Thursday, January 28, 2016

Ephesians 4:5-7 as a non-Trinitarian Text

As many Trinitarians admit, while a distinction between the "persons" of the Trinity is tolerated (with great ambiguity; even the definition of "person" is debated), a distinction between "God" (or any other names/titles of deity) and any of the persons tends not to be tolerated. Notwithstanding, this is what we see time and time again throughout the New Testament, such as John 17:3, where the person of the Father is said to be in the category of "only true God," and the words of Paul in 1 Cor 8:4-6 (discussed here) and 1 Tim 2:5 that draws a distinction between "God" (not just the person of the Father) and Jesus, attempts to rehabilitate the Trinity through the concept of "divine identity" (á la Richard Bauckham, refuted by Dale Tuggy here) notwithstanding.

On John 17:3 and its Christological implications, as I wrote elsewhere:

Gilpin has used a text that refutes, not supports, his Christology Why? Firstly, one should note that in Trinitarian theology, there is an allowance (albeit, ambiguously) for a distinction between the “persons” of the Godhead (the Father is not the Son; the Son is not the Spirit; the Spirit is not the Father), as modalism would arise if no distinction was permitted between them; however, there is no allowance for a distinction between “God” or any of the divine titles (e.g., Yahweh; Adonai) and the persons, that is, the Father is “God” but so is the Son and Spirit. However, in many key “creedal” texts in the New Testament (e.g., 1 Tim 2:5 [discussed below]), there is a distinction, not just between the persons of the Father and the Son, but also between “God” and the Son, which is very non-Trinitarian. This is the case in John 17:3. The Greek reads:

αὕτη δέ ἐστιν ἡ αἰώνιος ζωὴ ἵνα γινώσκωσιν σὲ τὸν μόνον ἀληθινὸν θεὸν καὶ ὃν ἀπέστειλας Ἰησοῦν Χριστόν.

"Now this is life of the age to come that they may know you the only one who is the true God and the one whom you sent, Jesus Christ" (my translation).

The title, τον μονον αληθινον θεον (“the only one who is the true God”), is predicated upon a single person, not a “being” composed of three “persons” (however one wishes to define “person”), and such is predicated upon the singular person of the Father, with Jesus himself distinguishes himself in John 17:3 from “the only true God.” Absolutising this verse, this is a strictly Unitarian verse as only a singular person is within the category of being the “only true God.” However, in Latter-day Saint theology, “God” is a multivalent term, something Trinitarianism cannot allow when speaking of (true) divinities. That this is the Christological model of “Biblical Christianity” can be seen in many places, such as Heb 1:8-9:

But unto the Son he saith, Thy throne, O God, is forever and ever; a sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of thy kingdom. Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity, therefore, God, even thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness, above thy fellows.

This is an important pericope for many reasons—this is one of only a few places in the New Testament where Jesus has the term "God" (Greek: θεος) predicated upon him (others would include John 20:28 and probably, based on grammar, Titus 2:13 and 2 Pet 1:1], and yet, post-ascension, Jesus is differentiated, not simply from the person of the Father (ambiguously tolerated in Trinitarianism), but a differentiation from God (literally, the God [ο θεος]), something not tolerated in Trinitarianism. This can be further seen in the fact that this is a "Midrash" of Psa 45:6-7, a royal coronation text for the Davidic King, of whom Jesus is the ultimate fulfillment (cf. 2 Sam 7). Both the Hebrew and the Greek LXX predicates "God" upon the king, and yet, there is a God (in the case of Jesus, God the Father) above him. The LXX reads the same as Hebrews; the Hebrew literally reads "elohim, your elohim" (alt. "God, your God" [ אֱלֹהִ֣ים אֱ֭לֹהֶיךָ (elohim eloheyka)]

Another text that poses similar problems to Trinitarian dogma is Eph 4:5-7, which reads:

One Lord, one faith, one baptism, One God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all. But unto every one of us is given grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ.

In this pericope, εἷς, the cardinal number meaning 1 (and no, it and the Hebrew equivalent [אֶחָד] does not mean "plural one" or other such nonsense! For a refutation, see my article here, or Anthony Buzzard on אֶחָד here), and is predicated on the number of how many Lords, baptisms, and Gods and Fathers Christians have--numerically, one. Furthermore, "God" is equated, not with the Triune being or upon three persons, but one, God who is the one (again, εἷς) Father. Verse 7 distinguishes between, not just the Father, but the One God (εἷς θεὸς). Again, this is not consistent with much of Trinitarian formulations.

