Thursday, May 28, 2026

RLDS Zenos H. Gurley (1801-1871) and Isaac Sheen (1810-1874) on Joseph Smith’s Prophecies

The following is a transcription of:

 

Zenos H. Gurley and Isaac Sheen, “Evidences that Joseph Smith, the Martyr, was a Prophet of God,” pp. 1-8, Bound Tracts: no. 14, Community of Christ Library, copy in my possession

 

The Pearl of Great Price, which was printed in Liverpool, England, in 1851, contains the following prophesy, which is now being fulfilled:

 

A REVELATION AND PROPHECY BY
THE PROPHET, SEER, AND REVELATOR, JOSEPH SMITH.

Given December 25, 1832.

“Verily thus saith the Lord, concerning the wars that will shortly come to pass, beginning at the rebellion of South Carolina, which will eventually terminate in the death and misery of many souls. The days will come that war will be poured out upon all nations, beginning at that place; for behold, the Southern States shall be divided against the Northern States, and the Southern States will call on other nations, even the nation of Great Britain, as it is called, and they shall also call upon other nations, in order to defend themselves against other nations; and thus war shall be poured out upon all nations. And it shall come to pass, after many days, slaves shall rise up against their masters, who shall be marshalled and disciplined for war. And it shall come to pass also, that the remnants who are left of the land will marshall themselves, and shall become exceeding angry, and shall vex the Gentiles with a sore vexation; and thus, with the sword, and by bloodshed, the inhabitants of the earth shall mourn; and with famine, and plague, and earthquakes, and the thunder of heaven, and the fierce and vivid lightning also, shall the inhabitants of the earth be made to feel the wrath and indignation, and chastening hand of an almighty God, until the consumption decreed, hath made a full end of all nations; that the cry of the saints, and of the blood of the saints, shall cease to come up into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth, from the earth, to be avenged of their enemies. Wherefore, stand ye in holy places, and be not moved, until the day of the Lord come; for behold it cometh quickly, saith the Lord. Amen.”

 

The Pearl of Great Price which contains this revelation is yet in our possession, and can be seen by any person who desires to see it. It is also in the possession of many persons to this day. The revelation was kept in manuscript by Joseph the Martyr, and often read to brethren who are witnesses of the fact to this day. It was re-published in The True Latter-Day Saints’ Herald, in November, 1860, which was also before the rebellion of South Carolina commenced. The rebellion which had commenced in South Carolina when this revelation was given, was not that which was referred to in this revelation, but “the wars that will shortly come to pass, beginning at the rebellion of South Carolina,” are there foretold. It was thus shown that at a future time, which would “shortly come,” the wars upon all nations would commence with a rebellion of South Carolina, and that the Southern States would then be divided against the Northern States. They were not thus divided when this revelation was given. In no State except South Carolina were a majority of the people in favor of rebellion, or nullification as it was called. The plea, or excuse for that rebellion, was not in reference to slavery in the least, but in reference to the tariff. The anti-slavery party was then very small, and very unpopular in every Northern State. There was then scarcely a man to be found anywhere (except a few Latter-Day Saints) who believed that the time would come when the Southern States would be divided against the Northern States, much less that the commencement of it would be by the “rebellion of South Carolina,” and that then the Southern States would call upon Great Britain and other nations, and that slaves would then rise up against their masters, who would be marshalled and disciplined for war. These events have all transpired precisely as they were foretold in this revelation. Why have they transpired? The revelation shows why these events would transpire, and why war upon all nations, and famine, plague and earthquakes, &c., will make a full end of all nations. This is the purpose of God in bringing these judgments upon the nations, as this revelation shows: “that the cry of the saints, and of the blood of the saints, shall cease to come up into the ears of the Lord of Sabaoth, from the earth, to be avenged of their enemies.” When this revelation was given, there had not been any saints in our day whose blood had been shed, that we have any account of, but in less than a year afterward the blood of saints began to be shed, and from time to time thereafter, and these judgments are being poured out, that at the end thereof the cry of the saints, and of the blood of the saints, may cease to come up into the ears of the Lord.

 

Joseph the Martyr received a revelation in October, 1833, in Perrysburgh, N. Y., in which the Lord said:

 

“Now I give unto you a word concerning Zion: Zion shall be redeemed, although she is chastened for a little season. Therefore, let your hearts be comforted, for all things shall work together for good to them that walk uprightly, and to the sanctification of the church; for I will raise up unto myself a pure people, that will serve me in righteousness.” B. of C. 97: (95) 4.

