Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Kolob: A Fresh Approach

 

Kolob: A Fresh Approach


 

In this article I will give a possible interpretation of “Kolob” as found in the Book of Abraham.  This does not, however, exclude other possible interpretations,  In Jewish Hermeneutics, a passage can be understood on any of four different levels: Pashat (literal), Remez (hinted), Drash (Homiletical) and Sod (Hidden, mystical).  Moreover each passage is said to have seventy facets of understanding, meaning that a passage can be seen from several possible points of view.

 

There are several examples of passages in the Scriptures which have more than one valid interpretation,  For example “My son” in Hosea 11:1 can refer either to Israel (Ex. 4:22 & Hosea 11:1) and to the Messiah (Matt. 2:15); Jeremiah 31:14(15) can refer either to the tragic events of the fall of Jerusalem to Babylon, or to the slaughter of the innocents (Matthew 2:18); the “abomination of desolation” (Dan. 9:27; 11:31; 12:11) can refer either to the desecration of the alter by Antiochus Epiphanies (1Macc. 1:41-64 & 2Macc. 6:1-6) or the anti-Messiah (Matthew 24:15) and the two sticks of Ezekiel 37:15-17 can refer either to the reunion of the two houses of Israel (Ezekiel 37:18-22) or to the growing together of two scriptural records (2Nefi 2:4).

 

So as I expound upon Kolob in the Book of Abraham, keep in mind that I am presenting one possible interpretation of Kolob, which does not necessarily have to be the only interpretation of Kolob.

 

 

Philo’s Two Worlds

 

In a recent blog, I demonstrated a correspondence between Philo of Alexandria’s concept of two worlds and concepts laid out in the Restoration Scriptures. If you have not already read that blog, you should read it in order to fully understand this blog.

 

In that blog, we learned that the Restoration Scriptures seem to agree with what Philo says when he writes:

 

IV. We must mention as much as we can of the matters contained in his account, since to enumerate them all is impossible; for he embraces that beautiful world which is perceptible only by the intellect, as the account of the first day will show: (16) for God, as apprehending beforehand, as a God must do, that there could not exist a good imitation without a good model, and that of the things perceptible to the external senses nothing could be faultless which wax not fashioned with reference to some archetypal idea conceived by the intellect, when he had determined to create this visible world, previously formed that one which is perceptible only by the intellect, in order that so using an incorporeal model formed as far as possible on the image of God, he might then make this corporeal world, a younger likeness of the elder creation, which should embrace as many different genera perceptible to the external senses, as the other world contains of those which are visible only to the intellect. (17) But that world which consists of ideas, it were impious in any degree to attempt to describe or even to imagine: but how it was created, we shall know if we take for our guide a certain image of the things which exist among us. When any city is founded through the exceeding ambition of some king or leader who lays claim to absolute authority, and is at the same time a man of brilliant imagination, eager to display his good fortune, then it happens at times that some man coming up who, from his education, is skilful in architecture, and he, seeing the advantageous character and beauty of the situation, first of all sketches out in his own mind nearly all the parts of the city which is about to be completed–the temples, the gymnasia, the prytanea, and markets, the harbour, the docks, the streets, the arrangement of the walls, the situations of the dwelling houses, and of the public and other buildings. (18) Then, having received in his own mind, as on a waxen tablet, the form of each building, he carries in his heart the image of a city, perceptible as yet only by the intellect, the images of which he stirs up in memory which is innate in him, and, still further, engraving them in his mind like a good workman, keeping his eyes fixed on his model, he begins to raise the city of stones and wood, making the corporeal substances to resemble each of the incorporeal ideas. (19) Now we must form a somewhat similar opinion of God, who, having determined to found a mighty state, first of all conceived its form in his mind, according to which form he made a world perceptible only by the intellect, and then completed one visible to the external senses, using the first one as a model.


