The Feast of Trumpets and the Book of Mormon
Joseph Smith's Receipt of the Plates and the Israelite Feast of Trumpets
Lenet Hadley Read
Reprinted from Journal of Book of Mormon Studies 2/2 (Fall 1993): 110-120.
Abstract: Joseph Smith received the golden plates on the Israelite Day of
Remembrance (or Rosh ha-Shanah). Biblical references and interpretation by
Jewish sages through the centuries set this day as the day God would remember
his covenants with Israel to bring them back from exile. Also called the Feast
of Trumpets, on this day ritual trumpet blasts signify the issuance of
revelation and a call for Israel to gather for God's word of redemption. Set at
the time of Israel's final agricultural harvest, the day also symbolizes the
Lord's final harvest of souls. Furthermore, it initiates the completion of the
Lord's time periods, the Days of Awe, and signifies the last time to prepare for
final judgment and the Messianic Age. The coming forth of the Book of Mormon is
literally fulfilling such prophecies of the day.
In addition to the Sabbath, six biblical holy days hold prominent importance in
Israel as times of worship with prophetic implication. They began at God's
command (Leviticus 23). The first three observances—Passover, the barley sheaf
offering, the Feast of Weeks—coincide with Israel's first yearly harvest and
hold prophetic witness of Christ's mortal ministry,1 which his death,
resurrection, and initial harvest of souls fulfilled, on the very days those
festivals were observed.2 The final three holy times—Feast of Trumpets, Day of
Atonement, Feast of Tabernacles—fall at Israel's final harvest and also hold
prophetic meaning for the Lord's work among his people.3 These last three
worship times, taken together, are called Israel's High Holy Days, or Days of
Awe.
Joseph Smith's history dates the reception of the golden plates: "On the
twenty-second day of September, one thousand eight hundred and
twenty-seven" (Joseph Smith-History 1:59). Interestingly, 22 September 1827
was the day Jews throughout the world celebrated the Feast of Trumpets,4 which
initiates the Days of Awe. Because of the prophetic pattern in Israel's holy
days, the question arises, how much significance is there to the correlation
between these two events?
While scholars do not completely agree on everything concerning the Feast of
Trumpets, various methods can be used to ascertain its purpose and significance,
i.e., its origins as a biblical commandment; its timing; its names; its history;
its ritual, including prayers offered and scriptures read; its role according to
tradition; its relationship to other holy days; and its significance as seen by
rabbis and scholars.
An examination of the Feast of Trumpets from these perspectives reveals four
major meanings, which work together as a unity. The Feast of Trumpets signifies
the time of Israel's final harvest; the Day of Remembrance of God's covenants
with Israel; the announcement of revelation or truth; and preparation for God's
holiest times, including the Messianic Age. These four purposes bear strong
corollaries
The Feast of Trumpets Signifies Israel's Final Harvest
The Lord commanded Israel, "In the seventh month, in the first day of the
month, shall ye have a sabbath, a memorial of blowing of trumpets"
(Leviticus 23:24). By setting the festival in the seventh month of the Judaic
calendar, (usually falling in our September), the day, like other Israelite holy
days God commanded, was timed to coincide with an agricultural harvest (Exodus
34:22), in this case the harvest of fruits and grapes, the final harvest of the
year.5 In fact, this festival was also anciently called the Feast of Ingathering
[of the harvest].6 The Feast of Tabernacles, which follows a short time later,
celebrates the completion of all of Israel's harvests.
The correlation of Israel's holy days with harvest periods has been shown to be
important typologically. According to Elder Bruce R. McConkie, the harvest which
the High Holy Days celebrate is symbolic of Christ's final harvest of souls. In
speaking of the symbolism of the final festival as a completed harvest, he
states, "The fact that [The Feast of Tabernacles] celebrated the completion
of the full harvest symbolizes the gospel reality that it is the mission of the
house of Israel to gather all nations to Jehovah, a process that is now going
forward, but will not be completed until that millennial day when "the Lord
shall be king over all the earth' and shall reign personally thereon."7 In
other words, the Feast of Tabernacles is a "type" of Christ's
Messianic reign after the completed harvest of souls (see also Zechariah 14:16).
Certainly, the Lord's word to Latter-day Saints is replete with
"harvest" imagery. "For behold the field is white already to
harvest; and lo, he that thrusteth in his sickle with his might, the same layeth
up in store that he perisheth not" (D&C 4:4).
