
	
	
	
	Facsimile No. 3 from the   
	Book of Abraham 
	printed from a woodcut by 
	
	Ruben Hedlock - the original vignette is 
	lost. Note especially Figure 2. The above facsimile was derived 
	from the last vignette of the same Egyptian funerary scroll from 
	which  
	
	Facsimile No. 1 was derived. The 
	scroll contains  
a Book of 
	Breathings Made by Isis made available to the Prophet Joseph Smith in the Kirtland 
	period. Figure 2 represents the goddess 
	
	Isis/Hathor standing by enthroned
	
	Osiris 
	(Figure 1). The ancient owner of the scroll is Osiris Hor (Figure 5). The 
	soul of Hor is 
	justified before the throne of Osiris. Figure 2 is reinterpreted by the 
	Prophet Joseph Smith to represent "King Pharaoh, whose name is given in the 
	characters above his head."  
	
	
	 
	
	
	
	Characters above the head and raised arm of Figure 2 
	converted to 
	
	hieroglyphic Egyptian, a service provided by
	
	Michael Rhodes 
	(Hor Book of Breathings - A Translation and Commentary, pg. 24). Note the divine 
	
	throne
 	and 
		
	swallow
	symbols associated with great
	
	Isis (Figure 2). A straight forward 
	translation of the Egyptian symbols reads, “Isis the great, mother of the 
	god.” 
	Robert Ritner notes that "Isis the great, the god's mother" is a 
	"common" label appearing next to illustrations of Isis. (Ritner, The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri - A COMPLETE EDITION, pg. 173) 
	Isis/Hathor 
	is mother of the sky god Horus (Hor). Horus imbues the mortal ruler of 
	Egypt; so an immediate consideration for Pharaoh's title (suggested by symbols above the head of Figure 2) is 
	
	Horus (Hor).
	
	 
	
	
	
	Proposed restoration of hieratic characters above the head and raise 
	arm of Figure 2. by V. Coon. These symbols come from
	
	Moeller's lists which 
	correlate hieroglyphic and hieratic signs. The hieratic throne symbol (Möller,  
	  Q 383), 
	bread loaf (Möller,  
	  Y 575),
	and hieratic egg symbol 
	(Möller,  
	  H 238) 
	are visible at the top of the label.
		Other pertinent hieratic signs follow: swallow 
	(Möller,  
	  G 198), 
	mouth (Möller,  
	  D 91), 
	vulture (Möller,  
	  G 193), 
	temple flag (Möller,  
	  X 547).
	
	   
	
	
 
	
	
	Copied and woodcut 
	hieratic Egyptian characters above the head 
	and raised arm of Figure 2. Compare these copied and woodcut 
	symbols with the hieratic and hieroglyphic equivalents 
	above. In particular, note that what was originally a hieratic throne symbol (Möller,  
	  Q 383), and hieratic egg symbol 
	(Möller,  
	  H 238) 
	distinctly appear as the hieroglyphic feet and tail feather of a falcon perched on a standard 
	(Gardiner's G7).
	In other words, the egg and throne hieratic signs appear to be turned into the bottom parts of a perched falcon on a standard, signifying “Horus” and “king” 
	(G5, G7). 
	Who directed Ruben Hedlock to make this remarkably appropriate 
	interpretation/alteration/substitution? Where did it come from? Compare the partial "falcon 
	on a standard" hieroglyph 
(the 
	right horn of Hathor's crown points to it) with the 
	not very similar hieratic versions 
	(Möller,  
	  G 188). Ryan Larsen 
	analyzes the partial hieroglyph in his article, "RFM and the Crème de la Crème". 
	The pharaonic name that Ryan sees in the woodcut can be interpreted to mean 
	"painful, fierce, angry". 
	(Genesis 12:16-20) The characters portrayed in the reinterpreted vignette may be seen as figurative, 
	or archetypal. It took a scholar, trained in ancient Egyptian, to transpose the copied 
	hieratic symbols into 
	
	Egyptian hieroglyphs 
	(picture symbols) that made sense. The advantage of seeing the equivalent 
	hieroglyphs, is that they are more easily identified. Once identified, the 
	characters can be interpreted in other languages; Hebrew for instance.
	
	 
	
	Joseph Smith's esoteric, multilingual 
	"Egyptians" (the 
	Ah-meh-strah-ans) thought they could see 
	meanings (and in some cases deliberately assigned meanings) beyond the 
	standard meanings of Egyptian texts and art. 
	
	The 
	Ptolemaic Ah-meh-strah-ans were apparently the custodians of a version of 
	the ancient Sepher Avram (Book of Abram), which they 
	apparently supplemented with Egyptian funerary art, and text. They may have 
	tried to provide a meaningful Egyptian replacement for at least one lost 
	illustration that had featured "hieroglyphics". See 
	
	Abraham 1:12, 
	
	14.
	
	
	
Joseph Smith's original introduction to the 
	Book of Abraham published in the 
	
March 1, 1842 edition of the  
Times and Seasons 
	newspaper.
	
		Everything Joseph Smith learned about Ah-meh-strah-an symbols and 
		methods of interpretation, he learned by revelation. The Prophet did not 
		have an earthly, academic means of interpreting Egyptian characters. To 
		the Prophet, the scripture "purporting to be the writings of Abraham ... 
		called THE BOOK OF ABRAHAM" was a work of "present revelation" (Joseph 
		Smith, Times and Seasons, 1842, 
	
March 1, pg. 704, and 
September 1, pg. 902).
	
