“O How Great the Plan of Our God!”
Using Isaiah as a backdrop, Jacob prophesies of the future scattering and gathering of Israel, and likens it to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
I’m Mark Holt, and this is Gospel Talktrine.
Welcome again to Gospel Talktrine. This week’s lesson is 2 Nephi, chapters 6 through 10, “O How Great the Plan of Our God!”
And as always, should you care to ask a question on the program, send me an email at gt@gospeltalktrine.com, and we’ll have some questions for you next time. Additionally, if you would like to contribute to our ongoing transcription effort, in other words if you would like to transcribe one of the episodes of the podcast, also send me an email, and I’ll assign you an episode. We have a number of people who volunteered for that, and some have even already transcribed, so we’ll have more news about transcription on our next episode.
Well, I’m excited about this episode. It dovetails quite nicely with the last chapters that we studied, the final address of the prophet Lehi before his death. Specifically, we were talking about one of the main themes of the last episode was the fact that Lehi was telling his sons to “rise up from the dust and be men.” And even though this address is probably something like 30 years later, this idea seems to have sunk deeply into Jacob’s heart, as you might say, if you remember those words from Jacob’s son Enoch, his father’s words sink deep into his heart.
So that seems to be what happened with Jacob, He’s teaching us a very similar lesson. And by this time what has happened is, the people of Nephi, everyone who followed Nephi, they’ve established themselves in a separate place from all of the people who followed Laman and Lemuel. Nevertheless, there seems to be a certain amount of wickedness among them. And there also seems to be… I don’t want to say despair, but there seems to be some real need for the prophet Jacob to encourage them.
This is actually a great division of chapters as well, so let’s look at the structure of today’s lesson. So chapter 6 is where he talks about, that I’m going to be giving you a prophesy of Isaiah; 7 and 8 are the words of Isaiah. Chapter 9 is where he interprets those words and gives some teachings of his own. And then chapter 10 is kind of a restatement of what he prophesied in chapter 6.
One of the wonderful things about the Book of Mormon, as Nephi understood, as was revealed to Nephi, was that there were things that were called “plain and most precious” about the ministry of Christ and about the Gospel that were included, that did not have the opportunity to be lost or to be mistranslated, or to be misconstrued over the centuries, and therefore they come to us undiluted in today’s age.
And this lesson is one of those examples. So in chapter 6… the entirety of chapter 6 is really just a very plain prophesy of the future history of the Jews. So first of all they will… Jacob says the process of them being slain and carried away captive has already begun. So they have been carried away from the city of Jerusalem. We already know that, that was revealed to Lehi before he died, and so we know that the scattering that Isaiah prophesied, and we won’t bother to read those exact prophesies, but it wasn’t just Isaiah, for over a hundred years, the prophets were saying “Israel, if you don’t repent, then a greater power will come in upon you.”
First it was the Assyrians, and then it was the Babylonians. So now, we know that that’s happened. But then, what Jacob says is, “They will return again, and they will be brought back to the land of Jerusalem, and they will witness the mortal ministry of the Messiah. But because they’re so hard hearted, they will reject him and even crucify him, and slay him, and kill their own God. And because of this, they will be smitten, they will be scattered and they will be afflicted all over the world.”
So, to go back to the beginning, we’re already witnessing scattering number one, and there will be a return. They will reject God, they will be scattered again. And then last of all, this is the point, this is the reason why Jacob brings in all of these verses from Isaiah, he says “Those who believe will be delivered from their enemies, and they’ll be gathered in again. No matter how powerful their enemies are, their former enemies will be their servants, and they be gathered back to their homeland.”
So Jacob actually begins… if you go to chapter 7 you’ll see that that is a fairly straight forward reproduction of Isaiah chapter 50. But the quotation doesn’t actually begin there. It begins here in chapter 6. It begins with Isaiah 49. So Jacob begins quoting in the later part of Isaiah 49, and then he gives a little bit of commentary. And once he gets going, then chapter 7 continues the quotation, and it extends through Isaiah 49, 50 and 51.
And I’ll just briefly recap, I’ll paraphrase what Jacob was teaching and what Isaiah was teaching. And then I’ll give a little bit of commentary on chapter 9. Chapter 9 is the most profound part of today’s lesson. It’s the most difficult to understand, the most profitable for us today, and obviously it builds on the rest of them. But I think if you were to re-read any portion of this week’s reading, you would want to spend your time in 2 Nephi 9.
So he begins by quoting this verse that begins in 2 Nephi 6:6.
“6 And now, these are the words: thus saith the Lord God: Behold, I will lift up mine hand to the Gentiles, and set up my standard to the people; and they shall bring thy sons in their arms, and thy daughters shall be carried upon their shoulders.
7 And kings shall be thy nursing fathers, and their queens thy nursing mothers…”
So if you were to look at a modern translation of this, and this is a quote, a direct quote from Isaiah 49:22-23. If you were to look at a modern translation of those two verses, basically what you would see is that “kings will be their foster-fathers and queens their nursing mothers.” And what this means is, “You think your children are lost, you think that you’ve been scattered, but what you will find is, the great and powerful and prideful nations of the earth actually have protected and even raised and extended their own roof and fed and nurtured your offspring. They have brought up your own offspring and they will bring them back to you, in that day.”
