Connections - LDS and Jewish Theology - Series
A Message to Judah from Joseph
By President Ezra Taft Benson Of the Council of the Twelve
An address to Mormons, Non-Mormons, and Jews at the Jubilee Auditorium Calgary, Alberta, Canada, May 2, 1976
Ezra Taft Benson, “A Message to Judah from Joseph,” Ensign, Dec. 1976, pg 67
My brethren and sisters—I use that as an inclusive greeting to all assembled, for it is a
part of my faith that we are all children of one Father. To our Jewish friends I say,
“Shalom Haverim,” which is to say, “Good evening, brothers.” It is a privilege and
honor to be with you tonight.
Cherished Associations with Jewish People
Among some of my most cherished experiences and recollections are the fond
association I have enjoyed in past years with the Jewish people in the United States
and the land of Israel. I have visited Israel three times. I have met hundreds of
government officials, farmers, business and trade people, and leaders in professions.
No visits have been more impressive than the visits with David Ben-Gurion, Levi
Eshkol, and Moshe Dayan.
During a luncheon given in my honor, chaired by Mr. Eshkol in the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, Mr. Ben-Gurion sent a handwritten note to me from the hospital, asking
would I call on him if my time permitted. This I did. He was sitting in a rocker with one
leg elevated as I walked into his hospital room. You may recall that some crank threw
a bomb into Parliament and his ankle was injured. As we greeted each other, he said,
“Would you mind if the press came in while we visit? They’ve been trying to see me,
but I haven’t seen anyone except my wife and the nurse.” I told him I would have no
objection. The press came in, and then he began talking to me and asking questions.
He wanted to know what the attitude of the Mormons was toward the Jews. We had
a most interesting conversation.
On my second visit to Palestine, I toured the entire country by small plane, helicopter, and automobile, and was shown every possible courtesy and consideration. I had a
further meeting with Ben-Gurion and Levi Eshkol, and then met with General Moshe
Dayan, the man who had led their forces against the Egyptians.
Dayan, former minister of agriculture, gave a buffet dinner in my honor, served on the patio and lawn at his home. As we walked around the lawn, he told of the campaign
they had against the Egyptians. He said in substance, “I’m not what people would call a
spiritual man, but no one will ever convince me that there wasn’t a higher power with us
as we met the Egyptians down on the Sinai.” I could not help but be reminded of
Zechariah’s great prophecy:
“Jerusalem shall be inhabited again in her own place. …
“In that day shall the Lord defend the inhabitants of Jerusalem; and he that is feeble
among them at that day shall be as David; and the house of David shall be as God.”
(Zech. 12:6, 8.)
My next visit was while serving my church as a General Authority over Europe in 1964. We had two congregations at Beirut, Lebanon. I was visiting those branches and wrote
in advance to Mr. Eshkol, who had become prime minister when Ben-Gurion had
retired. I indicated that I would like to come to Jerusalem again, and if his time
permitted I would be happy to call and pay my respects. He wrote back immediately
urging me to come and sent me a handwritten note from Ben-Gurion, asking that I set
aside one night that my wife and I might spend an evening with them.
We had two visits with these men at that time. We spent an evening with Ben-Gurion and his wife in their apartment in Tel Aviv. Most of the time was spent in the library, where there were books from the floor to the ceiling on three walls. During the evening he said, “I want you to pray to God that he’ll spare me for a few more years. I’m writing a history of the Jewish people, and it will take time to finish it.” As we were leaving at the door that evening, he said, “You know, there are no people in this world who understand the Jews like the Mormons.”
We Have Cosuffered with the Jews
Yes, there is a great affinity for the Jews by the Mormons. The Jews have endured
great persecution and suffering. This we understand, for our people have also
undergone severe persecution and extermination. Indeed, the man we revere as a
modern prophet, Joseph Smith, was martyred for his testimony in 1844. In 1846 our
people had to exodus from the United States because of the threat of annihilation. We
settled in a desert region similar to the topography around the Dead Sea and the Sea of
Galilee. There we have developed our “land of promise.”