V. (20) As therefore the city, when previously shadowed out in the mind of the man of architectural skill had no external place, but was stamped solely in the mind of the workman, so in the same manner neither can the world which existed in ideas have had any other local position except the divine reason (Logos) which made them; for what other place could there be for his powers which should be able to receive and contain, I do not say all, but even any single one of them whatever, in its simple form? (21) And the power and faculty which could be capable of creating the world, has for its origin that good which is founded on truth; for if any one were desirous to investigate the cause on account of which this universe was created, I think that he would come to no erroneous conclusion if he were to say as one of the ancients did say: “That the Father and Creator was good; on which account he did not grudge the substance a share of his own excellent nature, since it had nothing good of itself, but was able to become everything.” (22) For the substance was of itself destitute of arrangement, of quality, of animation, of distinctive character, and full of all disorder and confusion; and it received a change and transformation to what is opposite to this condition, and most excellent, being invested with order, quality, animation, resemblance, identity, arrangement, harmony, and everything which belongs to the more excellent idea.
(Philo; On Creation IV, 15b-V, 22)

 

In other words, Philo is saying that the incorporeal world is a world of idea perceptible only to the intellect, which served as a sort of blueprint in the mind of the Creator, for this corporeal world in which we live.  (Again, read my earlier blog to see how this is the same thing taught in the Restoration Scriptures).

 

 

Kolob

 

In his same book “On Creation” Philo writes:

 

(30) And air and light he considered worthy of the pre-eminence. For the one he called the breath of God, because it is air, which is the most life-giving of things, and of life the causer is God; and the other he called light, because it is surpassingly beautiful: for that which is perceptible only by intellect is as far more brilliant and splendid than that which is seen, as I conceive, the sun is than darkness, or day than night, or the intellect than any other of the outward senses by which men judge (inasmuch as it is the guide of the entire soul), or the eyes than any other part of the body. (31) And the invisible divine reason, perceptible only by intellect, he calls the image of God. And the image of this image is that light, perceptible only by the intellect, which is the image of the divine reason [Logos], which has explained its generation. And it is a star above the heavens, the source of those stars which are perceptible by the external senses, and if any one were to call it universal light he would not be very wrong; since it is from that the sun and the moon, and all the other planets and fixed stars derive their due light, in proportion as each has power given to it; that unmingled and pure light being obscured when it begins to change, according to the change from that which is perceptible only by the intellect, to that which is perceptible by the external senses; for none of those things which are perceptible to the external senses is pure.

(Philo; On Creation 30-31)

 

Anyone familiar with the Book of Abraham will immediately recall these words from the explanation to Figure 5 in Facsimile 2:

 

5. Is called in Egyptian Enish-go-on-dosh; this is one of the governing planets also, and is said by the Egyptians to be the Sun, and to borrow its light from Kolob through the medium of Kae-e-vanrash, which is the grand Key, or, in other words, the governing power, which governs fifteen other fixed planets or stars, as also Floeese or the Moon, the Earth and the Sun in their annual revolutions. This planet receives its power through the medium of Kli-flos-is-es, or Hah-ko-kau-beam, the stars represented by numbers 22 and 23, receiving light from the revolutions of Kolob.

(Book of Abraham Facsimile 2 Figure 5)

 

Here the explanation to Facsimile 5 says that the Sun “borrows its light from Kolob” while Philo says the Sun derives its light from the Logos.  It seems very likely that Philo was familiar with the Book of Abraham.  (This is not a surprise, since Philo was a Jew who lived in first Century Egypt, and the Joseph Smith Papyri and mummies date to the Ptolemaic period of Egypt, from sometime between 300 and 100 BC).

 

If we interpret Kolob in the Book of Abraham in light of this corresponding statement in Philo’s On Creation, in context of the prior material in Philo’s On Creation, Kolob is not only identifiable with the Logos (“The Word”; “The Divine Reason”) but was the blueprint for the Sun, Moon and stars.  Kolob, then, does not exist in the temporal world perceptible to the external senses, but only exists in the world perceptible only to the intellect.  Kolob is the original idea of a star in the mind of Elohim, it is the blueprint for all the heavenly bodies in our universe.

 

The Greek word Philo uses for “divine reason” is “Logos” which is the “Word” (as in the Greek text of John 1:1-3)

 

There is also a close parallel between the material in the Book of Abraham, and the Jewish concept of Creation through four stages and the resulting four “worlds”.

 

These four stages of the process of creation are Atzilut (emanation, nearness), Beri’ah (creation), Yetzirah (formation), and Asiyyah (making/action), and can be found in Isaiah 43:7:

 

Even every one that is called by my name: for I have created (Beri’ah) him for my glory, I have formed (Yetzirah) him; yea, I have made (Asiyyah) him.

