Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1-3 John; Jude Part 1 • Dr. Justin & Sis. Aislin Dyer • Nov 27 - Dec 3
Episode Date: November 22, 2023How does a testimony of God’s love help during faith journeys? Dr. Justin Dyer and Sister Aislin Dyer examine how we can face today’s adversities with love, connection, and enthusiasm.Show Notes (...English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/mHnMS4XbTrUFacebook: 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. Justin Dyer and Sister Aislin Dyer02:18 Background to Dr. Justin Dyer and Sister Aislin Dyer04:42 Background to 1 John, 2 John, 3 John, and Jude07:48 Recurring themes 08:19 Being discerning10:54 Making connections12:07 Jesus had a physical body14:26 Servants of Jesus17:15 Jesus’s goal for us19:10 Sister Dyer shares a personal experience with fellowship21:49 Hank shares a story about a Home Teacher/Ministering Brother26:39 Loneliness epidemic31:43 Moroni addresses loneliness34:53 Church as a potluck dinner37:05 Dr. Dyer shares a personal story about an answer to prayer37:48 Jesus as Lord of Light44:39 John shares a story about his missionary son in Iceland45:51 Love vs fear48:03 Sister Dyer shares a personal story about the power of music51:43 “Perfect love casteth out all fear”55:04 The reality of sin57:10 The advantages of a spiritual life59:49 Avoiding shame through the Savior1:03:26 Connection vs anger1:08:18 Avoiding the natural man1:10: 52 End of Part 1–Dr. Justin and Sister Aislin DyerThanks 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
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Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my
Glorious co-host John by the way. Hi John. Welcome to another episode. Never had that adjective before. Thank you
You are a glorious co-host. I don't know what a glorious co-host would look like, but if there is one it would be you
John we're gonna be in first, second, and third John today.
I bet these are some books that you love.
We're also going to take a look at the epistle of Jude.
The title of the lesson, John, is God is love.
What are you excited for?
That's what I remember about John.
There's a lot of stuff about love and light and little children.
And I remember that in the gospel of John, he gives us that great by this,
shall all men know your My disciples,
if you have love.
And then he talks more about love here.
I am excited just to look at,
can we learn some more about God's love for us
and how that works with our own effort
to try to become more like God
and keep the commandments and everything?
How do those all work together?
That's what I'm looking forward to.
Yeah.
I remember being in high school, getting into the scriptures.
And I really, really was drawn to first John did a lot of marking.
I remember in first John, I thought it was like a good little quote book.
John, we are joined by a wonderful couple today.
This isn't something we've done very often at Follow-Ahead,
maybe one other time.
We're here with Dr. Justin Dyer
and his amazing wife, Aslan Dyer.
Dyer's, what are we looking forward to today
in first, second, and third, John and Jude?
I am really excited to talk about what God's love
looks like in our life and how it can absolutely transform
our experience, both curian in our mortal probation and to
eternity.
Beautiful.
And as I was looking through this, I love why he's writing
about love.
He's writing about love to answer a question.
There's something going on.
It's a really troubling thing.
And he's going to answer this question with love and he's
going to answer it with testimony.
I'm looking forward to that. Yeah, it seems like the Beatles were right. All you need is love. John, the diars are new
to our podcast. Not new to us. We've been friends for a while, but new to our listeners. Can you
introduce them? Justin Dyer is a professor of our religious education at Brigham Young University.
He receives his PhD in Human
and Community Development from the University of Illinois at Urbana, Champagne, and was a
postdoctoral fellow at Auburn University, teaches classes on religion and family, as well
as graduate statistics. I laugh because I took a statistic class out.
I teach both religion and statistics classes, the graduate statistics, and I think people
pray more in the statistic classes than you in the religion classes.
They're trying to access the power of God like nobody else in that class.
He's conducted research on incarcerated fathers and their families, and he currently researches
how religion, family, and he currently researches how religion,
family, and mental health influence each other. In fact, he has a
why religion presentation on mental health. Aislin Powell-Dyer graduated from
BYU with a degree in English. She has taught a women in the scriptures
Institute class, loves to study literature, history, and theater. She is currently
studying drama turgy at BYU and loves to serve as the drama mama. It was just fun to say that. At the
local high school, Asylenworks is a storyteller at the Springville Public Library. She loves
to sing, especially with primary children at church, and in the Nibbo holiday chorus
and orchestra's production of the Messiah every Christmas and just in an Asylina the parents of six musical children
We're really glad to have you. This is gonna be fun. Thank you so much for having it
Maybe we should mention early in our marriage
We almost argued or fought about nothing except for when we were reading the scriptures
Our scripture study
That's when the fights happened.
For whatever reason, she would bring up a question,
I'd be like, oh well, obviously the answer is this
for that or the other.
And she's like, you have the answer, do you?
Yeah.
This was going to be a discussion.
Yeah.
We had the hardest time getting over that.
Like, that's when all the negative feelings would happen.
So if you need to pull out the fire extinguisher today,
if things can't heat it, we have progressed though.
We've mostly progressed beyond that.
That's what 20 years will do for you.
But we've got you to sitting close side by side.
So we may need to get a referee.
Yeah, this is going to be fantastic.
Just in Aslan, let me read a little bit from the Come Follow Me manual and then we'll turn
it over to you and see where you want to go.
The opening paragraph says, when John and Jude wrote their epistles, corrupt doctrine
had already started leading many saints into apostasy.
Faltz teachers were questioning whether Jesus had actually appeared in the flesh.
What could a church leader do in such a situation?
The Apostle John responded by sharing his personal witness of the Savior.
Quote, this is the testimony which we give of that which was from the beginning,
which we have heard, which we have seen with our own eyes,
which we have looked upon and our hands have handled of the word of life.
And then John taught about love. God's love for us and love we should have for him and word of life. And then John taught about love.
God's love for us and love we should have for him and all of his children.
After all, John was a witness of that too.
He had personally experienced the Savior's love and he wanted the saints to feel that
same love.
John's testimony and teachings on love are just as needed today.
When faith in Jesus Christ is questioned and false teachings abound, reading John's
epistles can help us face today's adversities with courage.
For there is no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear.
What a great opener.
All right, Aslan Justin, where do we want to go from here?
What do we need to do in order to get the most out of these chapters?
Well, let's talk just a little bit about these teeny tiny little epistles.
They're so easy to skip over. We tend to not think of them often, but they are filled with so
many beautiful things. We're not 100% sure exactly who wrote these because there wasn't a name
signed to them. For second and third John, they have a lot of language in common with the gospel
of John. They refer to Jesus as the word, focusing on love and light,
whether it was John himself or whether it was a group of people who were closely associated with
him and were taught by him and picked up the way he taught the gospel, whichever it is, we call
these the Johanana pistols because that means related to John. Then first John is a sermon that
is kind of meant to be circulated around. I like to think of it like a copy of the Leahona that it's filled with advice and teachings
from church leaders, and they could share that with groups wherever they were.
Second, John seems to be like a cover letter to a specific congregation that you could
put with a larger sermon and maybe has a little more specific things that they're talking
about.