Yes, we can empathize with the suffering of the Jews, for we have cosuffered with
them. But our affinity toward modern Judah is not prompted merely out of mutual
suffering; it is prompted out of a knowledge of our peculiar relationships
together—relationships which claim a common heritage. Jeremiah has prophesied that
in the latter times “the house of Judah shall walk with the house of Israel, and they shall
come together.” (Jer. 3:18.) My prayer is that because of evenings spent together like
this one, this prophecy will come to be fulfilled. We need to know more about the
Jews, and the Jews ought to know more about the Mormons. When we understand
one another, then perhaps you will understand why Ben-Gurion said, “There are no
people in the world who understand the Jews like the Mormons.”
Kindred Doctrines of the Mormons and the Jews
Among the kindred doctrines of the Mormons and the Jews is our mutual belief in
Jehovah, a God of revelation. We share a common belief in the Messiah who will
come. We further hold reciprocal beliefs in prophets. We hold a common commitment
to the return of the Jews to the “land of Jerusalem,” in fulfillment of the words of the
ancient prophets. There are many other doctrinal and social similarities.
Foundation of the Church Known as “the Mormons”
The foundation of the Church, which is sometimes referred to by nonmembers as the
“Mormon” Church, is a belief in revelation—modern revelation by God of his purposes
and directions to living prophets.
We believe as Amos declared: “Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.” (Amos 3:7.)
We declare that secrets long since hidden through the ages have been revealed again
through a prophet by the revelation of “a new and everlasting covenant” to Israel. That
prophet’s name was Joseph Smith. These are the words of his own testimony:
“On the evening [of] the 21st of September, A.D. 1823, while I was praying unto God, and endeavoring to exercise faith in the precious promises of Scripture, on a sudden a
light like that of day, only of a far purer and more glorious appearance and brightness,
burst into the room, indeed the first sight was as though the house was filled with
consuming fire; the appearance produced a shock that affected the whole body; in a
moment a personage stood before me surrounded with a glory yet greater than that
with which I was already surrounded. This messenger proclaimed himself to be an
angel of God, sent to bring the joyful tidings that the covenant which God made with
ancient Israel was at hand to be fulfilled. … I was informed that I was chosen to be an
instrument in the hands of God to bring about some of His purposes in this glorious
dispensation.” (History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
4:536-37.)
The Mormons’ Interest in the Jews
From the very inception of this latter-day work, which claims to be a restoration of the
covenants given by God to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, this church has had a deep
interest in the remnant of the house of Israel, the descendants of Judah.
In 1836, the Mormons completed their first temple at Kirtland, Ohio. In the dedicatory prayer which was offered on that occasion, Joseph Smith petitioned the “Lord God of
Israel”:
“O Lord … thou knowest that thou hast a great love for the children of Jacob, who
have been scattered upon the mountains for a long time. …
“We therefore ask thee to have mercy upon the children of Jacob, that Jerusalem, from this hour, may begin to be redeemed;
“And the yoke of bondage may begin to be broken off from the house of David;
“And the children of Judah may begin to return to the lands which thou didst give to
Abraham, their father.” (D&C 109:60-64.) This was said during the Passover season, March 27, 1836.
The Orson Hyde Expedition to Israel
Before Joseph Smith was killed, he dispatched a Jewish apostle by the name of Orson
Hyde to dedicate the land of Palestine for the return of the Jews. This concern for a
homeless people and the sending of this apostle was done at a time when the Mormons
themselves were virtually homeless, having been dispossessed of their lands and
possessions in Missouri.