		The Prophet had performed an earlier, revelatory translation of another 
		ancient document, a document which he also did not hold in his hands. (LDS 
		Doctrine and Covenants section 7) Similarly, 
		Joseph received the text of the Sepher Avram, in English, by 
		revelation. He supplemented the revealed Book of Abram with 
		redactions and reinterpretations of Egyptian art and symbols; the kinds 
		of things the 
		Ah-meh-strah-ans had done to their lost version(s) of the Sepher 
		Avram.
	
		In other words, guided by higher intelligence, Joseph went to work 
		correlating, in Ah-meh-strah-an fashion, the revealed scripture, with 
		Egyptian funerary art and texts that came into his hands at Kirtland 
		Ohio. The Book of Abraham correlates with the 
		
		Hor Book of Breathings, and the
		
		Shishaq (Sheshanq) Book of the Dead; 
		but neither of these funerary works contain the Abram scripture's written 
		source. 
	
	
		Joseph Smith tells us that the Egyptian portions of the Book of 
	Abraham 
	were "A 
	TRANSLATION Of some ancient Records [plural] that have 
	fallen into our hands, from the Catecombs [Catacombs] of Egypt ..." This 
	does not mean that the main text of the Book of Abram 
	(his 
	name while in Egypt), which was "written by his own hand, 
	upon papyrus", existed in any obvious, written form on the papyrus scrolls 
	that Joseph Smith received.
	
	
		It was Oliver Cowdery, Joseph Smith's less informed assistant, who made 
	the claim that writings of Abraham and Joseph of Egypt were recorded on the 
	papyrus rolls. (Messenger 
	and Advocate, "Egyptian Mummies - Ancient 
	Records", December 1835, pp. 233-237)
	
	
		We now know that the ancient papyrus records that Brother Cowdery 
	described, contain the kind of funerary texts that one expects to find 
	accompanying Egyptian mummies. No writings on papyrus from Hebrew patriarchs 
	came with 
	the mummies to Kirtland.
	
	In an email to colleagues, subject titled: 
	cracked the pharaoh's name in Facsimile 3, dated 1/17/2022 
	at 12:45 AM, LDS Scholar Ed Goble wrote the following:
	
	"... the name of pharaoh in facsimile #3 is 
	Tutmoses. ... 
	
	https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thutmose_I
	This site shows that the name ThutMose is actually: ḏḥwtj-ms,Tʼaḥawtī-mīsaw, 
	meaning "Thoth is born".
	
	One symbol for Thoth is the bread loaf, as I 
	have documented elsewhere, but see this for example:
	
	https://www.egyptianhieroglyphs.net/gardiners-sign-list/  
	ḏḥwtj-ms,Tʼaḥawtī-mīsaw, meaning "Thoth is born".
	
	Rhodes' transliteration of the text is this:
	
	['Is.t wr.t, mw.t ntr.]
	
	
	throne-bread-egg-swallow(bird)-mouth-bread-vulture-flag 
	
	Q1 X1 H8 G36 D21 G14 R8.
	
	Notice that the last 3 are mouth bread 
	vulture. I think the mouth is a marker like a cartouche but also like a 
	pictograph, saying that something will be mouthed or pronounced here.
	
	The key now is bread-vulture.
	
	Here are the Hebrew words for these signs in 
	succession, similar to when we decoded the Shulem cryptogram:
	
	kisseh lehem betsah 
	deror peh lehem ozniyyah nes.
	
	Putting the two together, bread and vulture, 
	we have: lehemozniyyah.
	
	Notice the pronunciation of this part: 
	lehemoz.
	
	Remember, lehem is bread, a symbol for 
	Thoth/ḏḥwtj. In other words, a cryptogram between Egyptian and Hebrew 
	pronunciations: ḏḥwtj-moz, Tutmoses.
	
	It is interesting that an egg is one of the 
	symbols here, and that the name speaks of Thoth being born. I don't know 
	what to make of the other parts yet, but I am figuring it out. For now, this 
	is what I know. Ed "
	 
	
	 Commentary on Ed Goble's Discovery
		Ed Goble's 
		transtextual 
		discovery of a 
		pharaonic name focuses on a 
		combination of the bread bun and vulture symbols that Michael Rhodes 
		transcribed from the characters above the raised arm of Figure 
		2, Book of Abraham 
	
		Facsimile No. 3. 
	
 
	= “Isis the great, mother of the god.”
	There are actually three bread buns (
, 
	
	Gardiner's X1) seen in Michael Rhodes' transcription. Ed 
	combines Hebrew words for 
	bread and 
	vulture (osprey) which are "lehem" 
	(לחם) 
	+ "ozniyah 
	(עזניה)", to arrive at a version of the string "lehemozniyah". 
	There is really only one yod (י) in the Hebrew word "ozniyah" 
	but many think to help the transliteration by doubling the "y". 
	The vowel sounds are not explicitly written in the Hebrew string.
	If we allow 
	the Hebrew letter mem (מ,ם) in 
	the string "lehemozniyah" 
	to undergo a kind of 
	mitosis  
	and split in two (multiplying mem), 
	we may argue that we hear "lehem-moz..."
	Now take the Hebrew word for bread, "lehem" 
	apart from "moz..." and relate it to a 
	tall bread loaf 
	(
, 
	Gardiner's X2, X3). 
	The tall loaf of bread signifies the 
	ibis like moon god 
	Thoth - father of letters and writing. Substitute "Thoth" for 
	"lehem" 
	and you have what sounds like the pharaonic name "Thothmes" 
	or "Tutmose", variously spelled.
	
	The tall bread loaf
is 
	similar in shape to the egg hieroglyph. Compare Gardiner's 
	X3 and 
	H8. The egg hieroglyph can signify a 
	begotten "son". This is one of the meanings of the 
	name of the prince and prophet Mosheh 
	(משה, 
	Moses 1:3-4). 
	
