What Is Isaiah Doing in First Nephi? Or, How Did Lehi鈥檚 Family Fare So Far from 魅影直播?
S. Kent Brown, 鈥淲hat Is Isaiah Doing in First Nephi? Or, How Did Lehi鈥檚 Family Fare So Far from 魅影直播?鈥 in From Jerusalem to Zarahemla: Literary and Historical Studies of the Book of Mormon (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1998), 9鈥27.
The prophet Nephi incorporated words of Isaiah in his first book for both public and private reasons. Nephi openly declared that he intended to deepen people鈥檚 faith in the Holy One of Israel while linking his family鈥檚 experiences to prophecies concerning the scattering and gathering of Israel. Evidence in the Book of Mormon points also to the sorrow and estrangement which the family of Lehi and Sariah felt as they fled their home in Jerusalem and traveled across deserts and oceans to the New World. In Isaiah, Nephi found calming solace as well as evidence of prophetic fulfillment.
Nephi said, 鈥淲e did take our tents and depart into the wilderness, across the river Laman鈥 (1 Ne. 16:12). Evidently with purpose, Nephi tells us indirectly that the base camp of his father, Lehi, had been pitched on the bank of the river Laman that was nearer to Jerusalem. When the members of their party crossed that stream, they left Jerusalem behind forever, striking out into the desert and cutting themselves off from home. [1]
At first blush, the question about Isaiah seems to be out of place or, at the very least, out of focus. After all, Nephi assures us that Isaiah had been one of his favorite books, and his acquaintance with this work had led him to quote significant parts of it (e.g., 1 Ne. 19:23; 2 Ne. 11:8). [2] Moreover, Nephi supplies us with his reasons鈥攑ublic reasons, it turns out鈥攚hy he had included chapters 48 and 49 of Isaiah at the end of his first book. I believe, however, that he kept other poignantly personal reasons largely to himself, allowing those reasons to be expressed principally by others. As it turns out, it is his younger brother Jacob who, writing after Nephi鈥檚 death, allows us to see most clearly the acutely personal inducements for including these passages from Isaiah. [3] Most of them have to do with the grave challenges that the family encountered in the desert of Arabia.
To be sure, the public reasons that Nephi offers to us for his appeal to Isaiah stand within the larger prophetic message about the scattering and gathering of Israel, of which he and his family鈥攖he scattered鈥攁nd their distant posterity鈥攖he gathered鈥攚ere a part. [4] One does not look far to find that Isaiah鈥檚 prophecies had a good deal to say about these events. [5] As a prime example, one reads a passage that both addresses the scattered remnants of Israel and鈥攖his next point is especially important鈥攆its precisely the circumstance of the departure of Lehi鈥檚 family: 鈥淗earken . . . all ye that are broken off and are driven out because of the wickedness of the pastors of my people; yea, all ye that are broken off, that are scattered abroad, who are of my people, O house of Israel鈥 (1 Ne. 21:1 = Isa. 49:1). [6] On the side of the gathering, one reads the tender assurance that the Gentiles 鈥渟hall bring thy sons in their arms, and thy daughters shall be carried upon their shoulders. And [Gentile] kings shall be thy nursing fathers, and their queens thy nursing mothers鈥 (1 Ne. 21:22鈥23 = Isa. 49:22鈥23). A third passage not only characterizes the Lord鈥檚 loving care for his people at the time of the future gathering but, as in the first passage, mirrors his efforts to provide necessities for Lehi鈥檚 party as they traveled in the desert, much as he had for the Hebrew slaves: 鈥淭hey thirsted not; he led them through the deserts; he caused the waters to flow out of the rock for them; he clave the rock also and the waters gushed out鈥 (1 Ne. 20:21 = Isa. 48:21) [7] The allusions to manna (Ex. 16:14鈥15; etc.) and water provided by the Lord from a rock (Ex. 17:1鈥6; Num. 20:2鈥11), of course, need no comment.
In light of the first and third passages that can plainly point to aspects of the journey of Lehi鈥檚 family, one notes that in Nephi鈥檚 view the words of Isaiah in chapters 48鈥49 apparently anticipated the entire trip, from beginning to end, starting with the flight from Jerusalem and ending with the settlement in the promised land. In a word, Nephi is saying, 鈥淚saiah spoke about us.鈥 [8]
But before turning to Nephi鈥檚 announced reasons for appealing to Isaiah鈥檚 book and then to the travel experiences, as well as Isaiah鈥檚 words about such, we should observe that Nephi鈥檚 thorough acquaintance with Isaiah is beyond challenge. [9] Throughout his work, Nephi鈥檚 expressions brighten with phrases and terms that reflect an influence radiating from Isaiah. [10] For instance, borrowing a phrase from Isa. 29:14, Nephi speaks of 鈥渁 marvelous work鈥 which will 鈥渂e of great worth unto our seed鈥 (1 Ne. 22:8). In fact, the angel who accompanied Nephi during his vision used this same phrase, a hint that the angel knew of Nephi鈥檚 acquaintance with it from Isaiah (14:7). [11] In addition, Nephi calls God 鈥渢he Holy One of Israel鈥 and 鈥淪avior,鈥 titles at home in Isaiah鈥檚 works. [12] Further, Nephi employs expressions that find parallels in Isaiah, such as 鈥淓at, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we die鈥 [13] and 鈥渢he four quarters of the earth.鈥 [14] As a capstone of sorts, even the Spirit of God recognized Nephi鈥檚 grasp of Isaiah鈥檚 book and virtually quoted to him what must have been a line familiar from Isaiah about the Lord giving a sign [15]鈥攊n Isaiah鈥檚 prophecy, the sign consisted of the virgin who gives birth鈥攁nd then followed it almost immediately with the vision of the virgin (11:7; 11:13鈥20).
