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Led
by an Angel from on High
Chapter 7, part
2 of The Blessings of Abraham: Becoming a Zion
People
By E. Douglas Clark
Led
by an Angel from on High
At
that terrifying moment [as his religious rite had been interrupted
by the appearance of birds of prey], Abraham heard the voice
of God directing an angel to go and strengthen him. Abraham
even heard God call the angel by name: “Iaoel [or “Yahoel”
[1]
] of the same name.” [2]
The
same name as whom? Of God Himself, who will later in the Apocalypse
of Abraham be called by this very name.
[3]
In fact, the name is a combination of the two divine
names from the Hebrew Bible: the Greek form of Yahweh
(transliterated by the King James translators as “Jehovah,”
the name of the God of Israel
[4]
), along with the word El, meaning God.
[5]
So
who was this angel that was privileged to bear the Lord’s
own name? It was none other than Enoch, whose first of the
seventy other names listed in 3 Enoch is Yahoel.
[6]
The
twentieth century’s leading authority on the Kabbalah, Gershom
Scholem, has similarly shown that the angel who appears to
Abraham in the Apocalypse is indeed the same that later Jewish
sources call Metatron, or Enoch. [7]
It was the same angel who had rescued Abraham from
the altar in Ur and had later delivered to him the patriarchal authority and the
ordinances, including “the baptism of life and the right hand.”
[8]
The
first thing Enoch does upon arrival is to cast out Satan from
Abraham’s presence. “Depart from this man!”
[9]
declares Enoch. “Depart, for you can never lead
him astray!”
[10] Enoch then extended his right hand to Abraham (an
indication that this was no spirit, but rather a translated
being of flesh and bones [see D&C 129:4–9], for as yet
there were no resurrected beings serving as angels to planet
earth).
As
told by Abraham, the angel “took me by the right hand” and
“said to me, Stand up, friend of God, who loves you ... I
am sent to you to strengthen you and to bless you in the name
of God, who loves you. . . . It is for your sake that I have
made the journey to earth ... Take courage and come; rejoice
and be glad of heart; and I will rejoice with you; for eternal
honor has been prepared for you by the Eternal One.” And “come
with me to meet him with all speed,” but first “carry through
the sacrifice as you have been commanded; for behold, I am
appointed to be with you and with the people who are to spring
from you.” [11] “And with me Michael blesses you forever.” [12] “Take courage: come.” [13]
As
Abraham relates in the Apocalypse, “I got up and looked at
him who had taken my right hand and set me on my feet. [14]
And his body was like sapphire, and his face like
chrysolite, and the hair of his head like snow; and there
was a linen band about his head, and it was like a rainbow,
and the robes he was wearing were purple, and he had a golden
staff in his hand.” [15]
Not
only does his apparel have “strong priestly associations,” [16]
but the rainbow surrounding his head seems to be
a sign that he is from God’s throne, which was surrounded
by a rainbow. Medieval Jewish texts associate Enoch (Metatron)
with the rainbow, [17]
which in restored scripture figures prominently
as a sign of the covenant that God had made with Enoch that
in the latter days he and his city would return to the earth
(JST Gen. 9:21–24). Enoch thus
exhibited around his own person the very sign portending his
latter-day return to the earth.
Enoch
explains that Abraham will be allowed to see “what is in heaven
and on earth ... and in the fulness of the universe and its
circle: you shall see it all.” [18] Enoch then takes Abraham to a holy mountain from
where he sees hell and its tortures, a sight that leaves Abraham
weak [19] — apparently similar to what Moses would experience
when he “began to fear exceedingly” and “saw the bitterness
of hell” (Moses 1:20).
Enoch
also introduces Abraham to other men, at which point, according
to Nibley, “Abraham ... receiv[es] instruction at an altar
... surrounded by men ... form[ing] a circle around [him].”
[20]
These men are not otherwise named or described,
but they are apparently some of Enoch’s colleagues from the
translated city of Zion, including perhaps
some from Melchizedek’s Salem.
Then
came “the sign of the Holy Ghost unto Abraham, in the form
of a dove,” [21] as Abraham was caught up by the Spirit and accompanied
by Enoch to heaven.
[22]
He had glimpsed God’s abode from afar on the night
before he had entered Egypt, but now was
being taken there following the pattern of his righteous forefathers
Enoch, Seth, and Adam.
In
heaven, Abraham sees glory like a great fire approaching,
and hears the voice of the Lord like “the voice of many waters”
[23]
or “the sound of rushing waters,” [24]
the same description given by Joseph Smith of the
Lord’s voice in the Kirtland Temple.
[25]
Then, “clad in the garment of glory, Abraham becomes
like ‘one of the glorified beings and takes part in the song
of praise chanted by them in heaven to God.’”
[26]
The
profound effect of this experience on Abraham may be surmised
by the later experience of his descendant Alma who, upon seeing
the same scene and hearing those same celestial strains sung
at the throne of the Almighty, felt that “my soul did long
to be there” (Alma 36:22). Such also was the righteous King Benjamin’s
greatest desire, that he might one day “join the choirs above
in singing the praises of a just God” (Mosiah 2:28).
And
such was the Prophet Joseph Smith’s great desire for himself
and all the Latter-day Saints, “that we may mingle our voices
with those bright, shining seraphs around thy throne, with
acclamations of praise, singing Hosanna to God and the Lamb”
(D&C 109:79).
