Responding to Isaac Hess's Interview on the Lila Rose Show
Kohelet Rabbah 12:5:1
“They will also fear heights, there will be obstacles on the way, the
almond tree will blossom, the grasshopper will be burdened, the caper berry
will fail. For the man goes to his eternal home, and the mourners will circle
in the streets” (Ecclesiastes 12:5).
“They will also fear heights” – An elderly man, when they would call
him to a place , he says to them: ‘Are there thorns there? Are there ascents
there? Are there descents there? “There will be obstacles [ḥatḥatim] on
the way” – Rabbi Abba bar Kahana and Rabbi Levi: One said: The fear [ḥititei]
of the way descends upon him, [so that he says:] Shall I go or shall I not go;
and he [eventually] says: I shall not go. The other said: He begins delineating
subdivisions along the route. He says: Until this street, until this place, I
am able to go, but until that place I am unable to go.
“The almond tree will blossom” – Rabbi Levi said: This is the nut-sized bone at
the top of the spinal column. Hadrian, may his bones be crushed and his name
expunged, asked Rabbi Yehoshua ben Ḥananya; he said to him: ‘From where does a
person blossom in the future?’ He said to him: ‘From the nut-sized bone at the
top of the spinal column.’ [Hadrian] said to him: ‘Show me.’ What did [Rabbi
Yehoshua] do? He brought him the nut-sized bone at the top of the spinal
column. He placed it in water, but it did not dissolve; in fire, but it did not
burn; in a mill, but it was not ground. He placed in on an anvil and struck it
with a hammer. The anvil split, the hammer split, but it was to no avail.
“The grasshopper will be burdened” – these are one’s ankles. “The caper berry
will fail” – this is the desire that sustains peace between a man and his wife;
it will cease. Rabbi Shimon ben Ḥalafta was accustomed to ascending to our
Rabbi. When he grew old, he was unable to do so. One time, he ascended. Our
Rabbi said to him: ‘Why have we been privileged to see the radiant countenance
of the rabbi today?’ He said to him: ‘The distant have become close, the close
have become distant, two have become three, and what sustains peace has
ceased.’
“For the man goes to his eternal home” – it is not written here, “to the
eternal home,” but rather, “his eternal home.” Reish Lakish said: [This is
analogous] to a king who entered a province, accompanied by dukes, governors,
and military commanders. Although all of them enter through one gate, each and
every one stays in a place corresponding to his status. So too, although all
taste the taste of death, each and every one has a world in and of himself.
“And the mourners will circle in the streets” – these are the worms. (source)
he might destroy. The verb katargein can mean depriving something of its power (Rom 3:31; Eph
2:15) or destroying it (1 Cor 6:13). Since Hebrews assumes that evil and death
remain (Heb 3:12; 9:27), the sense is that the destruction of death and the
devil has begun but is not yet complete. The gospels associate Jesus’ conflict
with the devil with exorcisms (Mark 3:26; cf. Matt 12:26; Luke 10:18; 11:18),
but Hebrews stresses the conflict that took place in Jesus’ death and
resurrection (cf. John 12:31–32; 14:30–31; 1 John 3:8). Other NT writings look
for the destruction of the devil and death at the end of time (Rev 12:7–8;
20:1–3, 10; 1 Cor 5:5; 15:24–26; 2 Tim 1:10; cf. T. Mos. 10:1; T. Levi 18:12).
the devil. The term diabolos was used by the LXX for the Hebrew sātan, which means “accuser” or “slanderer.” The devil, as a
personification of evil, is rare in the OT but more common in later Jewish
writings (W. Foerster and G. von Rad, TDNT
2.72–81). Two aspects of the devil’s work should be noted: (a) Agent of death. The serpent that lured Adam and Eve into sin
and separation from the tree of life was later identified with Satan (Wis
2:23–24; cf. Rev 12:9; John 8:44; 13:2, 27). Hebrews does not speculate on the
origins of death, but focuses on the devil’s power to intimidate people with
it. (b) Tempter. The devil may
“test” people by inflicting suffering upon them, as in the case of Job and
others (Job 1–2; Wis 2:17–20, 24; 1 Pet 5:8; Rev 2:10). The devil may also
“tempt” people by making sin seem attractive (Matt 4:1; Mark 1:13; Luke 4:2,
13; 1 Cor 7:5); therefore, he could be called “the tempter” (Matt 4:3; 1 Thess
3:5; cf. 2:18; 1 Cor 7:5). When people sin, they fall prey to the devil’s wiles
(Eph 4:27; 1 Tim 3:7; 2 Tim 2:26; 1 John 3:8). (Craig R.
