Friday, October 4, 2019

Isaiah in the Book of Mormon 2 Nephi 14 Isaiah 4


Isaiah 4 or 2 Nephi 14
By Jeffrey Bushman Aug. 2017

Chapter 14

Zion and her daughters will be redeemed and cleansed in the millennial day—Compare Isaiah 4.
The JST places verse one of this chapter at the end of the previous chapter
1 aAnd in that day, seven women shall take hold of one man, saying: We will eat our own bread, and wear our own apparel; only let us be called by thy name to take away our breproach.  (The stigma of being unmarried and childless) The footnote talks about the scarcity of men because of war, and will make it so 7 women will take hold of one men and ask him to marry them and they are willing to pay their own expenses for the chance to bear a child and the reproach that came from that stigma in Isaiah’s time. President Wilford Woodruff wrote the following experience he had about this verse
Wilford Woodruff
I had been reading the revelations...[when] a strange stupor came over me and I recognized that I was in the Tabernacle at Ogden. I arose to speak and said...I will answer you right here what is coming to pass shortly....I then looked in all directions...and I found the same mourning in every place throughout the Land. It seemed as though I was above the earth, looking down to it as I passed along on my way east and I saw the roads full of people principally women with just what they could carry in bundles on their backs...It was remarkable to me that there were so few men among them...Wherever I went I saw...scenes of horror and desolation rapine and death...death and destruction everywhere. I cannot paint in words the horror that seemed to encompass me around. It was beyond description or thought of man to conceive. I supposed that this was the End but I was here given to understand, that the same horrors were being enacted all over the country...Then a voice said "Now shall come to pass that which was spoken by Isaiah the Prophet That seven women shall take hold of one man..." (Journal of Wilford Woodruff, June 15, 1878 as taken from Isaiah: Prophet, Seer, and Poet, by Victor L. Ludlow, p. 109)
After these horrific judgments then comes the time that all righteous covenant people of the Lord have dreamed about.
2 In that day shall the abranch of the Lord be beautiful and glorious; the fruit of the earth (Christ is the spiritual food or restoration of the gospel) excellent and comely to them that are escaped of Israel.  KJV 2 In that day shall the abranch of the Lord be bbeautiful and glorious, and the cfruit (earth renewed, productive, glorious)of the earth shall be excellent and comely for them that are descaped of Israel.  The term branch here can have several meanings. One can be that Christ is the branch and he will bring the fruit of the gospel in its fullness again to the earth.  This will be made available for righteous Israel to bless their lives.  “Centuries ago John Calvin saw in this verse a promise that a ‘New Church shall arise’ created by Jesus Christ himself. (Calvin Commentaries 1:152-53, as taken from Isaiah: Prophet, Seer, and Poet, by Victor L. Ludlow, p. 110  )   Sounds like how the Church of Jesus Christ of latter-day Saints was restored.  Other scholars believe that the branch just refers to the house of Israel and after it is first cleansed by the Lord (see D&C112:23-26) it will then become glorious when they associate with the Lord personally as he reigns on the earth.
3 And it shall come to pass, they that are aleft in Zion and remain in Jerusalem shall be called holy, every one that is written among the living in Jerusalem—KJV 3 And it shall come to pass, that he that is aleft in bZion, and he that remaineth in cJerusalem, shall be called holy, even every one that is dwritten (i.e. those saved by approval by the Messiah) among the living in Jerusalem:
4 When the Lord shall have awashed away the filth of the daughters of Zion, and shall have purged the blood of Jerusalem from the midst thereof by the spirit of judgment and by the spirit of bburning.  The wicked will be destroyed by fire for their evil acts and for refusal of the atoning blood of the Savior. Washing away the filth and purging the blood brings to mind the ancient sacrifices in which the burnt offerings were rinsed to remove impurities, or the cleansing atonement of Christ, and washings and anointings.  In finally bringing all these elements together, the Lord will create the New Jerusalem, Zion.  The Hebrew word here, bara, connotes an absolute creation or salvation through him who is the “author of Salvation: see Heb 5:8-9
When the Lord has cleansed the earth, he will set up His dwelling and His protective presence here.
