Sunday, February 8, 2026

James Denney on Jesus's Debate with the Sadducees in Mark 12

  

Jesus, for His part, answers quite seriously. Do ye not therefore err? He says. The meaning of " therefore " (δια τουτο) has been disputed. It is often read in an anticipative sense, as if Jesus meant: Are you not misled for this reason, that you are ignorant of the Scriptures and of the power of God? Weiss says this has no analogy in the New Testament. However this may be, it is certainly more natural, and yields a deeper and more apposite meaning, to make the words retrospective. The very question of the Sadducees-the very fact that they have stated such a monstrous case-shows, not that the life of the world to come is totally incredible, but that they have totally misconceived it. They have assumed that it must simply reproduce this life, and renew all its relations; whereas, according to Jesus, it is so constituted (ver. 25) that questions involving these relations, in certain aspects, can never arise there at all. Marriage has its roots in nature, has reference to the succession of generations on earth, is what it is, so far, because of man's mortality; but where there is no death, there is no marrying nor giving in marriage, and therefore the question is inept.

 

This, of course, is not to be misunderstood, as if in the life to come there would be no relation, or no peculiar relation, between those who have been intimately connected here. All it denies is that there will be any natural relation out of which the difficulty of the Sadducees could arise. But what of that? Even on earth, that which is merely natural ought to pass, and in every true marriage actually passes, into something spiritual. Husband and wife not only become one flesh, but one mind, one soul, one spirit. This relation, which has grown out of the other, or into which the other has been raised and transfigured, does not perish with it; on the contrary, it is capable of immortality and destined for it. The man and the woman who, to borrow St. Paul's words, "are not without each other in the Lord" here, will not be without each other in the Lord there. They will owe the completeness of their Christian life to each other even in the resurrection world. This truth, which cannot be touched by the vulgar puzzle of the Sadducees, ought to be noted in all its generality. A natural relation, whatever it may be-of husband and wife, of parent and child, of brothers and sisters in the same family -has no necessary permanence. All experience shows this. Such relations either lapse into nothingness,-a shocking phenomenon, but by no means rare,-or by God's blessing are elevated into spiritual ones, which have the capacity and the promise of immortality in them. One of the best blessings which the faith in immortality brings is its hallowing influence on the natural affections. It begins at the very beginning that transformation of them which secures to us their joy for ever.But Jesus not only declares, he explains the error of the Sadducees. They were the enlightened people of their day, and despised the believers as fanatics and obscurantists, but it was on their own side that the darkness lay. Doubt should be humble, and there is a severe reproof in the words of our Lord: Ye do err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God.

 

Here our Saviour clearly teaches that the Scriptures, meaning of course the Old Testament, contain a revelation of immortality. It may not lie on the surface, nor be visible to a careless or Sadducean reader, but it is there. If Jesus saw it, as He did, it is idle for verbal interpreters to say that they cannot find it in so many words. The very scripture that Jesus quotes has been the subject of pedantic comment. "Have ye not read in the book of Moses, at the bush, how God said to him, I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? He is not the God of the dead, but of the living." What kind of logic, it is said, have we here? Plainly the words mean, "I am He who was the God of Abraham," and then the argument for immortality is gone. To lay stress on the present tense (I am the God) is inadmissible, if for no other reason than that the verb is not expressed either in Greek or Hebrew idiom. But this line of objection is beside the mark. Jesus does not argue from the tenses, like a grammarian, but from the spiritual relations involved in the case; the revelation of immortality is made in this, that God has pledged Himself to man to be his God. The goodness and faithfulness of our Creator, and the value of our human life to Him: it is there that the promise lies. Faith in immortality is an immediate inference from faith in God. Once we know what He is to man, and what man is to Him, eternal hope is born. Because He lives, they who are His shall live also. Can we exhaust the friendship of God in seventy years? Or, on the other hand, can we believe that He really loves us, takes pains to guide us, to teach us, to discipline our character, to raise us from natural into spiritual life, to make us His children, only that at the end of so short a time he may let souls so dear to Him, that have so loved Him and been so loved, that have cost so much, go out into the dark, and never miss them? No, God is not so loveless, and cannot be so bereaved. Neither death nor life will pluck His children out of His hand.

