Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 & 2 Thessalonians Part 2 • Professor Dale Sturm • Oct 16 - Oct 22
Episode Date: October 11, 2023Professor Dale Sturm shares the joys of living the covenant path during this lifetime and the next while examining Paul’s letters to the Thessalonians.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portugues...e): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/-RNWTEeB4BYFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part II– Professor Dale Sturm00:25 Relentless regularity2:08 Pursuing sanctification07:06 President Oaks’s “Sin and Suffering”11:13 President Uchtdorf and a bumper sticker12:01 Hope in the Resurrection17:46 Teaching doctrine brings comfort21:46 Signs of the Second Coming of Jesus Christ23:45 President Oaks and four indisputable facts25:25 Thief in the night or woman in travail27:11 Comfort in local leaders and support31:41 Be patient with one another33:25 Following up and good sources36:56 The Second Coming and sources39:27 Standing vs compromising40:29 President Hinckley and keeping the doctrine pure44:28 Counsel for helping those who have walked away49:38 Professor Sturm’s takeaways from the lesson52:59 End of Part II– 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)
Welcome to part two with Professor Dale Sturm, first and second Tessalonians.
I feel like sometimes it's pretty easy to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints sitting in the chapel.
Yeah.
But then we got to go to work and then we're out on the freeway and then we're out.
Facing difficulty, facing opposition.
Keep coming back because that's where we get our strength.
Yeah.
Elder Maxwell would quote this idea that the cross comes before the crown, and tomorrow
is a Monday morning, that with all of the glories of the gospel, we also have to deal
with the fact that tomorrow is Monday, and we got to be faithful tomorrow in the ordinary
things, in the persistence of regular stuff.
It's easy to be a faithful lad,
he's sitting in the chapel hearing a wonderful talk or conference time hearing the soaring
language of an apostle.
But tomorrow's a Monday morning and we got to go to work and we got to deal with neighbors
and traffic.
And then sometimes the affliction of Christianity is just found in the ordinariness of the day
to day that it just keeps coming, the relentless regularity of life.
Yeah, the relentless regularity.
I like that.
It reminds me of chapter 3, verse 12, the Lord make you to increase and abound in love
one toward another and toward all men.
That sounds like a day to day useful verse.
Dale, let's keep going here. What does Paul have to say in this first letter?
Chapter four is where we do get some doctrinal things.
So having noted that you are in the covenant Thessalonians
and we love you. You're an example to everyone. You're doing great.
He now says, but I want to invite you to even be better,
to continue on this path.
Don't just sit where you are.
So in first one, furthermore,
then we'd besiege you, brethren,
and exhort you by the Lord Jesus
that as you have received of us,
how you ought to walk into please God,
so you would have bound more and more.
This is the end-to-the-end part,
but not just in place. This is an invitation to growth. So he
introduces a very significant doctrinal idea. I'm in verse 3, for this is the will of God, even your
sanctification. And in fact, in the next three or four verses, he's going to use that word repeatedly.
We're inviting you to pursue sanctification. Verse
four, every one of you should know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honor. Verse
seven, God has not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness. And the Greek word is Hagiazmus,
it's the same word that was used in three and four for sanctification. Across these few verses, Paul is saying,
you're doing great, but we need to invite you
to pursue sanctification.
This is an interesting idea that we come to Christ,
we receive the ordinances, we enter into the covenant
and thereby we are justified and Paul teaches this.
Probably the Book of Mormon is the only place
that's top better than Paul teaching it,
that our justification is where we're forgiven.
We're declared clean, where the slate is wiped clean,
where we're put back at the zero sin line,
that we're relabelled as righteous, even though we aren't.
But sanctification is beyond that.
Sanctification is where we not only get forgiven for when we didn't do as we knew we ought to.
It's where we're enabled to actually live like Christ, not just get forgiven for when I wasn't like Christ.
That's what Paul's inviting him to.
There's a couple of definitions in the guide to the scriptures that I really love that they're really useful.
The definition of justification in the guide to the scriptures is to be pardoned from punishment for sin and declared guiltless.
A person is justified by the Savior's grace through faith in him.
We come to Christ and he covers us.
He forgives the transgression. He relabels us.
He calls us clean.
And if he calls us clean, we're clean.
And of course, we know I'm not righteous.
I'm a mess.
But because I've come to Christ, he's reclassifying.
The label he puts on me now is righteous.
That's justification.
But here's the definition for sanctification.
Still guide to the Scriptures, sanctification. The process of becoming free from sin,
pure, clean,
holy through the Atonement of Jesus Christ. Now the language is similar and sometimes we imagine
becoming free from sin means getting forgiven. But that's not what we're talking about here. That's the justification
part. This is when I'm freed from committing sins, not just freed from the consequences of the
sins I have committed. The sanctification process helps me become increasingly like Jesus. Again,
not just forgiven for when I wasn't, although that's always available. I think that's what Paul is
Again, not just forgiven for when I wasn't, although that's always available. And I think that's what Paul is inviting them.
Remember Elder Maxwell used to talk about it as if it were an adventure to come out of the foothills
and go into the high mountains of seeking to be like Christ?
This is real adventure.
