Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 Corinthians 8-13 Part 1 • Dr. Mary Jane Woodger • Aug 28 - Sept 3
Episode Date: August 23, 2023Are we sensitive to others’ challenges within our congregations? Dr. Mary Jane Woodger examines Paul’s letter to the Corinthians and their difficulties with intellectualism being inappropriate imm...orality, indiscretion, and insecurity.Please rate and review the podcast which makes it easier to find.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-31-40/00:00 Part 1–Dr. Mary Jane Woodger03:07 Introduction of Dr. Mary Jane Woodger05:58 Background regarding Corinth07:04 Butchers and sacrificed meat09:39 Personal rights vs. spiritual welfare of others14:25 Story of a Vietnam Veteran15:25 Being submissive to God17:37 Paul’s day and views on women21:18 Paul doesn’t condone abuse23:38 Elder Holland teachings about men and women25:58 Spiritual Gifts30:25 Less conspicuous gifts32:54 Moroni and spiritual gifts34:54 Hank shares a personal story about listening39:42 Dr. Woodger shares a personal story about testimony43:21 John shares keeping a testimony journal44:07 Eleazar Miller and Brigham Young45:44 Heber J. Grant called to be Stake President47:13 John’s How Do I Know if I Know?48:04 Additional spiritual gifts50:01 Complementary spiritual gifts52:16 Wisdom and knowledge57:29 End of Part 1–Dr. Mary Jane WoodgerYouTube: https://youtu.be/R1eqqsj-iekFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with the awesome John. By the way, welcome John. Thank you.
It's a good day here at Follow Him. Hey, John, we're going to continue in these letters from Paul. We're once again in first Corinthians. We were in first Corinthians last week with Dr. Bell. And here we are again, in another lesson in first Corinthians. What are you learning about Paul so far? We've
been through a two of his epistles. What are you seeing? What have you learned?
I am so dazzled by Paul. We hear the phrase sometimes, I'd like to be an instrument in
the Lord's hands. Well, I think Paul is like a Swiss army knife because he could do anything.
He could speak different languages.
He could he could talk the Torah with a group of Jews and convince them or try to convince them
that the Messiah is Jesus and then he could turn and talk to the Greeks and quote philosophers
and stay toe-to-toe with him. He was amazing and I'm really loving learning about Paul here. Yeah, I've noticed too, John, how many problems he's dealing with in the separate branches
as we're going through.
Man, it's not an easy go for him as the leader.
I just don't think I thought of that before how many problems he was dealing with.
He's not just teaching doctrine.
He's trying to, okay, we got to be nice to each other. We got to get along. We have to find a way for Jews and Gentiles to be in
this together.
John, we're joined by a wonderful scholar and friend, Mary Jane Woodier. Mary Jane,
what are we looking for to today in this first Corinthians eight through 13 lesson?
Well, when I look at Corinthians, as you just said,
I look at the problems that that branch was going through
that Paul is dealing with as what I like to call an area authority.
I've kind of gone through and put it in modern terms.
You know, if you had a new branch president
and there's an area authority and the branch president writes
and says, give me some advice on the handle of these issues. And maybe I can just go through those.
You know, members are suing each other in civil court. They're frequently going to social clubs
where they're serving stuff that isn't exactly word of wisdom. Intoxicated men are handling the
ordinance of the sacrament. Women are saying, I'm going to conduct the meeting.
Paul's saying, you need to get rid of the fornicators.
And then the branch president said, well,
I've got this ancestral relationship in my ward
and they're both coming to church and flonning it.
And I'm just kind of looking the other way.
So what do you think, Paul?
Yeah, what can I do?
He's just dealing with what our
bishops deal with basically. I like to say there's nothing new with San under the sun. He's dealing with
the same things that that we're dealing with in our congregations. Fascinating. I think I'm looking
forward to this today, although I don't love talking about the problems you listed, but I am looking
forward to how Paul is going to address these. We can probably help quite a few leaders in the church with this episode. Hey, John, why don't you introduce Mary
Jane to our audience? We've actually never had her on the podcast before, even though she's a good
friend, I've known her for years. Tell us who she is. Yes, I'm excited to introduce Dr. Mary Jane
Woodger. She's a professor of church history and doctrine at Brigham Young University. She was born and raised in American fork
in Salt Lake City.
In 1992, she completed her master's of education
at Utah State University and received an educational
doctorate in education and leadership at BYU
with a minor in church history and doctrine.
She's written over 20 books.
She wrote one called Beloved Prof about David O. McCay,
more recently gifts of self-esteem and spiritual gifts in the Christ-like life with Lloyd Nuel.
And I was excited to have Dr. Woodgerone because as Hank and I, we both went to Greece earlier this year
and I needed to have something to say in Corinth.
And I have this book, Go ye into all the world.
Mary Jane wrote this article called,
The Eyes of Corinth, Modern Problems Not New.
And all of this you can find at rsc.biu.edu now,
but she's like an expert on Corinthians.
So.
Sounds like she's an expert on everything. Right. So we're just thrilled to
have her. So thank you for joining us today. My pleasure. And not only is she a prolific writer,
John, she's just really, really nice. When I first came to BYU, she was one of the first to come
and find me and say, welcome and you belong here. And we love having you here. That meant a lot to me.
I don't know if you knew Mary Jane, but that really made a difference for me. A little nervous
coming into to BYU. It was odd to walk those halls with people I'd read plenty of books.
