Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 & 2 Thessalonians Part 1 • Professor Dale Sturm • Oct 16 - Oct 22
Episode Date: October 11, 2023Have you ever wondered what ancient letters to a small Christian community can teach us about thriving in a modern world of challenges and uncertainties? Professor Dale Sturm teaches about the importa...nce of loving one another, the power of hope, and how the gospel of Jesus Christ allows us to experience joy amidst affliction.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/d8WS5o7VbhUFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Professor Dale Sturm00:59 Introduction to 1 Thessalonians and 2 Thessalonians02:03 Introduction of Professor Dale Sturm04:13 Background to Thessalonica, Paul and Silas06:54 Thessalonica is a free city09:28 Acts 17 review, Silas, and Timothy14:33 The “baser sort”17:00 Paul is escorted out of town19:23 Paul sends Timothy to Thessalonica21:10 Timing of 1 Thessalonians22:51 A letter of encouragement26:06 Hard work due to faith27:48 President Hickley offers encouragement30:59 President Packer expresses love31:52 Joy amidst affliction35:40 Conversion requires sacrifice37:34 Professor Sturm shares a personal story about President Hinckley39:29 Key indicators and Same Boat Therapy41:49 1 Thessalonians 245:38 We love those we serve46:42 Joseph F. Smith story in Hawaii49:43 Praying for those who serve51:54 Paul encourages those enduring trials54:00 Paul makes a doctrinal correction56:19 Elder Holland’s “Cast Not Away Therefore Your Confidence”59:41 End of Part 1–Professor Dale SturmThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my marvelous co-host, John, by the way. Welcome, John. Another week of Follow Him.
Yeah, I marvel that I'm here to. Can't believe it.
I marvel that you are here, John.
John, we have been studying the letters of Paul here for quite a few weeks.
What have you learned so far? What's stood out to you?
It's fun to see where Paul goes.
I feel like I might have a tendency.
Okay, I went there. I did my job.
Now I'm going home, but Paul feels connected to these places where he's gone.
He feels connected to the people and you can feel it and the letters he writes to them.
He's praying for him.
He feels connected to them.
And I like that his service was heartmine my strength.
Yeah, it does feel that way as he's going from place to place.
It looks like he's just adding to his plate more people.
He's worried about more congregations.
He's worried about writing to John.
We have a wonderful guest with us today.
His name is Dale Sturm.
He teaches up in BYU Idaho, one of our friends up there.
Dale, we are in first and second Thessalonians today. His name is Dale Stern. He teaches up in BYU Idaho, one of our friends up there.
Dale, we are in first and second Thessalonians today. What are we looking forward to?
First and second Thessalonians is unique in a bunch of ways. Maybe one is that it's among the earliest,
if not the earliest, New Testament document. This could be the first letter Paul wrote. Some would
say Galatians maybe is ahead of this one,
but others think this is first.
These are people that he loves.
You just have this ebullian affection expressed
through this letter.
Both of these letters, neither of them is full of corrections.
It's not a first Corinthians kind of letter.
It's really encouraging, which becomes almost poignant when we start to understand
where Thessalonica is and who are these people and the sacrifices they've made to come to
Christ. That's fantastic. I'm looking forward to this. As I've watched Paul in First and
Second Corinthians, it feels like he's pulling his hair out just like, I cannot get things
straight over there. But it's good to hear that things are going well
and for the Thessalonians.
John Dale is new to our podcast.
Why don't you introduce him to us?
Yes, I'm so glad you're coming from Southern Idaho.
I'm part Idaho.
My grandfather was raised there.
Brother Storm was raised in Thousand Oaks, California.
He served as a missionary in the Japan Kobe mission.
So a big Konichiwa. He needs you. He has a bachelor missionary in the Japan Kobe mission. So a big
co-need you want to. He has a bachelor's degree from BYU, a master's from Utah
State University, and also a master's degree in theology from Campbell'sville
University in Campbell'sville, Kentucky. He's done PhD work at Amherd University
in biblical studies, and he began teaching for seminaries and institutes in 1987.
And in 1995 was transferred to the church office building
to write curriculum.
So he actually wrote seminary movies and lessons
for seven years.
I bet we've seen some of those hang.
He spent a couple of years at the Institute
to Jason to the University of Utah
and came to BYU Idaho in 2004.
Dale and his wife, Valerie, have five children, 11 grandchildren, and two more grandchildren
on the way.
That sounds really wonderful.
We live on a horse ranch and raise Tennessee walking horses.
They also spent three years serving in the Iowa City Mission, which is a remarkable place.
Navu Carthage in all those areas are part of the mission,
part of the Pioneer Trail.
And we're really looking forward to being with you,
going from Kentucky to Thousand Oaks to Idaho.
Now we're gonna go to Thessalonica.
So welcome, Dale.
We're really happy to have you.
Thank you for joining us today.
Thank you.
It's great to be here.
We are excited.
I have a lot of friends that teach up in Rexburg, a BYU Idaho.
And every time have you had Dale on your podcast yet, you are beloved by your colleagues
up at BYU Idaho.
Or they're go for, they use me to, yeah, I'm the utility in-fielder.
Yeah, have you had Dale yet?
Yeah, there you go. That's right.
That's fantastic.
And it's a pleasure to be with you both.
Dale, I'm going to read a little bit from the manual here and then we'll hand it over to you
and see where you want to go. The manual says this. In Thessalonica, Paul and Silas were accused
of having turned the world upside down.
They're preaching angered certain leaders among the Jews, and those leaders stirred the
people up in an uproar.
As a result, Paul and Silas were advised to leave Thessalonica.
Paul worried about the new Thessalonian converts, and the persecution they were facing, but
he was unable to return to visit them.
When I could no longer forebear, he wrote, I sent to know your faith. In response Paul's assistant Timothy, who had been serving in Thessalonica,
brought us good tidings of your faith and charity. In fact, the Thessalonian saints were known as
examples to all that believe. And news of their faith spread to cities abroad. Imagine Paul's joy and
relief to hear that his work among them was not in vain. But Paul knew that faithfulness in the past is not sufficient for spiritual survival in the future.
