Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Corinthians 8-13 Part 1 • Dr. Joseph Spencer • Sept 18 - Sept 24
Episode Date: September 13, 2023How are we like the Corinthians in our offerings? Dr. Joseph Spencer examines Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians and remembering the poor, giving with love, and the purpose of offerings.Show No...tes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-31-40/YouTube: https://youtu.be/bPVIRxODOrMFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Dr. Joseph Spencer02:09 Introduction of Dr. Joseph Spencer03:22 Background to the letter05:24 Reconciliation after 1 Corinthians06:15 Possible third letter06:57 Paul fulfills Isaiah07:44 Paul asks for donations11:05 Becoming a cheerful giver14:07 N.T. Wright’s translation 16:28 Jesus’s example of generosity19:17 The practicality of giving22:13 Paul’s strategy for offerings24:27 Doing what we can27:23 Inspiration vs competition29:43 Parallels to King Benjamin31:31 Hanks shares a personal story about fast offerings34:10 Needs of the body and the heart35:37 God’s unspeakable gift36:35 Paul’s parodic boasting40:21 Revelation and trial44:39 Parallels to Moroni47:44 Ether 12 connections49:43 Faith, love, and a capacity for pain54:26 End of Part I–Dr. Joseph SpencerThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I'm your host, I'm here with John by the way.
Hey John, we've been studying first Corinthians and second Corinthians for a while now.
What have you learned from Paul and these Corinthians saints?
Well, I actually got to go to Corinthians once and it was so fun to hear kind of the
backstory of what a that place on the
isthmus that was had so much commerce and travel and everything and you kind of get
a sense of this was a real gathering place for a lot of people and for travelers and a lot
of worldliness there and so when you read what Paul's addressing you're like, yeah,
yeah, when you see that.
So I'm excited to see how he finishes in this second letter.
I've noticed that Paul has a lot of interaction
with these Corinthian saints.
He spent 18 months with them as we learned in the book of Acts.
And then the back and forth with these letters,
there's a letter that we're told is there,
but we don't have.
There's also a what Paul calls a painful visit.
This back and forth seems to me like a friendship
almost it has ups and downs.
It's, I love you.
What are you doing?
I love you.
I gotta, we gotta address some problems.
John, we have a Bible expert here with us today.
He wouldn't call himself a Bible expert,
but I think he is.
His name is Dr. Joseph Spencer.
I like to call him Joe. Joe, what are we looking
forward to today with the last lesson here in Corinthians? There's a lot here. We'll be looking at
really kind of two blocks of text, a couple of chapters in which Paul is talking about a collection
that's being gathered for the saints in Jerusalem. There's some interesting things to dig into
there, but then especially the last four chapters here kind of pulls parting words to the Corinthian saints at least by way of letter.
And some really beautiful teachings about weakness and grace. So lots, lots we can play around with
today. This sounds fantastic. Sounds like we're going to learn a lot. Hey, John, Joe is new to our
podcast. He's not new to me. We've been friends for many years,
but he's new to our podcast.
Why don't you tell everybody about him?
Yeah, we're excited to have Dr. Joseph M. Spencer.
He's a philosopher, associate professor of ancient scripture.
At Brigham Young University,
he has degrees from Brigham Young University,
San Jose State, and the University of New Mexico
where he got his PhD in philosophy. It's the author of seven books co-editor of four collections of essays.
He serves as the editor of the Journal of Book Mormon Studies and is the
associate director of Latter-day Saint Theology Seminar, a co-editor for the
introductions to Mormon thought and he and his wife Karen lived in Probe with their five children.
His latest book is called A Word in Season and the subtitle is Isaiah's Reception in the Book of Mormon
and that will be published in November and I'm excited to see that. It's kind of like why is Isaiah in there and how is it perceived among
early readers of the Book of Mormon?
Yeah, I mean the question I'm trying to sort out in the book is just how unique
is the Book of Mormons handling of Isaiah? If you put it in conversation with the large or
history of Christians and Jews and reading Isaiah and making sense of it.
Yeah. Well, we may have to have you back next year when we take on the Book of Mormon,
right, Hank? Absolutely. Joe is an expert there as well. So Joe, I want to jump right in here,
but can we do a little bit of review? I mentioned earlier that Paul spent 18 months, a year and a half
with these Corinthians saints, basically raised up this branch, leaves, and first Corinthians,
as his response to all the problems he's heard about since being away. What has happened since then?