Koester, Hebrews: A New Translation with
Introduction and Commentary [AYB 36; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008],
231)
Testament
of Moses 10:1:
And then His kingdom shall appear throughout all His creation. And
then Satan shall be no more, and sorrow shall depart with him.
Testament
of Levi 18:12:
And Beliar shall be bound by him, and he shall give power to His
children to tread upon the evil spirits.
BAPTISMAL
PRAYERS.
O God, Who restorest human nature
to a higher than its original dignity, look on the ineffable mystery of Thy
loving-kindness; and in those whom Thou hast been pleased to renew by the
mysteries of regeneration, preserve the gifts of Thy perpetual grace and
blessing; through Jesus Christ our Lord. (Gelasian)
O God, Who openest the entrance
of the kingdom of heaven to those only who are born again of Water and the Holy
Spirit, increase evermore on Thy servants the gifts of Thy grace; that they who
have been cleansed from all sins, may not be defrauded of any promises; through
our Lord Jesus Christ. (Ibid.)
O God, Who hast renewed in the
Font of Baptism those that believe in Thee, vouchsafe to the regenerate in
Christ such preserving grace, that they may not lose the grace of Thy benediction
by any incursion of error; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. (Ibid.)
O God, Who restorest us unto
eternal life by Christ's Resurrection, fulfil the ineffable mystery of Thy
loving-kindness; that when our Saviour shall come in His majesty, as Thou hast
made us to be regenerated in Baptism, so Thou mayest make us to be clothed with
a blessed immortality; through the same our Lord Jesus Christ. (Gelasian)
O God, by Whom redemption cometh
to us, and adoption is bestowed, look upon the works of Thy mercy; that unto
those who are regenerated in Christ may be vouchsafed both an eternal
inheritance and a true freedom; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. (Ibid.)
Almighty and everlasting God,
bring us to the fellowship of heavenly joys; that Thou mayest vouchsafe an
entrance into Thy kingdom to those that are born again of the Holy Ghost, and
that the lowly flock may reach that place whither the mighty Shepherd hath gone
before; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. (Ibid.)
Hear us, O Almighty God; and as Thou
hast bestowed on Thy family the perfect grace of Baptism, so do Thou dispose
their hearts to the attainment of eternal bliss; through Jesus Christ our Lord.
(Ibid.)
O God, Who by the Baptism of
Thine Only-begotten Son hast been pleased to sanctify the streams of water;
grant that we who are born again of Water and the Spirit may attain an entrance
into eternal joys; through the same Jesus Christ our Lord. (Gregorian, as
edited by Pamelius)
May Thy servants, O Lord, who
have been called to Thy grace, be unceasingly protected by Thy help; that they
who have been regenerated in divine Baptism, may never be plucked away from the
power of Thy kingdom; through Jesus Christ our Lord. (Gothic)
O God. by Whom redemption and
adoption are bestowed upon us, raise up unto Thyself the hearts of Thy
believing people; that all who have been regenerated in holy Baptism may
apprehend in their minds what they have received in mysteries; through Jesus
Christ our Lord. (Old Gallican Missal)
O Lord God Almighty, Who hast
commanded Thy servants to be born again of Water and the Holy Ghost, preserve
in them the holy Baptism which they have received, and be pleased to perfect it
unto the hallowing of Thy Name; that Thy grace may ever increase upon them, and
that what they have already received by Thy gift, they may guard by integrity
of life. (Gallican Sacramentary)
O God, Who hast bestowed on Thy
servant by holy Baptism redemption from his sins, and the life of regeneration;
do Thou, O Lord God, grant the brightness of Thy face to shine for ever on his
heart. Preserve the shield of his faith safe from the lying-in-wait of the
adversaries; the robe of incorruption, which he has put on, clean and
unpolluted; and the spiritual seal of grace untouched and inviolate; Thou being
reconciled to him and us, according to the multitude of Thy mercies; for
blessed and glorified is Thy venerable and majestic Name of Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit, now and ever, and unto ages of ages. Amen. (From the Baptismal
Rites of the Eastern Church)
O Lord our God, our Master, Who
by the font of Baptism dost illuminate the baptized with heavenly radiance, Who
hast vouchsafed to Thy servant, (recently illuminated,) by Water and the
Spirit, remission of his sins, voluntary and involuntary; lay Thy mighty hand
upon him, and protect him with the power of Thy goodness; preserve him from
losing the earnest of glory, and be pleased to bring him to eternal life and to
Thy good pleasure;--for Thou art our sanctification, and to Thee we render
glory, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, now and ever, and unto the ages of ages.
