Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Isaiah 1-12 • Part 1: Dr. Jason Combs
Episode Date: August 31, 2022What are the tools to understanding Isaiah? Dr. Jason Combs examines how Latter-day readers can better understand the words of Isaiah and find inspiration for today, as well as understanding the conte...xt, geography, and warnings issued to ancient Israel.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-h
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh.
We want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I'm your host.
I'm here with my co-host, John, by the way,
who I will describe as one who refuses evil and chooses good.
John, you refuse evil and choose good.
When I read Isaiah 7, I thought of you,
that you refuse evil and choose good.
And one of the things you chose good was to be a co-host
on this podcast.
Thanks. That was a great invitation.
I appreciated it.
Yes, yes, please keep doing that, John.
Keep doing it.
So I chose the good.
I didn't refuse the invitation.
Yeah.
Hey, speaking of choosing the good,
we are starting a brand new section,
five weeks of Isaiah coming up.
And we chose not just a good Bible scholar,
we chose a great Bible scholar to join us. John,
tell everyone who's with us. Yes, we're delighted to have Dr. Jason Combs with us today. He's an
assistant professor of ancient scripture at BYU. He joined the BYU faculty in 2016 after working
as a lecturer at High Point University, Guildford College, and University of North Carolina, Greensboro,
in North Carolina, UNC Greensboro.
He earned his bachelor's degree in Near Eastern Studies
from BYU, has a master's degree in Biblical studies
from Yale Divinity School, and in classics
from Columbia University,
he earned his PhD in religious studies with an emphasis
on the history of early Christianity
from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Thanks, I'm super excited to be here.
I was really grateful when Hank reached out to me
and grateful that he let me to talk a little about
the one part of the Old Testament I know something about.
I really specialize in New Testament in the period after that, but I've written a little
bit on Isaiah 6 and a little bit on part of Isaiah 7, so I'm really excited to talk about
that today.
Jason is one of the kindest people you will ever meet.
He and I have been friends for years now, got hired at BYU around the same time, and
you think someone this smart shouldn't be this humble
and kind, but he is.
He's everything you'd hope him to be.
I appreciate that.
Jason, I know there's a book coming out this fall
with your name on it out of the Maxwell Institute.
Tell us a little bit more about that.
I know you've been working on it for a while.
Yeah, not only my name, I'm co-editing this book with Mark Ellison, who's also an ancient scripture,
as well as with two colleagues over at the Max Wands to Two, Christian Heal and Catherine Taylor.
It's going to be a beautiful book, both Mark Ellison and Catherine Taylor specialise in early Christian art,
and we have incorporated so much of that rich artistic history of
early Christians into this book. We are covering all sorts of topics. It would be of interest
to Laird et Saints, the history of the canon, how we got the New Testament. We're talking
about church organization, how the church developed into a hierarchy with bishops and elders and deacons and all of that.
We're talking about rituals and worship and how that evolved over time and
developed beautiful rich traditions. I have a chapter in it on the nature of God,
on the Trinity, something that I think we often misunderstand as Lardé Saints.
And because of that, we often enter into
disagreements with other Christians that we don't have to have. We agree on a lot of things.
Oftentimes, when we Larday Saints talk about the history of Christianity after the New Testament,
we tend to approach it from the perspective of the apostasy. So we look at it looking for problems.
We look at it looking for differences. We look at it looking for
differences from the church today. In this book we're taking a different approach.
In this book we're turning our hearts to our ancient Christian fathers and
mothers and asking what can we learn from them. And I think they have a lot of
beautiful rich insights to offer us to help us appreciate our own beliefs today and
all that we've inherited from ancient Christians.
I think we have a tendency, Jason, if it's post-New Testament, but before Joseph Smith, we maybe
just have a tendency to look over it like, oh, we don't need that.
That's during the apostasy.
But I've heard you talk about a principle called holy envy.
What is that? That term actually comes from a Christre Stendall, an ordained minister, also a famous New Testament
scholar who taught at Harvard University for years, but then when the church was trying to build a
temple, and there is a lot of protest, he actually intervened in order to help our church build a temple. And
part of his intervention was using this principle that he called holy envy, where he said,
I can look at another religion, one that is not my own, and find things in it that I wish
were in my own religious tradition, things that I am envious of, but in a holy way, so we call it holy envy.
I think it's a beautiful principle
and one that we should value as well as Latter-day Saints.
I think we can look at the beliefs of others
and the practices and teachings of others
and find things that we can have some holy envy for.
It's titled Ancient Christians and Introduction
for Latter-day Saints.
It should be out by the end of the year,
and it should be up on BYU's Max Wandsditute pretty soon
on their publication page.
That's exciting.
Jason, John, this is the beginning of five weeks covering
the book of Isaiah.
So before we jump in Jason,
what would you tell our listeners on how they approach
the next five weeks?
I know some are going to be tempted to just,
I can't do this, I'm going to skip it,
but don't do that, don't do that.
How would you start?
Yeah, well that's what you do when you read
the book of Mormon.
You skip over the Isaiah chapter.
Now you're actually required to read them.
It's part of our come follow me, lessons. So let's just start a little with what we know about Isaiah. And the
truth is we don't know much. We have his writings, but the writings don't give us a whole lot
about who this man Isaiah was. They give us a little bit. We can sort of pin down a date of when he lived. At the beginning of Isaiah 6, he tells us that
he has this amazing vision of God, and he says that this is in the year that King Uzziah
died. And so we know that's right around 740 BC. In the very first verse of Isaiah, we
have maybe some editor or something, introduce the book in this first paragraph
where it just summarizes everything we're about to read as the vision of Isaiah, the son of Amaz,
which he saw concerning Judah and Jerusalem in the days of Uzziah, Jatham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah,
kings of Judah. And so we know he continues preaching up to the time of King Hezekiah.
King Hezekiah, his reign ends shortly after the siege of Jerusalem.
So the Assyrian kings, the Nacarib will come down and lay siege to Jerusalem.
I'm sure you've already covered this a little bit in second Kings.
Kings.
So that's right around 701 BC. And so he continues
to reign a couple years after that. And then Manasa, Hezekiah's son, takes over from there. We can
roughly estimate that Isaiah is preaching from 740 to about 701. But we don't know how long he lived before then or how long he lived after.
We get a couple of other hints about Isaiah's life. We know that he has children. He takes one of
them along to deliver a message at the beginning of Isaiah 7, and another one is mentioned in Isaiah 8.
So we know he's married, he has children. There's a legend about his death. There's a legend
that he has killed that he dies as a martyr under King Manasseh. That legend might be hinted at
in the book of Hebrews and the New Testament. Hebrews 11 is a lift of all these different
heroes of the Old Testament who exemplify living a life of faith.
And it mentions that some were sawed in two.
And that might be a reference to Isaiah, because we know from a later tradition, both in
Christianity and in Judaism, there is a tradition that Isaiah was killed under King Manasseh,
and that he was sawed in half.
Sounds like a horrible way to die. So I hope that legend is false.
Hebrews 11, and I'm looking for that verse. What is that? I want to know that.
It's Hebrews chapter 11 verse 37.
37 is the one that mentions
Psalm a Sunder. There it is. Psalm a Sunder. Yeah.
