explained what would happen next. He said, “And blessed are all they who are persecuted for my name’s sake, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven” (3 Nephi 12:10, Matthew 5:10). Later he observed, “A prophet is not without honour, but in his own country, and among his own kin, and in his own house” (Mark 6:4).
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    FOOTNOTE

    {1} For a discussion of the Beatitudes as sequence see Who Shall Ascend into the Hill of the Lord, First edition, p. 925-97; Second edition, p. 646-91.
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  • 1 Nephi 19:3 — LeGrand Baker — “I did make plates of ore”

    1 Nephi 19:3  

    3 And after I had made these plates by way of commandment, I, Nephi, received a commandment that the ministry and the prophecies, the more plain and precious parts of them, should be written upon these plates; and that the things which were written should be kept for the instruction of my people, who should possess the land, and also for other wise purposes, which purposes are known unto the Lord.

    Nephi kept everything that was important on his original large plates. They contained “the record of my father [he mentions his father’s journal twice], and also our journeyings in the wilderness, and the prophecies of my father; and also many of mine own prophecies…and the genealogy of his fathers [so he had also copied a good deal from the Brass Plates], and the more part of all our proceedings in the wilderness.”

    It appears that “journeyings” were their travels, and “proceedings” were what they did when they stopped in the various places. They spent eight years to traverse the distance of a typical four month’s journey, so there would have been a lot of story to tell. His writing the information on plates indicates that Nephi believed he was doing a necessary, permanent, and probably final job of it.

    Before we assume that the Small Plates are just an abridgement of the Large Plates, we ought to ask, What were the Small Plates for? The answer we usually give is that when Mormon was working on his own history, he found these plates and decided that for some reason that he didn’t know, he would stick them on at the end of his own work. The Lord had known, 2,500 years before, that they would be needed because Martin Harris would lose the precious 116 page of manuscript (D&C 10:38-42).

    Nephi tells us the Lord instructed him that the Small Plates should contain an account of “the ministry and the prophecies, the more plain and precious parts of them, should be written upon these plates.” That can be read: “plain-and-precious” or “plain” and “precious.” If the latter, it again calls attention to the double languages in which Nephi wrote First and Second Nephi. There are some things that are so sacred that if they are lost, their loss virtually signals the closing of that dispensation of the gospel. Interestingly, those most sacred things that must not be forgotten are also the things that must not be written, except, of course, in places that are carefully guarded—guarded physically or by a code language. Nephi seems to be saying both.

    Nephi’s instructions to his successors were that the plates “should be handed down from one generation to another, or from one prophet to another, until further commandments of the Lord.” In ancient Israel the chief prophet was often the king (as it was with Nephi and Benjamin), but, as in Judah, the early Nephite kings apostatized, so apparently to avoid the loss or alteration of the Small Plates, they were to be kept by the descendants of Jacob until they could safely become a part of the royal regalia.
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  • 1 Nephi 18:23-25 — LeGrand Baker — “we did arrive at the promised land”

    1 Nephi 18:23-25  

    23 And it came to pass that after we had sailed for the space of many days we did arrive at the promised land; and we went forth upon the land, and did pitch our tents; and we did call it the promised land.
    24 And it came to pass that we did begin to till the earth, and we began to plant seeds; yea, we did put all our seeds into the earth, which we had brought from the land of Jerusalem. And it came to pass that they did grow exceedingly; wherefore, we were blessed in abundance.
    25 And it came to pass that we did find upon the land of promise, as we journeyed in the wilderness, that there were beasts in the forests of every kind, both the cow and the ox, and the ass and the horse, and the goat and the wild goat, and all manner of wild animals, which were for the use of men. And we did find all manner of ore, both of gold, and of silver, and of copper.

    With those words, Nephi ends the story he began in chapter one. The concluding chapters of First Nephi are a kind of summing up of—not his story—but his intent. Their connection with the narrative can probably best be understood in light of Nephi’s “thesis statement”:

    And when the Jews heard these things they were angry with him; yea, even as with the prophets of old, whom they had cast out, and stoned, and slain; and they also sought his life, that they might take it away. But behold, I, Nephi, will show unto you that the tender mercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of deliverance (1 Nephi 1:20).

    A corollary to that is:

    And I, Nephi, did go into the mount oft, and I did pray oft unto the Lord; wherefore the Lord showed unto me great things (1 Nephi 18:3).

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  • 1 Nephi 18:22 — LeGrand Baker — “we sailed again”

    1 Nephi 18:22 ”

    22 And it came to pass that I, Nephi, did guide the ship, that we sailed again towards the promised land.

    Walton discussed the possible routes:

    The normal wind movement is northward into the Indian Ocean, which includes the Arabian Sea, during the summer months, and in the opposite direction in winter, generally with periods of calm in between. Had they sailed in the early summer, they certainly could have made no progress against the summer winds, so we must assume they sailed in the early autumn. Thus, they could very easily have gone through the period of calm referred to, followed by favorable winds. …

    An examination of the Pilot charts of the world reveals that if the Nephites embarked in late summer, after the harvest, they would have two or three months of northerly winds, or about 100 days, and, if they floated at the normal rate of from 3 to 5 miles per hour, they would reach a south latitude of about 40 degrees in that length of time, or slightly south of the line connecting Cape Town, South Africa and Melbourne, Australia. Here they would encounter the …’Prevailing Westerlies,’ as they would here enter the ocean currents that travel eastward around the globe the year round. These currents continue their eastward course until they encounter the southern tip of South America, which extends southward to 56 degrees south latitude, where they split. Those south of 56 degrees continue on around the earth, while those striking the Chilean coast are deflected northward along the shoreline, turning seaward again at about 35 degrees south latitude during the warm months, but continuing northward to about 20 degrees during the winter.{1}

    Brown and his party have suggested essentially the same route.{2} However, some scholars are now suggesting that the Nephite civilization was in the northeastern United States. If that is correct, then their route might have been across the Atlantic, and the storm a hurricane.
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    FOOTNOTES

    {1} Leon C. Walton, “Routes To The Promised Land,” Liahona, The Elders Journal, August 8, 1944, 101-03.

    {2} John Sorenson and Kelly DeVries in S. Kent Brown and Peter Johnson, Journey of Faith, from Jerusalem to the Promised Land  (Provo, Utah, The Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, BYU, 2006),

    92-94.
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