Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon Part 1 • Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner • Oct 23 - Oct 29
Episode Date: October 18, 2023Is it possible for young leaders to play a pivotal role in guiding others towards a deeper connection with Jesus? Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner embarks on a journey through Paul’s letters to emerging c...ongregations, revealing timeless insights on the roles of men, women, and youth in leadership positions and their vital responsibility to impart teachings.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/4sdbyv58kbIFacebook: 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–Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner00:23 Introduction to 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, and Philemon01:55 Introduction of Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner04:08 Leadership and mentorship07:45 Dr. Gardner shares a story about building her personal area11:53 Paul expresses love as mentor to Timothy14:29 Paul builds leaders16:41 Needing the Atonement of Jesus Christ19:44 Leaders being vulnerable23:00 Women speaking and teaching26:05 President Ballard’s advice regarding counsel27:49 Marg Mowczko’s research on women in the church30:35 Leaders encourage women to study, teach, and preach32:40 Timothy’s female family member of faith35:29 Beginning the discussion on modesty40:21 Dr. Gardner shares a personal story about chewing gum43:26 Covenant relationship with Jesus and modesty45:08 Reminders regarding judgment 47:36 Distraction and controlling your own thoughts49:40 Worldliness53:47 Dr. Gardner shares a story about swimming in Jordan54:54 John shares a story about the Western Wall55:57 Dr. Gardner shares a story about her aunt’s white carpet58:16 Dr. Gardner shares a story about serving in the temple and swimsuits1:00:08 End of Part 1–Dr. Barbara Morgan GardnerThanks 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
here with my magnificent co-host, John, by the way. Welcome, John.
Thank you, Hank. Good to be here.
Yep.
It's a good day at Follow Him. John, we're going to spend our time in first and second Timothy
and some of the other epistles of Paul. Anything you're looking forward to, anything you've
prepped?
Yeah. As I've read through this, I've just found phrases in first and second Timothy that we use
all the time.
So it's going to be fun to see a context for all of these little phrases that we use.
We'll point them out as we go through.
I just love Timothy personally because it sounds like he was a young man, which is kind
of fun to imagine.
I'm looking forward to this because we've often had Paul speaking to big groups of people in these letters, and we're going to see Paul maybe on a little
more one-on-one level, which I think will be a fun look at him. John, we're joined this
week by a scripture expert that has been with us many times in the past. Dr. Barbara Morgan
Gardner. Barb, what are we looking forward to in these epistles from Paul this week?
Morgan Gardner. Barb, what are we looking forward to in these epistles from Paul this week?
What I'm looking forward to the most is for Sip and T. Checkter to verse 11 where it says, let the women learn in silence with all
suggestions. I'm really looking forward to just sitting here and watching the two of you talk.
And me just making sure I'm modest and, and keeping silence, keeping silence.
Submissive and keeping silence. I am looking to not being suffered to speak or use
Serp authority in any way.
That's what I'm looking forward to today.
I can't wait for this time with you guys.
Why don't we go straight to the issue then, Barbara?
Oh, good.
Yeah, where some people might say,
I wonder if they're going to skip it this week.
No, no, actually, it's going to be the first thing we talk about.
And that's our recording for this week.
And I folks, you know, I have a good week.
Silence for two hours.
Take it away, Barbara.
John, trying to do what Paul said.
All right, John, for those who might be new to follow him, tell them who barb is.
Why we think she's so wonderful.
Yes, we've had Dr. Gardner here before. Barbara Morgan Gardner. In fact, I'm holding my
priesthood power of women book. I'm just going to read the back of your book jacket here,
which is a really great book. And I think when we had you on before, that this topics that we
touched on, Barbara Morgan Gardner is an Associate Professor of
Church History and Doctrine at Brighaybe Young University. She holds a Master's
degree in Educational Leadership and Foundations in the PhD in Instructional
Psychology. She did postdoctoral work at Harvard University, was an Institute
Director in Boston, serving more than 100 universities and colleges in the area and acting as Chaplain
at Harvard and MIT, she continues to serve as the Chaplain at large and higher education
for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
She is the chair of the Belonging and Inclusion Committee for Religious Education.
She's married to Dustin Gardner.
There are the parents of two children. She likes to eat at Gardner. They're the parents of two children.
She likes to eat at Gardner Village. Welcome, Dr. Gardner. Good to see you again.
It's so great to be with you guys. Thank you.
John, I did this a couple of weeks ago. I'm holding up, finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament.
This was put together by a member of the Sorenson family who are our sponsors and producers, Annabelle Swanson. And what Annabelle did was compile the bunch of quotes
from our Old Testament guests.
So I want to read one from Dr. Gardner.
This is when she was with us on the book of Malachi.
I loved this.
She said,
you're probably not going to get rich
being a covenant keeper.
Some people will, some people won't,
but that's not the point.
It's not that kind of richness. It's just like the Lord says, I will make up my jewels.
We are the money to the Lord. We are His great value. We are His glory. It's people. And that's
the thing with tithing. It's not about the money. And then this part, John, it's about what God is creating. He's creating his jewels as we
give up our jewels. Man, to me, that was a standout moment. If you want this book, Finding Jesus Christ
in the Old Testament, put together by Annabelle Swanson, I'm sure you can find it online or go to our
website follow him.co, follow him.co. Anyway, great moment, Barb. Not that we're jumping into there, but for the time, just because you brought that up,
it does remind me of chapter six, Paul talking to Timothy and him just saying,
for the love of money, it's a root of all evil.
One of those famous verses that John was talking about, I mean, these words,
which, while some coveted after, they have aired from the faith and pierced themselves
through with many sorrows. And just as you were saying that, I just thought, we covet the world,
we covenant with God. If we can just change those things around and make
sure that we're fighting the good fight, as he says, focusing on eternal life, being on
that covenant path, then the things that we covet, hopefully we'll just fall out of the
way.
Now, I love that.
It's just interesting that he brings in this money part again in Timothy.
Money's an issue. It can be something that can destroy if it's coveted, but it also can be a huge blessing
if it's used in the covenant type relationship.
Don't covet.
Covenant.
It's not the money.
It's the intention of the heart.
Covenant the world.
Covenant with God.
I love it.
She just says these wonderful things.
Just she grabs them out of the air and makes beautiful connections.
We're looking forward to that today.
A barb, let me read something out of the manual
and then we'll kind of hand it over to you
and let's see where you want to go.
This is from the Come Fall Me manual opening paragraph.
In the epistles, Paul wrote to Timothy, Titus,
and Philemon, you can call him Filiman if you want to.
We get a glimpse into the heart of a servant of the Lord.
Unlike Paul's other epistles to entire congregations,
these were written to individuals. Paul's other epistles to entire congregations, these were
written to individuals. Paul's close friends and associates in God's work, and reading
them is like listening in on a conversation. We see Paul encouraging Timothy and Titus,
two leaders of congregations in their church service. We see him in treating his friend,
Philemon, to reconcile with a fellow saint and treat him like a brother in the gospel.
