Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 1 Nephi 11-15 Part 1 • Dr. Joshua Sears • Jan 22 - 28 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: January 17, 2024How does reading Nephi’s Vision prepare you for the work in the kingdom? Dr. Joshua Sears explores the evolution of the term “Messiah” and emphasizes the role of Jesus Christ and his condescensi...on to gather the family of God.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/book-of-mormon-episodes-1-13/YouTube: https://youtu.be/ZbOlFPxRJy0Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part 1–Dr. Joshua Sears00:47 Nephi wants to see what Lehi saw01:09 Dr. Sears shares the two purposes of the Book of Mormon02:44 Bio of Dr. Joshua Sears07:38 1 Nephi 1 and the term “Messiah”10:09 Kingship and the title Messiah10:58 Messiah as Redeemer12:12 1 Nephi 11 and the “condescension of God”14:13 The Lion and the Lamb15:49 Jehovah and the Messiah in 1 Nephi 11:1819:00 Jesus as the literal Son of God22:19 Fulfilling the promises of the Title Page 24:13 1 Nephi 8:3026:32 Similarities for Lehi and Nephi28:48 Hesed and covenantal relationships33:42 So exclusive, everyone can be a part35:43 Broken relationships with God38:03 “Being cast off”41:33 Psalm 8947:03 We are free to choose to be in covenant with God51:53 1 Nephi 11:7 and 1 Nephi 1256:28 1 Nephi 10:12 and a remnant 59:20 The term gentile1:00:42 The Great and Abominable Church1:04:25 That which destroys souls1:07:00 A Jewish record1:09:52 End of Part 1–Dr. Joshua SearsThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. We are excited to continue our
study of the Book of Mormon. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my co-host
who I will describe as joyous to the soul. John, by the way, welcome, John. Do you feel
like you're joyous to the soul? I feel like you are. I have moments like that. I have
other moments, but sometimes I have those moments where I'm not so joyous to the soul. I feel like you are. I have moments like that. I have other moments, but sometimes I have those moments
where I'm not so joyous to the soul. I'll ask your children what they think.
Yeah. Right. John, we're continuing our discussion in first Nephi.
We were with Dr. Strathern last week showed us some incredible things with Lehigh's dream
and the connection with first Nephi 10. What are you looking forward to today?
Have you been thinking about what we've learned?
What I love is that Nephi wants to see
what his father saw.
And instead of the angel repeating the same thing,
he gives him like a triple dose.
It brings in another television
and shills him things on two screens.
Yeah, we get an extended version.
We get Lehigh's dream, but we get to see things.
We didn't see the first time around.
We see the life of Christ inner spurs with the dream, and it's really cool how they do it.
Yeah, I've told my students before the tree stands up,
gas, arms, and legs, and starts healing people.
John, we are joined by a good friend of both of ours, an incredible Bible scholar.
His name is Dr. Josh Sears. Josh, what are we looking forward to today as we look at
Nephi's experience? I'm excited because on the title page of the book of Mormon that Moroni
wrote to introduce the whole thing. Moroni explains that there's two purposes for the book of Mormon,
and I think in Nephi's vision, you see both of those purposes really playing out. Number one is
to show under the remnant of the house of Israel what great things the Lord have done for their fathers and that they may know the
covenants of the Lord that they are not cast off forever. And number two to the
convincing of the Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ, the eternal God
manifesting himself unto all nations. So the Book of Mormon as a whole does this,
but Nephys vision sure gonna really zero in on those two things
So we're gonna fun seeing how the Book of Mormon fulfills what it's set up to do
Fantastic Josh. I'm looking forward to this because here's a book. I've read many times and yet every time I go through
I see something new especially when I have someone who's also read it many times they can show me
Things that I've never seen before. So this year, going
through the book, Mormon, I just am getting more and more excited for each lesson because
the book seems to change with me. As I grow older, the book seems to adapt to my situation.
John, Josh is not new to our podcast. I'm sure many of our listeners remember his awesome
episodes in the past. But let's do a quick introduction.
Yes, we're so happy to have Dr. Joshua Sears back.
He's an assistant professor of ancient scripture at BYU.
He received a PhD in Hebrew Bible from the University of Texas
at Austin.
His wife, Alice, is from Hong Kong and plays in the Bells
at Temple Square.
They live in Linden with their five children.
I was very excited to have Joshua
back again because I remember what we did before and I'm thinking, okay, I've got my pencil
sharp and I'm ready for action.
Well, it's great to be back. Thanks.
Josh, we love having you. And, John, when I think of Josh, I just think someone that brilliant
should not be that humble. It's not fair. It shouldn't work that way because I'm not that
brilliant and I'm not that humble.
And that just goes to,
I'm going the wrong direction in both of those.
Yeah, it's gonna be exciting to have Josh with us.
I have to read, John, from his old testament lessons.
We put together a compilation,
it's called Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament.
You can get it absolutely free on our website.
And these two lessons,
John, Josh was with us for our opening lesson in Genesis. It was a life changer for me.
Josh showed us things about the creation I had never seen before. And then he came back and he did
section of scripture that I'm sure many of our listeners, including me and you, John, hadn't really taken time
to read through. Second Kings 17. That doesn't usually ring wow to me, but Josh took it and
made it unbelievable. I would encourage any of our listeners who are looking to have an incredible
experience. Go back and find these two episodes, either on YouTube or just use your app and
go back and listen to these. I want to read to you two thoughts out of the many that are
in this book from Josh's episode on Second Kings.
It has a kaya, is a reminder that if you've got a human leader as good as they might be,
they're going to eventually disappoint you. If you look hard enough or wait long enough, whether it is Joseph Smith or your bishop or somebody, they will disappoint
you. They're not perfect. But the Savior, of course, is going to do everything that they
can do, but perfectly. And we can trust him, not to stumble and let us down. And then,
as Josh was talking about Hezekiah and the struggle, he was going through the pressures
he was under.
And I really felt that with Josh.
Here's what Josh said.
He said, God has a long game.
He is not making promises to these people, and then everything is going to be ruined.
In fact, even though they are wicked and have some major setbacks and all sorts of destruction
and calamity, they can't ultimately thwart God's plans.
He is always going to find a way to use Israel to accomplish his purposes, no matter how bad
they blow it along the way.
The theological takeaway here is that God is still in charge.
He is moving the chessboard in ways that we can't comprehend, and with the sight that
goes beyond what we can see, and he is going to make everything turn out the way it is supposed to be.
Again, John, I know I'm gushing here a little bit, but if you want to have an
incredible experience, go look up these two episodes in the Old Testament.
They were really life changers.
Absolutely.
And that's another reason I was just looking forward to this.
After our first few episodes in the book, Mormon Hank, I thought, I think I know
this book. And then I'm like, Oh, okay, I, I got a lot to learn.
Yeah, I've only read this book for what, 35 years and people are showing me things I've never seen
before. We can't feel embarrassed, John. We just have to be good students. Here's what the
Come Follow Me manual says. It says, when God has a monumental work for His prophets to do,
He often gives that prophet a monumental vision. Moses, John, Lehigh, Joseph Smith, all
had visions like that. Visions that expanded their minds and helped them see just how grand
and awe-inspiring God's work really is. Nephi also had one of these life-changing visions.
So Josh, with that, how are we going to jump into these chapters?
There's a lot in these visions. We're going to have to take this step by step.
In chapter 11, the vision begins. This is where Nephi is learning about Jesus Christ,
and where we see most this purpose from the Book of Mormon is to convince us that Jesus is the Christ,
the eternal God, manifesting Himself to all nations. What we want to see in this vision is how
Nephi learns. What does it mean that he's the Christ?