And then third, John seems to be a letter
to a specific person named Gaius.
We might think of it like here is a copy
of a letter from church headquarters.
It is sent to say a ward,
and there's a letter saying,
hey, in your ward specifically,
please take these teachings to heart.
And then maybe there's a separate little note
to the bishops specifically talking about these things.
Jude is attributed to one of Jesus' brothers.
It seems like James the brother of Jesus
was the bishop of Jerusalem, and after he died,
it may be that Jude kind of stepped into that role,
but we don't know a lot about him,
but we know that this is a pastoral letter,
him writing to people he cares about.
Fantastic.
They're small and simple, these epistles,
but they can bring about great things.
John, I just quoted the Book of Mormon there.
I don't know if you noticed.
That was really good.
These letters, they're going to have a lot of recurring themes.
They're kind of like a piece of music, like a symphony,
where we're going to have a lot of the same topics circling back around,
like little melodies that we go, oh, yeah, that's familiar.
And then they'll elaborate it on it in a different way.
Today, we're going to kind of jump around a lot among them
because they're all going to talk about love,
they're all going to talk about sin and the need
we have for a savior.
So we'll kind of bounce around a lot.
Kind of a cyclical message between love and light and truth.
Let's start here at the beginning of John I.
And the background here is really important. Why is he writing
this particular letter to all of the churches in this area? In 1 John 226, he says,
these things have I written unto you concerning them that seduce you or that are deceiving you.
It's interesting in 2 19, he says, they went out from among us. So what you have is you have
these Johanon churches that are connected closely with Pyrs the Apostle John, and there's people
within those congregations that are leaving and trying to deceive them. In 3 John, we get the name of one of these individuals
and Aselin always has to pronounce this one for me.
How do we pronounce that?
I say it diatrophies.
Diatrophies. That sounds Greek to me.
Yeah.
Diatrophies, who he seems to be rejecting John
and the other church leaders in there, it says in 3 John.
Diatrophies who likes to put himself first
does not acknowledge our authority.
So if I come, I will bring up what he is doing,
talking wicked nonsense against us.
I love that phrase.
They're talking wicked nonsense against me.
Wicked nonsense.
He's that with my kids in the next episode.
Sometimes my eight-year-old does that.
She talks wicked nonsense against me.
Wicked nonsense against me.
So we have these individuals that seem to be trying to take the church in a different direction.
And in fact, one biblical commentary says that the Johan and Epistles quote describe the
fracturing of the Johan and community itself.
John's going to talk a lot here about fellowship
and about love and how do we connect these two?
You're gonna see the word fellowship come up again and again.
And of course, me as a talking fan,
I have to think of fellowship of the rings.
The last chapter in the book, The Fellowship of the Rings,
is called the Breaking of the Fellowship.
It seems maybe that's what's happening here.
We're breaking the fellowship.
We have John here really trying to emphasize
how do we connect?
And in some ways, this gives me a lot of hope
because you could imagine people at the time,
wow, this Christianity thing,
it's clearly not gonna get off the ground.
They're fracturing, the fellowship is broken,
but the work of the Lord will get done.
And throughout the history of Christianity in the beginning of the restored gospel,
you had some fracturing that was happening.
And yet the work of the Lord just continues on.
I was thinking back, I've been a bishop a little over four years now.
Just a few months after I was called as bishop, we had 2020.
There was a lot of fracturing going on in societies. Just the other day, I happened to
look at an email that I sent to the ward and as when we're just starting to get back and do
church again and it was like, okay, this third of the ward is going to come on this Sunday. The next
third of the ward is going to come on this Sunday. The next third on that Sunday, we're going to
stay distance. You're going to sanitize your hands when you come in, we're going to tape off some benches, we're not going to sing disinfect afterwards.
All these things, there was a lot of stress put on our community with that shout out to
the Mapleton 26 ward.
They did so good during this, but you still work with some fracturing and some difficulties.
We had epistles from the first presidency about what we needed to do.
And sometimes it was really hard for people.
I love how what he's trying to do is he's trying to say, hey, let's connect here and let's
get some fellowship going on.
Yeah.
So it seems the problems of today are not new.
They've been around for a while.
Yeah.
John wasn't dealing with a pandemic,
but it seems he was dealing with some cultural forces
at the time and cultural beliefs
that were taking people away.
Deucetism, I think that's how you say it,
was one of those things.
This group really didn't have a very high opinion
of the material world and our physical bodies.
So they thought, well, there's no way
the Son of God would have come into a physical body.
That's just impossible.
They could saw, well, Christ and Jesus was really just
kind of a reflection and he didn't really come
in the flesh, he couldn't have really died on the cross. That wouldn't have really happened.
It would just appeared to have happened.
And another thing is they kind of had a different view of salvation.
Salvation was more, okay, well, I got to get out of the flesh.
And that's really what it was about.
It wasn't really about sin.
You can imagine the Apostle John saying, oh my goodness,
these people don't believe that Christ came in the flesh
and they don't believe in sin and the need of a Messiah.
These are vital pieces of the church, the doctrine of the church.
Exactly.
I love first John chapter one.
So with these beliefs, what does John very first start out with and Hank, you kind of
went over it initially, he says, that which was from the beginning, which we have heard,
which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled the word
of life. For the life was manifested, and we have seen it, and bear witness, and show unto you that
eternal life, which was with the Father, was manifested unto us. So right off the bat to combat these
things that are going around, John is saying, look, I have seen handled. I know he really
did come in the flesh. And what an amazing thing to have these special witnesses that can
testify. We're not maybe deserial dealing with this.
We have our own things, but we still have our special witnesses today that can tell us
what we need to know and combat what's going on in the world.
As we drift around this way and that way, you can someone says, wait, this is where we
need to be.
I was there.
I witnessed this.
I like that.
An anchor keeping us there.
There's something that President Ballard said in his talk about staying in the boat, if
you remember that. He said, we cannot separate Christ from his servants. Without his first
apostles, we would not have an eyewitness account of many of his teachings, his ministry,
his suffering on the Garden of Guest 70, and his death on the cross.
We needed them then we need them now.
This is really helpful to understand this idea that came also from Greek philosophy.
This idea that matter is course and unrefined.
And also, why would you want to be resurrected?
Why would you want a body because having a spirit is more transcendent.
It's better.
That's one of the things I noticed reading John. How many times know you have to confess that he came in the flesh. So he really did have a body. Count the resurrection. What have we got
for him and for all of us? You could see why that's important to John. And maybe that's why it's
important for Satan to fight against it. That maybe he really didn't have a body, maybe God doesn't really have a body sort of a thing,
and maybe the body is something to have to stand for.
I love this idea that we have special witnesses,
and that this is a critical way that the Lord organizes his people.
We see through all history, he sends a messenger
who has received something from him that he can then share to others.
As I have studied these epistles, I had a really special experience reading them alongside of the Gospel of John chapter 17, the Lord's Great Intercessory Prayer.
And that's an idea for some of our listeners. That could be a really good experience to go through that chapter and go through these little epistles. There is an extraordinary amount of parallels.