Paul's words were not addressed to us directly, and he may never have expected that so many
people would one day read them.
You imagine you're writing a letter and billions of people are going to read it one day.
He's probably like, oh, I've got to maybe said something different.
Yet, the manual says, we find in these epistles counsel and encouragement for us.
Whatever our personal ministry in the service of Christ might be.
I was reading as we prepped for today's episode
that there's some problems in Ephesus.
And so Paul sends Timothy back to Ephesus
to try to correct some of these problems,
these false teachers that are there,
some of the problems within the Christian community itself.
So it'd be kind of fun to be on a mission
that your mission president Paul sends you on
and then he writes you a letter.
How are things going?
Here's what you should do.
With that, Barb, where do you wanna go with first Timothy?
John Ann Hank, it's interesting as I was
just listening to you, Hank.
When I read through this recently,
I remembered being a youth and reading Timothy. So it brought me to
this mentoring type, feeling and mentoring type relationship. And speaking as a woman, many women, young
and old, wish they had more mentors. This is something that I've been trying to work on and really help
women see mentors and women who are strong in the scriptures, strong in their faith, diligent in
all that they do. And I just love how many principles
of leadership and mentoring there are from Paul to Timothy, but also recognition that we see in Timothy
that we don't see in other places as Timothy's recognition, Paul's recognition of the women mentors
that he has had in his life. That brings us into second Timothy. I just love this family relationship
of a mother and a grandmother who have been mentoring him. I also look at this and I just think about these many scriptures in my youth that have been extremely impactful in it.
I remember being a youth.
I was a 12th of 13th children.
I thought at that time that all my siblings were perfect.
Like genuinely, I did.
I remember my dad was serving as a state president.
I was surrounded by strong active of people in my own family
Although many of my friends and these were not. I was raised in Oregon. I
Remember one day being on a volleyball bus. I played volleyball in basketball and softball and
Having all of my teammates asking me questions about the gospel just pounding me, right? One after the other
Where are the gold plates today? Why do you believe in Joseph Smith? Where are the horns on your head?
The kinds of questions that you just get
that you just don't ever hear about.
But we were teenagers, we were young.
And I remember answering all the questions
to the best of my ability.
And I frankly, I think I did a pretty good job.
And then the big bus pulled in.
I got out of the bus, went to my parents' gold van,
went to the front seat, sat down.
And I began to cry.
My dad was driving.
And he just said,
did you lose the game?
And I said, well, yes, but we always lost.
So that wasn't, that wasn't the problem.
And then he just said, you know, what's the problem?
And I said, I have just spoken to all of my friends
on this bus and was pounded with questions regarding
the church.
I don't know if any of it's true.
I know all the answers, but I don't know if any of it's true. I know all the answers,
but I don't know if any of it is true. And I remember my dad just looking at me in the rear view mirror
and just saying, well, go figure it out. And I bring this verse up because specifically for the next
few months of my young teenage life, I studied the scriptures, trying to find the truth. Maybe
similar to Joseph Smith, but in my own way,
I read every book I could find about the church.
I went through the missionary books.
I went through scriptures.
I even attended other churches that were around me
in Oregon, and my parents at the time just let me
that seemed to be what I needed to do at that time.
I remember one morning reading this exact verse,
ever learning and never able to come to the knowledge
of the truth.
And I remember this moment where I just sat there and I realized,
Barb, that's you. You are learning and learning and learning and you have read and you have studied and you have gained so much information and you don't even know if it's true. But then it was this moment of
so what do you need to do? And then it was a simple silent, I need to get on my knees and do what it teaches in
Marona, and ask the Lord if it's true.
Interestingly enough, I went to church after that, and the teacher used this exact verse
in Sunday school.
And then I went to seminary the next day, and this exact verse was shared.
And I just knew that the Lord just kind of putting little drops in your path.
And I just knew that the Lord was speaking to me and saying, when you felt that that verse applied
to you, it was confirmed that it applied to you and then confirmed again that it applied to you.
And the answer for you is you need to know for yourself. And at that point, I went on not just
a knowledge and information quest, but a, I want to know the truth, not just a knowledge and information quest, but I want to know the truth,
not just gather information.
It changed my life.
So this verse has been marked in many scriptures for me,
it has been written about in my early days of my journal
and if people are to say,
what is one of your all-time favorite scriptures,
that was a life changer for me.
It's the James 1-5 that was a life changer for Joseph Smith.
This one was a life changer for me.
I feel like Timothy, and I've felt this
way since I was a youth that Timothy was one of my best friends because somehow Timothy
needed that, and although it may not have been for him, it may have been for other people
that Timothy was helping, but somehow I connected to him at a very deep level that maybe Timothy
and others understood that I was ever learning, and I needed to come to the knowledge of the
truth.
So that's one of my all-time favorites from these scriptures.
I think that there are many people in that realm who are ever learning.
And at some point, the Spirit will teach the knowledge of the truth if that effort and
price is paid in the due time of the Lord.
Awesome.
Wow.
What a great way to start here, Barb.
We chose the right guest for today.
That's so great.
Personal connection to that.
Sorry to jump up to chapter three of chapter two already.
But I read that even this morning again.
I just got so excited about the feelings of my youth came back to me.
And such power this morning that I just it was actually a kind of a renewing of.
Yes, I know these things are true to me in my later years.
I know this now more than ever, but it started at a very young age.
Thankfully, for great mentors and prophets and leaders like Paul and others who help the
youth come to a knowledge of the truth.
I love these writings.
When he speaks, he's letters when he first writes them.
I just love this kind of language and this love and care that Paul gives for those who he has been
given stewardship over.
Paul and Apostle, and then verse two,
unto Timothy, my own son in the faith,
from his my own daughter in the faith,
Grace, Mercy, and Peace from our God,
from God our Father and Jesus Christ.
And then I be sought thee to have just these terminology.
He just is such love between Paul and those
he is writing to you.
You see the same thing exactly with Titus. We just start that with letter with Titus.
According to the faith of God's elect and then acknowledging of the truth, which is after God in us in the hope of eternal life,
which God that cannot lie promised before the world began. And then the way he just
verse four, to Titus, my own son, after the common faith,, Grace Mercy. And again, I would say to Barbara my own daughter
and to any of you who's listening, put your own name in there. Grace Mercy and peace from God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ our Savior.
And second Timothy chapter four we see again to Timothy and the Lord should deliver me from every evil work and will preserve me
unto his heavenly kingdom to whom be glory forever and ever amen. And he asked him to salute and salute.
It's like entering into the school of the prophets and the times of Kirtland where we greet each
other with a holy kiss.
It's that kind of idea to me.
These are true servants of the Lord, their disciples of Jesus Christ.
They practice what they preach.
And because they live the doctrine of Jesus Christ, they increase in charity.
And they are leaders not because they have studied leadership, but they are leaders because
they have become disciples of Christ.
They're full of charity.
Verse 15 and Titus, chapter 3,
is all that with me salute the greet them that love us in the faith.