 

It was not until more than a month after this revelation was given, that the saints were driven from Zion, but in this revelation it was shown that this event was to transpire, for Zion could not “be redeemed” if the saints had not been driven from her, but in these words it was foretold that she would be chastened for a little season, and that she will be redeemed. The chastening came suddenly and unexpectedly in the following month, when the saints were driven out of the centre place of Zion, which was Jackson Co., Mo. It was shown in the foregoing quotation that the church was not then sanctified, but that all things should work together for good, to sanctify the church, that the Lord might raise up unto himself a pure people. It was thus shown that the church was not then sanctified, and that the Lord had not then raised up a pure people. The chastisements which the saints have experienced, have been in accordance with this prophesy. The saints were driven out of Jackson Co., Mo., in November, 1833, and in the following month the Prophet Joseph received a revelation, in which the Lord said:

 

“Verily I say unto you, concerning your brethren who have been afflicted, and persecuted, and cast out from the land of their inheritance, I, the Lord, have suffered the affliction to come upon them where fore they should continue to importune for redress, and redemption, by the hands of those who are placed as rulers, and are in authority over you, according to the laws and constitutions of the people, which I have suffered to be established, and should be maintained for the rights and protection of all flesh, according to just and holy principles, that every man may act in doctrine and principle pertaining to futurity, according to the moral agency which I have given unto them, that every man may be accountable for his own sins in the day of judgment. Therefore, it is not right that any man should be in bondage one to another. And for this purpose have I established the constitution of this land, by the hands of wise men, whom I raised up unto this very purpose, and redeemed the land by the shedding of blood.

 

“Now, unto what shall I liken the children of Zion? I will liken them unto the parable of the woman and the unjust judge. Thus will I liken the children of Zion.

 

“Let them importune at the feet of the judge; and if he heed them not, let them importune at the feet of the governor; and if the governor heed them not, let them importune at the feet of the President; and if the President heed them not, then will the Lord arise and come forth out of his hiding place, and in his fury vex the nation, and in his hot displeasure, and in his fierce anger, and in his time, will cut off those wicked, unfaithful, and unjust stewards, and appoint them their portion among hypocrites and unbelievers; even in outer darkness, where there is weeping, and wailing, and gnashing of teeth. Pray ye, therefore, that their ears may be opened unto your cries, that I may be merciful unto them, that these things may not come upon them. What I have said unto sol. must needs be, that all men may be left without excuse; that wise men and rulers may hear and know that which they have never considered; that I may proceed to bring to pass my act, my strange act, and perform my work, my strange work. That men may discern between the righteous and the wicked, saith your God.” B. of C. 98: 10–12.

 

The saints did “as the Lord commanded them. They importuned at the feet of the Judge at Independence, Jackson, Co., Mo., and at the feet of the Governor of Missouri, and at the feet of Martin Van Buren, the President of the United States, and they all from my house shall go forth, saith the Lord. First among those among you, who have professed to know my name, and have not known me, and have blasphemed against me in the midst of my house, saith the Lord.” B. of C. 105: (104) 9, 10.

 

The calamities which are here spoken of commenced first upon the Church of L.-D. S. in the following year, (1835) as it is shown in the History of the Persecutions of the Latter-Day Saints, (page 90) and in the Times and Seasons, Vol. 1, p. 2. In the year 1839, the saints were driven from Missouri, June 27, 1844, the Prophet Joseph and his brother Hyrum, were martyred at Carthage, Ill., and in 1846 the saints were driven from Illinois. Thus judgment begun at the house of God, as it was foretold in the prophesy we have quoted, and as Peter prophesied. See 1 Pet. 4:17. Thus “a day of wrath, a day of burning, a day of desolation, of weeping and of lamentation” commenced, first among those who were among the saints, but who were not saints. These calamities were judgments upon them, and chastisements upon the saints. Afterward vengeance came speedily upon this nation, and now there are fearful apprehensions that it will soon come upon the world generally.

 

This prophesy was confirmed by another, which is in a revelation which was given Jan. 19, 1831, as follows:

 

“The day of my visitation cometh speedily, in an hour when ye think not of, and where shall the safety of my people, and refuge for those who shall be left of them?” B. of C. 107: (103) 2.

 

It was here shown that when the day of God’s visitation should come, only a remnant of His people should be left of them. So it has come to pass, and the day of His visitation has come.

 

That which was foretold in paragraph 14 of the same revelation, has also come to pass. There the Lord said:

 

“If you build an house unto my name, and do not do the things that I say, I will not perform the oath which I make unto you, neither fulfil the promises which ye expect at my hands, saith the Lord; for in stead of blessings, ye, by your own works, bring cursings, wrath, indignation and judgments upon your own lands, by your follies, and by all your abominations, which you practice before me, saith the Lord.” B. of C. 106: (103) 14.

 

The saints did not do the things which the Lord commanded, in all things, therefore these calamities came upon them. Nevertheless the Lord accepted the offerings of those who labored with all their might to do the work which the Lord commanded them; on the next paragraph shows, as follows:

 

“you are called to bring to pass the gathering of mine elect, for mine elect hear my voice and harden not their hearts; wherefore the decree hath gone forth from the Father, that they shall be gathered in unto one place, upon the face of this land, unto prepare their hearts, and be prepared in all things, against the day when tribulation and desolation are sent forth upon the wicked; for the hour is nigh, and the day soon at hand, when the earth is ripe.” B. of C. 28: (69) 2.