Amen. (From the Baptismal Rites of the Eastern Church)
Him who hath put on Christ our
God, do Thou preserve, as an invincible wrestler, against the vain assaults of
his adversaries and ours; and grant that all they who are adorned with the incorruptible
crown may be victorious even unto the end;--for it is Thine to pity and to
save, and to Thee we render glory, with Thine unbegotten Father, and Thy most
holy, good, and life-giving Spirit, now and ever, and unto the ages of ages.
Amen. (Ibid.) (William Bright, Ancient Collects and Other Prayers, Selected
for Devotional Use From Various Rituals, With An Appendix on the Collects in
the Prayer-Book [3d ed.; Oxford: J H. and Jas. Parker, 1864], 159-63)
As Bright noted:
These prayers, which strikingly illustrate
our Baptismal Offices, clearly assert two things; 1. the reality of Baptismal Regeneration;
2. the necessity of post-baptismal growth in grace. (Ibid., 164 n. a)
Although the book was, to be blunt, a joke, we do have this admission from Robinson (while attempting to defend a [Western/Latin] model of the Trinity):
This structure communicates
quality (what the Word is), not identity (the Word is not all of
God). The Word shares the essence of deity, not merely a divine rank. (Robert
Clifton Robinson, 200 or 2,000: Why Do We Need a 200-Year-Old Mormon
Religion Instead of 2,000-Year-Old New Testament Christianity? [Teach the
Word Publishing, Inc., 2025], 280)
Therefore it shall be, when the
Lord thy God hath given thee rest from all thine enemies round about, in the
land which the Lord thy God giveth thee for an inheritance to possess it, that thou
shalt blot out the remembrance of Amalek from under heaven; thou shall not
forget it. (Deut 25:19)
While reading Alter’s commentary on Deut 25:19, I came
across the following note that might shed some light on the promise in D&C 117:12 that Oliver
Granger’s name “shall be had in sacred remembrance from generation to
generation, forever and ever”:
you shall wipe out the remembrance
of Amalek. The noun zekher which is also used in the parallel verse
in Exodus 17:14, means “name” but derives from the root meaning “remembrance.” Etymologically,
a name is the remembrance a man leaves after him, and zekher, “remembrance,”
is strongly linked with zakhar, “male.” (Compare the necessity of male
offspring to prevent a name from being wiped out in the levirate marriage.) But
it is important to retain the idea of remembering in translation because the
writer is pointedly playing with “remembrance . . . do not forget.” (Robert
Alter, The Hebrew Bible, 3 vols. [New York: W. W. Norton & Company,
2019], 1:704, emphasis oin bold added)
Lexical Sources:
זֵכֶר:
זכר; Sec. ζεχρ; MHb., Arb. ḏikr;
Akk. zikru/siqru utterance, mention,
name, vow: cs. id.: זִכְרִי, זִכְרֶֽךָ: —1. mention (of a name): of Amalek Ex 17:14
Dt 25:19, Israel 32:26, the vine Hos 14:8 (text ?), affliction cj. Lam 3:19,
the dead ones Is 26:14 Qoh 9:5, overthrown cities Ps 9:7, the evildoers 34:17
109:15, the righteous 112:6, the pious Pr 10:7, the impious Jb 18:17, Purim Est
9:28, cj. לְזֵכֶר בָּהֶם Jr 17:2 (Diringer 204f); עָשָׂה זֵ׳ לְ׳
God causes (his wonderful works) to be remembered Ps 111:4; —2. the mention and
invocation of God in liturgies, Arb. ḏikr,
Ex 3:15 Is 26:8 Hos 12:6 Ps 6:6 (the dead do not know it) 30:5 and 97:12 (זֵ׳ קָדְשׁוֹ) 102:13 135:13 145:7 (rd. רָב־טוּבְךָ).