If you're going to strive to become like Christ, that's what Paul's inviting them to do.
Know how to possess this vessel in sanctification and in honor.
He talks about behavior, even sexual sin is one of the things he notes here, but also intent
that we got to develop the way we think and what our intents and our motives are.
All of that's part of sanctification.
So there's an invitation here for them to step up into the next great challenge of our path and mortality not just come to Christ, but allow Christ to work in us.
You remember elder Bednar talks about this sort of two pronged effect of the Atonement of Christ, the justification, the forgiveness part, but also the sanctifying part. And he does it repeatedly.
This is Elder Bednar from way back in October 2007.
It's the Atonement of Jesus Christ that provides both a cleansing and redeeming power
that helps us to overcome sin and a sanctifying and strengthening power
that helps us to become better than we ever could by relying only upon our own strength.
That's the talk where he said the atomans
for the sinner and the saint, that it forgives us,
but it also helps us to be better than we ever could.
Seems to be that that's Paul's invitation.
That's the next thing to the Thessalonians
seek sanctification.
I don't remember who taught me this.
Maybe it was last year John in the Old Testament
But someone put it together for me of clean hands and a pure heart. That's exactly what I was thinking of
Really? Okay, so I was on the right track that
Justification is those clean hands that I'm cleansed and then sanctification is my heart is changed. Is that sound right?
that I'm cleansed and then sanctification is my heart is changed. Is that sound right?
Yeah, and can I tell you my favorite analogy of that is elder oaks.
I had the same thing about a tree. Do you remember the one?
Yeah, I have it right in front of me.
John, we've been doing this too long.
The two insights we both had were the exact same.
Yeah.
Here's what you were thinking of.
This is from a talk called sin and suffering.
VYU devotional.
Elder Oaks talks about what Dale has been teaching us here.
He says, we often think of the results of repentance as simply cleansing us from sin,
but that isn't incomplete view of the matter.
A person who sins is like a tree that bends easily in the wind.
On a windy and rainy day, the tree bends so deeply
against the ground that the leaves become soiled with mud, like sin. If we only focus on
cleaning the leaves, the weakness in the tree that allowed it to bend in soil its leaves
may remain. Merely cleaning the leaves does not strengthen the tree. Similarly, a person who
is merely sorry to be soiled by sin will
sin again in the next high wind. The susceptibility to repetition continues until the tree has been strengthened.
And that's the sanctification part. He goes on to talk about conventure and Alma while speaking
of a mighty change of heart. Is that what you're thinking of, John? Yeah, that's exactly the one. In fact, I went on a search to find a weeping willow,
I was trying to find a tree that might fit that analogy. Something where the leaves
would actually get muddy, and then you could hose them off, but next storm, you're going
to be doing the same thing. So the sanctification part is losing desire for sin.
Because we talk about a mighty change of heart, but sometimes people get discouraged
because they want it to be an instant change of heart.
And I don't think it's incidents.
Let me read something from teachings
of the prophet Joseph Smith.
This is on page 51.
He said, the nearer a man approaches perfection,
the clearer are his views, and I love this part,
the greater his enjoyments,
tell he has overcome the evils of his life and lost every desire for sin.
And like the ancients arrives at a point of faith where he's wrapped in the power and glory of his maker,
and is caught up to dwell with him.
But we consider this is a station to which no man ever arrived in a moment. So it's not an instant change of heart. And the process
of sanctification is that slowly losing desire for sin. As Dale said, justification were
cleansed, now we're trying to get to the point where we're losing desire to sin. And it doesn't
happen in a moment, just like a tree isn't strengthened in a moment, it's got to grow.
Take a bit. It's always like two steps forward, one step back, or two steps forward, three steps back.
But that we persist that we continue. So Paul says in 4, 7,
for God has not called us unto uncleanness, but unto holiness. As if he were saying, your arrival into the gospel
covenant is not just about you getting declared clean. It's about changing you. It's about you actually
turning into something that you're not yet. It's even hard to imagine how you could possibly get
there, but we're going to abound more and more this call to sanctification.
possibly get there, but we're going to abound more and more this call to sanctification. We've come to Christ in whatever condition we're in as a mess, perhaps, but now we're
striving to become light-christ, lifelong process.
We got to be patient with ourselves and with each other over that process.
We're all kind of messed up here along the covenant path.
Don't you think that acknowledging that truth exactly how you just said it, John,
makes it much easier to not judge anybody that any time the natural man in me feels to pass
judgment, I can quickly remind myself that you're a mess yourself. You got your own stuff and the
Lord's helping you along the way just like he's's helping them. We're all in this together. The process is one that we share and we really
need to encourage one another and a bound and love one to it.
What was President Oopdorf's talk? The bumper sticker? Yeah, the bumper sticker. Don't judge
me because I sin differently than you do. So that verse seven becomes pretty crucial because you would think
God has called us to uncleanness, to clean us up. But he's saying, no, there's more than that.
It's holiness. He wants. Yes, you can be justified and declared clean. But man, we want to become
something even more. We want to be new creatures. That's a very Paul way to say it and Hank, you read a few weeks ago, I think, the CS
Lewis thing about, you're not just coming into do a little bit of remodeling,
but he's going to take out a couple of wings and add a new patio and all sorts of stuff.
