“The Book of Jacob.” The Evening and the Morning Star (Indep
“The Book of Jacob.” The Evening and the Morning Star (Independence, Missouri) 1, no. 4
(September 1832): [26].
THE BOOK OF JACOB.
One of the greatest figures, one of the plainest parables, and sublimest prophecies, that
we know of, is found in the book of Jacob in the book of Mormon. It is as simple as the accents
of a child, and as sublime as the language of an angel. The words are from the mouth of an
ancient prophet named Zenos, and would to God we had all his prophetic book, for he that
caused Isaiah’s lips to be touched with sacred fire, filled Zenos with the word of wisdom. Isaiah
said, The vineyard of the Lord of hosts, is the house of Israel, and the men of Judah his pleasant
plant, and Zenos adorns it with the tame olive tree for the children of Israel, and grafts in the
wild olive, for the Gentiles; and marvel not that the Lord is now sending his servants to prune
this vineyard for the last time; he hath already had laborers in it at the sixth and ninth hour, and
those that work for the Lord at this eleventh hour, will receive their penny as much as those that
have labored all day. The captivity of Jacob will return, and the children of Israel shall come,
they and the children of Judah together, going and weeping: they shall go and seek the Lord their
God. They shall ask the way to Zion with their faces thitherward, saying, Come and let us join
ourselves to the Lord in a perpetual covenant that shall not be forgotten. Whoso readeth let him
understand, for thus it is: . . .