Zion
and Her Atoning King
Chapter 10, part 4 of The Blessings of Abraham:
Becoming a Zion People
By
E. Douglas Clark
Most importantly, as the Apostle Paul emphasized, God’s promise
to Abraham focused on that one particular Descendant who would
bless all nations, even the Savior (Gal. 3:16) — as Abraham
himself well knew, having previously seen in vision the Savior’s
birth and ministry.
In fact, Abraham must now have recognized,
if he hadn’t already, that his own intense trial had been
a remarkably detailed foreshadowing of the great Atonement
of Christ.
According to the Cave of Treasures, an early Christian work,
when “Abraham took up his son as an offering ... he at the
same time foresaw in this act the crucifixion of Christ.”
[1]
Nor would some of Abraham’s offspring
miss the symbolism of this poignantly unique event as simply
the clearest and most powerful type of the most important
event ever to take place on this planet, the sacrifice of
the Son of God. Hence when the Book of Mormon prophet Jacob
chose from all of past history an event that would serve as
a compelling “similitude of God and his Only Begotten Son,”
it was the obedience of “Abraham in the wilderness ... in
offering up his son Isaac” (Jacob 4:5).
The same comparison is evident in the
New Testament, where the Greek word used by James to describe
Abraham’s faith being made “perfect” (teleioun) when
he offered up Isaac (James 2:21–22), is the same word used
in the gospel of John when Jesus prays that His disciples
may be “perfect” in one (John 17:23), and yet again the same
word used by John to describe the crucifixion of Jesus as
bringing scripture to “complete fulfillment.” [2]
But already John had written that “God
so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son” (John
3:16), the one passage that best sums up the entire gospel
of John. [3] The words carry a distinct and intentional echo
of God’s ancient directive to Abraham to offer up his beloved
son. [4]
Moreover, as the first occurrence of
any form of the word love in the Old Testament is God’s mention
of Abraham’s love for Isaac in Genesis 22, so the first occurrence
of love in the New Testament is by a heavenly voice
speaking of the love of a Father for His Son: “This is my
beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
[5]
And as Abraham had walked up the mountain
to fulfill that directive, he had promised Isaac that God
would provide a lamb. What God provided that day was a ram.
So where was the lamb? The answer comes only later as recorded
in the gospel of John when John the Baptist sees Jesus and
announces, “Behold the Lamb of God” (John 1:29). This was
the fulfillment of Abraham’s prophecy, uttered in the only
conversation that Genesis records between Abraham and his
posterity.
Hence, according to the second-century
theologian and martyr Irenaeus, “Abraham ... delivered up,
as a sacrifice to God, his only-begotten and beloved son,
in order that God also might be pleased to offer up for all
his seed His own beloved and only-begotten Son, as a sacrifice
for our redemption.” [6] Or, as portrayed in Armenian apocryphal sources,
“Abraham is the type of God the Father, Isaac is Christ, the
wood is the wood of the Cross, Abraham’s sacrifice is God’s
sending of his Son.” [7]
Such redemption would take place very
near the site of Abraham’s similitude, even as prophetically
foretold by generations of ancient Israelites exclaiming,
“In the mount will the Lord be seen.”
[8]
Ironically, only when Abraham had obediently relinquished
the promise of being the Savior’s ancestor did he secure the
guarantee of that promise.
This guarantee of God’s swearing an
oath is unprecedented in Genesis, but not in the writings
of Abraham’s forefathers. When Enoch had prayed for mercy
for his posterity, the Lord had covenanted with Enoch and
irrevocably sworn with an oath to preserve and protect his
posterity — adding that “blessed is he through whose seed
Messiah shall come; for he saith — I am Messiah, the King
of Zion” (Moses 7:51–53).
The Messiah’s unnamed blessed ancestor
could well be Abraham, who upon completing the similitude
of the Messiah’s Atonement heard the Lord swear an oath guaranteeing
that through Abraham’s seed would indeed come the Messiah,
the King of Zion.
The word Zion
is used throughout the Prophetic and Psalms literature and
extensively in the rabbinic writings to designate that most
important of all Jewish geographic locations, the Temple Mount. Curiously,
Jewish and biblical scholars are at a loss to explain the
origin of the name,
[9]
noting that from earliest times “it is transmitted
as a proper name” and “undoubtedly comes from pre-Israelite
times,” [10]
having been “only secondarily transferred” to Jerusalem
and its Temple Mount.
[11]
And a key part of that inherited tradition
“depict[s] the city of God
in the light of complete happiness and prosperity.”
[12] In short, the Zion tradition
at Jerusalem is now recognized to be far
older than Jerusalem
itself, pointing back to an ancient golden age. Only with
the loss of the Enoch texts did later generations forget the
original, the order of Enoch that those at Jerusalem
sought to reestablish on the very site dedicated by Abraham
for that purpose.
Nor would the Jerusalem
effort to reestablish Zion
be the last, for as Brigham Young said, it is “the order of
Enoch” that “God has established for his people in all ages
of the world when he has had a kingdom upon the earth.” [13]
It would thus be the order of the latter days,
as Abraham also foresaw when he beheld in vision the temple
as it would stand in the far-distant Messianic era.
It was all part of the original oath
to Enoch about the latter-day return of his city of Zion,
to meet the earthly Zion built by Abraham’s
posterity — pursuant to the oath sworn to Abraham by God through
his angel on Mount Moriah.
Who was that angel? Jubilees specifies
that it was the very angel of the presence,
[14] who, as seen before, is elsewhere identified as
Enoch. Similarly in the Midrash ha-Gadol the angel who called
out of heaven is specifically named as Metatron,
[15]
who is Enoch.
[16]
This source further tells that Metatron was chosen
to relay the message because, as Abraham was about to sacrifice
Isaac, “Metatron arose before the Holy One ... and said before
him, ‘Lord of the Universe, let not the seed of Abraham perish
from the world.’” The Lord then “indicated to Metatron to
call him, as it is written ‘The angel of the Lord then called
to him from heaven.’”
[17]
Having once been God’s messenger to
rescue Abraham from death on the altar in Ur,
Enoch again serves as God’s messenger to rescue Abraham’s
son of promise from another altar and to convey the oath encompassing
the future building of Zion. In fact, a Turkish source seems to indicate
that it was concern for the latter-day Zion that prompted the plea of the angels, who
saw “from the Preserved Tablet that the Prophet of the End
of Time will come from ... [the] line” of the son about to
sacrificed.
[18]
For Latter-day Saints, this End-Time prophet is
none other than Joseph Smith.
Hence on Mount Moriah, Zion above had
interceded for Zion below, and particularly for the benefit
of latter-day Zion — but only after Abraham’s obedience had
foreshadowed the price to be paid for Zion by her King, the
Messiah, the Son of God and of Abraham.
Well did the Danish philosopher Kierkegaard
title his treatment of Abraham’s sacrifice Fear and Trembling,
for as a later philosopher, Jacques Derrida, would comment
about Abraham’s sacrifice, “What is it that makes us tremble
... ? It is the gift of infinite love.” [19]
To Him whose death was prefigured by
the experience of Isaac, Moroni
said: “Thou hast loved the world, even unto the laying down
of thy life for the world” (Ether 12:33). It was this divine
gift of love, freely given to Zion by her suffering King, that was foreshadowed
in Abraham’s offering of his beloved son.