The Ephesian text is paralleled in Mal 2:10, where our having "one father" is paralleled with our having "One God) (i.e., God the Father, not the Tri-une being):

Have we not all one father (אָב אֶחָד/πατὴρ εἷς)? Hath not one God (אֵל אֶחָד/θεὸς εἷς) created us?

That a single person is in view is strengthened by the fact that "created" is in the third person singular (בְּרָאָנוּ/ἔκτισεν)



For further instances of the subordinationist Christology in Paul (and John), see here for a discussion of John 17:11-12 and Phil 2:5-11.


Introductory Bibliography on the Parables of Jesus

What follows is an introduction bibliography of suggested reading, from varying perspectives, on the parables. If I had to choose just one, however, it would be the Snodgrass volume.

Klyne Snodgrass, Stories with Intent: A Comprehensive Guide to the Parables of Jesus

Arland J. Hultgren, The Parables of Jesus: A Commentary

J.P. Meier, A Marginal Jew: Rethinking the Historical Jesus, vol. V: Probing the Authenticity of the Parables

Kenneth E. Bailey, Jesus Through Middle Eastern Eyes

Idem. The Cross & The Prodigal: Luke 15 Through the Eyes of Middle Eastern Peasants

Craig L. Blomberg, Interpreting the Parables

Joachim Jeremias, Rediscovering the Parables

John Dominic Crossan, The Power of Parable: How Fiction by Jesus Became Fiction about Jesus

Does Genesis 19:24 support the Trinity?

I just recently listened to a rather eisegesis/question-begging filled presentation in favour of Jeff Durbin (if you want to torture yourself for 70 minutes, click here). Many of his "proof-texts" for the Trinity (e.g., Heb 1:3; 8-9) actually refute, not support, Trinitarianism (for e.g., see my paper on LDS Christology here [Heb 1:3, for e.g., supports the Father having a body, for instance!). One of his arguments in favour of the Trinity is Gen 19:24:

Then the Lord (Yahweh) rained upon Sodom and upon Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord (Yahweh) out of heaven.

The argument is that there is one Yahweh in heaven and another Yahweh on the earth, indicating a plurality of persons within Yahweh. Firstly, allowing this to be the case, one has to reject basic mathematics and logic:

There is numerically only 1 Yahweh
There is 1 Yahweh in Heaven
There is 1 Yahweh on the earth
The Yahweh on heaven is not the Yahweh on earth.

This is the same as saying that 1 plus 1 equals 1. Apart from the rules of logic (e.g., identity of indiscernibles) and exegesis, mathematics is not the friend of Trinitarianism.

Furthermore, only one person who is Yahweh is in view here; Gen 19:24 is reflective of a Hebraism. In Latin, it is antecedens pro pronomine relativo, where an author repeats the noun in place of the pronoun. Consider other examples:

And Lamech said unto his wives, Adah and Zillah, Hear my voice; ye wives of Lamech, hearken unto my speech: for I have slain a man to my wounding and a young man to my hurt. (Gen 4:23)

Solomon amassed chariots and horsemen. He had 1,400 chariots and 12,000 horsemen, and he stationed them in the chariot cities and with the king [Solomon] at Jerusalem. (2 Chron 1:14 NASB)

So that ye come behind in no gift; waiting for the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ who shall also confirm you unto the end, that ye may be blameless in the day of your Lord Jesus Christ. (1 Cor 1:7-8)

Calvin, in his comments on Gen 19:24, cautioned his fellow Trinitarians against using this verse as a valid "proof-text" for a plurality of persons within the One God, a caution Robert Morey, Jeff Durbin, and others really should heed:


The proof which the ancients have endeavored to derive, from this testimony, for the Deity of Christ, is by no means conclusive: and they are angry, in my judgment, without cause, who severely censure the Jews, because they do not admit this kind of evidence. I confess, indeed, that God always acts by the hand of his Son, and have no doubt that the Son presided over an example of vengeance so memorable; but I say, they reason inconclusively, who hence elicit a plurality of Persons, whereas the design of Moses was to raise the minds of the readers to a more lively contemplation of the hand of God. And as it is often asked, from this passage, ‘What had infants done, to deserve to be swallowed up in the same destruction with their parents?’ the solution of the question is easy; namely, that the human race is in the hand of God, so that he may devote whom he will to destruction, and may follow whom he will with his mercy. Again, whatever we are not able to comprehend by the limited measure of our understanding, ought to be submitted to his secret judgment. Lastly, the whole of that seed was accursed and execrable so that God could not justly have spared, even the least.