I know what you are saying. And I'm like, oh, there's that guy. I read his book.
There's that woman. I read her book, right? And you're like, holy cow, where am I?
All right, I'm going to read a little bit from the manual here. And then we're going to turn it over to you. And let's go where you
want to go into this, this lesson. Here's the first paragraph in the manual. In Paul's time,
Corinth was a wealthy trade center with residents from all over the Roman Empire. With so many different
cultures and religions in the city, church members in Corinth struggled. You've already talked about
that. They struggled to maintain unity.
So Paul sought to help them find unity in their belief in Christ.
This unity was to be more than just a peaceful coexistence.
Paul wasn't asking them to merely tolerate each other.
Rather, he taught that when you join the Church of Jesus Christ,
you are baptized into one body, and every body part is needed.
It goes on a little bit later to say,
so whether you feel like you've always been at home in the church
or find yourself wondering if you actually belong,
Paul's message to you is that unity is not sameness,
but you need your fellow saints and your fellow saints need you.
I thought it was a great opening to this lesson.
So Mary Jane, where do you want to go?
How should we start this?
Do we need some background on Corinth or should we just jump right in?
As we talk about Corinth, I have kind of conceptualized some problems they were having and they all
start with the blood or eye. As identified, those you've got intellectualism being inappropriate,
immorality, indiscretion, being insumisive and insecurity. And you've
covered the first three intellectualism, being
inappropriate and immorality with chapters
one through seven. But I'd like to look at
those other three problems they were
having that we also have, starting with the
first one, which I call indiscretion.
Paul's going to apply the gospel to social
situations. We might look at Greco, Roman society and say that doesn't apply to us, but I really think
it it does. The first one chapter 8 through 10 that he spends a lot of time on maybe Saturday,
Saint's reading it go, this has nothing to do with me. But there's two problems.
One, people were going to the butchers, some meat, and you realize that in Corinth, if you
got to eat meat, it was a big deal.
It was very scarce.
They would sacrifice the meat to the idols.
People were going, I don't know if that's right. The other thing is
saints in Corinth, ancient saints, were being invited to pagan temples for dinner parties
and they weren't sure if they should go. Those are the things that Paul's dealing with.
I've never been invited to a pagan temple for a dinner party. I would wonder too. I
would wonder if I should go. If I went to the local grocery store and
Said to the butcher now. I want to buy this tea bone, but I need to know if it's been sacrificed to Zeus or not
They'd be calling security. This woman's got some problems
But if you look at it in the context, it really does apply to us
So his response in chapter 8 verse 4, he says,
as concerning therefore, the eating of those things that are offered in sacrifice unto idols,
we know that an idol is nothing in the world and there is none other than God but one. In theory,
eating idol meat had no religious significance for the Christians, but Paul's going to add
something. So if you go to chapter 8, again in verse 9 he said, take heed less by any means
this liberty of yours becomes a stumbling block to them that are weak. For if any man see
the which has knowledge sit at meat in the the idols temple, shall not the conscience of
him which is weak, be emboldened to eat those things which are offered to idols, and through
this knowledge shall the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died.
So I believe pause applying the principle of love your neighbor to yourself to this social situation.
In some context, in Corinth, eating meat offered to an idol is correct and others, it's
inappropriate depending on how it's going to affect all the people that are involved.
Paul admonished, and this is going to chapter 10, he said, once so ever is sold in the
shambles, that eat asking no questions for conscience sake. Paul instructs the Corinthian
saints not to ask where the meat that you're going to buy
came from unless someone else makes an issue of it, then the
saints aren't to buy it. Some may eat meat because the
examples of other saints or through peer pressure, but
feel it's wrong.
Thus, they would violate or weaken their consciousness.
So in other words, if you put your rights ahead
of the spiritual welfare of another, you're in the wrong.
In other words, go through the motions
and the liberty of yours or some right of yours
can become a stumbling block to your neighbor's testimony.
What does that apply to us? Well, he's not talking about commandments. He's talking about
those gray areas, word of wisdom, dress, those kind of situations where you've got to
consider your neighbor's feelings. We need to be concerned about what we do, how it affects
our brothers and sisters. I'll give you an example in class and this is talking about something
that I don't think we even consider that much, but we were talking about word of wisdom,
we're talking about Coke. So I have one sister return missionary who raises her hand said,
well sister would you, when I was on my mission, my mission president said, if a member of the church offers you a coke, just drink it, just drink it.
And then I had another return missionary who raised their hands said, well, sister, would you
in my mission, the saints were so conservative that the mission president said even if a member of another faith offers you a
coke, don't drink it. So it's in the context. It's in the context. Yeah, trying to be careful with other
people's faith, especially Paul says the week in the faith. Be careful with those who are, how would
you describe it? That their testimony isn't quite strong enough
to maybe handle some of this ambiguity.
Yeah, absolutely.
Let me give you another example.
Let's say sister Smith comes over,
she sees me outside and she comes over.
By the way, I love her sister Smith.
She is one of my favorite people.
Yeah, sister Smith is the best, right?
I just look ahead to her.
I'm glad I got to marry her.
All right, keep going.
Yeah.
I didn't know that. Yeah. Oh dear, maybe I better I got to marry her. All right, keep going. Yeah. I did know that. Yeah.
Oh dear. Maybe I better change it to sister Jones. And she says, Oh, I'm sorry, you see,
you're seeing me like this and she looks like she could model for the Lyahona cover.
