Clyde J. Williams, "Thus We See": Teachings of Mormon (Audio)
Scriptural Mormonism
Friday, July 18, 2025
The Use of "Wherefore" in 2 Nephi 15:4 (= Isaiah 5:4) and 2 Nephi 7:2 (= Isaiah 50:2)
Isa 5:4 (KJV) |
2 Nephi 15:4 |
What could have been done more to my
vineyard, that I have not done in it? Wherefore, when I looked that it should
bring forth grapes, brought it forth wild grapes? |
What could have been done more
to my vineyard that I have not done in it? Wherefore when I looked that it
should bring forth grapes, it brought forth wild grapes. |
Isa 50:2 (KJV) |
2 Nephi 7:2 |
Wherefore, when I came, was
there no man? when I called, was there none to answer? Is my hand
shortened at all, that it cannot redeem? Or have I no power to deliver?
Behold, at my rebuke I dry up the sea, I make the rivers a wilderness: their
fish stinketh, because there is no water, and dieth for thirst. |
Wherefore when I came, there
was no man; when I called, yea, there was none to answer. O house of Israel,
is my hand shortened at all that it cannot redeem? Or have I no power to
deliver? Behold, at my rebuke I dry up the sea. I make the rivers a wilderness
and their fish to stink because the waters are dried up and they dieth
because of thirst. |
In these two verses, the Book of Mormon interprets
"wherefore" (Heb: מַדּוּעַ), not as an interrogative, but a
conjunction. According to David P. Wright,
The BoM reading depends on the ambiguity
or polysemy of the English “wherefore.” . . . the BoM reading uses “wherefore”
as a conjunction which is not possible for Hebrew maddûac,
which reveals the BoM’s dependence on the English text. (David P. Wright,
“Joseph Smith in Isaiah: Or Joseph Smith in Isaiah,” in American Apocrypha:
Essays on the Book of Mormon, ed. Dan Vogel and Brent Lee Metcalfe [Salt
Lake City: Signature Books, 2002], 168)
While this is possible, it is also possible that an ancient
scribe or interpreter would understand it to have the sense of “therefore” or
be a rhetorical question.
What is interesting is that the LXX of Isa 5:4 interprets
the passage as being indicative:
What more shall I do for my
vineyard that I did not do for it? Because I waited for it to produce grapes,
but it produced thorns. (Lexham English Septuagint, Second Edition)
The Greek reads:
τί ποιήσω ἔτι τῷ ἀμπελῶνί μου καὶ
οὐκ ἐποίησα αὐτῷ; διότι ἔμεινα τοῦ ποιῆσαι σταφυλήν, ἐποίησε δὲ ἀκάνθας.
(Göttingen)
The word διοτι, according to BDAG, is "1. marker of a
causal connection between two statements, because" and "2.
marker used to introduce an inference, therefore."
For a similar usage in the Hebrew is Exo 3:3:
And Moses said, I will now turn
aside, and see this great sight, why (מַדּוּעַ) the bush is not burnt.
Examples of מַדּוּעַ being used in the sense of a rhetorical
question, consider the following examples:
Then king Jehoash called for Jehoiada with the other
priests and said to them, “Why (מַדּוּעַ) are you not repairing the house? Now
therefore do not accept any more money from your donors but hand it over for
the repair of the house. (2 Kgs 12:7 [Heb: v. 8])
As for me, is my complaint to
man? And if it were not so, why (מַדּוּעַ) should not my spirit be troubled? (Job
21:4)
John H. Elliott on Various Words, Phrases, and Formulas Used by Early Christians as an Apotropaic Against the Evil Eye
The
Speaking and Inscribing of
Potent Words, Phrases, and Formulas
Uttering certain powerful words,
formulaic phrases, the names of God, Jesus, and the angels, liturgical
expressions, and incantations were all considered by Christians as effective
means for warding off or repelling the Evil Eye. Examples of such expressions
also are found in written form on amulets and are presented below.
. . .
--The naming of children “Abaskantos”
(“Unharmed by the Evil Eye”) and the regular speaking of that name also were
deemed effective prophylaxis.
. . .
--The Chi Rho monogram is
a symbol formed by the superimposition of the first two Greek letters of the
name CHRistos (X + R, chi + rho). As a Christian symbol it
was used widely since emperor Constantine (fourth century CE) to identify all
things Chrisitan. It recalls the crucifixion of Jesus and his confession to
being a king of a kingdom not of this world (John 18:36). IT also served
Christians as a popular apotropaic, especially in Syria but also across the
Mediterranean world including Gaul and Spain. The monogram was put over doors
and windows, at entrances to churches and grave sites, on sarcophagi, on the
shields of Constantine’s soldiers (where previously the crescent moon had stood
to ward off the Evil Eye) and also on the helmuts of the emperor of his sons.