We can kind of guess as to what a literal meaning, a literal interpretation of this might be. It means that the nations of Israel have been scattered abroad and they’re to be found all over the world. And the day will come when the Jews or the Israelites, whether they’re Jews or Christians, they will find out that those who believe have been nurtured in every country and have even been included in countries that might make up the great and abominable church. But they’ll come out of the enemies of Israel and join themselves to Israel.
So that’s one idea of how this might be interpreted in a literal sense. But I want to skip forward a little bit to chapter 9 verse 3. Jacob talks about why he’s quoting all these verses from Isaiah. He says:
“Behold, my beloved brethren, I speak unto you these things that ye may rejoice, and lift up your heads forever, because of the blessings which the Lord God shall bestow upon your children.”
So we need to understand a couple of things about what is driving Jacob to do this, to teach this particular lesson.
Number one; it is really important to both the Israelites, and by extension the Nephites, for some reason it’s really important, we don’t quite understand it the way… or, we don’t quite internalise it the way they would. It’s really important that their seed be prospered, that their progeny has access to the covenants of God, to the priesthood of God. And we talked last week a little bit about why that would be important to them.
Part of it is, they hoped for noble things, even royal descendants, from their bloodlines. But it was a belief at that time, and it still is a little bit, but it was much more so then, that you gained glory through your descendants. And so Abraham, for example, was very glorified because everyone who had done anything glorious in Israel was descended from Abraham. So he was there first father, or considered the progenitor of all Israelites. And therefore, much glory was returned to the head of Abraham.
And they all wanted to be like Abraham, they wanted to be the father of many nations, they wanted… or as Abram, his name was before it was changed to Abraham, “the Father of a Multitude”, it was “Exalted Father”. So this is the ideal, this is the Jewish ideal or the Israelite ideal, the Old Testament ideal. So that’s the first thing we need to understand.
The second thing is, there has to be some doubt about how their progeny at this moment is going to turn out. So why would they need encouragement, except that they were discouraged? So let’s examine, looking back a couple of chapters, let’s examine the situation that the Nephites are in at this point. Even though Jacob doesn’t say it - he’s just teaching them a lesson - we can kind of infer from the fact that he’s trying to help them to celebrate, to lift up their heads and rejoice, that they’re sad.
And why would they be sad, except that they’re being oppressed from another people? So we know that the Lamanites… as Nephi said, “I’ve already made many copies of the sword of Laban, and I’ve wielded the sword of Laban in defence of my brethren, even before now, several times already, even before one generation passed we’ve already had wars and contentions with our brethren.”
So thirty years later, right, this is… we don’t know exactly, but thirty to forty years later even, this is when Jacob is delivering this lesson. So they’ve had many wars and they feel like they’re being oppressed. These Nephites are not the aggressors. They don’t care to conquer territory. All they want is to be free and to be left alone. Now it’s part of the Lamanites world view that they can’t leave them alone, they are due the reigning power over the Nephites, and therefore if they ever leave the Nephites alone then they are being stripped of their birthright.
So the Lamanites can never stop being the aggressors. Their ideology demands it. And the Nephites will never be the aggressors, as long as they remain true to their covenants. That is the nature of the narratives under which they both labour.
So those are the two things that we have to remember. It’s very important to them… they’re worried that they’re going to be wiped of the map at some point. And they’re thinking, “How can I have glory, how can I be a father of the multitude, the mother of many nations, how can I have these blessings of progeny, if at every moment, or from year to year, we’re being threatened with utter destruction by the Lamanites?”
So that’s one thing that’s probably going on. He doesn’t say it explicitly. But that is a reason why the Jews, the followers of Nephi and Jacob, the Nephites I should say, they might find these chapters very encouraging. So let’s talk about why. What is in these chapters of Isaiah?
First of all, it’s a prophesy of scattering and gathering. So in chapter 6, Jacob already goes through what’s going to happen. He says that, “One day, the Messiah, the Lord of all will be born in Jerusalem, or he will condescend to live among them in the flesh. And they will reject him and crucify him. Not only will they kill him, but it will be a tortured sort of death.”
In chapter 9, jumping forward again, he says… wait, maybe this is in chapter 10. In chapter 10 verse 3 he says, “there is none other nation on earth that would crucify their God.” Not only do they reject their God, but they reject their God in such a way that no other people are wicked enough to do, in human history. And that’s his interpretation, I don’t know whether that’s an actual fact. I think there are a lot of wicked populations in history that might have done the same. In any case, uniquely wicked people. And because of the nature and severity of the rejection of their God, then they are scattered again.
Now, I want to bring up something about Isaiah. For those of you who have been listening for more than a year, you may remember when we did the Old Testament, I talked about what I called “the six antecedents of Isaiah”. An antecedent is a word that precedes a pronoun.
So if I’m going to say that John goes to the store, and he bought milk and eggs, “he” is the pronoun, and “John” is the antecedent. Sometimes you can have a sentence… let’s say you’re talking about two men: John gave Bill two apples, and Bill paid him the money, and then he was happy.