What does it mean he's the eternal God?
And how does he manifest himself?
Of course, the vision doesn't just come out of nowhere.
It's not just giving Nephi a random history lesson.
It follows everything that's been happening
in the first 10 chapters of the Book of Mormon.
The questions that Nephi's been having,
the conversations in the family, the struggles that they're having.
So to better appreciate what he's learning about Jesus, I want to really quickly look at a few verses
from chapters 1 to 10, we can follow this thread of what is Nephi been learning about the Messiah already
to prepare him for the vision.
Wonderful, let's do it.
First Nephi chapter 1 has Lehi, and it's the first time we get this term Messiah. Chapter 1 verse 19 says that Lehigh
testified to things which he read in the book manifested plainly of the coming of a Messiah
and also the redemption of the world. The thing I want to point out here that might sound a little
strange to us at first is he doesn't say the Messiah. He says, a Messiah. And the reason
for that, you got to get back into there. Their ancient Israelite Old Testament kind of setting.
They're in Old Testament Jerusalem right now. I think the reason Lehigh is very deliberately saying
a Messiah is because at this point in history, there's no concept of one single Messiah. There's
lots of Messiah's. We learned this back in the Old Testament here
that Messiah comes from a Hebrew word Mashiach
and it means anointed one.
Literally someone who's had oil poured on their head
to anoint them for some special task or mission
and giving them divine power and authority.
And in Old Testament times, there was lots of people
that this happened to priests are anointed. They are Messiah's.
The kings of Israel are referred to as Messiah's because they are anointed. They are set apart
to be God's leaders for the people. You don't usually see this in translation, but for
example, in the story of where David and Saul are chasing each other around and David has
the opportunity to kill Saul, but he doesn't do it. He says, I don't want to lift up my hand.
And the King James version says, the Lord's anointed.
But the Hebrew there is the Lord's Messiah.
He's saying, God commissioned this guy.
So God's got to have to take him out.
I don't want to do that.
There's lots of Messiahs there.
And most often when we see references to Messiah and the Old Testament, it's to the King
of Judah or Israel there.
They're the ones.
If you were in Nephi's Jerusalem and stop someone on the street and said, excuse me, sir, can you direct me where I might find the Messiah? They'd probably point up to the palace and say,
he's up there. Lehigh is recognizing that there's more than one Messiah, even while he's around
right there. That's why he's got to say, a Messiah. He's talking about a certain person,
but he's using a title that they're familiar with from elsewhere. Now, what happens in the rest of Old Testament and New Testament history is Babylon
destroys the Kingdom of Judah. They lose the kingship. There's no longer a king ruling over them
from the line of David. You don't have that kind of a Messiah anymore. And they start to talk about,
wow, it'd be great if a descendant of David one day returns, takes
the throne, and rules over Israel again. Over time, they start referring to this future king
as not just a Messiah, but the Messiah, the Messiah of Messiah, the ultimate Messiah, who's
going to come, take the throne, and just set everything right. By the time you get to
Jesus showing up in the New Testament, they do have this idea of
the Messiah as a specific single individual that they're looking forward to coming. And what we can
see in the book of Mormon is they go through that same kind of development, but a lot faster.
Here in 1 Nephi chapter 1, Lehigh starts a Messiah. And then now let's jump to chapter 10,
where Lehigh is going gonna talk about him again.
Chapter 10 verse four, he says,
600 years from the time that my father left Jerusalem,
a prophet with the Lord God raised up among the Jews,
even a Messiah, or in other words, a savior of the worlds.
We're still saying, a Messiah,
but then in verse five, he refers to this Messiah,
meaning of all the Messiah's out there,
now talking about this one who's going to come in 600 years. And then in
verse 7 he talks about the Messiah. And from then on the rest of the book of
Mormon it's just the Messiah. Within a few verses, Lehigh transitions from A
Messiah to the Messiah, he's established, now we're talking about this guy, this
human king from the line of David
who's gonna come and do these amazing things.
And then just by way of review,
he talks about how this Messiah
is going to be a redeemer,
how he's going to get baptized,
and he's gonna take away the sin of the world.
He has this overview of what this figure is gonna do.
Nephi has this basic understanding before he moves on into the vision.
Wow, that's fantastic.
There was multiple Messiah's because it means anointed like a king.
King was anointed.
So that could be a Messiah, but then over time, they start to recognize that
there's going to be the Messiah.
Reminds me of Isaiah a little bit, King of Kings and Lord of Lords, so there's Messiahs,
but this is the Messiah of the Messiahs.
Yeah. So chapter 11 opens for it came to pass, after I desired to know the things that my
father had seen and believing that the Lord was able to make them known unto me. As I sat pondering in my heart,
I was caught away in the spirit of the Lord,
yay, into an exceedingly high mountain.
And thus begins this vision.
So I want to jump ahead a little bit
and let's look at where Nephi starts learning
about Jesus Christ here.
Verse 13, it came to pass that I looked
and beheld the great city of Jerusalem
and also whether cities. And I beheld the city of Nazareth. And in the city of Nazareth looked and beheld the great city of Jerusalem and also weather cities,
and I beheld the city of Nazareth, and in the city of Nazareth I beheld a virgin, and
she was exceedingly fair and white.
And it came to pass that I saw the heavens open, and an angel came down and stood before
me, and he said unto me, Nephi, what be holdest thou?
And I said unto him, a virgin, most beautiful and fair above all other virgins.
And he said unto me, knowest, most beautiful and fair, above all other virgins. And he said unto me,
knowest thou the condescension of God.
And that's the really interesting question
that's gonna kick off Nephi's important lesson here.
We know that the word condescension here
means to go from a higher kind of place
down to a lower kind of place.
And this is gonna be Nephi's lesson
about how Jesus is going to go from ruling
up in heaven to coming down and becoming a human being here on earth. But the angel asked
the question, Nephi, do you understand this? And Nephi's response in verse 17 is, I know
that he loved his children. Nevertheless, I do not know the meaning of all things. And
first, I love his response there, that when we face things that we don't understand
or things that don't make sense, it's okay to acknowledge that, but we can acknowledge, in fact,
lead with what we do know and what Nephi does say he knows is that God loves his children. That's
helped me a lot when there's things I can't make sense of that don't seem to fit with the way things
are supposed to work.
I'll go back to that to say I know that Heavenly Father loves us as His children and therefore somehow this is going to make sense even if I don't get it right now. Josh, we had a lesson a
couple weeks ago with Dr. Nick Frederick in the book of Revelation and in chapter five of Revelation,
John looks for a lion. Someone tells him the lion is going to open the book.
And he's looking for a lion, but he sees,
when he turns and looks, he sees a lamb.
And Dr. Frederick brought us to this verse,
Noah's Thou, the condescension of God.
This wonderful idea that the Savior is going to go
from this to this, and this dramatic condescension
is bigger than when I hear the angels say, no, it's not the condescension of God. I almost hear him say, do you have any idea who that is?
Are you wrapping your mind around what he gave up, what he was to what he became?
Yeah, and let's explore this a little bit more. The angel says, do you know the condescension of God?
Nephi is not sure about that.
When we have to ask, what does the angel mean by God? How is Nephi interpreting that terms? We got to remember again, Nephi is an ancient Israelite living smack dab in the middle of the times of the Old Testament.
For him, God is Jehovah, the God of Israel,
the one who covenanted with Moses on Mount Sinai, the one that was speaking
through the prophet Isaiah, the one that led them through the Exodus. That's Jehovah, the God of
Israel. When Nephi hears God, he's going to be thinking Jehovah. We've got to keep in mind that
in Old Testament times, most of the Israelites aren't thinking of the Godhead in the way that we do
today in a post-new Testament world. They're not thinking of Heavenly Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost.