Yeah, it's not a little cottage you want. He wants a mansion.
It can be very surprising what he puts us through in order to change us,
because he has a plan that sometimes we don't see and becoming like him is a stretch.
It's gonna stretch us. Just to finish out chapter four, he does a little more encouraging. So he
switches topics, verse 13, this might be something that maybe Timothy brought back to him that they're
saying this in Thessalonica, they're concerned about this.
And so Paul seems to address a specific thing, verse 13, I would not have you be ignorant,
brethren, concerning them which are asleep, those that have already died, that you sorrow
not even as others which have no hope.
Don't be like the world who's a wash and sorrow at the loss of loved ones. And 14, for if we believe that Jesus
died in Rose again, this thing I've been preaching to you and you have a witness
of you know that it's true. Jesus died in Rose again. If you believe that, even
so them also would sleep in Jesus will God bring with him. This is Paul encouraging
them by reminding them of the
remarkable hope that's in the doctrine of the resurrection. It's just such a practical hope to know
that those that we've loved will be with us again and will be together with them in the Lord,
and here Paul even connects it to the coming of Christ, which they probably thought was going to happen sooner.
Yeah, rather than later, my sense is that their early Christian expectation, so it's not going to be that far away.
It's just around the corner, right?
Yeah.
Yeah. Don't you imagine that if John knew it was going to be 2000 years, he would ask for something different, you know?
I think they... It's not going to be 2000 years, he would ask for something different. You know, I think they're really good.
They thought it was going to happen pretty quick.
So Paul is noting, when he comes, our beloved dead are going to rise with him and will be
caught up to meet them.
And I don't think this is a really technical exposition on the resurrection, rather it's a reminding of them of the doctrine of resurrection in order to give them whole.
Help them to be cheered in their hearts.
That remember one of the glories of your belief in the gospel of Jesus Christ is you get to have
hope of a resurrection, a hope that we'll be with our loved ones again.
Kind of the tone of the whole, it's still there. Even in a doctrinal place, Paul is using it as encouragement.
Yeah.
This idea in verse 17,
then we which our live and remain shall be caught up together
with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air.
In the religion 211-212, New Testament student manual,
the institute manual, which everybody has on their phone,
whether they know it or not, library, adults, young adults, the Institute manual, which everybody has on their phone, whether they know it or not,
library, adults, young adults, institute manuals.
You can read this,
the Joseph Smith translation,
the first Thessalonians 417 reads,
then they who are alive shall be caught up together
into the clouds with them who remain
to meet the Lord in the air.
And so shall we be ever with the Lord. Many Christians,
the manual continues, use the word rapture from a Latin term meaning caught up when referring
to the time, when the righteous will be caught up to meet the Savior at His coming. Have you heard
of those movies called Left Behind? There's these different ideas that our Christian friends have
about the rapture.
And I remember I ran into one of our colleagues,
brother Tom Weimant, and I said,
what's our feeling about the rapture?
And he, in one sentence, blessed my life,
he said, we believe in a post-tribulation rapture. They believe in a post-tribulation rapture.
They believe in a pre-tribulation rapture.
And it's like, oh, so we're gonna be here
for all the tribulation stuff.
We're gonna go through that before this caught up
to meet him in the air thing.
Does that sound right to you, Dale?
Yes, before the thousand year party,
we're gonna have to go through some challenging
things. I was driving on the freeway and there was a van in front of me that had a
bumper sticker that said in case of rapture this car will be unmanned and I thought
oh that's useful. Thank you for the warning. In some Christianity that it could
happen at any minute and others won't know that it's happened, that life will go on.
That's clearly not what the scriptures teach, particularly the scriptures of the restoration.
We're all going to know what's going on when this, it will be a dramatic, undeniable event,
an event that for some will be frightening, but just imagine the joy of the coming of the Lord coupled with the resurrection
of grandma and grandpa and mom and dad and maybe a lost child and what a moment of encouragement
stay true for so you can be there for that day. That's coming in second Thessalonians more about
the second coming. Like you said, he's talking about resurrection here, but he kind of hooks it to when the Lord comes and will be caught up in the air to meet him.
And I've just had a lot of students that have asked about that rapture thing because that's
talked about a lot in some circles. And in one of those movies, both of the pilots disappear
from the front end of a 757. And that could be kind of alarming. We're going to be here through those tribulations,
which is nice to know because in a way, it builds our testimony to see the trials and the persecution
and to be able to go, yep, this is what was supposed to happen. Yep, we're going to be here for it,
but all this means there's something wonderful coming.
Then Paul's final words there, wherefore comfort one another with these words.
When someone's heartbroken about loss, remind them of the resurrection.
We can encourage one another by teaching doctrine.
Isn't that a great last phrase?
I mean, that's general conference.
That's the scriptures.
Comfort one another with these words. That's really good. Something really cool about the word comfort. I looked
up the etymology, not to be confused with entymology, which is the study of insects, but I looked up the
etymology of the word comfort, and it means I love this together strong.
The Latin come like companion and fort, fortis like a fort.
The Comforter means together strong.