I've said that to my students before that sometimes in Christian art Isaiah will be seen holding a saw that goes with that tradition
There's a Christian apocryl text called the ascension of Isaiah
Definitely written by Christians maybe second century or later that sort of reimagines some of Isaiah's prophecies as being even more
Direct about who Jesus Christ was and what Jesus Christ did in his lifetime.
And then it ends, he has that all sealed up and then it ends with this story of him being
saw in a sunder, cut in half with a saw. Placed inside of a hollow log first or something like that, right?
Yeah. Yeah. Not the peaceful death that anybody's hoping for. Yeah. Jason, tell me this.
So 740 to 700 BC, that's a pretty exciting time for the history of Israel, right? There's a lot
happening in that 40-year chunk. Right. In the middle of that, 722 is when a Syria comes and captures
the northern kingdom of Israel, carries them away captive,
and those become the lost ten tribes of Israel. So Isaiah is the prophet of the scattering and
gathering of Israel. He witnesses the scattering and most of his prophecies throughout the book
are about the future gathering of Israel. So he is an incredibly important prophet for that reason.
So it really shouldn't surprise us that the Book of Mormon encourages us to read Isaiah
that modern day prophets have encouraged us to read Isaiah.
Given that, the gathering of Israel is such an important part of the restoration of the church.
Wow. I love that. The prophet of the scattering and gathering of Israel.
He lives to see the scattering
and he prophesies of the future gathering. No wonder Nephi loves him so much because Nephi's living
the scattering, right? Yeah, and it's important to realize that people can be scattered for different
reasons, right? Nephi is part of a righteous kind of scattering. God scattered Lehigh's family in order to preserve
that righteous line at the time when Babylon was about to invade and take the southern kingdom
of Judah captive. So, scattering can happen for a variety of reasons. Okay. Well, this is
according to Isaiah always part of God's plan. This is fascinating. He is living during a time of dramatic change in Israel.
And he sees it coming and then sees what's gonna happen
after all this scattering.
I should bring this up.
John, by the way, you wrote Isaiah for air heads.
I did.
It's just the Book of Mormon chapters.
John, I always say that people can buy our books at DI. We have our own shelf right next to each other. That's where I get them.
That's nice. And then I take the tags off and give them out as gifts.
Right.
Let's keep going. Give us an overview of Isaiah. How should we approach this 60 what 66 chapters?
Very long book. It can be broken down roughly into three parts. The chapters one through 35 are Isaiah's
woes to Judah primarily, though he does have some warnings to other nations in there as well,
but woes to Judah's they face the looming threat of Assyria, who is already on the border of the
northern kingdom of Israel, ready to invade, as we just mentioned, 722, they do.
Then 36 through 39 is a narrative.
It breaks from Isaiah's prophecies.
I'll say more about the nature of Isaiah's prophecies
in just a minute.
And we get this narrative about the threat
of the Assyrian king, Sennacherib.
We learn a little about the Judei king,
Hezekiahiah as he's
been guided by Isaiah to deal with the threat of Sinac rib, then those sections end with the warning
about future Babylonian exile. If this sounds familiar, we've already covered this story in
second Kings, right? So if everybody's going, hey wait, I thought we already covered this, we did
with that. That's right. With Dr. Josh Sears, we look at the story of Hezekiah and Isaiah.
And as you get to those chapters again, 36 through 39, and start reading them, you're
going to think not only does this story sound familiar, but the way the story is told
sounds very familiar, because it is literally word for word the same the same as 2 Kings 18-20.
Now, there are some parts that are missing, there are some parts that have been changed slightly,
but somebody is copying somebody here, because this is word-for-word the same.
Then, after chapter 39, suddenly the tone shifts, and chapters 40-66 are dealing with the return of Israel, the return of
a scattered Israel, the return of Judah from Babylonian exile, and their prophecies
addressed to the people at that time. Let's emphasize that. It's not the return
from the Assyrian captivity, it's the return from the Babylonian captivity, which hasn't even happened.
That was what Lehigh was prophesying about. And actually, he mentions King Cyrus in there,
who hadn't been born yet, unless he was really old. I mean, that's right.
Now, organization, that is just a very simple way of describing the organization of these chapters. It may be more complicated. Some think that Isaiah gave these prophecies and then later disciples
of Isaiah were the ones that organized them. And there are some hints in the text
that that may very well be what happened. Take a look for instance. Isaiah 8 verse 16,
Isaiah commands his disciples. He says, bind up my testimony, seal the law among my disciples.
Isaiah has disciples who are following him. He has another word for disciples as student,
or mentee, or something like that. Apprentice might be good too. It could be that it was later
disciples who organized the book of Isaiah as we have it today. So the organization is a little more
complicated. Some think, for instance, that maybe Isaiah, chapters 24 to 27 might belong to a later
period. And so some of it is more complicated than the way I just laid it out. But that is a rough
way of understanding the basic organization. The part we're looking at today is just chapters one through 12.
And that can be broken down roughly into three parts as well.
Chapters one through five are primarily Isaiah's prophecies
against God's people.
So more woes.
And after this section, beginning in Isaiah 13,
you'll see some prophecies against other nations.
But in this section, Isaiah one through five
prophecies against God's own people. Isaiah six through 11 some prophecies against other nations. But in this section, Isaiah 1 through 5, prophecies against God's own people,
Isaiah 6 through 11 are prophecies
that deal directly with the zero Ephraimite war,
and we'll talk a little more about that when we get there.
And then Isaiah 12 concludes this section of Isaiah
with praise to God.
And it's a beautiful, beautiful section.
That's the section we'll be looking at today.
Before we get into that though,
it might be helpful to talk about some tips and tricks
or tools for understanding as Isaiah.
Because I think many Latter-day Saints here, Isaiah,
and they automatically go into,
I won't understand mode, where we don't
need to do that.
You can understand this.
Yeah, that's right.
Let's turn to the Book of Mormon real quick.
I think this is the traditional way we approach finding our tools for Isaiah because Nephi
gives us some, right?
So if we turn to a second Nephi 25, I'll actually get some tools for understanding Isaiah here.
And when I say I think that we make it worse, I mean that because I think we focus too much
on one of the very first things Nephi says, he says in second Nephi 25 verse 4 that they're
not plain unto some people, not plain unto you, nevertheless, they are
plain unto all those that are filled with the spirit of prophecy. And so when we open up Isaiah,
and we start to read it, we don't understand it. We think, oh, I'm just not filled with the spirit
of prophecy. I'm not spiritual enough. But Nephi doesn't stop there. In fact, in just a couple more verses,
he is going to talk about how the Jews understand, the Jews back in Jerusalem in his time,
the Jews that elsewhere he calls wicked people. He says they understand it perfectly.
So the spirit of prophecy is important. It is important to be righteous and to be open to God's promptings as we read Isaiah. That is really important. But
that's not the only way to understand Isaiah. There are other tools that Nephi gives us.
Yeah, he talks about the manner of which they speak, the manner of prophesying. He talks about
knowing concerning the regions, knowing the geography and the history. Perfect. So let's start with a manner of prophesying.
That comes from 25 verse 1 where Nephi says,
My people don't understand because they know not concerning the manner of prophesying among the Jews.
