Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Isaiah 1-12 • Part 2: Dr. Jason Combs
Episode Date: August 31, 2022Dr. Jason Combs returns to examine how Isaiah’s prophecies apply to ancient Israel and our day and provide information regarding the scattering and gathering of Israel.Please rate and review the pod...cast!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 part two of Isaiah 1 through 12 with Dr. Jason Cones.
As I'm looking in chapter 7, Jason, it looks to me like I'm going to need to know who
people are and a little bit of history in order to understand this chapter, right?
Yeah.
This is definitely a chapter that helps to know some historical background.
And unfortunately, what we know best about chapter seven
is the gospel of Matthew.
And so already, we begin reading chapter seven
with a very different historical context,
a very different framework than the historical time
of Isaiah himself.
So, I mean, when we think of chapter seven,
we think first and foremost of Isaiah chapter seven,
verse 14,
where there's a prophecy about a son who will be born, whose name will be called Emmanuel.
And then we immediately think of the gospel Matthew chapter 1 verses 22 and 23,
right after the description of the birth of Jesus, where Matthew says,
now all this was done that it might be fulfilled, which was spoken of the Lord by the prophet saying,
Behold, a virgin shall be with child,
and shall bring forth the Son,
and they shall call his name Emanuel,
which being interpreted is God with us.
And so because we are so much more
familiar with Matthew than Isaiah,
we go into Isaiah chapter seven,
looking for Jesus. And of course, that is one
of the beautiful ways that this chapter has echoed through time. And yet, there is another possible
reading of this. There's an initial meeting, right? A current day. Yeah, there's an initial meeting.
The current event of it sounds, it would make any sense at all
If you're like hey, I know you've got a couple of guys trying to remove you as king
But don't worry in 700 years this will happen
That's right. That's right. It's like what that doesn't help me a lot
Yeah, the other problem is this is described as a sign that God is giving to King Ahaz.
And yeah, Ahaz refuses because he isn't one assigned.
He hasn't want to do what Isaiah is telling him, but Isaiah gives him one anyway.
And the problem is we stop reading the sign short.
The sign continues for several more verses.
So we'll look at that in just a minute.
But before we do, I think it's worth noting because we're more familiar with Matthew, and
in fact, because we're more familiar with the Book of Mormon, I think we often imagine
Isaiah's experience to be something like Nephi's experience, where in Nephi's vision,
in first Nephi, right after Lehi has his vision, and then Nephi asks for his own, Lehi has
a vision of the tree, and Nephi says, I want a vision of the tree too, and to understand my father's prophecies, Nephi has his vision,
and in Nephi's vision he actually sees a virgin holding a child in her arms, and the angel
helps Nephi to understand what that means.
And so I think we sometimes transport that into our reading of Isaiah, and imagine that
Isaiah must have had the same experience.
But there's nothing really in this chapter to suggest that Isaiah had that experience.
Isaiah absolutely saw the Lord. We just finished reading a whole chapter about Isaiah seeing the Lord.
So that's without a doubt.
But we don't know that Isaiah had the exact same kind of experience that Nephi had and so we need to be careful
How we read it for that reason just to give you an example of how other people read this
Passage because again we read it and we immediately think of Matthew and we think who else could this possibly be a
Virgin shall bear a son and call his name Emmanuel of course. That's Jesus. It's a miraculous
Virgin birth the way we think of it.
Yeah. To us we think it couldn't possibly be anybody else. But let me give you an example
of how some other people thought about it. This example I'm about to share comes from a
Christian author who is writing well more than 50 years after Matthew, probably 70 to 80 years after Matthew,
it's a Christian named Justin Martyr.
He didn't go by that in his lifetime.
He was later called Justin Martyr,
after his martyrdom, he was went by Justin.
But Justin Martyr was a convert to Christianity.
He ended up writing out a dialogue that he says he had with a Jew, a Jew named
Trifo. And so he describes this really lengthy dialogue he had with Trifo the
Jew. He wrote this down right around maybe one fifty-five so middle of the
second century, one fifty-five AD. And in this dialogue he quotes this passage
from Isaiah to Trifo. He's doing a little bit of Bible bashing. He quotes this passage from Isaiah to trifo. He's doing a little bit of Bible
bashing. He quotes this passage at trifo to say, see, this is proof that Jesus is the Messiah.
And then trifo retorted, the quotation is not behold a virgin shall conceive in
Barra-Sun, but behold a young woman shall conceive in bear a son, and so forth as you quoted it.
Triphal continues,
furthermore, the prophecy as a whole
refers to King Hezekiah,
and it can be shown that the events described
in the prophecy were fulfilled in him.
Here's a Jew having a debate with the Christian,
and Justin Martin the Christian says this passage is definitely about Jesus and
Triphal the Jew responds and says no, it's not this passage is definitely about King Hezekiah who was
King a has his son and says that all of it was fulfilled in him
So to somebody else writing not too long within less than a century after Matthew, they were
still reading this passage in a very different way.
So I think it's worth going back then and trying to make sense of what was going on in
the time of Isaiah.
Why did he deliver this prophecy and understand it on his terms first and then look at how
Matthew is using it?
Because I think Matthew knows Isaiah pretty well.
I don't think he misread Isaiah.
I think he's doing something really special here.
I'll show you how that works.
But let's start with a little bit of background here.
You've already covered in this podcast before
the history of Israel up to this point.
So you know that by the time of Isaiah, the kingdom of Israel has fractured.
There is now a northern kingdom and a southern kingdom. That happened after Solomon's death in 930.
This is a couple hundred years after that now. There's a northern kingdom that is called Israel still.
Sometimes it's also called the kingdom of Ephraim, and Isaiah will use both of those terms to describe the northern kingdom
Then there's the southern kingdom. It's the kingdom of Judah to the north the ruler at the time of this chapter is a man named
Peca who's the son of Ramalia and
To the south the king is a has so Peca son of Ramalia is the king of the northern kingdom called Israel or E
from and to the south is Ahas. By the way we know that Peca son of Ramalia ruled in the northern kingdom
from 735 to 732 BC and so that helps us really narrow down when this prophecy is taking place.
We're still about 10 years away from 722 when a
Syria is going to come in, but Syria is on the border and is causing trouble, and that in
fact leads to part of the history we're going to see here. There's one more player that I need to
mention, who's significant in this chapter, that is the King of Syria, not to be confused with us, Syria.
Us Syria is the major empire that's coming in,
but there's a smaller kingdom that's just called Syria
in the location of the modern country of Syria, right?
That also goes by the named Ahram.
Ahram?
Yeah, in fact, it's related to the word Aramaic.
In fact, the modern language of Syriac is related to Aramaic. And the kingdom of Syria or Oram is a king called Rezun.
Every violinist knows what that is.
So I've got three kings that I need to understand. Southern Kingdom. His name is A has. Thank you, John.
His name is A has the son of Jotham, the son of Uzziah. And he's the king of Judah.