(Is. 43:7 KJV)

 

The first Century Jewish writer Philo of Alexandria speaks of these same four stages of creation or four worlds when he writes:

 

We must mention as much as we can of the matters contained in his account, since to enumerate them all is impossible; for he embraces that beautiful world which is perceptible only by the intellect, as the account of the first day will show: (16) for God, as apprehending beforehand, as a God must do, that there could not exist a good imitation without a good model, and that of the things perceptible to the external senses nothing could be faultless which wax not fashioned with reference to some archetypal idea conceived by the intellect, when he had determined to create this visible world, previously formed that one which is perceptible only by the intellect, in order that so using an incorporeal model formed as far as possible on the image of God, he might then make this corporeal world, a younger likeness of the elder creation, which should embrace as many different genera perceptible to the external senses, as the other world contains of those which are visible only to the intellect. (17) But that world which consists of ideas, it were impious in any degree to attempt to describe or even to imagine: but how it was created, we shall know if we take for our guide a certain image of the things which exist among us. When any city is founded through the exceeding ambition of some king or leader who lays claim to absolute authority, and is at the same time a man of brilliant imagination, eager to display his good fortune, then it happens at times that some man coming up who, from his education, is skilful in architecture, and he, seeing the advantageous character and beauty of the situation, first of all sketches out in his own mind nearly all the parts of the city which is about to be completed–the temples, the gymnasia, the prytanea, and markets, the harbour, the docks, the streets, the arrangement of the walls, the situations of the dwelling houses, and of the public and other buildings. (18) Then, having received in his own mind, as on a waxen tablet, the form of each building, he carries in his heart the image of a city, perceptible as yet only by the intellect, the images of which he stirs up in memory which is innate in him, and, still further, engraving them in his mind like a good workman, keeping his eyes fixed on his model, he begins to raise the city of stones and wood, making the corporeal substances to resemble each of the incorporeal ideas. (19) Now we must form a somewhat similar opinion of God, who, having determined to found a mighty state, first of all conceived its form in his mind, according to which form he made a world perceptible only by the intellect, and then completed one visible to the external senses, using the first one as a model. (On Creation 15b-19)

 

On the surface Philo seems to only write here of two worlds, but if we look in more detail about what he says about each of these two worlds, we see that there are really four:

 

Philo says of the incorporeal world, that it is “an incorporeal model formed as far as possible on the image of God.” (On Creation 17)

While of his corporeal world Philo says:

(8) But Moses, who had early reached the very summits of philosophy, and who had learnt from the oracles of God the most numerous and important of the principles of nature, was well aware that it is indispensable that in all existing things there must be an active cause, and a passive subject; and that the active cause is the intellect of the universe, thoroughly unadulterated and thoroughly unmixed, superior to virtue and superior to science, superior even to abstract good or abstract beauty; (9) while the passive subject is something inanimate and incapable of motion by any intrinsic power of its own, but having been set in motion, and fashioned, and endowed with life by the intellect, became transformed into that most perfect work, this world. And those who describe it as being uncreated, do, without being aware of it, cut off the most useful and necessary of all the qualities which tend to produce piety, namely, providence: (On Creation 9-9)

So we can lay out these four worlds as follows:

 

Kabbalah

Philo

Olam Atztilut

The World of Emanation or

 The World of Nearness

 

The Image of Elohim

(The Logos)

Olam Beri’ah

World of Creation

 

Incorporeal Model

Olam Yetzirah

World of Formation

 

Inanimate Passive Subject

Olam Asiyyah

World of Making/.Action

 

This World (Animated)

 

That this Jewish Understanding of creation thru stages beginning with emanation, parallels that found in the Book of Abraham, seems to have been recognized by Hugh Nibley, who wrote in his monumental work on the Book of Abraham, One Eternal Round, which compares the Sefer Yetzirah to the Book of Abraham saying: “It even ‘denies the popular belief that the world was evolved from nothing.’” Referencing in a footnote Adolph Frank’s book The Kabbalah; the Religious Philosophy of the Hebrews, page 71 in which we read Franck’s comments to the SeferYetzirah 1:9-13 as follows:

 

Is not this what is called the doctrine of emanation? Is not this the doctrine which denies the popular belief that the world was evolved from nothing? The following words free us from uncertainty: “The end of the ten Sefiroth is tied to their beginning as the flame to the fire-brand, for the Lord is One and there is no second to Him: and what will you count before the One?” [(Sefer Yetzirah 1:7)]

 

Philo’s inanimate passive subject, which is the material upon which the active cause of creation acts, the primordial “material” from which the creation is “formed” in the World of Formation, parallels the “material” from which the earth is “made” in the Book of Abraham.