Grace be with you all, amen.
Such a personal relationship in these letters.
Not just a general feeling,
but a personal feeling of a mentor trying to help someone
that he loves dearly and has really wanting to help teach and grow.
He's trying to build him and
give him opportunities for growth and he's building entire nations and communities because of his
mentoring of one individual. It's beautiful. And he trusts them. He sent them on these
missions out to these congregations. I don't know if they're missions as in just go there and be
there, go in there and lead. So the trust that's there and then the mentoring really gives us a personal side to Paul.
To me, he is a builder of people.
In these verses, you just see Paul.
He is trying to help Timothy and Titus and others that he's saying, and please teach these
people as well, he's trying to help them become spiritually self-reliant and he's doing
it in such a way.
He's magnifying people.
He's giving them some great tutorials, some skills,
and things that he has learned in the past,
mostly focusing on the principles and doctrines
of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
But in such a way that you know that Paul's gonna move on
someday and he needs to have that younger generation
ready to go and they need to teach the gospel,
be grounded in the doctrine of Jesus Christ,
be true to what they're saying.
He's warning them about the things that he has experienced
and he's seeing that this is happening there.
He's talking about the foolishness of some people
and he just keeps saying, Timothy,
you've got to be grounded.
You've got to have your feet completely rooted.
You've got to know your doctrine.
They're going to people.
They're going to try to confuse you.
Teach this to the members of the church.
Make sure we're all on the same team.
It's like he's just teaching these leadership skills,
but it's not just leaders.
He's teaching saints how to live in this world
according to the gospel. These are his own experiences. He's teaching saints how to live in this world according to the gospel.
These are his own experiences. He's come from being one who was a fighter of who was among these people
who were at one time. Perhaps they were flattering and words and perhaps they weren't kind. And perhaps
he was one who was trying to destroy the kingdom of God on the earth. I mean, we know that about Paul
and he knows what it's like to be on both sides and he knows how to help people deal with people who were once like him.
And he's guiding them through, stick to the doctrine, stick to the purity. There's gonna be a lot of foolish out there, be meek.
These kinds of things, it's a missionary, it's a teacher, it's a leader, it's a parent,
it's trying to help people be firmly grounded in the gospel of Jesus Christ.
To a younger group of people who desperately need a mentor to help them on their way.
I like that you're using the word mentor. I hadn't thought of that before of this relationship,
but my mission president was that for me. President Menlo Smith, he used to say,
though, Lord gets the work done through his people and he gets his people done through the work.
He would also say a good leader trains leaders while he leads. And I like what you're saying, that Paul's not only saying,
okay, here's a memo from Church HQ, do this,
but you're my sons, you're my colleagues,
you're my brothers in this work, and they're still doing the work,
but he's treating them like a mentor would treat.
I like that you brought that phrase in.
I love the mentoring too, because he's treating them as real humans.
He recognizes in verse 15, this is a faithful saying and worthy of all exception that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief.
I remember before my mission, my dad just said to me,
Barb, is there anything that you are not saying that you would be embarrassed to tell me as a father?
And I cried for hours.
And I remember after I had just confessed everything,
which I didn't need to confess everything,
because I had already confessed to the bishop.
I did need to though, because it was a worldly sorrow,
not a godly sorrow.
I was afraid of being a fool in front of my own father
who loved me so much.
But what's more important is I remember after saying all these things,
my dad just looking at me and saying,
welcome to the club of people who need the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
And I so appreciate sometimes as leaders, there's a caution to not put all your sins out on the
table and have all those discussions, but there's also the reality of as we are mentors and humans
that we're real and authentic with people. And Paul's doing this, I love that he just admits,
I'm the chief, I'm the chief of all sinners and I need Jesus Christ. And as we're working with
youth, what is working with each other, as we're working with people our own age
and experiences that we recognize.
And just be clear, we're not judging you,
we're not here to tell you what you should
and shouldn't do exactly.
We are here as those who have found the gospel
of Jesus Christ and who are living it.
And we are desperate for his atonement.
And Paul recognizes that right off the bat with Timothy.
I love the name, just Timothy.
The Bible dictionary says, Timothy means honored of God.
I just think that's such a beautiful understanding of that term, Timothy.
These are important words. These are important uses.
But Timothy is clearly honored of God.
And as it says, he is trusted.
And he's one that Paul can reach out to, but trusted and perfection are not the same thing.
But we admit our need for the Atonement of Jesus Christ. And that's very clear here.
That's a great verse that you brought up. Chapter 1 verse 15. Christ Jesus came into the
world to save sinners of who I am chief. I think sometimes my students, my children,
think I was born in a suit and tie that I was in the delivery room came out with my scriptures
in hand and started teaching the nurses and doctors.
There's an authenticity to listen, I need the atonement too.
I've shared with John a little bit of my youth and yeah, if I got my patriarchal blessing
and the Lord was being truly honest, he would say, it does not look good.
Right.
You have a lot of unearned confidence and you're going your own way and
you are spiraling actually. But I love that realness from Paul. He came to save sinners. I'm a big
sinner. Who am I am chief? Then that next verse he calls, so I'm a pattern to them which should
hear after believe on him to life everlasting. If I can be forgiven, I hear Paul who used to persecute. You can too.
I think that gives us a lot of hope that when we look at Paul's background, no wonder
he would say, I'm chief. I was here. I let me hold the cults while you stone somebody
or whatever that story is. Sometimes I think that some of us, including myself,
perhaps look at those who are among the most righteous
and think they're beyond temptation
or they're beyond hardship or they're
behind whatever it is.
And I appreciate so much general conference talks recently
that you can see a lot of this authenticity
and some of the struggles that people have gone through.
I love President Nelson's talk in the early 2000s
when he lost his wife, Dansell,
and how he just cried with us
as he talked about how he couldn't save her life.
There have been so many others as examples of this.
I just know with myself and to your point, to Hank,
sometimes my daughter will feel the same way.
I think it's like, mom's so righteous,
he teaches the gospel and goes to church
and to me is almost laughable
because I know that my sins and weaknesses are in my face constantly. And the reality is I don't believe that for the
most part at least myself, it's not a matter of judging anyone else. I'm not going to church
on Sunday because I'm being self-righteous. I am desperate. I'm desperate for Christ.
And I remember when we were growing up, we'd go camping and we'd watch and be with other families
and things, even on the Sabbath.
And my parents always went to church, always.
We would be smelly and smoky.
Whatever it was, we'd do our best to look nice
and clean, we'd go to church.
And I realized my parents were desperate
for the Atonement of Christ.
And they were desperate for us to know
about the Atonement of Christ.
They weren't trying to be self-righteous. I'm not trying to be self-righteous. I need the Atonement of Christ and they were desperate for us to know about the Atonement of Christ. They weren't trying to be self-righteous. I'm not trying to be self-righteous.