Orson Hyde left on his assignment in the fall of 1840. He arrived in Palestine in
October 1841. On October 24, 1841, he ascended the Mount of Olives all alone, built
an altar to the Lord, and offered a dedicatory prayer. Here are some portions of that
prayer:
“Thy servant … has safely arrived in this place to dedicate and consecrate this land
unto Thee, for the gathering together of Judah’s scattered remnants, according
to the predictions of the holy Prophets—for the building up of Jerusalem again
after it has been trodden down by the Gentiles so long, and for rearing a Temple in
honor of Thy name. …
“O Thou, Who didst covenant with Abraham, Thy friend, and Who didst renew that
covenant with Isaac, and confirm the same with Jacob with an oath, that Thou wouldst
not only give them this land for an everlasting inheritance, but that Thou wouldst also
remember their seed forever. Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob have long since closed their
eyes in death, and made the grave their mansion. Their children are scattered and
dispersed abroad among the nations of the Gentiles like sheep that have no shepherd,
and are still looking forward for the fulfillment of those promises which Thou didst
make concerning them. …
“Let the land become abundantly fruitful when possessed by its rightful heirs; let it again
flow with plenty to feed the returning prodigals. … Incline them to gather in upon
this land according to Thy word. Let them come like clouds and like doves to
their windows. [This was uttered before the airplane was invented.] Let the large
ships of the nations bring them from the distant isles; and let kings become their
nursing fathers, and queens with motherly fondness wipe the tear of sorrow from their
eye. …
“Let them know that it is Thy good pleasure to restore the kingdom unto Israel—raise
up Jerusalem as its capital, and constitute her people a distinct nation and
government, with David Thy servant, even a descendant from the loins of ancient
David to be their king.” (HC, 4:456-57; italics added.)
This was said at a time when Jewish immigration was but a trickle. Today the gathering has been realized in part with over three million Jews back in the land of their fathers.
On at least two separate occasions, leaders of the nation of Israel have requested that I
relate to them the story of Orson Hyde. The first occasion was at the luncheon to which
I alluded previously. Mr. Eshkol asked me to tell the luncheon audience about Orson
Hyde and his visit to Palestine. I replied, “Do you mean that?” He said that he did. So I
related that account to them.
Another occasion was my last visit with David Ben-Gurion. He requested, “I would
like you to send me all the information you have about Orson Hyde and his visit to
Palestine in 1841. I would like to include it in my history.” We subsequently sent that
information to him.
The Mormon Interest in the Jews Is Based on Kinship
Historically, we must recognize that this interest in the restoration of the Jews to their
homeland is older than modern Zionism and the great work of Theodor Herzl and
others. There were a number of Christian sects in the nineteenth century which held
millennial views and saw the return of the Jews to their homeland as a “sign of the
times” which would precede the second advent of Jesus Christ. The Mormon interest
was and is more than this. Our concern and interest is a kinship to our Jewish brothers.
Our common heritage goes back to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. God reiterated to
Jacob the same promises which were given to Abraham, and then gave Jacob the new
name of Israel. His posterity—all those who descended through his twelve
sons—were known by this designation. They were variously referred to as the “house
of Israel,” “children of Israel,” or “tribes of Israel.” I emphasize that all of his posterity
received the family name designation through the twelve sons. Today it has become
common practice to identify only one of his twelve sons, Judah, with the family
designation “Israelite” because they have maintained their separate identity.
Israel’s Blessing to Joseph
As you carefully read the forty-ninth chapter of Genesis, you will find that Jacob, or
Israel, pronounced blessings on all his twelve sons. Each was given a peculiar and
distinctive blessing. Time will only permit a consideration of the blessings to two of
these sons, whose blessings were preeminent above the blessings of the others. I refer
to the blessings pronounced on Judah and Joseph. May I read first the blessing
pronounced on Joseph:
“Joseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the
wall:
“The archers have sorely grieved him, and shot at him, and hated him:
“But his bow abode in strength, and the arms of his hands were made strong by the
hands of the mighty God of Jacob; (from thence is the shepherd, the stone of Israel:)
“Even by the God of thy father, who shall help thee; and by the Almighty, who shall
bless thee with blessings of heaven above, blessings of the deep that lieth under,
blessings of the breasts, and of the womb:
“The blessings of thy father have prevailed above the blessings of my progenitors unto the utmost bound of the everlasting hills: they shall be on the head of Joseph, and on the
crown of the head of him that was separate from his brethren.” (Gen. 49:22-26.)