It's very close to the ideas that are there.
And if we look at that intercessory prayer as the desire of our Savior's heart, that that's
what he wants, it's really powerful just to do a few verses from John chapter 17.
I have manifested thy name unto the men which thou gave us me out of the world, thy Just to do a few verses from John chapter 17, those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as we are. As thou hast sent me into the world, even so have I sent them also into the world.
And neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on me through
their words, that they may all be one as thou father art in me and I in thee, that they
also may be one in us, that the world may believe that thou has sent me.
And I have declared unto them thy name and will declare that the love wherewith thou has loved me
may be in them and I in them. I've pulled a few verses there, but I feel like that's Christ's
goal for us, that we understand who he is and why he came and the love of God, and he gives this message to his
special witnesses, and the ripples just keep moving outward. And we share them with one another. And he
prayed for us because we are part of that group who are receiving these words from his witnesses. And
what are we going to do with this? He prays that this will unify us. I see these very much as being the goals of these epistles
that we're reading now, that the author of this,
he wants the same thing that Christ prayed for in that prayer.
This is a fantastic visual for me.
So we've got these churches that John is speaking to
and kind of some wandering going on,
some drifting, hey, come over here, listen to me.
No, come over here, listen to me.
And all of a sudden you have John declaring
from the very first moment, come, here. Listen to me. No, come over here. Listen to me. And all of a sudden you have John declaring from the very first moment come listen to me. Let's get back centered. I was there. I saw him
I know almost you can feel hopefully these churches turning and going. Oh, yeah
And that's maybe the role of a prophet. We wander a little bit
We go and listen to this group. We listen to that group and here the prophet says we can come back
Come back come back to center.
Let's come back to what we know.
Let's read 1 John chapter 1 verse 3.
That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that you also may have fellowship
with us, and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his son Jesus Christ.
What does fellowship mean to you? What do you think it looks like?
It feels like brotherhood, sisterhood, it feels like friendship, it feels like we're all in this
together. Justin mentioned COVID and I just remember the feeling when we started to come back
again to the chapel and how good that felt just to see everybody and to hug everybody and say,
how you been, I haven't seen you.
And that was a feeling of fellowship perhaps.
I really like the phrase that crops up in a few places in the scriptures in Moses 7 and
in Dr. and Covenant's 45 that God's people are of one heart and one mind.
That's what we're going for the feeling and I love how in every time
that phrase comes up, heart comes before everything else. It's there of one heart and one mind.
We disagree about a lot of things. Maybe we can find that place of unity in our hearts. That's
probably the first thing. If we can agree about how we want one another to feel, if they feel loved, if they feel included, that we want them to feel close to God and that there
are questions and there are problems or things that matter to us and we're in this together.
And if we can find a way to unify with our hearts, I feel like the rest we will figure
out with time and with the Lord working on us, but getting our hearts right, I have an experience where I felt so fellowshiped.
The Sunday right after I graduated high school, I was trying to decide where I wanted to go.
If I wanted to stay attending young women's until I would left to college or if I wanted to go to
relief society, and that felt kind of weird and scary. And the great thing is, is there's not a
right or wrong answer. Young women can choose what they want to do shortly after they've graduated.
And I was kind of feeling out the waters, and I poked my head
into the Relief Society room and kind of looked around.
Two seconds after I poked my head in, Sister Steven Sonson.
And Sister Stevenson is one of those fairy godmothers in my life.
She just noticed me.
She would say hi in the halls, and she kept track of very Godmothers in my life. She just noticed me. She would say hi in the halls
and she kept track of what I was doing in my life
and she talked to me like a person.
She didn't just kind of let her eyes skate over me.
She saw me and her hands shot up and she waved and she said,
Hey, Zlyn, you come sit by me.
And I didn't feel like I had a choice at that point.
So I came down and I sat next to Sister Stevenson
and she squeezed my arm and she said,
I am so glad you are in relief society with me.
And I have got to tell you, from that moment,
I knew I belonged in the relief society.
No matter where else I have served in the church since then,
no matter how big or how small,
you know, the relief societies I've been a part of since, I'm a member of the relief
society of this amazing global organization of women.
And Sister Stevenson was glad I was there.
She communicated how God felt that he was glad that I was there.
And I have thought since then, don't we all need that?
Don't we all deserve to have an experience
where we say, you are here, we are so glad you're here.
You comes it by me.
Acel, and I love that story.
It's so small.
It's not something grand with a lot of fanfare,
but that moment can really impact someone's life.
I'm thinking of a home teacher I had.
When I was 14. His name was
Ray Padrastek. I didn't love it when the home teachers came over. I'll be honest. As a 14-year-old,
my parents would say, okay, come on, sit down. The home teachers are here and I thought,
oh, they stayed for so long. I sat down and he could tell. I think I was just drifting,
just kind of staring at the window. I still remember this.
He said, have you ever heard of Frank Sinatra?
And I said, oh yeah, yeah, I've heard of Frank Sinatra.
He said, I was friends with Frank Sinatra.
I said, no, you were not.
And he said, no, I was friends with him.
I was a door man in Las Vegas.
He said, I was friends with him with Sammy Davis Jr.
with Dean Martin, you know, as this door man in Las Vegas.
And it peaked my interest.
I said, are you serious? I said, what did they say to you? And they're like, oh, hey, Ray. And
we would talk all the time. And he had me. I don't know. He was interested in me. He was interested in
me being interested. I liked it when the home teachers came over. Here it reminds me of Sister
Stevenson, who just said, come here. I am so glad you're here. I am interested in you." He shared part of himself with you, something that was meaningful to him,
and I think that is such an important part of fellowship, is that we understand one another. You
can't really be in fellowship with somebody that you don't know and don't understand. And when we
get to know each other, that makes all the difference in the world. I mean, I think that's one reason why Christ can love us perfectly
because He knows us perfectly.
The better we know ourselves and each other,
this is life eternal, that they might know the.
So knowing God is that fellowship
and that love that just emerges from that.
I think it's really wonderful that the church
is not just telling us everybody stay in your
own bedrooms and study the gospel and get your personal revelation there and just live your
own life. And now let's come together. Now let's share what we've learned. That's the glory of
the diversity of God's creation. Is that we all experience this a little bit differently. And
there's tremendous richness when we bring it together and we share it.
I think that's part of our consecration is willing to share ourselves with other people.
That's fantastic.
John, did you have anyone fellowship you?
Yeah, I knew Frank Sinatra too.
He, he, he, he, he left his heart in San Francisco and I said, well, I don't think that's
physically possible. And then he, you know, he taught me what a metaphor was. He left his heart in San Francisco and I said, well, I don't think that's physically
possible.
And then he, you know, he taught me what a metaphor was, but I love the story, but the
idea of the heart being mentioned first.
Oh my goodness.
That's in my notes.
And just this idea, Aisland, thank you, that we can disagree about a lot of things in our
gospel doctrine class in our release of society on elders
core, but we can still be of one heart. That is a really interesting thought. And our
hearts focused on the Savior, on loving each other in the midst of our different
experiences. And I really like that idea. And I thought of Zion too, one heart, one mind.