Nephi鈥檚 Stated Reasons
Nephi鈥檚 stated motives are straightforward and high-minded. In introducing chapters 48 and 49, he announces that his most important purpose鈥攁nd I want to emphasize this purpose鈥攊s to 鈥渕ore fully persuade [his people] to believe in the Lord their Redeemer鈥 (1 Ne. 19:23). [16] A companion motive appears in his introduction of the Isaiah chapters in his second book, 鈥渢hat whoso of my people shall see these words [of Isaiah] may . . . rejoice鈥 (2 Ne. 11:8). Consistent with his first purpose of bringing others 鈥渢o believe in the Lord,鈥 one observes that embedded in Isaiah 49 lies a clear prophecy about the future Messiah-king, portrayed as the 鈥渟ervant of the Lord鈥 (Isa. 49:1鈥6 = 1 Ne. 21:1鈥6). [17] According to Isaiah, the Messiah-king will be called 鈥渇rom the womb鈥 and, though his mouth will be 鈥渓ike a sharp sword,鈥 he will seemingly spend his 鈥渟trength for nought鈥 (Isa. 49:1, 2, 4). In the end, however, he will not only 鈥渂ring Jacob again鈥 to the Lord but more broadly will be 鈥渁 light to the Gentiles鈥 and become the Lord鈥檚 鈥渟alvation unto the end of the earth鈥 (49:5鈥6). [18]
The second most important reason that Nephi included Isaiah鈥檚 prophecies appears in a much later passage, just before recording Isaiah 2鈥14. He reveals that in quoting Isaiah he seeks to bring comfort, even joy, to his people: 鈥淚 write some of the words of Isaiah, that whoso of my people shall see these words may lift up their hearts and rejoice鈥 (2 Ne. 11:8). While we shall return to this passage, and the implications therein that Nephi鈥檚 people needed a rejuvenation of sorts, we note here that Nephi set out other reasons for his quotations from Isaiah. For example, he adds that he 鈥渞ead unto them that which was written by the prophet Isaiah . . . for our profit and learning鈥 (1 Ne. 19:23). Further, immediately afterward, while addressing his people directly, he said first that Isaiah鈥檚 words were written for 鈥渢he house of Israel . . . who have been broken off鈥 (19:24), [19] and second that since Isaiah was shown 鈥渃oncerning us鈥 (19:21), Nephi wanted his people to 鈥渉ave hope鈥 (19:24).
Nephi鈥檚 Personal Reasons
When we turn to his more personal view, on the other hand, I suggest that as Nephi looked back on his family鈥檚 experience in the desert of Arabia, he eventually came to see those events in poignantly personal terms. In a word, the desert formed a decisive moment for his extended family. Although, as we have noted, he himself was guarded in expressing how the desert experience had affected him and the others, [20] his younger brother Jacob was not. As a result, Jacob supplies an important set of clues about what the family鈥檚 separation from home meant for them. In short, the separation was painful and the early generations did not feel completely at home in their adopted surroundings in the New World. Near the end of his life, Jacob spoke of the record on the small plates of Nephi, sighing, 鈥淚 conclude this record, declaring that I have written according to the best of my knowledge, by saying that the time passed away with us, and also our lives passed away like as it were unto us a dream, we being a lonesome and a solemn people, wanderers, cast out from Jerusalem, born in tribulation, in a wilderness, and hated of our brethren, which caused wars and contentions; wherefore, we did mourn out our days鈥 (Jacob 7:26). This mournful summary, in fact, cast in the language of lament, provides a key to the last chapters of 1 Nephi, including the personal reasons why Nephi inserted two chapters from Isaiah鈥檚 book. How so?
Although Jacob was not born in Jerusalem, nor did he ever set foot in the city, he faithfully reflects the feelings of other family members about the harsh necessity of leaving their home, even though their departure was mandated by the Lord. After all, Jacob would not have generated such feelings on his own. They must have come from his family environment. [21]
Yes, the extended family had learned from Lehi just before his death that the prophetic warning about the fall of the city had come to dreadful fulfillment, thus sparing the lives of family members as the Lord had promised. [22] And yes, they all must have been grateful that they had not been ground down in the inevitable and terrible retributions leveled against citizens by the fierce Babylonian warriors. [23] But home was home.
In this light, the following will set out for us the reasons for, and dimensions of, family feelings about abandoning home. Significantly, most of them have to do with their journey through the desert which, with finality, separated them from Jerusalem.
First, Jacob speaks of 鈥渙ur lives鈥 passing away 鈥渁s it were unto us a dream,鈥 an expression that sounds tones of disappointment. When one combines this sort of language with his term 鈥渨anderers鈥 for his people, who were 鈥渃ast out from Jerusalem鈥 (Jacob 7:26), one senses a mass of chafed, tender emotions lying barely below the surface. In an attempt to grapple with this passage, John Tanner has observed that 鈥渙ne feels the cost that the wilderness exacted on Jacob.鈥 He then attributes Jacob鈥檚 words to 鈥渢he accumulated sorrows of a nomadic life.鈥 [24] Yet there must be more. One must see that Jacob鈥檚 sentiments also expressed those of others in the family, illuminating the strong cords that bound all of them to their former lives in Jerusalem. Moreover, one understands that a nomad, speaking realistically, would not be unhappy with life in the desert. Jacob, who had really known no other kind of existence in his youth, would not have expressed dissatisfaction about this kind of life if he had not been exposed to the misgivings and sorrows of others around him.