Then I've got another king, Peca, the son of Ramoya. He's the king of the northern kingdom of
Israel. And then I've got this neighboring country with a king called Syria, not us area. And his name is Resin. I've got three, three characters here in verse 1.
That's right. Is it Pika? Peca. Peca would be closer to the Hebrew. That's too bad. I want it to be
Pika. Like Pika, too. When I teach, yeah, when I teach, I a hepeka had a son named Peekaboo and when he was born he spent time in that
Peekaboo I see you
But that ruins my joke so I want it to be Peeka
Right, right and so just to add to the confusion remember that these countries also go by different names
So Syria is also called Arun and that's where resin rules and the northern
kingdom of Israel is also called Ephraim and that's where Pechav rules. Because all
of those names will feature in this chapter. Yeah. Yeah. This is where I think my
students get confused. First of all, we've got the Kingdom of Israel, not the
House of Israel, not my people Israel, but the kingdom of Israel is kind of in an apostate condition.
So the context is so, and Ephraim, the tribe of Ephraim is the dominant tribe in the northern kingdom.
So sometimes Isaiah calls Israel Ephraim, right?
Yes.
And what I love here is in this chapter, it's a good way to illustrate your key of understanding the geography
and the place names because he uses five different names to describe the same place. Israel,
Samaria, the capital, Pika, I mean, Peca, Son of Ramalia, and Ephraim. So when I teach my students,
I say, if I say news came out of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, news came
out of the Oval Office, news came out of the White House, news came out of Washington,
DC, I'm talking about the same place.
Just different names.
And for them, they know that, but for us, we have to make ourselves a chart or something.
So we can understand that he's referring to the same place when he uses all of those terms.
Yes, absolutely. One more thing that we should know about the geography is the empire of a Syria that is coming in.
They can't come straight across the desert and the mountains to attack Judah. They have to follow the fertile
crescent up above and so on their way down to Judah they would have to pass
through the kingdom of Syria and the northern kingdom of Israel. So Judah, the
southern kingdom, is strategically quite safe because a Syria has to make its way through two other
kingdoms before it even gets to them. And that also features in what's just about to happen here.
So knowing a little bit of that geography, knowing these names, knowing these countries,
now I can understand what's happening. Yeah. So let's start reading a little. Isaiah chapter 7,
what's happening. Yeah. So let's start reading a little Isaiah chapter seven. Let me just start with verses two and three here. And it came to pass in the days of Ahaz, son of Jatham, son of Uzziah,
King of Judah, that resin, the king of Syria, not Ahsirah, but Syria, and Peca, the son of Ramalia,
King of Israel, went up towards Jerusalem to war against it, but could not prevail against it.
Sounds like these two countries win against the smaller, the southern kingdom.
Yeah, that's right.
So right away, it's giving us some historical context, but we need to know who these people
are and where they're located and all that to make sense of this historical context.
If you want more historical context on this, the siege of Jerusalem,
where Pekka and Resyn go up against Jerusalem and do not prevail against it, is described in
2 Kings 16. Verse 5. This is history that's already been covered on this podcast, and now we're
seeing it again in the context of Isaiah's prophecies. I've always had a question about the exact timing of the building of Hezekiah's tunnel.
Was it in anticipation of the Assyrian attack?
Or was it just for any enemy?
We got to have a water supply at Jerusalem.
Yes.
So, the Southern Kingdom of Judah is at war with the smaller neighboring kingdoms quite
often, but the larger threat, the monumental threat, is this empire of Assyria that is much
larger.
So Hasakaya likely had all of those threats in his mind.
Hasakaya, of course, is the son of A.H.
So that's a little bit after the time that we're talking about right here.
I just have always wondered, did he build that because of Assyria specifically or because
of just its smart strategically to have a water supply that's covered up that's within
the walls?
Yeah.
And we're now seeing that in his father's lifetime, there had been instances where siege
had been laid to Jerusalem. So there was in there,
there living historical memory,
a need for access to water
by the time of Hezekiah.
This is really helpful, Jason,
because if I remember my second king's lesson,
I know the Ahaz wasn't overly interested in Jehovah.
What Jehovah had to say.
Yes, second king says he's one of the wicked Kings
That's right and it tends to alternate we get a righteous King and a wicked King righteous King and a wicked King So has a kaya will be a righteous King following the son of a has that's right
So let's pick up in verse two and it was told in the house of David
So once again, that's the house of David, that's referring to the Southern
Kingdom of Judah, to the King there, that's King A. Has, saying Syria is Confederate with Ephraim.
So the country of Syria and the Northern Kingdom of Israel called Ephraim have joined forces
to come against the Southern Kingdom of Judah. So it's a word got to the Southern Kingdom that these two countries are uniting against them.
Is that kind of the, whoa.
Yeah, he's a little bit worried.
It says, and his heart was moved,
and the heart of his people,
as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind.
They're shaking a little bit here.
Oh, I love, I've got quaking aspens in my margin here.
They're just, you know, so that makes him nervous.
That's right.
So to skip down a little bit to get more of the history that
then we'll come and catch up with what Isaiah is told to do, but
skipping down to verse five and six, because Syria, Ephraim and
the son of Ramalia have taken evil counsel against the King,
King Ahaz, saying, let us go up against Judah and vex it, and let us make a breach therein
for us, and set a king in the midst of it even the Son of Tabayel. So, the planet seems of these two kingdoms to the North, Israel and Aram or Syria, is to
invade Judah, to depose Ahaz to put in his place this person who otherwise we know nothing
of, this is the only mention of him, the son of Tabayl. And put him in his place,
presumably with the assumption that the son of Tabayl would be in alliance then
with these two kingdoms to the north, with Israel and Aram or Syria.
There's a little bit of debate over what the purpose of this was. Some think it was to defend themselves against the threat of Syria, others think it was
to strengthen their trade relations, but whatever reason, Judah isn't playing ball, so they've decided
that they're just going to come in, depose the king, and put somebody else in his place,
and put somebody else in his place who will be sympathetic to them. So that's the context when all of this happens.
Now, A has his own plan.
We see A has an act this plan later on in 2nd Kings chapter 16.
So I'll read a passage from 2nd King 16 in just a minute here.
But at this point in the history, this is only his plan.
He hasn't done this yet. So here we go. Here's what he ends up doing in the future. Now he's only
planning it. This is 2nd King 16, 7-8. So A has sent messengers to Tiglath Pelesar, King of Assyria,
saying, I am thy servant and thy son, come up and save me out of the hand of the King of Syria, saying, I am thy servant and thy son, come up and save me out of the hand of the
king of Syria, out of the hand of the king of Israel, which rise up against me.
And they has took silver and gold that was found in the house of the lore and the treasures
of the king's house and sent it for a present to the king of the Syria.
So that's A-Haz's plan.
A-Haz's plan is, a Syria is still quite a distance from me. It has to make its way through these two kingdoms before it's even a threat to me.
But these kingdoms are a present threat to me. So I'm going to go to the Empire of a Syria and make an alliance with him and pay him out of the temple funds and some of my own funds.