And maybe we can even disagree
in Zion, but we can be of one heart. I don't think unity means sameness. Have you heard that phrase
harmony is being different together? The idea of being of one heart. And how that's listed first,
okay, my mind's going to be racing on that. You'll have to stop me from time to time because I'm
going to be thinking about that for a while.
And John, you mentioned about the one in Christ going back to 1 John 1, 3, he's testifying
of these things.
We have seen we've heard, declared to you that you may have fellowship with us.
Isn't that interesting idea that he's declaring these things so that they can have fellowship
together? that he's declaring these things so that they can have fellowship together. They might be different in some many other ways, but all coming together in the Lord Jesus Christ,
that's where we can really find that fellowship, that connection is in him.
Isn't it interesting that the church gives one fourth of all of their potential preaching time
with everybody together to fast and
testimony meeting where people get to come up and share what they have seen and heard
and experienced and testify of the Savior and the experiences that they've had, what
a tremendous thing that our church is organized such that they say this is important, this
is valuable that the primary child can get up they say, this is important, this is valuable,
that the primary child can get up and say what they have to say.
And the teenager can say what is dear to their heart.
And let's make a space for sharing what we feel,
what we know, and we're all stronger when we do that.
I love what we're talking about here,
all of you because loneliness today is an epidemic,
the fellowship, the sociality, the friendship
that the church can bring.
Can literally, I think, literally save lives
that you have a group that you belong,
that you're involved in something bigger than yourself.
I think all of us could sit here for a moment
and just think of the friends we have made
from being part of this church. And that right there, just that, I mean, there's so much more
that the church provides and offers, but just that right there is worth the price of admission,
the beautiful people that I've come in contact with. I could just start listing off people who have
changed the direction of my life. And you think of those across the earth.
I think that in the UK, there's now a minister of loneliness in the government
because it's such an epidemic.
Just is this something you've looked into at all?
You know what, there's actually quite a bit of research that's been done
on loneliness, sense of belonging.
There's a research trip, BYU,
that did a really fantastic study
and turns out that feeling lonely
is as bad for your health
as smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.
I mean, it's actually physically really bad for you
to be disconnected with other individuals.
My research on religion and mental health, and this is the general research on religion and mental health, and this is the general
research on religion and mental health, religious people are in general on average less depressed,
less anxious, fewer thoughts of suicide, lower suicide rates for religious people. And this has been
something that's widely acknowledged within the research literature. And one of the reasons
acknowledged within the research literature. And one of the reasons is because you have that sense of connection,
that sense of belonging within religious organization.
And we give the kids emblems of belonging.
And you don't have to do anything for those emblems of belonging.
You get the necklace, you get the ring.
You have these emblems saying, you belong here.
You have the sister Stevenson that's grabbing you and emblems saying, you belong here. You have the sister Stevenson
that's grabbing you and saying, no, you belong here. President Nelson is grabbing each one of us
saying, you belong here. Let me just mention that one of the things that I have researched is suicide.
This is such a sensitive topic. Those of us whose lies have been impacted by the suicide of a loved one. The feelings are just so overwhelming and they can be very complicated.
And we can think about what we should have done, what could have been done better.
When we are working with this topic, we just need to know that there are so many things
that go into a person being suicidal or deciding to end their life. And there's no one factor.
There's nothing that one person did. There's so many things that go into that. That we just need to
make sure we don't oversimplify it and that we don't do what it could have shoot a sort of thing with suicide, but just realize,
and I think the church has done a masterful job of this recently. If you go to the church's website
or your gospel library app in the life help section, there's a topic of suicide.
And you have Elder Remland, who does a fantastic job of talking about it, there's some really good materials there. So for anybody who is suffering
from those kinds of thoughts, reach out.
If we know anybody who has those thoughts,
reach out to somebody who you can get help from.
Again, the church does a really wonderful job with that
and is so understanding of individuals
who have these kinds of thoughts and what a challenge that
is, the highest risk for suicide are actually men in their 40s to 60s.
That's the highest risk for suicide.
Your elder's quorum is actually the most at risk by far from dying by suicide. We don't do a very good job as middle-aged men
have connecting with each other. We sometimes don't find friendships with each other. Obviously,
this is something for the whole ward to focus on. But, boy those Elders' corn presidencies have a wonderful opportunity
to create that fellowship. My word, we're going to watch the football game altogether as
a Elders' corn, you're in a weekend. It's those moments where can we create that? It
matters so very much to our mental health. In fact, those feelings of disconnection rank really high in terms of the kind of psychic
pain that we can experience. Some of the most prominent theories and research on suicide, the
beginning point, the point where the suicide ideation begins is what we refer to as thwarted belongingness. I'm trying to belong and I can't.
I'm trying to be a part of a group and I just can't be part of that group.
The second the twin thing that goes along with that that can lead to that then is
perceived burdensomeness and we'll talk a little bit about shame later, but just this idea that I
can't connect with anybody
and I'm just a burden to other people. And those are the two twin things that really begin
thoughts of suicide and from the basis for that. So anything that we can do to help connect with
other individuals, to see them, to make sure that they know,
you're not a burden being here.
We love you.
And you can contribute, no matter who you are.
Elder Christophe Senn once said,
no matter who you are,
all of us can contribute to the unfolding
of the kingdom of God in your age.
Talk about a guy who maybe experienced loneliness. Marona, I might be in your age. Talk about a guy who may be experienced loneliness.
Marona, I might be in that category.
John, you'll know this better than me.
Marona chapter six, he talks about the church and that their names are taken, that they
might be remembered and nourished, and they did meet together often and did speak to
one another concerning the welfare of their souls.
That's almost how are you?
How's your soul?
Right, how are you doing?
It seemed when I was a kid, I don't know,
maybe I'd just experienced St. George in the 80s.
It was just a word family.
Everything we did was about each other.
Maybe I just had a special childhood.
Maybe it was just all of us who got to grow up in the 80s, right?
I'm with I'm with you there Hank. I'm fascinated by this too and Justin
I was wondering if the research shows that is technology
contributing to loneliness because you can feel connected and we even call it that but can that contribute to I'm
I'm so into my device
that I'm lonely or is that possible?
Absolutely.
I don't think there's much of a question that technology has been part of creating these
lonely spaces.
Kids nowadays, they go out with friends less, they leave the house less, they socialize
less than they did in previous generations.
And there really is something about being physically with other people.
Our bodies, our minds are born to bond with other individuals.
They're not set up to bond with cell phones and the technology.
Now I love to, we're using it here, but if we are doing that at the expense of
actual personal sitting down, holding somebody, we're missing something that is so deeply
necessary for us as human beings as children of God, that we will starve ourselves of bonding.
And I think loneliness is that starvation
for the actual connection with other people
and being physically present with somebody
makes a huge difference.
It's interesting how it takes all of us
pitching in to make that.