Right. She says, I just got off my exercise bike where I was reading my scriptures and I was
my whole week bread was rising. And I just got home from the grocery store and I have some twinkies and bag and you know some
diet coke and she said, oh do you know twinkies are just full of triglycerides?
And have you seen what a coke does to a penny?
And then she says, I'm just going to go and pick up some peaches to can.
You do can fruit, don't you?
And you know by the time sister Smith gets done with me,
what do I feel like, something to crawl out from under the rock?
I'll have to go talk to her about this, right?
Yeah, you need to.
You need to.
So even in the church, Paul would say,
be sensitive if someone's not on your level.
No.
What's the principle?
It's love your neighbor as yourself.
Be sensitive. I like that.
I think sometimes we look at love your neighbor as yourself, those two great commandments. Love the
Lord like God with all your might and strength. And we think there's three commandments there.
We think the Lord's saying, love your God, love your neighbor and love yourself. He's not
commanding us to love ourself. He's just saying, I'm aware that you do that. He's simply
acknowledges that we our own comfort is our first priority. He's saying, as an
ancient saint, you've got to worry about your neighbors and what what you're
doing is is going to affect them. Is this getting into the avoid the appearance
of evil? I don't mean to say eating meat was evil, but it's that kind of idea.
What will this do to others who may be weaker in the faith? Let's look at verse 13 of verse Corinthians 8, flesh while the world standeth, lest I make my brother to offend. This reminds me of Jesus saying to
Peter, do the children of the kingdom give tribute to remember that story? Yeah, but Jesus says, well,
no, but lest we offend them. Go get that coin out of that fish's mouth and we'll pay.
Here's the savior being, but you know, we didn't come to a fence. So let's avoid a fending if we can.
Anyway, I love that Jesus would teach that.
Mary Jane, I really like what we're saying here
because we're not labeling you as evil or sinful
because you're doing this thing.
Just be sensitive to other people.
I really like that.
Every ward would be better.
Every branch would be better
if we were just sensitive to each other. Let me share with you a quick story. I had a friend who was a young dad in a ward and they came in
one of their first weeks. They sat down in sacrament meeting and he has a lot of noisy kids. An older
gentleman behind them decided to get up and switch benches. And my friend assumed it was because
his family was so kind of out of control.
He helped that little bit of that grudge towards that man for a long time. He said it wasn't
tell much later that I learned that he had served in Vietnam and the people he were fighting often
used children in that fighting, that they would either use them as shields or they would hand them weapons.
And so he had some real, very real trauma connected to that. He suddenly became very sensitive
to the needs of a member. Another member when he knew about this specific member's problems.
And so maybe that's similar to what we're talking about here. Be sensitive to maybe what other
people have experienced. What is Paul teach next?
I think the next one that we need to deal with, which is a difficult one, is being insubmissive. If you go to Corinthians 113, I know for some women, this is a difficult scripture where Paul says,
the head of every man is Christ, and the head of the woman is the man, and the
head of Christ is God.
Now some who read that misinterpret Paul's words, in error they feel that there's a continuum
of value and a woman is on the bottom.
I believe that Paul's focus in that verse is not on gender, but it's on the role of husbands and wives.
He is not talking about an individual's value, but if you look at the kingdom of God,
everyone is in submission to someone else, to a higher authority. Submissiveness is not gender-based. Nor does it demean the one who is presided over.
I would ask, is Christ lessened by being submissive to our Father in Heaven?
Is Abyssal who submissive to a state president less than?
Every latter day, saying, is voluntarily submissive through common consent with an understanding
that the person who presides over them is going to serve them.
I think as Paul talks about the covenant relationship that is made through a sealed
couple, his paradigm for a husband and wife relationship is Jesus Christ and the Church.
So as a wife, can I ask my husband to treat me better than Christ treats the Church?
Paul was perfectly comfortable with women teaching, counseling, testifying, praying and exhorting, but not with ruling, organizing
or presiding over a word or branch.
Especially if you look through Olympians, Paul loved and showed great concern for women.
It's not Paul and it's not the original puzzles that start the degradation of women.
It was rather the culture and society in which they lived.
Let me just give an example.
Often referring to women as the weaker sex.
It was Socrates who immortalized the Athenian disdain of toward women.
And Socrates said that being a woman is a divine punishment since a woman
is halfway between a man and
an animal.
That Greek philosophy that Paul's dealing with, privated the Christian church's thinking,
and it not only accelerated the apostasy, it accelerated the apostate perception of women.
Let me give you another one.
That was Socrates.
That first Socrates. That was Socrates. Yeah
Here's Augustine
Augustine wondered how a man could possibly love his wife
Knowing what she is and what she represents and concluded that he should love her as a Christian is commanded to love our enemies
Goodness. The ascetic church fathers identified when with sexuality, which they equated with filth
and the horror of sexual relations became transported into a horror of women.
So here you have in contradiction, what does Paul say?
In 1111 he says, neither is the man without the woman, neither the woman without the man
in the Lord.
That's revolutionary in the culture that he's living in.
It's just amazing.
He's never inferring that a wife should be a dredge, or a dormat, or a slave.
And for Paul, I believe, the only reason he's saying you are voluntary
submissive is because that person who's presiding is going to serve you. If you want to find
fault, you can easily find it. But don't find it with Paul or those original apostles.