And that will persuade him to be on my side and come and take out
these two kingdoms to my north. But not us. Right. But not us. That's his plan. Now Isaiah
is told to go deliver to King A has a message to tell him not to enact that plan.
And now is where we're going to back up to Isaiah 7, verse 3, to see what Isaiah's commanded
to do.
So Isaiah 7, 3 begins and then said the Lord unto Isaiah, go forth now to meet Ahaz, thou
and Shia Yahshub thy son, at the end of the conduit of the upper pool in the highway of the
Fuller's Field. Not sure exactly where that is, but Isaiah has been given very specific instructions
here to know exactly where to go and find the king. This by the way also reveals a little more
biographical information about Isaiah. Isaiah had access to the king. Not anybody could just walk up and talk to a king.
And so Isaiah, perhaps is on the king's court
as a prophet for the house of David.
And so he has direct access to the king
and is able to go up and have this conversation.
So here's what Isaiah is to say to the king.
And say unto him, take heed and be quiet.
Fear not, neither be faint-hearted.
Remember, they're already trembling like wind-blowing trees.
So fear not, neither be faint-hearted.
For the two tales of these smoking firebrands,
firebrand is just a piece of burning wood.
I like the new Revised Standard version translation of this.
These two smoldering stumps of firebrands.
It continues on, for the fierce anger of resin with Syria
and of the son of Ramalia, that's Pekka.
So don't be afraid of these two.
That's right.
And I love the description of them
as smoldering firebrands.
They are dying out already.
And so Isaiah's messages, these guys are not going to be around much longer. They're already fizzling out.
You don't need to worry about them. This is not what you should be worried about. So Isaiah's message is,
don't do anything about this. In fact, he gives them a specific time frame in verse 8,
and within three score and five years, she'll e from be broken, that it not be a people. That's a
prophecy of what's going to happen in 722, the entire Northern Kingdom. If Israel is going to be
completely gone, it won't be a people. Okay. Israel will be destroyed, the northern kingdom will be scattered.
Yeah, that's the message Isaiah delivers to Ahaz. Of course, that's not enough. Ahaz is not
willing to take Isaiah's advice. Isaiah recognizes he's going to need more. And so we get more starting
at verse 10. Moreover, the Lord spikened Ahaz again. So here's Isaiah's next message to A-az.
One message wasn't enough. So here's the next one. Ask the assign of the Lord thy God. Ask it either
in the depth or in the height above. But A-az says, I will not ask. Neither will I tempt the Lord.
Well, again, we know from second kings. It's not that A-az is concerned about tempting the Lord.
It's that he doesn't want the answer. He's already decided what he's going to do. We read about
what he ends up doing in 2 Kings 16, so he doesn't want the answer. So Isaiah is now going to continue
to give him the sign anyway. And here it is, starting in Isaiah 7 and 14. Therefore the Lord Himself shall give you a sign,
behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son,
and shall call his name Emmanuel,
and that's where we usually stop.
But that's only the start of the sign,
the sign continues.
Here's what it describes this Emmanuel doing.
Butter and honey shall he eat.
Now those are two luxury items
that are not easily available if you are in a city under siege.
So let's continue here.
Butter and honey shall he eat that he may know
to refuse the evil and choose the good.
That's not the best translation there.
Butter and honey in no way enables us to choose good and to refuse evil.
So a better translation there is by the time that he knows to refuse the evil and choose the good.
So Butter and honey shall he eat by the time that he knows to refuse the evil and choose the good.
In other words, this child's going to be born and by the time he's old enough to know the difference between right and wrong,
but we might say by the time he's reached the age of accountability,
he'll be able to eat butter and honey.
The city will not be under siege. There will not be a war going on.
It then continues, for before the child shall know to refuse the evil and choose the good. So again, before this child is reached the age of accountability,
the land that thou abhorest shall be forsaken of both her kings.
There it is, that's the sign, both her kings, two kings.
It's referring to those two countries to the north,
to the kingdom of Israel, ruled by Peccas,
and of Ramalia, and to the kingdom of Syria, or Aram, ruled by Pecas and of Ramalia and to the kingdom of Syria or Aram ruled by
Rezim. It's saying those lands are going to be forsaken by those kings. Those kings that
you're so worried about right now, they're going to be gone before this child is even old enough
to know the difference between right and wrong. Now the sign continues with a warning.
The Lord shall bring upon thee and upon thy people and upon thy father's house, days
that have not come from the days that Ephraim departed from Judah.
So things are going to get bad.
Things are going to be worse than they've ever been since the time of 930, since the
time after Solomon's death when these two kingdoms separated, since Ephraim, the northern kingdom of Israel,
departed from Judah.
And then it says, what is going to make things so bad?
Even the king of Assyria.
So point is, once again,
it has, don't do what you're planning on doing.
Don't go and make an alliance with the king of Assyria.
You're inviting trouble.
But of course, he doesn't listen.
And these verses, if you read them too fast, you don't realize 17 is kind of a prophecy. And I
tell my students, insert these words. Now, I could be in really big trouble for inserting words
into the scriptures. But I have them insert in front of 17. If you don't listen to me then,
the Lord shall bring upon thee and upon thy people
and upon thy father's house,
they's that do not come.
Because this is what Isaiah is saying.
If you don't accept the sign,
then this is what's gonna happen.
Is that fair?
Yeah, if you move forward with your plan.
Then the Lord will bring upon thee
and upon thy people, thy father's house.
Yeah, and quite frequently,
the Lord is definitely aware, perhaps even as made Isaiah
aware, that the King will not listen.
And nevertheless, the Prophet still delivers the message so that future generations can
learn from past generations' mistakes.
And it looks like the rest of the chapter is all that the King of Assyria is going to
do, and it sounds terrible. The Syrians were a brutal
superpower, right? Absolutely. Who else was called to go there and went west instead
to Japa? That sounds like Jonah. Yeah. Let's talk a little about this sign then.
And how to make sense of this. If this is about somebody who's
going to be born and grow up and before they know good and evil, the problem they has is facing
is going to be gone. What child is this who is born of a virgin in this time? How do we make sense
of this? Well, the first thing that's worth pointing out is that that comment that trifo the Jew made to Justin, where he
said, actually, the verse doesn't say a virgin.
It actually says a young woman.
There's a reason for that.
In Hebrew, the word that's here translated as the virgin is ha-alma.
The word alma, no relation to the Book of Mormon prophet, alma.
Those who study Book of Mormon names suggest
that comes from a different route.
The Hebrew here ha-alma does simply mean young woman.
Now people in that time may have assumed that if this is a young unmarried woman, of course
she would be a virgin, but that would only be assumed it's not necessarily implied in
the word.
It's also worth noting that it actually says
v, young woman, it has that ha at the beginning.
It's ha, alma.