 

24 And there stood one among them that was like unto God, and he said unto those who were with him: We will go down, for there is space there, and we will take of these materials, and we will make an earth whereon these may dwell;

(Abr. 3:24)

 

It is important to note that the Hebrew word “Asiyyah” means “making” or “action” indicating a verb meaning “to make” or “to do” and implies the idea of animating an inanimate creation.

 

The Jewish understanding of the process of Creation begins with a process known as Tzimtzum (contraction).  Before the beginning of Creation, there was only Eyn Sof (The Infinite One).  Eyn Sof is a Hebrew phrase that literally means “without end” or “without a border”.  Since the Infinite One was all of everything, there was nothing that was not Eyn Sof.  The first act of creation, therefore, was for Eyn Sof to contract upon Eyn Sof so as to create, for the first time, an empty space, and area that was not Eyn Sof for a universe, thus allowing foe, not only a universe, but for freewill.  It was in this empty space, that our universe would be created. 

 

It is this primordial empty space to which the Book of Abraham refers when it says “there is space there”. 

 

In the Book of Abraham chapter 4:1 we read that the heavens and earth were “organized and formed” and throughout the chapter the verbs organized and prepared are used.  This is parallel to the process of creation in the Jewish tradition as laid out above.

 

All of these elements of Jewish understanding and the Book of Abraham, now allow us to unlock the mysteries of Kolob. 

 

In the Book of Abraham we also read about Kolob:

 

3 And the Lord said unto me: These are the governing ones; and the name of the great one is Kolob, because it is near unto me, for I am the Lord thy God: I have set this one to govern all those which belong to the same order as that upon which thou standest.

4 And the Lord said unto me, by the Urim and Thummim, that Kolob was after the manner of the Lord, according to its times and seasons in the revolutions thereof; that one revolution was a day unto the Lord, after his manner of reckoning, it being one thousand years according to the time appointed unto that whereon thou standest. This is the reckoning of the Lord’s time, according to the reckoning of Kolob....

 

9 And thus there shall be the reckoning of the time of one planet above another, until thou come nigh unto Kolob, which Kolob is after the reckoning of the Lord’s time; which Kolob is set nigh unto the throne of God, to govern all those planets which belong to the same order as that upon which thou standest.

 

16 If two things exist, and there be one above the other, there shall be greater things above them; therefore Kolob is the greatest of all the Kokaubeam [Heb: Stars] that thou hast seen, because it is nearest unto me.

(Abraham 3:3-4, 9, 16)

 

Kolob, signifying the first creation, nearest to the celestial, or the residence of God. First in government, the last pertaining to the measurement of time. The measurement according to celestial time, which celestial time signifies one day to a cubit. One day in Kolob is equal to a thousand years according to the measurement of this earth, which is called by the Egyptians Jah-oh-eh.

(Facsimile 2 Explanation 1)

 

If we now apply this understanding to the explanations to Facsimile 2:

 

Fig. 1. Kolob, signifying the first creation, nearest to the celestial, or the residence of God. First in government, the last pertaining to the measurement of time. The measurement according to celestial time, which celestial time signifies one day to a cubit. One day in Kolob is equal to a thousand years according to the measurement of this earth, which is called by the Egyptians Jah-oh-eh.

 

Fig. 2. Stands next to Kolob, called by the Egyptians Oliblish, which is the next grand governing creation near to the celestial or the place where God resides; holding the key of power also, pertaining to other planets; as revealed from God to Abraham, as he offered sacrifice upon an altar, which he had built unto the Lord.

 

Then we see that the four worlds lay out in the Book of Abraham as:

 

Kabbalah

Philo

Book of Abraham

Olam Atztilut

The World of Emanation/Nearness

 

The Image of Elohim

(Logos)

Kolob, signifying the first creation,

 

Olam Beri’ah

World of Creation

 

Incorporeal Model

Oliblish, which is the next grand governing creation

Olam Yetzirah

World of Formation

 

Inanimate Passive Subject

and we will take of these materials, and we will make an earth whereon these may dwell;" (Abr. 3:24)


Olam Asiyyah

World of Making/.Action

 

This World (Animated)

This World – The Four Quarters of Earth (Fac.2 Fig. 6)

 

 

All of this information gives us a key to help us to begin to understand the Book of Abraham and especially Facsimile Two.  This information also opens the door to evaluate potential correspondence of these upper three worlds with the three degrees of glory outlined in D&C 76.

 

 

 

 

 

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