I need the Atonement of Christ. I need the Sacrament. It's that pattern. And you see that with Paul,
he's giving his life to this. Not a matter of judging anyone or being in a position where you're
doing more or less than someone. It's just on a personal note, I have to go to church. I need to
take the Sacrament. I need to go to the Temple. I have to, for my salvation, for who I am as a person,
I can't live without the Savior.
There's something beautiful in Paul being vulnerable
and saying, look, I need this just as much as everyone
I'm teaching.
Yeah.
The reality is we have general conference and things
we have, they're speaking to the general public
But in my personal interactions with frankly, I was to say first-presencing members of the core of the 12
Women leaders of the church and different experiences the one-on-one conversations you get to interact with and be with at people at a different level
Sometimes I wish so badly the members of the church
Around the world could have the personal one on one or the
personal letters that come. I've laughed harder in person with serious leaders of this church,
and I've been guided by them in a more personal way. This is a letter to an individual, so he's
able to speak and talk to him in a way that's very, very personal. And I appreciate it. Similar to
how we would be with one of our children versus an entire classroom of people in a gymnasium,
we're going to have a different conversation with that child than we would in front of that child's class
I think there's some of that going on here
And I love that we talked about mentoring
I love that the real mentor or in this case the real mediator is Jesus Christ
He's not the one he's trying to get Timothy to become like it's Jesus Christ who is the mediator between them and God and he recognizes that
That's first five. There is one God and one mediator between God and men. The man Christ Jesus.
I think all good leaders, all good mentors try to get people not to them, but they try to get them to
Christ. That's a sign I think of a good mentor, a good leader. Barbit seems that in Ephesus, Timothy
is dealing with some specific problems that Paul is going to address.
I think every bishop or release society president out there could say, yeah, our ward, our branch
has specific problems that I'm trying to figure out. Isn't that what happens next? Doesn't
Paul say, okay, here's a couple of things I know you're dealing with. Let's talk about
those.
I always think that these are kind of funny versus,
and as a woman, and especially as a religion professor,
and one who teaches the gospel and has taught throughout my life,
every time I see these, I just laugh,
and then I have this moment of,
I need to leave my job and sit in my hole in the basement
and not talk to my husband or anyone else.
Because women are supposed to be science.
That's clearly not what he's saying here.
He's talking to a specific group of people. He's talking to a specific group of people.
He's dealing with a specific group of individuals in this case.
And I just think we have to remember that in general.
It's a specific letter to Timothy at a time
for a specific group of people.
And I often teach that you have doctrines, principles,
applications, or policies and procedures.
He's not saying that there's a doctrine of making women be silent.
That is not a doctrine.
It's not generalizable.
We're not talking about the whole world.
It's simply in his congregation or whatever he is at this time, whatever they are trying
to do, which we don't know exactly, that he needs to help all people together.
And in this case, he's speaking to the specific group of women.
There have been some studies about who these women were and what they were doing, etc.,
etc.
Even more than that, I hope we recognize in our day, we have profit, shares, and revelators
that have absolutely taught the opposite of this.
Not that Paul was wrong, but it was again,
it was a policy or something at that moment
that he was teaching in Timothy.
In our day, we have President Nelson.
I have so many quotes and so many teachings
of the first presidency in Corp. 12
that I use on regular basis with my students.
But mostly it is President Nelson, speaking to women,
we need women to speak up and speak out.
We have elder Ballard speaking in 2014 at Education Week
and he's saying women, we need you to know
the doctrine of Jesus Christ so well
and we need you to teach the doctrine
of principles of the gospel around the fire sides
in your homes.
We have President Eiring who was telling the women of the church in 2018,
you are the primary gospel instructors in your home, and you need to be able to teach
the gospel with power.
President Oaks telling women that they have priesthood power and authority, and that they
can speak with authority of God and through our temple cabinets.
I mean, if there has ever been a first presidency that has asked more for the women of the church to speak out more
I don't know who it is with maybe the exception of of Joseph Smith, frankly, and maybe Adam with Eve. I don't know what their relationship was but clearly Eve was also making important decisions that
spoken of a little bit later here, but we have leaders of the church that are not just asking women but pleading women directing women to women, and saying that Israel can't be gathered
until the women of the church understand their priesthood power and authority and speak with
this power and authority they've been given. And this is kind of fun and maybe a little bit laughable.
I can imagine it probably offended a few women back in the day, but I just want to clarify that
this is not what the direction is of the church today. This is not what's being taught to the
women of the church. I will say, if anybody ever desires, there's a great talk by President Ballard, I was just
referring to, or he actually talks to women about how to counsel well and how to speak
well and to remember that in any meeting that there are sometimes when we are counseling
that there is a bishop or a leader who is a key holder and just to remember the importance
of the key holder. That's not just to women, that's to men as well. Everyone in the room, I think, is wise to understand
that there is a bishop or is a state president who is a key holder and that's the form of the church
that he presides in those meetings. However, I hope we also understand that that is not the pattern
in the home. As Elder Suarez recently taught and President Hinckley has taught often,
President Nelson has taught often in a relationship between a husband and a wife.
There is no president and vice president. They are counselors together. So together
they work to build that faith. Sometimes we try to put the hierarchical structure of the
church and put it on a transparency of the family. It doesn't work that way. You can't do that.
There is a state president who presides in a stake and he is the final say, but in a couple
of relationships, they are counselors together. There's not a president and vice president. Elder Suarez talks about that so well in his recent talk on that.
But in here, just to make sure that we understand.
And then it goes to Eve for Adam was first formed then Eve.
I don't know exactly how to talk about and capitalize on this,
except to say that if we go into our scriptures and understand,
later in the doctrine of covenants, the Lord refers to Eve as glorious mother Eve.
And President
Nelson asks the women of the church in 2019 to have the courage of mother Eve as they move forward
their families and growth, et cetera, et cetera. Eve becomes an R day, which is a unique teaching
of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, one who has been a called courageous and glorious
and one who is able to lead the kingdom
and move families forward through righteousness.
Fantastic.
There's a Christian writer by the name of Marge Moscow.
I like what she says here.
She says, versus in first Timothy
are about specific people and specific problems
in the Ephesian church.
Paul addresses the problem of specific women,
certain rich women who were wearing luxurious hairstyles,
jewels, and expensive clothing.
I've heard it said before that in Ephesus,
apparently there were some women who had turned church
into a fashion show, and that was leading to all sorts of problems
for all the other people in this branch.
She says, these two verses do not refer to all Christian women only to those Ephesian women
who are showing off their wealth, and this is why Paul offers this correction. I like that.
Paul did not intend this to be for all Christianity for the rest of time. He was addressing a specific problem that was happening in Timothy's war, you might say,
in Ephesus.
Yeah.
To that point too, I was just reminded of President Nelson how he spoke to the women in the
talk spiritual treasures in 2019, where he asked the women of the church to study doctrine
covenant section 25 and the teachings to Emma Smith.
And it reminds us that it's applicable to all.
And of course, in this case,
I'm thinking about all women.
And I love what you were saying before, John,
they want the women to learn.
In section 25 verse eight, the Lord says,
for he shall lay his hands upon thee
and now shall receive the Holy Ghost,
and thy time shall be given for writing and to learning much.