It seems that Joseph Smith read a lot of Paul.
Could you see it, showing up in everything that he taught.
At a funeral, he said, we mourn the loss, but we do not mourn
as those without hope. Right there, that phrase, first, that's a lot of names for, you sorrow
not even as others which have no hope. We still sorrow, but the sorrow is mitigated,
some watch by our knowledge. Don't you both think that we're, John, I know you've lost your parents, Dale.
I'm sure you've lost people close to you.
That there is something mitigating about the doctrines of the Gospel.
President Nelson once said,
our limited perspective would be enlarged
if we could witness the reunion on the other side of the veil.
When the doors of death open to those returning home,
Joseph Smith taught,
this is it the Kingfallate funeral. Our relatives and friends are only separated from their bodies for
a short season. Their spirits which existed with God have left the tabernacle of clay only for a
little moment as it were, and they now in exist in a place where they converse together the same
as we do on earth. The expectation, he says,
of seeing my friends in the morning of the resurrection, cheers my soul and makes me bear
up against the evils of life. And if you guys don't mind one more, John Taylor, while we are
mourning the loss of our friends, others are rejoicing to meet them behind the veil. We could go on
and on about these doctrines that mitigate the sorrow.
Hank, I've always loved that idea.
We shall have them again.
The gospel gives us an anticipation that is so wonderful.
I have a picture of my mom sitting right here on my desk that we lost in December of 2020.
There's just this expectation.
We know we'll have them again and And it's almost a knowledge that,
oh, yeah, they're there. And they're probably watching and face bombing sometimes.
But there's an anticipation that it's really something to look forward to. I'm glad you mentioned
that Hank. And you've lost people too, I know. And it's not that we don't sorrow. I don't want to.
We're supposed to sorrow. We're going to mourn. Yeah, what do you think about that?
Have you found that to be true in your life? Yeah, absolutely. I love what you just shared Hank and it reminds me that
Sometimes we take comfort from knowing that we will see them again
I've both of my parents are gone all of my grandparents are gone the gospel doctrine that
We will see them again is very comforting,
but that reminder that they're having a reunion with those that they lost. And for years of their
life felt that whole in their heart. They knew the truth and had hope in the truth, but there was
still a whole. And then when they pass over, the whole is filled. And my mom got to be with her dad again,
who she missed so desperately in the last 20 years
of her life.
And what an encouraging doctrine.
I think there's something beautiful there
about the reunions that happened on the other side.
And maybe Paul is saying,
that's why we do not mourn as those which have no hope.
So what have we gotten chapter five that we should notice?
First of all, let's note that Paul still seems to be responding to something that has been raised
by the Thessalonians. Again, we can only imagine that it's something that Timothy brought back.
So he says, but of the times and the seasons, brethren, you have no need that I write unto you.
I'm not going to engage in a lengthy discourse about the signs of the second coming.
Why?
For yourselves know perfectly that the day of the Lord's so cometh as a thief in the
night.
We're not going to try and pinpoint it.
I'm not going to try and give you any sort of formula to figure out what the thing you
got to know is that it's going to happen. So we have an expectation, but in terms of nailing it down, that's a fruitless
exercise. Instead, just prepare for it.
And then he also kind of takes a little shot at the Roman world view.
And one that may have made non-Christians in Thessalonica
concerned about the Christians, this verse three,
for when they, we don't know who they is,
when they shall say peace and safety,
then sudden destruction come upon them.
That's travail upon a woman with dread.
But that phrase, peace and safety,
that was the Roman motto of the Pax Romano,
of the Roman peace.
This is the emperor saying, I have given peace and safe.
You live in a time and a place of peace and safety.
The Thessalonians, particularly as they stride the great Vignacia, this speedway that was
both comfortable to travel and safe to travel on.
I've provided peace and safety. Paul's
purposely, I think, because you don't see this language anywhere else in Paul. He doesn't refer to
peace and safety anywhere else. I think he's quoting the Roman establishment and noting that
you live in a time when they claim there's peace and safety. This is exactly the time when we need to be watching. It's not a conversation about the signs as much as
it is going to happen and you've got to pay attention. While the world kind of treats it as silly,
note this from President Oaks, four matters are indisputable to Latter-day Saints. This is from
April conference 2004. Four indisputable matters for L for Latter- Days 1, the Savior will return to the earth
in power and great glory to reign personally during a millennium of righteousness and peace.
This is going to happen. It is certain. Jesus Christ is personally coming back to the earth.
It's not a figure of speech. It's not metaphor. It's certainly not hyperbole. He is coming back.
Number two, at the time of His coming, there'll be a destruction of the wicked and a resurrection
of the righteous.
There will be judgment.
Three, no one knows the time of his coming.
And he leaves that sort of in that stark simplicity, no elaboration, just an apostolic assertion,
nobody knows when it's going to happen.
Which should ring in our ears the next conversation
or somebody's trying to pinpoint it for us
or some group that believes they've got it been pointed in.
And then finally, the faithful are caught to study the signs of it
and to be prepared for it.
I think that's what Paul's getting at here.
We're gonna waste a lot of time on the signs,
but he is coming back and you gotta get ready for it.
You gotta prepare for his return.