Gospel of John vs. "no-Lordship" salvation theories

Today, as part of my daily Scripture reading, I read chapters 6 and 7 of John . . . in Greek  (as one does). I came across a few insights that go against the "no-Lordship" understanding of faith (once-off mere intellectual assent of Christ; repentance-free "gospel").

John's gospel often uses present participles for a (true) believer's faithfulness, indicating that one's "accepting Jesus Christ as Lord" (to borrow common Evangelical terminology) is not once-off, but something that must be on-going until the end. Unfortunately, the KJV blurs things, but when looks at the underlying Greek, this becomes much more explicit. Consider the following:

And Jesus said unto them, I am the bread of life: he that cometh to me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on me shall never thirst. (John 6:35)

Both "he that cometh" (ο ερχομενος ["the one coming"]) and "he that believeth" (ο πιστευων ["the one believing"]) are present participles, showing that Jesus is commanding believers to continually come to him and believe on him. This is also reflected in John 7:38:

He that believeth (ο πιστευων ["the one believing"] on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water.

Even in popular "proof-texts" that are often abused for this formulation of "faith alone" (which I will note, is rejected as heresy by many Protestants), when one examines the Greek, refute such a concept. In John 3:15-16, we read:

That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life. For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, what whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

The phrase "that whosoever believeth" is a ινα-clause, indicating purpose, and the purpose is the salvation of πας ο πιστευων, literally, "all the believing ones." Again, on-going faith on Christ, not a once-off intellectual assent, it in view (see my article in the issue of particularity in John 3:16 here).

We see this concept again in the more graphic language Christ uses in the Bread of Life Discourse. In John 6:54, 56-58, John uses the verb τρωγω, which means "to gnaw/much/crunch," after previously using εσθιω, a less-graphic verb. John uses the present participle form of this verb (ο τρωγων) in these verses, as well as the present participle form of the verb "to drink" πινω (πινων):

Whoso eateth (ο τρωγων) my flesh, and drinketh (πινων) my blood, hath eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day . . . He that eateth (ο τρωγων) my flesh, and drinketh (πινων) my blood, dwelleth in me, and I in him. As the living Father hath sent me, and I live by the Father: so he that eateth (ο τρωγων) me, even he shall live by me.

On-going "eating" and "drinking" the flesh of Christ is required for union with Christ (v.56).

(For a refutation of Catholic claims that τρωγω shows Christ was teaching the Catholic understanding of the "Real Presence" in the Eucharist, see my posts here and here).

While the Gospel of John has been abused by proponents of "no-Lordship" formulations of salvation, when one examines the texts, they actually end up refuting such a perversion of soteriology. Furthermore, John clearly teaches baptismal regeneration in John 3:3-5, another refutation of no-Lordship salvation theories:

Jesus answered and said unto him, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. Nicodemus saith unto him, How can a man be born when he is old? Can he enter the second time into this mother's womb, and be born? Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.

For a defense of the LDS understanding of this pericope teaching the salvific necessity of water baptism, see my post, “Baptism, Salvation, and the New Testament, Part 4: John 3:1-7.” For now, it will suffice to quote two leading scholars on the Gospel of John:

Jesus’ words are both and answer of an explanation (3.3). In order to enter the kingdom of God, a person must be reborn, that is, start a new lie (3.4). This entrails more than merely perceiving that the kingdom has arrived (3.3.). Rebirth, and the commencement of this new life, are said to come about εξ υδατος και πνευματος, of water and spirit. This phrase (without the article), refers to a rebirth which the early Church regarded as taking place through baptism (1 Pet 1.3, 23; Tit 3.5). In the NT, γεννασθαι εκ occurs only in John and 1 John: εκ at Jn 3.6. (John McHugh, John 1-4 [The International Critical Commentary; London: T&T Clarke, 2009], 227.)