 

This is the spirit in which Jesus reads the Scriptures, and finds in them a revelation of immortality. And it is remarkable that wherever the great hope comes clearly to the surface in the Old Testament, it is in this spiritual connection. "Enoch walked with God, and he was not, for God took him." When a man has walked with God, this is the only possible issue of his life. God takes him ; not nature, not disease, not an accident, not death, but He whose friendship gave life the promise of eternity. And so repeatedly in the Psalms. "I am continually with Thee; Thou hast holden my right hand." Here is the experience of God's friendship, close, uninterrupted, and faithful, which works the supreme hope, and the hope shines out in what immediately follows. " Thou shalt guide me with Thy counsel, and afterward receive me to glory." The writer of these words argues precisely as Jesus does in the passage before us; he feels that what God is to man-God who is from everlasting to everlasting-is so great, so tender, so divine a thing, that even death cannot touch it. In the last darkness he can say, "I will fear no evil, for Thou art with me." We find, too, the same interpretation of the same subject in that magnificent passage in Hebrews (xi. 13-16), the boldest in expression of any in the New Testament, which speaks of the faith of the patriarchs. " Now they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly, wherefore God is not ashamed of them, to be called their God, for He hath prepared for them a city." It is God, the writer means, whose faithful love, experienced all through this life, calls forth in the hearts of His people a hope which goes beyond life; it is God's present goodness which has the promise of an immeasurable, inexhaustible goodness as yet unseen. And God dare not frustrate the hope He has Himself inspired. He would be ashamed to be called our God, if He led His people to live and die in an expectation that was never to be fulfilled. Christ tells us, for His part, that He would not have suffered an illusory hope to root itself in His disciples' hearts. "In My Father's house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you." The whole argument for immortality is there; it is God who inspires the hope, and God is faithful. (James Denney, “The Sadducees and Immortality. Mark XII. 18-27,” The Expositor Fourth series 10, no. 6 [December 1894]: 402-6)

 

Robert G. Boling and G. Ernest Wright the text of Joshua 24:33 in the LXX

  

33y. Scholars are generally agreed that this concluding matter, surviving in LXX but not MT, was not original. We may suspect that it entered as part of the redactional work of Dtr 2. Perhaps this is what brought about the division of Joshua and Judges into separate books; with the sizable contributions made by the later redactor, the account of the pre-monarchical period was too long for a single scroll. Certain repetitions were inevitable as the original transition underwent two transformations to become a conclusion in one book and introduction in the other.

 

to his hometown sanctuary. Literally, ‘to his place and to his town.” Here the Greek clearly represents a hendiadys, beginning with Hebrew māqôm which often means more precisely “holy place.” That the same is intended here becomes clear in the next sentence.

 

Astarte (the “Lady”) and the gods of the nations. Compare Judg 2:11–15; 3:7; 10:6 on this formulation of the charge against Israel.

 

Astarte. First is specified the beautiful fertility goddess, chief consort of the Lord of storm and warfare Baal-Haddu, and no mean fighter in her own right.

 

(the “Lady”). Here LXX represents Hebrew ʿštrwt which seems to be a plural of “Astarte” used apparently to refer to the plurality of local manifestations of the goddess.

 

gods of the nations surrounding them. Compare Judg 2:12–13. In that context they are also called “the Baals” (that is, “the Lords”).

 

Yahweh. LXX does not distinguish between the title “Lord” and the personal name Yahweh which surely stood in the Hebrew here.

 

delivered. Literally, “gave over.” This is an inversion with the many examples of Israel as beneficiary of the same action by the sovereign. The effect is that of another incongruity, with the result that the reader of the “book” of Joshua was encouraged at once to study the following era of the Judges.

 

Eglon king of Moab. Judges 3:12–30. This looks like another corrective inserted by Dtr 2. For the first edition of Judges began the era with the oppression by the mysterious “Cushan-rishathaim” (Judg 3:8–10). The latter story in fact looks like a carefully crafted unit made to serve as “Exhibit A” for the Judges era in the first edition. Boling, Judges, AB 6A, 80–83. (Robert G. Boling and G. Ernest Wright, Joshua: A New Translation with Notes and Commentary [AYB 6; New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008], 542-43)

 

Robert Alter on Joshua 24:33

  

And Eleazar the son of Aaron died, and they buried him on the hill of Phineas his son, which had been given to him in the high country of Ephraim. (Robert Alter, The Hebrew Bible, 3 vols. [New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2019], 2:74)

 

 

The received text of Joshua ends on a relatively harmonious note of renewal of the covenant and the death in ripe old age of the military leader Joshua and the priestly leader Eleazar. But the ancient Greek translator used a Hebrew text that concludes more discordantly with the following verse, which confirms Joshua’s doubts and looks forward to Judges: “And the Israelites went each man to his place and to the town, and the Israelites served Ashtoreth and the Ashtaroth and the gods of the peoples round about them, and the LORD gave them into the hand of Eglon king of Moab, and he ruled over them eighteen years.” Though a variant manuscript might have added this report in order to create a bridge with the beginning of Judges, it seems more likely that a scribe or an editor deleted it out of motives of national piety, so as not to conclude the book with an image of Israel’s shame. (Robert Alter, The Hebrew Bible, 3 vols. [New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2019], 2:74)