	The pharaonic component name "mose" brings to mind the 
	name of the great law giver. "Mosheh" has both 
	
	Egyptian and Hebrew meanings. 
	(Exodus 2:10) Could the Hebrew word "mashah" 
	(משה) 
	that Mosheh relates to, 
	have drawn upon an Egyptian word meaning to "birth"; 
	so that the translation, "drew him out of the water" may have originally had 
	a 
	connotation suggesting "birthed him out of the water"? (Exodus 2:10, 
	2 Samuel 22:17, 
	Psalm 18:16)
	Ah-meh-strah-ans might interpret "Thut-mose" or "Thuth-mosis" to 
	mean "Thoth is Moses".
	(John 6:32-33) 
	You may recall that Moses (Mosheh) was 
	made as "a god to Pharaoh" 
	(Exodus 7:1), and 
	was placed by God as 
	"ruler" over a 
	
	great house. 
	(Exodus 22:28) 
	The title Paroh 
	appearing in Hebrew scripture, 
	means "great house" in Egyptian. Following the logic of the Apostle Paul, it may be argued that Moses in Abram sat upon the throne of Pharaoh. "For he 
	[Moses the Levite] was yet in the loins of his father [Abram]". 
	(Hebrews 7:9-10) It is appropriate then to see in the Hebrew string pharaonic 
	names with the component "mose".
	
	Though reinterpreted in the Book of Abraham as ostensibly depicting a 
	scene in mortality,
	
		Facsimile No. 3 was originally the final vignette of the  Hor Book of Breathings. 
	As such, it depicts a scene in the afterlife. Should we combine a post mortal 
	setting with Ed Goble's discovery of the 
	
	Thoth-Moses name, we may be justified in seeing in 
		Facsimile No. 3,
	meek Mosheh 
	
	in the afterlife, as ruler of his own great house,  letting his 
	exalted father Avraham 
	rule, and reason in his throne.
	
		
	After "moz" or Moses, in 
	the Hebrew string, is the letter nun 
	(נ,
	to some a serpent,
, 
	Exodus 4:3), 
	and after that, the abbreviated sacred name of the Israelite God, Yah.
	
	As for names of mortal Egyptian kings, we may primarily consider the component name "moz" or "mose" 
	in the string "...lhmoznyah..." 
	(...לחמעזניה...): 
	The component name "..mose" is common to the names of many Egyptian rulers, 
	including 
	Ahmose. 
	This pharaonic name, aside from its reference to Ah, 
	Lah, or 
	Yah the moon god, might be interpreted by an Ah-meh-strah-an to mean 
	"Ah-mosheh" = "Brother of Moses". 
	An Ah-meh-strah-an might also see in the name "Yah-mosheh" 
	= "Yah of Moses" or "Yah 
	is the Son". To the Egyptian ear, the Hebrew string "...לחמעז..." 
	can be pronounced in such a way so as to sound like a reference to the moon 
	(Lah) and birth (moz), as in the name 
	Ahmose.
Ed Goble makes a case for historically justifying the pharaonic name "Tutmoses" 
	converted from the characters to the right of Isis
	(Facsimile No. 3, Figure 2). But Ed 
	also admits that there must be more going on, because so many Hebrew letters 
	remain; not taking part in his find - so far. See Appendix 2, Ed Goble 
	Update.
	Let's compose a thorough list of the Egyptian symbols 
	(including all the loaves of bread, even the little bun) and their simple 
	Hebrew identifications. Here are the symbols of the complete string:
	
	
	Gardiner's Q1, throne; Hebrew: "kise" (כסא 
	,כיסא); 
	Greek transliteration: "κισα".
	There is a 
	hidden yod (י) in the ancient Hebrew word 
	for "seat" or "throne", as if the word is spelled so as to avoid being 
	interpreted to mean "as 
	Isis". It is not hard 
	to imagine Ptolemaic Ah-meh-strah-ans deliberately spelling the Hebrew word 
	for "throne" with a yod or a vav (ו)
	to seat in it a reference to "ise" or "wusa". The 
	modern Hebrew spelling of Isis is 
	
	איזיס,
	in imitation of the classical Greek pronunciation Ισις. 
	The Ptolemaic Ah-meh-strah-ans could have imitated the Hebrew word for 
	throne (כסא, 
	"kise") as
	"κισα" in Greek, and seen in it a reference to the throne goddess.
	
	Gardiner's X1, small loaf of bread, "t" 
	sound; Hebrew: "lehem" 
	(לחם).
	
	
	
	Gardiner's H8, egg; Hebrew: "beytsah" (ביצה).
	
	Related to "fine 
	white Egyptian linen". 
	Sounds like "house 
	of the 
	lamb". 
	Substitute "lamb" with 
	lehem from above (John 
	6:32-33) to see 
	beyt 
	lehem. (Micah 5:2)
	
	
    
	Gardiner's G36, swallow, 
	meaning great; Hebrew: "deror" (דרור).
	
	A continuation on the theme that from the small proceeds the great. 
	(Alma 
	37:7, 
	
	LDS Doctrine and Covenants 
	64:34)
	The Hebrew word "deror" (דרור) 
	also connotes 
	liberty, 
	freedom. (Leviticus 
	25:10,
	
		Isaiah 61:1, 
	
	John 8:32; 
	
	14:6)
	
	
		
	Gardiner's D21, mouth; Hebrew: "peh" (פה).
	
	
	
	Gardiner's X1, small loaf of bread, "t" 
	sound; Hebrew: "lehem" 
	(לחם).
	