They just prefer to Jehovah. When the angel says, you know, the condescension of God,
Nephys thinking Jehovah, Nephys says, no, what are you talking about? In verse 18, the angel says,
behold, the Virgin whom thou seest is the mother of the Son of God after the
manner of the flesh. And to really appreciate what Nephi is trying to grasp here,
I'm going to point out that the way Joseph Smith originally translated this
verse and the way it was published in the first edition of the Book of Mormon in
1830 is a little different from the way it reads in our Book of Mormon today.
The reason is is that there's
a few verses here in this chapter wherein the 1837 edition, the second edition, Joseph
Smith went through and changed the wording slightly. And I think the reason Joseph did that
is because he was trying to avoid confusion for us as modern readers, because the way
ancient Israelites talked about God uses different vocabulary than the way modern Christians talk about God.
And I suspect Joseph was concerned that we would misunderstand the roles of the God had here if we're using Nephi's ancient
Israelites vocabulary, so he exercises prophetic prerogative to adjust the text to make sure there's no misunderstanding on our part. But it can be helpful to know what it originally said
because that can help us appreciate
from Nephi's point of view what it was
that he was learning in his context.
There's not like one of the versions is wrong
and one is right.
I think the original one makes sense
of Nephi's point of view and what Joseph Smith
changed it to is appropriate for helping us
understand from our point of view.
When verse 18, what Joseph changed
was he added the three words,
the son of, originally what the angel said to Nephi
was, the virgin whom thou seest is the mother of God
after the manner of the flesh.
There's similar changes in verse 21.
The angel says, behold the Lamb of God.
And today it says, the son of the eternal father, originally just says, behold the Lamb of God. And today it says, the Son of the Eternal Father originally just says, even the Eternal Father.
It's worth noting that in the Old Testament times, Father was a title for Jehovah, like an Isaiah
63, 16, or 64, verse 8.
Also in verse 32, the angel says that the Son of the everlasting God was judged to the world.
Originally, that's just the everlasting God was judged to the world originally That's just the everlasting God was judged of the world
That's also everlasting God is a title for Jehovah in the Old Testament like in Genesis 2133 or Isaiah 40 verse 28
And then the final thing that Joseph changed was in chapter 13 verse 40
Which were says that the Lamb of God is and today it says the son of the eternal father,
but originally it read, the Lamb of God is the eternal father. Throughout this, the angels
using Old Testament titles for Jehovah that Nephi would have been familiar with. And what he's
trying to communicate is this. He says, do you know about the condescension of Jehovah? And Nephi says,
no, what are we talking about?
And then the angel says,
the Virgin whom now see us is the mother of Jehovah
after the manner of the flesh.
In other words, she is Jehovah's human mother.
And I think at this point, Nephi's brain
is just about exploded.
So, Josh, what I'm gathering here,
Nephi would not at this time in Israel history have an idea that
God has a son
That's going to come that the Messiah would be the son of God
Yeah, that's not a concept and I think that's something important that this vision is showing right here Nephi is learning this information for the first time
That means that he didn't pick this up from his culture, his version of Sunday school. He never picked up this idea
that Jehovah is going to condescend and become a human or anything
like that. It also suggests he didn't learn this from his own
dad, a prophet. Lehigh didn't tell him this. And I don't know,
I've wondered, did Lehigh not understand this himself? And he
learns it from his own son after the vision, or did Lehigh know this, but it seemed so mind-blowing that he kind of kept it close and private,
didn't feel like he could share this with his sons yet, until Nephi got the revelation for himself,
and then they speak about this more openly.
I don't know, but we don't see Lehigh talking like this before the vision.
We do see him after the visions.
I don't know which of those scenarios is correct, but at least we can tell for Nephi
He's seems to be getting his mind blown as he learns about this for the first time. He learns, okay
Jehovah is going to condescend and become a human being. He's got a human mother. He's going to live a human life
It's interesting. He says, you know, I want to know what the tree means
Then he sees the virgin. He learns about the condescension of God. And then in verse 20,
he sees the Virgin of again bearing a child in her arms. Verse 21, the angel says,
behold the Lamb of God, Ye even in the original, the eternal Father. And then he says,
noisthou the meaning of the tree which thy father saw, which was Nephi's original question.
And in verse 22, Nephi says, yep, I do now, it's the love of God.
And what's interesting to me is Nephi already knew about Jehovah.
He already knew that God loves his children.
It's one of the things he says he does know.
But somehow understanding that Jehovah's going to become human now
is helping him appreciate the love of God in a way he never has before. The love of God, he says, which shed it itself abroad in the hearts of the
children of men, wherefore is the most desirable above all things, which is kind of an echo of what
the fruit was like back in the tree, right? But the idea that God is not just helping you from afar,
but is coming down to earth to live like us and
experience what we experience, to walk among us, to be hungry, to be thirsty.
I think Nephi is recognizing that is the biggest manifestation of love I could think of from
my God, to come be here with me.
So this idea that we're used to of Jesus coming to earth, he's not so used to.
Yeah, and we should notice now that as the angel keeps talking, he's using phrases like Lamb of God,
which Nephi had already heard before, like back in chapter 10 when Lehi was talking about the Messiah.
Nephi is just having an incredible lesson from Revelation and this is probably forcing him to rethink a lot of how he thinks about God and the plan of salvation and everything.
This is just changing his fundamentals in an amazing new way that opens him up to all
these new possibilities.
Yeah, that's fantastic.
Seeing this happen for the first time and all inspiring to Nephi.
So we should pause and note here that as Nephi has been learning about this, this is again
where we see the title page of the Book of Mormon fulfilling its promise to us. The title page
says that if the Book of Mormon is supposed to convince Jew and Gentile that Jesus is the
Christ, Christ is your Greek term for anointed one, so it's the equivalent of Messiah. Jesus
is the Messiah. He's that human king from the line of David who's going to come and
be born and do all those things.
And it says, Jesus is also the eternal God, which again is a title for Jehovah, like in
Deuteronomy 3327.
You see that.
One way you can reinterpret the title page here saying, Jesus is the Christ, he's the Messiah.
And also he is the eternal God, he is Jehovah, he's both of them in one.
He's both figures.
The Book of Mormon is kind of making this case
that Jehovah the God of Israel and Jesus,
the human Messiah are the same persons.
You see that ground laid for that here in Nephys vision,
and they're gonna continue to discuss this
for the rest of the Book of Mormon.
Then the rest of chapter 11 of 1st Nephi
just Nephi sees kind of a summary of his mortal
ministry. It says that he goes forth among the children of men that he's baptized. This is
elaborating on what Lehi had already told Nephi about him getting baptized, that he ministers to
the people, that he heals them, that he's eventually taken and judged of the world and that he's
lifted up on the cross and slain for the sins of the world.
So we get this kind of panoramic overview of Jesus' life there.
It doesn't conclude with his resurrection, which is really interesting.
We'll get the resurrected Jesus in the next chapter when he visits the Nephites.
Jesus' story here is kind of framed as part of a larger story.
It's not like he dies on the cross and we've reached the climax and we're done now.
This is the setup for the longer covenant story
Of how God's gonna redeem his covenant people and of course the Messiah is central to making that happen
Excellent. So chapter 11 breaks new ground for Nephi. That's a fun way to look at it
I wanted to take a look at a connection with Lehigh's dream and see what you both think about it. Right at the end of 1st Nephi 8, verse 30, there's this group of people who are making their way
towards the tree. And when they get to the tree, they fall down. And I remember being taught as a kid
or maybe I just thought this, that living the gospel is so hard. It is so difficult. That when you get to the end, you're just exhaust. You've endured to the end.