Sometimes it can be a little bit easy for us to say,
well, when I went to church,
I didn't get anything out of it.
Nobody was watching out for me
and I'm willing to come and send my kids to the activities
that feel relevant to their interests or whatever,
but I'm not gonna worry about everything.
And of course, we can't all do everything.
Right.
But I love that metaphor of, you know,
the church should be a potluck, not just a buffet.
We don't have a youth program
if nobody's willing to show up and be there for the youth.
Even though sometimes
that takes a lot of time. We don't have a good Sunday school discussion if nobody's willing to
be the teacher and take the lead. And we all, of course, we want to get things out of this. And
that means we all need to give what we have. And we're going to give different things. My definition
of adulthood that I tell my children is that you contribute more than you consume. I said, it's not just when you get married or when you have kids because who knows what
life plans will be like, but when you're ready to say, I'm here and I'm building, and we
all need to consume something.
We all need things and that's fine.
But you're also looking around and saying, how can I give in my own way?
Yeah.
It feels just as good to give as it does to receive, to give that fellowship, to know the
names of the people in the benches around you and to call them by name and to shake their
hand and to say, how are you?
That can really be life changing.
Thanks for that.
I really got to my heart there.
John, do you look like you have something to say?
Yeah, I was thinking about when Al and the elder led those who believed Abinadi out to
the waters of Mormon,
he gave what Elder Holland called the most complete list of what the newly baptized commit to do and be when he said,
are you willing to come into the fold of God and be called as people?
And then notice how much is more about contributing than consuming to mourn with those that mourn?
Every week we can do that.
Comfort those who stand in need of comfort.
So much of the baptismal covenant is not just about you.
Part of it is, but it's about,
now you're part of a community
and how we're gonna take care of each other.
So that resonated with me.
I wrote that down.
I contribute more than I consume.
I mean, to stick that on our fridge,
see if it works around here.
Yeah.
That's all right. The other day as a bishop, and I can see, I mean, to stick that on our fridge, see if it works right here.
The other day as a bishop, I was consumed with a lot of different administrative sorts of things. And, you know, a lot of things just pile up.
I was praying about, I have only father, how can I lift this burden here from me?
I thought of this elderly woman in our ward who's suffering from arthritis
and all kinds of things, a lot of pain.
And I went over and visited her and I left
and I just felt so good.
You cannot contribute more than the Lord will bless you.
You contribute that and the Lord just gives
and getting a past all the administrative stuff
just to sit with somebody who appreciated a visit
is soul healing for me.
It was a really beautiful moment.
Yeah.
I've never thought about the fact that John made have learned this from the Lord himself.
The fellowship with the Father and with his son Jesus Christ.
I'm wondering if John, maybe I'm going too far here, but John is remembering the fellowship
he had with the Lord and still has.
I love that.
Let's read verse five in first John chapter one. This then is the message which we have
heard of him and declare unto you that God is light and in him is no darkness at all.
I just love to hear what pops into your head with that idea of God being light.
That's one of very, very common metaphors that we hear in the scriptures for God.
And this does sound like the gospel of John.
He hits that right.
I think it's the fifth verse.
I could go look it up, but I think right when he said, look, in the beginning was the
word and the word was with God and the light came into the world.
And the darkness comprehended it not.
It sounds like John is making the same connection.
He made in his gospel.
This is the light.
The first thing I thought of was I drew some musical notes
in the side of the verse.
There is in his side no dark, and I said,
all, you're mom must have been in the Cybernaccal fine.
The Lord is my light.
Yes. And so I thought of that. And then I thought of what's become one of my favorite Your mom must have been in the Cybernacle family. The Lord is my light.
Yes.
So I thought of that.
And then I thought of what's become one of my favorite.
It's always dangerous to say my very favorite, but it's really close.
And that list can change daily, but section 50 versus at 23 hank that which is of God
is light.
And he or she that continue with in God receiveeth more light. And that light
growth brighter and brighter until the perfect day. I just love that idea of continuing in God. And
I think it comes up in these epistles too of continuing in God and don't discontinue God. If
you're looking for for more light, you don't discontinue the source of all light. So you continue in God. If you have questions, great,
own them and continue in God because that's where the light is. So that's what I thought.
I love that. I think a lot about the verse in Isaiah that says,
the people that walked in darkness have seen a great light, that they were in the shadow of death
and the light came upon them. And I think it's one of the biggest metaphors
of contrast that we get in the scriptures.
That's something that everybody's gonna understand.
The difference of what you're able to do
and how you might feel and what you're capable of
when you're in the darkness,
what you can understand about the world around you.
And then when those lights come on, when that sun rises,
that's when we do think.
That's when we get out there and experience the world and learn
and God is light. That's something that permeates everybody's experience. If God permeated our lives,
the way light permeates mine. If I was connecting with God every time I flipped on a light switch,
that kind of frequency, that idea that he's with me. The sun all day long is shining and he's with me. I love what Elder Deeter F. Ugtorff said in
2017, and his talk bears of the heavenly light. He said, every time you turn your hearts to God in
humble prayer, you experience his light. Every time you seek his word and will in the scriptures,
the light grows in brightness. Every time you notice someone in need and sacrifice your own comfort to reach out in love, the light expands and swells.
Every time you reject temptation and choose purity. Every time you seek or extend forgiveness, every time you courageously testify of truth, the light chases away darkness and attracts others who are also seeking light and truth. Christ's light brings hope, happiness, and healing
of any spiritual wound or ailment.
Those who experience this refining influence
become instruments in the hands of the light of the world
to give light to others.
I love his examples of when we can feel
and experience that light.
And I think we've talked a lot about that.
We're having a feeling of fellowship.
God's light is with us.
Yeah, you can feel it.
You can see it in our faces.
Maybe I should look at this closer,
Justin and Asel and you have six children.
I've noticed that when it's dark outside
or even dark in the house,
they have a tendency to not go to those places.
Something that is totally fine in the light.
They'll play in the backyard,
they'll go in the basement as long as it's light. But the moment something is dark, they have a
tendency, I say, hey, can you run down to your room and get the, uh, no, you, you come with me.
Why? There's something about the light that is inviting. But man, in the dark, I remember,
when I used to walk home, you guys are bringing back all sorts of memories for me with all this
fellowship. I remember walking home to my childhood home and during the day used to walk home, you guys are bringing back all sorts of memories for me with all this fellowship.
I remember walking home to my childhood home and during the day, that walk home was just
fine.
It was just a simple walk home.
But man, at night, when it was dark, it was eerie, that walk home.
I was kept looking behind me and then eventually I just started running.
I think to get home, I think it's the perfect metaphor.
God is light. It's inviting. It's comfortable.
It's safe. When I see something where God is probably not present or he's not there, I hesitate.
I don't want to go there. It makes me anxious. It makes me nervous. Do your kids do that?
You know, actually, our youngest Thomas, he went through a period where anytime he'd wake up in the
morning, he would go through and he would turn on every light. Because he was awake, you know, if he needed to go downstairs and get a new
box of cereal or something, he would go downstairs and not only turn on the lights that helped him
make his path to the storage room, but every single light. And six hours later, I'd end up going
downstairs and be like, all the lights. All the lights. Electric bill is what it is. But, you know,
I love that you spoke to that.