So there are two antecedents there, and it’s unclear which antecedent gets the pronoun “he”. It’s unclear which antecedent “he” refers to. So we don’t know what the antecedent is. That’s just a little introduction to the idea behind my “six antecedents of Isaiah”. Because in Isaiah, throughout Isaiah, the prophet, the writer of Isaiah uses pronouns, and uses stories, and we’re not exactly sure what the context is. We have to guess at what the antecedents of those pronouns are. We have to guess who that story is about.
And my contention, my idea, my thesis with “the six antecedents of Isaiah” is: in any given chapter of Isaiah, you can put up to six interpretations of what’s going on in that chapter, and perhaps more. But there are six that I think it’s always worth asking yourself the question, “Is Isaiah talking about this particular antecedent in this chapter?” And quite often more that one of them is present.
So we’re going to talk a lot more about this next week when we cover the Isaiah chapters. But I’m just going to give you two of them right now. One of the antecedents is “the history of the people of Israel”, the nation of Israel. The Exodus is very much seen, for example, as synonymous with baptism. And when Jesus was baptised, what did he do? He passed through the River Jordan and then he immediately went into the wilderness for forty days. And this was very analogous to the Exodus. So they passed through the Red Sea, and then they were in the wilderness for forty years. And they were tempted, and tried and proven. And that’s what happened to Jesus in the wilderness.
So this was an intentional act on the part of Jesus to… but it also had been prophesied for thousands of years, so it was both. The life of Jesus and especially the ministry of Jesus parallels in many respects the history of the nation of Israel, their struggles. So one of the well-known points of connection is that Israel’s exile is seen as a death. So Jesus Christ was killed on the cross and then after three days was resurrected. Israel, after they had rejected their Messiah, this is what Jacob is saying in chapter 6, he’s saying, “after they reject their Messiah, they will be smitten, afflicted, and scattered to and fro, among all nations.” And eventually they’ll be gathered again. And so another point of connection: when they’re gathered, then they never again will be scattered. God will watch over them for ever and ever.
An in much the same way, Jesus Christ conquered death once, and never has to face it again.
So, the question is, is the history of Israel, is there Exodus, is there slavery, is there scattering and gathering, is that reminiscent of the life of Christ, or is the life of Christ meant to be purposefully set up to reflect the history of Israel? It’s worth thinking about. But in any case, those are two of the layers we can consider, or two of the interpretations upon which we can put every single chapter in Isaiah.
So these two chapters are no different. So we move forward into 2 Nephi 7. And what’s going on in this chapter is that Jehovah finds no-one righteous among the Israelites. So he says, “I’ll send my servant,” and then all of a sudden we’re speaking in the first person, “I will do this,” and you’re wondering, “Is this Isaiah who is talking about it, or is this Jehovah who is talking about it, or is it Jesus, and they don’t know it’s Jesus?” So that is the reason why we have to think about the six antecedents of Isaiah.
Now modern translations quite often, in Isaiah, they will indent the poetry, and they will put quote marks around things, and they will also add things like “Thus sayeth Jehovah,” where that didn’t exist in the old text. They put those things in because it’s necessary for comprehension.
But what that is, is one person’s interpretation, that’s the translator’s interpretation, where does the quotation begin? It’s their attempt to make sense of what the antecedents are, to everything that’s going on in Isaiah. The problem with that is, when you do that, you might even be right, but you’re limiting what you’ve just done to one interpretation. And I don’t believe that’s the intent with Isaiah. I believe we’re supposed to look at this as if it could have multiple simultaneous interpretations across many layers of understanding. And just two of those layers are: the history of the people of Israel, which is explicitly what these chapters are about, right? That’s the surface meaning. And underneath, the life of the Messiah.
And as proof, as support for this idea, Jacob is going to come back in chapter 9 and talk very much about exactly why that’s true. So we’ll point that out.
But what chapter 7 is about is the servant; Jehovah is going to send his servant. And the servant begins saying, “I have received wisdom from God. Nothing can stop me from following his commandments. Not even being mocked and ridiculed, and having people spit on me and pull out my beard, and pulling out my hair.” Because Jehovah is all powerful, he’s able to endow his servant with great wisdom and power and endurance. So everything else will pass away. But the righteousness of his servant will not pass away.
The interpretation of modern Jews is that Judaism itself, Israel, the Israelites collectively, they are the servant, and that’s one valid interpretation. And the interpretation among Christians is that Jesus Christ is the servant. And the controversy is, which of those interpretations is valid? In my opinion they’re both valid. There’s no point in fighting; the purpose of Isaiah was always to be ambiguous in this way, because we are supposed to see those two things as being parallels.
And so you see language in chapter 7 like, “The earth will wax old, the earth will pass away like a garment and the heavens will wax old, and all men are as grass.” Many times we read this, modern readers, we read this and we think, “Oh, this is a prediction about the tribulations that will come before the second coming.” It’s a sudden destruction this is talking about. But waxing old is something that happens very slowly and gradually.
And so the point now is that, it’s not that the servant is going to destroy something the way that a moth would destroy it, but that the servant is going to endure so long, that the destruction comes upon everyone but him. In other words, he has patience to wait on the Lord. It’s a little bit of a different way to see these promises.