The Book of Mormon has been a major instrument in initiating and perpetuating
the Lord's final harvest. Therefore, it appears highly meaningful that the
golden plates were received on the Feast of Ingathering, a holy day which
coincided with Israel's final harvest and symbolized Israel's final harvest of
souls.8
The Feast of Trumpets Signifies God's Remembrance of His Covenants with Israel
One of the original names given to the day is Yom ha-Zikkaron ("Day of
Remembrance").9 This name originates from the Lord's commandment to blow
trumpets for remembrance on that day. The term zikhron means
"memorial" or "remembrance," and, according to one
authority, "The significance of zikhron is inherent in its definition, a
sound which will arouse God's remembrance (or judgment) of his people."10
Tradition and biblical history show a connection between this holy day and God's
remembrance of his covenants with Israel. First, like other holy days, it is a
memorial of Israel's deliverance by God from their exile in Egypt,11 which is
understood by many to be a pattern for Israel's future exiles and exoduses
(Jeremiah 16:14-15).12 In addition, according to Jewish tradition the Israelites
returned to freedom from slavery on this date, prior to the completed Exodus.13
Furthermore, the Lord remembered Israel on this day after their return from
exile in Babylon—when they were granted spiritual renewal. On the first day of
the seventh month, Ezra read again from the book of the law, and the people
rejoiced greatly because he "gave the sense, and caused them to understand
the reading" (Nehemiah 8:1-12). Through the exile, they had lost God's
truths, which were now restored in clarity. Hearing the Lord's truths again
brought them repentance and joy.
On the very day, then, when they were observing the Day of Remembrance, they
were actively engaged in hearing again the true law after its loss while in
exile. The full importance of this situation can only be grasped when we realize
that the return from Babylonian exile is a "type" of the latter-day
return from spiritual Babylon.14 As the return from Babylon would have its
latter-day counterpart, the Day of Remembrance would have its latter-day
counterpart.
Many scholars agree that the major theme of the day is "Remembrance,"
God's remembrance of his covenants with Israel, and the need of Israel's
remembrance of their God.15 The prayers of the day contain many pleadings and
high expectations toward these ends. Such pleadings include, "Remember us
unto life" and "May our remembrance . . . come before Thee."16
Specific hope is uttered that God will even remember them "for deliverance
and well-being on this Day of Remembrance."17
The prayers "invoke the merit of the patriarchs and the covenant made with
them."18 And the blessings expected from God in return are phrased, "I
will for their sakes remember the covenant of their ancestors, whom I brought
forth out of the land of Egypt" (Leviticus 26:45).19
In addition to the prayers, many readings of the service concentrate on the
Lord's promises to remember his covenants—with implications for Israel's
restoration and return from exile.20 Some of these readings date from very early
times. One scholar states, "Beyond any shadow of doubt the leading motif in
the choice of the readings for Rosh ha-Shanah during the two centuries or so
before Christ was Remembrance."21 Among readings still used today are
scriptures prophesying the restoration of Ephraim. One, Jeremiah 31:1-20, calls
Ephraim "a darling son unto me" and states that "I do earnestly
remember him." One sage cites the words, zakhor ezkerenu ("I shall
remember him") as especially meaningful for the Day of Remembrance.22 Also
read are scriptures dealing with the ending of Sarah's and Hannah's barrenness
(Genesis 21; 1 Samuel 1-2:10). According to tradition, Rachel, Hannah and Sarah
were remembered on this day, their fruitfulness restored.23 The implication of
such "remembrances" is the final fulfillment of covenanted blessings
previously promised but seemingly forgotten. After barren Rachel was remembered,
she was blessed with Joseph from whom came Ephraim and Manasseh. Through
Hannah's ended barrenness came the return to a righteous priesthood.
Throughout the centuries, various Jewish scholars, in explaining the purpose of
the trumpet sound on the Feast of Trumpets, have seen it as signal of Israel's
redemption from world-wide exile.24 That concept comes from scriptural
references in the prophets and the psalms, such as Isaiah 27:13. "And it
shall come to pass in that day [the time of regathering], that the great trumpet
shall be blown, and they shall come which were ready to perish in the land of
Assyria, and the outcasts in the land of Egypt."25
Zechariah 9:14 and the surrounding prophecies are used to confirm the
relationship.26 Zechariah's statement, "And the Lord God shall blow the
trumpet," accompanies pronouncements that Ephraim would help raise up God's
covenanted people (Zechariah 9:13), and that those of Israel's blood would again
become his flock (Zechariah 9:16.).