There are several points which we should note carefully about this blessing:
- Joseph’s posterity would be numerous; that is, he would be a “fruitful bough.”
- His posterity or “branches” would “run over the wall.”
- His descendants would be sorely persecuted, which is the meaning of the
phraseology “the archers have sorely grieved him, and shot at him, and hated him.”
- The blessings on Joseph’s posterity were to prevail “above the blessings of my
progenitors unto the utmost bound of the everlasting hills.”
Later I shall comment on the interpretation of this blessing as it affects the relationships
of the present-day Mormons and Jews; but first it will be instructive to review the
history of the descendants of Israel after they came into the land promised to Abraham
as “the land of Canaan … an everlasting possession.” (Gen. 17:8.)
The Scattering of Israel
For a time the confederated tribes were a united monarchy under Saul, David, and
Solomon, but ultimately they divided into two major kingdoms. The kingdom to the
north—which comprised 10 1/2 tribes, including the descendants of Joseph—retained
the designation Israel. The kingdom to the south—made up primarily of the tribe of
Judah—adopted the name of Judah. (See 1 Kgs. 11:31-32; 1 Kgs. 12:19-24.)
Prophets were raised up among these two nations to call them to repentance because
of their idolatry and wickedness. The prophet Amos predicted the results of this
disobedience to God.
“Now shall they [Israel] go captive with the first that go captive.” (Amos 6:7.)
“I will sift the house of Israel among all nations, like as corn is sifted in a sieve, yet shall
not the least grain fall upon the earth.” (Amos 9:9.)
The northern kingdom, Israel, was subsequently taken into captivity by the Assyrians
721 years B.C.E., or Before Common Era. The Old Testament contains no history of
Israel, nor of Joseph’s descendants after this date. Are we to believe that God’s
promises to Joseph were for naught, that the prophecy of his posterity being numerous,
“running over the wall,” being sorely persecuted, and going to the “utmost bound of the
everlasting hills” would not be fulfilled?
Separate Records to Be Kept
Because of the division which occurred between the two kingdoms, the Lord made
special provision that separate records were kept. The prophet Ezekiel spoke of these
records in these words:
“The word of the Lord came again unto me, saying,
“Moreover, thou son of man, take thee one stick, and write upon it, For Judah, and for
the children of Israel his companions: then take another stick and write upon it, For
Joseph, the stick of Ephraim, and for all the house of Israel his companions:
“And join them one to another into one stick; and they shall become one in thine hand.
“And when the children of thy people shall speak unto thee, saying, Wilt thou not shew
us what thou meanest by these?
“Say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I will take the stick of Joseph, which
is in the hand of Ephraim, and the tribes of Israel his fellows, and will put them with him,
even with the stick of Judah, and make them one stick, and they shall be one in mine
hand.
“And the sticks whereon thou writest shall be in thine hand before their eyes.” (Ezek.
37:15-20.)
From this commandment from God to the prophet Ezekiel, these provisions should be
noted:
1. That a stick or record was to be kept for Judah, and that a stick or record was to be
kept for Joseph;
2. That the two records were to be joined together into “one stick,” or record, in the
hands of that prophet.
Where is the fulfillment of this important commandment? Who claims to have the
record of Joseph today?
The Book of Mormon Fulfills Joseph’s Prophecy
The record of Joseph has been brought forth in this day to Joseph Smith by a
messenger sent from God. That record is called the Book of Mormon, named after one
of the seed of Joseph who abridged the records of his people. The record tells the
account of a colony of Israelites, descended from Joseph, who left Jerusalem before its
great destruction during the Babylonian siege under King Nebuchadnezzar. It tells how
these descendants of Joseph came “over the wall”—a metaphoric expression which
denoted a barrier to them. That barrier was the great ocean between the continents of
Asia and the Americas. This record tells how they were guided by the hand of the Lord
to the land of America, a land of promise to Joseph and his descendants, a land “of
everlasting hills.” It tells how Joseph’s posterity became very numerous upon the land
until they filled it with a mighty nation. All this was in fulfillment of Joseph’s blessing!