And he was wary of the influence of false teachers among the saints.
His message to them and to us is to continue to perfect that which is lacking in our faith
and to increase more and more in love.
Great opening statements here from the manual. Where do you want to go?
I agree with you. I think that those introductory paragraphs are really apt. It would be useful to just
talk about this place because it's, it is unique. Today it's Thessaloniki, but it's one of the longest
continuously inhabited parts of the Roman Empire and founded by a Macedonian king named Cassander who named it after his wife
Thessaloniki, meaning the victory of Thessaloniki.
In Coenigreek, it's Thessaloniki, modern Thessaloniki, and we'll probably just go with Thessalonica.
It's situated in an interesting spot, so it's on the north shore of a beautiful, large,
deep, well-protected harbor,
sits at the foot of a mountain,
going immediately north, our trade routes into Europe.
And it straddles a very important Roman highway,
the Via Ignatius.
It was like a Roman expressway.
It connected the western side of Macedonia.
That is the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea all the way to Byzantium to modern Istanbul.
There you have this east-west route. And not only that, on the Adriatic Sea, where it ends
there at Dirichium right across the Adriatic Sea was the end of the Appian Way, which leads northwest to Rome.
So they had this pretty much an express way
that could get you from Rome to Byzantium,
and you had to go through Thessalonique.
Oh, okay.
It also has this really interesting history
through its rises and falls in Roman history.
It ends up being granted the status of a free city,
which is really significant in Rome. Probably the most practical things that come from that was,
it was tax-free. They didn't have to pay Imperial tax, and they were self-governing. They didn't
have a Roman procurator. They didn't have Roman policing via Roman military. That little town council, which we're gonna actually meet
in acts, it's this town council
that Jason has to go in front of.
And so they really cherished this status
and the privileges that they got from being a free city.
There was a sense there that in order to maintain
this independence and this liberty, we have to show great loyalty to the emperor.
There was a temple to the Caesars, their emperor worship, the Lord and living God, the emperor, was a really important thing in Thessalonica. This will create a little bit of trouble that even people of other religions
because of Roman syncretism were expected to regularly make offerings at this temple to
the Emperor. Public meetings would begin with the offering of a pinch of incense to the Emperor.
You were expected to do it regularly personally, but but also anytime they gathered as a municipality,
there would be some emperor worship.
Of course, this is really hard for the Jewish people there, and those who will become Christian.
Much of the difficulty that they're going to experience, the new Christians are going
to experience there, is because of the pressure locally that you could be threatening this very comfortable circumstance we have here.
That is Christianity could cause Rome to change our status.
That's sort of a unique thing that the Fessalonians are having to deal with.
Interesting. Sounds like the political problems the early saints had as they entered Kirtland or as they went out to Missouri or came into Illinois, you can upset the balance of things.
I think that was the concern that the people are feeling relative to Christians.
And why it's so challenging for them.
There's probably another dimension here that we can pick up.
Is it okay if we go back to Acts for just a second and take a look at the narrative
of what happened in Thessalonica? Let's just start in verse one of Acts 17. This is Paul's second
mission journey. You'll recall, he has taken with him as a companion, Silas. He and Barnabas had
there falling out, there's split, and he's got Silas with him now. And Silas is an important character that we don't
talk much about. In Acts 15, we're reminded that he had served Christ at the hazard of his life,
that he's hand selected by the apostles to be their personal representative to take the message
of the Jerusalem Council. I mean, Silas is kind of a big deal. At Philippi, Paul makes it clear that Silas, like Paul himself, is a Roman
citizen. And the name Silas, by the way, that's a Semitic name. Paul's going to call him Sylvanus.
Peter calls him Sylvanus, too. That's just the Latinized form of the same name. But Silas is also
it's the Aramaic form of the Hebrew name, Shaul. So Saul. So, Silas and Paul haven't said, they're both named Saul
in Hebrew. So, you've got Silas with him, and we also know that he's picked up Timothy. You remember
in Acts 16, he picks up Timothy at Lystra. This is a kind of a little powerhouse trio of missionaries.
Paul, Silas, and Timothy. So, verse 1 of Acts 17, now when they'd passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia,
they came to Thessalonica, where was a synagogue
of the Jews, and Paul, as his manor was,
went in unto them, and three Sabbath days,
reasoned with them out of the scriptures.
He comes back three weeks in a row.
Yet you would think this indicates that they're interested,
that he's welcome there.
And so maybe the shift that's about to come comes as a bit of a surprise.
Three weeks in a row, he's been preaching in the synagogue.
At verse three, opening and alleging that Christ must needs have suffered and risen again
from the dead, and that this Jesus, whom I preach unto you, is Christ.
So his message is, Jesus is the Messiah, Jesus is the prophesied Messiah.
It's that powerful thought to the early Jewish Christians that Christianity is not a new
religion. It's the logical conclusion of what they've always believed. It's the fulfillment
of the prophets. That's his message. And in verse 4, and some of them believed and
consorted with Paul and Silas, and then this a really interesting note that's
going to be significant. And of the devout Greeks, a great multitude, and of the
chief women, not a few. You get a few of the Jews, but here Luke notes of the
devout Greeks, a great multitude, that word devout is a key
word.
We're talking about Gentiles who are worshipping in the synagogue.
Sometimes they're called the God-fearers, Cornelius is one who feared God.
This word devout means, at least this particular coin, a Greek word, devout means worshipping.
They're coming to worship.
It's not just a comment that's indicating that they're pious, they're worshipful, they're
showing up. In fact, six times in the Book of Acts, that word is going to be used only
to describe Gentiles who are participating at the synagogue. These are God fears. They
believe that Jehovah is the one true God. They believe that the teachings of Judaism, that the prophecies of the prophets, that these
are true and a good guide for your life.
But for whatever reason, it probably varied from person to person, they never take the
step of actually becoming a proselyt to Judaism.
They don't live the food laws.
They don't observe the Sabbaths.