His need to be able to see and
perceive what's around him and feel comfortable
and how important that is.
There are so many decisions we have to make in our lives.
And, oh, my goodness, how often do we feel in the dark about those?
Flipping on that light or having the light of faith,
just having that faith, having that light,
oh, can keep us from that paralysis
that sometimes we experience when we're trying to make a decision.
But if we have that faith, you know what?
I'm gonna follow the light of the world.
Maybe I don't know everything, but I do know this.
If I follow the light of the world, it's gonna be okay.
We're just like those kids. We're trying to turn lights on.
It'll all over. I feel in the dark. I go to the temple and trying to turn the lights on. I want to're just like those kids. We're trying to turn lights on. Call over.
I feel in the dark.
I go to the temple and trying to turn the lights on.
I want to see.
And God doesn't begrudge the electric bill.
Yeah.
Where are these lights on again?
He's like, please, please.
Will you turn on the light?
Yes.
My son Andrew went to the MTC to go to Iceland.
His MTC companion went home after only a few days.
He was alone in the MTC.
He learned Icelandic.
When he got to Iceland, the sun came up at 11 a.m.
and set it three or four.
Oh, goodness.
It was cold and dark and windy.
I'm so proud of him because he,
and then COVID hit.
And he was inside.
And maybe Justin, you know about this,
but some kind of a happy light or something,
the missionaries have a light in their apartments
to give them a certain amount of light physiologically
each day to keep them sane.
So light is a fascinating topic to me and when I think
of the mist of darkness in lehystream one of the things it did was it isolated people on the path
wow we talked about belonging and loneliness because now you couldn't see that there were
others in front of you that were trying. And others behind you that were trying.
The decision to go on had to become an individual decision.
But I wonder if they couldn't see, but they could hear the great and spacious.
And what a circumstance.
I'm alone.
I'm hearing all that.
But I've got the iron rod.
I'm going to press forward.
And I wonder if that mist of darkness
being that metaphor kind of goes along
with what we're talking about.
What do you guys think?
That makes me think of the verse a little later on,
perfect love cast it out fear,
because I think when we get in those dark places,
it is scary.
We have the mist of darkness, we have people yelling at us.
I've got the siren rod.
Now I can't see the tree anymore.
And it's scary. And what do I do? All of a sudden some of the trust we had before when we could see the tree begins to dissolve. And perhaps part of that verse there about perfect love casting out
fear, we can say, I'm not quite sure, but I know God loves me. Like Nephi said, I know God loves me and I know this is his word.
And that's all the light I have right now.
It feels pretty dim, but it's the light that I have.
I'm going to stick with it.
And eventually you stay on that path and the mist does dispel and the light does come.
There are those moments where we are in the dark, where we're not quite sure.
And it might be day after day, week after week, sometimes year after year, but the Lord
promises us.
And I know that if we stay moving forward, that light will shine again.
And we will feel that,
and we will be out of the fear that we're experiencing."
That verse is 1 John chapter 4, verse 18 and 19. He says,
There is no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear, because fear hath torment.
He that feareth is not made perfect in love. Then we love him because he first loved us.
Elder Uktor Fwan's taught that sometimes that fear might be because of us.
But if we are causing fear for somebody else,
this was in a 2017 and his talk perfect love,
he said, maybe we through our actions through unkindness,
through bullying, through us having a lack of fellowship,
a lack of light in our life, we might be a cause for somebody else's fear.
And if we can be transformed with God's light and God's love, it's apparent this is really
profound to me. How can I remove fear from my relationships? It's love that's going to push that.
I had an experience about 10, 15 years ago. I was in to push that. I had an experience.
About 10, 15 years ago, I was in a place spiritually where I had a lot of really big,
40 questions.
And they'd been things that I'd wondered about my whole life, but for some reason, at
that space of time, those questions got bigger and wortier and spikier until they were really pressing out anything else that I could think about or see or experience.
At that point, the term faith crisis wasn't as much in vogue. You didn't really hear that term very often.
I personally am glad because when I hear the word crisis, I think everything's in crisis, everything's bad, everything's broken. And that was not my case.
I had wonderful experiences in my family,
in a ward family, in church callings, in scriptures,
and with the prophet.
And I mean, I had so many good things.
But I also had these questions that just really,
it got to the point where I struggled to have peace.
I was very concerned, and a lot of them focused around
what my place was in eternity.
And with God's plan and what was this going to look like, I was really the place where I was
suffering, where I was hurting a lot. And Justin sure tried to be a good listener, but he really
wasn't sure how to help, and it was me. Then I received an invitation to serve as the primary music leader.
And I was excited for the calling because I loved working with kids and I loved music.
And it sounded really fun.
I had no idea what kind of impact that was going to have on.
Over the course of the first few weeks and months as I served in that space, I began
to have profoundly revelatory experiences where I would be standing
at the front of the room and leading the kids in a song. And I would be filled. I felt like
a vessel that was overflowing with God's love and God's light. It's almost like I was
getting a download from heaven. I would see in the middle of dancing around and leading a song and whatever it was
It's like I would see these faces and I would see each one of those children and I became hyper aware of
Well, they're having a rough day to day or it's kind of tough for those two to sit next to each other or wow
That kid is really connecting in a way that they don't usually are and you know, it extended to the teachers
connecting in a way that they don't usually are. And you know, it extended to the teachers,
noticing that that's a teacher who's feeling this.
And I was so filled with God's light and God's love.
And it was happening over and over and over again
until I realized that light and that love
was pressing back on the difficulty in the pain
that my questions brought me.
I knew from my experience.
It almost makes me think of Nephi's language
where he talks about to the consuming of his flesh.
I was filled with the sense of love and light
and I thought, if God feels that way
about these precious children, I'm one of his children
and I'm included in that.
And the piece that that brought me,
the way it dispelled my fears and my concerns,
was nothing short of miraculous.
And that is a space where I continue to feel those feelings
and feel my testimony get deeper and stronger,
and it has transformed my life.
Something that we should have put on her bio
is that she is the best primary music
leader in the church. She's had that calling for 10 years. It's a different time. I just did my
11th program. Yep. Oh wow. It is legitimately the best church. Any other thoughts on perfect love castes out fear?
These two are tied together in first John art.
They have the idea of fellowship and light
because he goes on in chapter two to say he that say
if he is in the white, but hates his brother,
doesn't fellowship is really in the dark.
He that love with his brother abides in the light.
It seems that John might be connecting light with love and fellowship and fear and hate
with the darkness.
Chapter 2 verse 11, that he that hated his brother is in darkness and walketh in darkness.
And knoweth not whether he go with, because the darkness has blinded his eyes.
So do you see that connection being made here? Love and light and
darkness, fear and hate all kind of tied together? I love how our prophet the last number of years
has been inviting us to examine ourselves for things that could be based in hatred, whether or not
we're aware of them. You know, he's invited us to look at what are our biases?