 

Tribulation and desolation are now sent forth upon the wicked, as it was foretold in this prophesy. When it was given (Sept. 1830,) this nation was in great prosperity, and there were scarcely any persons in the nation who expected that such calamities would befall it as those which we now experience.

 

Another prophesy which is now fulfilling was given in December, 1830, and is in the B. of C. 34: (11) 3, as follows: “There shall be a great work in the land even among the Gentiles, for their folly and their abominations shall be made manifest in the eyes of all people.”

 

The folly and abominations of the Gentiles in the land, (this land,) has brought forth a great work—a great war—a great destruction of life, and great distress upon the land.

 

Another fulfilled prophesy is in par. 4 of the same revelation, in which the Lord said:

 

“I have called upon the weak things of the world, those who are unlearned and despised, to thresh the nations by the power of my Spirit; and their arm shall be my arm, and I will be their shield and their buckler, and I will gird up their loins, and they shall fight manfully for me; and their enemies shall be under their feet; and I will let fall the sword in their behalf and by the fire of mine indignation will I preserve them.”

 

“Unlearned and despised” men, by the power of the Holy Spirit have fought spiritually, and their enemies have been confounded by their words. The Lord has let fall the sword in behalf of His people as He promised in this revelation, but when it was given, who could see how it would be done, or what need there would be of it? There had then been no revelations given concerning Zion in Missouri, and all the persecutions which the saints endured afterwards, were hid from them. Notwithstanding there was no visible probability that this event would transpire, yet it is now transpiring. In the same revelation the Lord said, “Zion shall rejoice upon the hills and flourish.” Par. 6. In the prosperity of the cause of Zion which ensued after this promise was given, the fulfilment of it was realized.

 

In January, 1831, the Lord forewarned the saints as follows:

 

“Now I show unto you a mystery, a thing which is had in secret chambers to bring to pass even your destruction, in process of time, and ye knew it not, but now I tell it to you.” B. of C. 38: (12) 4. In par. 6 of the same revelation, the Lord also said:

 

“Zion, I say unto you that the enemy in secret chambers, seeketh your lives, yea, he hath stirred up the hearts of many people, and they know not the hearts of men in your own land. I tell you these things because of your prayers: wherefore, treasure up wisdom in your bosoms, lest the wickedness of men reveal these things unto you, in their wickedness, in a manner that shall pierce your ears, with a voice louder than that which shall shake the earth; but if ye are prepared, ye shall not fear.”

 

There were secret plotings against the saints at that time which they knew not of, but subsequent experience demonstrated the truth of this revelation, and the wisdom of God in giving this warning, both in reference to His saints, and in reference to this nation.

 

Another fulfilled prophesy is in the B. of C. 39: (59) 4, as follows: “Inasmuch as my people shall assemble themselves to the high places, I have kept in store a blessing such as not known among the children of men, and it shall be poured forth upon their heads.”

 

The blessing which was promised in these words, was realized in the endowment which many of the elders received in the temple in Kirtland, and the blessing consisted in a great outpouring of the Holy Ghost, and an additional qualification to preach the gospel, and there are many witnesses to the fact that they did receive these blessings. In par. 6 the Lord said:

 

“It shall come to pass, that on as many as ye shall baptize with water, ye shall lay your hands, and they shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, and shall be looking forth for the signs of my coming, and shall know me.”

 

Many thousands have testified that they have received the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of the hands of the elders, and the evidence of their reception of it is in every place and at every time where the saints testify by the power and demonstration of the Spirit, and this has been done in many nations and in the presence of hundreds of thousands of people.

 

The next fulfilled prophesy which we will examine, was given March 7, 1831, and in it the Lord said:

 

“Verily I say unto you, that great things await you; ye hear of wars in foreign lands, but behold I say unto you, they are nigh, even at your doors, and not many years hence ye shall hear of wars in your own lands.” B. of C. 65: (15) 11.

 

When this revelation was given, nullification was becoming prevalent in South Carolina, but in this revelation it was shown that war in the United States need not then be expected, but that not many years hence they would hear of wars in their own lands. This is the day of “great things” which was spoken of in this revelation. It was shown in this revelation that the wars which were to be in this land, would not be common wars, but that great things would be connected with them.

 

In the B. of C. 41: (9) 2, 3, there is another prophesy which is being fulfilled. It reads as follows:

 

“Behold, I the Lord have looked upon you, and have seen abominations in the church, that profess my name; but blessed are they who are faithful and endure, whether in life or in death, for they shall inherit eternal life. But wo unto them that are deceivers, and hypocrites, for thus saith the Lord, I will bring them to judgment.

 

“Behold, verily I say unto you, there are hypocrites among you, and have deceived some, which has given the adversary power; but behold such shall be reclaimed; but the hypocrites shall be detected, and shall be cut off, either in life or in death, even as I will, and wo unto them who are cut off from my church, for the same are overcome of the world; wherefore, let every man beware lest he do that which is not in truth and righteousness before me.”