And so it seems like Isaiah is pointing
to a young woman that's there that is known by the king,
saying that young woman there,
v young woman, who you see right there,
is going to bear a sun. And before that sun is old enough
to know the difference between right and wrong, these two kingdoms you're worried about are
going to be gone, so don't worry about them. So jumping forward hundreds of years now into
the 200s B.C., maybe even a little before that, the Hebrew is translated into Greek. There's
a Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible that's made for all the Jews who are living outside of the land of Israel in other parts by this time.
Alexander the Great has come in and is convinced everybody they should learn some Greek.
So a lot of Jews who only know Greek and so the Hebrew Bible is translated into Greek.
And when it is, this passage, Haalma, is is translated as, hey, Parthenos, which literally is the virgin.
Again, it does have the definite article, so it seems to refer to somebody who's known, who is definitely there,
but it does have that more specific meaning.
It could just be assumed if this person is a young maiden, who's not yet married,
or is only recently married that
she's a virgin, that could be the assumption.
So Christians using the Greek version of the Old Testament read this passage as the
virgin, whereas those Jews who continue to use the Hebrew read Ha-Alma as the young
woman.
So that was the debate that Justin was having with trifold the Jew.
You've said this Greek translation, is that the Sep 2 agent that we hear about?
Yeah, it's called that because there's a tradition that 70 scholars all got together and
translated.
So in trying to figure out who this Emanuel is, it's not really clear.
Emanuel meaning God with us, that is what Emmanuel means. It could
be a kingly title. It is the sort of royal title that could be given to somebody in the
House of David, especially since God promised King David that God would be with King David.
So the title God with us is an appropriate term for somebody born to the house of David. Some have speculated that
Emanuel might actually be Isaiah's son, and Isaiah might have been pointing to Isaiah's
wife, referring to her as the young woman. And the reason for that has to do with a parallel between Isaiah 714 and Isaiah 8, 1 through 3, where we're introduced to Isaiah's
second son, Mahesh al-Hashbaz. Notice the parallel here, it's really interesting.
Isaiah 714 says, before the child shall know to refuse the evil and choose the good,
the land that thou abhorish, shall be forsaken above their kings, referring to Emanuel. And then in Isaiah chapter eight, verses one through three,
it introduces Maharshalal Hoshbaz,
and then chapter eight verse four says,
before the child shall acknowledge to cry,
my father and my mother,
the riches of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria,
she'll be taken away before the king of Assyria.
So that parallel prophecy between Isaiah 716 and
Isaiah 8.4 have led some to think, okay maybe Emanuel is Maharshalal-Hashbaz.
That's a possibility, but that would take some other logical leaps. In
particular, Emanuel is clearly a part of the House of David, and so then we would have
to conclude that maybe Isaiah's wife is part of the House of David and that lineage in
order to make that connection.
So I think we should be open to that as a possibility, but I think we should be hesitant to say
that's the only possible reading.
As we know from reading that passage from trifo,
trifo was convinced that this is a reference to Hezekiah.
There's some question about whether Emanuel could be Hezekiah
because of some of the dates of Hezekiah's birth
as given in second kings,
but second king's dates can be a little bit fast
and loose sometimes.
So the answer is we don't know for certain who this
Emanuel is other than saying clearly at somebody in the original fulfillment of this prophecy clearly
is intended for Ahaz any has his time and refers to a child that Ahaz would observe grow up so that
he would know when this sign is fulfilled. Yeah, For the first fulfillment, Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, he said about this,
there are plural or parallel elements to this prophecy as with so much of Isaiah's writing.
The most immediate meaning was probably focused on Isaiah's wife, a pure and good woman who brought
forth a son about this time. The child becoming a type and shadow of the greater later fulfillment
of that prophecy
that would be realized in the birth of Jesus Christ.
The symbolism and the dual prophecy acquires additional importance when we realize that
Isaiah's wife may have been of royal blood and therefore her son would have been royalty
of the line of David.
Here again is a type, a prefiguration of the greater Emanuel, Jesus Christ the ultimate
son of David, the royal king who would have been born of a literal virgin. Indeed his title
Emanuel would be carried forward to the latter days, being applied to the Savior in section 128
verse 22 of the Doctrine and Covenants. And that's from Elder Holland's book Christ and the new covenant on page 79.
Yeah, very nice. So I want to hear what Matthew does with this. So this interpretation,
I'm glad you brought up that quote from Elder Holland because this interpretation that I am
sharing right now is not new. You can read about it in Elder Holland's books. Lots of books published
on the writings of Isaiah,
available in Deseret book from Donald Perry to Victor Ludlow. I'm not sure how Kerry
Mielstein deals with this passage. I know he's recently published a book on Isaiah,
and he'll be on this show soon, so he can share with you how he deals with it. But I know this
interpretation that we're looking at, trying to understand
Isaiah's own time period, is one that's been familiar for a while, but doesn't seem to be as common
knowledge in, say, a gospel doctrine class. And I think knowing this context helps us to appreciate
even more what Matthew does with this passage. Let's talk about that now. This Emanuel and this prophecy about this
sign is definitely related to a concern about the house of David. The prophecy is introduced
in chapter 7 verse 13 by saying, here ye now, O house of David. After it introduces this prophecy
about Emanuel, it mentions Emanuel one more time in chapter 8. In chapter 8 verse 8, where it's talking about
what the king of Assyria is going to do, it says, and he, referring to the king of Assyria,
shall pass through Judah, he shall overflow and go over, he shall reach even to the neck,
and stretching out of his wings, shall fill the breadth of the land, O Emanuel.
So that there, that is addressed to
Emanuel as if to a future king of Israel who's going to be concerned about
Assyria overflowing the land. So this is definitely a strong focus on kingship.
So just to summarize real quick what we know about Emanuel from this passage in
Isaiah, we know that the child Emanuel was born in Ahaz's lifetime, that Emanuel's mother was present or known to Ahaz, that
the prophecy was for Ahaz and assumed that he would observe the boy Emanuel grow up,
that the land of Judah in some sense belongs to Emanuel, as we just saw, the Emanuel therefore
is a
Davidic air. Okay, so what's going on in the Gospel of
Man, of Matthew, where he quotes this passage, following his
description of Jesus' birth, and says that it's fulfilled.
Well, remember, way back at the beginning of our podcast
here today, we talked about how the word fulfillment has a
broad range of
meanings. Sometimes we assume that the only meaning of fulfillment of prophecy is when
a prophet in the past has seen something happen, and that thing happens exactly in that way,
and that is fulfillment. Well, that is a type of fulfillment, but it is not the only type. Another use of the term fulfilled can mean to fill out a prophecy to more fully accomplish
or complete a prophecy.
And I think that is how Matthew is using the term fulfilled.
He is suggesting that as much as a past David King may have been an initial or partial fulfillment of that
prophecy from Isaiah. Jesus fills out that prophecy more fully. He fulfills it.
And here's why I think that. So there's at least two different ways we can think
about what Matthew's doing. One possibility is that Matthew believes that Isaiah 7
has nothing to do with King Ahaz and was a direct
foretelling of Jesus' birth. I say that's a possibility because you can see some
of that happening in Jewish writings in the same time period as a Gospel of Matthew.