What's he talking about there Jason? Well, I think Nephi characterizes his own way of
prophesying as he often uses terms like plain and precious. He's trying to speak in a way that
they cannot misunderstand. Isaiah has a different way of speaking. As do other prophets in the Old
Testament. Their way of speaking is poetic. It uses a lot of imagery,
there's a lot of metaphor and simile, and in Hebrew poetry, there's also a lot of repetition.
Let's take a look at how that works. Let's turn to Isaiah chapter one, quick pet peeve here while
we're turning to Isaiah one. My current ward has some great gospel
doctrine teachers. This is not a critique of my current ward's gospel doctrine teachers,
but I have seen gospel doctrine classes before where you get to the Isaiah chapters of
the book of Mormon. And the entire lesson is on how to read Isaiah and you never actually
read Isaiah. So as we go through and talk about these different tools,
I wanna take each one straight into Isaiah
and actually put it into practice
so we can see how it works here.
So let's start with Isaiah chapter one, verse two.
It says, Ero Earth for the Lord hath spoken. I have nourished and brought up children and they have
re-billed against me. So already you see the imagery at play here. God is calling upon heavens
and earth to witness and he is talking about Israel as his children and how he's nourished
them and raised them up, but they've re-billed against him. Okay. That's not too tough to understand.
and raise them up, but they've rebuild against him. Okay. That's not too tough to understand.
Yeah. Now, in the next verses, you're going to start to see the use of poetic repetition.
The ox know with his owner. Okay. There's one example. Here's the next example.
Kind of like a family pet knows the family.
Yep. That's right. The ass, his master's crib. Crib is just a fancy old King James English term for a feeding trough.
So those are in parallel.
The ox knoweth his owner.
The ass knoweth his master's crib.
Master is another word for owner.
An ox and an ass are different animals, but it's both the idea an animal knows their
owner.
So it's the same sort of imagery,
same sort of metaphor working, and he repeats it twice.
Then we get another repetition.
But Israel, Dothnot know.
My people, Dothnot consider.
So Israel is God's people.
The animal gets this.
Why can't you guys get this?
That's right.
Okay, continuing on,
awesynful nation. What's another name for sin iniquity? People
laden with iniquity. A seed of evil doers. The seed, meaning
offspring of evil doers. What's another word for offspring or
seed? Children, children that are corruptors. So it's the
repetition. See what's happening here? Yeah. You get this constant repetition.
They are forsaken the Lord. They have provoked the Holy One of Israel and to anger. So I think oftentimes we expect to find,
because we're used to reading the Book of Mormon more than any other scripture, we expect to find unique meaning in every sentence.
And that's not true with Isaiah.
Isaiah is painting a picture for us.
Everything we've read is just trying to help us to see
that Israel is rebellious.
Yeah.
That's his whole point.
But he's taken a lot of words,
a lot of poetic imagery to say that.
John, that reminds me of you and I. You've taken a lot of words to a lot of poetic imagery to say that. John, that reminds me of you and I.
You've taken a lot of words to say something very simple.
That was a lot of talking for one very simple point.
But still, that's the way he talks, right, Jason?
This is the manner of prophesying among the Jews.
I think we've already talked about the kind of parallelism
as we've looked at Psalms and as we've looked at some of the Proverbs too,
who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord.
Let's say it again, who shall stand in his holy place.
And we've seen that before.
So I like that you said, I say as a poet,
and he's not going to talk in a plain, precious way.
He's going to wax eloquent.
He took humanity's Hebrew class, right?
Yes. Instead of business writing, that's what I tell my students. to wax eloquent. He took humanity's Hebrew class, right?
Instead of business writing, that's what I tell my students.
I had business writing.
We had a paper we had to write.
He said, if I find one typo, you get an F.
And it was the whole semester,
but we really had to work hard on that.
I want you to deny the listener the right to misunderstand,
be clear, be concise, and I tell my student,
say, it did not take that class.
He took humanities writing, say.
Say it lots of different ways, say it poetically.
Make your meaning hard to understand.
Go in and out of past tense, future tense,
go everywhere and make people go,
huh, and have to think about it.
But it does, it makes you think.
The idea that an animal knows his owner
and that the animal knows his way around the house,
but Israel doesn't know.
They figured it out.
So the real advantage of this for our listeners here
is if you are starting into Isaiah for the first time
and you read a verse and you don't understand it,
that's okay.
Try reading the next verse or the verse after that.
Because he's probably gonna repeat himself.
Because he's gonna be repeating it.
That's right.
I've told my students before, Jason and John,
I'd say, you and I would say the sun went down.
Isaiah wouldn't say it that way.
He'd say the mother of the earth has made her bed
in the tops of the mountains. And then he'd say it that way. He'd say the mother of the earth has made her bed in the tops of the mountains.
And then he'd say it again, the light of the earth has descended into darkness.
It's just you just have to, if you read carefully, it's not that difficult. Those three verses you read, Jason,
those aren't difficult to understand. If you're reading slowly and carefully, be like, oh, I get that.
being slowly and carefully, be like, oh, I get that. You know, Hank, we've talked about Joseph
building McConkey on here before,
and he changed my life in one sentence once in class.
He just said, we read scriptures too fast.
Yeah.
And seriously, slowing down is.
Just slow down.
Yeah, especially in Isaiah.
That's one of the tools for the next five weeks. Slow down. Slow down. Yeah, especially in Isaiah. That's one of the tools for the next five weeks.
Slow down.
Slow down.
Yeah.
And that may mean that you are not going to get
through the assigned 12 chapters.
But that's okay.
If you're getting meaning out of Isaiah,
that should be your goal.
It's exactly right.
That should be our goal.
Get something out of this.
Understand the portions that you can cover. Understand those.
All right. Let's go on to our next tip.
Okay.
So next tool for understanding Isaiah, Nephi recommends that we know something about, or that his people should know something about the things of the Jews.
And the regions round about Israel, round about Jerusalem.
And so we can see some examples of how that would be helpful
in Isaiah chapter 1 as well. For instance, take a look at verses 9 and 10. If you don't know anything,
if you've never heard of Sodom and Gomorrah, then these passages probably aren't going to make a
whole lot of sense to you. But if you know the story from Genesis about how the people of Sodom and Gomorrah were wicked and
about how those cities were destroyed completely, then suddenly these two verses make a little
more sense.
Jason, in verses 9 and 10, this kind of an insult, I shouldn't say an insult, but it's a
condemnation.
Hear the word of the Lord, you rulers of Sodom.
Give ear unto the law of our God, you people of Gomorrah.
I mean, he's basically saying, you're as bad as they were.
Yeah. And in verse 9, it's saying that they almost were destroyed, has Sodom and Gamora
God allowed the remnant to remain. Otherwise, they would have been just like those cities
and completely wiped out.
I've asked my students before, how many of you know what point of the mountain is.
And they'll raise their hand and they'll say,
how many of you are not from Utah and they'll automatically switch hands, right?
Because if you're from Utah, you know the geography.
My students from North Carolina, they're thinking, point of the mountain, that's the top, right?
No, no, it's the far side of the mountain.
Yeah, yeah.
What? Why'd you call it the point of the mountain then?
Because it's at the
far end. It just doesn't make sense to someone who hasn't been there. Growing up in Salt Lake,
it's also a synonym for prison. Hey, they're going to send you to point of the mountain. Right. Yeah.