Second, from a review of other passages it becomes clear that the time in the desert had left a bitter taste in the mouths of family members [25]鈥攏othing but bad memories. [26] For instance, Lehi called the eight-year desert crossing 鈥渢he wilderness of mine afflictions; . . . the days of my greatest sorrow鈥 (2 Ne. 3:1). In addition, at the end of the desert trek Lehi鈥檚 sons complained鈥攁nd it is important to note that, on one level, Nephi entered the complaints into his record because they told of unspeakable suffering鈥攖hat 鈥渨e have wandered in the wilderness for these many years; and our women have toiled,. . . and suffered all things, save it were death.鈥 [27] So severe were the desert sufferings, they cried, that 鈥渋t would have been better that [the women] had died before they came out of Jerusalem鈥 (1 Ne. 17:20). [28] Further, generations later Alma would look back to the desert era and, hinting at specific experiences known to him and his hearers, say that the Lord had 鈥渄elivered our fathers out of the hands of their enemies鈥 and had 鈥渟aved [them] from famine, and from sickness, and all manner of diseases鈥 (Alma 9:10,22), underscoring the ferocity of the challenges faced by Lehi鈥檚 family. Hence, Jacob鈥檚 choice of terms points to plainly painful events in the desert. [29]
Third, moving from Jerusalem had torn the family to the point that family members split more than once about whether to return to their family estates, this in direct disobedience to the Lord鈥檚 directives to flee (1 Ne. 2:11鈥14; 7:6鈥7). [30] Additionally, complaints about having to leave the city continued to surface throughout the desert journey, as illustrated first by the grieving of the daughters of Ishmael, vocalized before trudging into the heart of the Arabian peninsula, and later by the gripes of Lehi鈥檚 older sons, articulated after emerging from the desert. As Nephi records, in a burst of emotion Ishmael鈥檚 daughters murmured that Lehi had wronged them by bringing 鈥渢hem out of the land of Jerusalem鈥 only to 鈥減erish in the wilderness with hunger鈥 (16:35). On the subsequent occasion, Lehi鈥檚 older sons whined that their father, 鈥渓ed away by the foolish imaginations of his heart,鈥 had 鈥渓ed [them] out of the land of Jerusalem,鈥 with the result that 鈥渨e have wandered in the wilderness for these many years鈥 and could not enjoy 鈥渙ur possessions and the land of our inheritance鈥 (17:20鈥21). By any standard, they desperately missed home.
Fourth, the memory of days in Jerusalem had evidently been cultivated at least in story, if not in song and verse, in such a way that the next generation was imbued with a nostalgia for a place that they had not seen. One thinks of Jews, at Passover, when they say as part of their celebration, 鈥淣ext year in Jerusalem.鈥 Something like this must have become a part of family tradition, naturally turning hearts back to their original home. [31]
Fifth, Jacob鈥檚 words betray a feeling that even though the hand of the Lord had brought the families of Lehi and Ishmael to the promised land, it was not the same as possessing an inheritance in the land promised to Abraham. [32] One need only notice that Jacob called his extended family 鈥渁 lonesome and a solemn people,鈥 hardly a happy description (Jacob 7:26). To be sure, Jacob does not strictly contradict Lehi, and would have been horrified to be thought of as espousing a different view of the status of their people. [33] But his father spoke more warmly of obtaining 鈥渁 land of promise, a land which is choice above all other lands,鈥 which 鈥渢he Lord God hath covenanted with me should be a land for the inheritance of my seed鈥 (2 Ne. 1:5). [34] Even so, some fifty or so years later Jacob mournfully portrayed the self-image of his people as 鈥渨anderers,鈥 outcasts 鈥渇rom Jerusalem鈥 (Jacob 7:26).
Sixth, Nephi reveals the need for comforting his people when bringing forward the chapters that he cites in the middle of his second book. To recall his words quoted above, 鈥淚 write some of the words of Isaiah, that whoso of my people shall see these words may lift up their hearts and rejoice鈥 (2 Ne. 11:8). As background, one must recollect that by the time Nephi copied these chapters, family members had already split geographically because of a bitter quarrel over leadership in the clan, those loyal to Nephi having fled their original place of residence (5:1鈥7). In this light, the fact that Nephi seeks to lift the spirits of his followers, now separated from other family members, reveals an underlying, unspoken despondency. This despondency, in my view, had to do with the fact that even after arriving in the land of promise, Nephi鈥檚 part of the family had been forced to move from its original settlement, thus compounding the feeling of estrangement from home in this distant place. Even the observation that the flight came at the urging of the Lord (5:5) does not seem to have eased the loss of homes and property and family associations. [35]
Seventh, prophecies about the Messiah held believers鈥 focus on Jerusalem. Circumstantial evidence exists, for instance, that the prophecies of Zenos spoke of the Messiah dying there (1 Ne. 19:10, 13), [36] Further, by vision Nephi鈥攁nd before him Lehi鈥攈ad evidently learned the place of the Messiah鈥檚 death and resurrection. For in one scene out of their parallel visions 鈥渢he great city of Jerusalem鈥 appeared, followed shortly afterward by the following vista: 鈥淎nd I [Nephi] . . . beheld the Lamb of God, that he was taken by the people; yea, . . . was judged of the world; and . . . was lifted up upon the cross and slain for the sins of the world鈥 (1 Ne. 11:13, 32鈥33). It stands to reason that if Nephi saw in his vision 鈥渢he city of Nazareth,鈥 [37] the place of Jesus鈥 youth, he would have noticed the place of his death, even though he does not record it directly. [38] It is Jacob who clinches the case, providing the proof that Jerusalem was known to the founding generation as the place of Jesus鈥 death. Speaking to those in the colony of Nephi, he says, 鈥淵e know that . . . he [Jesus] shall show himself unto those at Jerusalem, . . . for it is expedient that it should be among them; for . . . he suffereth himself to . . . die for all men鈥 (2 Ne. 9:5). Naturally, the Messiah鈥檚 tie to the city kept both memory and anticipation alive among Book of Mormon peoples.
Eighth, one gauge of the intensity of impressions from the wilderness lies in the names of the two sons born there to Lehi and Sariah鈥擩acob and Joseph. There is no doubt in my mind that these two boys were named after Jacob, the father of the twelve tribes, [39] and Joseph, his son, who was sold into Egypt. [40] One naturally asks what these two personalities from the Bible had in common, besides sharing the same tent for the years of Joseph鈥檚 youth. The answer, of course, has to do with the fact that they both spent long periods of time away from home. In the case of Jacob, he was forced to flee after receiving the blessing that his brother Esau claimed for himself, living several hundred miles away for two decades in the home of his father-in-law. In addition, Jacob spent the last years of his life in Egypt because of the severe famine in the land of Canaan. In the case of Joseph, his brothers sold him to caravanners who in turn took him to Egypt where he lived out his days, dying with only one wish: to be buried at home, in the land of his ancestors.