The name most often used today for the feast is Rosh ha-Shanah, which means the
New Year. But this was not the original name, and the day's significance is
really as a "new beginning." It is understood to be the day when the
Lord moves from his seat of judgment and sits instead upon the seat of mercy.27
Layer upon layer, this holy day symbolizes that new beginning Israel would
experience as God has mercy upon them in exile, remembers his covenants with
their fathers, and restores them as his people. This new beginning for Israel
was to be initiated with the sounding of the trumpet. A commentator on Rosh ha-Shanah's
liturgy explains, "Expectantly, we await the sounding of the Shofar of
Liberation, when Zion will be free to receive its exiled children from all parts
of the earth."28
The Trumpet Signifies the Proclaiming of Truth
The blowing of the trumpet (a shofar or ram's horn is used in modern practice)
is the major ritual of the Feast of Trumpets. These instruments are seen as a
symbol of revelation as well as redemption.29 The trumpet sound is associated
with revelation because the first mention of it was at Mount Sinai. It is
understood, therefore, to be a memorial of Sinai. "The celebration of
Passover was to be an annual reminder of the exodus. The ritual blast of the
shofar would similarly recall by association the revelation on Mount
Sinai."30
However, the sound of the shofar is seen not only as a memorial of Sinai's
revelation, but as having importance for the future as well. Because the trumpet
preceded God's revealing of his law at Sinai (Exodus 19:16), some interpreters
declare that the trumpet on Rosh ha-Shanah signifies a further gift of
revelation, in particular, the granting of the true law,31 resulting in
redemption. "The smaller horn was sounded at Sinai, but the great shofar
will initiate redemption."32 We can see why "Trumpets," a prayer
regarding revelation, is recited on Rosh ha-Shanah.33
The scriptures, both ancient and modern, speak of the trumpet as preceding
proclamations of truth which lead to redemption (Isaiah 58:1; Alma 29:1; D&C
33:2). The imagery of proclaiming the gospel like a trumpet remains a part of
our heritage. "And at all times, and in all places, he shall open his mouth
and declare my gospel as with the voice of a trump" (D&C 24:12).
Furthermore, one of the most common symbols of the restored gospel is that of
the angel Moroni portrayed in the act of blowing the trumpet. We know this image
symbolizes proclaiming the gospel to the world, particularly to the house of
Israel. Indeed, much of the fullness of the Lord's truth began with the coming
forth of the Book of Mormon.
In the scriptures, the sound of the trumpet is also used as a call for God's
people to assemble or gather (Numbers 10:2-3), as a warning (Numbers 10:9; Joel
2:1), as a signal of something important to come (Revelation 8-9). The sound of
the trumpet on the one festival day set aside by God for the blowing of the
trumpet seems to carry all of these meanings, and therefore does signify
something important in the destiny of Israel. The truth which came out of the
golden plates is still causing a gathering, is still offering its warnings, and
is still acting as harbinger of great things to come.
The Festival Signifies Preparation for the Messianic Age
It would be a great mistake to see the Feast of Trumpets as a festival without
relationship to any other. Part of its significance is in its juxtaposition to
the Lord's other holy days, particularly as preparation for those days
considered most holy of all days.
The Feast of Trumpets (Rosh ha-Shanah), Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), and Feast
of Tabernacles (Sukkot) are together called the High Holy Days, and the Days of
Awe. To begin with, these days fall in the seventh month of the Judaic calendar,
which gives them special status—as seventh periods of days, weeks, months,
years, are generally considered particularly holy and significant, and as times
of completion.
The trumpet sound of Rosh ha-Shanah includes the need for repentance in
preparation for the days ahead.34 One scholar enunciates its message as,
"Awake from your slumbers, you who have fallen asleep in life, and reflect
on your deeds. Remember your Creator."35 The way the ram's horn is blown
portrays that theme. First comes a long lengthy note promising hope. Sets of
short notes follow to symbolize weeping for one's transgressions and the desire
to forsake them. A last long note promises God's forgiveness to the truly
repentant.36
The day's prayers of repentance are said to prepare one for the coming Messianic
Age.37 It is believed the Lord makes a prejudgment on Rosh Hashanah as to
"who shall live and who shall die; . . . who shall be cast down and who
elevated."38 However, those judgments can be changed through repentance,
prayer, and charity since the final judgments are not "sealed" until
the Day of Atonement or Yom Kippur.