It is on the sarcophagus of arch-bishop Theodore of Ravenna, on the columns of
the Antonius and Faustina temple in Rome, and , with a Byzantine cross and
Alpha and Omega, on Rome’s Porta Latina. It also appears in conjunction with
other Evil Eye apotropaic symbols and inscriptions.
--The first and last letters of
the Greek alphabet, alpha and omega, appear in Rev 1:8; 21:6, and 22:18
as the letters by which God and Christ identify themselves in the book of
Revelation. These letters were inscribed on parchments and papyri, on buildings
(in Syria above the house portals), amulets, jewelry boxes, medallions and on
bells, in the company of other anti-Evil Eye words and symbols (Meisen
1950:162).
--Other letters of the Greek
alphabet were also used to form potent abbreviations: CH M G (= “CHrist-Michael-Gabriel,”
or “Mary bore Christ” [Christon Maria Genna]). These were
used for exorcistic purposes and also as protection against the Evil Eye.
. . .
--Figures of Christian crosses
were inscribed on amulets, buildings, churches, sarcophagi, and tombs.
Christians in Egypt removed from buildings the images of the deity Serapis
(pagan protector against the Evil Eye) and replaced them with the cross of Christ.
. . .
--The names of angels (e.g.,
Michael, Gabriel, Raphael, also Uriel Archaf) were thought to have apotropaic
power. They too were inscribed on amulets, lamina, put at thresholds and above
the entrance to churches and grave sites, along with other words and symbols.
--Holy persons likewise
were ascribed power as protective patrons against the Evil Eye. Under this
heading Meisen’s illustrative list includes Solomon, Daniel in the lion’s den,
the Three Young Men in the fiery furnace, the Magi at Jesus’s birth, the four
Evangelists, St. Sisinnios, St. Theodore, St. John and St. Veit. Their names
appear on amulets and apotropaics, often in combination with other
prophylactics against the Evil Eye. (John H. Elliott, Beware the Evil Eye:
The Evil Eye in the Bible and the Ancient World, 4 vols. [Eugene, Oreg.:
Wipf and Stock, 2017], 4:107, 108-10)
John H. Elliott on the Fish (ISHTHYS) Symbol Being Used as an Apotropaic By Early Christians
Christians, like their neighbors,
considered the fish to have apotropaic power. The individual letters of
the Greek word for “fish,” ICHTHYS, also formed an acronym representing
the Greek Words Iēsous Christos,
THeou Yios Sôtêr
(“Jesus Christ, God’s Son, Savior”). The term ICHTHYS thus was
considered an employed by Christians as a powerful apotropaic. Where found as
an inscription, the acronym generally identifies distinctly Christian apotropaic
and amulets. An amulet in the Berlin Bode Museum (previously the Kaiser
Friedrich Museum) shows two fish under a cross. A phallus amulet shaped like a
fish at one end and having its own end, a mano fica is a composite amulet,
which shows even more clearly the Christian association of fish, phallus, and mano
fica as related conventional designs for warding off the Evil Eye. The
Christus Rex (“Christ the King”) monogram on phylacteries also was ascribed
apotropaic power and marked the phylacteries as Christian. (John H. Elliott, Beware
the Evil Eye: The Evil Eye in the Bible and the Ancient World, 4 vols. [Eugene,
Oreg.: Wipf and Stock, 2017], 4:103)
John H. Elliott on the Development of the Evil Eye and Its Assocation with Demons or the Devil in the Post-Christian Period
It is not until the post-biblical
period that Christians explicitly link the Evil Eye with an external demonic
force, namely the chief of demons, the devil, or Satan. . . . The Evil Eye
spoken of in the New Testament writings is a strictly human phenomenon and is
regarded as part and parcel of everyday human experience and conduct. (John H.
Elliott, Beware the Evil Eye: The Evil Eye in the Bible and the Ancient
World, 4 vols. [Eugene, Oreg.: Wipf and Stock, 2016], 3:113)
(1) In contrast to Mesopotamian,
Egyptian, and Greco-Roman sources, the biblical authors make no mention of
an Evil Eye demon, a baskanos daimôn, alias the “demon of envy” (phthoneros daimôn). This Evil Eye demon was associated
with Hades and, often in funerary inscriptions and tomb epitaphs, said to be
responsible for the deaths of those remembered in the epitaphs. In the Bible,
the Evil Eye is never presented as a demon attacking humans from without. It is
rather always depicted, lamented, and warned against as a human defect
arising within the human heart and communicated by an ocular glance. Only in
the post-biblical period was the Evil Eye associated by the Christian communities
with Satan/the Devil.