They were so different in the way they regarded women. And I would
say they regard women in the same way that our general authorities do. And as I read
Corinthians, I feel that Paul was absolutely clear that women receive their due respect,
which the society and culture around him was not giving women.
I was down at Deseret Industries once.
I was looking for a book.
My books.
Yeah, that's where I find mine.
You're a book.
Yeah.
Goodwill, recycle bins everywhere.
You can find mine.
I found this book called Who's Who in the Bible?
Kind of a Reader's Digest publication.
I wanted to see what they said about Melchizedek, but I looked up Eve and it said that in early Christian theology,
Eve was seen as the devil's gateway.
The opposite of Mary.
Yeah.
The opposite of Mary.
I found another book called History's Worse Mistakes and the People Who Made Them.
And I opened up the first page and it said, Adam and Eve were the original idiots.
It's fun to show that to my class when I teach Second Nephi to about the fall. And then to look at Joseph F. Smith's vision where he uses the phrase, and about people he saw in the spirit world,
and our glorious Mother Eve, and many of her faithful daughters, and to see how different that is
than Socrates, or even some of the early church fathers, like you just said, our glorious
Mother Eve and find that anywhere in traditional Christianity that phrase.
I think Paul would never, we just talked about him worrying about being insensitive to your neighbor.
He would never ever condone any kind of abuse for a woman in any way, shape, or form.
And you get into Corinthians and you get into this whole thing about their cultural dress standards.
And a woman needs to cover her head This kind of thing and he's he's just saying there that it's a form of respect
Kind of like in our congregations. I don't think a man would wear a baseball cap
He would never condone abuse and as you look at especially what President Nelson has said and
the incredible, incredible things
I've learned about being a female and the kingdom of God from President Nelson. I think
Paul would say, oh, absolutely, he has this respect for women. And when you look at the
civilization which he was brought up in, especially as a Roman citizen,
and the place of women, he is revolutionary in how he sees really women and men as being equal
partners in that marriage relationship. As we've talked earlier about some of the first witnesses
of Christ's resurrection, the women at the tomb and everything, what a prominent part they play in the whole story of the resurrection.
It's interesting, John, that, though that's not mentioned all that often in the Gospels,
there were women following the entire time.
There were women in the Savior's circle, in the group that would go with him, from place
to place.
This is President Nelson in 2022.
As President of the Church, I affirm the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ on this issue.
He's talking about abuse. Let me be perfectly clear. Any kind of abuse of women, children,
or anyone is an abomination to the Lord. He grieves, and I grieve whenever anyone is harmed.
He mourns, and we all mourn for each person who has fallen victim to abuse of any kind.
Those who perpetuate these hideous acts are not only accountable to the laws of men,
but will also face the wrath of Almighty God.
I think he was perfectly clear.
There's a book out by Elder Jeffrey Arholon called Our Daystar Rising, and it's basically
his commentary on the new testament.
And he had a commentary on 1 Corinthians 11, 11 that we just read. So let me, let me read from Elder
Holland's book. The Apostle Paul taught that the inspired concept that neither is the man without the
woman, neither the woman without the man in the Lord. Just 1 Corinthians 11, 11. I know the truth
of that in my own life. No
prophet, no apostle, no president of the church, no mission president, no bishop,
no deacon's corn advisor, no scoutmaster, no seminary teacher, no one in all
this world has taught me what sister Holland has taught me. She has been the
light of my life for more than half a century in a category of her own beyond
any of those great fine teachers
that I have had. I like to tell young adult men, you make sure you marry the right woman. I don't
care about how she looks, I don't care about her education, I don't care about her social status,
I don't care about her income or what her parents were or were not. But I want her to have faith
in the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of
God Almighty, our Father, with her conviction of the Restoration and her love for you, you will
change the world and you will start by changing your own. Beautiful. And I'm just thinking, we just
lost Sister Holland, it's hard to read that. But Mary Jane, I love what you said. Can we expect our husbands to
treat us better than Christ treated the church? I'm so glad you put it that way. And that
Paul elevates marriage and elevates the marriage relationship so much when he talks about
that. How does Christ treat us and the church? And, boy, if we can treat each other that way,
that seems to be the ultimate that Paul's giving us.
I think it's his expectation, Paul's expectation,
and it's probably not happening as it needs to,
but it's the ideal and it's how he envisioned.
In mortal settings, it's not as it should be,
but that's what he envisioned. That's what he's trying to say.
Yeah. I like that.
He even flat out says in another place, brethren, love your wives as Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it.
The next eye that I want to cover, I think, is the most important one in Corinthians, and that's insecurity.
That, I believe, has to do with spiritual
gifts. So chapter 12, Paul starts right out and he says, now look, concerning spiritual gifts, brethren, I would not have you ignorant.
Paul says, I want you to learn about spiritual gifts. Now look at President Nelson, same thing.
He said, pray to understand your spiritual gifts, to cultivate, use and expand them even
more than you ever have. You will change the world as you do so. I would suggest that you will change your world as you learn about spiritual gifts and
become confident and secure in owning those gifts. And notice in verse 70 says, but the manifestation
of the Spirit is given to every man to profit with all. In other words, every member of the church has at least one
spiritual gift. Now, I call, there's two apostles, modern apostles that I call the great
spiritual gift apostles. And then I call President Nelson, the prophet who spoke more about spiritual
gifts than any other prophet in my lifetime. But the two apostles that spent more time than any others are Elder Maxwell and Elder
Marvin J. Ashton.