The Book of Mormon further records the destruction of this mighty civilization because
of their departure from the commandments of the God of Israel.
The records of these people lay buried in the earth for centuries. Then in 1827, a
heavenly messenger turned them over to Joseph Smith. They were subsequently
translated from their ancient reformed Egyptian writing into the English language and
were published to the world in the year 1830.
The Judean prophet Ezekiel had declared that these records were to be “one in thine
hand.” I witness before you the fulfillment of that prophecy—the record of Judah in one
hand, the record of Joseph in the other—one in our hands today.
Judah’s Scattering and Persecution
But what about the prophecies that pertain to the house of Judah? The northern tribes
of Israel were not the only ones to be dispersed according to prophecy. Judah, the
southern kingdom, was also to be scattered:
“And the Lord said, I will remove Judah also out of my sight, as I have removed Israel,
and will cast off this city Jerusalem which I have chosen, and the house of which I said,
My name shall be there.” (2 Kgs. 23:27; italics added.)
The history of the scattering of the nation Judah is so well known as to be regarded
proverbial. Under the seizure of Babylon, the nation was taken into exile. A remnant
returned to rebuild Jerusalem and the temple after the Persians came into power. Since
that time, except for a short period of independence under the Maccabees, Judah has
been under the yoke of foreign domination: the Macedonian Empire; the tripartite
government rule by Egypt, Syria, and Macedonia; Syrian domination; then the Roman
rule, and a final dispersion among all nations.
Time will not permit extensive comment about the depth of the suffering and their
persecution among many nations. Some of the most evil of those deeds were
perpetrated upon the remaining Jews in Palestine in the name of Christianity during the
Crusades. Will Durrant has correctly written of this sad chapter of human suffering,
“No other people has ever known so long an exile, or so hard a fate.”
I remember standing on the ruins of what was the largest Jewish ghetto in Europe in the
Jewish section of Warsaw, Poland, in August 1946. There we were given a description
of what had transpired as being somewhat typical of that which had gone on in various
parts of Europe through the establishment of the medieval ghetto.
Here 250,000 descendants of Judah had lived prior to the war. Under the Nazi rule,
through forced labor, Jews were required to build a wall around the ghetto. Later
some 150,000 Jews from other parts of Europe were brought into that area. The
Germans first tried to starve them out, but when that did not work, they transported
over 310,000 Jews to the extermination camps. When Himmler found that there were
still some 60,000 Jews alive in the ghetto, he ordered their “resettlement.” When they
forcibly resisted, the German S. S. General Stroop ordered the tanks, artillery,
flamethrowers, and dynamite squads on the ghetto. The extermination which was to
have taken three days lasted four weeks. The final report by the general read, “Total
number of Jews dealt with: 56,065, including both Jews caught and Jews whose
extermination can be proved.” This report left 36,000 Jews unaccounted for which
were no doubt claimed by the gas chambers. (William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of
the Third Reich, Greenwich, Conn.: Fawcett Publishers, 1965, p. 1272.)
As we stood on the crumbled brick and mortar and the rubble some fifteen feet deep,
with only the spire of one burned synagogue showing—no other building in that vast
area—we were told that thousands of bodies still remained under the rubble of those
once great buildings in this section of Warsaw.
I have visited some of the concentration camps, the mass graves, and the crematoriums
where, it is estimated, six million of the sons and daughters of Judah lost their lives,
reducing their world population from seventeen to eleven million.
I have been impressed to tears as I visited some of these wanderers, those persecuted
and driven sons of our Heavenly Father, my brethren of Judah. Yes, the prophecies
regarding the dispersion and suffering of Judah have been fulfilled. But the gathering and
reestablishment of the Jews was also clearly predicted.