The evangelist appears to have deliberately exercised reserve about the Christian sacraments in writing for a pubic which included pagans whom he wished to influence towards the Christian faith. So he would not say plainly that initiation into the higher order of life is by way of baptism accompanied by the gift of the Spirit. Indeed, he may well have felt that to put it in that way would risk misleading such readers as he had in view. But he could bring in the idea of Baptism allusively. He was already had much to say about John the Baptist. In particular, he has recorded that John was sent to baptise εν υδατι (i.26, 31, 33—the threefold repetition of εν υδατι is impressive) and that he declared Jesus to be ο βαπτιζων εν πενυματι αγιω on the ground that he had himself seen the Spirit descending and remaining on Him (i.33). Thus the association of ideas, υδωρ-πνευμα, is established, although so far it is an association of contrast. Now in iii.22, after the discourse which contains the saying about birth from water and Spirit, we are told that Jesus was baptizing, and that the fact was reported to John the Baptist, who was simultaneously engaged in baptizing at another place (iii.26). The implication is that the two are regarded as competing practitioners of the same ritual, viz., baptism in water. But the reader is not to forget that Jesus is ο βαπτιζων εν πνευματι αγιω. The implication is that the water-baptism administered by Jesus (and therefore also the water baptism of the church, though this is not brought to the surface) is also baptism εν πνευματι. This is quite intelligible in the context of Johannine thought. The opening of the eyes of the blind by Jesus (partly through an act of ‘washing’, i.e., baptism) is also spiritual enlightenment (ix. 5-7) and we are to learn that the ‘living water’ which proceeds from Christ is the Spirit (vii. 38-39). (C.H. Dodd, The Interpretation of the Fourth Gospel [Cambridge University Press, 1958], 309-10).


For an LDS appraisal of the Lordship vs. no-Lordship formulations of salvation within modern Evangelicalism, see Jeff Lindsay's analysis here (btw: check out his entire LDS-related Webpages!)

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Blake Ostler on the Hosts of Heaven and Species Uniqueness of Yahweh

There have been some attempts, especially by Michael Heiser, to argue the species-uniqueness of Yahweh from the Old Testament. One such text that is employed is Neh 9:6. Blake Ostler wrote the following in response to Heiser on this issue:

Nehemiah 9:6: It is you, O Lord, you are the only one; you made the heavens (עָשִׂיתָ אֶת־הַשָּׁמַיִם), the highest heavens and all their host (כָל־צְבָאָם), the earth and all that is upon it, the seas and all that is in them. To all of them you give life, and the heavenly hosts bow down before you. (New American Bible [NAB])

Nehemiah claims that the hosts of heaven have been made or organized just as the earth was organized (עשׂה, 'asah) with everything on it. However, the sense of “create” here does not entail creation out of nothing but rather organization of the armies of heaven. Further, it doesn’t entail that the armies of heaven are created in all respects. The sun, moon, and stars are not “created” in the sense that they are brought into existence from nothing. Rather, the sun, moon, and stars are “created” in the sense that they are placed in the raqia or dome that separates the waters above the heavens from those below as Genesis 1 states. In fact, the parallel in Psalm 148:1-5 suggests that the “hosts of heaven” refer to the sun, moon, and stars: “Praise the Lord from the heavens; give praise in the heights. Praise him, all you angels; give praise all you hosts. Praise him, sun and moon; give praise, all shining stars. Praise him, the highest heavens, you waters above the heavens. Let them all praise the Lord’s name; for the Lord commanded and they were created” (יְהַלְלוּ אֶת־שֵׁם יְהוָה כִּי הוּא צִוָּה וְנִבְרָאוּ) (NAB).

Based on the parallel between “hosts of heaven” and the sun, moon, and stars in Psalm 148:2-3, the assertion that the “hosts of heaven” are created refers to the creation of the sun, moon, and stars, but only in the sense that the preexisting heavenly bodies are organized by being placed in the firmament or raqia on the fourth day in Genesis 1:14-18. As physically organized things, the sun, moon, and stars are deemed to be created or organized realities in Mormon thought as well. Returning to the Hebrew cosmology, it must be kept in mind that the Hebrews regarded the sun, moon, and the stars as sentient beings that can praise Yahweh. However, the sun and the moon are not among the sons of God who reside in the highest heaven above the heaven of heavens. The creation in Nehemiah 9:6 refers to dividing the waters by fixing the dome to hold back the waters above and the separate the waters from the heaven below the firmament. The sun, moon, and stars are fixed in the firmament and that is what constitutes their being “created” . . .  The armies or hosts of heaven like the sun, moon, and stars are the lowest in the heavenly hierarchy. These heavenly hosts or bodies are fixed in the solid but transparent “firmament” or raqia that is below the waters which are located in the heavens above the firmament. The raqia holds back the waters from flooding the earth. The sun and the moon move below the raqia, and the stars are fixed in it like lights in the dome. The sons of God in the council of heaven around God’s throne, in contrast, are above the heaven of heavens in the realm of the uncreated.