. . .
(2) The Evil Eye, furthermore, is
never attributed to God, but only to humans. Israelites and Christians
never attributed an Evil Eye or envy to Yahweh, in contrast to the Greeks who
ascribed both to the gods. The God of Israel rather is portrayed as rescuing
his favorites from the baneful effect of the Evil Eye in typically unexpected
or unpredictable ways, as the stories of Joseph and David make evident. (Ibid.,
279)
The
Martyrdom of Polycarp—The Evil Eye and the Devil
The Martyrdom of Polycarp
(c. 160-170 CE) is an account of the recent death of Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna
in Asia Minor. The details of his death, which occurred c. 155-157 CE under the
Roman proconsulship of Statius Quadratus (21:1), are contained in a letter from
the church of the city of Smyrna to the church of Philomelium (Prescript).
Toward the end of the description of his execution and the events leading to it
(chs. 3-18), the letter emphasizes the role that the Devil played in the
treatment of Polycarp’s charred corpse. Martyrdom of Polycarp 17:1
reads:
The envious (antizêlos),
Evil-Eyeing (baskanos) and evil (ponêros) One [i.e. the Devil,
cf. 2:4], who resists the family of the righteous ([i.e. the Christian
community], however, when he saw the greatness of his [Polycarp’s] martyrdom,
and his life-long blameless career, and that he [Polycarp] was crowned with the
crown of immortality and had carried off the unutterable prize, he [the Devil]
saw it that not even his [Polycarp’s] poor body should be carried away by us,
though many desired to do this and to have a share in his holy flesh.
The Devil is not explicitly
mentioned but is clearly implied by the epithets and the context as the
transcendent agent directing the action here. An earlier passage of the letter
describing the modes of torture and death used against the Christians concludes,
“For the Devil used many wiles against them” (2:4). This same though of the
Devil manipulating human agents appears in 17:2: “Therefore he [the Devil] put
forward Niketas, the father of Herod, and the brother of Alce, to petition the
governor not to give his [Polycarp’s] body” [to the Christians]. “The envious,
Evil-Eyeing, and evil one,” the letter states, is the Devil working his malice through
human hands.
This is the first direct
Christian association of the Evil Eye with the Devil, Satan, the prince of
demons. It is the beginning of a tradition that continues in Christian circles
down to the present. IN this tradition, the Evil Eye, as well as envy (“through
the Devil’s envy death entered the world,” Wis 2:24) are attributed to the
Devil, Sata, who then infects humans and enlists them as his agents of the Evil
Eye and envy. This association of the Evil Eye with the Devil has been labeled
a “paradigm shift” that constitutes a distinctive Christian perspective
on the subject. While a significant development, it must be pointed out,
however, that this association of the Evil Eye and the Devil in particular
begins not with Jesus or the writings of the New Testament, but only in the
post-biblical period. Throughout the Bible, the Evil Eye is described as a human
characteristic and not as a demonic external power, as it is presented in
various Greek and Roman sources. This “shift” is later than the biblical writings
and the nascent Jesus movement. In actuality, it represents a turning or
return in the post-biblical period to the conceptuality of the pagan
world and the attribution of the Evil Eye to an Evil Eye demon (baskanos
daimôn).
This coupling of the Evil Eye and
the Devil, once established in the Chrisitan communities, had a lasting influence
on future generations. It set the stage for an association of the Evil Eye with
heretics as well as with witches (Hexen and Hexenaguen—withces and
witches’ eyes)—both classified as enemies of God and the church. Consequently
in the Middle Ages, casting an Evil Eye became equated with bewitching (verhexen)
as an action of the Devil and his minions operating through witches (Hexen)
as human agents, accompanied by the gradual disappearance of the Greek and
Latin terms baskainein and fascinare. Witchhunts included
searches for possessors and wielders of an Evil Eye, now deemed a telltale and
malignant feature of witches. Whereas the Greeks thought of the Evil-Eyeing
envy of the gods and imagined Evil-Eyeing demons, the Christian church,
demonizing the phenomenon of the Evil Eye, saw humans as under the sway of an
envious Evil Eyeing Devil and as pawns of Satanic Evil eyeing malice. In this
regard there was no separation of a pagan popular religiosity, on the one hand,
and on the other, an enlightened Christian theology tolerant toward the relics
of pagan culture. (John H. Elliott, Beware the Evil Eye: The Evil Eye in the
Bible and the Ancient World, 4 vols. [Eugene, Oreg.: Wipf and Stock, 2017],
4:52-54)
Address
to the Greeks
A further text of this early
post-biblical period, the Address to the Greeks (Cohortatio ad
gentiles), attributed to Justin Martyr, refers to its conclusion (ch. 38)
to the Sibyl’s prediction of the coming of
our savior Jesus Christ who . . .
restored to us the knowledge of the religious of our forefathers, which those
who lived after them abandoned through the teaching of the Evil-Eyeing demon
(didaskalia baskanou daimonos) and turned to the worship of those
who were not gods. (Address to the Greeks 38; PG 6.307-308B)
Here the Greek designation for
the Evil-Eyeing demon (baskanos daimôn) is used in reference to the Devil of Israelite and
Christian parlance, as in the Martyrdom of Polycarp 17:1.