Prophecies Concerning the Gathering of Israel and the Jews
This predicted gathering has three phases: the gathering of Israel to the land of Zion, the
American hemisphere; the return of the Ten Tribes from the north countries; and the
reestablishment of the Jews in Palestine which had been long ago predicted by the
prophets in these words:
“It shall come to pass in that day, that the Lord shall set his hand again the second time
to recover the remnant of his people. …
“And he shall set up an ensign for the nations, and shall assemble the outcasts of Israel,
and gather together the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth.”
(Isa. 11:11-12; italics added.)
“For, lo, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will bring again the captivity of my people
Israel and Judah, … and I will cause them [plural] to return to the land that I gave to
their fathers, and they shall possess it.” (Jer. 30:3; italics added.)
“Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house
of Israel, and with the house of Judah.” (Jer. 31:31.)
And hear the words of Zechariah:
“I will strengthen the house of Judah, and I will save the house of Joseph, and I will
bring them again to place them. …
“I will hiss for them, and gather them; for I have redeemed them.” (Zech. 10:6, 8.)
I have witnessed this spirit work upon the Jews. In 1946, I was impressed as we
interviewed many to find how determined they were to return to Palestine. As they
would come to the relief agencies and the displaced-person camps to get temporary
help, we would ask them why they did not settle nearby, and often would invite them to
stay. But most had but one desire—to return to the land of their fathers.
The Book of Mormon is no less explicit in its prophecy concerning Israel’s and Judah’s
gathering from a long dispersion:
“And it shall come to pass that they shall be gathered in from their long dispersion, from
the isles of the sea, and from the four parts of the earth; and the nations of the Gentiles
shall be great in the eyes of me, saith God, in carrying them forth to the lands of their
inheritance.
“Yea, the kings of the Gentiles shall be nursing fathers unto them, and their queens shall
become nursing mothers.” (2 Ne. 10:8-9.)
I saw the fulfillment of this prophecy with my own eyes in war-torn Europe in 1946
when ships of Great Britain smuggled the Jews to Palestine in response to the powerful
spirit of gathering. The Mormon people understand this spirit.
Here is a further prophecy from the Book of Mormon regarding the scattering and the
restoration of Judah:
“Wherefore, the Jews shall be scattered among all nations; yea, and also Babylon shall
be destroyed; wherefore, the Jews shall be scattered by other nations.
“And after they have been scattered, and the Lord God hath scourged them by other
nations for the space of many generations …
“And the Lord will set his hand again the second time to restore his people from their
lost and fallen state. Wherefore, he will proceed to do a marvelous work and a wonder
among the children of men.” (2 Ne. 25:15-17.)
Since 1948, the people of the world have witnessed a marvelous drama taking place
before their eyes; and yet it is a miracle that has gone rather unnoticed and
unappreciated. One of the greatest events in history is the literal gathering of the Jews
to their homeland from “the four corners of the earth.” It is, as Isaiah prophesied, “a
marvelous work and a wonder.” (See Isa. 29:14.)
In 1950, I said, “There has been much confusion over the Palestine question—much
talk of division of the land, of quotas, import restrictions—but out of it all I cannot help
feeling that we will see a complete fulfilment of the prophecies which have been made
regarding this people. These prophecies are in rapid course of fulfilment before our
very eyes today.” (Conference Reports, April 1950, p. 77.)
Since that time, the nation of Israel has fought three wars, regained Jerusalem and the
western wall (Wailing Wall), and added the Golan Heights and much of the Sinai
Peninsula to its territory.
The Blessing of Israel Pronounced on Judah
We previously considered the blessing that Jacob, or Israel, pronounced on Joseph.
Let us now consider the blessing pronounced on Judah:
“Judah, thou art he whom thy brethren shall praise: thy hand shall be in the neck of thine
enemies; thy father’s children shall bow down before thee.
“Judah is a lion’s whelp: from the prey, my son, thou art gone up: he stooped down, he
couched as a lion, and as an old lion; who shall rouse him up?
“The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet,
until Shiloh come; and unto him shall the gathering of the people be.