 

When this revelation was given, very little was known, either by the saints or the world, concerning abominations in the church of the saints, and we believe that the general moral character of the church was at least as good as that of any church in the land, but the unseen germs of iniquity were then seen by God’s all-seeing eye, and were then revealed through the prophecy, and this was a strong evidence that he was a true prophet, and a teacher of righteousness. Since that day the prophesy has been fulfilled, for “deceivers and hypocrites” have been brought to judgment. Many have suffered much from the judgments of God which they brought upon themselves; many have been “cut off” by premature deaths, and many have cut themselves off from the tree church, and have been “overcome of the world.” The Lord said, “hypocrites shall be detected, and shall be cut off, either in life or in death,” and so it is come to pass, and terrible has been the judgment. The Most High upon them—

 

The next fulfilled prophecy which we will examine, was given in August, 1831, in these words:

 

“Behold, vengeance cometh speedily upon the ungodly, as the whirlwind, and who shall escape it; the Lord’s scourge shall pass over by night and by day; and the report thereof shall vex all people; yea, it shall not be staid until the Lord come; for the indignation of the Lord is kindled against their abominations, and all their wicked works; nevertheless Zion shall escape if she observe to do all things whatsoever I have commanded her, but if she observe not to do whatsoever I have commanded her, I will visit her according to all her works, with sore affliction, with pestilence, with plague, with sword, with vengeance, with devouring fire; nevertheless, let it be read this once in their ears, that I, the Lord, have accepted of their offering; and if she sin no more, none of these things shall come upon her, and I will bless her with blessings, and multiply a multiplicity of blessings upon her, and upon her generations, forever and ever, saith the Lord your God, Amen.”

 

Vengeance has come upon the ungodly in this land by this war, and upon other lands there is great distress in consequence of it, and from other causes, and Zion has not escaped, because she did not observe to do all things whatsoever the Lord commanded her, therefore she has been visited with sore affliction, and with sword, and vengeance. These chastisements came upon Zion in about three months after this revelation was given, and from time to time since then, and even at your doors, and not many years hence ye shall hear of wars in your own lands.” B. of C. 65: (15) 11.

 

There were among you adulterers and adulteresses; some of whom have taken away from you, and others remain with you, that hereafter shall be revealed, Let such beware and repent speedily, lest judgment come upon them as a snare, and their folly shall be made manifest, and their works shall follow them in the eyes of all people.” B. of C. 63: (20) 4.

 

When such transgressors became notorious in the church, judgment came upon them, and their folly has been made manifest, and their works have followed them in the eyes of all people, therefore the prophecy has been fulfilled.

 

In par. 9 of the same Sec. the Lord said:

 

“I, the Lord, am angry with the wicked; I am holding my Spirit from the inhabitants of the earth. I have sworn in my wrath, and decreed wars upon the face of the earth, and the wicked shall slay the wicked; and fear shall come upon every man, and the saints also shall hardly escape; nevertheless, I, the Lord, am with them, and will come down in heaven from the presence of my Father, and consume the wicked with unquenchable fire. And behold this is not yet, but by and by; wherefore, seeing that I, the Lord, have decreed all these things upon the face of the earth, I will that my saints should be assembled upon the land of Zion; and that every saint should set in righteousness in his hands, and faithfulness upon his loins, and lift a warning voice unto the inhabitants of the earth; and declare both by word and by flight, that desolation shall come upon the wicked.”

 

The time has come which was here foretold, that the wicked should slay the wicked, and fear has come upon every man, and the saints hardly escape. Truly desolation has come upon the wicked, as it was foretold in this prophesy.

 

In par. 15 the Lord said:

 

“Let all men beware how they take my name in their lips; for, behold, verily I say, that many there be who are under this condemnation; who useth the name of the Lord, and useth it in vain, having not authority. Wherefore let the church repent of their sins, and I, the Lord, will own them, otherwise they shall be cut off.”

 

Because many in the church did not repent of their sins, the church was cut off, as they were forewarned in this revelation. At the death of Joseph the Martyr, the church was “cut off” by being disorganized.

 

In September, 1831, a revelation was given, in which was a prophesy which was to be, and was fulfilled in five years after. The Lord said:

 

“I, the Lord, will say unto you, in five years, in the which I will not overthrow the wicked, that thereby I may save some; and after that day, I, the Lord, will not hold any guilty that shall go, with an open heart, up to the land of Zion.” B. of C. 68: (21) 4.

 

After five years had passed away, Kirtland ceased to be a “stronghold” of the church. Persecution and apostacy greatly reduced the number of the saints in that place, so that the prophesy was fulfilled.