The days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur therefore signify the only time
left to repent, and are thus called the Ten Days of Penitence. The intervening
time period is a crucial period for returning to God and to righteousness, with
the trumpet sound representing God's final warning before the rapidly
approaching judgment.39
The Day of Atonement is considered the day when the unrepentant are doomed, but
the repentant are forgiven and reconciled with God. Worshippers on Yom Kippur
believe they spiritually enter the Holy of Holies, symbolic of entering God's
presence, and that this sacred time permits them their "highest and deepest
communion with God."40
The relationship between these holy days may bear witness of what will occur in
the last days. While Christ performed the acts of atonement through his
suffering, crucifixion, and resurrection, the work is not yet complete. Christ's
return will actually complete the reconciliation between him and mankind,
serving as the great time of At-one-ment, when repentant individuals can
physically enter his presence.41
Because Israel's last three holy days signify something momentous to come, the
period between Rosh ha-Shanah and Yom Kippur are called The Days of Awe, with
the Day of Atonement considered most "awesome" and most holy of all
days. The Feast of Tabernacles follows. We have already learned it signifies the
completed harvest and the Messiah's reign.
The Reception of the Golden Plates Fulfilled the Prophecies Associated with the
Feast of Trumpets
Was the coming forth of the Book of Mormon on Rosh ha-Shanah coincidental? Truth
is often manifest through fulfillment.
The golden plates were delivered to Joseph Smith early in the morning of 22
September 1827. The Feast of Trumpets, with prayers pleading for God's
remembrance of his still exiled people, had begun at sundown the previous
evening. The services continued that morning, with the sound of trumpets. All
that those trumpets symbolized was now to be fulfilled. That day, God remembered
his people. That day, new revelation was granted, which would bring a return to
the true law. That day Israel's final harvest began. From then on, Israel would
be called to repentance in preparation for the time of judgment ahead.
The Book of Mormon continues to reawaken exiled Israel, bringing them back to
true worship and renewed covenants. It is the means of helping Israel prepare
for the coming Day of At-one-ment, when the Christ will reappear and reconcile
all repentant unto himself. The days are approaching when the harvest will be
completed and Christ will come and dwell with his people, therefore keeping the
ultimate Feast of the Tabernacles. It was Moroni who delivered the golden plates
on 22 September 1827—the Feast of Trumpets. Now his image trumpets from temple
spires the final warning to awaken, gather, repent, and prepare.
The Lord has used many ways to prophesy of what would come to pass in the
future. We have long been familiar with prophecies of Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
Ezekiel, who spoke of the restoration of Israel and the gospel in the
latter-days. However, the Lord has also told us that his ways are often
difficult to find out. When we do discover them, we shall feel awe (D&C
76:114-19).
In addition to other prophecies, the Lord also foretold his future works through
the holy days he established in Israel. Through the first of these holy days he
witnessed of his crucifixion (Passover), his resurrection (offering of the first
sheaf of barley), and of the beginning of his first harvest (fulfilled on
Pentecost). Through the last three holy days, the Lord has witnessed of his
latter-day remembrance of Israel's covenants (Feast of Trumpets), his
reunification with the repentant who return to his presence (Day of At-one-ment),
and of his millennial reign when the harvest is complete (Feast of Tabernacles).
These works are a witness for our day. Every witness strengthens our testimony,
providing new energy to obey and endure.
Knowing that this is indeed the final harvest with an ever shortening time to
labor should create greater motivation to thrust in our sickle with all our
might. While working in that harvest, we are called to make known every
wonderful work the Lord has performed among the people (D&C 65:4).
Notes:
1 Bruce R. McConkie, Promised Messiah (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1978),
428-32.
2 John P. Pratt, "The Restoration of Priesthood Keys on Easter 1836,"
Ensign 15 (June 1985): 59-68 and 15 (July 1985): 55-64; Joseph Fielding McConkie,
Gospel Symbolism (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1985), 48-50, 84-85; Lenet Hadley
Read, "Symbols of the Harvest," Ensign 5 (January 1975): 32-36;
McConkie, Promised Messiah, 428-32.
3 McConkie, Promised Messiah, 432-37; Read, "Symbols of the Harvest,"
35-36.
4 Eduard Mahler, Handbuch der jüdischen Chronologie (Leipzig: Fock, 1916), 588.
Verification can also be obtained from Jewish community libraries. The date can
be recalculated from Jewish calendars.
5 Norman H. Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival: Its Origins and Development
(London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1947), 24; Abraham P. Bloch,
The Biblical and Historical Background of the Jewish Holy Days (New York: KTAV,
1978), 18-19; Abraham P. Bloch, The Biblical and Historical Background of Jewish
Customs and Ceremonies (New York: KTAV, 1980), 182; Hayyim Schauss, The Jewish
Festivals from Their Beginning to Our Own Day, tr. Samuel Jaffe (Cincinnati:
Union of American Hebrew Congregations, 1938), 113, 116.