Maybe there's something from that lesson there, but what do you think of these people falling down and
partake of the fruit of the tree? And then chapter 11, as Nephi is seeing the life of Christ in verse 24,
he says, I saw the Son of God going forth among the children of men, and I saw many fall down at his feet and
worship him.
Josh John, is there a connection there that the tree that we high saw is the Lord and
there's people get to him and they truly know who he is when they get to the tree or they get to
and they truly know who he is, when they get to the tree,
or they get to the Messiah,
and they fall down,
not because they're exhausted from living the gospel,
but they know who that is.
What do you think?
I've always loved the idea that that was worship,
that Christ is the tree,
and they fell down at the tree.
That was God's will love the world he gave his son,
and the love of God was the fruit.
So, I think both of those work, but I don't necessarily think the gospel is so exhausting.
So hard to live.
Yeah, it should bring us some joy and some sweet as the work type of feelings as well.
Right.
Am I in safe ground to say the tree is the Lord? And the fruit is the love of God, which Josh connected in verse 22 there.
When Nephyses the Lord, he says, it's the love of God that is most desirous to the soul.
And that's the connection to the fruit.
And that love is manifested most obviously by Jehovah coming down to earth as Jesus Christ and sacrificing
his life.
You can't get a better representation of the love of God than that act right there.
Is it possible then that Nephi and Lehi saw similar things but describe it differently?
Maybe Lehi sees the life of the Lord and describes him as a tree and Nephi sees the life of
the Lord and gives us in more literal terms. As you go through Nephys vision, you can start to see elements of the
misce of darkness, the great and spacious building, right, the great and abominable church.
Do you feel like Josh, they saw similar things or should I take this as no, these are two totally
different visions? Well, it seems pretty clear that the imagery from the dream is embedded all over Nephi's vision.
He started off saying, I wanna see the things my father saw,
but it does seem like it's not exactly the same experience
in its frame to differently
and pointing out different things.
I mean, Nephi even makes that comment at one point.
Yeah, the water's dirty and our father didn't notice that.
He didn't mention, yeah, he didn't see that.
He's having a kind of a different experience, I think,
and pulling new things out of it.
Yeah, I think of it as like,
Lehigh saw it on this big screen TV,
and then Nephi wants to see it,
and they bring in another big screen TV.
I don't think angels use big screen TVs,
but first Nephi 11.4, believe us that I father saw the tree.
He says, yeah, I believe all the words of my father
and then in verse six, yeah, Nephi, that'll believe us in the Son of the Most High God. And it's like, oh, so the tree is,
oh, okay. So I feel like he sees the vision and interspersed with events in the life of Christ. He
sees some of the things that Lee has dreams vision symbolizes and is going back and forth like this.
That's kind of the way I thought of it.
And like you said, Josh, at one point, yeah, my father's mind was so cut up
and other things he didn't notice this.
I love the idea that if you ask, God might give you even more than you expected.
What did Joseph Smith want to know?
Well, which church should I join?
What did he get?
Why are we all sitting here today? Well, the teenage boy said a prayer, which is amazing and you might get more than you expect.
Yeah, you asked the Lord for a knife and he gives you the whole house that goes with it.
I love this idea that perhaps Nephyssal the tree and then it transformed maybe in front of him
into the Lord and then he sees the life of Christ, which maybe started
as seeing the tree. We're going to move on to chapter 12, but before we can fully appreciate
why chapter 12 was so significant to Nephi, this is another case where I think we got to go back
to the first 10 chapters, see what's going on in their family, what questions are they having,
what are the issues, so that we can appreciate why is Nephi learning what he's learning in chapter 12. I'd like to go back to chapter 8 for a moment here in Lehigh's
dream. And of course, Laman and Lemuel are featured prominently in this dream. Dr Strathern talked
about this in the last episode that even though we can read the dream as being about broader groups of
people, Lehigh seems to be really focused on the implications of this in his own
family.
In 1 Nephi chapter 8, verse 36, Nephi summarizes,
It came to pass after my father had spoken all the words of his dream or vision, which
were many.
He said unto us, because of these things which he saw in a vision, he exceedingly feared
for laymen and Lemuel.
Yay, he feared, lest they should be cast off from the presence of the Lord.
Verse 37, and he did exhort them with all the feeling of a tender parent that they would
harken to his words that perhaps the Lord would be merciful to them and not cast them off.
We've got this issue here.
We've got a crisis in the family.
Laman and Lemuel are at risk of being cast off from the presence of the Lord.
And that's something that they're all struggling with. Nephi is struggling with this.
And to really appreciate the full significance of the dynamic here and what's going on,
I think we need to recognize that the terms being used here, presence of the Lord and cast off
are Old Testament covenant language. We've got to go back a little bit again to Old Testament,
kind of see a little bit of development of these ideas here,
so we can kind of appreciate why these ancient Israelites
and this family are using these terms and what they mean by them.
Let's take a couple minutes and do quick covenant one-on-one again.
To just to sum up, Heavenly Father wants to have an intimate binding,
exalting relationship with all of his children.
That's why he offers us the new and everlasting covenant
so that we can come to him in that close relationship
where we can grow and develop and become like him
in the bonds of that covenant relationship that we have.
And President Nelson's Leahona article,
the everlasting covenant, which is from October 2022,
he explains that we enter the new and everlasting covenant
with baptism, and then he says,
when you and I also enter that path,
we have a new way of life.
We thereby create a relationship with God
that allows him to bless and change us.
The covenant path leads us back to him.
If we let God prevail in our lives, that covenant will lead us closer and closer to him.
All covenants are intended to be binding.
They create a relationship with everlasting ties. To illustrate how everlasting and binding these ties are,
President Nelson talks about this Hebrew term
that I've mentioned on the podcast before, Hesed.
President Nelson says that in English,
we don't have a good word for the kind of love
and loyalty and mercy that's experienced
within a covenant relationship,
but the Israelites had a word for this,
and it's Hesed, H-E-S-E-D. President Nelson says all those who have made a covenant
with God have access to a special kind of love and mercy in the Hebrew language that covenantal
love is called Hesid. And then he says in English, it's translated a whole bunch of different
ways like loving kindness or mercy or love or goodness. And he says, Hesid is a unique term
describing a covenant relationship
in which both parties are bound to be loyal
and faithful to each other.
Because God has Hesit for those who have
covenanted with him, he will love them.
He will continue to work with them
and offer them opportunities to change.
He will forgive them when they repent.
And should they stray,
he will help them find their way back to him.
Once you and I have made a covenant with God, President Nelson continues,
our relationship with him becomes much closer than before our covenant. Now we are bound together.
Because of our covenant with God, he will never tire in his efforts to help us,
and we will never exhaust his merciful patience with us. Each of us has a special place in God's heart. He is high hopes for us. That's
the end of my quote from President Nelson. So we've got this idea in the Old Testament
that God wants to have a covenant relationship with us, both as individuals and as part
of this covenant people, Israel, that was formed when he covenanted with Abraham and
Sarah. We covenant with God individually, and we're also part of this covenant people Israel that was formed when he covenanted with Abraham and Sarah. We covenant with God
individually, and we're also part of this covenant family or
covenant people Israel. His job it is is to take the blessings
of the new and everlasting covenant out to all the nations of
the earth from Genesis in the and in Lycicil all the nations of
the earth be blessed. Josh, I think that's a very important
point.
Oftentimes we talk about Israel as if they're chosen and they're better, that God has
a people and that he doesn't love the rest of the world.
And what you said there is crucial.