They don't get circumcised among other things.
They stay on the periphery, but they're believers. And I think we see people like this in the modern world,
people who have faith in Christ, but for whatever reason haven't taken the step to enter into the
covenant, haven't got baptized. I grew up with wonderful men like this in my ward in Southern
California as a boy, people that would show up for everything. And then when you found out that they
weren't actually members of the church, you were surprised. They seemed more faithful than
yeah, than some members. But this is significant to note that in Thessalonica, the biggest crowd for Paul is from these Godfair's, these Gentiles, people who have not had much experience being on the bad side of Rome and the world.
The Jews are pretty good at it. As a minority religion, they've got some privileges in the empire and certain things aren't asked of them, but that's not the case for these Gentiles
who are getting interested in Paul's message.
And then, of course, the chief women are listed here.
That is, these would be the women who are the opinion makers.
Their husbands are in important municipal positions,
and we're gonna meet Jason in a minute,
perhaps his wife is one of the chief women.
That's the crowd, of course,
that is coming to Christ in Thessalonica.
All right, so Paul is having some influence.
Yes, but then verse five,
but the Jews which believed not,
moved with envy, took unto them this great King James Bible phrase,
certain loopholes of the baser sort.
The baser sort. The baser sort there is translating a word that means they're hanging out in the
marketplace. They're the market loiterers. They're bombs and thugs and they gather up these people
that have no particular interest in this, but they got nothing
else to do. So they're able to engage them in their little riot. And they go to the house of
Jason. Jason's a thoroughly Greek name. Jason, a convert from the devout Greeks, the Godfearing
Greeks, not Jewish, but Paul and Silas and Timothy aren't there and they take Jason to this town council to the rulers of the city again
There's no
Procurator. There's no
Centurions here. It's a self-rule and then the accusation as you know in verse six is
These that have turned the world upside down are come here. Love it. Yeah
These guys are changing everything. In Thessalonica,
it's just worth noting that there's this additional undertone that they're having an effect everywhere,
and it's causing all sorts of havoc to our social structure. But here in Thessalonica,
it could challenge the very status of our city as a free city in the Roman Empire. That's a concern. Ultimately, all this
council does to Jason is asking for money. He pays a surety, some sort of guarantee that he's
going to take care of it, and then they let him go. Yeah, I love that phrase too. Turn the world upside
down. I feel like way back to the Beatitudes. Jesus gets up.
You ask people who are the happiest people, all theirself assured, their confident, their
independent, their, and Jesus will actually blessed her the poor in spirit and blessed her the
me can blessed her the more than what the whole gospel just turned the world upside down. So I
like that phrase because I see examples of that all over. That's a great point. And also Christianity, of course, is preaching a story where the victory of God
is in his execution by the Roman Empire. Because he got killed. Talk about an upside down narrative.
Dale, is this the point where Paul has to basically sneak out of town? Yeah.
Well, he's escorted out of town.
My guest is Paul.
Okay.
Paul goes kicking and screaming.
You know, Paul, this is the Paul who wants to rush into the amphitheater, right?
That's the emphasis.
And others have to say, now Paul, it's probably not a good idea.
Not a good idea.
Oh, I had missionaries like that during, there'd be some sort of demonstration that everybody
on the news was saying, stay out of downtown.
Missionaries are saying, well, that's where all the people are.
Let's go.
So I suspect that Paul had to be encouraged to leave.
But yes, so in verse 10, we're still in act 17, the brethren immediately sent away Paul
and Silas by night into Berea.
My guess is they're sending them to some Jewish brethren
in Berea, thinking they'll be safe,
they'll be protected and watched over there.
And then this wonderful comment,
these were more noble than those in Thessalonica.
That is the Berean Jews were more noble
than the Thessalonian Jews,
in that they received the word with all readiness of mind and search the Scriptures daily
Whether those things were so now Berea of course doesn't have that added
concern about what will
The truce Paul is teaching actually mean to us in terms of our status
They're a little more open and many of them believed, also of the honorable
women which were Greeks and have men not a few. So again, a lot of Gentile converts. Remember,
among the very earliest letters, this is the earliest evidence, perhaps, that Gentiles
are coming to Christ in greater numbers, at least in Paul's experience. Once he crosses the EG and C and now he's kind of in
Europe, it's the Gentiles that he's having much more success with. But the Thessalonian Jews
aren't going to leave it at that. When they find out he's in Berea, which is still a city in the
Macedonian province, I think they're still concerned that if this gets a foothold in Berea, it's
going to continue to have an impact on us
and they follow him there. Verse 13, but when the Jews of Thessalonica had knowledge that the word of God was preached of Paul at Berea,
they came here. They're also in stirred up the people. And then immediately the brethren sent Paul to go as it were to the sea, but
Silas and Timothyus abode there still. It sounds like they're going to send him to the seashore and catch a boat to
Athens, but I don't know that he ever gets on the ship. He might have gone overland down to Athens where he's supposed to lay low
But Paul being Paul. Yeah, he doesn't lay low in Athens either right his spirit was stirred and off he goes and he's talking again
Then he finally rejoins his companion,
Silas and Timothy at Corinth,
but immediately sends Timothy back to Thessalonica.
I got to know what's going on there.
I'm so worried about him, but I can't go.
You need to go.
We got to know what's happening there.
Timothy goes and then it's likely that after Timothy comes back
and makes his report, Paul writes his first letter.
That's very good the letter.
Probably during his time at Corinth.
Yeah, what a great reminder and what a great connection for us to make between Acts and
Thessalonians.
Yeah, I love that we read an Acts.
Here's where Paul was and here's what he did.
And then he writes letters to all these places, knowing what happened
there. It's really helpful before we read the letter. So thank you for that.
I think in this particular case, because it's unique, it's useful to know that Thessalonica's
a little different than some of the other places. Yeah. John, I don't know if I'm right about this,
but it seems that Timothy becomes kind of a mailman. He's running all over the place, delivering these letters.
I don't know how many are taken by Timothy, but it seems a couple of them so far have been,
oh, by the way, Timothy is bringing this letter to you.