 

The LXX reads:

 

33Καὶ ἐγένετο μετὰ ταῦτα καὶ Ελεαζαρ υἱὸς Ααρων ἀρχιερεὺς ἐτελεύτησεν καὶ ἐτάφη ἐν Γαβααθ Φινεες τοῦ υἱοῦ αὐτοῦ, ἣν ἔδωκεν αὐτῷ ἐν τῷ ὄρει τῷ Εφραιμ.† 33aἐν ἐκείνῃ τῇ ἡμέρᾳ λαβόντες οἱ υἱοὶ Ισραηλ τὴν κιβωτὸν τοῦ θεοῦ περιεφέροσαν ἐν ἑαυτοῖς, καὶ Φινεες ἱεράτευσεν ἀντὶ Ελεαζαρ τοῦ πατρὸς αὐτοῦ, ἕως ἀπέθανεν καὶ κατωρύγη ἐν Γαβααθ τῇ ἑαυτοῦ.† 33bοἱ δὲ υἱοὶ Ισραηλ ἀπήλθοσαν ἕκαστος εἰς τὸν τόπον αὐτῶν καὶ εἰς τὴν ἑαυτῶν πόλιν. καὶ ἐσέβοντο οἱ υἱοὶ Ισραηλ τὴν Ἀστάρτην καὶ Ασταρωθ καὶ τοὺς θεοὺς τῶν ἐθνῶν τῶν κύκλῳ αὐτῶν· καὶ παρέδωκεν αὐτοὺς κύριος εἰς χεῖρας Εγλωμ τῷ βασιλεῖ Μωαβ, καὶ ἐκυρίευσεν αὐτῶν ἔτη δέκα ὀκτώ.† (Rahlfs text)

 

33 And it happened with these events that Eleazar, son of Aaron the high priest, passed away and was buried in Gibeah of Phinehas his son, which he gave him on Mount Ephraim. 33a On that day, when the sons of Israel took the ark of God, they carried it around among themselves, and Phinehas served as the priest in place of Eleazar his father until he died and was buried in Gibeah, in his own place. 33b But the sons of Israel departed, each to his home and to their own city. And the sons of Israel worshipped Astarte and Ashtaroth and the gods of the nations surrounding them. And so the Lord put them into the hands of Eglon the king of Moab, and he ruled over them eighteen years.  (Lexham English Septuagint, 2d ed.)

 

Saturday, February 7, 2026

Mark Enemali, “Divine Presence in the Ark of the Covenant in 1 Samuel 4:1b-7:1" (2020)

  

An interesting point in the comparison of the ark with the ancient Near Eastern cultic images is the idea of the divinization of the images. This made the image holy and able to represent the deity. With respect to the ark, while it was not consubstantial with Yhwh, something of the being of Yhwh dwelled there. The ark as a site for Yhwh’s dwelling was consecrated and made holy in order to perform this function. This made it more than just a box; it was Yhwh’s dwelling place and therefore required reverence. The ark was not an image of Yhwh, nor was it coterminous with Yhwh; but something of Yhwh’s being was present in the ark. This made what one did with the ark important. (Mark Enemali, “Divine Presence in the Ark of the Covenant in 1 Samuel 4:1b-7:1,” in God and Gods in the Deuteronomistic History, ed. Corrine Carvalho and John McLaughlin [The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series 2; Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2020], 116)

 

 

Israel’s mishandling of the ark leads to its defeat and the abandonment of the army. Without the one who sits above the ark, the army does not exist. This idea points to the crucial role of the ark and the need to care for it. A question that comes to mind immediately is, What is the status of the ark? Is it a covenant repository or God’s throne? The meaning of the ark is a problem based on the evidence from the Bible. The ark is a tangible representation of divine presence. The nature of this presence is understood in different ways by the different traditions in the Bible. In some traditions, the ark is understood to be the physical manifestation of God’s presence, as it is God’s throne or footstool. In other traditions, it only bears the name of God or carries the tablets of the covenant.