Is it racism? Is it these other things? Where do we struggle to have love? He's invited us to
heal the conflict in our lives, to be peacemakers. As we talk about God being love, if we're not
being loving, we're not in alignment with him. As we try to become like him, that means just
increasing our capacity and our ability to
feel and share and experience love. And we can be blinded to the fact that we are in the dark
and in hatred. So what does John say here? The darkness has blinded his eyes. I might assume, oh no,
I'm doing fine, I'm in the light, I'm doing great." And it's like, no, you need to do that introspection that President Nelson is talking about. Is there things in your heart that are of darkness?
I think about the times when I've had difficult feelings towards somebody, maybe somebody has
done me wrong. It can become just so all-consuming. You're in bed asleep and at 2 a.m. this little lawyer in your brain wakes up and
opens this briefcase and starts to litigate how right you are and how wrong the other person is
We just spit on it again, and just keep going over and over it. I can say that just feels like darkness
It feels kind of good to think about in fact they've done
Studies where they look at a person's brain when
they're thinking about getting even with somebody. I'm going to get back at that person.
Pleasure centers light up. It's like you're eating chocolate. But always it's so destructive
to our souls. It wears away at our physical system. It just does. It just wears us down
it. And we can become sick because of it because they're hating on people. And it just wears us down it and we can become sick because of it because they're hating on people
and it just blinds you to the beauty of life, to the beauty of that person, to the fact that
they're a child of God. You just can't see clearly. Hatred does a real number on us in terms of
being able to see reality clearly. It seems like that's what happened to this one man that you talked about in third John.
What did you say his name was?
Diatripes.
Diatripes, who loves to be first, blinded by pride and he does not like what John is
teaching.
You might say to him, you're not seeing, you're not seeing the truth and the light that's
being offered to you.
Pride has blinded you.
One thing I think that's tied to all of this and it's really interesting. Again, the people
at the time were saying, well, there's no real sin. And here in 1 John chapter 1 verse 8,
he says, if we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. And then in verse 10, if we say
that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us. It is so critical
that we recognize when we make mistakes. From a mental health perspective, one of the
worst things we could possibly do as a society is
believe that all choices and all beliefs are equal to each other.
That in reality, there's nothing bad.
Recognizing that there are some things that are much better than others is a very mentally
healthy thing for us to do.
And we all have those moments, right, when we're doing something we don't want to be told
that we're doing it wrong and the other day I was trying to fix our shower and Aslan had to come in three
times and say I don't think you're doing that right because I'm yanking on something trying to get
it off and I'm like you're gonna make it worse. I know and I'm not just or fix it but I'm trying to
be and finally I'm like okay yeah I'm probably doing this wrong and so I call trying to be and finally I'm like, okay, yeah, I'm probably doing this wrong.
And so I call my neighbor Jared and he has all the tools
and he gets in and he gets it off just fine.
I have to swallow my pride in that instance
and recognize, yeah, I was kind of breaking it
and we maybe kind of had to fix it a little bit
after I was through.
But it is so good when we recognize that we do something wrong.
If we never recognize when we do something wrong, then we really can't progress at all.
I think it's so important that we realize how vital the gospel patterns are.
Those are the right choices, even though they might be difficult,
even though we might have to swallow our pride, and even though they can be really strenuous, boy, those are the
right choices.
I've been crunching numbers on mental health for a long time, literally around thousands
of statistical analyses on mental health, and I can tell you that God's patterns lead
to a significant advantage in life.
And sometimes when we sin, I think Satan kind of has
maybe two things, it's like a balanced beam.
Satan is trying to push us off one side of the other.
Pushing us off on one side, he says to us,
if we sin, that really wasn't sin.
Now that really was okay.
If we say we have no sin, we just deceive ourselves.
Maybe we even get a little angry at a commandment that we broke and say, well, no, that's not
really sin and we kind of go down that road.
That's interesting that we can deceive ourselves about that.
I think all human beings are a little bit prone to that.
As I was studying verse 8, I was thinking about that, why do we deceive
ourselves? Sometimes it's rationalizing because maybe repentance feels uncomfortable or scary
and we'd like to avoid it. We'd like to not need that. Maybe we are afraid of change that
would need to happen. Maybe we are afraid of losing face or losing status and admitting
we did something wrong. I know I've been in a situation where I have been fearful when I knew that I needed to
confess something that that person was going to get mad at me, that it would damage a relationship.
Again, that fear can be one of those things that leads us to deceive ourselves.
I remember when I was in high school, there was a guy I really liked and he liked me too.
And I was too young to be dating.
According to the standards, my parents had encouraged me to keep and they said, you know,
just be friends. Let's not be dating. And I told myself, well, we're not dating. He's
my best friend. We're not dating. I'm too young. We're just best friends. And now when I look
back, I go, oh, yeah, we were dating. My kids laugh at me because I'll kind of tell them, look, if it looks like a cat and if it sounds like a cat and if it acts like a cat,
it's probably a cat.
But sometimes we tell ourselves, no, that's a turtle.
I think we're really prone to that.
But again, if we have the love of God in our life, it can push out our fear of repentance.
If we know he loves us, maybe we don't have to be so afraid
and so avoidant and so prone to deceiving ourselves.
Yeah.
Huge win for the devil is to get us to believe that sin is not sin.
On the other side that he might push us off is when he wants us to fall into the despair
and self-hatred.
He doesn't say that, oh, it's not sin, but he says, oh, it's so bad and you are so bad, you are so wrong. You're broken. Yeah, you're broken,
and that then gets into the shame area of things where it's not that thing I did was bad, but you are
broken, you are evil, and that just makes it so you are disconnected from other individuals. As leaders and as parents,
we do have to walk the straight and narrow as well. And we have to tell people the whole truth. It's
so critical to tell them the whole truth. The whole truth is number one, yeah, that's something wrong.
Number two, you are loved infinitely. We have to tell those twin truths, right? That love and loss, it was brought up earlier, that we have both of those. We have to tell the whole truth
to people. It's not kind to hide it from somebody. I was talking with somebody the other day,
a really nice guy. He's got teenage kids. And I was mentioning about how the mental health
of Latter-day Saints is on average. We have our mental health issues, certainly, but on average, better than most, about how gospel patterns really feed into
that good mental health.
And he brought up shame and, well, so important to realize.
But then mentioned that one of his teenagers had started drinking in an effort to not shame,
the dad said, well, just be safe. Number one,
drinking is illegal. You can get into a lot of trouble just on that score. And number two,
drinking is also associated with poor mental health. Now, I don't know the full story and the
full relationship, so I don't want to say too much there. But there is this
reticence today to say that certain things are actually wrong. We need to make sure that we are not shaming the person by telling the whole truth that it is wrong and God does love you infinitely,
and all things can be made right through the atonement of Jesus Christ.
But it is, again, as a society, one of the worst things we could be doing
is to not tell people when things are good or bad
because then you're really in the darkness, not knowing which way to go.
We have to be able to do that.