You might not know that. All right, let's keep going, Jason. Good. Yeah. So there are some other
examples we could see of that just in chapter one. If you were look at chapter 1 verses 11 through 15, that's all about ancient Israelite
worship practices.
And if you don't know anything about how ancient Israelite's worship, especially their
temple practices and their holy days, then it's not going to make a whole lot of sense
to you that God who commanded those worship practices in holy days is now saying
he would rather have them not do those things if they're going to continue to act the way they are,
if they're going to continue to live wickedly, those worship practices are not serving them well.
He says, bring no more vain obliations, meaningless sacrifices. If you don't understand, that's what they're supposed to be doing is going to the temple
making these sacrifices, then you won't understand that verse.
But if you do, that's quite a condemnation.
Yeah.
Don't come to the temple anymore and bring your meaningless sacrifice.
Ooh.
Yeah.
And when we get to chapter seven in a few minutes, we're going to see how important it is to know something about not only the geography, but the history, the Ciro e from might war and the kings who are involved in it.
Peacus, right?
Some are from Maliah, Residus.
That's right. Yeah, I love it.
So all of those things are important.
Okay.
Next tool.
So sometimes, prophets foretell the future, but mostly prophets preach God's word.
If we're reading the new test, I'd say mostly they preach the gospel, right?
Prophecy can be about the future, but prophecy can also address the present.
What I'm saying here is if you're reading Isaiah expecting everything to be about Isaiah
for seeing the time of Jesus or Isaiah for seeing the time of the restoration, then you're
going to miss a lot of what Isaiah is saying.
Because he was talking to his present audience.
Yeah, a modern day example of this would be imagine us attending general conference and listening to every word, every
prophet and apostle says, trying to find the secret clue in what they're saying about what's
going to happen right before the second coming of Jesus.
Well most of what they're saying is not about the second coming of Jesus.
Most of what they're saying is the message we need to hear in our present, in our here and now, and their message is about faith, about repentance, about redemption.
And believe it or not, Isaiah's messages are roughly the same.
They're about faith.
They're about repentance.
They're about redemption.
So let's look at a couple of examples of that still in chapter one.
So Jason, you're telling us to hesitate before we just automatically jump to, oh, he's seeing Jesus here.
Oh, he's seeing the Millennium here.
Yeah, he could be, but there is going to be a present day, 700 BC application we need to see.
Yeah.
And sometimes we make Isaiah harder for ourselves by looking in every verse for what
is the future prophecy? Yeah, what is the foretelling here, rather than what is his message
about how I should live faithfully. So there are some beautiful passages in here that if
you're only reading it for descriptions of stuff in the future, you're going to totally miss.
Take a look at Isaiah chapter one, verses 16 and 17.
Wash you, make you clean, put away the evil
of your doings from before my eyes, cease to do evil,
learn to do well, seek judgment,
relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless plead
for the widow.
A beautiful passage calling upon Israel
to turn from their wickedness and to repent. And that's followed just after by a promise of redemption.
Now in verse 18 of chapter 1, come now, let us reason together, say at the Lord, though your sins
be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow. Though they be red
like crimson, they shall be as wool. There's the repetition. And again, beautiful, beautiful message
of hope, of healing, and one that we would read right over if we're only looking for prophecies
about the future. Future events. Yeah, and especially since he just compared them to Sodom and Gamora to now have this promise
of, you can be clean, your sins, though they're dark red, they can be as white as snow.
Yeah, we don't want to miss that too, that he was, yeah, he was telling him like it is,
but he's also offering repentance.
That's right.
I just love when we hear echoes in the doctrine of covenants or other scriptures because look at verse 19.
What is section 64?
I the Lord require the heart and a willing mind and the willing and obedient will eat the good of the land in the latter days.
We'll look at verse 19.
If you be willing and obedient, you shall eat the good of the land.
And I don't know why the Fitnote committee didn't say, hey, that's stick section 64 reference in there.
I think it's 64, isn't it? But I like it. What do you want to do next, Jason? I like this. Don't automatically jump
to future prophecy. Even if it's about Jesus, stay in Isaiah's day, stay in 7.0, you know, 7.22 BC.
Yeah. For our last tool, let's jump to future prophecy because Isaiah absolutely does talk about the future.
And so there are instances of that all over the place.
In fact, we're going to read one in Isaiah seven, where he is predicting the future to King A has.
So we will see that when we think about prophecy and fulfillment fulfillment though, fulfillment of prophecy,
I think we need to be really careful because I think we have unnecessarily limited ourselves in our understanding of how prophecy can be fulfilled.
Meaning that
too often we think that fulfillment of prophecy works something like this. A
fulfillment of prophecy works something like this. A profit at some point in the past, how to vision, saw the future exactly as it would happen, and when that thing happens exactly
in that way, that is fulfillment of a prophecy. That is, that is one type of fulfillment of a prophecy.
But there are other ways in which prophecy can be fulfilled. And we're going to see example of that when we get to Isaiah 7, because of course Matthew
talks a lot about prophecies being fulfilled in the Gospel Matthew and the first two chapters
especially.
And so we'll see that Matthew actually has a whole range of meanings.
The word for fulfilled that Matthew uses is the same word that in other places is translated as to fill something
as into fill a jar or to fill a room with smoke. It can mean not only to fill up, it can
also mean to complete. So something has started in the past and now it is completed. It can
mean to complete more fully. So to full fill, to fill a fully. So there is this
variety of meanings for fulfillment. And so that should make us a little hesitant to always
assume that prophecy fulfillment means a prophet saw something exactly as it happened,
and then it happened in exactly that way. That is one possibility, but it's not the only one.
Excellent.
So here's the tool.
When you're reading Isaiah,
when you're thinking about prophecy fulfillment,
Nephi, when he is explaining the meaning
of these Isaiah chapters to his people,
before he ever starts,
he uses the word likening to describe what he's going to do
back in 2 Nephi 11.
Another word he uses in that same chapter is typifying.
He talks about how things in the past can be a type of things in the future.
And when you're likening something, you're comparing one thing that's not the same as
another thing to that other thing.
You're comparing two different things.
So Nephi likens Isaiah to his people.
So when Nephi gives us an explanation
of what these chapters mean,
it's important to keep an open mind
and realize that Nephi is not providing
the end-all explanation of what Isaiah means.
There may be additional future fulfillments that work in other ways other than the way
Nephi describes the fulfillment of Isaiah for his people in his time.
Excellent. Jesus said it much better than I did.
Let me tell you how Jesus said it.
This is in 3rd Nephi chapter 23, verses 1 through 3.
Here's what Jesus says as he's describing the importance of us searching the writings of Isaiah.
He says, and now behold, I say unto you that ye ought to search these things.
Ye a commandment I give unto you that ye search these things diligently. For great are the words of Isaiah.
Let me pause there. Notice, knows that whole searching diligently thing.
I think that goes back to what John was saying earlier
that he learned from Joseph Fielding Maconkey.
Low down.
Yeah, a speed read is not diligent.
So we need to search these things diligently.
For great are the words of Isaiah.
Okay, Jesus continues here.
For surely he spake is touching all things
concerning my people, which are
of the house of Israel, that's another clue to reading Isaiah. We should be reading it as a
description of God's people, the house of Israel. Therefore, it must needs be that he speak also to
the Gentiles, and I think, I'll leave whoever's going to talk with you about the final chapters in
the book of Isaiah to talk about that, because that's when Isaiah really turns to talking about the importance of Gentiles.