Ninth, a further indicator concerns place names. It was Lamanites, joined by dissident Nephites, who founded a city named Jerusalem more than five hundred years after Lehi鈥檚 family departed from Jerusalem, creating an administrative territory of the same name, 鈥渁fter [the name of] the land of their fathers鈥 nativity鈥 (Alma 21:1). Evidently, in their tradition Lamanites had perpetuated a deep tie to their distant homeland. [41] Of course, the name Jerusalem also comes into play in discussions of the New Jerusalem. Even though the expectations were millennial, the risen Jesus felt the need to explain that the New Jerusalem would be 鈥渋n this land,鈥 in the New World (3 Ne. 20:22), a point that Moroni repeats almost four hundred years later, tying its existence to that of the ancient city (Ether 13:3鈥10). [42] Thus, the memory of the Jerusalem from which both the founding family and the scriptures had come continued to live on in Book of Mormon society.
Tenth, the eight-year crossing indicates serious troubles in the wilderness (1 Ne. 17:4). It suggests that the family spent considerable time in at least one location, possibly at an oasis or a grazing area, and probably dependent on desert tribesmen. Eight years is far too long even for a cautious crossing of the Arabian desert. To make the point, the time required in antiquity for a loaded caravan to travel from the coast of the Indian Ocean to the Mediterranean Sea鈥攁pproximately the assumed route traveled by Lehi and his family, though in reverse鈥攚as a matter of sixteen weeks, not eight years. [43]
Isaiah Connections
The deep, at times terrible, impact that the desert trek made in the soul and memory of Nephi, I believe, can be seen in his choice of Isaiah passages that follow the narrative of his family鈥檚 trip to the land of promise. Understanding that Nephi saw Isaiah as one who had been shown matters 鈥渃oncerning us鈥 (1 Ne. 19:21), a number of possible allusions to the family鈥檚 journey stand in chapters 48 and 49. We turn first to those that have to do with flight, next with difficulties in a desert clime, and then to passages which bring assurance of the Lord鈥檚 aid. [44]
Passages in Isaiah 48 and 49 spoke to the circumstance of Lehi鈥檚 departure from Jerusalem, directed by the Lord and forced by public pressure. [45] One must understand that less than a year earlier the Babylonians had forced the city to surrender and had installed Zedekiah as a puppet king (2 Kgs. 24:10鈥19). In this connection, one notices expressions in Isaiah that make reference to Babylonians. For instance, in an affirmation that the Lord is in charge, Isaiah says that the Lord 鈥渨ill do his pleasure on Babylon, and his arm shall be on the Chaldeans鈥 (Isa. 48:14 = 1 Ne. 20:14). [46]
In addition, for those who find themselves captive to the Babylonians, the Lord will exercise his right to seek the release of his people who are enslaved abroad, [47] saying to them, 鈥淕o ye forth of Babylon, flee ye from the Chaldeans, with a voice of singing declare ye, . . . The Lord hath redeemed his servant Jacob鈥 (Isa. 48:20 = 1 Ne. 20:20). [48] In addition, one finds reference to the corruption and iniquity in the city that met Lehi when he began his preaching. Isaiah holds that the citizens of Jerusalem will 鈥渟wear by the name of the Lord, and make mention of the God of Israel, yet they swear not in truth nor in righteousness. Nevertheless, they call themselves of the holy city, but they do not stay themselves upon the God of Israel鈥 (1 Ne. 20:1鈥2 = Isa. 48:l鈥2). [49]
However, in addressing scattered Israel, Isaiah鈥檚 condemnation is even more scathing. In a passage that does not appear in the received Hebrew text of Isaiah, the prophet admonishes, 鈥淗earken, O ye house of Israel, all ye that are broken off and are driven out because of the wickedness of the pastors of my people鈥 (1 Ne. 21:1). [50] Here Isaiah had anticipated a day in which corrupt officials would rule people in the city, a situation that Lehi suffered in his day. And, it seems, Nephi had seen the relevance of this passage to the family鈥檚 situation.
The strongest statement on difficulties in the desert arises from the refining process in 鈥渢he furnace of affliction,鈥 which of course can also allude to the heat that one experiences in the desert, or a place of trial. [51]鈥淚 do this,鈥 the Lord says, because 鈥淚 will not suffer my name to be polluted鈥 (1 Ne. 20:10鈥11 = Isa. 48:10鈥11). [52] Many examples can be found in these chapters of Isaiah which give assurances of the Lord鈥檚 assistance to those who may struggle. For instance, Nephi, if not others, must have taken courage from the Lord鈥檚 assurance that he 鈥渓eadeth thee by the way thou shouldst go鈥 and that those who trust in him 鈥渢hirsted not鈥 because 鈥渉e led them through the deserts鈥 and 鈥渃aused the waters to flow out of the rock for them鈥 (1 Ne. 20:17,21 = Isa. 48:17, 21). Moreover鈥攃ontinuing the desert imagery鈥斺漈hey shall not hunger nor thirst; neither shall the heat nor the sun smite them: for he that hath mercy on them shall lead them, even by the springs of water shall he guide them鈥 (Isa. 49:10 = 1 Ne. 21:10). Plainly, one can identify a number of passages that naturally would have spoken to the situation of the family while traveling through Arabia. [53]
This situation becomes evident in words of Isaiah about a river and the sea, recalling both that Lehi named a river after his son Laman and that the Red Sea, into which the river flowed, was one of the major geographical features near the first camp (1 Ne. 2:5, 8鈥9). In addition, on the far side of the Arabian desert the sea formed both a barrier as well as a highway of sorts to the promised land (17:5鈥6; 18:8,23). Isaiah wrote, 鈥淥 that thou hadst hearkened to my commandments! then had thy peace been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea鈥 (Isa. 48:18 = 1 Ne. 20:18). Lehi spoke similar words to Laman at the time he named the river after him: 鈥淥 that thou mightest be like unto this river, continually running into the fountain of all righteousness!鈥 (1 Ne. 2:9). The tie between Isaiah鈥檚 words and those of Lehi stands in plain relief. A dozen or more years later Lehi pleads with Laman and his siblings that they not be 鈥渃arried away . . . down to the eternal gulf of misery鈥 (2 Ne. 1:13), evoking a combined image of river and sea. In sum, Nephi鈥檚 record of Lehi鈥檚 words to his wayward sons, both at the departure from Jerusalem and in the New World, brims with allusions to words from Isaiah 48鈥49. [54]
Conclusion
What have we learned? First, we have seen that Nephi balances two kinds of reasons throughout his story as to why he appeals to Isaiah, one public and the other personal. He holds to the former while he allows the voices of others to express the latter. In both cases, the ultimate reason for bringing the Isaiah passages into 1 Nephi was to bring comfort and joy to his people by directing their attention to the Holy One of Israel and his covenants with his people. Nephi鈥檚 secondary purpose radiates through the perceptible connections between Isaiah鈥檚 prophecies of the future scattering and gathering of the house of Israel and the experiences of Nephi鈥檚 family during their exodus from Jerusalem to the land of promise. Thus, Nephi found calming solace as well as proof of prophetic fulfillment in the words of Isaiah, words which he knew and loved.