That's going to say, Marvin J. Ashton comes to mind when he asks for your children.
Yeah, Elder Maxwell will say, the spiritual gifts that we have are not new.
You possess them pre-mortally.
So he says, this is all the Maxwell, each mortal is endowed genetically
environmentally, but also premortally. We each have, for instance, at least one spiritual gift.
None of the approximately 20 gifts specified in the scriptures is insignificant. Yet if we despair,
then whatever our gifts or talents we have failed, a gift is no gift until one gives it.
Lucifer apparently wasn't as multi-talented, but the memories of what might have been not him constantly.
No wonder he is an incurable insomnia.
That's Elder Maxwell.
We will never see a word Smith like Elder Max. Yeah, he's just some people don't think they have any spiritual gifts
Elder Maxwell says that's gonna bring despair. Here's elder Ashton
He calls that one of the great tragedies of life a tragedy
It seems to me is when a person classifies himself as someone who has no talents or gifts
and classifies himself as someone who has no talents or gifts. When in disgust or discouragement we allow ourselves to reach depressive levels of
despair because of our demeaning self or
praiseal it is a sad day for us and a sad day in the eyes of God. For us to
conclude that we have no gifts when we judge ourselves by stature,
intelligence, grade point average, wealth, power,
position, or external appearance is not only unfair, it's unreasonable.
Some later they say, who are believers, fail to believe they possess any spiritual gifts.
Elder Ashton goes, it's up to each of us to search for and build upon the gifts which
God has given.
We must remember that each of us is made in the image of God that there are no unimportant
persons.
So, I get from what those two apostles have said, what Paul said, that if you don't believe
you have spiritual gifts, you're going to be in despair. You're going to have those other awful deeds,
depression, doubt, darkness,
until you can rediscover what, in mortality,
what spiritual gifts you had, primordially.
So if you'll go to verse four, Paul says,
now there are diversity of gifts gifts but of the same spirit.
Not all spiritual gifts are listed in Corinthians or DNC 46 or by Moroni.
And there is a whole, I think that list is illustrative, not comprehensive.
And Elder Ashton, again, gives what he calls less,
a list of less conspicuous gifts.
He says this,
many gifts are referred to as being very real
and most useful.
Taken at random, let me mention a few gifts
that are not always evident or noteworthy,
but that are very important among these may be your gifts.
Gifts not so evident, but nevertheless real and valuable.
Let us review some of these less conspicuous gifts,
Elder Ashen says.
The gift of asking, the gift of listening,
the gift of hearing and using a still small voice,
the gift of being able to weep, the gift of hearing and using a still small voice, the gift of being able
to weep, the gift of avoiding contention, the gift of being agreeable, the gift of avoiding
vain repetition, boys and teacher, I need that one. The gift of seeking that which is righteous,
the gift of not passing judgment, the gift of looking to God for guidance, the gift of being a disciple, the gift of caring for others,
the gift of being able to ponder, the gift of offering a prayer, the gift of bearing a mighty
testimony and the gift of receiving the Holy Ghost. And then Paul says, but all these, and I would
include those gifts that Elder Ashton just listed. But all these work
is that one and the self-sane spirit dividing to every man severely as he will. So
there is this diversity of gifts but they are all honorable and look what Paul
says in verse 23 as he compares compares, I believe, our spiritual gifts
to the human body.
And he says,
and those members of the body,
which we think to be less honorable upon these,
we bestow more abundant honor,
and our uncommly parts have more abundant comeliness.
For our comely parts have no need,
but God hath tempered the body together,
having given more abundant honor to that part which lacked, that there should be no schism in the body,
but that the members should have the same care one for another. When I read that, I'm looking at
those gifts that maybe we would call uncomly. And Paul is saying, they're all needed. They're
all needed as much as the gifts even that are listed by Paul and Joseph Smith and Maroni.
I'm glad you mentioned it. We all, when we think of Maroni 10, we think, oh, Maroni's promised.
Right after that, Maroni gives this list of spiritual gifts and you mentioned
also section 46 and I'm really grateful for that one that talks about some is
given to teach some to believe on their words. In my margin, I put here's Nephi that
says, I want to see what my father saw and he sees and then he tells Sam and Sam
just believes him and I think both of those are our spiritual gifts,
with those two as an example.
I just have here also, Elder Mankanki said,
in the fullest sense, spiritual gifts are infinite
in a number and endless in their manifestations.
And I love that Elder Ashton said,
gift of listening.
I've heard Hank give some really excellent counsel
about listening.
We've had a few home evenings about interrupting. Ha, ha think Mary Jane, sometimes we see our spiritual gifts as weaknesses.
People who weep are often like, oh, I hate that I weep so easily.
And I'm saying, that's a spiritual gift.
That's a spiritual gift.
Elder Ashton lists that one also.
That it's a gift to be able to cry.
Yeah.
When people are shy, they think, oh, this is such a curse.
And I tell them, I covet that gift.
John, it would be good for you and I to sometimes be shy, right?
Close your mouth sometimes.
What a gift.
What a gift to keep your mouth shut.
I would love that gift.
Actually, I had done some research on listening.
There are just so many different types of listening
from ignoring someone to kind
of passive and casual listening where you're kind of on your phone, you're doing other things.
And you work your way all the way up to this connective type of listening. So I have to share
a story. Sarah and I were out to dinner once with a big group of people and we ended up sitting
across from a couple we did not know. And so we were engaging in polite conversation. I was talking to the husband across from me
and we were talking about the red socks or something
and I was trying to be a good listener.