6 Apparently, because they both celebrated the same harvest, the Feast of
Trumpets and the Feast of Tabernacles were referred to as a feast of
Ingathering. Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival, 17, 23-28; Bloch, Jewish Holy
Days, 18-19; Bloch, Jewish Customs and Ceremonies, 181-83; Schauss, The Jewish
Festivals from Their Beginning to Our Own Day, 113.
7 McConkie, The Promised Messiah, 433.
8 Bloch, The Jewish Holy Days, 21, states the persistent belief, "The
ingathering of the Jewish people and its ultimate return to God will be
announced by a prolonged blast of the shofar."
9 Louis Jacobs, "Rosh Ha-shanah and Yom Kippur," in Mircea Eliade,
ed., The Encyclopedia of Religion, 12 vols. (New York: Macmillan, 1987), 12:474;
Max Arzt, Justice and Mercy: Commentary on the Liturgy of the New Year and the
Day of Atonement (San Francisco: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1963), 36, 146.
10 Bloch, Jewish Customs and Ceremonies, 142.
11 Rabbi Nosson Scherman and Rabbi Meir Zlotowitz, eds., Rosh Hashanah: Its
Significance, Laws, and Prayers (Brooklyn, New York: Mesorah, 1983), 60, 99.
12 Nehama Liebowitz, Studies in Shemot (Exodus) (Jerusalem: The World Zionist
Organization, 1981), 8.
13 Scherman and Zlotowitz, Rosh Hashanah, 99.
14 Bruce R. McConkie, The Millennial Messiah (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book,
1982), 289-93.
15 Arzt, Justice and Mercy, 129; Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival, 162, 172.
16 Arzt, Justice and Mercy, 32; Other examples of this theme are shown on 108,
112-13.
17 Ibid., 32.
18 Ibid., 164.
19 Ibid., 185.
20 Ibid., 121-48.
21 Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival, 172.
22 Arzt, Justice and Mercy, 146-48.
23 Ibid., 129; Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival, 168. One source of this
tradition is The Talmud (b.RH 11a), which says, "On New Year Sarah, Rachel
and Hannah were visited [or their barrenness ended]."
24 Scherman and Zlotowitz, Rosh Hashanah, 58, 61-62, 112-13, 117-18; Arzt,
Justice and Mercy, 55, 94, 154; Bloch, Jewish Holy Days, 21; Snaith, The Jewish
New Year Festival, 162; Leo Trepp, The Complete Book of Jewish Observance (New
York: Behrman House and Summit Books, 1980), 95.
25 Scherman and Zlotowitz, Rosh Hashanah, 58, 112-13; Bloch, Jewish Holy Days,
21; Philip Goodman, ed., The Rosh Hashanah Anthology (Philadelphia: Jewish
Publication Society, 1970), 23.
26 Bloch, Jewish Holy Days, 21; Goodman, The Rosh Hashanah Anthology, 22.
27 Arzt, Justice and Mercy, 149.
28 Ibid., 55; see also 94.
29 Trepp, The Complete Book of Jewish Observance, 95.
30 Bloch, Jewish Customs and Ceremonies, 144.
31 Goodman, The Rosh Hashanah Anthology, 42.
32 Trepp, The Complete Book of Jewish Observance, 95.
33 Goodman, The Rosh Hashanah Anthology, 42.
34 Snaith, The Jewish New Year Festival, 165.
35 Maimonides, Code of Law, Repentance 3:4.
36 Jacobs, "Rosh Ha-shanah and Yom Kippur," in Eliade, The
Encyclopedia of Religion, 12:474.
37 Ibid.
38 Ibid.
39 Scherman and Zlotowitz, Rosh Hashanah, 111.
40 Trepp, The Complete Book of Jewish Observance, 92.
41 I am not necessarily saying that Christ's return will actually occur on the
Day of Atonement. While the pattern of Christ's fulfillment of events on his
holy days might indicate the wisdom to be prepared on that day, it is more wise
to be prepared on every day. The point being made is that the relationship of
these three holy days bears another witness of what will occur in the last days.
The final harvest of Israel has begun. When Christ returns, the repentant and
obedient will be fully reconciled with him, physically entering into his
presence after being cut off due to sin. Afterwards, Christ will reign during
the Millennium when the spiritual harvest is complete.