But here's Jesus' final point that I think is so important for understanding prophecy in Isaiah.
And all things that he, Isaiah, spake, have been and shall be, even according to the words which he
spake. Notice that Jesus doesn't say some of the things
that Isaiah said have been and other things that Isaiah said shall be. He doesn't say that. He
says all things that Isaiah said have been and shall be. In other words, everything we're reading in
Isaiah refers to Isaiah's time, refers to things in the past, and refers to things in the future.
So Elder Oopdorf has this great quote
about how prophets speak to people in their time,
but their voices echo through time.
I have that right here, Jason.
I'm glad you brought that up.
This is March 2012, and Zine.
Prophets speak not only to the people of their time,
but they also speak to people
throughout all time.
Their voice is echo through the centuries as a testament of God's will to his children.
Oof, that is good.
Their voice is echo.
Yeah, so I think that's one way of thinking about how Isaiah's prophecies work.
They are addressed to people in his time, and yet they echo through time, and in those
echoes, we can find new meaning.
Let's just take an example. Isaiah chapter 2, we're finally out of Isaiah 1.
Isaiah chapter 2, right at the beginning, verses 2 and 3. So this is a new prophecy.
Yeah, chapter 2 introduces it as a new prophecy here. The word of Isaiah, son of Amaz,
a sa'uq, and certain Jew and Jerusalem, verses two and three here. And it shall come to pass in the last days
that the mountain of the Lord's house shall be established in the tops of the mountains.
Right away, we know this is a future prophecy because he tells us, this is about the last days.
The mountain of the Lord's house shall be established in the tops of the mountains,
and shall be exalted above the hills and hills and all nations shall flow into it.
And many people shall go and say, come and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to
the house of the God of Jacob, and he will teach us of his ways and we will walk in his paths.
Brow to Zion shall go forth the law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem.
Now I think we love that passage
because of course the church headquarters
is in a place surrounded by mountains.
And certainly modern day prophets have seen certain events
that happen here in Utah as fulfillment
or partial fulfillment of this prophecy.
I'm thinking right now of Elder Robert D. Hales,
he gave a talk back in April 2002 general conference.
This was around the time of the Olympics. And here's what he said, Isaiah, a great prophet of the Old Testament prophesied,
and it shall come to pass in the last days that the Mount of the Lord's house shall be established in the tops of the mountains.
This is the prophecy, we just read. And all nations shall flow unto it.
He then continues. As Salt Lake has hosted the 2002 Winter Olympics and Paralympic Games,
we have seen a partial fulfillment of many prophecies, the nations of the earth,
and many of their leaders have come and have seen us serving alongside our friends in this community
and our neighbors of other faiths. And they have seen the lighten our eyes in this community and our neighbors of other
faiths. And they have seen the light in our eyes and felt the clasp of our hands. The
mountain of the house of the Lord with its brightly lit spires has been witnessed by 3.5
billion people around the world. So I think Elder Hales gives a wonderful example of how we can see partial fulfillments or echoes
of Isaiah's words resonating through time.
I think Elder Hales does well using the term partial fulfillment there to make it clear
that there's not the fulfillment, it's only a partial one.
I have another example that we can look at the end of Isaiah 5.
A passage that we often assume
means only one thing because of a quote from Elder LeGrand Richards, but likely has a broader meaning. Yeah, Elder Brussar Maconkey wrote a book called A New Witness for the Articles of Faith,
and speaking of these opening verses of Isaiah 2, he said,
this has specific reference to the Salt Lake Temple and to other temples built in the top of the Rocky Mountains.
And it has a general reference to the temple yet to be built
in the New Jerusalem in Jackson County, Missouri.
Those in all nations be it noted,
shall flow to the houses of the Lord
in the tops of the mountains,
there to make covenants out of which eternal life comes.
So there's a specific reference,
but a general reference, it sounds like to all temples
because a temple is a nickname for a temple
is mountain of the Lord.
Right.
And Elder Hales does something similar
when he refers to this as a partial fulfillment.
He's not saying this is the end all,
this is the only thing that Isaiah saw and talked about.
He's saying this is a partial fulfillment.
So back to Elder Ucdorf's concept of the words of prophet echoing through times,
I think we can see this as one of those echoes. I like this approach. It's a safe way of not saying,
ah, here I know exactly what Isaiah saw. He saw things like this. I like that. And remembering the quote we read from Jesus in 3 Nephi,
that the things of Isaiah have been and shall be,
should function as a caution to us,
not to assume that we have the end all interpretation,
that it can refer to things in Isaiah's time
and to future things.
And we can certainly see how it echoes in our own day.
When I teach Isaiah, I like to use four C words. I'm going to add five, I'm going to have five now, one of them is coms, but no, I have four C words. So I joke, I looked out the window on what
did I see four kinds of trees that all begin with see I talk about Isaiah as a forest and
Sometimes we don't see the forest for the trees, but the four C words are covenants covenant Israel
Christ
So Isaiah doesn't use the word Christ
But he talks about the Holy Spirit of Israel the Messiah and then current events to Isaiah's day and coming events
And sometimes the current events foreshadow coming events,
but sometimes the current events are just current events. And there are a duel and sometimes
it even looks like multiple fulfillments of those. So I like what you're saying. Don't
say that's the fulfillment, right? There. No, it could be there's an echo. It's a president
up north put it. And we don't limit it. We think there could be, he's going to be talking to Hezekiah's people, but it applies
to us too.
So a current event might foreshadow a coming event, or it might just be a current event
to his day.
That's right.
I think there's an example of an instance where we have limited the meaning of Isaiah, where
we have thought we know the interpretation.
It comes at the end of Isaiah chapter 5, so we're skipping a bit ahead now. But end of Isaiah 5 verses 26 through 30,
Isaiah gives us this description that begins in verse 26 by lifting up an ensign to nations from afar. And then as we skip down into the
verses by verse 28, it's describing these nations coming in a way that using language
of arrows and bows and horses hooves counted like Flint, I'll just read the verse as is,
whose arrows are sharp and all their bows bent and their horses hooves shall be counted
like Flint and their wheels like a whirlwind
continuing on to verse 29. Their roaring shall be like a lion and their roar like a gung lion
and it continues to describe this roar a little bit more. And I think we've limited ourselves by choosing one thing that Elder Le Grand Richards once said about
this passage, and that not a whole lot of people have said about it since, and said, this
is the only meaning. Here's the quote from Elder Le Grand Richards. He says, since there
were no such things as trains and airplanes in that day, Isaiah could hardly have mentioned them by name.
But he seems to have described them in unmistakable words. How better could their horses hoof be
counted like Flint and their wheels like a whirlwind than in the modern train? How better could
their roaring be like a lion than in the roar of an airplane? And so I think with quotations
like that, we've limited ourselves and said, Oh, well, this must be describing later day
gathering of Israel. It's missionaries going forth in planes and trains. And that is what
this prophecy is about. And because Elder Le Grand Richard said it, and we revere him as
an apostle, I think sometimes we assume that must mean that this is his prophetic interpretation.
But the truth is Elder Le Grand Richard is not the only one who set that.
