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Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship:

The Ark and the Tent: Temple Symbolism in the Story of Noah

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Published by:
Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship
Published:
3/25/2021
Specs:
Digest / 5.25" x 8.25"
48 pages Saddle-stitched
Category:
Religion
Tags:
ark, church of jesus christ of latter-day saints, lds, Mormonism, Moses, Noah, Tabernacle, temple symbols

Abstract: Jeffrey M. Bradshaw compares Moses’ tabernacle and Noah’s ark and identifies the story of Noah as a temple related drama, drawing on temple mysticism and symbols. After examining structural similarities between ark and tabernacle and further information about the Mesopotamian flood story, he shows how Noah’s ark is a beginning of a new creation, pointing out the central point of Day One in the Noah story. When Noah leaves the ark, they find themselves in a garden, not unlike the Garden of Eden in the way the Bible speaks about it. A covenant is established in signs and tokens. Noah is the new Adam. This is then followed by a fall/Judgement scene story, even though it is Ham who is judged, not Noah. Bradshaw points out how Noah was not in “his” tent, but in the tent of the Shekhina, the presence of God, how being drunk was seen by the ancients as a synonym to “being caught up in a vision of God,” and how his “nakedness” was rather referring to garments God had made for Adam and Eve.

Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship: The Ar...


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