A Christian inscription in the
Catacomb of Priscilla on the Via Saleria, Rome, one of the largest and oldest
of the catacombs, illustrates this association of the Evil Eye and the Devil.
It names the Devil baskanos pikros (“spiteful fascinator/Evil-Eyer”).
The catacomb was used for Christian burials from the mid-second to fourth
centuries CE. (Ibid., 55)
Michael S. Heiser on Paul's Reference to the Idols/Gods of Deuteronomy 32:17 and Their Ontological Existence
Paul’s Reference to
Deuteronomy 32:17
In 1 Cor 10:21–22, Paul is having
a discussion about sacrificing to idols and eating the meat sacrificed to
idols. He warns the believers there in Corinth in these two verses to avoid all
of this, to avoid this meat. Why? Because you have to be careful, because if
you partake of it, you enter into fellowship with demons.
Now, Paul believed demons were
real. He’s quoting Deut 32:17 and assigning reality to the shedim, to the other elohim
from these other nations that the Israelites fell into idolatry with.
So, let’s put all that together.
We have a person under inspiration, the apostle Paul, quoting this passage in
Deut 32, affirming that the elohim
here were real; they’re real beings. Paul refers to them as demons. These
beings were allotted to the other nations. These elohim allotted to the other nations are called the host of heaven,
the sun, moon, and stars in Deut 4.
So Deuteronomy, all through the
whole book (chapter 4 all the way to 32), assumes the existence, the reality,
of these other gods. But it’s in that same chapter, Deut 4, where all of this
starts, where this thread starts, where we have this phrase that “there is none
beside me.”
Yahweh’s Incomparability Negates Contradiction
Now, if such statements like that
were to telegraph the idea that these entities don’t really exist, then either
Deut 32 is wrong or Paul is wrong, or both. We don’t have that problem though
if we just say, “Look, statements like ‘there is none besides me’ just mean
that Yahweh is incomparable. These other elohim
exist; they are inferior. They are not like Yahweh. He is species unique.”
There is no problem theologically if we take the verse—and not just this verse,
but the whole statement found in other verses and similar statements found in
many places in the Old Testament—if we just take them as statements of
incomparability, we don’t have a theological contradiction. (Michael
S. Heiser, Sons and Daughters of God: The Believer’s Identity, Calling, and
Destiny, [Logos Mobile Education; Bellingham, Wash.: Lexham Press, 2019],
Logos Bible Software Edition)
Paul on Deuteronomy 32:17
The apostle Paul quotes Deut
32:17, which calls these real spirit beings “demons.” He quotes that passage in
1 Cor 10:21–22, when he warns the Corinthians not to eat meat sacrificed to
idols because they would be in fellowship with demons. “Outside the temple
context,” Paul says in 1 Cor 8, “it’s okay, but when it’s connected to a temple
complex, you do this, you are in fellowship with demons.” Paul took these
beings, the gods of these nations, who are called shedim, translated “demons” in the OT—he took them as real
entities.
This is part of the OT rationale
for how to view reality, how to view the world. Israel was alone against the
nations in part because all those nations had other gods. Initially it was
because they were punished with them, because of what happened at Babel, but
eventually those beings seduced the Israelites into moving away from the true
God, worshiping them, and that really frames the entirety of the rest of the OT.
This is why there is such
spiritual conflict. This is why we have apostasy. This is ultimately why we
have the exile. There was a spiritual warfare going on in the OT, and it all
starts with Deut 32:8–9. It is the introduction to what scholars call “cosmic
geography.” Israel is Yahweh’s domain. All the other nations are under dominion
of other real spiritual entities. (Michael S. Heiser, B161 Problems
in the Bible Interpretation: Difficult Passages I [Logos Mobile Edition;
Bellingham, Wash.: Lexham Press, 2016], Logos Bible Software edition)
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- Clyde J. Williams, "Thus We See": Teachings of Mormon
- The Use of "Wherefore" in 2 Nephi 15:4 (= Isaiah 5...
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- John H. Elliott on the Fish (ISHTHYS) Symbol Being...
- John H. Elliott on the Development of the Evil Eye...
- Michael S. Heiser on Paul's Reference to the Idols...
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