No, these are the chosen people to take my love to everyone else in the world.
And then the idea is that once Gentiles join the covenant
that they're numbered with
or adopted into the house of Israel,
this is an exclusive group that God wants every single person
to be a part of.
Everyone's invited to protect
with this covenant relationship with God.
It's so exclusive.
Everyone can be a part of it.
We just this past week talked about the Abrahamic covenant
in Genesis 12 and it appears in a few places,
but the Abraham, I think, version says to bear the ministry like you're talking about.
Your job is to take this to the world and Elder Bednar even said once that that's the reason
the missionary gets his patriarchal blessing first so that they have that reminder their house of
Israel. So he like to say it's kind of like being a chosen person is not to sit on
a throne and be admired. It's more like being chosen to mow the lawn. It's more like God has a
work for you to do. It's a blessing, but it's a burden too, and a responsibility. So I like that you
said that. Genesis 12 says in thee to Abraham, shall all the families of the earth be blessed.
That's Genesis 12, 3.
Just things for pointing that out, that this group called Israel is not meant to be God's
chosen, exclusive, hey, we're better than you.
It's your chosen to spread the message and invite everyone in to this group.
Yeah.
He says there in the first three verses of Genesis 12,
I will bless the Israel.
You guys get the blessings of the covenant
and through you, I'm gonna bless everybody else.
This is his plan and his program
to get the opportunity to join the everlasting covenant
out to all his kids.
He wants to have that close relationship with everyone.
And it seems it would work, but the only problem is Israel.
Yeah.
Unfortunately, like all relationships,
things don't always go perfectly.
So an Old Testament language, this covenant language,
you can kind of divide up your state
into two conceptual categories,
which they call being in the presence of the Lord,
or you're separated from the presence of the Lord.
They kind of divide it into those two.
Being in the presence of the Lord means that
you're close to Him. The relationship is working. You're receiving the blessings of being in the
covenant. You have His spirits to be with you. Not being in the presence of the Lord is the opposite
of that, or the relationship is experiencing friction or it's broken. You're not experiencing the
blessings of being close to God in the covenant relationship. You're distant from him. You're not experiencing the wonderful results of being close.
Josh, is that what Lee has referring to them in 1st Nephi 3836? He feared less they should be
cast off from the presence of the Lord. He's not concerned what you and I might think is, oh,
they're going to outer darkness. This is, they're stepping away from that relationship,
that covenant. Exactly. In the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon, when they talk about this,
you can think of being in the presence of the Lord in two different ways. There's both an afterlife
sense to this, where final judgment and being in the celestial kingdom in God's presence or somewhere
else, you have kind of an afterlife sense of being in his presence or not in his presence.
But there's also many scriptures that talk about this
in this life, that this begins right now.
We can be in his presence right now in this life
before we're literally physically there
in the celestial kingdom,
or you cannot be in his presence in this life.
So when we're close to him in this life,
we have his spirit to be with us. For example,
that's one of the great blessings of baptism and confirmation is having that member of the
Godhead with you always. In the Old Testament, they often talk about the tabernacle or the temple,
the house of the Lord, being a place where you go to be physically close to him in his presence.
They'll use that term a lot there. They long to go to the temple so that they can be in the presence of the Lord.
So we can think of it in afterlife terms, but we don't want to just restrict it to that.
We've got to recognize that this is a dynamic that can change right here right now.
So when Lehigh is saying, oh, I fear that you're not going to be in God's presence,
he could be talking about both that I fear for your eternal future and right now.
You're not experiencing the blessings
of that close intimate binding relationship with God
because you've chosen to move away.
So now let's look at that phrase cast off
that Lehigh uses.
Yeah, that was my next question,
because instead of walking away,
cast sounds like you've been thrown.
So I'm glad you're going to talk about it.
Yeah, Lehigh fears that they're going to be cast off.
So the Book of Mormon uses the phrase like the Testament, cast off from the Lord's Presence. Sometimes it'll also
say, cut off from the Lord's Presence, mostly synonymous in what this means here. That means that
you go from being in the Presence of the Lord experiencing that close relationship to now you're
separated from the Presence of Lord not experiencing that close relationship.
It's one thing to mean the presence of God another one to just kind of walk away or dwindle an unbelief
But cast or cut off sounds a lot more physical separation with some force
When we're talking about the presence of the Lord and this image of being cast off
There's a fantastic article on this by Dr. Jennifer C. Lane, who you've had on the podcast
before.
So she wrote an article called The Presence of the Lord, and it deals with both the Old
Testament and Lehigh's dream and Nephise vision, exactly what we're talking about now.
And you can read this for free at the BYU Religious Study Center website.
That's rsc.biu.edu.
I would recommend that,
and I'm gonna be riffing off her great work here,
plus my own analysis of these verses.
Dr. Lane kind of breaks this all down
and shows how the Old Testament context is playing out here
with Lehigh and Nephi and the language that they're using.
When we see cast off in the Old Testament,
it's usually translating a Hebrew verb, Zanach. You might see it in other translations as see cast off in the Old Testament, it's usually translating a Hebrew verb, Zanach.
You might see it in other translations as to cast off, to reject, to abandon.
But it's a relationship term.
It's talking about people that were once close together, and now there's a split happening
where they are being separated.
And what you see is in the Old Testament, a lot of people express some great anxiety and
fear that they are going to be cast off from the Lord's presence or that they already have been and they're worried that they won't be able to undo this.
So I'll just read a few examples here so we can get a sense of how they're using this language and that'll help us understand where Lehigh is coming from. Psalm 44, for example, verse 17, has people complaining,
all this has come upon us,
yet we have not forgotten the neither have we dealt
false sleep in thy covenant.
So they're experiencing hard times,
and they're saying, hey, we thought we were doing okay
in the covenant, but we seem to not be.
Verse 23, awake, why sleepest thou, O Lord, arise,
cast us not off forever.
And that's the verbs inach.
Again.
And then in verse 24, wherefore, hideest thou thy face, and that's punim, it can also
mean your presence.
And forgetest our affliction and our oppression, for our soul is bowed down to the dust, our
belly cleaveeth unto the earth, arise for our help and redeem us for thy mercy's sake.
And that's the word, Hesit. Help us for your Hesit. You're supposed to be loyal to us because of
the covenant, and we're not seeing your help. Don't cast us off. And give us an act of Hesit here.
And then there's others like Psalm 60, verse one, or Psalm 74, verse one, where they'll say,
why are you casting us off? Please don't cast us off forever. I'll read Psalm
77 verse 7 it asks, will the Lord cast off forever?
rhetorical question
Will he be favorable no more? Is his mercy his hesed clean gone forever?
Dut his promise fail forever more. Have God God forgotten to be gracious, hath he an
anger shut up his tender mercies? So you can see the struggle this person, the psalmist,
is experiencing as life is going nuts and they're wondering, has God truly abandoned
them forever? Psalm 89, starting in verse 1, starts off pretty positive. I will sing of
the mercies of the Lord, the acts of
Hesid of the Lord forever.
With my mouth, I will make known his thy faithfulness to all generations.
And then he quotes the Lord as we skip down several verses in the
Psalm, where God says, I've made a covenant, my loving kindness, my
Hesid, I will not utterly take, my covenant I will not break.
But then the Psalmist feels like, well, God, you've promised this, and yet I'm not feeling this in my life right now.
Verse 38,
but thou hast cast off and abhorred.
Thou hast been wrothed. And I want you to notice here it doesn't say cast off from your presence,
but that's always implied. So you can just say cast off and the presence part is implied because that's what's built in here.
This is a relationship term where in his presence and now we feel like we've been kicked out.
