Friday, December 7, 2012

Discovering Deseret

Reading:   Ether 2

Today I discovered, or should I say rediscovered as I know I have discovered this in the past, and, for fun, I want to say "discover" again (making that four times in one sentence); discoveries aside (5 times), the origin of the Utah state symbol was rediscovered (6) today.  That symbol of course being the beehive, aka Deseret (honey bee)...

ETHER 2:3

3    And they did also carry with them deseret, which, by interpretation, is a honey bee; and thus they did carry with them swarms of bees, and all manner of that which was upon the face of the land, seeds of every kind. 

Not as indepth as some of my other posts but no less interesting.  The Jaredites gathered animals like Noah, seeds, and "...all manner of that which was upon the face of the land," and built water tight barges with a hole in the top and a hole in the bottom (unplugged only for oxygenation purposes).  I'm guessing they were fairly symmetrical vessels and the reason for a hole on top and bottom was to allow for the possibility that the boat, in a storm, might flip over.  Now all they need is light, hmmm...what shall they do...

~Kipling





Pssssst!
The following article is quite enlightening but it does have a lot of scholarly jargon and may just be a little too intellectually intense for some.  So, those of you required to read this blog for Family Home Evening purposes (my children), you may ignore it.  Dr. Hugh Nibley went after the word "Deseret" with much vigor because it was included in the text of the scriptures and even interpreted for the reader instead of translated and left out...

          By all odds the most interesting and attractive passenger in Jared's company is deseret, the honeybee. We cannot pass the creature by without a glance at its name and possible significance, for our text betrays an interest in deseret that goes far beyond respect for the feat of transporting insects, remarkable though it is. The word deseret we are told (Ether 2:3), "by interpretation is a honeybee," the word plainly coming from the Jaredite language, since Ether (or Moroni) must interpret it. Now it is a remarkable coincidence that the word deseret, or something very close to it, enjoyed a position of ritual prominence among the founders of the classical Egyptian civilization, who associated it very closely with the symbol of the bee. The people, the authors of the so-called Second Civilization, seem to have entered Egypt from the northeast as part of the same great outward expansion of peoples that sent the makers of the classical Babylonian civilization into Mesopotamia. Thus we have the founders of the two main parent civilizations of antiquity entering their new homelands at approximately the same time from some common center--apparently the same center from which the Jaredites also took their departure. The Egyptian pioneers carried with them a fully developed cult and symbolism from their Asiatic home. Chief among their cult objects would seem to be the bee, for the land they first settled in Egypt was forever known as "the land of the bee," and was designated in hieroglyphic by a picture of the bee, while the king of Egypt "in his capacity of 'King of Upper and Lower Egypt'" bore the title, "he who belongs to the sedge and the bee."
           From the first, students of hieroglyphic were puzzled as to what sound value should be given to the bee-picture. . . . We know that the bee sign was not always written down, but in its place the picture of the Red Crown, the majesty of Lower Egypt was sometimes "substituted for the superstitious reasons." If we do not know the original name of the bee, we do know the name of this Red Crown -- the name it bore when it was substituted for the bee. The name was dsrt (the vowels are not known, but we can be sure they were all short). The "s" is dsrt had a heavy sound, perhaps best represented by "sh," but designated by a special character -- an "s" with a tiny wedge above it by which the Egyptians designated both their land and crown they served. . . . The bee symbol spread in other directions from its original home, wherever that was. . . . In all of these the bee is the agent through which the dead king or hero is resurrected from the dead, and it is in this connection that the bee also figures in the Egyptian rites. Now the original "deseret" people, the founders of the Second Civilization, "the intellectuals of On," claimed that their king, and he alone, possessed the secret of resurrection. That, in fact, was the cornerstone of their religion; it was nothing less than "the king's secret," the power over death by which he held his authority both among men and in the hereafter. . . . I am personally persuaded that the archaic and ritual designation of the bee was deseret, a "word of power" too sacred to be entrusted to the vulgar, being one of the keys to "the king's secret." [Hugh Nibley, The World of the Jaredites, pp. 191-192]

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