In the Dead Sea Scrolls, the Dead Sea Scrolls have a style of writing called a
Peshire or Peshire Reem, and the Peshire which literally is translated something
like it is interpreted.
That's how it's often translated.
It'll give a quotation of a prophecy and said, it is interpreted and then give the interpretation.
And the Dead Sea Scrolls tend to interpret everything as dealing with the founder of
the Dead Sea Scroll community, somebody they call the teacher of righteousness, and Rome
is often the bad guy.
So that's a possibility, but I'm not convinced.
I think Matthew's familiar with Isaiah.
I think he knows what was going on in the Old Testament.
And the reason I think this is because
this is not the only time in Matthew
that he takes a passage that was about something else
and makes it about Jesus.
Let me give you one other example.
Throughout Matthew 1 and 2,
there are a number of these fulfillment passages.
In Matthew chapter 2,
he has already described how Jesus' family
takes him and flees after his birth to escape Herod.
Herod the Great is killing all the infants in Bethlehem.
So he takes them and flees to Egypt.
Then it talks about them returning from Egypt, and Matthew says this.
So this is Matthew chapter 2 verse 15.
Matthew describes how they stayed in Egypt until the death of Herod
that it might be fulfilled which was spoken of the Lord by the Prophet,
saying, out of Egypt, I have called my son. Now, we know what prophecy that is,
that comes from Hosea.
That's Hosea, chapter 11.
So here's the passage now in Hosea.
When Israel was a child,
then I loved him and called my son out of Egypt.
Now, in the context of Hosea,
this prophecy out of Egypt I have called my son
refers to the people of Israel as if God's son. And God calling them out of Egypt is a description
of the Exodus, led by Moses, and then by Joshua into the Promised Land. And in fact, we know that
that's what it's talking about, because we can continue reading here.
It describes how Israel does when God calls them out of Egypt as his son. They don't follow God.
In verse two, it continues on and describes how they sacrificed unto the Baalim and burned incense to grave in images.
So Israel doesn't do too well when they are called out of Egypt.
And it's pretty clear who Jose was talking about.
Absolutely. So why in the world would Matthew say Jesus fulfills this? Because Jesus does.
Because Jesus fulfills this in a way that Israel could not. Israel was called out of Egypt by God as God's son and
yet they turned away, they worshiped the Ba'aleem and false gods, false idols.
Jesus however, called out of Egypt, also spent some time in a wilderness, also
is tempted in that wilderness for 40 days and 40 nights, not 40 years, and does not give in to temptation after that time in the wilderness.
Jesus fulfills this call to God's Son in a way that Israel never could, and does it for Israel. So all of the covenant promises that God made with Israel are more fully completed,
are fulfilled in the ministry of Jesus Christ. That's fantastic. The Savior more fully fulfills
these prophecies by the way He lives. Then those who the original prophecy was probably about.
Brotter? Yeah, it's a broader way to apply that idea of fulfilling.
I really like what you've done with that, Jason.
It completes it.
It is another dimension of it.
Yeah, so let's now take that idea
and go back to the passage in Isaiah.
So Matthew quotes that passage after describing Jesus' birth.
As we've seen, that passage has something to do with Davidic kingship.
With the concern that A has would be replaced on the throne with another king.
A has was a descendant of King David.
He is a preservation of the Davidic line.
Remember by now your audience, if they are staying tuned and being faithful and listening
every week, they know back in 2 Samuel chapter 7, God made a promise to David. 2 Samuel
7 16, God said to David, in reference to his descendants, thine house and thy kingdom
shall be established forever before thee. Thy throne will be established forever. So there's also
in Isaiah 7 a concern that the Davidic line is going to be interrupted, that the king is
going to be deposed, and what's going to happen to the Davidic line? Well, Isaiah makes
a promise that the Davidic line will continue through remanual, and that a Syria or Syria or Israel will not be able to
depose the king. Now, is Matthew aware of this context? Is Matthew aware that Isaiah is all about
this question of kingship? I think he is. If we were to take a look at the Gospel of Matthew,
notice how the Gospel of Matthew begins.
Chapter one verse one,
the book of the generation of Jesus Christ,
the son of David,
right away, the first figure from the Old Testament
that Matthew mentions, the son of David.
When Matthew gives his lengthy genealogy,
there are a whole lot of kings in that genealogy.
Christ is descended from the Davidic line.
There are lots of kings in that genealogy and get out of that whole genealogy. Christ is descended from the Davidic line. There are lots of kings in that genealogy.
And get out of that whole genealogy, only one of them is named as king. Any guesses who that is?
It's King David. That's in verse 6. And Jesse begot David the king. And David the King begot Solomon. When Joseph is mentioned in Matthew 1 verse 20, it's Joseph, thou son of David, as the
angel addresses him.
Later on in the beginning of chapter 2, when the wise men come, when the magi come, where
is he that is born King of the Jews?
So Matthew is absolutely aware that this is all about kingship. And so it shouldn't
surprise us at all that when Matthew turns to Isaiah, he is reading this as being about kingship
and seeing Jesus as more fully fulfilling this promise of kingship. Now, I mentioned before
that Davidic promise that King David's throne would continue.
Of course we know, and Matthew was well aware, that that didn't happen long after a
Syria when the Babylonian Empire comes along, they conquered the southern kingdom of Judah.
They take Judah captive into Babylon.
They take them into exile.
And that is the last time there is a king of David's lineage
on the throne. But notice how Matthew ends his description of the genealogy. He summarizes it like
this. So all the generations from Abraham to David are 14 generations. There's David again,
Abraham to David. And from David to the carrying away into Babylon,
our 14 generations.
So now Matthew's readers are thinking,
oh, Babylon, that's when we lost David at kingship.
And here's the final part.
And from the carrying away into Babylon
unto Christ, our 14 generations.
He is setting up his readers to understand that Christ is the continuation
of this Davidic promise, a promise that could never be fully accomplished by the kings,
a promise of eternal Davidic throne. Matthew is saying his readers up to understand that
Jesus is the one who fully accomplishes that. And so it should not be a surprise to us at all that Matthew chooses this passage from
Isaiah chapter 7 verse 14, a passage about the preservation of the Davidic line through
a son named Emmanuel, God with us, as a perfect passage to describe Jesus and to show how
Jesus more fully accomplishes all the promises God made
to David.
Of course, he's also showing that Jesus accomplished all the promises God made to Abraham and to Israel.
I love this, Jason.
I love one.
We've taken it in its original context, and that's crucial.
We haven't just jumped straight to future, just jumping straight to, oh, this is about Jesus.
Two, you've shown us that Matthew isn't proof texting.
He's actually doing something much more rich than just grabbing a verse saying,
this is about Jesus. He's saying, look, God, it remembers His promise all the way back from 2 Samuel 7.