If there is one thing that we really do well in the church,
as leaders of the church, and hopefully in our families,
it is that women are encouraged to learn.
Women are encouraged to be scriptorians.
We really have leaders of the church
that are trying to get women to learn, to be grounded,
to be wise in the understanding of the doctrine
of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Men as well. Let me just share with you a couple of quotes. This one comes from President Eiring.
He says, the Lord is at the head of this church and we all follow His direction. Both men and women
need increased faith and testimony at the life and the atonement of Jesus Christ and increase
knowledge of His teachings and doctrine. We need clear minds so
that the Holy Ghost can teach us what to do and what to say. We need to think straight in this
world of confusion and disregard the things of God. And then he says specifically to sisters,
sisters, your sphere of influence is unique, one that cannot be duplicated by men. No one can
defend our Savior with any more persuasion or power as you the daughters of God cam. You who have such inner strength and conviction, the power of a converted
women's voice is immeasurable and the church needs your voices now more than ever.
It's such a beautiful quote and a beautiful reminder.
That's one from elder Valorant, another one regarding Eve.
I love this one as well.
Attacks against the church is his president Nelson.
It's doctrine and our way of life are going to increase because of this. I love this one as well. Attacks against the Church as his president Nelson.
It's doctrine and our way of life are going to increase.
Because of this, we need women who have a bedrock understanding of the doctrine of Christ
and who will use that understanding to teach and help raise a sin-resistant generation.
We need women who can detect deception in all of its forms.
We need women who know how to access the power that God makes available to covenant keepers
and who express their beliefs with the confidence and
charity. And then we need women who have the courage and the vision of Mother
Eve. President Nelson again, I'll just give you one more. My dear sisters,
whatever you're calling, whatever your circumstances, we need your
impressions, your insights, and your inspiration. We need you to speak up and
speak out in ward and state councils.
We need each married sister to speak as a contributor and full partner as you unite with your
husband and governing your family. Married or single, you sisters possess distinctive capabilities
and special intuition you have received as gifts from God. We, brethren, cannot duplicate your unique
influence. As a woman myself I can't tell
you how much I appreciate other women and men who get this principle. I
appreciate men when they ask for feedback when they actually want the
feedback and and it's not just ornamental as as we've been told as well. But when
we are in council's president Valorant has talked so much about counseling. I
interviewed sister Elaine Jack recently about counseling and how she felt that she was listened to as a woman
and that she was never intimidated by the first presence
of your leaders of the church at that time
that her voice was wisely taken into consideration.
Same with the leaders of the church today.
I've been in some of those councils
and I've watched the opportunity for women leaders
to really express themselves.
How important it is for the men and women key holders,
especially to help and guide women in their ability to do so. express themselves, how important it is for the men and women, key holders, especially
to help and guide women in their ability to do so.
And the women being ready to say something and having prayed and prepared for those meetings
that we have with each other so that we are all equal partners in helping build the
kingdom of God.
And Barb, you even brought up the fact that Paul mentions Timothy's mother and grandmother in his second letter to Timothy.
He says, I want you to remember the faith that is in the, which was first in your grandmother
lowest and your mother unis. There seems to be in other writings of Paul this respect for the
faith of women and their influence. This is great. I love when I teach Second Nephi too, to talk about that line,
our glorious Mother Eve from the Doctrine and Covenants.
I love to say to my students,
I challenge you to find anything like that
in mainstream Christianity that calls Eve,
our glorious Mother Eve.
And then it's followed by,
and many of her faithful daughters,
what Joseph Smith saw in the spirit world.
I'm glad you mentioned that phrase, Barbara.
I love these verses where it talks about these women, the silent women in here
almost, but you can tell it how powerful they are.
Paul writes to Timothy, when I call to remember, it's the unfained faith that is
in the, which dwelt first in the grandmother, Lois and the mother, Eunice.
And I am persuaded that in the also, I love it when people talk about my mother and grandmother
They both passed away and I love it when there are strong people who say Barb you're just like your mom
Or Barb you're just like your grandma your faith is so much like your grandmother's your knowledge of the gospel was clearly
Ruted from your mother the apple didn't fall far from the tree
I love when people say that to me.
And I think this is what Paul is saying to Timothy.
I'm sure Timothy's heart was just so happy
of that recognition and that tie into his mother
and grandmother.
They were unfained in the faith.
Yet another great talk that President Nelson gave to women,
he has given so many great talks to women.
This one's embraced the future with faith.
He makes the statement to sisters.
He says, dear sisters, you are
adept at creating places of security for yourselves and those you love. Further, you
have a divine endowment that enables you to build faith in others in compelling ways. And
you never stop. You have demonstrated that once again this year. I love this in the footnote.
And one of the things I love also about President Nelson, if you want to find a really good
talk and you want a really good scripture study,
go to President Nelson's footnotes.
That man, that prophet, I think,
has been footnoting more than any other prophet,
any other leader of the church.
I mean, there are talks within talks within talks
if you read his footnotes.
But in this footnote, he actually addresses this exact
scripture, 2 Timothy chapter one, verse five,
and he writes, the Apostle Paul signaled this reality
when he attributed Timothy's unfaithful to his mother,
Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois.
And then President Nelson says to us,
please keep going.
I just love that he's tying it into these women.
Please keep going, your vigilance and safeguarding
your homes and instilling faith in your hearts
into hearts of your loved ones
will reap rewards for generations to come. And then my sisters, you have so much to look forward to. Maybe Hank and John,
perhaps that idea from President Nelson Marie says, your vigilance and safeguarding your
home brings us also back to what we were talking about before with modesty with women. And
I know that this can be such a difficult topic. I know that sometimes we get really caught up in who should be able to say what and who can tell me what I can do with these types of things.
And I know it's hard and it's painful for many people.
And there's been a lot of back and forth.
I think it's important that we just simply understand again.
In my very humble opinion, modesty is not about dress and appearance as it is about our heart and it is about our covenant
and our commitment to God. It's the same thing President Nelson says about the Sabbath day.
When we truly understand the doctrines and principles and truths associated with the Sabbath day
and helping us understand that it is applied to the Atonement of Jesus Christ, we don't need a yes
and a no. We don't need specific things that we need to do.
We want to show Christ that how we keep the Sabbath day is an essence and outward appearance
of what is in our heart. And I would say that is the same thing with modesty. How we dress
is an outward appearance of the covenant that we have made with God and an understanding of our
identity. When we are baptized as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Letterday Saints, we state that we are willing to take upon ourselves
a name of Christ. When I take upon myself a name of Christ, that means I dress like Christ
would have me dress. I act as Christ would have me act. I speak as he would have me speak.
Modesty is simply a component. It's a leaf on the tree as I would explain of what we do to show our commitment and our covenant relationship with God.
It's very important, especially in this day and age.
I believe that there are many who would have a say simply that we dress according to popularity or we dress according to the tradition or what we see around us,
but in just an everything that Paul is teaching to Timothy, it's not about what the world teaches.