 

Roland de Vaux sees no contradiction between the views of the ark as God’s throne and as a covenant repository, since both refer to some form of God’s presence. McCarter, however, finds a contradiction based on Near Eastern materials. The view of the ark as the visible representation of the divine presence is in line with the idea that the presence of the ark was necessary in order for Israel to win any battle (cf. Num 14:44). The ark is the guiding center (Num 10:33-36), and it precedes the people in battle (Joshua 3-4). It plays a significant role in the siege of Jericho (Joshua 6). The military role of the ark comes to the fore here. (Mark Enemali, “Divine Presence in the Ark of the Covenant in 1 Samuel 4:1b-7:1,” in God and Gods in the Deuteronomistic History, ed. Corrine Carvalho and John McLaughlin [The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series 2; Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2020], 118)

 

 

The idea of the ark as a representation of the presence of the God of Israel can be seen in the role the ark played in the priestly tabernacle or the temple of Solomon in comparison to the role the image played in the ancient Near Eastern temple, which functioned as the house of God. We can see this in several ways. The biblical accounts of the construction and dedication of the Priestly tabernacle (Exodus 25-31; 35-40; Leviticus 8-10; Numbers 7) and the temple of Solomon (1 Kgs 5:15-9:25; cf. 1 Chronicles 17-2 Chronicles 8) show a literary pattern that is common in the ancient Near East.

 

. . .

 

There is, however, no identification of the ark and Yhwh. The ark is “the incarnation of Yhwh’s sovereign power and will,” an “extension” of Yhwh’s extraordinarily powerful Personality.”

 

. . .

 

There is a real presence of Yhwh in the ark and the temple. It is important to point out, however, that even though we see a close relation between the understanding of the cultic statue in the ancient Near East as presence of the divinity and the ark as presence of the divinity, there is some difference with the understanding in the Priestly source. In the Pristly source there is a clear aniconic position. The ark is not the image of Yhwh. It does not correspond to the form of Yhwh in the way that the Mesopotamian statue may correspond to the form of the deity it represents. The form or image of Yhwh cannot be represented in that sense (cf. Exod 20:4; Deut 5:8). The being of Yhwh is interwoven with the ark in the sense that it is the tangible representation of the invisible deity.

 

Since the ark represents God, it is a source of destructive and protective power and should be handled with care. The Israelites are defeated because they failed to handle this presence with care. The Philistines are plagued because they mishandle the divine presence, and their god is defeated in the divine combat. As the ark returns to the Israelites, the men of Beth-shemesh are smitten either because they looked on the ark, which was taboo, as the MT might suggest, or because they were not members of the priestly family, as the LXX and Josephus may suggest. The LXX says that the sons of Jaconiah did not join with the people in celebration when they saw the ark of Yhwh. As Josephus’s A.J. 6.16 shows, the sons of Jeconiah were priests. That is why their absence is significant. The problem here is that the Beth-shemeshites treat the ark with unclean hands. It remains uncertain what they actually did. The only clear fact is that they fail to treat the ark with the appropriate reverence. That is why they are smitten. At Perez-uzza, Uzza is smitten for unlawfully touching the ark (2 Sam 6:6-7). In some sense or other, the idea of the presence of God as being dangerous that developed in the Priestly tradition of the Pentateuch is reflected here. The ark is the locus for the physical manifestation of God, and what one does to this concreate objects is a matter of highest concern because what is done to it is done to God. (Mark Enemali, “Divine Presence in the Ark of the Covenant in 1 Samuel 4:1b-7:1,” in God and Gods in the Deuteronomistic History, ed. Corrine Carvalho and John McLaughlin [The Catholic Biblical Quarterly Monograph Series 2; Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2020], 122-23, 124-25)

 

 

Orson Pratt on the "One Mighty and Strong" (cf. D&C 85:7) in a Letter to Joseph F. Smith, August 12, 1875

The following is the transcription of:

 

Orson Pratt, Letter to Joseph F. Smith, August 12, 1875,

Joseph F. Smith papers, 1854-1918, MS 1325, Church History Library

 

 

P.S. Aug 13th. Your family, so far as I know, are well.  All the articles which you sent have arrived.  Prest Geo. A. Smith is very low; the Dr. thinks that if some change does not soon come, he cannot survive long.  Prest B. Young is in feeble health; he went yesterday to Cache valley; Several of the Twelve are on a mission in the northern counties. The prisoner, John D. Lee, arrived, last evening in charge of the U. S. Marshall.  Two companies of U. S. soldiers are sent to protect Corrine against Indians.  We know of no Indian outbreaks in that quarter. These expeditions are got up merely for excitement.  O. Pratt.

 

Historian Office,

Salt Lake City,

Aug. 12, 1875.