Verse six, therefore, let us not sleep as do others, but let us watch and be sober.
I think that was the same talk where Elder Oak said something like a 72-hour kit of temporal
supplies is good, but a 24-hour kit of spiritual preparation is more enduring.
That's awesome.
I have a theory about this.
I want to run by you guys because I think there's two metaphors here.
One of them is the thief in the night, but the other is a woman in Traveille, in verse
three.
And I feel like for the wicked, it comes as a thief in the night.
I noticed footnote 2b takes you to section 106 verse 4, where
it says, and again, very late, I say unto you, the coming of the Lord drawthnite, and it overtake
at the world as a thief in the night. But what if for us who are studying the signs of
the times, it's more like a woman in travail? She has a pretty good idea of when she's going to go into labor of how long it's been.
And if we know what the signs are, it won't overcome us as a thief in the night. It will be more like,
uh, that that was supposed to happen. Yep. That's that's supposed to happen. It's more like a woman
in Traveil. Yeah, I like that. I love that. I like that a lot. Particularly because the woman in travail knows it's going to happen.
It is inevitable.
There's no, maybe it's not going to happen.
It is going to happen.
Wisdom requires that you prepare.
You can't just ignore it.
It is going to happen.
Yeah, I think he's telling us, but you're the children of light.
It won't overcome you because you are the children of light in verse five.
So let us not sleep, but let's
watch for the signs. And that's kind of the woman in travail thing. So that's just my
thought.
But you got to prepare like the expected woman. So verse eight, let us who are of the day,
that is we have knowledge, we can see, we have clarity on this, we'll be sober. Let's
put on the breastplate of faith. By the way, clearly the first time he
starts to trot out this analogy that he's going to develop the ineffisions. Yeah. Putting on the
breastplate of faith in love and for a helmet, the hope of salvation, the fact that we don't know
exactly when it's going to come is not an excuse to do nothing. And as he finishes this, he does hit a few miscellaneous
things, some counsel that he gives, and all of it is memorable, but of extremely well-fraised,
little great bumper stickers, things that you could cross stitch onto pillows. But there's one
other idea that I think is very rich and applicable to the church in all ages. In verse 11, he says,
wherefore comfort yourselves together,
which with what John shared about the etymology of comfort,
that's maybe a more significant phrase than I'd realized.
And edify one another, even as you also,
so to edify us to build up, of course, and then this.
And we beseech you, brethren,
to know them which labor among you,
and are over you in the Lord, and admonish you, and to esteem them very highly in love for their
work's sake. And be at peace among yourselves. You have local leaders, people who aren't the
apostles, that they're regular people, and you live among them, esteem them and love them and be kind to them
in a lay church where we serve one another,
it can be easy to be kind of harsh or hard
on those who are leading from time to time.
And I think this is Paul saying,
cut them a break, those people who are presiding over you,
they're doing it because they were asked to. Maybe sometime it'll be you who's asked to, but esteem them and be kind to
them. It reminds me of something, Elder Christopherson taught in that wonderful talk October 2015,
Why the Church, just a remarkable talk. He notes, in the church, we not only learn divine doctrine,
we also experience its application.
So the church is a classroom, but it's also a lab
where you gotta do the experiments in real time.
As the body of Christ, the members of the church
minister to one another in the reality of day-to-day life.
All of us are imperfect.
We may offend and be offended. I love the
gentleness of this next sentence. We often test one another with our personal idiosyncrasies.
You'll have a gently put stuff. In other words, yeah, there's a lot of weirdos among us.
We're all weird. And my weirdness tests you. We get on each other's nerves a little bit. Yeah.
Yeah. And I think he went off script there and then he said, President Packer called them idiot
synchrosies. Did you remember that? Oh, yes. Yes.
This religion is not concerned only with self. He says, rather, we are all called to serve.
We are the eyes, hands, head, feet, and
other members of the body of Christ, referring to another Pauline note. And even those members
would seem more feeble, are necessary. Just a reminder, I think from a couple of apostles,
from Paul and from Elder Christ, of course, and this is also part of how this works, that we gotta love and esteem one another,
even when we know each other pretty well.
And we challenge one another with our idiocindicates.
It is our idiocindicates.
Our idiocindicates, right.
Yeah.
I remember Elder Holland asking about our children.
He says, dear children, know that you love
and sustain local and general leaders
in perfect
as they are for their willingness to accept a calling they did not seek in order to preserve
a standard of righteousness they did not create.
So good.
Remarkable.
Give your local leaders a break.
I like that Dale.
I maybe did you have to say that sometimes as a mission leader to give your mission leaders
a break or try and certainly your mission leader to give your mission leaders a break
or try and certainly your mission leaders, your young mission leaders, district leaders and
zone leaders and senior companions and but also it's great for young missionaries to see it
out in the branches of the church, out in foreign countries or for us in the Midwest where
sometimes the branches don't run quite as smoothly as they do in Provo or Rexburg.
And they just got to realize these are people who were doing it because they were asked
to and they're faithfully trying to maintain a standard that isn't theirs simply because
they believe they're going to try out.
Be patient, Paul says in verse 14, be patient. Comfort the feeble minded. See, that one was for me,
to people come and find my feeble mind and comfort me.