In fact, after World War I, a lot of Americans turned to Isaiah and other parts of the Bible trying to make sense of the Great War,
and found in the writings of Isaiah prophecies that they thought were about airplanes, airplanes
specifically involved in attacks during World War I. So that was a common Christian interpretation
that made it into books like William Barnes Business in the Bible later in Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types, published in 1957, the Barnes Business in the Bible, that's in 1926.
So already both those books are saying that Isaiah 5, 26 to 30 is about airplanes, and the idea about it being about trains, that goes back even earlier. Elder Matthias Cowley in his talks on doctrine
is chapter on gathering of Israel,
talks about Isaiah 5 as gathering of Israel by means of trains.
But he seems to be getting that from people
who were writing in the late 1800s
at the time when railroad tracks stretching
across all the countries of the earth.
And other Christians are also speculating
that this has to do with the gathering of Israel
as one particular train track was getting closer
and closer to the land of Israel.
They're speculating this will have to do
with the gathering of Israel.
And so there are some common Christian interpretations
that we have sort of inherited.
And then because a prophet or apostle repeated them, we think, oh, will it must be a prophecy
by a Larity-Prophet and Apostle?
And then we have then limited ourselves
and said, this must be the only meaning of Isaiah chapter 5.
Excellent. Jason, when I read this,
knowing the history now like I do,
I think to myself, here comes a Syria to take over,
or here comes Babylon to take over.
So we're not saying that elder Richards is wrong here,
we're just saying that don't limit it
to just that single interpretation.
Yeah, there's certainly a way that we can see Isaiah's words
echoing in our time and read this, especially with words
like ensign to the nations that we have in the doctrine
and covenants as a call to the gathering of Israel.
And so when we read this within the larger context of our
standard works, absolutely, we can read into this a story about
us going forth and serving as missionaries.
But in Isaiah's time, in its original context, it likely
has to do with the war.
And people coming with horses and chariots, their wheels spinning like a whirlwind, and their
arrows and bows ready to attack.
And so it seems to describe that.
And in fact, the end of Isaiah 5 here is describing war and destruction as a punishment for them
neglecting the poor. If you go back a
little bit to all of these Isaiah 2 through 5 are all about the sins of Israel and Judah at this time
and how they've neglected the poor, take a look at verses 14 and 15 and that war is part of the judgment for how they have mistreated people.
Isaiah 3, 14 and 15, the Lord will enter into judgment with the ancients of His people,
and the princes thereof, for ye have eaten up the vineyard, and the spoil of the poor
is in your houses.
What mean ye?
They ebete my people to pieces and grind the faces of the poor, say at the Lord God of hosts.
And that's a message that absolutely should resonate with us today as well.
Elder Holland gave a great talk back in 2014, titled, Are We Not All Beggars?
Where he quotes this very passage and says, down through history, poverty has
been one of humankind's greatest and most widespread challenges.
Its obvious toll is usually physical, but the spiritual and emotional damage it can bring
may be even more debilitating.
In any case, the great redeemer has issued no more persistent call than for us to join
him in lifting this burden from the people.
As Jehovah, he said he would judge the house of Israel harshly because, quote,
the spoil of the needy is in your houses. What mean ye, he cried, that ye beat my people to pieces
and grind the faces of the poor? That's another way in which the prophet Isaiah's words echo through time.
They are a message to us today that the same sins of the house of Israel
we may be guilty repeating and that we need to be aware of.
If we don't realize that this, the end of chapter 5 could be about a destruction
that comes when you don't care for the poor, we will miss that entirely.
Because we're thinking, oh, this is about the gathering.
So when she goes back to that tool, you gave us to not automatically jump to some future
event that Isaiah is very likely talking about something that's happening in his, what
you call it, John, his current day, current event or a coming event.
Yeah.
So the tools we've talked about are knowing something about the manner of prophesying.
So recognize that Isaiah is poetic. So expect imagery, simile, metaphor, expect repetition.
The second tip, expect that Isaiah to talk about the things of the Jews.
That is the things of the people of Judah, the southern Kingdom, and to know something about the regions round about.
So know something about the history of all of that.
The third tool was expect Isaiah to preach,
so expect him to talk about faith and repentance
and redemption and healing.
All those things are part of Isaiah's message.
And then the fourth one was,
when Isaiah does
foretell the future, expect multiple filaments. Okay. And don't limit yourself
and saying this only has one meaning, the meaning to us today.
This is fantastic. I've got my toolbox open and you've given me some great examples.
What chapter do you want to do next?
Why don't we move on to chapter six. Chapter 6 is Isaiah's call as prophet.
Let's just start reading right at the beginning in Isaiah chapter 6, verse 1.
So we have the setting and then we can talk a little about what's going on here.
It starts by introducing us to the time and place that this is happening.
And in the year that King Uzziah died, that's right
around 740 BC, so we're still just under 20 years away from Assyria capturing the northern
kingdom. So in the year that King Uzziah died, I saw also the Lord sitting upon a throne,
high and lifted up, and his train filled the temple. There's our setting. Everything he's going to describe here is going to sound like the temple.
Some have speculated that maybe Isaiah was a priest because he describes the temple.
I don't think that's necessary and I don't think everybody accepts that because
remember that the temple is a mirror of the heavenly temple. That's how
ancient Israel understood it. When it's describing God in his house, in his temple, it very
well could be a vision of heaven as well. His train filled the temple. Above it stood the
seraphemes. Each had six wings. With twain, he covered his face, with twain he covered his feet,
and with twain he did fly.
And one cried unto another and said,
holy, holy, holy is the Lord of hosts.
The whole earth is full of his glory.
And the post of the door moved at the voice of him
that cried and the house was filled with smoke.
Then I said, whoa is me.
Now here's Isaiah speaking. Then I Isaiah said, woe is me
for I am undone because I am a man of unclean lips and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.
For mine eyes have seen the king, the Lord of hosts. Then flew one of the seraphimes under me,
having a live colon his hand, which he had taken with the tongs
from off the altar. So this is the altar of incense that is right before the holy of Holies.
That's what we're supposed to be imagining here, and the smoke going up from the coals
on the altar. So he's now one of these seraphim have now taken the coal off this incense
altar. Having the live coal in his hand, which which is taking the tongs from off the altar,
on to verse 7, he laid it upon my mouth and said, low, this touch-slide lips, thy ninniquity is taken
away, and thy sin is purged. And I also heard the voice of the Lord saying, whom shall I send, and who
will go for us? And I said, hear my son me. So this is a description of this vision Isaiah
has, it's similar to visions that other prophets have had both in the Book of Mormon. We can think
of Lehigh's vision right at the beginning of the Book of Mormon in First Nephite chapter 1,
as well as other prophets in the Old Testament. Jason, I'm gonna use some of the tools you gave me here.
I'm gonna go slow.
I see some repetition, holy, holy, holy,
three times that emphasis there.
When he says he saw the Lord
with a train that filled the temple,
what would train be?
This is his clothing, his ropes.
And maybe his clothes represent his power, his authority, his following.
Yeah, and oftentimes in these visions, prophets describe God as being larger than life.
That is one way to describe magnificence.
One way to describe grandeur or glory is to describe that in terms of height or size.
And so, gods are often described as being enormous.
