Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Roy Weldon (RLDS) on Book of Mormon Prophecies: Lebanon to be a Fruitful Field

  

LEBANON TO BE A FRUITFUL FIELD

 

In 1830, there were very few Jews in Palestine, and the country itself was desolate. The restoration of the Jews involves more than people. It involves the land also.

 

An old encyclopedia gives us the situation in Palestine in the early part of the eighteenth century.

 

Eighteen centuries of war, ruin, and neglect have passed over it. Its valleys have been cropped for ages without the least attempt at fertilization. Its terraced walls have been allowed to crumble, and its soil has washed down its ravines, leaving the hillsides rocky and sterile. Its trees have been cut down and never replaced. Its fields have been desolate. Its structures pillaged and all its improvements ruthlessly destroyed. A land of ruins without man or beast. Everywhere, on plain or mountain, in rocky desert, or on beetling cliff the spoiler’s hand has rested.—McClintock and Strong’s Encyclopedia, Article on Palestine.

 

The twenty-ninth chapter of Isaiah prophesies of a book to come forth. This is followed by this significant declaration:

 

It is not yet a very little while, and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field; and the fruitful field shall be esteemed as a forest?

 

And in that day shall the deaf hear the words of the book.—Isaiah 29:17, 18.

 

Both the Book of Mormon (II Nephi 12:79-87 [LDS: 2 Nephi 30:3-8]) and the Bible (twenty-ninth chapter of Isaiah) agree that the restoration of Israel is to follow the coming forth of a book. The Book of Mormon goes a little further than the Bible and identifies itself as being the book whose coming forth is to precede and herald the restoration of Israel (II Nephi 12:79-87).

 

When the Book of Mormon was published in 1830, Palestine was an unproductive wilderness.

 

In a book published in 1935, Mr. George T. B. Davis says:

 

The change that has taken place in Palestine . . . it almost unbelievable, and well nigh beggars description. Swamp lands have been reclaimed, and have given place to waving fields of grain. Sandy waters have been turned into beautiful orange groves. Desert places have been turned into a veritable garden of Eden. Indeed it is quite probable that such a sudden change from a waste wilderness to a land blossoming as the rose has never before been witnessed in the history of the world. (George T. B. Davis, Rebuilding Palestine According to Prophecy, page 16)

 

Our Good Neighbor magazine for October, 1952, contains some interesting information about Palestine.

 

Israel is planning 66,000 farm units by the end of 1954 with the rural population to be doubled within three years to reach 600,000 people living and working in farm areas or about 30 per cent of the population. More than 950,000 acres, which is almost 18 per cent of the territory of the state and well over one third of the total cultivable land in the country, is now under cultivation in Israel.

 

In addition to its agricultural wealth recent surveys indicate there may be rich oil deposits in Palestine. Its phosphate deposits are fabulous. There are also rich manganese deposits as well as other valuable minerals. (Roy Weldon, Other Sheep: Book of Mormon Evidences [Independence, Miss.: Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and Herald Publishing House, 1958], 80-81)

 

Further Reading:

 

Resources on Joseph Smith's Prophecies

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