Thus, the proof texts reviewed by Heiser do not establish that the “sons of God” are not the same kind as Yahweh because they are created in the sense that they are ontologically contingent and he is not. Rather, they merely establish that: (1) some of the elohim are not considered to be fully divine beings like Yahweh; (2) some of the heavenly hosts such as sun, moon, and stars were created or organized at the time that the earth was created. The sun, moon, and stars already existed to be placed in the firmament. They are created only in the sense that they are organized by taking preexisting heavenly hosts and placing them in their order in the firmament. However it is contrary to the Hebrew scripture to regard the sons of God as created in the sense that they are brought into existence at the time of creation because they were already present with Elohim at the creation of humankind. When Elohim declares in Genesis 1:26: “Let us make man in our own image” (emphasis mine), the plural refers to the council of gods who assist in the creation. When God says in Job: “Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? . . . . When all the morning stars sang together, and all the sons of God shouted for joy?” (Job 38:4 7), Job cannot refer to the creation of the earth because the stars were placed in the raqia on the fourth day after the foundations of the earth had already been laid. (Blake T. Ostler, Exploring Mormon Thought, vol. 3: Of God and Gods [Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2008], 283-84.)


Blake also makes mention to “creation” not implying creatio ex nihilo; I would strongly suggest one to read his article, "Out of Nothing: A History of Creation ex Nihilo in Early Christian Thought," a response to recent attempts by William Lane Craig and Paul Copan to salvage belief in this post-biblical doctrine.

Another dilemma for Trinitarian Theology

In traditional Trinitarian theologies, Christ remains the “God-man” in his role as the heavenly high priest (cf. Rom 8:33-34; Heb 7:24-25; 8:1, 3), and will remain so eternally. However, alongside the logical problems of the hypostatic union (see my discussion of this doctrine in this paper, for example, under the heading, "The Hypostatic Union Examined"), the fact that Jesus, as the second member of the Tri-une God, has an additional (and now, exalted [cf. Phil 2:9]) nature than what He had prior to the Incarnation. This is handily illustrated in the following diagram that I recently came across (click to enlarge):




Some notes on the Nephites and the Law of Moses

I was recently in a theological discussion over dinner with a Reformed Protestant (Calvinist) while in Cambridge during the weekend. One of the issues that were raised against the antiquity of the Book of Mormon was the issue of the Law of Moses amongst the Nephites. My Reformed interlocutor argued that the Book of Mormon shows a poor grasp of the Law of Moses due to the Nephites, who were not Levites, offering sacrifices and building temples and similar structures outside of Jerusalem, as well as the religious freedom amongst the Nephites, something which he viewed to be problematic vis-à-vis Book of Mormon authenticity.

A lot of this “problem” was more or less repeated in 1831 by Alexander Campbell in Delusions, so this is not a novel argument though one does hear it quite often. For this reason, I will blog on this issue so there will be a ready-reference on this issue here.

Firstly, the Law of Moses is accurately depicted, albeit very subtly and in ways Joseph Smith could not have “faked” over, even allowing him to have a good grasp of the Bible when he produced the Book of Mormon. One of the best articles on this, which to this day remains unanswered by critics of Book of Mormon historicity, is that of John A. Tvedtnes, “King Benjamin and the Feast of Tabernacles.” Even in areas where some critics have argued the Book of Mormon messes up things, it comes out being authenticated by recent discoveries, such as the issue of Mosiah 2:3 and the firstlings of the flock.