So he’s going to watch God’s enemies wither and fade. And that continues right into chapter 51. First the wicked are going to be separated out; and the servant of God, first of all he finds no-one righteous, and then he’s going to watch all of the wicked wither and fade.
So chapter 7 is sort of the promises to the wicked. And it’s sort of the condemnations for Israel’s failure to remain faithful.
And then chapter 8 are the promises to the righteous. The first verse… I want to read this then give you an interpretation, and along the way, by the way, I hope you can understand a very good way to not only get Isaiah as you read it, but also look forward to it. So the first thing I did here, I started reading chapter 8, it says at the top, compare Isaiah 51 and a couple of verses of 52. And so if there is any language that you don’t understand or that seems just a little bit difficult for you, then go to biblehub.com and look up that corresponding chapter in Isaiah and the verses that you’re looking at, and see what modern translations have had to say. Not so you can get your doctrine from those modern translations, but simply so you can have comprehension of what’s going on.
In this case, I’m going to read you this verse, this is 2 Nephi 8:1:
“Hearken unto me, ye that follow after righteousness. Look unto the rock from whence ye are hewn, and to the hole of the pit from whence ye are digged.”
Now this is clear reference to… if you look in modern translations it’s says, “Look to the rock form which you are carved, and the quarry from which you are mined.” So what Isaiah is saying is, “You are building blocks. You Israelites are building blocks of a mighty building. And if you want to understand from where you come from, then you have to go back to the stone, to the quarry from which you came.” This is all to make a point. The next verse says what the point is:
“2 Look unto Abraham, your father, and unto Sarah, she that bare you; for I called him alone, and blessed him.
3 For the Lord shall comfort Zion, he will comfort all her waste places; and he will make her wilderness like Eden, and her desert like the garden of the Lord. Joy and gladness shall be found therein, thanksgiving and the voice of melody.”
So making a desert like a garden is exactly like what happened to Abraham and Sarah. What he’s saying is, “If you want to know where you come from, look back to Abraham and Sarah, and consider what I did for them. What did I do for them? They were both… Abraham was a hundred, and Sarah was ninety years old, and I gave them a child. I gave them the son that would allow them to receive this blessing that I promised them, that of being parents of many nations, exalted parents.”
“And I did that in their old age to prove that all of these blessings come from me, from me Jehovah. They don’t come because of your strength, your particular fertility, your ability, your wisdom to create a family, or any of that. I have chosen you, and I have prospered you, because you have been faithful, and for no other reason.”
“So, if you want to lose hope, before you do, look back to where you came from, and see the miracles that have gotten you this far. And you should understand that, if you look around and see a desert.” As the Nephites are doing, right?
They’re looking around, and I don’t mean literally, but if they look into the future they might see, no-one is going to be here, there is going to be desolation, and the Lamanites might utterly destroy us. For sure we live in a precarious state.
And what Jacob is saying, the reason he’s quoting all of this, is he wants them to see, “We come from Abraham and Sarah. The Lord is capable of taking what we have, this little that we have, and from a seemingly hopeless state, multiply it many-fold, until we fill the earth, right? Or until we fill the nation or we fill the Land of Canaan, what ever the promised land might be. The Lord is capable of fulfilling that promise.”
So that’s the meaning of the first three verses here of chapter 8, 2 Nephi 8. So that’s what “the hole from which ye were digged” means. It is worthwhile to look up modern translations, especially when you’re dealing with Isaiah, because of what they call the “Jacobean” language, and all that means is the original Greek root of James and Jacob is the same word. So instead of saying “Jamesian” from the King James Version, scholars talk about “Jacobean” language, which means the King James language.
So instead of trying to get the Jacobean language on its surface, you might as well get the context from another translation, so you can get what’s going on, and then come back to the King James Version.
Now this leads us into another idea. And I’ve touched on this briefly in a couple of previous lessons. Here’s the question put bluntly: “How much Joseph Smith is there in the Book of Mormon?”
Some people think… and we’ve called it a “tight” and “loose” translation, some people think Joseph Smith had absolutely nothing to do with the wording of the Book of Mormon, and God knew exactly what English words would correspond with what was engraved on the plates, and all he needed was somebody to take a one-to-one correspondence to those words and put it on paper. And Joseph Smith was inspired enough to do that, using the tools that he had at hand.
Now other people look at chapters like the Isaiah chapters that we looking at now, and to me this conclusion seems almost inescapable, they look at this and they say, “Ok, wait. The fact that this shows up, not just kind of similar, but almost exactly like the Jacobean language, the King James wording of the Bible, the fact that those two things are almost exactly similar, tells me that Joseph Smith…” First of all, any modern translation as you see, from biblehub.com, you see, any modern translation is going to word those ancient verses differently. They’re going to go back to Isaiah, and if you were to render that into English at any point, except for the exact scholars at the exact timing of the King James Version, you’re going to come up with a different result.
So the fact that Joseph Smith came up with the same result, to me the inescapable conclusion is that God was working through Joseph Smith’s mind in a conceptual way, not in a word-for-word way. And that the ideas would be communicated to Joseph Smith, and Joseph Smith was familiar enough, or influenced enough, or close enough, perhaps, even physically, to a Bible, that these are the words that his mind and his spirit found, to render these ideas into. The words with which he was already familiar, in the King James Version.