And I'm going to use this Isaiah prophecy to show you that he remembers that promise.
So we've used the tools you've given us and it's become much more nuanced and beautiful.
I love the idea that Matthew knows exactly what he's doing.
He's not proof texting.
He's not just grabbing a verse saying, this is about Jesus.
He's saying he's using this man.
That's just really well done.
I really like this idea of Jesus more fully fulfills these.
That's something I hadn't thought of before. Yeah. Or fills them out to accomplishes them,
yeah. In a way that the original person could not. One of the things that I've read into that
Matthew verse about the spelling of the name David, the Dalathe V Dalat and the number value of that being 14, is that Matthew was fond
of 14, and it's kind of fun if you've ever been to the Church of the Nativity to go down
below in the traditional spot that marks the spot of Jesus's birth as marked with a 14-pointed
star.
And I think those who are all trying to say, look, son of David, which it sounds like what Matthew's trying to do.
Son of David, see this?
You mentioned Jay and Donald Perry, and they wrote this book with Tina Peterson called Understanding Isaiah.
And I liked it because it helped me make sense of it.
Isaiah 7 is the Emanuel prophecy that Isaiah 8 is the first fulfillment, Maharsha-Lahal-Hajba's the
Sun, and that Isaiah 9 is the Jesus fulfillment. For unto us a child is born unto
us a son is given, and there's three chapters in a row that have three birth
prophecies in a row. To me, I kind of liked that. The manual prophecy, the first
fulfillment, and then the ultimate fulfillment.
Yeah, and I think that's a really nice way of reading it from our perspective. Of course,
a Jew like Justin's friend Trifo would see even chapter 9 as referring to the future
Israelite King. All of those chapters seem to address events happening at the time of
this zero epharmite war. And so they would see even the one who is
described as a wonderful counselor and mighty God as being theophoric titles given to this great
Israelite king who would come along. Or they might say the Jesus that came, it sounds like
it's describing a political Messiah, not just a spiritual Messiah. Yeah, I think it's interesting that passage in chapter nine, this is Isaiah nine six unto us,
a child is born unto us, a son is given, the government shall be upon his shoulders,
and I'm quoting it from memory because of Handel's Messiah. We know Handel's Messiah so well that we
read this and we think, who could this possibly refer to other than Jesus.
And it's interesting when we look at things that early Christians wrote about this passage,
they thought they had to convince people that it was about Jesus because at the time nobody read
that and assumed it was. In fact, that passage about untoo-S a child is born, that's not sighted anywhere in the
New Testament as being about Jesus. It's only after New Testament times that some Christians read
that and say, oh, that's about Jesus. So just to give you an example, there's a Christian named
Tertullian who's writing, at the end of the second century, beginning of the third century,
he's writing a work against another Christian named Marcian. So this is in his work against Marcian book three chapter 19, where he quotes
this passage and he says, Isaiah says, because to us a child is born. And then he says, what
is new in this, unless he is speaking of the Son of God? The Tertullians trying to be persuasive
here and say, why would that be significant to
say a child is born unless it's referring to a special child?
Therefore, it must be Jesus.
And then he continues, unto us one is given whose government is placed upon his shoulder,
which of the kings ever displays the sign of his dominion upon his shoulder, and not
rather a crown upon his head, or a scepter in his hand or
some mark of appropriate apparel. No, only the new king of the new ages, Jesus Christ, the king of
new glory, has lifted up upon his shoulder his own dominion and majesty, which is the cross.
That from henceforth, as our previous prophecy stated, he did as the Lord reign from the tree.
So, Tertullian sees in this prophecy the government being upon his shoulder, not as metaphorical as like carrying the weight upon the shoulder,
being him taking upon himself the government of the world, the government being upon him shoulder, the kingdom of God upon his shoulder.
But I think it's interesting that he has to make an argument for this. He has to persuade early Christians that this passage is about Jesus
because not everybody saw it that way, even in that period, even more than 100 years after the gospel authors wrote their gospels.
after the gospel authors wrote their gospels.
You guys, this has been so helpful because in my mind,
part of worshiping the Lord is worshiping the Lord
with our mind, learning these small phrases
and connections across to the New Testament,
to the Old Testament.
To me, this is part of my worship.
However, I can see that someone would be like,
thanks for all this information, you guys.
What do I do with it?
I want to reach to you from a book
of someone who I just simply adore.
His name is John, by the way. John, this might embarrass you a little bit. This is in the book Isaiah
for Airheads. There's a little section that says, how does this chapter help me today? And about
this chapter, John, you wrote, let's see if you can remember what you wrote. I really doubt that
the Lord wants us to study Isaiah so that we will know about Pecha or Damascus
or the Son of Ramalia.
At the final judgment, I don't think we will be quized
on the geopolitical situation in the Middle East.
For me, the greatest lesson in this chapter
is the promise of Emanuel, the assurance that God is with us.
I believe that this chapter is about the danger
of pursuing foolish alliances instead of a relationship
with the greatest ally of all.
John, this is really good.
You're doing a great job here.
Isaiah was trying to tell Ahaz that it doesn't matter
if Syria is with you or Israel is with you.
What matters is that God is with you.
That's a wonderful application, John, from these chapters.
And I think, in fact, that is
precisely the point that Matthew is trying to make. I mentioned that Matthew loves in his first two
chapters to talk about fulfillment of prophecy. I think what he's doing is actually setting up his
readers to constantly be looking for this throughout his gospel. But the very first fulfillment passage is this one that he quotes from Isaiah.
And he quotes it a little bit different from Isaiah
because he gives us the interpretation
of the name Emmanuel.
Isaiah doesn't provide that for us.
Matthew does.
Matthew tells us, Emmanuel means God with us.
And who better to fulfill a name that means God with us than Jesus Christ.
And in fact, at the end of the Gospel of Matthew, Matthew comes back to that idea. He relates
the account of Jesus' disciples gathering to meet Jesus, now resurrected on a mountain
in Galilee. And then Jesus gives his final commission to the apostles there.
And the final words he speaks to them in Matthew, chapter 28, verse 20, it's Jesus speaking
telling his disciples what message to deliver as they go forth in his name.
And he suggests, Jesus suggests to his disciples that they should teach them those people they are teaching to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you.
And then Jesus says this, these are the final words of the gospel of Matthew.
And lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world, amen. Amen. And what what a promise and a promise derived from this prophecy given
hundreds of years earlier by Isaiah to King a what a connection. And to think
about every Sunday hearing those wonderful young men say that they may always
have his spirit to be with them every week. That's the point. God is with us. He can be with us.
And that's the promise of Emanuel. The very first prophecy that Matthew says, Jesus fulfilled more
fully is this Isaiah prophecy, Emanuel, which, being interpreted, is God with us. That's Matthew 1.23 and Matthew finishes.
I've never seen this before, Matthew 28.
The last thing Jesus says, I am with you always.
I mean, Jason, what a connection.
Wow.
I'm looking forward to the New Testament, yeah.