† (HALOT)
זֵ֫כֶר
I 23.10.8 n.m. remembrance—cstr.
זֵ֫כֶר; sf. זִכְרִי,
זִכְרְךָ (זִכְרֶֽךָ, Q זכרכה),
זִכְרָם, זִכְרָם—(act of) remembrance; memory (i.e. what is remembered about someone
or something), memorial, of
remembrance, etc. of Y. Ex 3:15 (‖ שֵׁם name) Is 26:8 (‖ שֵׁם) Ps 6:6; 30:5; 97:12; 102:13; 135:13 (‖ שֵׁם) 145:7; Ho 12:6; Ps 111:4 GnzPs 410 1QM 138;
11QPsa 222, of human beings Dt 32:26; Jr 17:2 (if em.;
see Prep.) Ho 14:8; Ps 109:15; Si 10:17; 4QJubdf 2122 (‖ שֵׁם) 4Q416 2.37, specif. of evil persons Ps 9:7; 34:17;
Jb 18:17 (+ שֵׁם) Si 47:23, specif. of good persons Ps
112:6; Pr 10:7 (+ שֵׁם) Si 44:9, 13(B) 46:11, specif. of Amalek
Ex 17:14; Dt 25:19; 4QpGena 1.42, Josiah Si 49:1, Moses
Si 45:1, Nehemiah Si 49:13, of the dead Is 26:14; Ec 9:5; Si 38:20, 23, of
death Si 41:1(M), of affliction Lm 3:19 (if em.; see Nom. Cl.), of days of
Purim Est 9:28. (The
Dictionary of Classical Hebrew,
ed. David J. A. Clines, 8 vols. [Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press.
1996], 3:111)
V. zēkher, “Memory.” The noun zēkher,
“memory,” occurs 23 times in the OT. Here, too, theological usage predominates.
In a secular sense, Hos. 14:8(7) states that Israel will have a memory like the
wine of Lebanon, but this fame is God’s work. It is likewise God’s doing that
the “memory of the righteous” is a blessing (Prov. 10:7) and that the righteous
are promised “eternal memory” (Ps. 112:6). Est. 9:28 decrees that the days of
Purim be kept in everlasting memory, referring at least to a religious
observance.
More frequently, something is
being said about blotting out a memory. God cuts off the remembrance of
evildoers (Ps. 34:17[16]) and enemies (Ps. 9:7[6]) from the earth. He could
even blot out the memory of his own people, were it not for fear of the scorn
of his enemies (Dt. 32:26). According to Ex. 17:14, the remembrance of Amalek
is to be blotted out by Israel (likewise Dt. 25:19). In Ps. 109:15, the
psalmist prays in his curse that God may make the memory of the wicked be cut
off from the earth. In Job 18:17, too, the memory of the wicked perishes from
the earth. It is clear that these passages refer to death and annihilation,
just as Eccl. 9:5 says that the memory of the dead is forgotten among men. In
Job 18:17 and Prov. 10:7, we read not only that the memory of the wicked is
blotted out, but that they will no longer have a name (→ שׁם shēm). Denial
of remembrance after physical death likewise denies the wicked any posthumous
fame. His perishing as though he had never been is ascribed to God. It can be
inferred conversely that remembrance means more than being recalled by name and
acknowledged: it is seen as being somehow identical with existence before and
through God. (H. Eising, “זָכַר,” in TDOT 4:76)