If you try to say that Joseph Smith didn’t insert himself into that process, then you have to come up with another reason why the modern English rendering of those golden plates so closely resembles the King James Version of the Bible. I don’t know of another satisfactory explanation.
So that’s something else that comes up as we’re discussing “Jacobean” language, so called.
So we’re still in chapter 8, 2 Nephi 8, and so that’s the message. God is capable of bringing you back. We find this message also, by the way, a very similar message, in Ezekiel 37. You’ll recall that Ezekiel is brought out to a valley where there are many dry bones or skeletons on the earth, and it’s a desert place. And there are dead bodies there to the point... they are so desiccated that it’s just a valley of dry bones. And he witnesses the bones being stood, one upon the other, until finally a great wind blows through. And these bones that were lying in the dust, they arise, and when the wind blows the breath of God into them, they become living people, a mighty army.
And Ezekiel explicitly links that to the gathering of Israel. It’s like a resurrection of a dead thing. And that is what Isaiah is doing. So Ezekiel didn’t come up with that idea from it’s core. He certainly expressed it in a new and interesting way. But Isaiah also expresses this idea that returning from exile is a form of resurrection. That’s the point that Jacob will make in chapter 9. We’ll get to that in just a moment.
So, while Zion will flourish, even though it’s a desert today it will flourish almost like a tropical paradise, anyone who opposes it will age and die. And God will free his people and bring them back, even though there might be an ocean in the way. He brings in some Exodus, some Red Sea language here. One of the ways is “I’m God who commands the waves of the sea.”
I want to point out something here, in chapter 8 verse 19. This is in the middle of a passage that is talking about the anger of the Lord. If you go back to verse 17, you’ll see Israel is, at this point, “drinking the cup of the fury of God.” And in verse 19, no children are left to Israel, except for “these two sons are come unto thee.”
Now if you look in the footnote, the footnote calls you to Revelation 11:3, and says that this is a mention of the two witnesses that will testify to the people of Jerusalem in the latter-days. That’s one interpretation of this. Now there is a much more obvious interpretation. If it so be that that is a correct interpretation of this verse, it is an underlying one. The surface interpretation of this verse is that the two sons of Israel, the only two sons that will be left, are desolation and destruction, famine and sword.
So famine and desolation, and destruction and sword, there’s parallelism there. This is the same thig said twice, right? So desolation means the land will be deserted because of famine. There will be nothing to eat, everyone will die off. And destruction and sword; whoever hunger doesn’t get, then war will take the rest. And those are the children. If you look in verse 20:
“Thy sons have fainted, save these two; they lie at the head of all the streets; as a wild bull in a net, they are full of the fury of the Lord, the rebuke of thy God.”
Now if you read these verses and you think, “Oh, these are the two servants that will be sent to testify to Jerusalem in the latter-days,” it also works. But the surface meaning, I guarantee it, the surface meaning of these verses is that the anger of God will be upon Jerusalem. Now you look at verse 17:
“…stand up, O Jerusalem, which hast drunk at the hand of the Lord the cup of his fury…”
Now down in verse 21, we read:
“Therefore hear now this, thou afflicted, and drunken, and not with wine:”
Now what has Israel been drinking? They’ve been drinking the cup of the fury of the Lord.
If we skip forward to 2 Nephi 27:1,we also learn that all the nations around Israel:
“…they will be drunken with iniquity and all manner of abominations…”
So they’re drunk, not only on their wickedness, but they’re drunk on the judgements that come because of their wickedness. And this is true of Israel. This is an image that Isaiah uses not only to apply to Israel, but also to apply to those who oppress Israel.
And the promise here in chapter 8 is that God will free his people and bring them back, even though an ocean might be in the way. At the very end of the chapter we read, “The unclean will no longer come into your cities, your enemies will serve you, just like queens being your nursing mothers and kings being your nursing fathers. The enemies that you have, even their rulers, will serve you. They will kiss the dust and lick up the dust from your feet.” In other words, all the pride that your enemies once had will turn into abject humility, in the day that the Lord turns the tables on those who are wicked.
So these are fantastic promises. They basically say, if you remain faithful, then even though it’s generations and years and eons down the line, then the Lord can and will redeem his people, he will bring out a remnant of your seed and restore them to the former glory. And even though you think your seed is lost and destroyed, God can take of that desert place, and make of it a fruitful field and a fruitful country.
Now Jacob takes this one step further. Now we’ll go into chapter 9 [2 Nephi 9] and in verse 2 he says, God:
“…has spoken unto the Jews, by the mouth of his holy prophets, even from the beginning down, from generation to generation, …that they shall be restored to the true church and fold of God; when they shall be gathered home to the lands of their inheritance, and shall be established in all their lands of promise.”
And again, I want to reiterate verse 3:
“…I speak unto you these things that ye may rejoice, and lift up your heads forever.”
“So I know that you’re discouraged because of the existential crisis, the warring and the violence that we’re all subject to, and that we could be subject to in the future. But I want you to rejoice because basically, God has your back, he’s on your side, and if you’re righteous, your blessings cannot be taken away, no matter what happens.”