Secondly, there are many instances of non-Levites, both before and after Exo 19, engaging in priestly activity (e.g., offering up sacrifices). As I wrote in my paper, “The Biblical Evidence for an Ordained, Ministerial Priesthood in the New Covenant from the Last Supper Accounts":

Old Testament Prophecies of the New Covenant Priesthood

A common misconception among many is that the concept of priests and priestly actions are part of the Law of Moses, and, further, only Levites, after the establishment of the Levitical Priesthood, engaged in priestly services and sacrifices that were acceptable to God. However, this is far from the case. Before God established the Levitical priesthood, there were priests among the Israelites. For example, Noah (Gen 8:20); Abraham (Gen 12:7); Jacob (Gen 31:54, 46:1) and Jethro (Exo 18:12) offered sacrifices that were accepted by God. In Exo 19:22, 24:4-5, mention of priests and young men offering sacrifices before the establishment of the Levitical Priesthood are mentioned. Even after the establishment of the Levitical Priesthood, other Israelites offered sacrifices and/or were priests. For instance, Micah consecrated one of his sons to be his priest (Judg 17:5), although later he took a Levite to be his priest (Judg 17:11-12). Gideon offered a sacrifice (Judg 6:20-28), as did David (2 Sam 6:13), Manoah (Judg 13:15-23), and the prophet Elijah the Tishbite (1 Kgs 18:30-38). Moreover, David’s sons were priests in 2 Sam 8:18 (the Chronicler altered this in his history, instead giving them the position of chief officials in the service of the king [2 Chron 18:17]), and so was Ira the Jairite (2 Sam 20:26).

For a book-length study of the Israelite priesthood and its background, see Aelred Cody, A History of Old Testament Priesthood.

Additionally, it was seen as proper amongst the people at Jerusalem to erect altars and even temples if one was a certain distance away from the cultic centre of Jerusalem. This is evidenced by the temples at Arad and Elephantine, for instance. Those officiating at the temple in Jerusalem were aware of these temples, and in the case of the latter, allowed them to rebuild part of the temple after it suffered damage, but as a result, to cease offering animal sacrifices (see Jeff Lindsay's fuller summary of the importance of Elephantine vis-a-vis Book of Mormon authenticity here). Furthermore, texts at Qumran show us that the Jews of this time allowed for altars and other erections to be constructed if one was three days outside of Jerusalem, again, consistent with the Book of Mormon (e.g., 11QT52:13-16).

On the issue of the New World practice of the Law of Moses amongst the Nephites, Brant Gardner offers the following insightful comments:

The law that Nephi inherited and implemented made no differentiation between civil and moral laws. The specific content of the law which Nephi was familiar is dependent upon how one accepts the historical development of the Old Testament . . . The exigencies of the new life could certainly lead to adaptations of the Old World model, but questions of leadership, worship, land management, and social organization would be based on the principles in the law of Moses. A rapid adaptation would have been applying the names of animals in the Old World law to New World fauna. For example, Exodus 22:1 says “If a man shall steal an ox, or a sheep, and kill it, or sell it; he shall restore five oxen for an ox, and four sheep for a sheep.” Neither oxen nor sheep were available in the New World, but the principle of restoration in an amount greater than the theft would still apply. Since there were five oxen to one ox, but only four sheep for one sheep, the New World would have to establish relative values for whatever animals would be involved in such reparations.

In spite of Nephi’s declaration that they followed the law of Moses, the Book of Mormon has relatively few clear examples of either civil or cultic practice related to that law . . . The Nephite law of egalitarianism appears to be based more directly on Isaiah than on the law of Moses (See commentary accompanying 2 Nephi 15:8.) (Brant A. Gardner, Second Witness: Analytical and Contextual Commentary on the Book of Mormon 6 vols. [Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2007] 2:91-92)

With respect to Isa 5:8/2 Nephi 15:8 referenced above, Brant offers the following comments which have important ramifications for approaching the Nephite understanding of the Law of Moses vis-à-vis their New World setting:

2 Nephi 15:8

8 Wo unto them that join house to house, till there can be no place, that they may be placed along in the midst of the earth.