Verse 39, thou hast made void the covenant.
And then it asks,
Verse 46, how long, Lord, wilt thou hide thyself forever?
Shall they wrath burn like fire?
It doesn't resolve this.
They just feel like they're not in his presence and they're trying to fix this.
I'll do one last example.
It's from Lamentations chapter 3, which is another Psalm like exploration of this.
This is a person who feels like their life is just the worst right now that God has forsaken
them.
Verse 1, I am the man that has seen affliction by the rod of his wrath.
He had led me and brought me into darkness, but not into light.
Surely against me he has turned.
He turned his hand against me all the day.
My flesh and my skin, the hath he made old,
he hath broken my bones.
And it goes on and on for many verses about God
is mistreating them.
They feel like God has let them down
and God's actually out to get them.
But then in verse 21, it takes a turn.
This is Lamentations still, as they say,
this I recall to my mind therefore have I hope, meaning this is what I remember when I feel like this.
22, it is of the Lord's mercies, his acts of He said, that we are not consumed because his compassion fail not.
Verse 31, for the Lord will not cast off forever. But though he caused grief, yet will
he have compassion according to the multitude of his mercies or his acts of acid, for he did not
afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men. So they have that hope that because of God's
acid, even though this person feels like God's putting them through the ringer right now and is actually out to get them,
they're trying to trust and hope in the fact that because of that
He said that's there, that commitment to that covenant
relationship, that even though this person feels like they've been cast off
out of God's presence right now, that it's not going to stay that way forever.
Now, the Old Testament also explores why is it that we get cast off?
Is God being just capricious?
Is this arbitrary?
A sense you get is that no, we have full control over this.
We choose whether we are cast off or not.
For example, 1 Chronicles, chapter 28, verse 9,
has David giving advice to Solomon,
and says, thou Solomon my son,
know thou the God of thy father,
and serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing mind.
For the Lord, Jehovah, searcheth all hearts
and understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts.
If thou seek him, he will be found of thee,
but if thou forsake him, he will cast the off forever.
From that verb, Zanak, again. So there it's clear that the person Solomon here has the choice to make.
They can seek God or forsake him. And if they forsake him, then they are cast off from his presence,
but they're fully in control of that.
The issue is not what God wants to do. The issue is what we want to do.
You see this as well in the Book of Mormon. The Book of Mormon is even better on clarifying the role of agency and the importance of choice.
The second Nephi 7 verse 1 has a quote from Isaiah 50, but it adds aligned to the beginning that's not in the Bible that
helps clarify this even more. It opens by saying, yea, for thus say at the Lord, speaking
to Israel who has gone astray, have I put thee away or have I cast thee off forever?
And then we get into the Isaiah part. For thus say at the the Lord, ye to whom have I sold you, behold, for your iniquities
ye have sold your selves and for your transgressions." Has this happened? The Book of Mormon brings
in that cast-off language there, again, stressing that God doesn't want to do this. This is the
natural result of our choices. And it makes sense when you think of this in terms of a relationship.
If someone in a relationship
is treating the other person like garbage, if they're being abusive, if they're not trying to build
the relationship, then the relationship is simply going to suffer. It's not going to be great if one
of the parties is mistreating the other and doing things that hurt them. The Book of Mormon uses
this cast off language a lot. Nephi is going to use it in the chapters we read today,
but it's clear always in the Book of Mormon especially that we have full control over this. We choose whether we're in God's presence
enjoying the benefits of that close relationship or we choose whether to walk away and be cast off from his presence.
The words that we typically use to describe this are repentance and rebellion. If we're repenting, we're doing those things that move us closer to the Lord so that our relationship is close and we're in His presence.
The opposite of repenting is rebelling, we're making conscious choices to move away from the Lord
and do things that damage our relationship so that we no longer feel close.
Josh, let me ask you a question. In that lamentations, I think you read, there was this lament about being cut off.
Did you say they turned it around? Is that the chapter? Yeah, lamentations three. They're
lamenting that God's out to get them and there's lots of graphic imagery about how God is ruining
their life. Right. And then in verse 20, when it says, it turns, this I recall to my mind,
therefore I have hope. And then they list the things that the
remembering about the covenant and the loyalty and all of that. So they're saying, this is what
gets me through this. I've got all these reasons to think God is out to get me. My life is terrible,
but I'm going to remember these things about the covenant to give me hope that somehow this is
going to work out. The Lord does not cast off forever. That would make perfect sense if Nephi
is reading things like that for second Nephi four,
his lament.
Oh, this is awful.
My life is awful.
Things are awful.
But I know in whom I have trusted.
I knew.
Yeah, that's second Nephi four versus 19.
He turns it around.
It sounded so familiar.
I thought, I don't read lamentations that often.
Yeah, well, lots of people have analyzed Second Nephi 4 as a
Psalm of lament. So Nephi follows the patterns there.
You express the woes and the problems and then you have that pivot
where you're now expressing your trust and you're saying,
you know what, this is going to work out because of the one I'm trusting in.
In his dream, First Nephi 8, Lehigh in verse 17 was
desirous that Laman and Lemuel should come in partake of the fruit
verse 18, but they would not come should come in partake of the fruit, verse 18,
but they would not come unto me and partake of the fruit. Verse 35, and Laman and Lemuel
partook not of the fruit, said my father. So this is why now he fears for Laman and Lemuel
unless they should be cast off forever. Because they're making choices that are moving them away
from the Lord, that's what happens with rebellion. A the rebellion is severe enough and long enough.
Eventually, there's a rupture in the relationship where you're no longer in the
Lord's presence, experiencing that closeness and the warmth and the joy and the
blessings there.
Rebell versus repent.
Josh, I'm really glad you made that.
John calls it a sermon in a sentence.
That's a sermon in three words.
Repent or rebel rebel or repent?
We should clarify, though.
We all struggle with our day to day sins and just challenges of life.
And that that daily struggle does not mean that we're rebels or that we're being
cast off from the presence of the Lord, elder,
rendland in the April 2023 general conference,
give a talk called accessing God's power through covenants. And he offered this important clarification
on that. I'm reading from the end notes actually in note seven. He says, everyone stumbles on occasion,
but God is patient with our stumbles and has given us the gift of repentance even after breaking a covenant.
As Elder Richard G. Scott taught, so now it's Elder Rennlin quoting Elder Scott, the
Lord sees weaknesses differently than he sees rebellion, because when the Lord speaks
of weaknesses, it is always with mercy.
So that's an important thing to remember. Just because we slip up,
doesn't mean that we're a rebel
and God's kicking us out.
Cast off is describing in the scriptures
usually prolonged severe rebellion.
There's a difference between someone saying,
God, this week I messed up.
I tried and I messed up,
but I wanna take the sacrament,
I wanna keep trying.
Please help me to do better.
That's a different attitude than someone saying,
you know what, I don't care,
the church can't tell me what to do,
I'm gonna sleep with who I want,
I'm gonna eat what I want,
I don't care what the commandments are,
and you're not even trying anymore.
That's a rebellious attitude,
and it's different from trying,
but messing up, which is something that we all experience.
We want to be careful that we're not being too hard
on ourselves, well recognizing that there are real
consequences for turning from the Lord and breaking his commandments.
You're not a rebel, you're just weak. A message from the Church of Jesus Christ,
of Latter-day Saints. Yes, this thing is the setup. We high and Nephi, the rest of the family,
they're afraid for lemon and lemuel, we know that there's problems. So that is some background
to chapter 12,
where Nephi is going to see what's the future history of their family, what's going to happen here.