 

In par. 7 of the same revelation, is the following fulfilled prophesy:

 

“Behold, the Lord requireth the heart, and a willing mind; and the willing and the obedient shall eat the good of the land of Zion in these last days; and the rebellious shall be cut off out of the land of Zion, and shall be sent away, and shall not inherit the kingdom; for, verily, I say, that the rebellious are not of the blood of Ephraim, wherefore they shall be plucked out. Behold, I, the Lord, have made my church in these last days, like unto a judge sitting on a hill, or in a high place, to judge the nations; for it shall come to pass, that the inhabitants of Zion shall judge all things pertaining to Zion; and liars, and hypocrites shall be proved by them, and they who are not apostles and prophets shall be known.”

 

As it was foretold in this prophesy, the rebellious have been cut off out of the land of Zion, and they have been sent away. When this revelation was given, there was no visible probability that such an event would transpire. It was only about three or four months before it was given that the saints began to gather to Missouri. See Evening and Morning Star, p. 24. On Feb. 4, 1831, it had not been revealed where Zion, the New Jerusalem would be built. In a revelation which was then given, the Lord said, “thou shalt ask, and it shall be revealed unto you in mine own due time, where the New Jerusalem shall be built.” B. of C. 12: (3) 17.

 

As only three or four months had passed away after the commencement of the gathering to Missouri, when the Lord said that the rebellious should be cut off out of the land of Zion, and that they should be sent away, and as the saints in Zion were living in peace, there were no visible indications that this prophesy would be fulfilled, therefore the revelation could not have been the work of a man, or of men, but it contained the word of the Lord concerning the rebellious in Zion, and it contained a prophesy of an event, which to outward observers was an unexpected event, but it has been fulfilled. Liars and hypocrites have been proved by those who are striving, by keeping the commandments of God, to become inhabitants of Zion. Those only who keep the commandments will be inhabitants of Zion. The Lord said in this prophesy, “--- account the oracles of God a light thing; they should “stumble and fall” when the time should come. The “house” spoken of here is evidently the church, for the church is spoken of in this paragraph.

 

In B. of C. 92: (96) 1, the apostacy of “many” who had been ordained among the saints, before the revelation was given, which was in June, 1833, was foretold in these words:

 

“Verily, I say unto you, there are many who have been ordained among you, whom I have called, but few of them are chosen; they who are not chosen have sinned a very grievous sin, in that they are walking in darkness at noonday.”

 

Many have fallen away, as it was foretold in this revelation, and yet it is a prevalent opinion that this general apostacy shows that the Church of Latter-Day Saints was not the Church of Christ. If many had not, or should not fall away, this revelation would be false, consequently this great apostacy of many who were called but not chosen, is an evidence in favor of the faith from which they have fallen.

 

The prophesy in B. of C. 94: (82) 5, is being fulfilled; it was given in Aug. 1833. In it the Lord said:

 

“Behold and lo, vengeance cometh speedily upon the ungodly, as the whirlwind, and who shall escape it; the Lord’s scourge shall pass over by night and by day; and the report thereof shall vex all people; yea, it shall not be staid until the Lord come; for the indignation of the Lord is kindled against their abominations, and all their wicked works; nevertheless Zion shall escape if she observe to do all things whatsoever I have commanded her, but if she does not observe to do all things whatsoever the Lord has commanded her, I will visit her according to all her works, with sore affliction, with pestilence, with plague, with sword, with vengeance, with devouring fire; nevertheless, let it be read this once in their ears, that I, the Lord, have accepted of their offering; and if she sin no more, none of these things shall come upon her, and I will bless her with blessings, and multiply a multiplicity of blessings upon her, and upon her generations, forever and ever, saith the Lord your God, Amen.”

 

Vengeance has come upon the ungodly in this land by this war, and upon other lands there is great distress in consequence of it, and from other causes, and Zion has not escaped, because she did not observe to do all things whatsoever the Lord commanded her, therefore she has been visited with sore affliction, and with sword, and vengeance. These chastisements came upon Zion in about three months after this revelation was given, and from time to time since then, and The “many” who had been called but not chosen, and the rebellious among the saints, before the revelation was given, were forewarned of these words:

 

“Verily, I say unto you, there are many who have been ordained among you, whom I have called, but few are chosen; and they who are not chosen have sinned a very grievous sin, in that they are walking in darkness at noonday.”

 

Many have fallen away, as it was foretold in this revelation, and yet it is a prevalent opinion that this general apostacy shows that the Church of Latter-Day Saints was not the Church of Christ. If many had not, or should not fall away, this revelation would be false, consequently this great apostacy of many who were called but not chosen, is an evidence in favor of the faith from which they have fallen.

 

The prophesy in B. of C. 94: (82) 5, is being fulfilled; it was given in Aug. 1833. In it the Lord said:

 

“Behold and lo, vengeance cometh speedily upon the ungodly, as the whirlwind, and who shall escape it; the Lord’s scourge shall pass over by night and by day; and the report thereof shall vex all people; yea, it shall not be staid until the Lord come; for the indignation of the Lord is kindled against their abominations, and all their wicked works; nevertheless Zion shall escape if she observe to do all things whatsoever I have commanded her, but if she does not observe to do all things whatsoever the Lord has commanded her, I will visit her according to all her works, with sore affliction, with pestilence, with plague, with sword, with vengeance, with devouring fire; nevertheless, let it be read this once in their ears, that I, the Lord, have accepted of their offering; and if she sin no more, none of these things shall come upon her, and I will bless her with blessings, and multiply a multiplicity of blessings upon her, and upon her generations, forever and ever, saith the Lord your God, Amen.”