Notes
[1] One can see that the desert formed a watershed in the family by the way that Lehi addressed his son Jacob at the time of his blessing, 鈥渕y first-born in the wilderness鈥 (2 Ne. 2:2, 11), clearly distinguishing him from his sons born in Jerusalem.
[2] Nephi employs far more quotations from Isaiah in his second book, including a number to which his younger brother Jacob appeals. A handy list appears in the article by LeGrande Davies, 鈥淚saiah: Texts in the Book of Mormon,鈥 in Encyclopedia of Mormonism, ed. Daniel H. Ludlow (New York: Macmillan, 1992), 700. For the most part, these passages have to do with the second exodus of God鈥檚 people in the latter days or with the future Messiah and his work.
[3] Even Blake T. Ostler, who has sought to identify 鈥渁nachronisms鈥 in the Book of Mormon (鈥淭he Book of Mormon as a Modern Expansion of an Ancient Source,鈥 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 20, no. 1 [spring 1987]: 66鈥115), admits that the Isaiah chapters quoted in the text had 鈥渁ppeared in the Nephite record in some form鈥 although without qualification he maintains that 鈥淛oseph Smith clearly used the KJV translation,鈥 copying from it wholesale (77). What he fails to appreciate in the first instance is that in passages where the Book of Mormon text of Isaiah differs from the King James translation, the Book of Mormon reading agrees at least 9 percent of the time with the Septuagint version. This significant percentage stands firmly against the notion that Joseph Smith slavishly copied the KJV of Isaiah into the Book of Mormon. In addition, he has not taken into account the overwhelming evidence that the Book of Mormon was dictated鈥攏ot copied鈥攆rom beginning to end. See Davies, 鈥淚saiah: Texts in the Book of Mormon,鈥 700鈥701; and Royal Skousen, 鈥淭ranslating the Book of Mormon: Evidence from the Original Manuscript,鈥 in Book of Mormon Authorship Revisited, ed. Noel B. Reynolds (Provo, Utah: F.A.R.M.S., 1997), 61鈥93.
[4] For Nephi, the future survival of the posterity of his older and younger brothers was beyond question (1 Ne. 12:19鈥20; 2 Ne. 3:3, 23). Even though Nephi knew鈥攁nd this knowledge brought him deep pain (1 Ne. 15:5; 2 Ne. 26:7, 10)鈥攖hat his own descendants would eventually be destroyed, there are indisputable hints that a remnant would survive along with descendants from the other members of the family. See 1 Ne. 13:30; 15:13鈥14, 18; 22:7鈥8; 2 Ne. 10:2. Cf. 2 Ne. 3:3, 23; 4:7; 9:53; 25:8, 21; 3 Ne. 21:7; Ether 13:7.
[5] See, for example, an allusion to both the scattering and gathering in the Lord鈥檚 words to his Servant, 鈥渢o restore the preserved of Israel鈥 (1 Ne. 21:6 = Isa. 49:6).
[6] The passage quoted here stands neither in the Hebrew nor in the Greek text of Isa. 49:1.
[7] See also 鈥淭hey shall not hunger nor thirst, neither shall the heat nor the sun smite them; for he that hath mercy on them shall lead them, even by the springs of water shall he guide them鈥 (1 Ne. 21:10 = Isa. 49:10).
[8] Nephi says that the Lord 鈥渄id show unto many [prophets] concerning us鈥 (1 Ne. 19:21, emphasis added)鈥攚hich must also have included Zenock, Neum, and Zenos, whose words he had just quoted (19:10鈥17). Nephi then immediately introduces Isaiah 48鈥49 by instructing his people not only to 鈥渉ear . . . the words of the prophet [Isaiah]鈥 but also to 鈥渓iken [these words] unto yourselves鈥 (2 Ne. 19:24; cf. Jacob鈥檚 observation in 2 Ne. 6:5).
[9] The depreciating claims of Jerald and Sandra Tanner in Covering up the Black Hole in the Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City: Lighthouse, 1990) that the Book of Mormon plagiarizes sections of Isaiah rather than Nephi copying them or being influenced thereby have been answered by Matthew Roper in his review of their work, Review of Books on the Book of Mormon 3 (1991): 170鈥87. A number of examples that follow match Roper鈥檚 observations.
[10] Notice Nephi鈥檚 personal responses: 鈥渕y soul delighteth in the words of Isaiah鈥 (2 Ne. 25:5) and 鈥渕y soul delighteth in [Isaiah鈥檚] words . . . for he verily saw my Redeemer, even as I have seen him鈥 (11:2).
[11] In his second book, of course, Nephi discusses chapter 29 of Isaiah at length in a prophetic vein (2 Nephi 26鈥27), introducing the issues by citing Isa. 29:14 (2 Ne. 25:17).
[12] On 鈥淗oly One of Israel,鈥 see 1 Ne. 19:14; etc. (from Isa. 48:17 = 1 Ne. 20:17; Isa. 49:7 = 1 Ne. 21:7, although the Nephite text omits the last phrases of this verse, including the title Holy One of Israel). On 鈥淪avior,鈥 see 1 Ne. 10:4; 13:40; Isa. 43:3, 11; 45:15, 21; 49:26; 60:16; 63:8. Cf. 鈥淟amb of God鈥 (1 Ne. 10:10 from Lehi; 11:21, 27,31鈥32; etc.), which may recall the Servant of Isa. 53:6鈥7 who is 鈥渂rought as a lamb to the slaughter鈥 (this last was suggested by Roper, 178).