	
	
	
	Gardiner's X1, small bun, "t" sound, 
	feminine marker; 
	Hebrew: "lehem" 
	(לחם).
	Multiplied loaves.
	
	
	
	Gardiner's G14, vulture, 
	meaning mother; Hebrew: "ozniyah" (עזניה).
	
	
	
	Gardiner's R8, temple flag, 
	meaning god, divine; Hebrew: "nes" (נס). 
	
	These are the symbols above the raised arm of 
	Figure 2. We should not forget to include the symbols directly above the 
	head of Figure 2. The explanation in 
	Facsimile No. 3 requires that we include these also.
	The crown of the mother goddess 
	Hathor (worn by 
	Isis) is a composite of three hieroglyphs: 
	(1) ox horns 
	F13, (2) the solar disk emblematic of the 
	sun god Ra 
	N5, encircled by (3) a serpent (implicit 
	uraeus, not seen in the copied vignette) 
	N6.
		
	
	
	Gardiner's N6, sun with 
	uraeus, Re. One potential Hebrew homophone 
	is "raah" (ראה), 
	meaning look, behold, see.
	
	
	
	Gardiner's F13, ox horns, meaning 
	beginning. One potential Hebrew interpretation is "reshit" (ראשית), 
	used in reference to the cocreator 
	Hokhmah 
	(Proverbs 
	4:7;
	
	8:30). The Hebrew aleph (א), 
	Greek letter alpha (Α), 
	first, head, and a reference to the Gods (אלהים), 
	are all implicit in "reshit" 
	(ראשית, Genesis 1:1, 
	Deuteronomy 21:17).
	
	
		These last three special symbols (two combined in 
	N6) are directly above the head of Figure 
		2; making a total of 12 symbols to esoterically process as would inspired 
		Ah-meh-strah-ans.
	
		Avram preached the 
		besorah 
		(good tidings, Isaiah 61:1; later translated "gospel", 
		
		Luke 4:18) "unto the Ah meh strahans". See 
		
	[1.22]. So their understanding of the 
		coming of an 
		anointed savior could have been prophetic and profound. 
		(Isaiah 19:21-22)
	
		Here then is a complete Hebrew string (anticipating a little Ptolemaic 
		Greek) derived from the Egyptian symbols relevant to Figure 2:
	
		
	
		
	
		
		Facsimile No. 3, Figure 2, Hebrew 
		String in standard post-exilic Hebrew/Aramaic letters, and just 
		below it, the same string in 
		more ancient, phonetic, reformed Egyptian characters. Hebrew reads right to left. The string is 38 
		Hebrew characters long.
	Remember what the explanation to Figure 2 says. It reads, 
	"King Pharaoh, whose name is given in the characters above his head."
		From the symbols of the Hebrew string above, let us see if we can 
		construct a message that correlates to the Book of Abraham 
		explanation of 
		Facsimile No. 3, Figure 2. For instance, we may see in the 
		available letters of the string, that we can spell 
		the Hebrew words for Pharaoh 
		(פרעח) 
		and King (מלך). 
		The
		post-exilic Hebrew/Aramaic letter koph 
		(כ ,ך) from the word "kise" (כסא) 
		takes its final form (koph as it appears at the end of words, ך) in the 
		word "melek" (מלך). 
		Among phonetic reformed Egyptian characters (Sinai aleph-bet) there are 
		no final forms of letters. 
		
	
		
	
		Just above is a reordering of the letters from the Figure 2 Hebrew string. 
		The final nun (ן) in "ben" (בן), 
		meaning son, comes from the nun (נ) in 
		"ozniyah" (עזניה), 
		meaning osprey or vulture (signifying mother 
		in Egyptian). Each letter is used only once, so the resulting string is 
		also exactly 38 Hebrew characters long. Because the feminine Hebrew word for 
		"beginning" is deliberately placed last (Abraham 2:8), and because the word actually 
		ends with the last letter of the aleph-bet, we may interpret "reshit" (ראשית) 
		to suggest "the beginning and end". 
		(Isaiah 48:12, 
		Revelation 
		1:8, LDS Doctrine and Covenants 45:7)
	
		It is also important to know that in Ptolemaic times alphanumeric 
		equivalencies were contemplated in Greek and then in Hebrew. 
		
		
		Greek Isopsephy 
		and 
		
		
		Hebrew Gematria assigned numerical values to letters. For 
		example, the eighth letter of the aleph-bet, het (ח, 
		more anciently 
		
) 
		was seen as equal to the number 8. Such equivalency led to an 
		alphanumeric sensitivity in these languages. Names became associated 
		with numbers! (Revelation 
		13:17-18) 
	
		The reordered string then reads:
	
		"This  is Pharaoh, 
		king and child of Egypt (Egyptes), son of Isis. Look to the 
		sign 8 8 8,  the beginning 
		 and end."
	
		The feminine form of the Hebrew word for Egypt ("Mitsraymah", 
		Genesis 12:10), appears in the line above. This gives the 
		word a double meaning; either referring to the land of Egypt, or 
		to "Mitsraymah" ("Egyptes", 
		
		Abraham 1:23-25) the ancestral mother of the Hamite Egyptians 
		according to the Book of Abraham. An earlier spelling of the 
		substitute name 
		is preferred over the commonly published "Egyptus" which seems 
		to feature the Roman masculine ending "us". 
	
		Of particular interest is the combination of the Semitic words
		ראה לנס = "raah li-nes" = "look to the 
		sign" which sounds remarkably like the Semitic "Rahleenos, which 
		signifies hieroglyphics." (Abraham 1:14) The Hebrew "raah li-ness" in fact derives from 
		Egyptian hieroglyphics: the solar disk, 
		seraphic serpent(s), .. and what appears to be a 
		
		supporting, possibly 
		
		sharp 
		triple cross called 
		samekh.
	