 

Vengeance has come upon the ungodly in this land by this war, and upon other lands there is great distress in consequence of it, and from other causes, and Zion has not escaped, because she did not observe to do all things whatsoever the Lord commanded her, therefore she has been visited with sore affliction, and with sword, and vengeance. These chastisements came upon Zion in about three months after this revelation was given, and from time to time since then, and ready been cut off by this rebellion.

 

—PRINTED IN THE TRUE LATTCR-DAY SAINTS’ HERALD, office at Plano, Kendall Co., Ill.

 

 

Further Reading:

 

Resources on Joseph Smith’s Prophecies

Radak (David Kimhi) on Isaiah 8:20

  

Radak on Isaiah 8:20:1

לתורה ולתעודה. שבועה כאדם האומר בתורה יהיה כך וכך, וכן אם לא שבועה כמו אם לא שויתי ודוממתי, והדומים להם, יאמרו אלה שאמר, וכי יאמרו אליכם, תדעו באמת כי כן יאמרו אליכם כדבר הזה אשר אמרתי, וזהו דבר אשר אין לו שחר, פירוש אורה כלומר אין להם שום טעם ודבר חשוך ואפל הוא, ויונתן תרגם כדין תאמרון להון לאורייתא וגו', כלומר לאוב ולידעני אין לו מי שישחר פניו ויבקשנו, כלומר אין ראוי לכך, ובדרש אין לו שחר על עצמו אינו מזריח את השחר שהרי עינים לו ולא יראה ואיך יזריח על אחרים, ובדרש עוד אמר רבי סימון בארה אביו של הושע בן בארי נבא שני מקראות הללו, וכי יאמרו לתורה ולתעודה, ולא היה להם כדי ספר ונטפלו בישעיה ונבא לגלות עשרת השבטים כשגלה מלך אשור לראובני ולגדי הגלוהו עמם שנאמר בארה בנו נשיא לראובני ולגדי הוא אשר הגלה תגלת פלאסר: (source)

 

 

To the teaching and to the testimony” — an oath, like someone saying, “By the Torah, it shall be so-and-so.” Likewise expressions such as “if not” are treated as oaths, as in “if I have not calmed and quieted myself,” and the like.

 

Those who say this and say, “And if they say to you...” — know for certain that they will indeed say to you words of this sort, as I have said.

 

“And this is a thing that has no dawn” — meaning, no light; that is, it has no meaning or substance. It is a dark and obscure matter.

 

Jonathan translated: “Thus shall you say to them, to the Torah, etc.” כלומר, to the sorcerer and the diviner: there is no one who will seek his face or ask for him; that is, it is not fitting to do so.

 

And in the midrash: “It has no dawn” — it does not itself bring forth the dawn, for it has eyes but does not see; how then can it bring dawn to others?

 

Another midrash says that Rabbi Simon said that Bereah, father of Hoshea son of Beeri, prophesied these two verses: “To the Torah and to the testimony,” and “And if they speak not according to this word.” There was not enough of his book, so it was attached to Isaiah, and he prophesied the exile of the ten tribes, for when the king of Assyria exiled the Reubenites and the Gadites, he exiled him with them, as it is said: “Bereah his son, a prince of the Reubenites and the Gadites, he it was whom Tiglath-pileser carried away.”

 

R. C. Evans (RLDS) on Divine Embodiment

  

The cry is heard, “God is a Spirit.” Surely, we both believe and teach that. Now read it, “God is a Spirit, John 4, 24, the indefinite article “A” in this quotation gives us to understand that God is a Spirit, among more, and of the Angels, He saith, who maketh His Angels spirits and his ministers a flame of fire,” Heb. 1:7. Now this shows clearly that while “God is a spirit,” yet so are Angels. He is an individual Spirit among others, having shape and form. Your confession of Faith says, “In Unity of the Godhead there be three persons, of one substance, power and eternity, God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Ghost.” Con. of Faith, Ch. 2. If it be true that God has no form, then how can he be a “Substance.” You forget, as do your church, that you speak of Christ as being one of the three persons of the Godhead, and the same substance as the Father. May I ask you to enquire of your Sunday School children, they will likely inform you that Jesus was born and lived and Had a body, had parts, had passions, that He died, and rose again, and that He ascended to heaven and sits on the right hand of His Father, and that same Jesus who went to heaven will in like manner come again to earth. Yet you sneer at me because I say God has a body, has a form, has passions—Love is a passion. Now to be brief on this point, I affirm that the Bible teaches that God has body, parts, and passions. The Presbyterian Confession of Faith denies this. Now to the Bible. Just as it reads. I prefer it to the Presbyterian Confession of Faith, or to your sermon, which contradicts it. “And God said, let us make man in our own image, after our likeness,—So God created man in his own image.” Gen. 1:26-27. You may say, this was the moral image, or likeness of God. It does not say that. All the facts disprove it, and your church teaches that man is morally depraved and most of them were by your God foreordained for eternal torture. Of this more will be said later. But to continue, And Adam lived an hundred years and begat a son in his own likeness, after his image, and called his name Seth. Gen. 5:3. Here we cannot avoid the conclusion that God made Adam in His image and likeness. Adam begat a son in his image and likeness, and Paul caps the climax on this point when he said, “Christ was the express image of His Father’s person.” Heb. 1:1-3. If you had an image of Napoleon the Great, carved in marble, and a good likeness of Queen Victoria taken by a first class photographer, would you not have a good idea of what these two celebrated persons looked like?