So verses 4 through 6, he says, (this is verse 6 now):
“For as death hath passed upon all men, to fulfil the merciful plan of the great Creator, there must needs be a power of resurrection, and the resurrection must needs come unto man by reason of the fall; and the fall came by reason of transgression; and because man became fallen they were cut off from the presence of the Lord.”
So in verses 4 through 6, Jacob goes right from talking about the scattering and gathering of Israel to the death of man, because of the Fall, and the resurrection. So he is explicitly likening the salvation of man, the plan of salvation, to the history of the people of Israel. That’s another layer, by the way, of the antecedents of Isaiah; the plan of salvation. So there’s the life of the Messiah, there’s the history of Israel, there’s the plan of salvation. We’ll talk about next week what the other three are.
And in this chapter, the whole first part of the chapter, is basically Jacob saying, “We, Israel, are living out, as part of the history of Israel, we are living out the story of the plan of salvation. We are a type of things to come.” And that is what Nephi meant when he said, “You can liken the words of Isaiah unto yourselves.”
This is exactly what he meant, is that “We are living out the story that is symbolising the plan of salvation.”
Verse 7, I want to point out something here. The word “atonement” doesn’t occur before this. It says:
“Wherefore, it must needs be an infinite atonement…”
But before this point, Jacob wasn’t talking about the atonement. But where would they, where would the people listening to him, where would they have heard about the atonement?
To them, what atonement means, is that on the day of atonement, we take an animal without blemish, the first born of it’s mother, and we kill it on the altar outside the Temple, and we carry the blood from the altar of the Temple, through the veil into the Holy Place, through the double veil into the Holy of Holies, and we sprinkle it on the Ark of the Covenant. And in so doing, we wash away the sins of all of Israel. That is atonement.
So this is Temple language, and it is language that says, “God gives us an unearned gift when we do this, when we trade blood for forgiveness. He gives us an unearned gift, where he redeems us from the Fall, as we journey through the Temple, from the world we live in now, back to the Garden of Eden which is symbolised by the Holy Place, to the Kingdom of God itself, which is symbolised by the Holy of Holies.”
So when he says, “It must needs be an infinite atonement,” what he’s saying is, “I want you to extend, I want you to extrapolate, from what you already know about atonement, and I want you to now understand that we’re now talking about this Messiah that I mentioned first in chapter 6, before I started quoting about Isaiah, I want you to understand that atonement applies now to what he will do, it applies to the death and the sacrifice that he will do.”
This is new doctrine for them. I guess that’s where I’m going with this. He is using temple language to explain what Jesus will do, and why the death of Jesus Christ is important, and he’s likening it all to the exile and to the return, and to the eventual recreation or the new Jerusalem of the people of Israel.
So in doing that, he’s giving them plenty of parallels where they can understand exactly what the atonement of Christ means spiritually, and where it fits historically, and what it can do for them personally. And those are very important layers in understanding Isaiah. And so he’s just, in a masterful way, taken Isaiah and likened it to them in one lesson, and done that on three different layers in a way that they can’t mistake. It’s part of the plainness of the Book of Mormon. And it’s wonderful.
So, to go on, in verses 8 through 12 he talks about what would’ve happened if we had no atonement. We would have remained fallen and lost. And then in verses 13 through 19 he talks about the judgement and justice of God. So I’m not going to spend a lot of time reading these verses, but these are all doctrines that are contained, that are hinted at or symbolised in the chapters he’s just read, and this a divinely inspired commentary on these chapters of Isaiah.
By the way, what immediately follows these chapters, in the original scroll of Isaiah, what are called the most messianic chapters in all of Isaiah, so chapters 52 and 53 of Isaiah, and where people say, where Christians say, “Look, you can’t deny that this is talking about Christ.”
Now, actually, Jews can deny that; but they are quite explicit for Christians reading this; this is the way that we receive it, is that those are messianic chapters, and there’s no two ways about it.
So basically, Jacob stops just short of those chapters, where he starts talking about the servant suffering more, and more, and more. And he gives a very inspired commentary on those two chapters leading up to that messianic passage.
Verse 18 talks about how (I’m reading now 2 Nephi 9:18):
“…the righteous, the saints of the Holy One of Israel, they who have believed in the Holy One of Israel, they who have endured the crosses of the world, and despised the shame of it, they shall inherit the kingdom of God…”
Now, if you were wondering if Jacob is explicitly tying the people he’s talking to, to the life of the Messiah, now all you have to do is scroll back, or turn back if you’re reading your scriptures physically, to 2 Nephi 7, so turn back a couple of chapters, and in verse 6 he says:
“6 I gave my back to the smiter, and my cheeks to them that plucked off the hair. I hid not my face from shame and spitting.
7 For the Lord God will help me, therefore shall I not be confounded. Therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I know that I shall not be ashamed.”
So this is exactly the same idea as “I despise the shame of the world.” So in verse 18, what Jacob is saying is, “We have to be exactly like this suffering servant, from Isaiah chapter 50. We have to endure the crosses of the world. He will literally endure the cross, as I Jacob have now said more than once. I said he will be crucified. He will endure the cross of the world; we have to endure the crosses of the world. He will despise the shame of the world; we have to despise the shame of the world. If we do this,” as he says in the middle of verse 18, “they will inherit the Kingdom of God which was prepared for them from the foundation of the world, and their joy shall be full, forever.”