“Binding his foal unto the vine, and his ass’s colt unto the choice vine; he washed his
garments in wine, and his clothes in the blood of grapes:
“His eyes shall be red with wine, and his teeth white with milk.” (Gen. 49:8-12.)
The great blessing to Judah is that it contemplated the coming of Shiloh who would
gather his people to him. This prophecy concerning Shiloh has been subject to several
rabbinic and Christian interpretations and the object of considerable controversy. The
interpretation given this passage by the Mormon Church is one based on revelation to
modern prophets, not on scholarly commentary. It was revealed to Joseph Smith that
Shiloh is the Messiah. (See Gen. 50:24, JST)
President Wilford Woodruff, the apostle who became the fourth President of the
Church I represent, said this to the Jews in the year 1879:
“And this is the will of your great Elohim, O house of Judah, and whenever you shall be
called upon to perform this work, the God of Israel will help you. You have a great
future and destiny before you and you cannot avoid fulfilling it; you are the royal chosen
seed, and the God of your father’s house has kept you distinct as a nation for eighteen
hundred years, under all the oppression of the whole Gentile world. You may not wait
until you believe on Jesus of Nazareth, but when you meet with Shiloh your king, you
will know him; your destiny is marked out, you cannot avoid it. It is true that after you
return and gather your nation home, and rebuild your City and Temple, that the Gentiles
may gather together their armies to go against you to battle … ; but when this affliction
comes, the living God, that led Moses through the wilderness, will deliver you, and
your Shiloh will come and stand in your midst and will fight your battles; and you will
know him, and the afflictions of the Jews will be at an end, while the destruction of the
Gentiles will be so great that it will take the whole house of Israel who are gathered
about Jerusalem, seven months to bury the dead of their enemies, and the weapons of
war will last them seven years for fuel, so that they need not go to any forest for wood.
These are tremendous sayings—who can bear them? Nevertheless they are true, and
will be fulfilled, according to the sayings of Ezekiel, Zechariah, and other prophets.
Though the heavens and the earth pass away, not one jot or tittle will fall unfulfilled.”
(Matthias F. Cowley, Wilford Woodruff, Bookcraft, 1964, pp. 509-10; italics
added.)
The Book of Mormon, which was also written to the Jew, testifies who the Shiloh is,
“for there is save one Messiah spoken of by the prophets.” (2 Ne. 25:18.)
“The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until
Shiloh come.” (Gen. 49:10.) We see the fulfillment of the Shiloh prophecy this way:
Judah came to power when David was exalted to the throne. Even after the division of
the northern and southern kingdoms, the kings of Judah sat on the throne. Following the
Babylonian captivity, “lawgivers” were provided to the Jewish remnant who returned to
Jerusalem. Zerubbabel, Ezra, and Nehemiah are examples. Subsequently, the
Sanhedrin was established, and it continued as the ruling body of the Jews until the
destruction of Jerusalem and the scattering of the Jews. From that time, the Jews had
no lawgiver to whom they could turn. Shiloh had come. He was Jesus of Nazareth,
who was later crucified as “King of the Jews.”
Christian history has emphasized the point that the Jews as a nation rejected their
Messiah. Overlooked has been the fact that many Jews did believe him to be the
Messiah. Among those Jews who did so were his twelve apostles and thousands of
other Jews who were converted by their ministry. We declare that after his ministry in
Palestine, the resurrected Messiah personally visited the house of Joseph in this land of
America, taught them, blessed them, and renewed the everlasting covenant with them.
His ministry to America is recorded in the Book of Mormon.
The Story of Joseph Revisited
You will recall the episode of Joseph and his brethren in the Old Testament, and how
he was sold into Egypt. You will remember that, because of a famine in the land of
Canaan, his brethren were compelled to go to Egypt to purchase corn from the
granaries. Joseph had risen to the position of governor over the land, and was in charge
of those granaries. One of the most touching scenes recorded in the Torah is when
Joseph made himself known to his brethren: “I am Joseph your brother …” (Gen.
45:4.)