				The string 
	
 
 
, 
				may be read "het het het". The name of each 
 
				then includes an unseen 
				tav (
). 
				That is, "het", spelled 
, 
				in Proto-Sinaitic symbols, is pronounced "
".
	
				The Ah-meh-strah-an minded may see prophetic meaning in the 
				combination of the Hebrew "
 
				
				
", 
				or "het 
				het het", and the symbols 
 that translate 
				to mean "the 
				sign".
	
	
				The 
				saraph 
				(serpent) and the 
				samekh spell "nes" (נס) 
				meaning "sign". But "saraph" calls to mind 
				"saphar" (ספר) 
				which means "count". This Hebrew word for "count" happens to be 
				spelled with its alphanumeric characters 
				samekh (60), pey (80), 
				resh (200) in increasing order of numeric value (according to 
				
				standard Hebrew Gematria). Additionally, the ancient 
				samekh 
				symbol 
			 
				
pictorially suggests to the mind 
				the need to put the numbers "in order of 
				size". Thus a deeper level of meaning, suggested in the Hebrew "nes" 
				(נס), 
				guides the Ah-meh-strah-an mind to reorder the 
 
				and implied 
 
				symbols according to the Ah-meh-strah-an 
				tah rule 
				- in increasing order:
	
				
 
				= "nes"  = "sign" → "count ("saphar", ספר) in 
				ascending order"
. Ah-meh-strah-ans 
				could have recognized this to mean:
	
				 
				
				
				
				
				
	
				Here the reordered Hebrew/Egyptian characters resemble 
				Ah-meh-strah-an
				
				prophetic characters 
				(read left to right). The following 
				Ah-meh-strah-an number may be perceived:
	
		
  
		
		
  
		
		
		
 
		= "a  tah a  tah tah a" = 8 + 10x8 + 10x10x8
    
		= 888 = "eight hundred eighty eight".
	
		The sign of the fiery seraph (serpent) and triple cross
		samekh pillar or 
		pole 
, 
		are interpreted to mean "count in ascending order", that is, 
		arrange the "
" 
		signs so they express a combination of numbers in ascending order of 
		greatness. Thus the more ancient symbols (
		
		
		
) 
		which are behind the 
		post-exilic Hebrew "נס ח ח ח" = "nes
		het het
		het" = "sign (in ascending order) 8 8 8", 
		is fulfilled, or consummated in the number eight hundred eighty eight. 
		We may then replace 
		"
		
		
		
" 
		or "נס ח ח ח" with 888 in translation.
	
		Let us also change the order of the Hebrew words "king" and 
		"Pharaoh" so that they follow the order in the explanation of Figure 2, 
		Facsimile No. 3. Joseph's explanation reads "King Pharaoh 
		..." The Hebrew sentence now read " ... זה מלך פרעה" = "This is King - 
		Pharaoh ..." which may seam a little redundant until we consider that in 
		Hebrew, "מלך פרעה" = "King - Pharaoh" can be interpreted to mean "King 
		of Pharaoh", so that a greater than Pharaoh can be suggested by the order of the words. The 
		verse now begins to take on a more Messianic meaning, telling of one greater 
		than Pharaoh, and even greater than Moses who was made "a god" (or placed as the gods by Elohim) 
		above Pharaoh.
	
		Moreover, let us consider that the name Ισα 
		= "Isa" (Isis) is a 
		
		homophone for the Hebrew word "Ishah" (אשה) 
		= "Woman" (which includes the Hebrew word for "a man" = "ish" 
		(אש), 
		Genesis 2:23). 
		This is the description of Havah (חוה), 
		who is "Life", the divine "mother of all living", after 
		whom Eve was named. (Genesis 3:20,
		Moses 4:26) 
		We note that the Hebrew word for "life" begins with a het,
.
	
		We may then review and see the Hebrew word string derived from the symbols above 
		the raised arm and head of Figure 2, as follows:
	כיסא לחם ביצה דרור פה לחם לחם עזניה נס ראה ראשית 
	(κισα)
	rearranged as:
	זה 
	מלך 
	פרעה 
	
	וילד 
	מצרימה 
	בן
	יסא
 
	ראה 
	
	לנס 
	ח ח ח 
	ראשית
	hebraically interpreted as:
	
	
	which reads
	"This is King of a  
	great house and child of 
	Egypt, 
	Son of 
	Woman. Look to 888,  the beginning 
	 and end."
	 
	Name of the Father
	According to scripture, the "name which is above 
	every name" is "ΙΗΣΟΥΣ" 
	("IĒSOUS",
 
	Philippians 2:9-11). 
	According to 
	
	
		Greek Isopsephy:
	Ι = 10, Η = 8, Σ = 200, Ο = 
	70, Υ = 400, Σ = 200.
	Thus ΙΗΣΟΥΣ = 10 + 8 + 200 + 70 + 400 + 200 = 888.
	But the name "IĒSOUS" 
	(ΙΗΣΟΥΣ) 
	is a Greek spelling of the Hebrew name "Yeshua" (ישוע), meaning 
	"Salvation" or "he 
	will save". 
	(Matthew 1:21, 
	Job 13:16, 
	Isaiah 12:2) 
	The more complete and ancient spelling of this name is
	
,
	יהושוע, 
	"YEHOSHUA", spelled 
	here with two "nails" (Deuteronomy 3:21) or 
	"vavim" 
	(ו,
used 
	as "hooks" on which the full weight of the veil of the tabernacle was hung;
	