Paul is trying to ground Timothy and Timothy to ground his people in making decisions based upon doctrine and principles.
So when I ask myself, what am I willing to wear? Well, it depends on where I'm going.
If I'm going to this when we pull, I'll probably wear a swimsuit. If I'm going to school,
I'm going to wear something that is appropriate as a professor to be teaching the gospel of
Jesus Christ and be representing Him in that manner. But there is nowhere that I'm going to go
that I am in any way going to say.
Today I decided to not take upon myself
the name of Jesus Christ.
I want to show what a covenant-keeping daughter
who identifies herself as a daughter of God
and who has divine nature and a divine destiny would dress.
And I think if we understand these principles
and we are genuinely striving to have that testimony
of Jesus Christ and live that way,
we will say, am I dressing according to popularity
or am I dressing according to covenant?
And I think that we can make those decisions.
I think one of the things that becomes hard
for young women, especially and for older women is,
we don't wanna be told the yeses and the noes.
But if we build each other
and teach the doctrines and the principles associated with,
we have made a covenant with Christ.
We are bought with a price genuinely
through the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
And what I wear identifies me as one
who takes upon or is willing to take upon me
the name of Christ, that will drive what I'm willing to wear.
I'm not looking horizontal.
I'm not looking at what other people think of me.
In a negative or even a positive way,
I'm thinking about what the Lord thinks about how I feel about him with my body that is bought with his price, his
atonement, his blood, how am I strengthening myself and how am I strengthening those I care about
by how I dress. And that makes a big difference. If we can teach each other the young men as well,
modesty is again, it goes to every individual in the world.
I also love Joseph Smith where he teaches,
we teach them correct principles
and we let them govern themselves.
This deals with modesty, it deals with everything else
in the church.
Sometimes we think, we're just gonna let our young men
or our young women decide what they wanna wear
and just tell them we love them
and try to help them in that way.
I'm not gonna let my daughters start smoking
just to see if they like it. I'm not gonna let my daughters jump into a car to see how they feel about it.
Joseph Smith says we teach them correct principles and let them govern themselves.
They don't govern themselves until they know the correct principles and they understand those principles.
And it's the same with modesty and how I let my daughters dress.
I'm teaching them principles of who they are as divine daughters of God, divine sons of God.
And then I really help them to see, ask them the questions, how would you feel in the presence of God, divine sons of God, and then I really help them to see, ask them
the questions, how would you feel in the presence of God?
Do you feel like when you're wearing this way that you are truly taking upon yourself
the name of Christ?
Not in a demeaning or not in a judgmental way, just genuinely, I'm helping them be self-reliant.
How does this make you feel as a daughter of God?
How does this make others around you feel?
How can you dress in such a way that will bring others to Christ?
We're all missionaries. It's not that we're saying that we are responsible for how other people feel,
but in all that we do, our light and how we live our lives does influence other people.
Remember your covenants and teach that kind of understanding. When I was younger, I used to chew gum a lot,
like a lot. And I remember my mom in the sacrament meeting one day,
this has to do with modesty, just as much as I
do with gum chewing.
I remember my mom saying, Barb, and I was so bugged at the moment.
I know it's probably 12.
Barb, you're chewing your gum in the sacrament meeting
and the way you're chewing your gum
is a distraction to the people around you.
They're not able to partake of the sacrament
and have a sacred experience like the other ways could have.
There's nothing wrong with that.
I hope we understand that the way I was chewing my gum was a distraction. There is a principle of distraction in this world. And the way I was
choosing chewing my gum was a distraction to those people around me. And I appreciated that.
I recognized that people were not able to have the sacred experience they needed to in that
second meeting because I was so loud and so obnoxious in the way I was chewing. And yeah, I was
offended for a moment. And I was like, mom, whatever. And so I chewed my gum louder for like two minutes
just to show where that I was in control of my life.
But then as an older individual, I recognize,
you know, mom's surprisingly right.
And now believe it or not,
I actually don't chew gum often on Sundays
unless I have a headache
and I need the smell of the gum
over the smell of the perfume and church.
Yeah.
I think it's the same thing with modesty.
I think we just recognize that we are children
of God and we're all trying to come into Christ. And how can we be an instrument in God's hands
and helping ourselves and others first understand our own identity and dress according to our
covenants. And then second, how can we help other people making their sacred covenants
just a few thoughts.
Sister Dalton said that same thing. Modesty is often talked of in terms of dressing appearance, but modesty encompasses much more
than outward appearance.
It's a condition of the heart.
It's an outward manifestation of an inner knowledge and commitment.
It's an expression that we understand our identity as children of God.
It's an expression that we know what he expects of us.
It's a declaration of our covenant keeping.
And, Barb, I'm sure you would absolutely agree with this here. In our talking about modesty,
it is never okay to shame, ridicule, belittle, or judge someone by the clothing that they wear.
I've seen that before in the church, hopefully not in huge ways all over,
but for someone will say, the way you dress is affecting the thoughts of others. And the thoughts
of others are up to them. I tell my own teenage boys, look, your thoughts are up to you. You don't
blame someone else for the thoughts you have. Yeah, there's no question that we are all responsible
for our own thoughts and our own actions.
It's not one or the other.
There's also no question that what I say
and what I do affects other people.
We are not on islands by ourselves,
and that's one of the beauties of,
we are in covenant relationships with God,
but we live in families, we live with friends,
we live in church, and I hope it's just
like any other topic in the church. We do our best to be covenant leaders and to be covenant
followers of Jesus Christ, and we don't judge other people in doing so unless there's a specific
responsibility of a bishop to be a judge in Israel. But as individuals, we're not judging,
we're not condemning and doing anything like that. In fact, that's what also is going to drive
people away. So I think it's two things, and I think this is wisdom.
We ourselves recognize and understand the truths
and the doctrines of the gospel of Jesus Christ,
and we live accordingly.
And we don't judge other people according to how they live.
But we also don't make excuses for ourselves
based upon the possibility of somebody else judging us.
So I will dress
regardless and I will do what the Lord would have me to do because of my covenant relationship with
him. And I have a responsibility to teach my children and to teach other people to live according to
the laws and commandments of God. But I also have a responsibility to be kind and loving and full of
charity and understand that there are people who do not
have and will not be judged according to what I know.
I grew up in Oregon.
I just went to my 30th year high school reunion.
There were people that would not be wearing clothes that would be in alignment with what
the church teaches today.
Nor were they drinking things.
Nor were they discussing things.
Nor was their language, in many cases, according to perhaps what we would consider in the church
Jesus Christ a lot of days saying something that is perhaps appropriate in our
terminology. But these are my dearest friends. They live wonderfully according
to what they know. Modesty for me is going to be different than modesty for some
of them because they genuinely were dressing what they thought was
appropriate for that experience. It's just that when we make covenants with God
and we understand those covenants, perhaps it puts us as President Nelson says in a position to live a higher and a whole your way.