And this is set up from this concern they have about some members of our family are leaving the
covenant path and we're worried about them. We fear that they're going to make choices where
they're going to be out of God's presence forever, where they're never going to repent and come back.
Before we start reading chapter 12, though, I want to read one verse from chapter 11,
that's a little bit of setup here.
In chapter 11 verse 7, the spirit tells Nephi that in the vision he's about to see, there's
something in particular he needs to watch out for, a special event.
So the spirit says, Hey, Nephi, you're going to see the tree.
And then later in the vision,
thou shall also behold a man descending out of heaven.
And him shall ye witness.
So Nephi's told of all the stuff.
He's going to see in this vision,
watch for this moment when a man descends out of heaven.
That apparently that's going to be significant.
So we're watching for that.
And it never happens in chapter 11, all of Jesus' mortal ministry.
It never says he descends from heaven. Finally in chapter 12 is where the promised moment
arrives. Chapter 12, Nephi sees the promised land, he sees Nephi sees Lamanites, he sees
generations of them living there. And he sees all the destruction that happens in third Nephi, vapor of darkness and earthquakes and all this. And then chapter 12,
verse six, and I saw the heavens open and the Lamb of God descending out of heaven.
That's significant, not just because it's Jesus visiting the Nephites. And we love
that. But this is the moment the Spirit told him to watch for that there's
going to be something significant about this.
So then we're kind of wondering, what is it?
Why is this visit such a big deal?
And then the rest of the chapter is a little bit perplexing because verses 6 through 10
has Jesus ministering to the Nephites, and we love it.
It's great.
It's beautiful.
But then, in starting in verse 11,
Jesus has taken off and the rest of the chapters
about what happens to Nephites and Lamanites
after Jesus has visited.
And this is tremendously disappointing
because it kind of looks like Jesus visit failed.
Just for the record,
that could be my autobiography title.
Tremendously disappointing.
You still have time to turn this around here.
Okay.
Nevertheless, I know.
Yeah, he sees three and a half generations passed away in righteousness,
and then they all get wicked again.
In fact, if you start in verse 11 and go to the end of the chapter,
there's 13 verses about the post ministry effects of his visit.
Two of them are positive.
11 of them are negative.
The vision here spends a lot more time focusing on how everything falls apart after Jesus is visit, then it spends talking about how awesome the visit was.
And this is a little hard for us to notice because we've read Third Nephi.
We've seen that movie, The Testaments of One Folding One Shepard.
We love the visit of Jesus to the Nephites.
For us, it's this big moment in our minds.
We just got to stop and appreciate that in the vision,
as the angels framing the story for Nephi at this point,
Jesus's visit looks like it's a spectacular failure
that has only very temporary
Positive benefits for them and then they're back worse than they ever were before
For Nephi this must be incredibly disappointing and that raises the question Why did the spirit say to watch out for this visit if it looks like it ends in a parent failure?
And it turns out that this visit is actually more important than it looks like at first
But we don't find out why it's so important here in chapter 12.
We're going to have to wait to the end of chapter 13.
We have to kind of hold that thought here that this looks like an apparent failure.
Things are not going great, but there's something that happened here that was more significant.
But Nephi doesn't learn that at this point in the visit.
We'll have to circle back to this in a chapter and a half.
Otherwise we'll just hold the thought and notice that chapter 12 ends with them dwindling in unbelief, and that they're in spiritual darkness and that this is not great.
I love what you're saying here, because I remember at the end of this Nephi is not saying, wow, it's so great. It's so wonderful. Actually, he's considering his afflictions are above all in first Nephi 15
Sorry to jump ahead
But this helps me understand why what is he seen as you described it?
He's seen some the failure of his own people. I don't know at this point
I might have said layman, let me you're right. What do you guys go back home and I'll take her a dad and mom?
Because he just saw his people get destroyed by the
Lamanites.
Yep.
Now, we move into chapter 13 and here we're going to start
dealing with Gentiles.
And here's, I want to back up a few chapters actually
again to review a little bit of what Lehigh taught
last time because it'll help us appreciate this.
So if we go back to chapter 10, starting around
verse 11, Lehigh had told his family a very, very bare bones history of the house of Israel
and Gentiles, very bare bones. So like in verse 11, well, let's start with verse 12.
Lehigh says, the house of Israel should be compared like into an olive tree whose branches should be broken off and should be
scattered upon all the face of the earth. Verse 14, Lehigh says,
that the house of Israel will be gathered together again,
natural branches of the olive tree or the remnants of the house of
Israel being grafted in and coming back. Basically, Lehigh says,
house of Israel has two basic steps. They're going to be
scattered and they're going to be gathered.
We've got those two.
That's about a simple of the history of Israel as you could summarize.
Right there.
Scattering and gathering.
But what Lehigh also does is he gives them two steps in the history of Gentiles.
Back in New Testament times, Messiah manifests himself by the Holy Ghost to them,
they come to the gospel.
And then in the last days, he says, the Gentiles will receive the fullness of the gospel.
So those are the two steps for Gentiles.
Lehigh is giving such a bare bones, brief summary
of the history there.
It leaves a lot of unanswered questions,
which I think is why Nephi's brothers
in chapter 15, when the vision's done,
Nephi goes to them and says,
Hey, what are you wondering about? In chapter 15, the vision's done, Nephi goes to them and says, hey, what are you wondering about in chapter 15 verse 7, they say,
behold, we cannot understand the words which our Father hath spoken concerning
the natural branches of the olive tree and also concerning the Gentiles. In other
words, that was such a quick summary, we got questions. So they might be
wondering questions such as the following. Why do the Gentiles
have to get the gospel twice? Something's fishy about that. They get it back in New Testament
times and then he says they get it again in the last days. There seems to be a missing
step in between those two. Why are they having to get it again? Lehigh doesn't tell them
that and Nephys vision is going to get the infotof flesh that out. Another question might be, why did Lehigh say
the Gentiles have to get that gospel again the second time first and only then can the House of
Israel be gathered? Lehigh stops and clarifies that the sequence there is important. But he doesn't
say why? What's the relationship between Gentiles getting the gospel again and House of Israel
getting gathered? He doesn't say. So that seems to be kind of where the brothers are maybe getting
confused. It seems to be some missing pieces to this puzzle that Lehigh didn't explain.
Nephi's vision now in chapter 13 is going to explore that. He's going to get all those
answers so that he can explain it to them in chapter 15.
Josh for our listeners who are hearing the term Gentile and maybe don't understand what
you mean.
Can you give us a quick definition from Lehigh's point of view?
Yeah, from their point of view, Gentile is from a Hebrew term that just means the nations.
It's everybody who's not Israel, not descended from Abraham.
You're dividing up the world into two conceptual categories.
You're either part of the covenant family Israel or you're dividing up the world into two conceptual categories, you're either part of the covenant family, Israel, or you're not.
We have this idea from Genesis that Israel is supposed to bless all these other nations
that Gentiles through the covenant that they have.
And in the longer version of that account from the book of Abraham, the April for the
Pearl Great Price and Modern Revelation, it explains that as these Gentiles come to the
covenant that they'll rise up and bless Abraham
as their father.
They're adopted in their part of the family now, so they get to join.
That's some clarification we get there from the book of Abraham.
The gospel is going to go to them, New Testament, but then they're going to get it before the
gospel returns to the house of Israel.
So the two questions are, why do they have to get it before the gospel returns to the house of Israel. So the two questions are,
why do they have to get it again?
They already got it.
And why do they have to get it before we get it,
meaning Lehigh and...
And that's what this chapter is going to explain.
Chapter 13 of verse Nephi and Nephi's vision
is going to flesh out all these details
where Lehigh kind of left them hanging.