	Exodus 26:31-32,
	
	Hebrews 10:19-20). This is the name 
	pronounced "Joshua" in English Bibles. Again, the Greek spelling of Joshua in the 
	ancient Septuagint is ΙΗΣΟΥΣ.
	"YEHOSHUA" means 
	"the Eternal is 
	Salvation". The name 
	was revealed by Moses and given to his prophetic successor as a new name. (Number 13:16) 
	
	"Endless and
	Eternal" is a name of both God the Father and 
	the Son. (Moses 7:35; 
	6:57, 
	
	LDS Doctrine and Covenants 19:10) This is a divine name of GOD (Elohim) that the Gods (Elohim) command should should not be taken in vain. 
	(Exodus 20:7)
	
	 By replacing 888 = ΙΗΣΟΥΣ, with 
	the more ancient and original 
	יהושוע,
	
 
	we obtain from the characters above the head of Figure 2, a Messianic message in 
	pure Hebrew:
	
	
	 
		This may be interpreted:
	"This is King of a  
	great house and child of 
	
	Egypt, 
	Son of 
	Woman. Look to YEHOSHUA,  the beginning 
	 and end."
	 or alternately:
		"This is King of a  
	great house and child 
		of 
	Egypt, 
	Son of 
	Woman. Look to YEHOSHUA of 
		
		Hokhmah."
	since in scripture, Hokhmah 
	(spelled with a het (ח, 
		
);
	Sophia in Greek) is "reshit" 
	(ראשית, Proverbs 4:7;
	
	8:30,
	
	Luke 7:35, Matthew 11:19). 
	But according to Torah, the 
	
	Firstborn Son is also 
			"reshit" 
	(ראשית, 
	Deuteronomy 21:17).
	Thus we see:
	"This is King of a  
	great house and child 
		of 
	Egypt, 
	Son of 
	Woman. Look to YEHOSHUA 
		the Firstborn Son."
	The expression "child of Egypt" can refer to the house of Israel and/or Messiah. (Exodus 4:22-23,
	Hosea 
	11:1, Matthew 2:15)
	But how can the name "YEHOSHUA" (
) 
	be
	 "above every name ... to the glory of God the Father"? (Philippians 2:9-11)
	The Messianic title begins with a serpent 
	sign in "nes" (נס)
	
, and ends with horns 
	
 
	in "reshit" 
	(ראשית). 
	The horned viper hieroglyph 
signifies 
	father 
	(Gardiner's I9). 
	In this symbolic sense, the entire Messianic name and title is in father, 
	"av" (אב,
); 
	much as son, "ben" (בן,
), 
	represented by the letter "bet" (ב), is 
	in 
	father (אב,
,
	Aramaic: אבא),
, 
	3 Nephi 9:15, 
	 
	John 14:11). We should recognize that the firstborn is also "Aleph" (א,
).
	How then can the name "YEHOSHUA" (
) 
	be "above every name"? The answer is simple: The name includes and is one 
	of the ageless names of God the Father. The names and titles of the Son 
	came from the Father. For said he, "I am come in my father's name ..." (John 5:43)
	“The scriptures inform us that Jesus said, As the Father hath power in Himself, even so hath the Son power - to 
do what? ...what the Father did. The answer is obvious - in a manner to lay down 
His body and to take it up again. Jesus, what are you going to do? To lay down 
my life as my Father did, and take it up again. Do you believe it? If you do not 
believe it, you do not believe the Bible.” (Joseph Smith, H.C. 6:305-306; Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, 
King Follett Discourse, "Power of the Father and the Son", pg. 346)
	This then makes sense of Messianic Psalm 110:1, "The
	Eternal said unto my Lord, sit thou at 
	my right hand, until I make thine enemies thy footstool." In this scripture, the Messiah is 
	referred to as "adoni" = "my Lord". The 
	Eternal in this verse, is God the Father.
	(Mark 12:35-37) 
	Elder 
	
	James E. Talmage, 
	understood that the translated name "Jehovah" means he that is 
	Eternal. In Chapter 4 of
	Jesus the Christ, Talmage explains that, "Jehovah is the Anglicized rendering of the Hebrew ... signifying 
	the Self-existent One, or 
	 The Eternal." See 
	Appendix 1, and consider that the Eternal 
	name is substituted with "Lord" or "LORD" (KJV) in numerous places throughout LDS Scripture. (Moses 1:3-6;
	6:57; 
	7:35, 
	50, 
	53-54, 
	59-62)
	
	
	An artistic depiction of the Eternal name and the meaning of each letter  
	- by V. Coon 
	
	
	
	
	
	כּוּן 
	Consider ישעיהו, 
	Isaiah 43:15
	
	
Early leadership of the Church, in fact, referred to God the Father 
as "The Great Eloheem Jehovah" (See 
Proclamation of the Twelve Apostles of the Church of Jesus 
Christ of Latter-day Saints, April 6, 1845, and 
Genesis 2:4) The name of 
Elohim 
	is 
	יהוה. (Exodus 3:15)
	
Identifying the "the LORD"
	(Jehovah), or the "LORD God", as God 
"our father" 
comports well with Hebrew scripture. Compare for example 
1 Chronicles 29:10-13, with the Lord's prayer. consider also the Messianic prophecy in 
Ezekiel 34:23-24.
	
According to the Book of Moses, the "Lord God", or 
more authentically "Yhvh 
Elohim" (Genesis 2:4), is clearly a title of the divine Parent(s) of the Savior. 
See 
Moses 3:18  
in parallel with 
Genesis 2:18 (KJV), and especially the Hebrew source 
Genesis 2:18.
 