And the question really is, where is our commitment to God? And are we willing to live in a higher
and whole your way? But that also includes not judging in a higher and whole your way. It includes
loving in a higher and whole your way. So it's us becoming more like Christ, living the covenant,
but also not judging according to the covenant.
It goes both ways.
Yeah.
With youth today, both young men and young women, there is such an emphasis on being judged
by the way you look.
We don't need more of that coming from church members.
Yeah, that's another talk yet by President Nelson, where he talks about the person comes
home from their mission or if a person lives like, our job is not to judge them, our job is to love them. On their side, it's also important as
mothers and as parents, our job is also to teach them and our job is also to help them. So
it depends on our responsibility, it depends on our stewardship and I think you can never go wrong
with love. One of the things that we know about love is we love best when we stay close to God.
When we stay close to how he would have us love.
And when we learn to love the way God loves,
we will help everyone in the process.
President Nelson has that great co-op
where he's talking to BYU students just a few years ago.
And he's talking to them about the truth.
So he's talking about like five truths that he has.
He says, sometimes we as leaders of the church
are criticized for holding firm to the laws of God, defending the
Savior's doctrine and resisting the social pressures of the
day. But our commission as ordained apostles is to go into
all the world to preach his gospel into every creature. That
means we are commanded to teach truth. And doing so, sometimes
we are accused of being uncaring as we teach the Father's
requirement for exaltation and the celestial kingdom. But
wouldn't it be far more uncaring for us not to tell the truth, not to teach what God has revealed? It is precisely
because we do care deeply about all of God's children that we proclaim His truth. We might not
always tell people what they want to hear. Profits are rarely popular, but we will always teach
the truth. I want to know what the leaders of the Church are teaching about specific topics.
And I want the agency to be able to decide, which is what the prophets do,
and I believe that the more of a covenant keeper I am, the more I'm going to be aligned with God.
And I also want the freedom to not judge other people.
I'm grateful that I am not a judge in any capacity.
I'm not the judge. I want the truth taught, and I want it taught clearly.
And I also want to recognize that I'm not the judge. I want the truth taught and I want it taught clearly. And I also want
to recognize that I'm not the judge of how anybody else lives their lives. But I am a teacher,
I am a mentor, and I want to help people. There's more to the topic than just this or that. It's
let's talk. And I think that's a lot of what Paul is doing to Timothy too. He's not just saying this,
this, this, he's having a conversation and writing with him. He's guiding him through this process
of how people may respond to things, how people may be offended.
Let's talk about the doctrine. Let's love people.
Let's do so with grace and with charity.
He's teaching a teacher.
He's teaching a future missionary, a future leader.
It's beautiful.
Yeah. It's great.
And when I heard church had become a fashion show in Ephesus, I was like, I wonder if I ever treat it that way.
Am I going to go get my really nice suit
and I'm gonna show my fellow members how important I am
by my nice clothes.
There's this great talk by Elder Bedner
because it deals with the young men.
It's the principle of non-destruction.
I mean, he talks about this.
In the sacrament, we don't wanna do things
that will cause distraction,
but in some ways we're in control of our thoughts.
We are, but we're also influenced. that's become a very popular thing to say
No one else can influence your thoughts. Well, they really can I mean the key is what you do with the thoughts
But if you see a billboard on there and it tells you to there's a reason why advertising gets a lot of money
Yeah, I remember a few years ago specifically deciding not to wear a necktie of one of my favorite
teams because I didn't want this place of worship to be a distraction for somebody who
liked another team.
To feel like here's a chance to gloat.
So I like that idea of, I didn't want to be part of that that was making somebody else
around.
I just like this idea of a guide on the side and the principle of what's our focus at Sacramene? It is the sacrament table.
It is the Savior, His ransom, His sacrificing. I wouldn't ever want to get in the way of
the reason why we worship type of the thing.
I remember John you telling me once it's vicarious about sports. Yeah, there was an article
I read and the article was called the vicarious heroism of the sports spectator.
And they talked about professional sports, especially the NBA and stuff where for a commercial
reason, I want you to be emotionally think you are part of the team because that
will commercially help us be successful.
So it's you are Utah jazz that are playing tonight.
The vicarious heroism of the sports spectator.
I have been guilty of that, I think.
So I think that non-destruction, and we see that in Paul writing to Timothy, this idea and
the worldliness of some things.
In chapter 4 of 2 Timothy, starting in verse 1, he says,
I charge thee therefore before God and the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall judge the quick
and the dead at His appearing and His kingdom.
So first of all, God is the judge.
But then he says this, for the time will come when they will not endure sound doctrine,
but after their own lusts shall they heap to
themselves teachers having itching ears. And they turn away their ears from the truth and shall
be turned unto fables. But watch that on all things. Endure afflictions do the work of the
evangelist make full proof of thy ministry. In other words, there are going to be those who will not
listen to truth or who will not want to be in line with what the leaders of the church are saying
because it's not pleasing to them.
It doesn't jive with the way they dress.
It doesn't work with the way they think.
It doesn't fulfill the desires of their hearts or what they think is best or what culture
is teaching them.
And it says, they're not going to be pleased with you because you may teach something that
is contrary to what they want.
It's choosing to be offended by things.
And we have to recognize that the prophets and leaders of this church are trying to help us become like Christ.
Or I need to realize that the leaders of church are trying to help me become
like Christ. There are things in my life that they have taught in the past that
perhaps I might have difficulty with. And I may not have understood, but I have to
say, what is their role and what are they trying to do and what are they trying to
guide me to do? I love in verse 10 where he says,
for Demas have forsaken me having loved this present world.
Like, wow.
He cares so much about the things of the world.
He cares so much about how people perceive him.
Again, it's this horizontal look
that he actually uses the word forsake.
And I think that that's something I myself have to recognize
in a world where moral relativity is the answer to most things,
God is not morally relative. God is absolute and truth. In my case, I want to live my life
according to what God would have me be because in the pre-mortal world, I wanted the kind of life
he had. And so I don't want the life that the world gives me. I want the life that our heavenly
parents have. That's what I want.
We as leaders, as teachers, as friends, younger, older,
whatever else to think to ourselves.
I chose to come to this world.
I have leaders who are trying to teach me the truth.
Why would I reject that?
Or why would I even be rebellious?
Why would I be edgy?
I want to be like them.
And that's kind of this principle of non-destruction.
It's not just in what we wear.
It's in all that we do.
It's in how we keep this habit, they holy. It's in how we treat other people. This is what Elven Bednar says about the principle of non-distraction. It's not just in what we wear. It's in all that we do. It's in how we keep this avat they holy. It's in how we treat other people. This is the elder Bednar says about the principal
of non-distraction. This is President Dalin H. Oak, spoken general conference in 1998 about
ironic priesthood holders. So this is specifically to the young men, related to preparing and
administering the sacrament. He described the principal of non-distraction and indicated that a
holder of the ironic priesthood would never want anything in his appearance or behavior to
distract any member of the church from his or her worship and renewal of
covenants. President Oaks also emphasized the related principles of orderly
lists, cleanliness, reverence, and dignity. So again, he's not saying that these
young 11, 12, 13-year-olds had the responsibility of what other people are
thinking, but he is saying that they do impact and influence.