Me too, we're already looking going, okay,
what are we gonna do?
Who are we gonna bring on our show and Jason?
You'll be one of those.
So I wish we could keep going verse by verse, but I think we'll
have to do an extended version of our podcast. We still have Matthew chapter 9, 10, 11, and
12. Jason, what do you want us to see in these chapters?
Let me just summarize what's going on here. And then we can focus in on just a couple of
parts to wrap things up today. Nine through 11 are continuing the prophecies
that we've already been seeing. This is a continuation of the prophecies during the
Syriouille from my war. So mixed in here are calls to repent with promises of a better
future, with some rebukes. For instance, chapter 9 verse 1 through 7, that's definitely promise of a better future.
Followed immediately in chapter 9 verse 8 all the way through 10 verse 4 by a rebuke of Israel
and Judah.
And if you look at 10, 1 and 2, we've circled back to the theme of rebuking Israel and Judah
for their abuse of the poor.
Woe to them that decree on righteous decrees and right grievousness which they have prescribed
and turn aside the needy from judgment and take the right from the poor of my people that
widows may be their prey, and they may rob the fatherless.
So once again, we get that time and again in Isaiah as a central rebuke of Israel and Judah.
God says that a Syria is going to come upon Israel. And this is sometimes portrayed in Isaiah as
a tool, as Syria's portrayed as a tool that God is using to punish.
My students always laugh at that, by the way.
Yeah.
They laugh at that always when I'm like,
God looks at Assyrian and says,
tool, I guess, tool is a term they use to,
it's like an insult.
So, I think it's interesting that he uses them as a tool,
but then God is also concerned that Assyria is going to boast
in how they have been used as a tool. And so in chapter
Isaiah 10 verses 5 through 19, God then turns to rebuke Assyria. Look for instance at chapter 10 verse 15,
this is one of the greatest rebukes of a tool. He says, shall the axe boast of itself against him that he with therewith?
So is the axe going to turn around at the person using it?
And boast, I'm the one doing all the work. He continues on. Or shall the saw magnify itself
against him that shakeeth it? So his point is, no, Aceria, you have no grounds to boast.
This is not your doing.
I am allowing this to happen.
And if my hammer turned and talked to me,
first of all, I'd be a little bit shocked.
The second, if it was telling me how great it was,
I'd say, well, watch how great you are without me.
Yes.
So God is putting a Syria in its place right here.
After that, we get more, another promise of a better future in chapter 10 verses
20 to 21. We get more about punishment by the hand of Assyria and how it's part of God's plan and
will soon be over in chapter 10 verses 24 and 25. Then it talks about how there will be peace,
then it talks about how there will be peace, which is described very poetically in chapter 11 verses 6 through 9. We get peace described as a time when a child can play on the whole of an
ask or the lion and the lamb lying down together or the wolf in the lamb. Yeah, and the leopard with
the kid in verse 6, a promise that the end of all of this will be peace.
And then chapter 12 is sort of a conclusion to the prophecy. So the prophecy sort of ends
at the end of 11, then chapter 12 is wrapping up everything that's happened,
acknowledging that all of this is the work of God and that thanks and praise are owed to God for his mercy, for his plan,
for everything that God is doing to save his people.
Even though it might not seem like a lot of saving is going on,
the preparation of this righteous remnant is for the sake of Israel.
So chapter 12 is, God is so good to us in the good and the bad because all of it is
meant to save us. Even though these chapters 9 through 11 are really a continuation of what happened
back, sorry, in chapter 6, talking about these events during the Syrie from my war and Isaiah's
prophecies to the people then to warn them of what was coming and to encourage the righteous to have
hope in a peaceful future, even though a Syria was bearing down on them of what was coming and to encourage the righteous to have hope
in a peaceful future, even though Assyria was bearing down on them and there was a threat
of greater violence, despite that context, once again, there are ways in which these words
echo through time. And I think it's very easy to read ourselves into these chapters,
or to liken these chapters to our people, as Nephi would say. I'm thinking in particular of
passages like chapter 11 verses 11 and 12. Let me just read them real quick. And it shall come to pass in
that day that the Lord shall set his hand again a second time to recover the remnant of his people.
There's that mention of that righteous remnant again. The remnant of his people, which he'll be left from Assyria, from Egypt, from
Pathros, from Kush, from Elon, from Shinnar, from Hanna, and from the islands of the sea.
From everywhere, sounds like.
Yeah, and he shall set up an ensign for the nations, and they shall assemble the outcasts of Israel
and gather together the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth.
I think just as Matthew read into these chapters and saw in them fulfillment of Jesus or Jesus more fully fulfilling these events,
I think we as Letterday Saints with the command to go into the world and gather Israel can read into these passages a more full fulfillment
in our own day. This of course has been one of the major focuses of President Nelson. He
gave that wonderful talk back in October 2020. I'm thinking of the 2020 talk, let God
prevail. He says, for centuries, prophets have foretold this gathering and it is happening
right now as an essential prelude to the
second coming of our Lord. It is the most important work in the world. This pre-millennial gathering
is an individual saga of expanding faith and spiritual courage for millions of people.
And as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, or Latter-day Covenant Israel,
we have been charged to assist the Lord
with this pivotal work.
I think a passage like this one in Isaiah
is definitely one that will resonate with us
as Latter-day Saints today,
given our Latter-day responsibility
to go into the world and gather Israel.
That's fantastic.
Reading verses like that can tell you why so many prophets
today have said prophets all through time have looked down to this day. And I like that we're seeing
kind of what we talked about, setting up an ensign for the nation before that was the Assyrian
armies. Now it's the beginning of a latter-day gathering. And it says in verse 10 that in that day
there shall be a root of Jesse, which he'll stand for an ensign of the people. And then says in verse 10 that in that day there shall be a root of Jesse, which
shall stand for an ensign of the people. And then in verse 12, he shall set up an ensign for the
nations. So there's that gathering and notice four corners of the earth. So this scattering is
worldwide, they're everywhere. Go, go bring them in. Yeah. In some ways we might think of that as the counterpart to the temple work we
do today. Our temple work is part of binding up people's across dispensations in preparation for
the second coming of Jesus Christ. The scattering was influencing the nations. Scattering gods chosen
people throughout the world to be that
leaven or that salt of the earth. In my classes I like to call it a
fortunate scattering because it's bred the blood of Israel everywhere. So now
you'd be hard pressed to find anybody who isn't House of Israel and how we're
gonna go gather them in. Yeah, that's great, John. It's like trying to find the yeast
after the bread's been cooked
It's throughout the whole thing. He can't pick it back out. Isaiah concludes with chapter 12
Jason which to me is one of the more beautiful chapters that we're gonna study this week
this chapter 12 is worth just reading out loud and in that day, thou shalt say, oh Lord, I will praise thee
Though thou was angry with me, thine anger has turned away and thou comfortest me.
Behold, God is my salvation. I will trust and not be afraid for the Lord.
Jehovah is my strength and my song. He also has become my salvation. It's very rare, right Jason, that they leave Jehovah.