5 And the aLord will create upon every dwelling-place of mount Zion, and upon her assemblies, a bcloud and smoke by day and the shining of a flaming fire by night; for upon all the glory of Zion shall be a defence. KJV 5 And the Lord will create upon every dwelling place of mount aZion, and upon her assemblies, a bcloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming cfire by night: for upon all the glory shall be a defence.  In this verse there seems to be protection for Zion  even before the Lord comes, in D&C 115:5-6 the Lord talks about the stakes of Zion are for a defense and a refuge when wrath is going to be poured out on the earth. Isaiah also describes the blessing of living with the Lord at the time of His coming.  He makes reference to Moses’ day when the covenant people of the Lord were guided in the wilderness by a cloud in the day time and a pillar of fire in the night time.  He will personally watch over his people as the coming bridegroom will watch over his family giving protection and direction and letting them partake of the Glory of the Lord.  This will be much different because Moses was the only one to approach the tabernacle when it was filled with smoke or God’s glory.  It now will be available to all, and under the tabernacle or wedding canopy, the remarriage of Yahweh and his people, promised and prophecied in Isaiah and throughout the Old Testament, will be consummated at last. 
The Lord is preparing a people for the Millennium
6 And there shall be a tabernacle for a shadow in the daytime from the heat, and for a place of arefuge, and a covert from storm and from rain..  I will conclude this chapter with a quote from Elder Orson Pratt taken from the Journal of Discourses, volume 18:82  —“And the Lord will create upon every dwelling place of mount Zion, and upon her assemblies, a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flaming fire by night: for upon all the glory shall be a defence. And there shall be a tabernacle for a shadow in the day time from the heat, and for a place of refuge, and for a covert from storm and from rain.” I believe this building is called a Tabernacle, and it will accommodate from twelve thousand to fifteen thousand persons, and it is a tolerably cool place for the people in the heat of summer, especially to be a shade in the day time from the heat, and for a place of refuge and a covert from storm and from rain and tempest. I do not think that storms or tempests would affect a congregation that might be assembled in the Lord's Tabernacle; but I wish particularly to call your attention to the preceding verse—“The Lord shall create upon every dwelling place of mount Zion, and upon all her assemblies, a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a flame or pillar of fire by night.” I do not see any cloud covering this house, or the congregation that is before me. What is the reason? The time has not yet come. The time is to come when God will meet with all the congregation of his Saints, and to show his approval, and that he does love them, he will work a miracle by covering them in the cloud of his glory. I do not mean something that is invisible, but I mean that same order of things which once existed on the earth so far as the tabernacle of Moses was concerned, which was carried in the midst of the children of Israel as they journeyed in the wilderness. Did God manifest himself in that tabernacle that was built according to the pattern which he gave unto his servant Moses? He did. In what way? In the day time a cloud filled that tabernacle. The Lord intended his people to be covered with the cloud continually, and he intended to reveal himself unto them, and to show forth his glory more fully amongst them; but they sinned so much in his sight that he declared—“My presence shall not go up with this people, lest I should break forth upon them in my fury and consume them in a moment.” Because of their wickedness he withdrew his presence, and his glory in a great measure was taken from them; but still Moses was permitted to enter the tabernacle, and to behold the glory of God, and it is said that he talked with the Lord face to face—a blessing which God did intend to bestow upon all Israel had they kept his law and had not hardened their hearts against him. But in the latter days there will be a people so pure in Mount Zion, with a house established upon the tops of the mountains, that God will manifest himself, not only in their Temple and upon all their assemblies, with a visible cloud during the day, but when the night shall come, if they shall be assembled for worship, God will meet with them by his pillar of fire; and when they retire to their habitations, behold each habitation will be lighted up by the glory of God—a pillar of flaming fire by night.
Did you ever hear of any city that was thus favored and blessed since the day that Isaiah delivered this prophecy? No, it is a latter-day work, one that God must consummate in the latter times when he begins to reveal himself, and show forth his power among the nations.

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