 

Paul wrote to the Philippians, 2:6, that Christ being in the form of God thought it not robbery to be equal with God, and that same Jesus speaking to the wicked Jews said, (speaking of the Father), “Ye have neither heard his voice nor seen his shape,” John 5:37. Here we have something concerning God having Form, shape, A Person, the same substance as Christ and that Christ was the express image of his Father.

 

That the Bible says that God appeared unto men and conversed with them . I submit the following: Gen. 17:1-22; Gen. 18:1-33; Gen. 32:24-32; Gen. 35:9-12; Ex. 24:9-14; Ex. 33:9-23; These all show that God Almighty appeared to men, that He talked face to face with some of them. You may try and make it appear that at times God appeared through the medium of an Angel, well I admit it, but we have learned that Angels are spirits. Are Spirits immaterial beings, or are they material substance? We hear of them coming and going, talking and walking, eating and drinking. To me, this all proves that Spirits are material beings, and God is a Spirit.

 

Yes, Doctor McKenzie, I believe that God is a spirit, that he has form, that he has a body, parts and passions, that he made man in his image and likeness, that Christ was the express image of his Father’s person, that both the Father and Son will mingle with men in the eternity be- yond death when this mortal body will become a spiritual body and this corruption shall put on incorruption, when Christ shall change our vile body that it may be fashioned like unto His glorious body. If you do not know that this is the hope of both the former day saint as well as the Latter Day Saint, then you have no right to make a profession of Christianity. (R. C. Evans, Letter to J. A. McKenzie, February 28, 1917, rep. Controversy Between Bishop R. C. Evans, of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, Toronto Ont. and the Reverend J. A. McKenzie, of the Presbyterian Church, Ont., pp. 19-21, Bound Tracts: no. 13, Community of Christ Library, copy in my possession)

 

 Further Reading:


Lynn Wilder vs. Latter-day Saint (and Biblical) Theology on Divine Embodiment

Martin Luther on Isaiah 8:20 Being a Reference to Scripture and Oral Preaching

  

20. To the Law rather, and to the testimony, that is, the Law must be consulted rather than the mediums. The teaching must be sought from God alone, so that one may be your master, Christ, as Matt. 23:10 says. But this takes place through the medium of Scripture and oral preaching. The “Law” is Scripture, and the “testimony” is oral preaching. He who reads Scripture in an unfeigned and humble spirit does not read it without fruit. In this way you have recourse to the Law. That is to say, the Law and the testimony should be consulted. (Martin Luther, Lectures on Isaiah: Charters 1-39, ed. Jaroslav Jan Pelikan, Hilton C. Oswald, and Helmut T. Lehmann  [Luther’s Works 16; Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1999], 95)

 

Graham Stanton on the Lack of Meaningful Parallels Between Matthew 11:28-30 and Sirach 51

Arguing that purported parallels between Matt 11:28-30 and Sirach 51 “are probably misguided,” Graham Stanton noted that:

 

(a) The verbal links between Matt 11. 28-30 and Sirach are in fact quite slender. Only two words, 'toil' and 'yoke', and one phrase, 'find rest', from these three Matthaean verses are found anywhere in Sirach. The verb 'toil' is found twice with reference to the search for Wisdom, but at Sir 6. 18 and 51. 27 the sense is very different: the emphasis is not on the toil needed to find Wisdom, but on the ease of the task.

 

(b) There is nothing in Sirach quite comparable with two of the most important clauses in Matt 11. 28-29, the group addressed as 'all who toil and are heavy laden' and the reference to Jesus as 'meek and lowly in heart The portrait of Jesus as 'meek and lowly' is difficult to square with the portrait of Sophia which we find in the Wisdom writings. At Sir 24. 1, which introduces the so-called Sophia myth, Sophia speaks with pride. In Prov 1. 20ff. and again at 8. 1ff. Sophia lifts her voice and cries aloud. She stands by the gate and calls aloud in a rather arrogant manner.