Not only, I say gods because I'm talking not only in Israelite tradition,
but even if you were to imagine in Greek tradition or Roman tradition much later,
gods are described as being giants.
And that is one way to describe their magnificence, their power.
And so this is describing God as larger than life as we
would say it. Tell me a seraphim. Is that an angel? Yeah, that's an angel. So there are
these different angelic beings we encounter in the Old Testament. We sometimes encounter
the cherubim and other times the seraphim. And we don't really know a lot about these creatures because we don't get much of a description
other than things like this that describe them as having multiple wings.
So we can look to other ancient Near Eastern traditions to try and get an idea.
We might think of something like how in Egyptian tradition there's the sphinx that guards
the wands got the face of a lion
and these wings.
There are these guardian creatures that are God's guard dog, might be a way of thinking
of it.
That's protecting the sanctuary, protecting the holiness of the sanctuary.
It sounds like these angels have assignments.
They're talking with one another and when Isaiah feels unclean, one of them comes to him
and fixes his unclean lips by burning them off, which sounds like a kind of painful experience.
Yeah, it sounds horrifying. I enjoy noticing that for whatever reason, the King James translators
added an S tool word that was already plural, the seraphim. So it's really fun to notice in the Book of Mormon,
when you go to 2nd Nephi 16, it just says seraphim.
But here it's seraphim,
which is like saying geese's.
For listeners, it's kind of fun to know that if you see an I am at the end of a word,
it makes a plural like cherubum,
like serifim, like yurim and thumim, are plural, which is kind of fun. The Book of Mormon reference
companion says that the word serifim was translated from a Hebrew word that means burning ones.
Interesting. So they're bright and glorious, where they are.
Yeah, exactly. That's another way to describe glory. We just talked a minute ago about how height or size is one way to describe grandeur and glory, light or fire is another way that's
used frequently to describe that.
And as you read that section of Isaiah, am I supposed to pick up on Isaiah feels unworthy?
He says, I am a man of unclean lips.
I am undone.
I don't deserve to be here, maybe.
Which is so common a reaction in the face of the glory of God.
We can think time and again of prophets having that experience
and feeling unworthy.
See, if I'm getting this right, I'm using the tools you gave me.
Am I supposed to see kind of a symbolic way of his repentance
in this live coal going on his mouth?
Right, so fire can be used to purge things to clean them and
so that seems to be the imagery that is being used here that the fire is burning away the
Iniquity of his mouth or transforming his mouth into something that
now can speak on behalf of God.
Let me give you an example of how this passage, everything we just read from Isaiah 6, 1 down
to 6, 8, was read by some ancient Christians.
Your listeners are getting a preview here.
This is the first time this has been heard publicly. This comes from that book
I mentioned at the beginning. This comes from ancient Christians and introduction for Lareda Saints. This comes from Mark Ellison's chapter. His
chapter is titled Connecting with Christ rituals and worship. And he talks about ancient Christian worship. He has a box in this chapter
in worship. He has a box in this chapter titled a personal reflection on ancient Christian ritual and Latter-day Saint worship. And he begins this box in this chapter with a quotation
of this passage from Isaiah. And then he goes on and says this, and I absolutely love this.
He says, in the fourth century, some Christians were comparing the Eucharist, that's the sacrament.
The sacrament bred to the coal that the serif touched to Isaiah's cleaned lips.
With the word, this has touched your lips, your iniquity has taken away and your sin is
perched.
By the sixth century, liturgies made frequent reference to the details in Isaiah 6.
Liturgy is a fancy term that means sort of the practices of the worship service.
So what happens in a sacramed meeting service?
What is step one? What is step two? That's a liturgy.
By the 6th century, liturgies made frequent reference to the details in Isaiah 6
and liturgical vessels and spaces were decorated with images of the Sarah Femme and Cheribim that surrounded God's throne.
These ritual elements encouraged worshipers to imagine themselves in the role of Isaiah, approaching the throne of God as they approached the church altar, receiving forgiveness and purification and new through the Eucharist.
Again, that's the sacrament.
And being transformed into people who could, like Isaiah,
go forth with newfound confidence to bear testimony
of God's word to the world.
Then after that, Mark shares a personal reflection on this.
And I'll just read the end of his reflection.
He says,
as I sit in my relatively simple
Latter-day Saints' Accomit meeting
and take the small piece of bread,
I feel led to recall the angelic words,
this has touched your lips,
your iniquity is taken away,
and your sin purged.
I think of the many ways the Lord has changed my life,
and as I consider the good
that God wants me to do in the world, I feel myself renewed to say in my heart, here
am I, Lord, send me. I just think that's beautiful, and it goes to show some of the beautiful
insights we can gain from our ancient Christian brothers and sisters, who also read these
texts and reflected on what they mean to them in their time.
So they saw the sacrament here. The Lord saying, I can take those unclean lips of yours,
and I can transform them into the lips that give powerful messages, which Isaiah does. He ends up
giving for the rest of his life. That's fantastic. Yeah, isn't that beautiful? We'll bring Mark on
for our New Testament year for sure. Yeah, absolutely.
I like when Isaiah gets his calling and go and tell the people and he asks what I usually ask when
I get a calling, how long is this going to be, right, verse 11? Lord, how long and the response he
gets is usually different than the one I got until the cities be wasted without inhabitant and the houses
without man and the land be utterly desolate.
Imagine that's going to be the end of your calling.
So we're spending some time on that part because Isaiah's mission is so unlike the missions
that we received today when you actually look at what he is asked to teach.
Let's take a look at that real quick.
So Isaiah says, here am I sending me and then in verse nine, God says, go and tell this people
here, indeed, but understand not, see indeed, but perceive not. And
Isaiah has to be thinking, what? What kind of mission is that? Where
I go and teach the people so that they won't understand that makes no sense at all.
And it continues in verse 10, make the heart of this people fat, make their ears heavy,
and their eyes shut, lest they see with their eyes and hear with their ears and understand
with their heart and convert and be healed. Like, wait, what? You want me to teach so that they
won't convert and be healed? That makes no sense. And so Isaiah asked the question that,
Isaiah is a little less forward than I think I am being right now and saying,
why would you even ask me that Lord? Isaiah instead just asked, how long do I have
to teach the people in a way that they won't understand? Certainly that can't be
the end goal Heavenly Father. Certainly there must be some other plan in place here.
And then God's response, of course, is not very hopeful until cities be wasted without inhabitant.
And until the Lord has removed men far away, there will be a great forsaking in the midst of the land.
This is a very different kind of call. One way that we might make sense of it is just by saying that the people must have been in
a state where they weren't ready to hear the message. And so they would have been condemned
further for the message. And so Isaiah is preaching to the people in that time in a way that they
won't understand. But later on, we will see, or later people in that time will see that the message
was delivered and that people didn't understand.
So I'd love verse 10 right there.
Is that do you think a reference to the scattering that's coming?
Absolutely. And just to give an example of what we've been talking about from the beginning,
the way that a prophet's words can echo, I think that this prophet's words also echo
in the Book of Mormon.
This passage, of course, is quoted in full
in the Book of Mormon as well.
Second Nephi 16.
Just add 10 and you get the Book of Mormon chapter.
Yeah.
