Isaiah foresaw both the fate and the future restoration of Jerusalem and her people. Nephi . . . likened Isaiah's words to his people in a new prophecy, showing how Nephite writings would advance the Lord's work in the latter days. . . . Then, the Savior and the resurrected Moroni taught the significance of Nephi's likening for this dispensation to the Prophet Joseph Smith. Joseph Smith, in turn, replaced Isaiah's words in his inspired translation of the Bible with his new understanding of how they had been likened to him and to the Lord's latter-day work. In this process, Isaiah's sealed book was reinterpreted as Nephi's gold plates and as Joseph Smiths Book of Mormon. Isaiah's dust of death was reinterpreted as Nephi's source of renewed life and as Joseph Smith's Cumorah. . . . This is the process of likening. Prophets do it readily. . . . There is no impropriety in their giving old scripture new meaning for their lives. (233–34)