The Prophet Joseph Smith directly addressed God the Father as "Jehovah", 
the "Mighty God of Jacob". 
 (LDS 
Doctrine and Covenants 109:4,
  
42-51,
  
54-56,
  
67-68; consider 
 
3 Nephi 20:12 and 
 
		Isaiah 61:1;
 
63:16)
	
The Son of God is therefore not the only divine person on whom 
the Eternal name "Jehovah" 
is bestowed. That the sacred name is given to the messianic messenger, consider Exodus 23:20-21, 
Isaiah 26:19,
Jeremiah 23:5-6, 
		verse 6
 in Hebrew. 
The Godhead, which includes the Son, is an everlasting Family of unified Gods. 
(Alma 11:38-39,
44)
The Heavenly 
Family is presided over by the order of "El Elyon", "the Most High God" - the God of 
Melchizedek, whose name is 
ETERNAL. (Genesis 14:18-20,
 
Psalm 83:18;
 
135:5,
 
LDS Doctrine and Covenants 121:32) 
Israelite scripture further describes the Most High as "El elohim
YHVH", "The LORD
God of gods”. 
(Joshua 22:22) 
Even the "Sh'mah", faithfully recited in Jewish prayer, emphasizing divine 
unity, nevertheless uses the plural possessive "Eloheynu", "our Gods". 
Translations tend to render the plural as singular. 
(Deuteronomy 6:4)
	
But a plurality can also be 
"one". 
(Genesis 2:24;
 
11:6,
 
Judges 6:16;
 
20:1, etc.) The Eternal seeks to fully place his name 
by ordinance upon his covenant people.
	(Numbers 6:26-27, 
	Abraham 1:18-19)
The Eternal name, as a new name will be 
placed upon redeemed Jerusalem. (Ezekiel 48:35)
 
	The 
	determinative 
	symbol for eternity (see N16) that goes along with the Egyptian word for eternity, "d.t", 
	is a symbol of
	
	the earth 
	
	 
	(
, 
	
	Gardiner's N16). This may be a key to understanding why the 
	esoteric 
	
	Ah-meh-strah-ans, who worshipped the Hebrew God (Isaiah 
	19:21-22), considered the sacred name of 
	 the Eternal to be bestowed upon the earth in her 
	cycles. (Facsimile 
	2, Fig. 1, 
	TETRAGRAMMAT
N 
		and EARTH)
	 
	Degrees of Meaning
	Book of Abraham 
	
		Facsimile No. 3 isn't just depicting an historic scene enacted in Egypt in the days of  Abram. It 
	isn't just about a mortal ruler allowing a Hebrew prophet of flesh and blood 
	to sit on the throne. It is a scene of supernal and transcendent meaning, 
	extending into the world beyond this. It is a resurrection scene about judgment, justification, endowment and exaltation. It is ultimately about 
	the King of eternity who saves and exalts Abraham and his seed 
	(
, 
	כהנה, "Kehunah" , 
	
	Abraham 2:10-11,
	
	LDS 
	Doctrine and Covenants 132:28-29), to rule and reign with him 
	in his throne. (Revelation 
		3:21)
	
	
	A sketch made by this writer on a 3"x5" card decades ago, 
	as a young fulltime missionary, and kept in an old set of scriptures.
	
	(Psalm 9:7)
	 
	Appendix 1:
	From LDS SCRIPTURES, AUTHORIZED VERSION INCLUDING OFFICIAL 
STUDY AIDS (CD-ROM RESOURCE 1.0) Transliterated Hebrew | English:
	
	See also the Tetragrammaton 
	as the name of God the Father in a 
	Vatican Library Hebrew Gospel of Luke, and 
	as the name of the Father and the Son in the 
	Cochin Hebrew Book of Revelation.
	Appreciation expressed to 
	Romolo Simonetti for making 
	his colleagues aware of these scriptural texts.
	Appendix 2:
	Ed Goble Update - Who was king of Egypt at the time of Abram?
	In an e-mail to colleagues dated October 3, 2024, LDS 
	scholar Ed Goble proposed that the king of Egypt contemporary with Abram 
	could have been 
	Senusret I.
	In his own words, Ed proposed that “the Cryptogram of Isis the Great spells out S S WRT, where the strongest consonant in the name EST(Isis) is the S, and over time with the Egyptian pronunciation of Isis, the pronunciation of the T was dropped.  And the Egg hieroglyph, normally a determinative for female names, in this case is vocalized with an 
	S sound.  And then the bird hieroglyph (WRT/OoRT, "The Great")  So it's once again a double meaning cryptogram: Se-S-OoRet.”
	V. Coon responded:
	
	
	“For the label of Isis (Fig. 2, Facsimile 3) 
	Michael Rhodes writes … “’Is.t wr.t, mw.t ntr.” = “The great Isis, mother of the god.” [Hor Book of Breathings, pg. 25] 
	Ritner agrees, but uses somewhat different [transliteration] symbols and translates, “Isis the great, the god’s mother.” The “god” in this case being 
	Horus. You [Ed] see in Ritner’s “[..]S.t wr(t)” 
	[The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri, pg. 173] the name of an Egyptian king “Senusret” 
	that seems to fit in a possible time period contemporary with Abram [including a famine during his reign].
	Apparently “Senusret” means “Man [Son] of the goddess Wosret” 
	...”
	V. Coon further responded:
	“Here’s a link arguing that “Senusret” can be interpreted “son of Wosret”: 
	[About the Goddess Wosret of Ancient Egypt] 
	Again:
The name of the goddess can be read first in the cartouche [Senusret], in the understanding that the divine son is “of” 
(n-water ripple) the mother. Thus we see that the name 
“wsr-s-r:t-z:n” 
	[see cartouche below] means essentially the same as “Zenwosret” [Senusret].
	[Ed Goble recommends resourcing A Ptolemaic Sign-List - Hieroglyphs Used 
	in the Temples of the Graeco-Roman Period of Egypt and their Meanings, 
	by Dieter Kurth. Kurth lists wś; 
	wśr among possible sound values of the 
	Was-sceptre (Gardiner S40) appearing foremost in the Senusret cartouche below.]
	So why couldn’t Ptolemaic 
	Ah-meh-strah-ans have perceived in the Isis/Hathor label “’Is.t wr.t mw.t ntr.” (Hor Book of Breathing(s) 
	last vignette) the esoteric meaning “’Is.t
	w[s]r.t, mw.t ntr.” = “Iset [is] Wosret, mother (protector) of the divine (Horus/Pharaoh).” implicating the pharaonic name “Senusret” = “son of Wosret”?”
	