So that word “forever,” that idea “forever,” has been used by Isaiah in these chapters to talk about how long Israel will enjoy its prosperity after it is gathered by God. God will protect them from all their enemies forever. And they will live under his prosperity and blessings forever.
So this is very explicit, the parallel that Jacob keeps drawing. He keeps finding different points to connect our lives, our choices, and the lives of Israel and the life of the Messiah. So the plan of salvation, the life of Jesus, and the history of Israel. Three of the important layers in understanding Isaiah.
As we go forward, Jacob explains the universal nature of God’s plan, in verses 20 through 24. He talks about how it applies to everyone. And in 25 and 26 he says salvation, also, is available to everyone. So God’s plan, no-one can escape the need for God’s plan, even the people who don’t ever hear about it. They fall under the sway of the atonement, and greater mercy is extended to them. And for those who need salvation, explicitly who need to choose it in this life, it’s available to everyone.
And then he starts talking about all of the deceits and the counterfeits of Satan. So there’s a very well-known verse here. It says, “Oh that wicked plan of the evil one.” Right, you all know this verse, verse 28:
“O that cunning plan of the evil one! O the vainness, and the frailties, and the foolishness of men! When they are learned they think they are wise…”
So wisdom is not the same as being learned. And rich is not the same as being saved. And he’s saying, “Just because you’re learned and rich, doesn’t mean that you’re wise or that you’re saved.”
You could be deaf, spiritually deaf, right? You could be blind, spiritually blind, you could be uncircumcised of heart, a liar, a murderer, you could commit whoredoms, idolatry; if you do any of these things you have fallen prey to one of Satan’s counterfeits. And nobody who fits that description can receive the blessings of the plan of salvation.
In other words, as he sums it up, to be carnally minded is death, and to be spiritually minded is life eternal. So he has now tied death, which Jesus suffered, and life eternal, which is what Jesus was resurrected into, and what he has told us we will all be resurrected into; he’s likened it to our own spiritual progression, to the plan of salvation. So once again he’s tied Jesus’ death, the life of Jesus, what Jesus went through, the ministry of the Messiah, to our own personal plan of salvation and to the history of Israel.
Now shortly after that point comes my favourite verse from all these chapters, and this is 2 Nephi 9:42. And I’m just going to read it first, then we’ll talk about it a little bit.
“And whoso knocketh, to him will he open; and the wise, and the learned, and they that are rich, who are puffed up because of their learning, and their wisdom, and their riches—yea, they are they whom he despiseth; and save they shall cast these things away, and consider themselves fools before God, and come down in the depths of humility, he will not open unto them.”
Ok, so I want to interpret this just a little bit, and I want to get a little deeper in our understanding of it. First of all, the promise at the end there is “he will not open unto them.” But at the beginning of the verse it says, “whoso knocketh, to him will he open.”
So this verse is actually giving us a definition of what it means to knock. When God says, “Knock and it shall be opened unto you,” then he also says, “seek and ye shall find, ask and it shall be given to you,” but we don’t know exactly what it means to knock. Here is Jacob giving us indirectly a definition of what it means to knock.
So if we don’t “cast away these things, consider ourselves fools before God, and come down in the depths of humility,” he wont open unto us. But if we knock, he will open unto us. So by the rules of logic, if we don’t do these things, and he won’t open unto us, but if we knock he will, we know that the opposite of what he’s talking about is knocking.
In other words, knocking is here defined as casting things away that give us pride, considering ourselves fools before God, and coming down in the depths of humility. So anywhere where you read in the scriptures “seek and ye shall find, ask and you shall receive, knock and it shall be opened unto you,” now you know what it means to knock. It means that you are willing to humble yourself, and consider yourself a fool before God. Take what you think is your wisdom, and put it aside. Or as it says in this verse, “cast such things away, and consider yourself a fool before God.”
Now I want to note, there are three things that are mentioned here twice. One is “learning”, another is “wisdom” and then “riches”. These are three things upon which people might build a positive image of themselves. But also, they’re strengths. If you are rich then you have the ability to move resources about. If you’re wise you have the ability to plan and have your plans come to fruition. If you’re learned, it means you understand the way the world works.
All of these things are strengths. And what Jacob is saying is, “You might need to cast away things you might consider strengths, because they’re standing in the way of you being humble.” It’s only when you’re able to cast away that pride that comes from any of the strengths you think you have, and take full humility, basically humble yourself to the dust, then God will open unto you.
The blessings that are promised to those that God opens unto, the blessing that are promised to those that actually knock the way this verse describes, are so myriad and so plentiful, that anyone would have everything that they could ever possibly want if they received those blessings. So it is worth it, it is worth it to knock, to make sure you are receiving every blessing that comes from being humble.
So this verse, to me, is very reminiscent of that best verse of all, Ether 12:27, where it says the Lord gives us weaknesses, that we can be humble. And if we will humble ourselves before him, and pray to him and have faith in him, then he can make these weak things strong unto us.
Now this doesn’t talk about weak things. This verse, here in 2 Nephi 9, it talks about strong things. So these two verses go together. One talks about how we can take our weaknesses and have them make us humble, and the other talks about how we take our strengths and cast them away, and humble ourselves. In either case, I love this language. We have to consider ourselves fools before God.
