M E R I D I A N M A G A Z I N E
A
View of the Last Days
Chapter
7, part 4 of The Blessings of Abraham:
Becoming a
God then “revealed [to Abraham] the end of the times.” [1] Abraham saw that “in the last days” his own righteous posterity would be “the people set apart for” the Lord, but would be “put to the test” in that “ungodly age” of great “plagues” and “misfortunes,” [2] and would be “humiliated” and “mocked” and “ruled over” [3] and threatened with destruction. [4]
When Abraham’s forefather Enoch had been shown events in the future, he had pled for mercy for his descendants, and the Lord granted Enoch’s request by making a covenant (see Moses 7:48–67, especially 50–52). So it apparently happened now with Abraham as he foresaw the distress of his latter-day posterity and, according to Jewish tradition, petitioned God for their benefit, [5] whereupon the Lord made a covenant with Abraham.
In the highly abbreviated Genesis version of the story, the covenant concerns merely the promise of the land (Gen. 15:18–21). But Jewish tradition held that the covenant encompassed more, and that the Lord “promised Abraham to redeem his children” [6] and to “deliver them from the kingdoms,” [7] or, in the words of 4 Ezra, to “never forsake his descendants.” [8]
The Midrash speaks of “the deep designs which the Holy One, blessed be He … arranged between Himself and His noble companion,” namely Abraham. [9] These deep designs were made part of the covenant, by virtue of which the Lord would protect His Latter-day Saints: “I will show unto them that fight against my word and against my people, who are of the house of Israel, that I am God, and that I covenanted with Abraham that I would remember his seed forever” (2 Ne. 29:14).
The
passage is found in the writings of Nephi, who
elsewhere uses another word in describing the
same event: “And all that fight against
Nephi was paraphrasing Isaiah’s writings, which in turn, as one scholar has shown, preserved much of the old Enochic heritage. [10] In fact, 1 Enoch tells that at the last day the wicked “shall quiver. And great fear and trembling shall seize them unto the ends of the earth. Mountains and high places will fall down and ... melt like a honeycomb before the flame ... He will preserve the elect” but “destroy the wicked ones.” [11]
Abraham had undoubtedly read this Enoch passage, along with the one telling that the Lord’s return to the earth would be in fulfillment of His covenant to Enoch (Moses 7:59–60). Now Abraham himself, having received the Lord’s promise to protect Abraham’s latter-day posterity, was shown that the Lord would maintain them “safe in my keeping,” [12] “protected by me.” [13]
He would “sound the trumpet from the air, and I will send my Elect One, with a full measure of all my power. And he shall summon my people ... and those who have reviled them and have had dominion over them in the present age will I burn with fire.” [14]
Abraham saw, in other words, that his Descendant who had once been humiliated by the powers of the earth would in the last days come in glory to rescue others of Abraham’s righteous descendants in their hour of grave danger.
Then, as attested by various ancient sources, God showed him “the resurrection of the dead [and] the future judgment” [15] and “the fates of sinners and the righteous.” [16] He thus saw not only “the punishment of the evil,” [17] even “the wicked [who] rebelled ... during their lives,” [18] but also “the reward of the good,” [19] and he “watched as seats were arranged and thrones were set up.” [20]
A vision of such things is reserved, as the Lord has stated in latter-day revelation, for “those who fear me, and ... serve me in righteousness and in truth unto the end” (D&C 76:5). It was a vision for which Joseph Smith also qualified (see D&C 76).
As
Abraham continued to watch, he saw something else,
something that moved him deeply, something of
which he had been reminded when he noticed the
rainbow surrounding Enoch. What Abraham saw is
mentioned in a text attributed to Baruch, a contemporary
of Lehi who, like Lehi (1 Ne. 1:12–13), had foreseen
in vision the fall of
It
is the same city that 4 Ezra calls
Wilford Woodruff stated that Abraham saw that “a reign of righteousness would commence and the honest and meek of the earth would be gathered together to serve the Lord, and upon them would rest power to build up the great Zion of God in the latter days.” [26]
For many years, Abraham had longed
to join the translated city of
If
Abraham had sought the city of
And
as Abraham had rejoiced in the vision of the first
coming of Christ, so now he rejoiced in the vision
of Christ’s Second Coming, when the Son of Man
would rescue Abraham’s latter-day seed, those
inhabitants of the earthly
Having been offered the opportunity
to choose what gift he wished from the Lord, notwithstanding
Abraham’s long quest for the translated city of
And
once again in Abraham’s life,
Thus Abraham, heir to the royal patriarchal authority of Adam, now descends as a Sent One, a special witness of the Greater One whom the Father would send as his Beloved Son, even the King of Zion, he who had welcomed Abraham at the royal throne above.