 

Hon. Joseph F. Smith:-

 

Dear Bro., Your letter, bearing date July 19th, 1875, came duly to hand. You inquire, what information I have, concerning a Revelation or Prophecy, given through Joseph Smith, the Prophet, and contained in a letter, written by him in Kirtland, Ohio, under date of Nov. 27th, 1832, and directed to W. W. Phelps, then residing in Jackson County, Missouri.  The Prophecy reads as follows:-

 

“And it shall come to pass that I, the Lord God, will send one mighty and strong, holding the sceptre of power in his hand, clothed with light for a covering, whose mouth shall utter words, eternal words; while his bowels shall be a fountain of truth, to set in order the house of God, and to arrange by lot the inheritances of the Saints, whose names are found, and the names of their fathers, and of their children, enrolled in the Book of the Law of God; while that man, who was called of God and appointed, that putteth forth his hand to steady the ark of God, shall fall by the shaft of death, like as a tree that is smitten by the vivid shaft of lightning.”

 

Soon after this was given, it was generally understood in Kirtland, that the prediction was intended as a warning to Bishop Partridge, then in Jackson Co., Missouri, who had been, for some length of time, somewhat fearful and unbelieving in carrying out the law of God in regard to consecration and inheritances, wishing to introduce some of his own wisdom in modification of the divine law.  You will see by the revelations in the Doc. & Cov. that he, and some others in high authority, dwelling in Zion, had, about that time been severely chastened of the Lord: he, the only Bishop then in Missouri, had been threatened with removal from his office, unless he repented. So far as I was in the possession of information, the Prophet as well as the people in Kirtland, believed the prophetic warning was to arouse up Bishop Partridge to a sense of the important duties of his office, and to trust to God's plan, instead of devising some other plan of his own, wherein he sought to steady the ark of God. Who the personage, “mighty and strong” is, I am unable to say.  It will be some one sent to officiate in the office of the Bishopric, “to arrange by lot the inheritances of the Saints,” and to execute the law of God, after the redemption of Zion, and “to set in order the house of God;” whether he will be mortal or immortal is not revealed; but it is revealed that he will “be clothed with light for a covering.”

 

Yours Truly,

Orson Pratt, Sen.

 


Here are the images; click to enlarge:


Page 1:






Page 2:







 

Example of Debates Concerning Whether a Part of a Day is to Be Counted as a Full Day in the Babylonian Talmud

The following comes from Tractate Pesahim from the Babylonian Talmud:

 

            I.11 A. [4A] Rab was the son of R. Hiyya’s brother and the son of his sister. [Freedman: He was the son of his paternal brother and his mother was Hiyya’s sister on his mother’s side.] When he went up there [to the Land of Israel], he said to him, “Is Aibu [your father] alive?”

 

            B.         He said to him, “Mother is fine.”

 

            C.         He said to him, “Is your mother fine?”

 

            D.         He said to him, “Is Aibu alive?”

 

            E.         He said to his servant, “Take off my shoes and bring my clothing after me to the bathhouse.”

 

            F.          Three conclusions are to be drawn from the incident:

 

            G.        The conclusion is to be drawn: A mourner is forbidden to tie on a sandal.

 

            H.         The conclusion is to be drawn: A bad news that comes from afar is to yield a mourning period of only one day.

 

            I.          The conclusion is to be drawn: Part of a day of mourning is tantamount to the whole of that day. (Jacob Neusner, The Babylonian Talmud: A Translation and Commentary, 22 vols. [Peabody, Mass.: Hendrickson Publishers, 2011], 4:10)

 

Friday, February 6, 2026

Almon Fackrell on D&C 100:9-11 and its Fulfillment with Sidney Rigdon

  

Joseph of ancient Egypt prophesied of Joseph Smith as follows: “And his name shall be called after me; and it shall be after the name of his father . . . and I will make for him a spokesman. And I, behold, I will give unto him that he shall write the . . . (Book of Mormon) . . . and the spokesman of thy loins shall declare it.” (2 Nephi 3:15, 18)

 

This was published approximately two years before Joseph met Sidney Rigdon, a leader in the Campbellite Church movement. On October 12, 1833 Joseph received a revelation as follows: “And it is expedient in me that you, my servant Sidney, should be a spokesman unto this people; yea, verily, I will ordain you unto this calling, even to be a spokesman unto my servant Joseph. And I will give unto him power to be mighty in testimony. And I will give unto thee power to be mighty, expounding all scriptures, that thou mayest be a spokesman unto him, and he shall be a revelator unto thee, that thou mayest know the certainty of all things pertaining to the things of my kingdom on the earth.” (Doctrine and Covenants 100:9-11) (Almon Fackrell, Parallels of Moses, Jesus and Joseph Smith: A Study that Ties the Old Testament, the New Testament, and “Another Testament” Together [Salt Lake City: Hawkes Publishing Inc., 1996], 63-64)

 

 

Further Reading:

 

Resources on Joseph Smith’s Prophecies

Blog Archive