So I was trying to be interested in what he was speaking
about.
That's a good listener.
And a few minutes, probably, 10 minutes
into our conversation, I look over and my wife
and his wife are holding hands and they're both crying
across the table.
And I looked at them kind of shocked.
I was like, wow.
And my wife looked at me, both of the, both my wife and the woman looked at me and I just,
I didn't know what to say.
So I just said, what are you doing?
It's kind of struck me, John. So I said, what are you doing? It's kind of struck me, John. So I said, what
are you doing? And they went back to their conversation. And I turned to the man. I was like,
I'm not going to do that, right? We're not going to, we're not going to be holding hands
or crying anytime soon. So afterwards I asked Sarah. I said, what was that about? And she
said, she said, Hank, that woman is the best listener I've ever talked to,
which I was kind of offended because I'm obviously the best listener.
That she's ever talked to. But I said, why? What did she do? And she said,
well, she was asking about our family and our kids. And we had just barely had twin
boys. They were about two years old.
And she said, the woman said to my wife, you must rely on your mom a lot.
You've got all these little kids.
You must rely on your mom a lot.
And Sarah said, I would.
I absolutely would, but unfortunately my mom passed away about six months ago when they
were 18 months old.
Now even a good listener might say something like, oh, I'm so sorry. And then we
would probably move on in the conversation. She said, Hank, she looked as if I had kicked her or
something. She looked so hurt. And she kind of reached out across the table and she said, Sarah,
are you telling me that you are raising five kids and your mom is already gone." And she said, yeah, yeah, she is. She said,
tell me about her. Tell me about her, Sarah. I want to know about her. Sarah said, oh, thanks for
asking. Nobody ever asks, right? She said, she's the greatest grandma in the world. She,
she knew when their doctor's appointments were and who their teachers were. And she just was very interested.
She said, I miss her so, so much. And kind of the funny part of this is the woman said,
is there anybody that you have that you can talk to? And they both looked at me.
Right. And at that moment, at that moment, I said, what are you doing?
Right. And Sarah turned back to her and said, no, I have no one.
That moment of my wife being hurt and just having someone who was listening and understanding
really, really blessed her life. And that's because this woman had this spiritual gift,
this spiritual gift that she uses on a regular basis. It's not huge. It's not and that's because this woman had this spiritual gift, this spiritual gift that
she uses on a regular basis. It's not huge. It's not one that's up in front of everybody
on the pulpit, but it's real and it's there. Thanks for letting me tell a story there.
Well, I love that story. Look at me and went, no, I don't have anybody.
I don't have anybody.
Now that you mentioned.
Yeah, not really.
Let's keep talking about this, Mary Jane.
What more do you want to say about spiritual gifts?
You notice that Paul Maroni and DNC 46,
when they start to list those illustrated gifts,
always start, all three of them start with the same one and
Here's Paul where for I give you to understand that no man speaking by the Spirit of God
called Jesus accursed and that no man can say that Jesus is the Lord but by the Holy Ghost
so that I think is the premier spiritual gift is that you can say that Jesus is the Christ.
I just find that interesting that all three sections or chapters on spiritual gifts list that as the first.
noticed that in the doctrine of covenants, they are all listed in pairs. And this one, by Paul, misses the pair that is listed in the doctrine of covenants. That pair of gifts
became very important to me, one situation in my life. When I was 18, I had the opportunity
to participate in the Hilkemore pageant. And at that time, they took 600 women,
and I think we had about 24 return missionary males.
And they put us on buses and took us back from Utah
to Palmyra.
And we were on the bus for three days.
And I was one of the youngest and realized
that I was around people that
were much more developed in the gospel than I was.
And I remember we stopped in South Bend, Indiana.
I think we were at Notre Dame.
We had a test moment meeting.
And the meeting went on for I swear hours.
And with each testimony, I was feeling more and more inadequate. And finally, one of the
return missionaries got up and said, if there's any of you that are feeling your test mice week
compared to those that you're hearing today and I wanted to stand up and say, yeah, actually,
right here. He said, I just would encourage you to refer to section 46 verses 13-14.
And then he read them and he said to some, it is given by the Holy Ghost to know that Jesus Christ is the Son of God
and that he was crucified for the sins of the world. That's the one Paul's talking about.
But here's the pairing. But to others, it is given to believe on their words that they also might have eternal life
if they continue faithful.
And he said, now, notice, if you continue to believe on their words, you get eternal life
also.
At 18, I went, oh, okay, I get to have eternal life also if I have the gift of believing
on their words.
Of course, we cannot continue our whole lives without receiving that.
We can't go on borrowed light, but through the spiritual gift of believing on their words
eventually, we also will receive that knowledge.
And I love those, that pairing of pairing of those two gifts in the doctrine
cabinets, which kind of enhances what Paul is saying about that first
premier gift.
Yeah, reminds me very much of Matthew chapter 10.
Do you remember Jesus saying, he that receive a
the prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a
prophet's reward.