[13] 2 Ne. 28:7; Isa. 22:13; cf. 2 Ne. 28:8; see Martin S. Tanner, Review of Books on the Book of Mormon 6 (1994): 426. Tanner also points to Nephi鈥檚 reference to the cynical view of God beating sinners only 鈥渨ith a few stripes鈥 (2 Ne. 28:8) as an echo of Isaiah鈥檚 more serious words about God鈥檚 Servant who receives stripes so that we can be healed of sin (Isa. 53:5).
[14] 1 Ne. 19:16; cf. 鈥渢he four corners of the earth鈥 in Isa. 11:12 (= 2 Ne. 21:2).
[15] Isa. 7:14; the common terms in 1 Ne. 11:7 are the verb to give and the noun sign.
[16] One must also recall that the prophecies cited by Nephi in 1 Nephi 19 from the prophets Zenock, Neum, and especially Zenos correlate with Isaiah鈥檚 words about the Messiah (19:10鈥12). The point of quoting these three prophets was so that he 鈥渕ight persuade [his people] that they would remember the Lord鈥 (19:18). In a sense, Nephi is specifying that Isaiah stands as another witness of the coming Messiah, side by side with these three earlier prophets. See also 2 Ne. 11:2鈥3.
[17] This passage constitutes one of the four so-called Servant Songs of Isaiah (42:1鈥4; 49:1鈥6; 50:4鈥9; 52:13鈥53:12). For further discussion, see Otto Eissfeldt, The Old Testament: An Introduction (New York: Harper and Row, 1965), 340鈥41; also Bernard W. Anderson, Understanding the Old Testament, 4th ed. (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1986), 488. In the version embedded in 1 Nephi, one finds not only the Servant Song, in which the Servant speaks following a long introduction not found in the Hebrew text (1 Ne. 21:1b鈥6), but also other expressions that point to the Messiah, such as 鈥渉im whom man despiseth鈥 and 鈥渉im whom the nations abhorreth鈥 (Isa. 53:3, part of the fourth Servant Song) in whose presence 鈥渒ings shall see and arise, princes also shall worship鈥 (1 Ne. 21:7 = Isa. 49:7). In addition, one reads that the Lord will give 鈥渕y servant for a covenant of the people, to establish the earth, to cause [them] to inherit the desolate heritages鈥 (1 Ne. 21:8 = Isa. 49:8). Further, Isaiah speaks of the one who will bring freedom and be able to 鈥渟ay to the prisoners: Go forth; to them that sit in darkness: Show yourselves [in the light]鈥 (1 Ne. 21:9 = Isa. 49:9). In another possible reference to the Messiah, Isaiah mentions him 鈥渢hat hath mercy on them [and] shall lead them, even by the springs of water shall he guide them鈥 (1 Ne. 21:10 = Isa. 49:10).
[18] 1 Ne. 20:15 (= Isa. 48:15) also contains a possible reference to the work of the Messiah.
[19] Actually, Nephi鈥檚 introduction to Isaiah is addressed directly to his hearers: 鈥淵e who are a remnant of the house of Israel, a branch who have been broken off鈥 (1 Ne. 19:24). This kind of address conveys the reassurance that points to the need for rejuvenation.
[20] Nephi, stalwart that he was, seems to soften the severity of the problems that faced family members by speaking simply of 鈥渕uch affliction鈥 (1 Ne. 17:1) and 鈥渕any afflictions and much difficulty鈥 (17:6). But he does reveal the existence of personal difficulties when he expressed gratitude to the Lord, in his poetic lament, for guiding him 鈥渢hrough mine afflictions in the wilderness鈥 (2 Ne. 4:20; cf. 4:26).
[21] Notice that even though Jacob has never visited the city, in behalf of the family he speaks of 鈥淛erusalem, from whence we came鈥 (2 Ne. 9:5, emphasis added).
[22] 2 Ne. 1:3鈥4; cf. also 1 Ne. 5:4; 7:15; 19:20. The situation within the city of Jerusalem was to be so terrible that Jeremiah was forbidden to marry because of the certainty of death and suffering to family members (Jer. 16:1鈥4).
[23] 2 Kgs. 25:1鈥4, 8鈥10,18鈥21; 2 Chr. 36:17鈥20.
[24] John S. Tanner, 鈥淟iterary Reflections on Jacob and His Descendants,鈥 in Jacob through the Words of Mormon, To Learn with Joy, ed. Monte S. Nyman and Charles D. Tate Jr. (Provo, Utah: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1990), 251鈥69; the quotations are from p. 267.
[25] To be sure, Nephi remained positive by saying that 鈥渢he blessings of the Lord upon us鈥 were 鈥済reat鈥 during 鈥渙ur journey in the wilderness鈥 (1 Ne. 17:1鈥2). But his later use of the term sojourn (17:3鈥4), which often carries the sense of servility, points to a knot of difficulties, which Nephi rather blandly styles 鈥渕uch affliction鈥 (17:1), and 鈥渕any afflictions and much difficulty鈥 (17:6). For the possible connections of his expression sojourn to servility, see my study in this volume, chapter 4, 鈥淪ojourn, Dwell, and Stay: Terms of Servitude.鈥
[26] For other depictions of the period in the desert of Arabia, as well as some general details about experiences there, see 1 Ne. 17:1鈥2, 12; 2 Ne. 1:24; 2:2; 3:3; Alma 18:37鈥38; 36:29.
[27] For women as a measure of suffering or severe difficulty in a situation, see Matt. 24:19 JS-M 1:16); Morm. 4:14, 21; Moro. 9:8.
[28] Before turning 鈥渘early eastward鈥 across the southern end of the Arabian peninsula (1 Ne. 17:1), the daughters of Ishmael responded in part to Ishmael鈥檚 death, which came only months after beginning the journey, by complaining that they had already 鈥渟uffered much affliction, hunger, thirst, and fatigue鈥 after wandering 鈥渕uch in the wilderness鈥 (16:35). The most difficult part of the journey still lay ahead of them.