Abraham
had spoken face to face with the Lord before, but never in
the Lord’s own abode. Having received the fulness of the temple
ordinances from Melchizedek, Abraham was qualified to be ushered
into the presence of the Lord. And so it is, as Enoch takes
Abraham to the divine throne, where he saw four fiery winged
creatures and behind them “a chariot with fiery wheels ...
And above the wheels was the throne ... covered with fire
and the fire encircled it round about.”
[27]
It
was the same blazing chariot-throne that would be seen by
Abraham’s descendants Daniel (Dan. 7:9) and Ezekiel (the latter
also reporting the presence of four creatures protecting the
throne; Ezek.1:1-25; 10:6-12). [28]
Abraham now understood the significance of the
chariot of fire that he had once seen and that the Lord had
mentioned in Haran:
it was an image of the divine throne, as imitated extensively
by rulers throughout the ancient Near East [29]
and as Abraham himself had probably seen in the
courts of Nimrod and Pharaoh.
1.Hannah,
Michael and Christ, 53.
2. Apocalypse of Abraham 10:3, in Charlesworth, Old
Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:697.
3. Apocalypse
of Abraham 17:13, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha,
1:693.
4. Transliterated
as “Jehovah” by the King James translators.
5.
See Hannah, Michael and Christ, 52.
6. As
pointed out by Hannah in his discussion of the angel Yahoel
in the Apocalypse of Abraham. Hannah, Michael and Christ,
53. For the list of these names, see 3 Enoch 48D.1, in Odeberg,
3 Enoch, part 2, 172–74, and see note on verse 1, especially
on p. 174.
7. Scholem,
Jewish Gnosticism, Merkabah Mysticism, 41–42. Scholem
specifically concludes that the angel in Chapter 10 of the
Apocalypse of Abraham is the same angel known in later Jewish
tradition as Metatron.
8.
Budge,
Book of the Mysteries, 147.
9. Apocalypse
of Abraham 13:12, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha,
1:695.
10.
Graves and Patai, Hebrew Myths, 153, citing Apocalypse
of Abraham.
11.
Apocalypse of Abraham 10:5–8, 15–16, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 376–77.
12.
Apocalypse of Abraham 10:17, in Charlesworth, Old Testament
Pseudepigrapha, 1:694.
13.
Apocalypse of Abraham 10:18, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 377.
14.
This is what Enoch/Metatron would also do later for Rabbi Ishmael
ben Elisha, the High Priest, who in 3 Enoch reports that “Metatron
the Prince of the Presence, came and restored my spirit and
put me upon my feet.” 3 Enoch 1:9, in Odeberg, 3 Enoch,
part 2, 4–5.
15.
Apocalypse of Abraham 11:1–2, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 377.
16.
“The linen band around his head recalls Aaron’s headdress of
fine linen (Ex. 28:39); the rainbowlike appearance of this
linen band brings together the two central color schemes employed
elsewhere in the description of God as high priest, whiteness
and the multicolored glow. The purple of Iaoel’s robe is one
of the colors of the high-priestly garments of Exodus 28.
The golden staff, like other aspects of the description, is
not only obviously royal, but also priestly; Aaron’s rod figures
prominently in the story of the confrontation with Pharaoh
(Ex. 7:9, 19–20; 8:1, 12), and in the wilderness . . . it
sprouts to indicate the choice of Aaron and his descendants
as priests (Num. 17:16–26).” Himmelfarb, Ascent to Heaven,
62.
17.
See Wolfson, Through a Speculum that Shines, 334.
18.
Apocalypse of Abraham 12:9, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 378.
19.
See Apocalypse of Abraham 15; 16:1, in Charlesworth, Old
Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:696.
20.
Nibley, Mormonism and Early Christianity, 60. Nibley
is citing and paraphrasing (in a targumic type manner) Apocalypse
of Abraham 12:9.
21.
Book of Abraham, Facsimile 2, explanation of figure 7. See
following note.
22.
They ascended, says the Apocalypse, on the wings of a pigeon
and a dove. Apocalypse of Abraham 15, in Sparks,
Apocryphal Old Testament, 378–80. Facsimile 2 of the book
of Abraham shows, according to Nibley, that “the dove that
takes one to heaven is the Holy Ghost.” Nibley, Abraham
in Egypt,
56.
23.
Apocalypse of Abraham 17:1, in Charlesworth, Old Testament
Pseudepigrapha, 1:696.
24.
Apocalypse of Abraham 17:1, in Sparks, Apocryphal Old Testament, 380.
25.
Doctrine and Covenants 110:3: “his voice was as the sound of
the rushing of great waters.”
26.
Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 5:229 n. 114.
27.
Apocalypse of Abraham 18:12–13, in Charlesworth, Old Testament
Pseudepigrapha, 1:698.
28.
The four faces seem to be the four main signs of the Zodiac.
L’Orange, Iconography of Cosmic Kingship, 50.
29. L’Orange, Iconography of Cosmic
Kingship, 42–79, especially 44–50.
© 2007 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved
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About
the Author: |
E. Douglas Clark is an attorney and the author of the article on “Abraham’
in the Encyclopedia of Mormonism, and of a recent book
titled The Blessings of Abraham: Becoming a Zion People.
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