Chapter 13 opens,
Nephi sees many nations and kingdoms.
And verse 3, he reports, these are the nations and kingdoms of the Gentiles.
We're very much now leaving the house of Israel behind for a second and looking at the Gentile
situation here.
And then in verse 4, we get the formation of this great and abominable church, which is
most abominable above all other churches
that's seeking after gold and silver and harlots
and all these worldly things.
Josh, could I compare that to the great and spacious building?
I think we should compare that
to the great and spacious building, yeah.
In fact, in the Come Follow Me manual,
there's a statement from President Dallini Chokes.
This is what he said.
Well, this I'll just read the paragraph from the manual because there's a quotation within the
paragraph. President Dalin H. Oaks explained that the great and abominable church Nephi described
represents any philosophy or organization that opposes belief in God. And the captivity into which
this church seeks to bring the saints will not be so much physical
confinement as the captivity of false ideas.
I'm glad you brought this up because a church, we think of a building with a steeple, but
he's talking about any philosophy they don't necessarily have a building or organization
that opposes belief in God, but it's referred to as a church in 1st Nephi 13.
And this might be a good point to point out something we haven't mentioned yet,
is that a lot of people have seen Nephi's vision as being very apocalyptic,
which I'm using in the technical sense that we learned last month when we were in the book of
Revelation, where apocalyptic visions are a kind of Jewish literature or visionary experience,
where just like in Revelation and other examples here, you have an angel guide working a prophet
through a kind of a history of the world, especially the end times. And in these
visions, everything is very, very symbolic. You're not meant to understand a lot of
it in physical literal ways. The church thing here is an example of that. So we got
that great insight from President Oaks, and can see this at play for example in chapter 14
When the angel says behold there are saved two churches only one is the church of the Lamb of God and the other is the church of the devil
Wherefore who so belonged with not to the church of the Lamb of God
Belong it to that great church, which is the mother of abominations and again
We're not meant to be like,
is this a church I can look up in the phone book? This is apocalyptic, which means in apocalyptic
visions, everything's very black and white, good versus evil, all or nothing. There's no shades of
gray or nuance or anything like that. So the angels presenting this as very one versus the other
sort of a thing. So it'd be a mistake then to be like, well, that church over there, they must be the one on that side. Like President Oak said, it's any force philosophy practice that either brings you closer
to Jesus or against Jesus. That's probably the sense here. Fantastic. Thank you for clarifying that.
And Josh, I think that's super important. This versus kicked up a little bit of dust. You've
got on a mission you might have had it quoted to you because they are thinking of a church like one you can look up in the film book. Years ago,
Dr. Stephen Robinson wrote that article called,
Warring Against the Saints of God. And he said, this church is more about who has your heart
than who has your records. Do you remember that statement? Because there are folks that are striving to follow Christ in all sorts of different physical
churches and they would not be called the horror of all the earth.
So I'm glad you're explaining it this way and that President Oaks kind of referred to
it that way.
Anything that discounts or opposes a belief in God type of a thing.
I like what Steve Rounds has said who has your heart, who has your records?
John, I have written in my scriptures. I wish I had written down who I got this from, this kingdom of the devil, this great and a Bible church, this great and spacious building,
even in the book of Revelation, the symbols of the dragon and the woman on the waters,
any social, political or economic system that destroys lives and souls.
This might be a little discouraging, but I read that just the pornography industry alone
in the world makes over a hundred billion dollars a year.
That's more than the NFL, Major League Baseball, the NBA combined. No wonder if Nephi sees things like that.
It's this great and abominable group system. I think it's appropriate to compare this to the
imagery and revelation because at the end of chapter 14, Nephi is going to see John and the book
of Revelation. And he's told that there's connections between his vision
and that one. Looking at the apocalyptic imagery and revelation and helping it shed some light on
what's going on here, I think the text is openly inviting us to do that. When I've taught this, I've
always appreciated footnote 10D. It gives maybe we could call it a non-apocalyptic interpretation of
what church is called the Horde of all the earth. It takes you to a second Nephi 10, 16.
And that verse says, wherefore, he that fighteth against Zion, both Jew and Gentile, both Bonn and Free, male and female,
shall perish for there they who are the Horde of all the earth, for they who are not for me are against me, say, our gods.
That's a nice footnote to kind of, oh, okay, shed some more light on what Nephi saw, how it's described apocalypticly
and how it's described in second Nephi.
All right.
We have this picture here of Gentile Christianity.
We get descriptions of them and coming across the waters to the land where Nephi and Lehman
and Lemuel's descendants are living.
And let's pick up verse 20 in 1 Nephi 13 Lehman and Lemuel's descendants are living. And then let's pick up verse 20.
In verse Nephi 13, verse 20, it came to pass that I Nephi beheld that they did prosper in the land,
and I be held a book, and it was carried forth among them. And the angel pauses here for a long time
to talk about this book. This is a really important historical moment. The angel said unto me, noist thou the meaning of the book, verse 22, and I said unto him,
I know not. I would be thinking, you're the angel, you tell me.
I love me if I is honest. He probably thought the same thing. I know not. I know God
loves his children, but I don't know the book. Then in verse 23, the angel explains
the contents of the book.
Behold, it preceded out of the mouth of the Jew, it's a Jewish book.
The book that thou beholdest is a record of the Jews, which contains the covenants of the Lord, which he hath made under the house of Israel.
And it also contains many of the prophecies of the Holy Prophets.
And it is a record like unto the engravings which were upon the plates of brass,
saved there not so many.
Nevertheless, they contained the covenants of the Lord
which he had made under the house of Israel.
Wherefore they have great worth unto the Gentiles.
We gotta break this down,
because this is packed full of fun stuff.
He describes the Bible, of course,
as what we're talking about.
And he describes it as a kind of container.
He says, three times it contains, it contains, it contains.
So what does it contain?
Twice, he says, it contains the Lord's
covenants with the house of Israel.
And that's what we call the Abrahamic covenant.
In fact, Abrahamic covenant is not a scriptural term.
It's just a lot easier to say than the actual scriptural term,
which is the covenants
of the Lord, which he have made under the House of Israel,
which is a mouthful.
So it contains the Abrahamic covenant.
And it says it also contains many of the prophecies
of the Holy Prophets, which I don't see
as being a big different thing here.
I mean, if you look at Isaiah and Jeremiah and Hosea,
and Amos, what are they talking about?
The Abrahamic covenant.
So we've got kind of the covenants themselves spilled out,
maybe some history record of the covenant playing out.
We've got prophecies of gathering and things like that,
but he's saying that basically everything to do
in the Bible here revolves around these covenants.
This is why it's important.
And what's striking here is most people today
don't see the Bible that way.
If I were to go to New York and you do one of those things, you know where you stop people
on the street with a microphone and a TV camera and ask them a question out of the blue.
And I were to go to 100 Christians on the streets of New York and say, excuse me, sir,
do you believe the Bible?
Awesome.
Great.
Why is it important?
How many out of 100 do you think are going to go, oh man, love the Bible,
it's important because it's got the Lord's Covenants with Israel. I doubt we're going to get
very many people saying it that way. Even if you went to a Latter-day Saint Chapel and asked that,
you might not get it. Exactly. Now Christians appreciate the Bible for many awesome reasons.
They might be like, it's got awesome stories of faith.
It's got prophecies of Jesus' coming.
Well, the covenants with Israel
are not gonna jump to their minds
as the top reason the Bible's important.
It should be striking to us
that that's why the angel says the Bible's importance.
If people today are not seeing it the way
the angel sees it, that should invite some questions.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
I think this is one of the most significant verses in the whole Book of Mormon, and I'm
about to make my case for that.
you