To you, our friends of modern Judah, we declare, “We are Joseph, your brothers.” We
claim kinship with you as descendants from our fathers, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
We belong to the same family. We, too, are the house of Israel.
There is yet another parallel to this story of Joseph
The brethren of Joseph in times past came to him during a famine for physical
sustenance. Today there is another famine in the land, “not a famine of bread, nor a
thirst of water, but of hearing the words of the Lord.” (Amos 8:11.)
Has not the Lord God said through Isaiah, “Every one that thirsteth, come ye to the
waters. …
“[I will] satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a
watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not.” (Isa. 55:1; Isa.
58:11.)
We are also cognizant of God’s charge to Judah through his prophet Jeremiah:
“For my people have committed two evils; they have forsaken me the fountain of living
waters, and hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no water.” (Jer.
2:13.)
Of far greater value than the physical sustenance that Joseph of old provided his
brethren is the sustenance that modern Joseph has to offer modern Judah today. We
offer freely bread to eat and water to drink. I repeat, our interest in Judah is one of
kinship, for we are your brothers. We come with a message and say, “We have ‘living
water’ from its true source and well, which, if a man will drink it, ‘shall be in him a well
of living water, springing up unto everlasting life.’ ” (D&C 63:23.)
In Jacob’s blessing to Judah, he declared: “Judah is … as an old lion; who shall rouse
him up?” (Gen. 49:9; italics added.) We come as messengers bearing the legitimate
authority to arouse Judah to her promises. We do not ask Judah to forsake her
heritage. We are not asking her to leave father, mother, or family. We bring a message
that Judah does not possess. That message constitutes “living water” from the Fountain
of living water.
Our prophet, Joseph Smith, was given a commandment by the Lord to turn “the hearts
of the Jews unto the prophets, and the prophets unto the Jews.” (D&C 98:17.) We
are presently sending our messengers to every land and people whose ideology permits
us entrance. We have been gathering Joseph’s descendants for 146 years. We hope
you, who are of Judah, will not think it an intrusion for us to present our message to
you. You are welcome to come to our meetings. We display no crosses. We collect no
offerings. We honor your commitment to your unique heritage and your individuality.
We approach you in a different way than any other Christian church because we
represent the restored covenant to the entire house of Israel.
Yes, we understand the Jews, as David Ben-Gurion said. We understand them
because we belong to the same house of Israel. We are your brothers—Joseph. We
look forward to the day of fulfillment of God’s promise when “the house of Judah shall
walk with the house of Israel.” (Jer. 3:18.)
A Blessing on Judah
As one who, by special assignment, has been given authority in the house of Israel
today, I ask the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob to bless my brethren of Judah and
have mercy on them; that the land to which Judah has returned after a long night of
dispersion shall be fruitful, prosperous, and become the envy to her neighbors; that the
nation Israel shall be delivered from all her oppressors and enemies; that Judah will
“draw water out of the wells of salvation” (Isa. 12:3) and fulfill all those prophecies
that God declared through his prophets Isaiah, Ezekiel, and Jeremiah, even that
prophecy through Zechariah that “the Lord shall inherit Judah his portion in the holy
land, and shall choose Jerusalem again” (Zech. 2:12).
I witness to you, my brothers and sisters of all the house of Israel, that I know that the
God of heaven presides over the destinies of all his children. I witness that he has set
his hand a second time to recover his people from the four corners of the earth to the
lands of their inheritance. I testify that he has restored his new covenant with Israel. I
know the Book of Mormon is a truthful account of God’s dealings with the house of
Joseph, that its testimony is true, and that it is the word of the Lord to the Gentiles,
Jews, and all the house of Israel. I further witness that Joseph Smith was what he
represented himself to be, a prophet of the living God and a messenger of the new
covenant to Israel. I would urge all to give heed to the message given by God through
him.
Perhaps now, our friends of Judah, you will appreciate the sincerity of our declaration
to you, “Shalom Haverim.” I pray God’s blessings upon us all. In the name of Jesus
Christ—the Messiah. Amen.
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