[29] Isaiah prophesied of troubles in the desert, speaking of 鈥渄estroyers鈥 who make 鈥渢hee [a] waste鈥 (1 Ne. 21:17 = Isa. 49:17). One thus victimized will become 鈥渄esolate, a captive鈥 (1 Ne. 21:21 = Isa. 49:21). But such 鈥渃aptives of the mighty . . . shall be delivered鈥 by the Lord (1 Ne. 21:25 = Isa. 49:25), with the result that 鈥渢hey that swallowed thee up shall be far away,鈥 because the captive has been released (1 Ne. 21:19 = Isa. 49:19). The 鈥渃hildren鈥 of the captives, multiplying in their lands of inheritance, shall say, 鈥渢he place [of inheritance] is too strait [small] for me鈥 (1 Ne. 21:19鈥21 = Isa. 49:19鈥21).
[30] In the latter instance, Nephi indicated to his older brothers that they had a 鈥渃hoice鈥 whether to return, but that they would surely perish in the coming conflagration (1 Ne. 7:15). The effect of Nephi鈥檚 warning was to persuade the older brothers to remain with the family, thus assuring that the future would be fraught with family antagonisms. Isaiah could be understood as anticipating such a situation when he wrote that there would be 鈥渘o peace . . . unto the wicked,鈥 mirroring the Lord鈥檚 warning to Nephi and his posterity that the descendants of his brothers would be 鈥渁 scourge unto [Nephi鈥檚] seed鈥 whenever 鈥渢hey rebel against me鈥 (1 Ne. 2:24; cf. 2 Ne. 5:25).
[31] Although descendants continued to thank God for delivering their ancestors from Jerusalem (e.g., Mosiah 2:4), interest in Jerusalem permeated society until the final generation, as one can see in Moroni鈥檚 quotation of expressions about the city from Isa. 52:1鈥2 and 54:2 (Moro. 10:31).
[32] One notes the prominent mention of Abraham and his seed, the latter to bless 鈥渁ll the kindreds of the earth鈥 (1 Ne. 22:9). Centuries later, the resurrected Jesus seems to have felt the need to address this issue during his visit by reassuring his hearers that 鈥渢he Father hath commanded me that I should give unto you this land, for your inheritance,鈥 and 鈥渢his people will I establish in this land, unto the fulfilling of the covenant which I made with your father Jacob鈥 (3 Ne. 20:14, 22). Isaiah鈥檚 prophecies in chapters 48鈥49 also allude to the promise made to Abraham, speaking of 鈥渢hy seed鈥 which is 鈥渁s the sand,鈥 never to be 鈥渃ut off nor destroyed from before [the Lord]鈥 (1 Ne. 20:19 = Isa. 48:19).
[33] In other passages, Jacob speaks much more positively about the situation of the clan in their new land, the recorded occasions falling during the lifetime of his older brother Nephi. See 2 Ne. 9:1鈥4, 53; 10:2, 18鈥23. But even the passage in 2 Ne. 9:1鈥4 reveals a despondency that Jacob seeks to address. One guesses that his accompanying discussion of the resurrection was occasioned by the death of several persons, perhaps prominent, in the colony.
[34] Cf. also Lehi鈥檚 characterization of 鈥渢his land, which is a most precious land鈥 (2 Ne. 3:2).
[35] In preparing for flight, Nephi took 鈥渁ll those who would go with me鈥 (2 Ne. 5:6). One can imagine the trauma that this necessity caused among family members who were close to one another but found themselves on different sides on the question of leadership in the clan. In addition, those fleeing took 鈥渢ents and whatsoever things were possible鈥 (5:7), evidently leaving behind property that they had acquired since their arrival but could not carry, an action that would have chafed feelings even more.
[36] In Zenos鈥 prophecy, events following the crucifixion are tied to Jerusalem, a circumstance which most certainly points to Jerusalem as the place of the Messiah鈥檚 death (1 Ne. 19:13); compare Alma鈥檚 words that summarize prophecies from Zenos and Zenock, implicitly pointing to Jerusalem as the place of Jesus鈥 death (Alma 33:22).
[37] It is a bit puzzling that Nephi recognized Nazareth (1 Ne. 11:13). Archeological remains date no earlier than the third century B.C. and indicate only a very small settlement, not a 鈥渃ity.鈥 One has to assume help from his angelic guide.
[38] The same is hinted in Nephi's summary of his father鈥檚 words about his own vision (1 Ne. 10:4); so Nephi鈥檚 expectation, 鈥淸the Messiah] cometh . . . six hundred years from the time my father left Jerusalem鈥 (19:8). Comes where? To earth? The only place mentioned in the passage is Jerusalem. Cf. Nephi鈥檚 later words which also imply that Jerusalem would be the place of the Messiah鈥檚 death, in 2 Ne. 25:10鈥14; also Abinadi鈥檚 quotation of Isa. 52:9 at Mosiah 12:23 and 15:30.
[39] First suggested by Hugh Nibley in Lehi in the Desert, The World of the Jaredites, There Were Jaredites (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and F.A.R.M.S., 1988), 42. See also Robert J. Matthews, 鈥淛acob: Prophet, Theologian, Historian,鈥 in Jacob through the Words of Mormon, ed. Nyman and Tate, 33鈥53; the idea is expressed on 35鈥36.
[40] Lehi all but says that his son Joseph was named after the Joseph who was sold into Egypt (2 Ne. 3:3鈥5), tying the Lord鈥檚 promise about the endurance of the posterity of Joseph in Egypt (3:5) to a similar promise to his son Joseph (3:3, 23).
[41] Cf. Alma 22:9. In reviews of the 鈥渢raditions鈥 of the Lamanites, this sort of element has not yet come in for discussion; see, for example, Noel B. Reynolds, 鈥淣ephi鈥檚 Political Testament,鈥 in Rediscovering the Book of Mormon, ed. John L. Sorenson and Melvin J. Thorne (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book and F.A.R.M.S., 1991), 223; and the comments on Mosiah 10:12 by Joseph F. McConkie and Robert L. Millet, Doctrinal Commentary on the Book of Mormon (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1988), 2:198.