	%20Cartouche.JPG)
	
	
	
	
	
	“So since the name of the goddess can come [be written] first, e.g. “wsr-s-r:t-z:n” = “Wosret 
	man” (meaning Senusret) as suggested by [Senusret I in Hieroglyphs] Then “… wr.t mw.t ntr” is [only] missing 
	an “s” sound in suggesting “… Wosret mother of the divine (Horus/Pharaoh)” 
	[- or so] an Ah-meh-strah-an might say.  This essentially fits the Wosret relationship with Horus according to the myth (no need for an explicit n-water ripple). An Ah-meh-strahan-an might see that the “s” sound can come from the goddess Iset providing what is missing: So an Ah-meh-strah-an might read “Iset [is] Wo[s]ret, mother of the divine (Horus/Pharaoh)”, suggesting “Isis/Wosret man (son)”, suggesting “Senusret”.
	It takes the whole Isis label and an inspired Ah-meh-strah-an mind to see such a thing. And beside this, an Ah-meh-strah-an sees levels of Hebrew meaning in the label – not to be ignored.”
	“Taking the throne symbol (ws, i.e. Wsr = Osiris) and 
	masculinizing the egg (z, s, meaning son) and suppressing the breadbun 
	(t, as Ed has suggested) in “Iset” or rather “Ise” 
	[the bread bun may possibly be taken as a feminine determiner], and combining this with the swallow (wr), 
	mouth (r), and breadbun (t), an Ah-meh-strah-an may similarly see and pronounce “wsz-wr.t”. This also sounds like “Wosret. Thus we may 
	[also] read in the Isis/Hathor label “Wosret mother (protector) of the 
	divine (Horus/Pharaoh)”. This parallels some things [about mortal Pharaoh tied to Horus] that Ryan Larsen has put forward over the years.
	We don’t need to audibly simulate the name “ZenWosret” (Senusret) in the Isis/Hathor label to strongly implicate the name “ZenWosret” (Senusret) by the message of the label.
	Thus “Wsz-wr.t, mw.t ntr” = “Wosret, mother (protector) of the divine (Horus/Pharoah)” (detected in the label “’Is.t wr.t, mw.t ntr” = “Isis the great, mother of the god”) is arguably equivalent to the cartouche reading 
	“wsr-s-r:t-z:n”, 
	which is already accepted as equivalent to “ZenWosret” (Senusret) = “Son of Wosret”.
	According to information on line, it is believed that Wosret may have influenced or in some sense evolved into Hathor. 
	[About the Goddess Wosret of Ancient Egypt] Ryan has pointed out the 
	Isis/Hathor connection via the horned crown worn by the goddess in 
	Fig. 2. Thus Isis here personifies divine protection and motherhood in general, including the roles of Wosret/Hathor.”
	“Though I think it is not needed to succeed in identifying the 
	[mortal] king’s name, I have nevertheless attempted a rearrangement of the characters in the Isis/Hathor label of the Book of Breathing(s) 
	final vignette.”
	[Note;
may 
	possibly be seen  as a feminine determiner 
	after
in an attempt to designate a goddess. 
	Moreover, according to Kurth, the temple banner symbol for god (Gardiner R8), may represent a sound value of n. 
	Thus more closely simulating the name Senusret, while explicitly giving its meaning:]
	
	
	
	[Utilizing sound values from Kurth's Ptolemaic Sign-List we may 
	perceive sn-wśwrrt 
	...]
But there is a deeper [more sublime] question to ask from Fig. 2 Facsimile 3, beyond naming an historic ruler of 
	Mitsrayim[ah] contemporary with Avram.
	The question that should be raised is:
	Who really is King of a Great House, according to the Book of Abraham [Facsimile 2] - what is his name?
	To properly answer this 
	Ah-meh-strah-an style, we might delve 
	[as in this article] into Hebrew equivalents of the characters spelling out “’Is.t wr.t, mw.t ntr” seen 
	[interpreted from the copied 
	hieratic] in the last vignette of the Hor Book of Breathing(s):”
	In preparation for the answer, consider “Fig. 1 
	… crown upon his head, representing the Priesthood as emblematical of the 
	grand Presidency in Heaven; with the scepter of justice and judgment in his 
	hand.”
	It is clear then, that the King, crown and scepter symbolically 
	relate to “the grand Presidency in Heaven”. The Heavenly King who shares an 
	everlasting throne with Avraham, whose hand in fact is over his 
	son 
	(Fig. 1), 
	and whose name 
	(Priesthood) is placed upon him, is the Eternal 
	Elohim (Abraham 2:8) 
	- 
	Jehovah who is 
	Salvation (Ἰησοῦς = 888).