And so I wrote an article a couple of years ago
that was published in the Journal of Book of Mormon Studies
where I suggested that Mormon read this passage as fulfilled in the history of
the Nephites. If you look later on in the book of Mormon, if you look at 3 Nephi 11, we have a time
when there is a great desolation in the land. A desolation that seems to match the sort of desolation
that God tells Isaiah, this is what's going to happen. When Isaiah says,
how long, and he says there's going to be a great wasing, great desolation, it matches that.
And then just as Isaiah was told, make the heart of this people fat, make their ears heavy,
and shut their eyes, less they see with their eyes, hear with their ears, and understand with
their hearts, and convert and be healed. Well, what happens right after that desolation in the land that happens at the time of Christ's
crucifixion? Well, Christ is resurrected. And then he comes to the Nephites and right at the
beginning of 3rd Nephi 11, and again, this is 3rd Nephi 11 verses 5 and 6. And again,
the 3rd time, they did hear the voice and they did open their ears to hear it and the eyes
Were toward the sound thereof and they did look steadfastly towards heaven
Once the sound came and behold the third time they did understand the voice they heard and
Then what happens next?
Christ appears where he heals them
Christ appears where he heals them.
Cool. So I think Mormon intentionally woven to his description
of what happened among the Nephites in that time,
the language of Isaiah to suggest one of the ways
in which Isaiah is echoing in that time.
Yeah, I love it.
Yeah, that was verses five and six.
So it's a reversal in a sense of what Isaiah was command to do. Now
there are ears do here. Their eyes are open and fixed on the site. And now they understand
and are converted and healed. The idea of the prophet making their ears stocked up and
the prophet making it doesn't feel right to me. It feels like that. He was telling them
that's where they were. And in 3 Nephi,
they did open their ears. They did something differently. They focused a little more, or
something on their part that allowed them to hear the Lord differently. Makes more sense
to me that it's something they had to do to open their ears to hear it. This entire chapter of Isaiah chapter six,
there's a message here to me personally of,
you might see yourself one way.
Isaiah says,
whoa is me, I am undone, I am a man of unclean lips.
I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.
And then the Lord sees something else, right?
The Lord sees a prophet that is going to go and preach.
This is Joseph B. Wurthlin, October 2007.
Quote, we see ourselves in terms of yesterday and today.
That's how we see, we look in the mirror,
we see ourselves in terms of yesterday and today.
Our Heavenly Father sees us in terms of forever.
Although we might settle for less, Heavenly Father won't,
for He sees us as the glorious beings we are capable of becoming.
And then you mentioned this, Jason, you said this live coal is this transforming power.
Listen to Elder Wirtland here, the gospel of Jesus Christ is a gospel of transformation.
It takes us as men and women of the earth and refines us into the men and women
for the eternities. You feel like that could be a message I get from Isaiah 6.
Isaiah is transformed in this experience and prepared for a very difficult mission.
Is it safe to say that I can apply this to myself here, Jason? I'm on safe ground here and say,
the Lord can transform me for
my mission.
Yeah. And I love the connection, Mark Ellison made with the sacrament. The sacrament
itself can be a transformative power in our lives as we participate in that ordinance
sincerely with the attitude Isaiah has as of here am I send me and of recognizing his
own unworthiness, his own lack of preparation,
and being open to the Lord to transform him to make him ready for that.
Yeah.
And just to anyone listening, wouldn't you want to say, John, something like, God has
a work for you, and that he can transform you, and you might not see you in the way he
does, but he sees you as the glorious being you are capable
of becoming. The new, Aaronic priesthood theme that uses that phrase that I guess Marona
used with Joseph Smith, right? That I am a beloved son of God and he has a work for me to do.
Not just coming here and see if you can endure it to the end and try to go to church on Sunday,
but that he's got a work for you to do. There's a reason you're here. And that reminds me of the verse
8. I feel like you're verse 9 because it sounds like Isaiah is echoing another episode in the premortal
existence. Here am I send me, right? And I feel like we also said here am I send me in the premortal
existence. And now we have opportunities on earth whenever we are given a calling that makes us feel undone and makes us feel like we can't do it to voice our own.
I'll do my best here I am, send me but I'm undone I'm falling apart but here, here am I send me I'll try.
That's, that's awesome.
That combined with the sacrament, this could be a life changing chapter where you might skip it.
It's Isaiah. It's Isaiah. I won't understand this.
Yeah, and I feel like it's tough because we get to the end and it's that this isn't going to be easy
in how long. That's another thing I love to talk about is the how long, who else said how long
in our standard works? Joseph Smith, Liberty Jail, Almanamuleck in prison.
I think Job says how long,
it's not doubting that God lives,
it's just how long do I have to go through this type of a thing?
So here he's saying how long in the answer is not that positive,
right?
It's how the land is wasted and everything's so have a nice mission Isaiah.
And then finally that only kind of positive note there is verse 13. I mean Jason what do
you see in 13 there that's so much more positive. I'm curious to the teal and the oak, our
friend and colleague Terry Ball who is an archaeobotnist.
How many archaeobotnists do you know?
He said that the oak and the teal tree can have their leaves eaten off and even be chopped
down, but they'll regenerate because the sap or the substance is still in them, which
is it says, they can cast their leaves, but a remnant will return because the substance is still in there.
It's pretty cool. So when he says the whole house is filled with smoke, you feel like
smoke in the temple, the ancient temple, was that the presence of God?
So it was traditional to put incense on that incense altar to fill the house with smoke before
entering into the Holy of Holies, the most holy place,
so that you are protected from the glory of the Lord, in a sense.
So I think it can be both symbolic of glory, cloud by day, pillar fire by night, but also
in practice, serve as a shield.
And I think, too, it helps us remember that Sinai shook and smoked when God was there.
It's kind of this presence of the Lord type
reference of what happened on Sinai and it's happening here. God is here.
Chapter six to me can be one that a gospel doctrine teacher can really focus in on and have a great experience.
Yeah, there's so much in there.
And Jason, you talked about this. Here's a prophet receives his call starting by having a
theophony by seeing God.
Yeah, it's certainly something that we see not only in the
Bible with other prophetic calls, but in the book of
Mormon as well.
Why isn't this chapter the first chapter of Isaiah when he
receives his call?
That's a good question.
There's some debate about that.
As I mentioned earlier, some think that Isaiah's disciples are the one that organized the book and therefore just
chose to organize it by theme rather than chronologically. So that could explain it. This is really
what we'd expect to be chapter one. Right. Because this is the call. Well, Robert J. Matthews said,
Isaiah is not a continuous story. He said, it's like you took all of President Monson's talks
and mixed him up and just stuck him in a book,
but they're not chronological
in that Isaiah's prophecies are that way.
So yeah.
And certainly we have modern parallels to this.
For years our priesthood and relief society manuals
were teachings of the prophets.
And every year we'd get a new prophet. And if you open up those manuals were teachings of the prophets and every year we'd get a new prophet and if you open up those manuals it took the words of prophets given in
different sermons at different times and sort of mix them up and organize them
by theme. We'd have a theme of faith and we'd get everything that prophet said
about faith and we'd move on from there. So we just reviewed the collection of Isaiah's
teachings of his warnings against Israel concerning their pride,
concerning their oppression of the poor and the warning of devastation.
Now we just read Isaiah's call, and in chapter 7 we're about to get into the beginning of Isaiah's message during the Syriah from the might war.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.