Do you think part of it is that he's loved and trusted and their disappointed Nepal can't
come, but there's thrilled that Timothy's there.
They love Timothy.
The junior companion who was able to come. Yeah. Where do we go from here, Dales? Do you want to
jump into Thessalonians? Yeah, you want to dive into Thessalonians to the first letter?
So this could be this very well could be the first letter that Paul wrote. Now just for our listeners
help, why is it then so late in the book?
Why is it after Corinthians and Galatians
and Ephesians and Romans?
That's a great question.
I think the first part of the response is,
we're not entirely sure when the Pauline epistles
are written in which order.
So as the canon develops, the tradition was to order
the letters of Paul, not by any supposed
chronology or by topic, but oddly by length, the way you arranged books on your shelf when
you were five years old, the from biggest to smallest.
So the longest ones are first all the way down to the filet moon, the one pager, and then
Hebrews is in sort
of an odd spot because there's some disputation about Pauline authorship. There's some feel
that yes Paul wrote it others say no it's not Paul and others take a middle ground saying
that the thoughts are Pauline and it's clearly his arguments but somebody else wrote it probably
as a scribe or a menu. And so so it's long, but it's last.
So they're arranged by length.
All right.
So that's why it's later on in the book here, although it could be, very well, could be the
first one written.
Yeah.
And, you know, when you're thinking historically, what happens in Thessalonica happens after
what happens in Philippi, even though the letter of the Philippians comes in a different moment.
They're right next to each other in acts, the events, but the letters are kind of a reverse
story. Okay. All right, let's jump in. It is Paul's start out as usual way, giving lots of praise.
Yes, but the thing is, that's what this whole letter is going to be.
But the thing is, that's what this whole letter is going to be. Rhetoricians call this kind of letter an epidytic epistle.
That is, it's a letter of praise and encouragement.
So yeah, he's going to start with praise, but it's really some of the best praise in the
New Testament.
I love what he says about the Thessalonians.
When you hear his description of them, I think it makes you want to be like
them.
Okay.
There's a couple of issues he's going to deal with, but again, as we noted, it's not like
the first letter to the Corinthians where it's a laundry list of issues that have to be
dealt with.
Instead, it's a lot of encouragement.
And even when he's giving some correction, it's full of hope and encouragement.
Okay.
This would be different than the ones we've read before.
Right, yes.
If we're feeling a little beat up after Corinthians,
I would also note that Paul is gonna do a couple
of more subtle things.
You will see him use landwage that's gonna remind the Christians
that while they live in a setting
where the emperor is referred to as the Lord and the living God,
the provider of peace that in fact it's God the Father and Jesus Christ, who are the providers of
peace. And he starts right in 1st verse. He addresses it from Paul and Sylvanus. Again, Sylvanus is
Silas. That's just a Latinized form of his name and Timothy,
that's Timothy under the Church of the Thessalonians.
This is maybe also a little unique.
Frequently Paul will sing aloud individuals in the churches.
This is addressed to all of them there,
pretty clearly intended to be read aloud to everybody.
This isn't a letter to just the leaders
or a few individuals. This is for
everybody. This is to the Church of the Thessalonians, which is in God the Father and in the Lord Jesus
Christ. Grace be unto you and peace from God our Father and the Lord, the Kediet, and that word
is the word that was used to refer to the Emperor. But he said, we're not talking about the Lord Augustus.
We're talking about the Lord Jesus Christ.
This is the first time Paul does that probably
if this is the first letter,
using the language of empire,
but calling these people to remember
that really we serve Christ.
And then yes, his gratitude.
There's a couple of great phrases here that I love.
We give thanks to God always for you all,
making mention of you in our prayers.
We pray for you.
We're so grateful for this association with you.
Remembering without ceasing, then these three phrases.
Your work of faith and labor of love and patience of hope in,
again, the Lord Jesus Christ in the sight of God and our Father. But don't you love those
three phrases, work of faith, labor of love and patience of hope. Let's just note that
of's there could be translated as because of or as a result of. We think of the Thessalonians
and we remember how you worked because of your faith. How your faith made you work. And the word
work here, Ergon, is like a task. It's just your regular work. The work you do when you go out into
the yard or go to the office. And the labor because of your love,
that's a different word, this word copus,
it means strenuous effort that kind of works
for the English labor when a woman is in childbirth,
that laboring the strenuous effort,
but your effort comes because of love.
Youth esolonians work hard because of your faith,
you engage strenuously because of your love,
and you have patience in your unique circumstance
because of your hope in Christ.
It's just a wonderful set of compliments.
Yeah, I think that's wonderful.
It's kind of fun to see a phrase that we've used for years,
and maybe sometimes we go, oh, that's a biblical phrase.
You're working hard at something and people are surprised.
And well, it's a labor of love, you know?
Right.
And there's a, that's a Paul phrase.
It's kind of fun to hear those and to connect that.
But it's kind of like sweet as the work,
or it reminds me of the hymn.
Yeah, it's work, but it's sweet.
It's a labor of love.
I'm sorry, like this.
Perhaps the world doesn't think of love as inducing one to strenuous effort.
The world's sort of romantic view of love. Love should make everything easy. Love brings
puppy dogs and rainbows. But here Paul seems to be noting that among you, love has created a desire to sacrifice and not quit and keep serving.
Dale, this opening part here by Paul reminds me of way back in the 1900s, way back in 1997.
I remember listening to this talk from President Hinckley. I talk quite a bit about President Hinckley on the podcast.
quite a bit about President Hinkley on the podcast. I'm absolutely 100% in behind President Nelson and there's something about President Hinkley that is my surrogate grandfather when I was young.
And I remember him saying this. This is October of 1997. He talked about the members of the church
being Latter-day Saints indeed. And then he said this. He said, I have a confession to make my
brothers and sisters. And I remember hearing that going, what? You know, President England has a confession to make. I have a confession to make
my brothers and sisters. It is simply this. I love you. I love the people of this church. I love all
who are faithful. I love all who follow the ways of the Lord. It is a humbling thing to preside over
the church. I can never forget the words of Jesus.