Now remember, it is possible to be very intelligent in this world, it is possible to get a lot of education, it’s possible to learn a number of things, to have a lot of experience, and then we might think… and I’ve seen it happen to myself, I’ve seen it happen to other people, we might think that we have it all figured out. Especially spiritually, we might think “What was God thinking when he did this?” And the minute we go there in our thoughts, then we’ve taken this whole “I’m smart” idea to the point where Satan wants us to go. Instead of where God wants us to go, which is, “I may be smart, and now I get the opportunity to recognise that there is one who will always be more intelligent than I.”
So that’s the lesson of 2 Nephi 9:42. A wonderful, wonderful lesson.
So then after this, Jacob shakes his garments symbolically, saying, “I have now testified to you of everything you need to know about.”
And in chapter 10 now, he restates the predictions from chapter 6; the gathering, the crucifixion, the scattering, and the second gathering. And he actually makes some of Isaiah’s promises specific. He likens them to those who live only in the Americas. Now you remember that Nephi had a great vision of the future of his seed, and how the European settlement would occur, and how they’d be driven to and fro, and smitten, and then they would be redeemed, etcetera.
And so Jacob brings in some of those prophesies, and he helps fit them in, in verses 11 through 14 and 19 to 22. He helps fit them in with what is going on in Isaiah’s prophesies. And so he sort of integrates Nephi’s prophesy, Nephi’s vision, and Isaiah’s prophesies.
But in verse 23 he restates something that I think should be the main point of our lesson today; it was the main point of our lesson last week. In verse 23, I’m going to read this:
“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.”
Now remember, one of the main images that Lehi used when he was speaking to his sons for the last time, was “arise from the dust, my sons, and be men.” “Arise from the dust...” When we talked about earth, which in Hebrew was adama, one word for earth is adama, “…and be men” he may have said adam. So, “Arise from adama and become adam.”
Now, for those sisters out there, adam doesn’t actually mean men, it means mankind. It’s mostly translated as men because, again, this is an English idiom, not a Hebrew one. When people in the time the King James Version was written, when they said men, they meant everyone. And so for those of you who might think that it feels exclusionary, that was not the way it originally was in Hebrew. Adam meant all of mankind.
So Lehi’s message was, “Arise from the dust, be human beings, be men and women, be the people that God created you to be.” The dust was something to be acted upon. As Lehi talked about, God created things to “act”, and things to be “acted upon”. The dust, the adama, was something to be acted upon. But then he says explicitly, “Men were created to act. God took the dust, and he breathed into it, and then it became a living soul.”
So we are dust, but we also have the breath of God, and because of that we are not adama, we are adam. And this is an echo of that lesson, this is Jacob saying, “I remember my father’s lesson, remember that you are free to act for yourselves, you are not adama, you are adam. You are not meant to be acted upon, but you are meant to act.”
Now what does this mean? It means we don’t get to give the responsibility for our choices to any other person. No matter what happens to us. Terrible things might happen, and they do all the time. And there are many people listening who have had things far worse than I have ever had happen to me. And yet I don’t have a hard time saying this to you: God still will hold you responsible for your choices. Now your choices will be different than they would be if I made them.
C.S. Lewis made a big deal of this. He said, “There are some people for whom just not growling at somebody else is all they can do. And what God will do with that choice, is he will give them the same amount of quote unquote “credit” as you or I might get for spending our entire lives in charitable acts. So God definitely takes our context into consideration.
Nevertheless, there are plenty of people who have had terrible things happen to them, and they have taken of that awful past, and that have made of it a glorious present and future. They have taken passive abuse, for example, and they have made it a charity where abused people can go for help.
And that’s just one example. And what I’m not saying is that we all have a duty to create a charity where abused people can go for help. What I’m saying is, the lesson of the Book of Mormon is clear, and the lesson of the prophets is clear. That God expects us to be responsible for our choices, and to act and not be acted upon.
And if that makes us feel defensive, then it means we’re caught up in that… let me put it this way; we’re caught up in the attitude of being adama, rather than being adam. If we don’t like the idea that we’re responsible for our own choices, and that we are called to act and not be acted upon, then that means that we have adopted this attitude that “I want to be something that’s acted upon. And I refuse to take responsibility for my choices. I don’t want the breath of God. I want to remain dust.”
And what Lehi’s challenge to his sons was, “Arise from the dust. Get rid of this attitude that tells you that you are something to be acted upon, and accept the destiny of God, when he breathed life into you, that you are to act, you are called upon to act forever and be responsible for ever. And if it so be that ye despise the shame of the world, and you are willing to take upon you the crosses of the world, then glory will be added on your heads, for ever and ever.”
So that is the wonderful lesson of these chapters, chapters 6 through 10 of 2 Nephi; that’s the wonderful lesson of the prophet Jacob.
And the wonderful lesson of the Book of Mormon is that we are called upon to be human beings, in the images of God, that God has created out of the dust that gave birth to us, a living soul, that has the divine ability to choose and to act, to receive blessings, to receive curses, and to have glory added upon our heads for ever and ever. In the name of Jesus Christ, amen.