While I was on the road this afternoon, my meditations took me to the prayer offered by the father of Lamoni (who we can infer was named Laman but who is called only "the king" in the text). I recited it to myself, finding that I could do so easily despite never having intentionally memorized it, and began mentally tinkering out a tentative Latin translation.
When I arrived at my destination, I had some free time and so took out one of the books I am reading, Enoch the Prophet by Hugh Nibley. The very first thing I read was this (brackets and ellipses in the original, boldface added):
As stated by Egyptologist J. Zandee, "Not only in Israel, but it all the ancient Near East, every king is a Messiah. . . . There is no difference in principle between the eschatological Messiah and the ruling King as the bearer of salvation. . . . The King is a god, . . . the King is the son of God. . . . The King is as the image of God on earth. . . . The King brings justice to earth. . . . [The King is] the Good Shepherd, . . . [The King is the man of Wisdom]. . . . The King is the [High] Priest [endowed with power]. . . . The King is a cosmic deity." In short, the king is an Enoch, to whom God has promised his own throne.
Moses 7:59. . . . Forasmuch as
thou art God, and I know thee, . . . thou hast made me, and given me a right to thy throne, and not of myself, but through thine own grace.
Nibley quotes that verse from Moses because it mentions Enoch being given a right to God's throne. He juxtaposes it with an apocryphal Enoch document in which Enoch says, "God made for me a throne modeled after the Throne of Glory." His only reason for quoting the part I have bolded is to establish that God is the "thou" Enoch is addressing.
Here is the prayer of Lamoni's father, which I had been reciting to myself just minutes before reading the above passage in Nibley:
O God, Aaron hath told me that there is a God; and if there is a God, and if
thou art God, wilt thou make thyself known unto me,
and I will give away all my sins to
know thee, and that I may be raised from the dead, and be saved
at the last day. And now when
the king had said these words, he was struck as if he were dead (
Alma 22:18).
The parallel is quite exact. These are the only two verses in all scripture to include both "thou art God" and "know thee." More specifically, each has the words "thou art God . . . and I . . . know thee," in that order. In Moses 7:59, the speaker is Enoch; in Alma 22:18, it is "the king." Immediately before quoting the Moses verse, Nibley states that "the king is an Enoch."
If we look beyond the fragment quoted by Nibley, there is a further sync with the king's hope that he will be saved "at the last day."
And Enoch . . . called unto the Lord, saying:
Wilt thou not come again upon the earth? Forasmuch as thou art God, and I know thee, . . . I ask thee
if thou wilt not come again on the earth. And the Lord said unto Enoch: As I live, even so will I come
in the last days (
Moses 7:59-60).
This theme of God coming again upon the earth also syncs with something I read earlier today in Words of Them That Have Slumbered (in which the name Eru is applied to Jesus):
They (some) set into writings conversings with Arda’s Wild Voices, and careful to preserve as told, some others saw into those records, What was forbidden them to tell: Eru’s Return. Ever was that command, both to watch for and yet never reveal what sought all out to find, and yet was a gap read in records by those men knowing also their own enchanting promises. So surmised one silent to another, and then less silent, by gesture contriving, or crypted words, pieced as from some Oak, retelling how hunters bypassing, return always. That Return was a Theme to which all their writing bent around, never saying, always showing what was commanded, obeying; yet also seeing if by Other Tales Recounting, their audience may reveal knowing of His Return, whereto, and in what fashioned matter.
I've bolded "Wild Voices" because that is a link back to Joseph Smith's Enoch:
And it came to pass that Enoch went forth in the land, among the people, standing upon the hills and the high places, and cried
with a loud voice . . . . And they came forth to hear him, upon the high places, saying . . .
a wild man hath come among us (
Moses 6:38-39).
There is also a hint of "wild voices" in something I read today in the third book I am currently working on, The Story of Alice by Robert Douglas-Fairhurst:
[Lewis Carroll's] allusion to Gray's 'Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard', where we are reminded that 'Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, | And waste its sweetness on the desert air', carried a warning that not everyone was given the opportunity to make their voice heard . . . .