And for a long time, I didn't know what he was talking
about there until I read it really closely. shall receive a prophet's reward. And for a long time, I didn't know what he was talking about
there until I read it really closely and he's saying, you don't have to be a prophet to receive a
prophet's reward. You just have to receive a prophet. Then you are going to enjoy that same reward
that a prophet is given. He that received the prophet in the name of a prophet shall receive a
prophet's reward. And once I saw it, I it, oh, I don't have to be a
prophet in order to have the greatest blessings that God has in store. I do need to receive a prophet
in order to receive those same blessings. And I think you've got the capital P prophet and a small
P prophet too. I love that when Nephi is giving us his keys for understanding Isaiah, he says,
oh, it's not maybe clear to you,
but it's clear to those of us with the spirit of prophecy.
And we all think, oh, thanks a lot, Nephi,
you're large in stature too.
But I love the revelation 1910, I think it is.
The testimony of Jesus is the spirit of prophecy.
In that way, if you're with a group of people who believe and have a testimony of Christ,
you're in a room with prophets and prophecies, small, where else would you get it except
by the Spirit?
Doesn't that give us the reason we have testimony meetings every month?
How very important that is.
When I was a bishop, I kept notes on every testimony when I was there and I have a bishop's
journal and I didn't know when I had a brother pass away how beautiful that was because I could
go back and I could say, do you remember when brother Wardell said this?
Do you remember when brother Wardell said this? Do you remember when brother Wardell said this?
Do you remember another time when he said this?
And it was really nice to have those.
I know the angels record our testimonies,
but that has been a blessing writing those down.
I wanted to know how do people know?
When they say I know, how do they know?
And I was looking for that when I wrote those down.
I could see some of those
spiritual gifts in there. Mary Jane, there's a wonderful story from the life of Brigham Young,
where he talks about his baptism being taught and baptized, which, if you're the guy who baptized
Brigham Young, you had some impact on the church. This is what Brigham Young said about Eleazar Miller, who was teaching him
the gospel. He said, if all the talent, tact, wisdom, and refinement of the world had been
sent to me with the Book of Mormon and had declared in the most exalted of earthly eloquence,
the truth of it, undertaking to prove it by learning and worldly wisdom, they would
have been to me like the smoke which arises only to vanish away.
Now he's talking about Ali-Azer Miller, he says, but when I saw a man without eloquence,
or talents for public speaking, who could only say, I know by the power of the Holy Ghost that the
Book of Mormon is true, that Joseph Smith is a prophet of the Lord. The Holy Ghost, proceeding from that individual illuminated
my understanding and light, glory, and immortality were before me. I was encircled by them, filled
with them, and I knew for myself that the testimony of this man was true. My own judgment, natural
endowments, and education bowed to this simple but mighty testimony. And then in the meeting itself, he said,
there sits the man who baptized me,
brother, Eleazar Miller.
We don't have to be eloquent in this testimony.
In the bearing of a testimony,
we don't have to worry about talent or wisdom, right,
or refinement.
We can just speak what we know.
That reminds me so much of when President Heberjay Grant was called to be a stake president
at age 23.
Oh wow.
At 23, hold on a minute.
Yeah.
He was called to Tawila and he didn't live in Tawila.
When they sustained him, he got up to speak and afterwards they had the luncheon and President Taylor and Joseph
F. Smith were there and Joseph F turned to Heber J. Grant and said, I noticed this morning you didn't
bear your testimony that you know that Jesus is the Christ and I would encourage you to do that
this afternoon. And Heber J. Grant said, well, I didn't bear it because I don't know it.
And Joseph F. Smith was a gas and turned to John Taylor and said, I
suggest we undo what we just did. You know, we can't have a
steak president. And John Taylor said, he but J. Grant knows that
Jesus is the Christ. He just doesn't know that he knows it.
Yet, but he will. So what he but J. Grant did is he, he decided
he would go to all the different
wards in the stake and he was listening to one of the bishops speak. He had horrible grammar.
Huberty Grant started to write down all the phrases that he used in the program.
And then this bishop bore his testimony and Huberty out stopped and said, he knows, he knows.
And I know from listening to him. John, I remember you writing this book. How do I know if I know?
I remember you telling me that the impetus for that book was a conversation with your son. Yeah, he came into my office one day and said, Dad, how do I know if I felt the spirit?
I panicked to enclose the door and wrote a book.
But I loved the story because for John Taylor to say, he knows he just doesn't know that he knows.
I thought, is it testimony that hard to detect?
And sometimes we know more than we think we do.
And it's so fun that it was Hebrew, J. Grant.
He became the president of the church.
I guess six months later, he bore a powerful witness,
that he knew we talk about knowing,
but we don't often talk about how do we know one.
And so that story gave me a good jumping off point.
Thanks for mentioning that, Hank.
Mary Jane, where are we going to go next with this?
Does Paul continue to talk about spiritual gifts?
He does and he lists as I said some of the same ones that are found in the other two places in Scripture.
The next one he talks about in verse 5 and 6 and there are differences of
administrations but the same Lord and there are diversities of operations, but the same Lord, and there are diversities
of operations, but it's the same God which worketh all in all.
Lardey Saint scholar Sidney Beesperry defined the gift of knowing the differences of
administration is meant, he said, the distinctive varieties of service.
In other words, there are different ways that an individual serves in any capacity
and any calling. I think of my friend who was called to be a young women's president. She's
in her 60s. And she, oh, they're doing, she's just, she's going, okay, I need more energy.
I got to be able to hike. I got to be able to. It's just not going to happen.
But her way of serving is so needed by those young women in her ward.
And she has made a much different impression than she would have if she would have been called in her 30s or 20s. Unique style. There's a unique style. and the Lord honors that. He accepts the way in which each of us fulfill our callings,
even though it might be so different.