[42] See also 3 Ne. 21:23鈥24.
[43] According to Nigel Groom, the maximum time for a caravan to travel from Zufar (or Dhofar) on the Indian Ocean to Gaza on the Mediterranean coast was 120 days, a distance of about 2,100 miles; Frankincense and Myrrh: A Study of the Arabian Incense Trade (London: Longman, 1981), chart on 213. Lynn and Hope Hilton also reckon the distance as 2,100 miles, offering a different beginning point; Discovering Lehi (Springville, Utah: CFI, 1996), 16. Naturally, caravans did not include flocks, something which Lehi鈥檚 family seems to have eschewed (see 1 Ne. 2:4; 16:11鈥12). A handy summary of travel to and through the 鈥渆mpty quarter鈥 of the Arabian Peninsula is found in Eugene England鈥檚 work, 鈥淭hrough the Arabian Desert to a Bountiful Land: Could Joseph Smith Have Known the Way?鈥 in Book of Mormon Authorship, ed. Noel B. Reynolds (Provo, Utah: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1982), 143鈥56.
[44] If passages in Isaiah 48鈥49 can be seen to anticipate, even outline, the family鈥檚 trip through the desert, then one is justified in understanding Isaiah鈥檚 words about releasing captives to describe, in a somewhat roundabout way, circumstances that the family faced in the wilderness (e.g., 1 Ne. 20:20; 21:21, 24鈥26 = Isa. 48:20; 49:21, 24鈥26). Simply stated, they appear to have spent time as indentured servants, as I have argued in the article in this volume, chapter 4, entitled 鈥淪ojourn, Dwell, and Stay: Terms of Servitude.鈥 It is also possible to understand Lehi鈥檚 phraseology about the latter-day release from 鈥渃aptivity unto freedom鈥 (2 Ne. 3:5) as a prophetic insight sharpened by personal experience.
[45] See 1 Ne. 2:1鈥2 (鈥渢he Lord commanded my father . . . that he should . . . depart鈥); 7:14 (鈥渢hey have driven him [Lehi] out of the land鈥).
[46] These verses (Isa. 48:14 and 1 Ne. 20:14) are not the same. The Book of Mormon text adds an entire sentence in the middle of the verse that concerns the fulfillment of prophecy and does not appear in the Hebrew or Greek texts of Isaiah.
[47] This legal right undergirds the entire exodus saga of the Hebrew slaves. See David Daube, The Exodus Pattern in the Bible (London: Faber and Faber, 1963), 39鈥41. In addition, I have set out the meaning of this legal right for the visit of the risen Jesus to Nephites and Lamanites in 鈥淢oses and Jesus: The Old Adorns the New,鈥 chapter 10, and in 鈥淭he Exodus Pattern in the Book of Mormon,鈥 chapter 5, both in this volume.
[48] Compare Lehi鈥檚 interest in freedom and captivity (2 Ne. 2:26鈥29; 3:5) and the words of Isaiah on the same subject (Isa. 49:21鈥26 = 1 Ne. 21:21鈥26); and see my 鈥淪ojourn, Dwell, and Stay: Terms of Servitude,鈥 chapter 4.
[49] The Book of Mormon text, which I follow here, differs in important ways from the underlying Hebrew text of Isa. 48:1鈥2.
[50] Referring to the wickedness in Jerusalem, Nephi will later say that 鈥渢heir works were works of darkness, and their doings were doings of abominations鈥 (2 Ne. 25:2).
[51] As in the portrayal of Egypt in Deut. 4:20; 1 Kgs. 8:51; Jer. 11:4.
[52] I follow the reading of 1 Nephi, not that of the King James Version
[53] Assuming a period of servitude suffered by the family, one can also include reference to those whom the Lord looses from prison and darkness, whom he 鈥渟hall feed in the ways, and their pastures shall be in all high places鈥 because the Lord 鈥渨ill. . . not forget thee鈥 since 鈥淚 have graven thee upon the palms of my hands鈥 (Isa. 49:9, 15鈥16 = 1 Ne. 22:9, 15鈥16). In addition, it is the Lord 鈥渨ho leadeth thee by the way thou shouldst go鈥 (1 Ne. 20:17 = Isa. 48:17). On darkness and prison, see Lehi鈥檚 appeal to his older sons to 鈥渁wake from a deep sleep鈥 in order to 鈥渟hake off the awful chains by which ye are bound鈥 that make them 鈥渃aptive鈥 (2 Ne. 1:13; see also 1:21, 23). On feeding and pasturing 鈥渋n all high places,鈥 as well as the Lord鈥檚 promise to 鈥渕ake all my mountains a way鈥 (1 Ne. 21:9鈥11 = Isa. 49:9鈥11), compare the function of the brass ball that 鈥渓ed us in the more fertile parts of the wilderness鈥 (1 Ne. 16:16). See my 鈥淎 Case for Lehi鈥檚 Bondage in Arabia,鈥 Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 6, no. 2 (fall 1997): 205鈥17.
[54] Without multiplying examples, we note that other allusions to the family鈥檚 situation appear in Isaiah 48鈥49. For instance, the reference to 鈥渃hildren鈥 born while one is 鈥渁 captive鈥 (1 Ne. 21:21 = Isa. 49:21) could be understood as allusions to Jacob and Joseph. In addition, the expression 鈥渢hose who are in the east鈥 (1 Ne. 21:13 = Isa. 49:13) could be seen as referring not only to the extended family who traveled east through Arabia to reach the shore of the sea, but possibly to the direction that they traveled by sea in order to reach the Americas. Moreover, the remark about the one who 鈥渨ouldst deal very treacherously鈥 but from whom the Lord 鈥渨ill . . . defer mine anger . . . that I cut thee not off鈥 (1 Ne. 20:8鈥9 = Isa. 48:8鈥9) could be understood to apply to Nephi鈥檚 older brothers, for whom the Lord showed abundant patience during the journey and whose posterity was to survive.