He that would be first among you,
let him be the servant of all.
Thank you for your prayers, your trust, your confidence.
I am deeply grateful for all who have generously assisted
in helping us to do our duty.
It seems like a leader of the church thing to do here
is to just gush with love for members of the church.
I think there was an earthquake or something in Colombia or a flood. And I remember a video
of President Hinckley down there looking over one of our meeting houses. I believe there
was water all over the floor in one of the rooms in the meeting houses. And President
Hinckley looked around, grabbed a mop and started to clean up.
That idea of being a servant of all, he's one of this is my church too, or all in this
together.
I'm getting a mop.
That's so great.
Just to see that.
Does that ring a bell with you guys?
Yeah, I absolutely remember that.
I remember the picture.
Yeah.
President Nelson fills the same way.
I've heard him say this a number of times in general conference
This is October of 21 my dear brothers and sisters welcome to general conference
What a joy it is to be with you. You have been on my mind almost constantly the last six months
I have prayed about you and for you. I love you dear brothers and sisters the Lord knows you and loves you
I think you've got the same
love for the saints as you see here with Paul and the Thessalonian saints. You can feel it in his
words how much he appreciates them and their faith. And I think you sense the sincerity of it. This
is not a tactic, it's not a rhetorical device. He actually feels it. I remember similar to what you brethren have just described
years ago at a meeting in Burleigh, Idaho, like a priesthood leadership conference, but that's
an agronistic. It was before there were such things as, but it was bishops in stick presidents,
and stick presidencies, and elder corn presidencies gathered in a chapel in Burleigh, Idaho, and it was
the middle of the summer, I recall. Of course, the big industry in the areas agriculture
with farmers are busy.
And to come on a Saturday afternoon,
they've set aside their work.
They've made a bit of a sacrifice.
And so you have this room full of these pre-stead leaders,
their sunburned and president-packer came to speak.
And he walked into the room and got on the
rostrum and turned and looked and he just stopped. He didn't proceed to a
city just stopped and got emotional. A man raised in a farming community and
knew what the sacrifice was for these men to be here and the place was jammed
packed. People who'd come to hear get instruction from an apostle. He felt it and he couldn't contain the emotion of his
love for the saints. Yeah, it's real and it's sweet and you feel it here from Paul. This is not
just rhetoric. He loves these people. He was their missionary and maybe many can relate to that,
the way you feel about the struggles of the people that you prayed with
and worried with and helped them move forward and helped them overcome challenges, clearly
Paul feels it.
In fact, he's about to give one of the greatest expressions of it in any of his letters.
He notes that we brought you the gospel, that you felt the Holy Ghost, you had the assurance
of the Holy Ghost.
There's a couple of phrases in verse 6, I love, you, you had the assurance of the Holy Ghost. There's a couple
phrases in verse 6, I love, you became followers of us and of the Lord. Having received the word
note this, in much affliction with joy of the Holy Ghost. Kind of an interesting paradox, you
received it with much affliction and joy simultaneously somehow mashed together. There was the struggle and the joy at the same time.
So much so that you were in samples or examples to all that believe in Macedonia and Akhaya. That is,
our work in other parts of that province was blessed because of the way you received the gospel. And
then this, verse 6, for from you, sound it out the word of the Lord,
not only in Macedonia and Akhaya,
but also in every place your faith to God
where it spread abroad.
That phrase, from you sound it out the word of the Lord.
Some translations use,
I think a better English phrase
that from you rang out the word of the Lord.
Something about that I like, this like a bell that you can the word of the Lord. Something about that I like.
This is like a bell that you can hear all over the place.
And if you're right next to it is deafening.
Now we're not talking about them sending missionaries.
We're just talking about the way they've accepted the gospel
and how they're striving to be faithful to it
in a complicated circumstance.
And then the end of verse eight, your behavior,
your acceptance is sounded out so thoroughly,
so that we need not to speak anything.
We don't have to tell anybody about it.
In fact, verse nine, for they themselves,
these other people who have heard of you,
show of us what manner of entering in we had unto you.
That is we go other places.
And we hear stories about our experiences with you because
it's been spread around. People are so excited about the way you've come to Christ and how you
turned to God from idols. And then an interesting repetition to serve the living and true God. That is
you have turned away from emperor worship at perhaps real cost socially, maybe even financially
to serve the true and living God,
and you've turned to God from idols,
and then to serve the living God,
not just philosophically or in terms of your doctrine,
but you start to serve the true and the living God
and to wait.
I love that.
How did they turn to God?
They did it to serve and to wait.
They're actively engaged in living the gospel,
but they're also waiting with patience
for his son from heaven,
whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus,
which delivered us from their wrath to come.
That they're faithfully looking forward to the
day when the worldly problems will be solved and they'll be
at rest from them. That's one of the most remarkable sets of
compliments that I think Paul gives anywhere in his letters.
Yeah.
Sometimes we hear from folks that our listeners, we are just
amazed at what people are going through,
but they're faithful.
When I saw verse 6, I underlined it before we started today, received the word in much
affliction.
And right at two words after affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost, and I marvel what
people go through, but keep coming back to God even in the midst of that. I think
the Thessalonians are going through that. Paul mentions it, but that is, it's not a one-time event.
That's a lot of people right now that receive the word with much affliction, wouldn't you say?
Dale, you just experienced this as a mission leader. Joining this church is not an easy thing for a lot of people.
It often means cutting old ties, friendships, whole new life.
Yeah, it's a whole new life.
And sometimes we as members, maybe we've never been there.
So we don't know what it's like to be a new member
of the church, but Paul does.
I think Paul knows what it's like to convert and lose friends over
it. So maybe he appreciates it a little bit more, but it's almost got to be like going
into a foreign country, you know, joining this church, there's new lingo, there's new meetings,
you have to attend, everything is different. It seems like Paul understands that.
