Melchizedek is not Jesus

Not long ago, I read a paper which defended the position that Melchizedek of the Old Testament was the ante-mortal Messiah. The paper made a great analysis, which included philology, legend, and canonical scripture.

Today, it seems reasonable to assemble my thoughts on why LDS teaching does not leave much room for this possibility.

The JST presents Melchizedek as a mortal

The JST for Gen 14:25-40 presents Melchizedek as a mortal man, even to the extent of having had a childhood (2000 years before Jesus’ childhood): “and when a child he feared God, and stopped the mouths of lions, and quenched the violence of fire.”

If you would contend that these miracles could be presented as prophecy for the actual childhood of Jesus, about which little is known, I cannot definitely tell you otherwise, but John the Revelator, at least, did not think that Jesus did any such thing in his childhood: speaking of the miracle at the marriage in Cana, he said, ‘This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee.’ (John 2:11)

Other excerpts from JST Gen 14 which hint at Melchizedek’s life being mortal, though they are far from conclusive on their own, include:

  • Now Melchizedek was a man of faith (nowhere in canon is God called ‘a man’ or even ‘man’, except for the sobriquet ‘man of holiness’)
  • having been approved of God (unless we apply divine investiture to this text, it’s self-referential)
  • he was ordained … after the order of the covenant which God made with Enoch (why would Enoch be treated as antecedent if Melchizedek were the ante-mortal God?)
  • his people … sought for the city of Enoch which God had before taken

Names appear not to interchanged in writ

Scriptural writers may have many names for Jesus (e.g. Lamb of God, Son of God, Messiah, Christ, etc.), so if Jesus and Melchizedek were in fact the same person it is possible that a writer might interchange Melchizedek for any of the better-known names of Jesus. However, an interchange is not what we see. Rather, the names are compartmentalized in the scriptures, with the only intersection being ‘Prince of peace’.

The name ‘Prince of peace’ is nowhere (in canon, at least) actually used as a referrer for Melchizedek; rather, we read that he was king of Salem (whose name means ‘peace’) and “therefore he … was called the prince of peace.” (Alma 13:18; c.f. JST Gen 14:33) What’s more the term ‘prince of peace’ is not reserved for Melchizedek and Jesus alone but is applied also to Abraham. (Abr 1:2)

Moses, David, Alma, Paul, and Joseph Smith mention Melchizedek by name, but never refer to him by any other name in context. If Jesus and Melchizedek were one and the same, the scriptural writers either didn’t realize it or decided not to disclose it.

This is at least the case for Joseph Smith, who gave us D&C 107:

Why the first [priesthood] is called the Melchizedek Priesthood is because Melchizedek was such a great high priest. Before his day it was called the Holy Priesthood, after the Order of the Son of God. (D&C 107:2-3)

If the writer knew that the two were one in the same and didn’t mind letting on, this language makes no sense.

God visited Abraham as Jehovah

Despite the segregation of the two personas in scripture, one might yet hold to an idea that Melchizedek was God but that Abraham failed to recognize the fact, which gave rise to Melchizedek’s treatment as a different character in later scripture. After all, did not the resurrected saviour keep company with two disciples on the road to Emmaus, yet they did not recognize him? (Luke 24:13-31) And did he not speak of himself in the third person, as though he were not the Christ? (vs. 26)

However, Abraham had already had dealings with the ante-mortal Jesus (Gen 18) and known him as God, which is something that his disciples appeared not to have grasped.

Without beginning of days or end of years…

A (ostensibly) compelling argument for the unity of Jesus and Melchizedek comes in a Paul’s (ostensible) description of Melchizedek:

Without father, without mother, without descent, having neither beginning of days, nor end of life; but made like unto the Son of God… (Heb 7:3)

However, the Joseph Smith Translation for that scripture places the description on the priesthood, not Melchizedek.

For this Melchizedek was ordained a priest after the order of the Son of God, which order was without father, without mother, without descent, having neither beginning of days, nor end of life. And all those who are ordained unto this priesthood are made like unto the Son of God, abiding a priest continually.

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4 Comments

  1. I’d never heard that view before, only the one that Melchizedek was Noah’s son, Shem, which we’ve discussed previously.

    On a side note, I rather deplore the colloquial pronunciation /mɛlˈkɛzɪˌdɛk/. I much prefer /mɛlˈkɪzɛˌdɛk/.

  2. Shalom,

    I wonder if the author of the above article read the Dead Sea Scroll 11Q13 regarding Melchizedek before they published their unsupportable nonsense.

    Apostle Paul declared in Heb. 7:3 that the man Melchizedek would have “NO END OF LIFE”… Thus, do you think that the above author could actually present a/ANY literal Biblical Scripture that clearly reveals that the man Melchizedek did indeed DIE?

    Anybody can SPECULATE – but proving one’s speculation is somewhat more difficult…

    barney

  3. Melchisedek is not the name of a man but a title held by a chosen line of men. These men held the title for the one to whom the title truly belonged which is Christ. The order of Melchisedek is in fact the birth line of Christ. For the most part the title is handed down from first born son to first born son until it came to Christ. When Christ was born he took the title back to heaven where he sits as a priest forever to intercede on our behalf. The first of the deviations from the first born was Seth who was the third born of Adam. The next deviation was when Jacob passed it to his fourth born son Judah when he said the scepter of rulership shall not depart from you until HE comes to whom it belongs. The He is obviously referring to Christ. The final deviation occurred at the time of the Passover when God told Moses he was going to kill all of the first born in Egypt. This put the first born in the chosen family in Jeopardy. God then transferred the priestly portion of the KIng\priest title of Melchisedek to Aaron and the tribe of Levi. When Christ was born the title was transferred back to Christ in the chosen line. When he was crucified it was to fulfill the sacrifice portrayed in Passover by the Lamb.

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