Making them comfort you.
That's an interesting one feeble minded,
because the actual Greek there, it's not talking about
not clear in your thinking. It's talking about being faint-hearted.
The doubter, we got to comfort the doubter,
not dismiss the doubter or shut down the doubter. We got to comfort the doubter, not dismiss the doubter,
or shut down the doubter. We got to comfort and support the week is another way of saying the same
thing and patient toward all. I like some of these phrases that he closes out with. My friend,
Kim Peterson, he's been teaching institute in Cedar City forever and he gave a whole talk on
quench not the spirit, verse 19 once.
We almost always use that for being thirsty to quench your thirst,
but this idea of quenching not the spirit.
And if you look at the footnote on quench, it says extinguish or hinder or suppress.
It reminds me one of my favorite quotations from Elder Bruce Armer Conkey.
If you have a second, he said, we come into these congregations and sometimes the speaker brings a jug of living water
that hasn't at many gallons and he pours it out on the congregation.
And all of the members of the church brought was a single cup.
He said, or maybe they had their hands over the cups and they didn't get anything to speak of.
I think maybe quench not the spirit.
No, don't talk about that.
I don't want to hear about that.
You know, putting your hand over the cup,
and we went on to say sometimes the speaker just brings a cup
and should have prepared better
and the people out there have a jug.
They want everything you've got.
Interesting idea of don't extinguish the spirit.
Dale, we have had a great experience in first Thessalonians here. I know the second Thessalonians
is a little bit shorter. I imagine it's a follow-up letter. What does Paul teach here?
Here exactly, right. He seems to be following up. We don't know how much time it lapses between
first and second Thessalonians. It's believed that he's still at Corinth when he writes this.
And it seems like it's part of an ongoing conversation.
I think he's being responsive to whatever response he got to the first letter.
And first of all, in chapter one, more of the Paul of first Thessalonians, I love you.
You're fantastic.
You are such good examples.
We're so proud of you.
And then chapter two, but I do want to deal with a question that seems to have arisen.
Chapter two, verse one, now we beseech you, brethren, by the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ,
that is in reference to or about the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. I want to talk to you about the second coming.
And by our gathering together unto Him, so the gathering and the coming of Christ, that ye be not soon shaken in mind,
or be troubled, neither by spirit nor by word nor by letter as from us, just Smith translation,
actually, doesn't change the meaning of any of those repositions of phrase. So in the
Joseph Smith translation, it reads, that ye be not soon shaken in mind or be troubled by letter, except you receive
it from us. If you get a letter talking about, if it's not from us, if it's not from the
recognized authorities, don't be troubled by it. And don't be troubled by someone who
is claiming to have some special revelation, or that's troubled in spirit, or troubled
by word, by logos, is
somebody making some sort of an argument. They're trying to prove something about the second
coming from reason. Don't get troubled imagining that the day of Christ is at hand. That English
kind of gives the impression that Paul's worried that they're going to think it's imminent.
But that probably was what everybody thought that it was imminent.
The actual text means that it's arrived, that it's here,
that perhaps it's even coming you missed it.
You and I know that that's not how the second coming
is gonna be, nobody's gonna miss it,
but they didn't seem to grasp that.
Paul seems to be responding to the possibility
that someone has written or preached or taught to these people that the second
coming's already happened. Yeah, Dale, it's pretty clear in the NIV. He says not to become easily
unsettled or alarmed by a teaching allegedly from us, prophecy or word of mouth or letter,
asserting that the day of the Lord has already come. Yeah, I think that's probably a better translation of what the Greek text actually says,
and what Paul's responding to.
Okay.
It suggests that there might be some misusing the name of Paul or the authorities of the
church claiming that they know something that other people don't know because they
I ran into Paul at a family reunion and he told me this. That kind of thing.
This is so close to home from people.
I've got some insider information.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
People who have left the church over stuff like that,
that I'm running out ahead of the train,
as Elder Pace said, taking a wrong turn.
Oh, but so and so says, you know,
or this YouTube video, he's, he's got a six hour
YouTube video on why about that date.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He knows the day of the second coming.
I think those are examples of the kind of thing he's talking about.
So Dale, you're saying that people are coming among them and saying, I know
it's something you don't know.
I maybe even know more than Paul about this second coming.
The brother and aren't saying much about this, but here's, this is pretty clear.
I think Paul's reacting to that possibility among maybe even some more blatant sorts of
things.
He assures them in verse 3.
Let no man deceive you by any means.
Let's just be really clear about this.
Don't go down a path where you allow yourself to be deceived.
For that day shall not come,
except they're coming, falling away first.
There is at least one major and highly recognizable sign
that you have to be watching for.
And we're not there yet,
that the man of sin be revealed,
the son of perdition,
and then some more description about that being.
But the idea here is,
the thoughts of the world will be enthroned and the simple truth of the gospel will be lost.
There will be a falling away, a turning away. The thoughts of the world will be enthroned.
What an interesting phrase. And then Paul says, by the way, this is not the first time we've talked about this.
Verse five, remember you know that when I was yet with you, I told you these things.
This is something we've talked about in person.