Isaiah is condemning the accumulation of real estate. Those who “join house to house” are consolidating their land-holdings into a single tract, in the process evicting those who previously lived on the land. The role owner is now along because he has eliminated everyone else. Ludlow explains the legal context:

This practice violates the spirit of the Law of the Jubilee, the property law of ancient Israel, which states that “the land shall not be sold forever” (Lev. 25:23). Instead, land was to remain within families and clans as a perpetual inheritance. (See 1 Kings 21, in which Neboth refuses to sell his ancestral lands to King Ahab.) The hoarding of land described in verse 8 was in violation of this law, for when all properly was purchased by a few wealthy individuals, there was no place for the original families to dwell. Having no homeland, they were forced to move to the cities or live on the property of the owner as indentured servants or slaves. (Victor L. Ludlow, Unlocking Isaiah in the Book of Mormon, p. 117)

This question was a pressing social issue in Isaiah’s time. According to Norman K. Gottwald, professor at the Pacific School of Religion, Berkely, California:

With Damascus and Assyrian both weakened in the first half of the eighth century, first Jehoash and then Jeroboam II were able to reign over a peaceful and increasingly prosperous Israel, while a period of similar accomplishment was enjoyed by Judah under Amaziah and Uzziah. Agriculture and trade flourished. From the Book of Amos we learn, however, that the prosperity and national confidence were experienced chiefly at the summit of the society whereas the majority of peasants were in dire straits. No doubt taxation and corvée played a role, but the particular focus of Amos is on the massive shift in land tenure from traditionally guaranteed family holdings to privately amassed estates taken over by debt foreclosures on impoverished farmers. In short, as in Solomon’s united kingdom, the “wonders” of eighth-century Israel were concentrated in a privileged class who rose to their advantages by the systematic deprivation and disempowerment of the peasant majority. (Norman K. Gottwald, The Hebrew Bible: A Socio-Literary Introduction [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1985], 345-46).

Culture: Nephi quoted these Isaiah texts not only to stress their spiritual message but also to provide a social charter for his people. This passage articulates an ideal of economic egalitarianism for the Nephite community. Isaiah condemns the wealth derived through the acquisition of land that dispossesses other members of the community. Nephite society will attempt to establish Isaiah’s described economic ideal rather than the sharply hierarchal society he denounces.

Social egalitarianism versus economic stratification is one of the recurrent conflicts in Nephite history. While Nephi does not tell us that this is the reason for the text’s inclusion, the importance of the theme in the remainder of Nephite history highlights the fundamental nature of this people in Nephite society. Isaiah’ implicit endorsement of egalitarianism was therefore doubtless one reason Nephi included it in his record. It is also likely given the principle’s long-lasting importance, that Nephi also preached it and implemented it as a foundational social principle. (Ibid., 231-32)

Finally, on the issue of religious freedom, something that is noted as some as being an oddity in the Book of Mormon. On this issue, Brant notes the following:

The Nephite legal system did not attempt to restrict belief . . .  [according to Alma 30:7-8] the law of the land had a scriptural basis. It is not clear whether the quotation from Joshua 24:15 was part of the Nephite codification of Law or Mormon’s interpretation . . .  An interesting social problem is how to create law with a scriptural basis. The citation from Joshua is a prophet’s declaration that others had a right to choose, although Joshua was announcing a pragmatic, not legal, principle. Here, the pragmatic principle is expanded to a legal principle, both expanding and formalizing the scriptural episode. A single episode becomes an example and then a formal, legal model for social actions.

This method is by no means unusual. For instance, we find the following in the Dead Sea Scrolls:

[. . .] with silver [. . .] [. . .] and the year of [jubilee] shall arrive [. . .] [. . .] no one should abandon […] […] for it an abhorrent thing; and the verse that says [. . . “if you buy from] your neighbour, do not defraud him (Lev. 25:14). Now this is the meaning […] [. . . he must be frank about] all that he is aware of that is found [in whatever he is selling;] [if there is a fault in it] and he is aware of it, he is cheating him, whether it is human or animal. And if [. . .]  to betroth, he shall tell him about all her defects, lest he bring upon himself the judgment of [the curse, which says, “Cursed] is he who leads the blind astray on the road” (Deut 27:18). Moreover, he should not give her to someone who is not proper for her, for this [is a case of “forbidden mixtures” . . . like plowing with] an ox and ass, or clothing made of wool and flax together. (4Q271 Frag. 1 Col )

This passage expands the meaning of Deuteronomy 27:18. This writer is basing regulations on statements from scripture but applying the scripture in new contexts for new laws, precisely the process at work in this Book of Mormon text. (Ibid., 4:406-7; square brackets added for clarification.)


When the facts are examined carefully, there is no real challenge to the historicity if the Book of Mormon and, in fact, much to support its claim to being a translation of a document from antiquity.

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