I think that's absolutely true. Paul clearly understands it. Where's the place where he
calls himself a Hebrew of the Hebrews?
Where he says, you know, I was a super Jew.
I had a lot of status.
I was a Pharisee.
Right.
But I had to turn away from all of that.
And these people, similarly, they're, I think they're a great model for what it's like
today when people come into the church. It's not just learning our ways and our language and our patterns,
but it's also being cut off from everything that had been your comfort zones,
the way you knew things worked.
Thessalonica is going to be a good example of that.
If they're not going to be willing to offer a pinch of incense,
then they can't even go to social events.
If they're not participating in offering sacrifices
at the Temple of the Seas,
they're probably kicked out of the guilds,
their business associates won't deal with them anymore.
I mean, everything changes.
Very, very challenging in much affliction,
but with joy, how do you do that? How do people
do it? How do you live through affliction with joy? Any thoughts on it?
Let me ask you a question, Dale, while we're thinking of your question. As a mission leader,
what would you say to members when new converts would come in?
Really sweet questions. It's such an important. Not just new members but returning members.
There's some similar application here that it's essential that we receive them as brothers
and sisters in Christ. We have to bring them into the fold. They have to become part of
us. We got to be deliberate and intentional about it. So here's a
President Hinckley story for you, but one that's maybe a great example of this.
And it's really simple. Every one of us could do this. I have a friend from my
hometown, Thousand Oaks, California, and he was serving as award-mission leader.
They were teaching someone. Things were going well. This woman and her family
decided to go travel to Salt Lake City.
See Temple Square.
They attend a sacrament meeting in the Justice Smith Memorial Building, and it happens to be the word that President Hinckley attended.
He was rarely there, but on this particular Sunday, he was, and he came in after everyone was seated, and the congregation stood as he came in and he was
coming down the aisle and he saw this woman and her family and he immediately
walked over to her and said, I don't know you. My name's Gordon Hinkley and put
out his hand. What a sweet and she had no idea what was happening. This remarkable
moment, this was just a pleasant member of the
church who was reaching out. Perhaps even a little awkwardly because the whole congregation
is standing watching this. But boy, it's so simple to do that, particularly when you see
there with the missionaries, but we don't, they don't have to be with the missionaries
for us to say to them, I don't think I know you. My name's Dale.
And just such a simple thing.
We found in the mission field that we keep track of a lot of statistics, a lot of numbers.
They're called key indicators, but one of the key indicators we found to be the most
indicative, the most indicator of the key indicators was, are they coming to church?
Because if they come to church, they get to be around the saints. They hear inspired talks and
hear inspired music and being among the saints makes a big difference. And as saints, we have to
reach out. Now with returning members, there's maybe one thing it's worth noting.
For some reason coming back, if you've been and stepped away, looms really large for them. It's just hard. My father was out of the church for years and I remember towards the end of his life,
he called me and he said, I want to go back to church, but I don't know how to do it. And it seemed
pretty obvious to me. Yeah, you drive over to the church and go in and sit down and that's it. You're back.
But he was afraid of people would say things like, what are you doing here?
Or, oh, hold up the walls. There's going to be an earthquake because art storm is back in the
church. Things that maybe we think are funny and even collegial are actually the very things they're afraid of.
Maybe the best we can do to returning members and people that the missionaries bring or new members is,
boy, I'm glad you're here. It's good to see you. Tell them your name, remind them of your name.
I think that's what people need. Then they feel like, okay, I have a spiritual
home here. And until somebody feels that they're not going to take the next step, because
imagine everything they're leaving, they need to feel at home. What a cool thing for Paul
to be able to say, I know where you're coming from. Believe me, I gave up a lot to join.
I like what Dale said about gathering because we find out that we're in the same boat.
And I love to call it same boat therapy that, wow, we've got problems too.
You've got problems too, but let's go through this together.
And COVID was tough because we weren't gathering.
I just remember how nice it was to go back to the chapel when we were able to gather again
and to see everybody and to hear what they're all going through.
It was really gave a testimony
to me of the idea of gathering in Helmport. That is. Dale, we're having a fantastic time here,
and we're through one chapter of Thessalonians. So let's keep going here. What are we going to see
next? Chapter two is really sort of an interesting moment where Paul is reminding them of the time that they spent together about how he and Silas and Timothy worked
among them and lived among them. And there's a couple of themes that he points out. And I actually
think this is a pretty good model for how to share the gospel, how to be a disciple of Christ who
sets an example that others might be drawn to.
He's gonna comment, first of all, in verse two,
he's gonna note that even after we had suffered before
and were shamefully entreated, as you know, at Philippi.
So he's reminding them of,
you know what happened to us at Philippi, we got arrested,
we got beaten, we got put in jail,
interestingly Paul kept that ace card in his pocket,
that by the way, where Romans until the
next morning.
So it kind of seems like he courted some of that for it.
Because Paul's always thinking about how we're going to spread the gospel.
He notes, things were pretty tough in Philippi.
But then we came to you.
We were bold in our God to speak unto you the gospel of God with much contention.
That English phrase sounds like Paul is saying we were
contentious when we came among you,
but it actually means in the face of difficulty.
We preached to you in the face of conflict and challenge.
He's talking about how bold they were.
And then maybe jump to verse 11, a similar theme.
As you know, how we exhorted and comforted and charged
every one of you as a father, death, his children. They had a relationship with these people that allowed
them to speak boldly and in a straightforward way kindly, but they would exhort them and charge
them the way a father does to their child. Like that tough coach you had in high school
who would sometimes give it to you straight.
And Paul said, that's how we were among you.
He also notes back in verse three,
that when we were among you,
our exhortation was not of deceit,
nor of uncleaneless, nor in guile.
That we weren't planning tricks.
We weren't you trying to use any rhetorical devices.
We were really straightforward. They're saying, we didn't you trying to use any rhetorical devices, we were really straight
forward. They're saying, we didn't manipulate, we just taught the truth as we know it.
Yeah, and we weren't trying to teach you the things that would please man, things that
we thought you might want to hear. We taught things that were pleasing to God.