When I was there in that short season before I was run out of town on a rail, we talked about that there will be a falling away.
So we're still in the fight.
The game is still underway. There's still time on the
clock. So this is interesting because it's a great example of an apostolic correction.
It's a gentle one. I sort of keeping with the tone of both of these letters. Again,
it's not the tone of first Corinthians. There's a, I praise you not. We don't have that
here. This is, I just want to correct you on something and I'm besieging you to remember
that we've already talked about this, so we have to carry on. And maybe there's one more verse
in chapter 2 verse 15 where he teaches the principle again, therefore brethren stand fast,
hold the traditions which you've been taught, whether by word or our epistle. It kind of reminds me of
2 Timothy 3, knowing that from a child you were taught the Holy Scriptures, you've been taught
this. Clean to what you've been taught. Don't get suckered into other points of view, look to what
we have taught you and what we have written to you to know the truth. I like that.
what we have written to you to know the truth. Hmm, I like that.
That verse 15, therefore, brethren, stand fast.
I've always loved that word, stand.
And when we have a standard's night, I love to ask the youth, what's the opposite of
stand?
It's shrink buckle of wilt compromise.
To be a standard bearer is a strong word, isn't it? Stand fast. I like it.
Don't wilt. Buckle shrink compromise. So, Dale, that's a mild correction. Yeah, comparably,
to the other things we've seen Paul write. I agree. Paul is generally mild with the
Thessalonians, but I'm also impressed that it's not a place where Paul says,
yeah, that's a little thing. I'm not going to let it go, particularly because there seems to be
some who are misusing the name of authority that they're claiming that they've got the inside scoop,
they've got the skinny, that they know something nobody else knows, and this is a great principle that
unless you hear it from apostolic ministers, you can set it aside.
I remember once this young seminary teacher hearing
that one of President Hinckley's major concerns,
which as a young seminary teacher,
I hadn't even thought of this,
was keeping the doctrine pure.
And I thought, well, why is that such a priority for him?
He says, I have spoken before about
the importance of keeping the doctrine of the church pure and seeing that it is taught
in all of our meetings. I worry about this. He says, small aberrations in doctrinal teaching
can lead to large and evil falsehoods. So is that what Paul is seeing here? Like, this
might start small, but it could grow into something that's quite a problem.
I think certainly this is an example of that.
When you think about it, the notion that Christ has already come and we missed it isn't
actually that small.
That's kind of a very big doctrinal issue for his church.
I think at any rate that we see Paul reaching to make corrections offer apostolic realignments that
in the absence of apostolic keys, we as humans, we would mess it up so fast. We just get
weird really quick. Yeah. Paul's fighting against that. Let's note, this is the earliest or among
the earliest letters of Paul. So we're going to see him have to do that a lot. I'll just throw
this in for teachers who are listening. And both of you will understand this having been in church education for
so long. To be careful of speculation, misquoting, I've seen that happen. We get on our own gospel
hobbies, our own topics that we find are you can take off with and say, here's Hank chapter five verse six. We can have sensational
stories or we too often give our own private interpretations. We should not teach our private
interpretation of the gospel in class. Does that make sense to those warnings that sound true to
you? Having been teachers for so long. Yes, absolutely.
One of the things that boy, I learned in my master's program from Robert Millett and Joseph
McConkey and Robert J. Matthews, it was so interesting to see how careful they were, how long they
would wait to answer a question and to be able to point to an authoritative source. I'd never
forgot that. Sometimes I would think, oh, I know.
But these guys were so slow and careful
about what they would say
and where they would get their information.
That itself was a great lesson.
And as a gospel teacher, it's okay to say,
I don't know.
I don't know, and they would do that.
They would say, I don't know.
Dale, how long you've been in church education now?
I bet you've seen this a time or two.
36, going on 37 years, minus three years that we were away.
I don't know if that's happening in Thessalonians, but we can
unknowingly teach something that is false.
Yes, I mean, it's possible that this idea was simply a
misinterpretation of something Paul had said that since he's talking about the second
coming and that we'll be able to see our deceased loved ones in the first letter, maybe somehow
that got twisted to, oh, it's already happened.
You know, as long-time church educators, our safety is in, can we find it in the scriptures
and can we find multiple prophets and apostles who
are teaching.
And I'm thinking of Elder Anderson's, we call it the Anderson rule in my classes where
he says that true doctrines taught by all 15 members of the first blessing and core of
the 12, true doctrines is taught frequently and by many.
The only place you can show it to me is Orson Hyde, 1855.
Sure, no of discourses, yeah.
Yeah, then that doesn't rise to the level
of doctrine of church.
I remember him saying in that talk,
our doctrine is not difficult to find over and over and over.
Dale, is there anything left in these two letters
that we haven't exhausted?
I feel like we've really squosed these two letters
and gotten a lot out of them.
Maybe one more thing in chapter three
that's worth pondering because I think it has,
it's an issue we got to grapple with
in the modern church as well.
In chapter three, he's giving them some counsel
about dealing with Christians who have fallen away
or who are not walking up to their covenant.
They're not doing as well as we would hope
that they would do in living the gospel.