It's just simply that there's a principle of non-destruction and what they do does influence
and impact other people.
Then he continues, interestingly, President Oaks did not provide for the young men a lengthy
list of things to do and not to do.
Rather, he explained the principle with the expectation that the young men and their parents
and teachers could and should use
their own judgment and inspiration to follow the guideline. And then finally, he explained,
I will not suggest detailed rules since the circumstances and various wards and branches in our
worldwide church are so different that a specific rule that seems required in one setting may be
inappropriate in another. Rather, I will suggest a principle based on doctrine. If all understand
this principle and act in harmony with it, there should be little
need for rules.
If rules are counseling are needed in individual cases, local leaders can provide them, consistent
with the doctrines in their related principles.
So I remember once I'm being in Jordan with my husband, and I went out to this big resort
wearing what I considered an extremely modest swimsuit.
And I don't remember feeling so immodest in my entire life.
Because as I looked around, the majority of the women
were wearing pants and headdresses,
and their bodies were covered based upon their religious beliefs
and their culture in that area.
I just simply said to my husband, I need to go change.
I'm feeling not just out of place, and I horizontal way,
but I'm feeling like because of this,
I'm creating an experience where I am influencing,
impacting other people in a way
that they don't consider appropriate in this culture.
It wasn't that I was doing something wrong.
It wasn't my responsibility necessarily.
I just wanted to be respectful of who they were.
I wanted to be respectful of their culture
and their beliefs.
This is something that I would like to do
as just as a disciple of Christ to be respectful of people. And I did in that case, I'm not saying everybody should.
It was just me, my own decision in that atmosphere I just felt like. As a covenant keeping
member of Christ of the church, I want to help people feel comfortable and I want to be respectful
of people. So I'm going to go use my agency to create an atmosphere that other people are
comfortable in as well in a righteous manner.
I don't know that anybody judge me. I honestly have no idea, but I just knew that I didn't want
to be a distraction to what they were trying to accomplish. That's wonderful. I felt something
similar once at the Western Wall. The first time I ever went there, which was so unexpectedly
emotional for me just to go there and watch all of these orthodox Jews come down just dress
to the nines and touching the wall. I felt like they were being so reverent and I was standing
there in blue jeans and a Salt Lake City 2002 Olympics jacket. And I'll never forget that feeling.
Wow, I feel underdressed right now. It was a strange feeling. It's very real there, some of those sacred places and things to other people.
And that's how the church is.
My sister was visiting me yesterday.
This is a Utah thing.
She came to my home last night and she was dressed in some casual shirt and pants.
And she said she just went to a reception.
And she never felt so undressed in her life.
In Oregon, we often don't dress up quite as much as we do in Utah to attend something.
We're just more casual about things.
And she just made the comment.
I just felt so out of place.
It doesn't mean she did something wrong.
But as time goes on, we learn lessons that perhaps in this case is a cultural thing.
But again, the most important thing that we're doing is focusing on a relationship with Christ.
I remember walking into my aunt's house when I was a child, and she had white carpet,
and a very nice pristine home, and I never had a white carpet ever in my life.
Even if it was white, by the time I came along, nothing was white.
I remember going into the house, going up the stairs, running up the stairs, going
up to my cousin's house to see her room and looking back and I had a trail of dirt behind me. Oh.
Oh.
I cringed.
My aunt was so kind.
She was already cleaning the floor.
Didn't say a word.
It wasn't judging.
She was just on her hands and knees
and cleaning up all the dirt right behind me
as I was running up the stairs.
It had nothing to do with how she was judging me
or how I was feeling.
That wasn't it.
It was her showing so much Christ-like love as she just simply gave me a hug, thanked me, and cleaned up
my mess. But it was a reminder for me later to just be careful. Well, maybe
wipe my feet next time. But it's also reminded me when I am standing face-to-face
with God as it teaches us in section 1-21, my confidence will wax strong
because of my virtue. And that is virtue and power.
It's all that we are.
We impact each other.
We impact people.
But most importantly, it's God that we are trying
to have that covenant relationship with.
We are proving to ourselves really,
because God already knows,
but we're proving to ourselves our covenant relationship
with God, with him, what we are really made of inside.
Perfect.
My friend, well, he's my state president now, but his dad was
temple president in San Antonio. They're out golfing and the fire department
calls them and says, we have a fire alarm at the San Antonio temple. We won't
enter until you get here, but we have to make sure the building's okay. We know
you don't want us to enter. So in their golfing attire, they ran to the temple and Bob, my friend, says,
we went in and my dad said, go check out the Celestial Room. And he said,
I was wearing black permutea shorts and a golf shirt. And I felt my skin crawl
walking into the Celestial Room wearing that. He said, I go back in the cards, I said, Dad, that was just really hard to do that
in what I was wearing.
And his dad was like, yeah, what do you think that means?
You know, I just let him think about it.
But I remember I was with two of my very dear friends.
We were in Hawaii.
We had just gone snorkeling in this beautiful area.
We wanted to just see the new temple that was built there.
I think it was on the big island.
And we were literally in our swimsuits and lava lava
is walking just, we had nothing to change into.
But our heart was we wanted to see the temple.
We just wanted to take pictures of the temple
and just have this temple experience.
But we weren't going in, or anything.
You just wanted to see it.
We were feeling a little bit sheepish in our clothing,
but we knew our hearts were in the right place.
So we got up closer to the temples. We were walking around thinking bit sheepish in our clothing, but we knew our hearts were in the right place. So we got up closer to the temples,
we were walking around thinking that the temple
was actually closed because there were so few people
that were in the area.
The door to the temple opens, and then this gentleman
calls out to us, sisters, would you be able
to perform some ordinances today?
We looked at each other, we're wearing our swimsuits,
our lava lov as we were soaking wet,
just coming out of the beach.
I mean, just looked like a disaster.
We just said, we're not in appropriate clothing.
And his comment was, the appropriateness of your clothing is not what's important right now.
Are you worthy before God and do you hold the temple recommend?
Yes. Well, we could really use your help today.
Would you please come do some ordinances? And we just said, okay, I went in the temple in my swimsuit.
And again, it was where my heart was, it was my relationship with God, but it was, it
was so silly.
These experiences may be extreme, but that is, I think that's the key, is we're not judging
each other.
I mean, any person who saw me walking into the temple, if they had any desire to judge
anyone, take a picture and post it anywhere of me being a rebellious individual, could
have taken that picture that day.
That wasn't the point.
It was me and God. That's all the point. It was me and God.
That's all it was.
It was, I understood a God.
He understood me and I'm entering that temple
for this purpose.
It may be an extended circumstance,
but that's the point.
It's between me and the Lord
and we didn't judge each other.
We just did it.
Beautiful.
The new FSY is just hear him and let God prevail.
That's it. Please join us for part two of this podcast.