Any kind of continues with that thing? We didn't use flattering words. Nor did we have the
King James text as cloak of covetousness. The Greek there means a pretext for greed. That is, we
weren't among you trying to get anything from him. He'll also note, by the way,
that he worked for his own living when he was there. He didn't ask for any
money, didn't ask for endless dinner appointments. We worked. In fact, in verse 9, he says, we
labored night and day because we would not be chargeable unto any of you. We didn't want you to
feel like you had to support us or to be misunderstood that we were just here, like some of the teachers
of the day, to get hired, to become your favorite teacher that you would pay us, and to get fed, and to...
Yeah, and he's reminding him that you saw
that that's not how things worked among us,
and that we weren't burdensome.
This is an interesting phrase, verse six,
nor have men sought we glory,
neither of you nor yet of others,
when we might have been burdensome
as the apostles of Christ,
that is we could have maybe pulled rank
and noted who we are and
demanded that you provide for us.
But apostles don't do that.
Paul is noting that we didn't pull rank.
We were there as brothers.
And then, first aid, so being affectionately desirous of you, we were willing to have
imparted unto you not the gospel of God only, but also our own souls
because you were dear unto us. We'd have done anything for you. And you know that from the people
that you've ministered to through your life. Maybe people you remember from when you were a young
missionary. I saw it with our missionaries. They would do anything for those people, their hearts just went out to them and Paul's reminding them
of that.
We were yours 100% when we just really loved you.
I think all of that, there's probably some pretty useful models for how do we live in
the world as Christians and how do we share the gospel?
We're bold, we're full of love and affection,
and a desire to serve, but we're also careful not
to allow our message to drift towards things
that men want to hear.
We're true to what God would have us speak.
Those are all pretty good instructions
for sharing the gospel in the real world.
Dale, John, as we've been talking about Paul and the Thessalonians and this love
missionaries have for the people, you might remember this story of Joseph F. Smith, the son
of Hiram Smith. He was called on a mission to Hawaii at, I think he was 15 years old.
15 years old. The teacher's column. Yeah. Yeah. I think he had some trouble at school and
Brigham Young said that he's got a lot of energy. It could be used in missionary work. So while he's
in Hawaii, I guess you guys, he is 16 years old and he's assigned to preside over the church
on Maui at 16 years old. In April of 1856 Joseph was transferred to the big island of Hawaii
and assigned to preside over the Hilo conference. And it's just amazing to me that this is all
happening as a teenager, not that this has a lot to do with why I'm telling this story. While
serving there, he became desperately ill, had a fever that lasted for nearly three months, and he was taken under
the care of a young Hawaiian couple, which took him to their home and did all they possibly
could to help him recover.
That was 1856.
And then Joseph F. Smith returns to Hawaii, and he's now president of the church.
This is what happens. This devoted sister and the young missionary she cared for
were reunited on a pier in Honolulu.
She called out for Ayosepa Joseph,
and he instantly ran to her, hugging her and saying,
Mama, mama, my dear old mama.
The boy she had cared for was now the prophet of the church.
Joseph F. Smith, and the
caring sister now blind and frail had bought in the best gift she could afford, a few choice
bananas.
Three months later, in the October 1915 General Conference, President Joseph F. Smith
proposed the construction of a temple in Hawaii.
Although construction advanced promptly, sadly Joseph F. Smith did not live to see the Hawaii
temple completed.
But Ma did.
In her 90s, among the first to attend, Ma was carried through the temple to receive her blessings and be sealed to her husband.
While in the temple, she heard the words of Joseph F. Smith tell her,
a loha, and a dove flew in through an open window and lighted on her bench.
Ma passed away a week later, buried near the temple. Ha and a dove flew in through an open window and lighted on her bench.
Ma passed away a week later buried near the temple and a statue of her now resides
to the temple in honor of her and so many like her who laid the foundation for a temple
in Hawaii.
So Dale, John, sorry to go off topic there, but it seems kind of apropos for the story
of a missionary connecting with a people.
Absolutely. Paul says, we gave you our own souls.
I think anyone who's ministered and served gets it in somewhere
and that's a very appropriate example of it.
Also our own souls. That's a beautiful phrase.
So maybe just two more things in chapter two before we leave it.
Verse 14,
for ye brethren became followers of the churches of God, which in Judea are in Christ Jesus.
That is, you've been on a path that's kind of similar to what the earliest churches,
the ones that we started in and around Jerusalem have gone through.
And here's how, for ye also have suffered like things
of your own countrymen, even as they have of the Jews
who both killed the Lord Jesus and their own prophets
and have persecuted us and they please not God
and are contrary to all men.
He's noting that you've had a similar path,
you've had some persecution and then reminds them, it
got so bad you'll recall that I got chased out and that ended our time together, verse
17.
But we brethren, being taken from you for a short time in presence, endeavored the more
abundantly to see your face.
You quoted President Nelson saying that he prays about us and for us all the time.
This is Paul saying, I'm not there physically,
but you are in my heart.
And I get it, you get it.
I pray for my return missionaries in every prayer.
Every prayer we say, my wife and I, we pray for them.
And for the current mission president, by the way,
for maybe different reasons.
But we're not there.
But we were there in our heart.
A piece of my heart is still there with you.
Yeah.
And maybe you feel that way about your field of labor or places you've lived that even
in the challenges melt away, here's something we noted about missionaries who are about to return.
In the final 24 hours of being in the field, they all get really emotional and mushy.
And every hard thing, everything that they wrote to me in a letter telling me how much
they hated and how hard it just melts away and they forget.
And now all they can remember is this great experience and that great experience and this
wonderful relationship and it's kind of interesting.
Maybe a little bit what a woman experiences after childbirth,
where the pain melts away a little bit and you're just left with the joy.
So Paul's noting that.
And then just one more thing, verse 18, wherefore, we would have come unto you, even I, Paul,
once and again, but Satan hinders.
I wanted to come back.
I wanted to get back there.