And I just tell church leaders, I say, you teaching
right and wrong to your youth, you're literally saving lives. You're literally saving lives.
Obviously, let's stay away from the shame. That's something we have to do. We also cannot
hide from our youth and adults
that there really are some things that are wrong
and we need to avoid those.
Yeah.
You imagine trying to help someone get somewhere
and which way's North?
Well, whichever way you choose, right?
Which every way you choose is in North.
Whatever North feels good for you.
Well, how am I gonna get anywhere?
How am I gonna get anywhere
if you're not telling me where the lines are,
where the fences are, where I can go,
where's dangerous, where's not dangerous?
Just and I think it might be helpful
to kind of define that.
I remember I think President Packer gave a talk about guilt
and compared it to like the warning light in a car
that says, you're low on motor oil,
you need to get this fixed and it's a really good thing.
When you're talking about shame as a bad thing
What can our listeners know that that's not appropriate?
Shaming somebody. What does that mean?
That's a great question. When we shame somebody we
indicate to them that
How could you have done such a thing?
Is it like you said you're bad not what you did is bad, but you are bad, is that?
Yeah, it is.
It's saying to the person that you are bad
and indicating to them that you are the problem
and not what's happened is the problem,
but you are the problem.
Let's say a kid comes home after their curfew.
The parent says, you are so irresponsible. Versus, hey, we've talked about
this. You know that we have these rules and we've talked about the consequences. And so we're
going to follow through with the consequences. By the way, there is no law written in heaven
that when a kid comes home after curfew, that you have to immediately be angry with them and talk about that first.
There's no irrevocable law.
That has to be the first thing.
Right.
Right.
Right.
I would begin with, how is your evening?
How did everything go?
And talk to them and connect with them.
And then, all right, with that built.
And so they know that you love them.
Now let's talk about, hey, you were late.
What happened?
And my guess is that if you ask them how the night went, they'll probably start
by talking about why they were late.
But then you can get into, all right, a rule has been broken.
We know the consequences.
And hopefully we have talked about the consequences.
And then we can enact those consequences.
Sometimes parents use the consequence of anger.
If you do something wrong, your consequence is for me to get really angry at you. And for me to try and
heap upon you the fire of the internal pit so that you just feel small and bad.
In my parenting head, that makes me think,
oh, that'll stop them from doing that next time.
There's something logical about that.
I'm wrong, but I can see me as a parent going,
oh, if I bring this painful experience on them,
the next time they'll go,
well, I don't wanna have that painful experience,
but you're right.
I'm actually doing more damage, aren't I?
Justin, at that point? It's that painful experience, but you're right. I'm actually doing more damage. Are they just in at that point?
It's good if we can explain to our kids.
This was really hurtful to me when you said this.
This really created some difficult feelings in me or I felt angry.
So expressing those things is not a bad thing.
But when we use anger as the whip and we say, I'm gonna whip you into shape
by just bringing all brimstone down on your head,
that really can make the individual feel very small
or it can make it feel defiant when we're the other.
Versus, hey, we've set up these rules.
You came in late, you know that you're not gonna be able
to go out for another two weeks.
Okay, we know moving on. Now, not all kids to go out for another two weeks. Okay, moving on.
Now, not all kids react like that, and I totally get that being apparent.
I understand that.
Sometimes we think that if we just verbally flagulate the other person enough, then that'll
keep her from doing it again.
And quite frankly, we also think that doing that to ourselves will correct us.
I don't know if you've ever done this, but you do something wrong.
And then you say, I'm so stupid, I'm such an idiot,
I'm so dumb.
We call ourselves all the most horrible names
in the book for about five to 10 minutes.
And we think, okay, now that I've called myself
all these mean names, I have somehow a tone for my sins,
or I've somehow now indicated to myself,
I've given myself
enough pain that I won't do it again.
When in reality, we've just lied to ourselves.
We've just said how bad and evil we are and how stupid.
Well, guess what?
That stupid evil bad person that we've just told ourselves are, well, we're probably
just going to do the same thing again versus saying to ourselves, I know I did something
wrong.
And I know I used my agency to do something wrong.
And we didn't excuse it. A real apology looks like not like, oh, I'm sorry, I snapped it you,
but I was really tired. A better apology is I snapped it you because I used my agency in a bad way.
We're not shoving it off to anything else. We're owning that. No, I did this. This was me,
We're not shoving it off to anything else. We're owning that.
No, I did this.
This was me, but I can fix it and I can move forward.
And I'm a child of God.
And I have somebody that has infinite power
and has infinite love.
That can help me through this.
We can hold our heads high as children of God
and walk forward.
And guess what?
When we realize we hurt somebody,
that will bring about the remorse of conscience.
I think that's such a critical thing.
In fact, it's a very mentally unhealthy thing when we hurt somebody that we don't feel
a little bit of remorse or empathy.
Like we should feel that.
That's good.
But we don't cross over into the shame area where we feel like we are horrible people.
The thing was horrible.
We should acknowledge it, face it straight forward,
and then say, all right, I'm going to fix this. I'm going to do something that's going to
improve this situation. And I can connect with people, especially with God, that can help me do that.
Just as I find it ironic that oftentimes I'm upset with my children for giving into the natural man.
So I'm gonna show them how upset I am
by giving into the natural man, right?
How dare you give into the natural man that way?
Let me now lay into you with my,
what the natural man wants me to do.
It satisfies the natural man to say,
you are so selfish versus,
let's talk about this,
that was not a very effective decision.
That one is being self-restrained and the other is let me heap coals upon your head and
make you feel small and awful.
Along with this, 1 John 3 verse 9, it says, whosoever is born of God does not commit sin. It's like, oh,
no, great. I guess I'm not born of God. But the JST helps us out a lot
by saying,
does not continue in sin for the spirit of God remaineth in him.
And he cannot continue to sin because he is born of God, having received
that Holy Spirit. I promise, so you don't continue in the sin.
When I see going back to his bishop, somebody coming in and saying, I messed up, I'm like,
you are born of God.
I'm like, this is so wonderful.
You have been born of God.
This is holy because you don't want to continue in sin.
People that don't want to continue in sin, that's being born of God. It's not very useful for John to say, oh, yeah, those that sin and those that don't want to continue in sin. People that don't want to continue in sin, that's being born of God.
It's not very useful for John to say,
oh yeah, those that sin and those that don't sin,
because we're talking about Jesus
and the rest of everybody else.
But he's talking here about those that continue in sin
and those that don't,
or don't want to continue in sin,
are working not to, that's born of God right there.
So the guilt that I feel might tell me who I really am,
that hey, I am a divine being, I'm a good person. I feel guilty because that thing happened.
I like that. Guilt is a sign of a person who was born of God. You might remember Brad Wilcox's talk
about the young man struggling with the problem and he said, I can't go to church because I'm such a hypocrite.
His leader said, well, you're a hypocrite if you try to deny it or say it didn't happen or don't confront it or say that it's the church
shouldn't have such high standards. But here you are confessing it and trying to deal with it.
That says something about what you just said. Just this is who you are. Look, look at what you're doing.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.