Footnotes
See Hebrews 7:2. James Burgess’s account of this discourse records that JS explained, “In the original it reads king of Shaloam which signifies king of peace or righteousness and not of any country or nation.” JS’s understanding of the Hebrew language came from his instruction under the tutelage of Hebrew scholar Joshua Seixas in Kirtland, Ohio, in 1836. (See Historical Introduction to Letter to Henrietta Raphael Seixas, between 6 and 13 Feb. 1836.)
Franklin D. Richards’s account of this discourse helps clarify this point: “Those who limit the designs of God as concerted by the grand council [of heaven] cannot obtain the Knowledge of God & I do not know but I may say they will drink in the Damnation of their souls.”
See Romans 8:17.