 

It is, I think, not a coincidence that at the very point in 11. 28-30 where we seem to be a long way from the Wisdom tradition, we can see, in all probability, the evangelist's own hand. Many of the words in 11. 28-30 are not found elsewhere in the gospel, but 'meek' and 'lowly’ are used by the evangelist and, as we shall see in a moment, they accord well with his portrait of Jesus. So the words 'for I am meek and lowly in heart' may well be Matthew's own addition to his source.

 

As is well known, elsewhere Matthew does add interpretative phrases and clauses to his sources: there are classic examples in his version of the Lord's Prayer and the Beatitudes. In support of this suggestion we may note that v. 28 and v. 29a and c are parallel statements:

 

Come unto me, all who labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.

 

Take my yoke and learn from me, and you will find rest for your souls.

 

Both statements are undergirded by the 'reasoning' of v. 30:

 

For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.

 

It is verse 29b, 'for I am meek and lowly in heart, which breaks up the flow of the 'argument in this short section, and which seems to come from the evangelist's own hand. If this proposal is correct, the evangelist's redactional addition runs directly counter to the Wisdom tradition. But

even if this specific suggestion is not accepted, it is clear that 'I am meek and lowly in heart' is out of character with the portrait of Sophia in the Wisdom writings, but very much in line with Matthew's portrait of Jesus, as will be shown below.

 

(c) I find it difficult to see how either Matthew or his readers could make the jump from v. 27 where Jesus is presented as 'the Son' to v. 28, where, it is alleged, Jesus is Sophia /Wisdom. It is hot just that Wisdom is a feminine noun in both Hebrew and Greek. In the Wisdom tradition Sophia is always portrayed in strongly female terms. Those who search and seek after her are always men: sexual imagery lies just beneath the surface in many passages. A similar point is made by M.D. Johnson when he insists that 'it would have been as incongruous to ancient Jewish sensibilities as it is to ours to speak of Lady Wisdom being incarnated as the Son”’.

 

In short, it is not at all clear that Matthew identifies Jesus as Sophia. The use of some Wisdom themes in 11. 28-30 is not being disputed, but they do not seem to be the key to the passage as it now stands in Matthew’s gospel. Whatever may have been their origin, the evangelist has redacted these verses, probably by adding his own portrait of Jesus as ‘meek and lowly in heart’, but certainly by placing them in their present position within his gospel. (Graham Stanton, “Matthew 11.28-30: Comfortable Worlds?,” in A Gospel for a New People: Studies in Matthew [Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1992], 368-71)

 

 

Samantha L. Miller (2020) on New Testament Texts that Speak of the Devil Playing a Positive Role

  

Chrysostom writes, “The devil, if you would understand, is even useful to us—if we use him correctly—and he helps us and we gain great things, not ordinary things. And this we demonstrated from Job.” (De diab. tent. 1.4) Again, Job is the exemplar of virtue in the face of the devil’s work, showing the congregation that, employed properly, the devil can be “useful” (chrēsimos, χρησιμος) to them. If the congregation has a proper understanding of who the devil is and what his goal is, the congregation may “use” (chraō, χραω) the devil, or their knowledge of the devil, to gain advantages over him and benefits for themselves. The clause “if we use him correctly” is significant. Chrysostom’s aim is to teach his congregation the proper way to use the devil so that they may gain great benefit, salvation itself.

 

Chrysostom’s other example of using the devil for one’s own profit is Paul, who writes to the Corinthians to hand over the fornicator to the devil so that the flesh may be destroyed but the soul saved (1 Cor 5:5). Chrysostom tells his congregation to take from the devil whatever chastisement comes, for this will rid a person of his impurities and earthly desires, making it possible for the soul to be saved. The devil is only allowed to punish as much as God allows, so the devil cannot destroy a person completely. As an extreme example of the profitability of the devil, Chrysostom writes, “Behold even the devil has become a cause of salvation, but not because of his own disposition, but because of the skill of the Apostle.” (de diab. tent. 1.1-2) It is possible, therefore, for the devil even to be an aid to salvation, if one is skillful enough to use him rightly.

 

Prior to this point in the homily, Chrysostom has been expounding the reasons why God allows the devil still to roam the earth and wreak havoc. People can only win crowns if they can exhibit their power, so if there is no adversary against whom to struggle, the righteous person cannot win a crown. (De diab. tent. 1.1-2) This is another way to use the devil. To struggle against the devil is to become stronger, better able to resist, to forge one’s character out of stronger steel. Chrysostom seems to believe this is an intrinsic benefit of struggling. His illustration is that of a wrestler. Even if the wrestler’s antagonist has been taken away at the last minute, the wrestler who has prepared well, who has done all his exercises for his practice, whether in the end there is an antagonist or not. (De diab. tent. 1.1-2) (Samantha L. Miller, Chrysostom’s Devil: Demons, the Will, and Virtue in Patristic Soteriology [New Explorations in Theology; Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP Academic, 2020], 74-75)

 

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