You look at our prophets, Joseph Smith restoring the great prophet of restoration,
but I'm not sure he had the gifts that would have brought
the saints across the plains and colonized the Great Basin, like Brigham Young did.
Even in my lifetime, I look at Spencer W. Campbell, who I call the great
prophet of change, and so many things that he did.
And then I'm not sure he could have got the Book of Mormon
into the lives of the church like Ezra Tuff Benson did.
So it's that differences of administration, but it's the same
ward. Mary Jane, maybe I'm going to be a little vulnerable here.
But how do I not excuse myself
from some service in the church saying, well, I just don't have the gift of administration.
Listen, I'm a teacher. I am not an administrator. It's like President Ballard said,
when you're called to that administrative situation, whenever you are considering the call of a
new counselor, make sure you look for people who are strong where you feel you are considering the call of a new counselor, make sure you look for people
who are strong where you feel you are weak. This means you need to have a pretty good understanding
of your own strengths and weaknesses as well as the relative ability and inability of those who
you are considering to serve with you. And that's why we need that diversity of gifts. Yeah.
That's why we need that diversity of gifts. Yeah.
You also have the diversity of operations
along with the difference of administrations.
You might say, what's the difference?
So as you look at the Greek word for operations,
it means activities.
Diversity of operations.
I think as you're looking at the Greek,
I give activities or different kinds of things that go on.
And so if you have that gift, then you understand what is going on around you,
and you can decipher what an activity really is.
You have eyes to see the reality of works, manifestations, trends, and events that are going on around you,
and you have that lens to know whether it's Satan's
counterfeit.
That is interesting, though.
I'd never seen that phrase, diversity of operations, along with differences of administration.
Under spiritual gifts, it says, knowledge of the diversity of operations helps individuals
discern whether a teaching or influence comes from God or from some other source.
So yeah, you were right on there.
Spiritual gifts produce results that are obvious because of the divine power behind them.
Satan can produce powerful counterfeits.
His works are nothing in comparison to the works of Lord.
So if you have that diversity of operations, you can recognize the power behind any work, whether it's Satan's
power or gods. Authentic gifts are workings of the Holy Ghost. You can determine from false spirits,
doctrines or commandments. Okay, that's a good gift. I like that gift. Yeah. Let's see. What does
Paul mean next, Mary Jane, when he says, for one, it is given by the
Spirit, the word of wisdom. Now, if I read that with my 2023 lens, I'm like, oh, this guy
keeps the word of wisdom. But I don't think that's what Paul meant.
I don't think it's a health code thing.
And to another, the word of knowledge by the same spirit. So you've got two gifts there. One is knowledge
and the other is wisdom. Let's first of all talk about the gift of knowledge. We're called
the information age and we have information at our fingertips literally. We have the preceding
accumulated information of every other era that's ever existed on the earth. So what's the difference?
I would ask between knowledge and information. I believe the difference is the Holy Ghost is
called the Spirit of Truth. And I think if you have that gift of knowledge that you are able to
understand through the Spirit what is truth. And that is the difference. It
isn't that you have a high IQ. Notice in the doctrine, count as this is in 121, 26. God
shall give unto you knowledge, and I would say the gift of knowledge by His Holy Spirit,
yay, by the unspeakable gift of the Holy Ghost that has been revealed since the world was until now.
And then in section 42, to gain knowledge, the Lord said, if thou shalt ask, thou shalt receive
revelation upon revelation, knowledge upon knowledge. I think that gift of knowledge is deciphering which
information is true. And boy, do we ever need that in our society?
I like to tell my students, if any of you lack information,
let him ask of Google.
Google will tell you something.
Alexa will tell you something.
Siri will tell you something every time.
And it might be true.
But if you lack wisdom, that's an entirely different question.
I heard Sherry do turn a phrase once that I thought, oh, that's so good. Go to sources
that only speak truth is the way she said it. Oh, what a good way to say it. Go to the
scriptures.
As we look at the difference because there's obviously a difference between the gift
of knowledge and the gift of wisdom, you'd say, what is the difference? I would say knowledge is the acquisition of facts of
true information, where wisdom is related to our actions, our decisions, and our behaviors.
A humorous once said, knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is knowing
you don't put that tomato in a fruit salad. Okay.
I had that quote ready to go.
I love that.
I love that.
Knowledge is knowing that tomato is a fruit.
Wisdom is knowing not to put it in a fruit salad.
Yeah, that's fun.
Yeah.
You look at Joseph Smith.
He determined he lacked wisdom.
He didn't lack information.
Well, there was plenty of information, plenty of knowledgeable
people around him. What Joseph wanted to know is how should I act? You know, a lot of people think
wisdom comes from age. A wise person is old, wrinkled, and has white hair. But wisdom is not just
acting your age. It is acting according to our better nature.
And it isn't even educational degrees.
It's a second Nephi nine.
When they are learned, they think they are wise.
It's like he's saying, it's not the same, not necessarily the same things.
Very wise people who don't have lots of credentials.
Yeah.
And both are good.
But to be learned is good if they harken.
I think John and I both have to learn this lesson.
Have you married Jane that knowledge is knowing what to say,
wisdom is knowing when to say it?
Right.
Yeah.
Knowledge is knowing how to play the banjo.
Wisdom is you don't use that for a musical number
and sacrament meeting.
Right.
Right.
I think I...
Please join us for part 2 of this podcast.