Yeah, it is absolutely. Usually ithovah? Yeah, it is, absolutely.
Usually it's capitalized, all caps Lord.
Yeah, and then this one, it's all caps Jehovah.
Verse 3, therefore, with joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation.
I mean, this is the pen of heaven.
This is beautiful language.
In that day shall ye say, praise the Lord, call upon
His name, declare His doings among the people. Make mention that His name is exalted. Sing unto the
Lord for He have done excellent things. This is known in all the earth. Cry out and shout. That
will inhabit in sub-sion for great is the Holy One of Israel in the midst of the, oh wow, those
are some powerful six verses.
What do you guys see there? I'm immediately thinking of what John pointed out earlier
when we were discussing the passage in Isaiah 6 where Isaiah cries out,
Lord how long? And John pointed out that that is echoed in the words of Joseph Smith and Liberty Jail Lord how long and the words of others. I
think in the moments of our trials we feel that need to cry out Lord how long. It
can seem as if the trials will never end and yet the beautiful promise here is
there will come a time when we will look back on those trials and they will seem but a moment. And we will be
healed. We will be able to sing to God, thou comfortest me." Jason, you mentioned the times of trial.
I thought of this talk, mountains to climb, present, Henry B. Eiring. When hard trials come, notice
he doesn't say if. When hard trials come, the faith to endure
them, the faith to endure them well will be there. Built as you may now notice, but may not have at
the time that you acted on the pure love of Christ, serving and forgiving others as the Savior would
have done, you built a foundation of faith from loving as the Savior loved and serving for him. Your faith in him led to acts of charity that will bring you hope.
And then he adds this, it is never too late to strengthen the foundation of faith. That feels to me like a Isaiah chapter 12.
And it makes me think of President Nelson's recent talk where he gave us some visual aids. We walked down to the foundation of the Salt Lake Temple as it's being strengthened.
And you called on us to strengthen our own spiritual temptations.
Jason, we've had a great day today. Isaiah chapters one through twelve. How would you sum this up?
If there's anything that I want our listeners to know is, first of all, you can understand Isaiah.
one our listeners to know is first of all, you can understand Isaiah. It is possible. You can do it.
So do it. Read Isaiah. And when you do, read it for its beauty, it's poetry. Read it for its witness to God's work among his people. Read Isaiah for what it meant in Isaiah's time and read Isaiah for what it means to you today
All the ways that Isaiah echoed through time or as Jesus Christ put it to the Nephites or a read it knowing that all that Isaiah speak
Has been and shall be so I think that's the message
Before we let you go Jason
I think our listeners would be interested in your journey
as both a Bible scholar and a believing Latter-day saint.
What's that journey been like for you?
I became a Bible scholar because I am a believing Latter-day
saint.
So those two for me are one and the same.
I am a convert to the church.
I started attending church when I was 16 and was baptized when I was 18.
Part of my conversion to the church was also a conversion to a love of learning.
I had always struggled in school.
I struggled throughout high school to the point where a friend asked me if I wanted to read
the book of Mormon and
offered me a copy and I laughed. I said I don't read my homework. What makes you think I'm
going to read that book that is ridiculously long? I'm never going to read that. She was quick
on our feet. She said it's okay. I've got a copy on cassette tape. You can listen to it. So that
was my introduction to the book of Mormon. It was listening to,
not just any, it was the dramatized version on cassette tape. But eventually that turned into
reading the book of Mormon a little bit more and then wanting to understand more and starting to
read books written by modern day prophets and apostles and my friends who invited me to come to
church also invited me to attend early morning seminary.
They sort of tricked me. They said, hey, there's this really cool thing that we all do every day. We get together about six o'clock and and we read scriptures together and visit and hang out.
It's really cool. I thought, yeah, that's that's why I'm not doing it anything at six o'clock.
It might sign me up. I got the official letter in the email saying welcome to early morning Civilian area what I immediately called up my friends that there's no way I am coming at six in the morning
I am sleeping at six in the morning they said come for a week or two if you don't like it you don't have to come anymore
So so I went for the next two years and it and it just so happened those two years of seminary
We're the old testament and the new testament.
Wow.
So part of my conversion to the church was studying in depth the old testament and then the new testament and of course reading the book of Mormon on my own.
So out of my conversion grew this love of learning.
I just I wanted to know more and more.
So on my mission, I had heard that Joseph Smith studied Hebrew, so when
I got back I wanted to do that. So as soon as I was at the NYU and had the opportunity,
I studied some Hebrew and I just fell in love with understanding the scriptures on their
own terms as well as understanding how they apply to me today. And so from there, all
of my career path led me to this point of a profession where I study
the scriptures all day and share what I learn, which is wonderful.
I think sometimes there's a misconception that all religious scholars out there are liberal
atheists or something like that, but the truth is, overwhelmingly, those who went into studying the Bible began because
they loved the Bible and are Christian. And most of them remain Christian. I remember talking about
the sort of misconceptions of how things are outside of, say, a place like BYU. I remember when I
showed up at Yale Divinity School. I was a little bit scared. I was a
little bit timid. I assumed when I showed up, everybody would have an anti-mormon pamphlet in
their back pocket and be ready to whip it out at a moment's notice and take me to task. And that
wasn't the case at all. It was actually the exact opposite. The friends I met there of different
faiths welcomed me in and were genuinely interested in understanding
why I believed what I believed and how I worshipped and in sharing with me the beliefs that they
had and the way they worshipped. It was such a wonderful experience and so enlightening.
And that's not to say that I've never had struggles in my studies with my faith, but the times that
I have, they have tended to be not because of something I've learned, but because of my
disposition. I think that's the best way of saying it. In other words, doctoral studies
are difficult. They require a lot of effort from you and a lot of time, and it is very
easy to allow that effort and time to crowd out your own spiritual practices. And when you are
studying the Bible for a living, when you're studying Scripture for a living, it is hard to separate that from your own personal devotional practices with Scripture.
And so there have been challenging times over the course of my learning, but they have tended to
be those where I allowed my studies to crowd out my faith or to treat religion as something separate
from me. I've had some colleagues sometimes describe it as
putting on their church hat and then they take that off and they put on their academic hat
and wearing these two hats. I once thought about my scholarly practices and my spiritual practices
in those terms, but I no longer find that comparison helpful. I really like what Elder
Neal A. Maxwell said about the disciple scholar eventually realizing that they
are only a disciple. And I am not two separate people. I am one person who loves to
study the scriptures and learn from them from a historical perspective
and finds great joy in how that informs my faith. And I am also somebody who studies scriptures
to hear the word of the Lord and to open myself up to have his promptings in my life.
Wow. Dr. Jason Combs, thank you. What a great day we've had with you learning from this book and learning from you and your life experience.
Now, thank you for inviting me. This has been great.
This won't be the last time we see you on Follow Him.
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And we hope all of you will join us next week.
We have Morizea to study on Follow Him.
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