As far as we know, he never goes back to
Thessalonica. Here he's saying, I wanted to get back and then in chapter three, he's going to note,
but we sent Timothy to go and be with you and confirm you and encourage you and you love Timothy, so
it's good you got to see him. This is a Paul that I have not seen before. Yeah, a tender, usually by this point, he's giving
some correction, something that they're doing wrong, something that they need to fix.
But yeah, he's really tender here. It seems like Paul's personality, based on what we've
been told, might have been a little hard, a little strident, but the Paul in Thessalonians
is awfully gentle and encouraging. Yeah.
We're two chapters in here and it's still just gushing with love.
He's still just you can feel him overwhelmed with love for these people.
I think when you see people that are persevering even in the midst of persecution, that's the
feeling it engenders.
You just love them.
You love that their testimony is carrying them through. And I guess that's kind of what Paul's doing here.
It's very similar in the book Mormon, isn't it, John, to Alma meeting the sons of Mosiah again and he's still has brother in the Lord and yeah, it's so excited. Yeah.
Yeah, it'd been over a decade, right? And they were still going.
I've had that happen, Hank, and so of you, I'm older than you, but I took my son to the dentist and
in walked Elder Comstock and I hadn't seen him for 30, 40 years and just how's it going? And kids on missions and everything. And you just, you feel, verse 20, ye are our glory and joy.
You see, that was a book more in verse came to mind when
I saw Elder Comstock. It's so fun to just catch up and see that their testimony is still there.
Yep, still on the covenant path. All right, let's keep going, Dale. What does he say next? Is this
the whole letter? Is he just saying, you're wonderful. I just need to write to you. For the most part, yeah, it's a lot of praise and encouragement. He's going to correct
a doctrinal thing. I think there's a gospel principle. It's worth noting that he raises
here in chapter three, having talked about their afflictions and being honest about the
fact that you're being persecuted and your choice to come to Christ has in many ways
complicated your life in the world.
Chapter three, verse three,
that no man should be moved by these afflictions
for yourselves know that we are appointed there too.
That's kind of a chilling thought actually
that difficulty is actually appointed.
It's part of the deal you need to expect it.
And then, verse four, for barely, when we were with you,
we told you before that we should suffer tribulation,
even as it came to pass.
And you know, makes me think of that spot
in Dr. and Covenant section 58,
the revelation that they get on the day
that they're establishing that first Sunday in Zion.
They think this is gonna be.
Yeah, yeah, this is it.
Man, we've made it.
We've made it.
We're actually laying the first logs where the long appointed hour has come and Zion will
be built.
And the Lord gives them this sort of chilling, the section 58.
I'm in the section 58 verse 3.
You cannot behold with your natural eyes for the present time, the design of your God concerning those things,
what shall come here after, and the glory which shall follow after much tribulation.
For after much tribulation come the blessings.
Wherefore the day comeeth that ye shall be crowned with much glory, the hour is not yet, but is not in hand.
Remember this, which I tell you before that you may lay it to heart and
receive that which is to follow. It's kind of a Paul Sand. Remember, we told you that difficulty
affliction was part of this path. This shouldn't be new information. There's promise and glory and
blessing, but we got to walk through these thorny parts first. Sitting here in climate controlled comfort with two rock stars and talking about the sweet
joys of the gospel, it's easy to see a afflictions part of it, but you know in the
in the dark of the night when you're faced with loss and challenge or illness or betrayal,
it's hard to remember that this is part of it,
but Paul wants them to remember.
Now, as you were talking here, Dale,
about this difficult path that they prepared them for,
I bet both of you remember a BYU devotional
called Cast Not Away, therefore your confidence
from Elder Holland.
We can link it in our show notes,
but he talks about Moses and how Moses saw the Lord and then the darkness comes. Elder Holland
says this, Moses' message to you today is, don't let your guard down. Don't assume the great
revelation. Some marvelous illuminating moment, the opening of an inspired path, is the end of it.
Remember, it's not over until it's over.
He goes on a little bit later to say,
I wish to encourage every one of us regarding the opposition that so often comes
after enlightened decisions have been made after moments of revelation and conviction
have given us peace and assurance.
We thought we would never lose.
Elder Holland then goes on to talk about what Paul says to people in
this, what Elder Holland says, a good and winning fight, but a fight nevertheless. Paul says to those
who thought a new testimony or a personal conversion or a spiritual experience would put them beyond
trouble. He says, call to remembrance the former days, after you were illuminated, you endured a great
fight of afflictions. Cast not away therefore your confidence.
This is all they're holding again.
That is to say, sure it is tough.
Before you join the church, while you're trying to join, and after you have joined,
that's why it's always been, Paul says, but don't draw back.
Don't panic and retreat. Don't lose your confidence.
Don't forget how you once felt.
Don't distrust the experience that you had.
This whole talk is just fantastic. I'll give you one more paragraph from it here. He talks about
the children of Israel being led out of Egypt to a Goodly land. He applies that to today. He says,
what Goodly land? You're Goodly land. You're promised land. You're new, your new Jerusalem, your own little acre flowing with milk and honey,
your future, your dreams, your destiny. I believe that in our own individual ways, God takes us to the
grove or to the mountain or the temple and there shows us the wonder of His plan for us. We might not
see it as fully as Moses or Nephye or the brother of Jared, but we see it as much as we need to see in
order to the know the Lord's will for us and to know He loves us beyond mortal comprehension. I also believe that the adversary and his pinched,
calculating little minions tried to oppose such experiences and then darken them after they
happened, but that is not the way of the gospel. That is not the way of the latter day,
Saint who claims as the fundamental fact of the restoration, the spirit of revelation,
and then this beautiful statement. Fighting through darkness and despair and pleading for the light is what opened this
dispensation. It is what keeps it going and it is what will keep you going. With Paul, I say,
cast not away, therefore, your confidence, which hath great recompense for reward. Do you both
remember that talk? Oh, yes. Thank you for reading that. That's soaring language from Eldra,
and you just you feel like, okay, give me some adversity. Give me this mountain ticket.
I can take this on. Wow.
Yeah.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
best.