And I think it's significant what he says here,
but I also think we need to take this counsel
and supplement it with Paul's counsel in other settings,
sort of a little cross-reference.
I'm in verse six, chapter 3, verse 6,
the very end of second Thessalonians. Now we command you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that you withdraw yourselves from every brother that walketh disorderly and not after
the tradition which he received of us. Don't affiliate and associate with them, but I'm also
thinking of what he says to the Galatians.
Can we just compare it for a second?
Jump over to Galatians chapter six.
It's kind of filling the same spot in the letter to the Galatians.
It's right at the end.
And it might have something to do with their varied circumstances.
To the Thessalonians, he says, withdraw yourself from someone who's not being orderly.
To the Galatians, this is chapter 6, verse 1, he says,
If a man be overtaken in a fault, you with your spiritual restore such a one in a spirit
of maintenance, and then a little warning, considering myself, less that will also be tempted.
Go after him, go find him.
Be a little careful about where you go. Watch yourself
that don't allow your position to drift in order to make theirs more palatable, but go get him.
To the Thessalonians, he says, withdraw, but maybe soften it a little bit back in 2nd Thessalonians,
chapter 3, verse 13 through 15. Really, the final moments,, but you brethren, be not weary in well doing. It can be
tiresome to always try to make good choices. That's built in there. But I think he's specifically
talking about towards each other, do good to one another. And don't get tired. Hang in there. Don't
be weary. Verse 14. And if any man obeys not our word by this epistle, note that man and have no company with him that he may be ashamed. So
there is this sense of we should use our influence in order to help people make
good choices. But verse 15, yet count him not as an enemy, but
admonish him as a brother. Don't reclassify him as on the outside apostate enemy.
Think of the way you would reclaim a brother, the way you want to help somebody that you
love.
I think that we are required to, as a body, as the body of Christ, maintain standards.
And sometimes it will be uncomfortable for people to hear the standards that we maintain and proclaim.
But also as a body of Christ, we have to be loving in kind and forgiving,
otherwise we kind of lose the moral authority to proclaim the standards in the first place.
So we got to proclaim the standard, hold fast to it, but also go in love and try and love people
where they are into living as Christ would
have us live. That seems to be his message.
I love this. I think with so many that I come to contact with, I have family members
who are no longer meeting with us. I have friends and this advice is great. I want to make
it as easy as possible for them to come back. You don't count them as an enemy, but at Monishem as a brother. You still think of them as family and, you know, maybe they'll
figure this out. The Lord will work with them. Maybe they'll come back and try to make that as
easy as possible for them to do. Yeah. I think that's the gist of Paul's council every time he gives it,
that you got to go get him. You got to hold to the standard, but you've got to go get him. You
got to go love him back. Yeah. hold to the standard, but you got to go get them. You got to go love them back.
Yeah, that's the doctrine of covenants phrase.
Dale, I like what you said there earlier about
how would you want to be reclaimed?
If it were you, how would you want to be treated
if you were deliberately disobeying the words
of the prophets and apostles, the word of this epistle
and you're like, no, I'm not gonna obey.
Would you want someone to esteem you as an enemy or help you as a brother?
Joseph Smith says this after his first vision, Joseph Smith history.
He says, I was a very tender years and persecuted by those who ought to have been my friends
and treated me kindly if they had supposed me to be deluded.
They should have endeavored in a proper and affectionate manner to have reclaimed me.
Joseph Smith even sees that in his young age.
Like if you really think I'm off,
then admonish me as a brother,
don't treat me as an enemy.
You should have been my friend.
And here's later on in Joseph Smith's life.
Cretan, if I'm wrong, guys,
is at WWFELPS, he writes the letter to come to brother
though the war has passed,
and friends at first are friends again at last.
And just to come back, and he never burnt that bridge,
friends at first are friends again at last.
Maybe because he went through that.
Yeah.
Dale, this has been fantastic today.
If I'm at home, and I'm listening,
and I'm folding laundry, or I'm mowing the lawn, or if I'm in Rexburg, if I'm shoveling snow already, what do you hope I get out of these two epistles from Paul?
Really good question. Maybe two things. One, you're probably doing better than you think you are. The Thessalonians were in a unique setting and you have this apostolic encouragement. It's telling them that even though it's hard and you're trying to live the gospel and keep your covenant in affliction.
You're doing great. In fact, people are talking about it. You're an example to others. So you're probably doing better than you think you are, even if your circumstances feel like, boy, this is just too hard. And then maybe the other thing is that
prophets and apostles, the Lord's anointed,
they really love those of us who are striving
in the covenant.
That encouragement is real, it's sincere,
they get it, they understand it,
and their desire is to just help.
We have an apostle here who loves these people
and is trying really hard for them to feel it.
The modern brethren love us, They want to help us be successful.
Yeah. John, isn't that really what we're hoping for our listeners? Is that you're doing really well?
You're doing great. Absolutely. Yeah, keep going. You're facing some difficult things and you are,
you're doing really well. Dale, this has been fantastic. Thanks for joining us
today. We want to thank our executive producer Shannon Sonson, our sponsors David and Verla Sonson,
and we always remember our founder Steve Sonson. We hope you'll join us next week. We have more
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