Abraham’s exhilarating experience at the throne of God would be but a foretaste of the eternal glory awaiting him when he would inherit his own throne of glory in the presence of God the Father and His Only Begotten Son. In the meantime, many centuries after Abraham when the Only Begotten Son would descend from His throne to be born in a manger, He would be recognized and honored as the Heavenly King by magi from the East. [30]
Who were they, and how did they know how to find and recognize the infant King? “The Magi are said to have called their religion Kêsh-i-Ibrâhîm, i.e., creed of Abraham, whom they considered as their prophet and the reformer of their religion. They traced their religious books to Abraham, who was believed to have brought them from heaven.” [31]
According to this tradition, it was the books brought down by Abraham from the throne of Jesus that guided the magi to the manger to worship the infant King of Heaven.
1. 4 Ezra 3:14, in Stone, Fourth Ezra, 58. As Stone (p. 71) comments, “The occasion of the revelation to Abraham was doubtlessly the Covenant Between the Pieces (Genesis 15).”
2.
Apocalypse
of Abraham 29:8–15, in
3. Apocalypse of Abraham 31:1–2, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:704–705.
4. Apocalypse of Abraham 29:19, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:704.
5. Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:235.
6. Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 2:201.
7. Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on Genesis 15:18, in Maher, Targum Pseudo-Jonathan, 61.
8. 4 Ezra 3:15, in Stone, Fourth Ezra, 59.
9. Genesis Rabbah 84:13, in Freedman, Midrash Rabbah, Genesis, 2:779.
10.
Barker, The Older Testament. The thesis of Barker’s
fascinating book is essentially that 1 Enoch and
other so-called pseudepigraphical writings provide
important keys to
11. 1 Enoch 1:4–9, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:13–14.
12.
Apocalypse of Abraham 29:17, in
13. Apocalypse of Abraham 29:17, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:704.
14.
Apocalypse of Abraham 31:1–2, in
15. Recognitions of Clement 1.33, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, 8:86. Jewish sources similarly remember that God “showed him the resurrection of the dead.” And see Kasher, Encyclopedia of Biblical Interpretation, 2:195–6; and Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:236.
16. A number of “pseudepigraphic and midrashic sources all take the scene at Genesis 15:7 as suggesting a vision by Abraham of the fates of sinners and the righteous.” Jacobson, Liber Antiquitatum Biblicarum, 2:717.
17. Recognitions of Clement 1.33, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, 8:86.
18. Fragment Targums on Genesis 15:17, in Klein, Fragment Targums, 2:13.
19. Recognitions of Clement 1.33, in Ante-Nicene Fathers, 8:86.
20. Fragment Targums on Genesis 15:17, in Klein, Fragment Targums 2:13; so also Targum Neofiti on Genesis 15:17, in McNamara, Targum Neofiti 1, 96–97.
21. 2 Baruch 6:2, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:622.
22. 2 Baruch 4:1–6, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:622.
23. 4 Ezra 13:36, in Charlesworth, Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, 1:552.
24. Galbraith and Smith, Scriptural Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 262, referring to the experience of many ancient prophets.
25.
One of the Dead Scroll fragments mentioning Abraham also mentions
a carcass (an alternate reading apparently alluding
to the sacrifice described in Genesis 15) and
contains the quote: “[For I will give] purified
lips to the people.” The next column of this fragment
then proceeds to mention “the judgment” and speaks
of the Lord telling Abraham the same thing reported
in Genesis 15:13. 4Q464, “Lives of the Patriarchs,”
in Wise, Abegg, and Cook,
26. Journal of Discourses, 17:245.
27. See Targum of Pseudo-Jonathan on Genesis 15:2, in Bowker, Targums and Rabbinic Literature, 200.
28. Ginzberg, Legends of the Jews, 1:297.
29. Widengren, Ascension of the Apostle, 21. Abraham had of course received the fulness of the kingly priesthood ordinances from Melchizedek, but he was also the heir to the royal patriarchal authority. Now he descends as yet a greater special witness of the Lord.
30.
For the translation of “magi” in Matthew 2:1, see NIV;
31. Haug, Essays on .,. the Parsis, 16.
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