An Eye Single to His Glory
What is an eye single to his glory? This particular phrase in the Stick of Joseph invites further analysis and leads to a conclusion that is not only unexpected, but is also another Hebrew idiom bullseye for the text.
What is an eye single to his glory? This particular phrase in the Stick of Joseph invites further analysis and leads to a conclusion that is not only unexpected, but is also another Hebrew idiom bullseye for the text.
This covenant made by the people is an example of a vow or oath made by way of a euphemism or analogy. Within Jewish law, there are two ways a person might make a vow. The first is direct, stating the terms forthrightly. For example, “this item shall be prohibited to me” is a direct statement of vow terms. However the vow might also be made by a euphemism, stating by analogy the terms of the vow.
And he shall be great like unto Moshe, whom I have said I would raise up unto you to deliver my people, O house of Isra’el. And Moshe will I raise up to deliver your people out of the land of Egypt. But a seer will I raise up out of the fruit of your loins, and unto him will I give power to bring forth my word unto the seed of your loins; and not to the bringing forth my word only, says YHWH, but to the convincing them of my word which shall have already gone forth among them.
This prophecy of Isaiah, and especially the ancient Nazarene interpretation of it, was fulfilled, not by Paul, who was only one man, but by the “young men” Alma the younger and the four sons of Moshiyah as recorded in the Stick of Joseph!
One of the many ways that Messiah was revealed to Israel in the Torah was through the brazen serpent lifted up in the wilderness. The Stick of Joseph adds depth and understanding to this incident as a symbol of Messiah.
This notion of “one eternal round,” whether found in later Jewish mysticism, or the earlier Stick of Joseph, clearly hails from even earlier Jewish sources and provides convincing evidence that the Stick of Joseph is an authentic Jewish record.
How could Yosef ben Yosef have known that the word “sun” in Mal’khi’s phrase “sun of righteousness” was understood in the ancient Jewish texts to refer to the “Son” and that this passage of Mal’akhi was understood in the ancient Jewish literature as a Messianic prophecy about the Messiah’s ability to heal?
The Fall of Adam account in the Stick of Joseph offers us a profound testimony to its authenticity as an ancient Jewish document. In this post, we’ll consider unique teachings from Jewish tradition reflected in the Stick of Joseph teachings about the fall of Adam and Eve.
This miracle has an amazing parallel in a Jewish tradition concerning another water-going vessel—Noach’s ark—and how it was lit when it was sealed shut.
These Isaiah excerpts are uniquely interesting because they show clear signs of descending from the ancient scribal tradition of the Book of Isaiah. In some cases, the Brass Plates versions of Isaiah differ from the standard Masoretic text found in modern Bibles…when the Brass Plates version differs from the Masoretic (Biblical) text, the Brass Plates version often proves to match other ancient sources better than the current Biblical text does.
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