Why do we get a second letter?
And more than just a second letter, right?
There are letters that he wrote that we know of,
or at least one, that we know of, that we don't have.
Of course, he may have had other correspondence.
He's one of the first missionaries there, it seems,
and helps to, yeah, found the sprang as you put it.
Though he baptizes only one person, I think, there, right? He sort of leaves to others that work. He does a lot of preaching, it seems and helps to, yeah, found the sprang as you put it. Though he baptizes only one person, I think, there, right?
He sort of leaves to others that work.
He does a lot of preaching, it seems.
But then he keeps a kind of close eye on the Corinthian saints.
So he has a further visit at some later point,
what he calls his painful visit, his tearful visit.
That seems to have been very, very difficult.
It's not clear exactly what happened.
But from first Corinthians, it's clear that things are rocky
in Corinth with the saints.
There's a lot of factional spirit about it,
a kind of tribalism, which isn't at all relevant
in the 21st century, I'm sure.
And a great deal of sort of trying to figure out novel ways
to think about the Christian revelation, right?
And in ways that then lead to all these kinds of problems, as well as just some
straightforward
sinfulness that Paul has to address. I remember going up to some of those Greek temples where they have the prostitution and saying, well, we're free and Christ, right?
So we know what we want. And then it didn't talk quite a bit about food, if I remember right?
And then, exactly. And then it didn't talk quite a bit about food,
if I remember right?
Yeah, there's all this battle about,
well, if we have what he calls Christian license,
we have the freedom in Christ to do basically anything,
then we can eat whatever we want.
And he's like, wow, it's a little more complicated.
That got to figure out how to get along together.
And sometimes your freedom is leading other people
into trouble.
Yeah.
And then with Dr. Nelson last week, we looked at Paul reconciling.
It seems to be the beginning of second Corinthians is this,
I was pretty harsh.
Let's reconcile.
I'm actually happy I was pretty harsh because it helped you quite a bit,
but let's reconcile, I still love you.
Is that sound right for the beginning?
Yeah. And ties it to a kind of doctrine of reconciliation with us. But let's reconcile, I still love you. Is that sound right for the beginning?
Yeah.
And ties it to a kind of doctrine of reconciliation with us and God.
So you can sort of take his own experience and make it a reflection of the gospel itself.
One of my favorite parts of reading was, where is your letters of recommendation?
And the pulse responses.
I started this branch.
Like, you are my letters of recommendation.
Kind of this, are you kidding me?
So with that background, Joe, lead us into chapter eight.
Where do you want to go? How do you want to start this?
Yes, so chapters eight and nine form a unit.
And in fact, many scholars have played with the possibility
that chapters eight and nine were from an independent letter
and kind of got sandwiched in here or something like that.
There's a kind of an abrupt shift at the beginning of chapter 8 and then a abrupt shift
again at the beginning of chapter 10.
So what we have going on here, Paul is talking to the Corinthian saints about something
that shows up in bits and pieces across his letters.
So scholars have had to reconstruct the situation here, but with some reconstruction, it's really, really helpful to know.
So Paul, after he began his ministry generally,
going around missionizing, preaching in all these places,
he clearly saw what he was doing and what was happening.
That is his mission to the Gentiles,
as a fulfillment of very specific prophecies in the Old Testament.
Here especially might think of Isaiah 60 and 61.
You get these prophecies not only of Gentiles coming and recognizing that Israel's God is
God, but there's talk of the Gentiles laying their goal and their silver at the feet of
Israel.
Paul believed he was living through the fulfillment of the gospel coming to the Gentiles.
I mean, it was, right?
And so when he read these passages,
he thought, this is the reconstruction.
He seems to have thought one thing that might help other Jews
who have not yet seen in Jesus Christ, the Messiah,
who haven't recognized that Jesus is the Messiah.
If they can see that those prophecies are being fulfilled,
this might provoke them to go,
oh, something's happening here.
Romans 9 through 11 talks a lot about that theme.
So one thing Paul then does is as he goes around to the various Gentile congregations, he asks them to
gather up whatever extra monies they have, and then he will have them all delivered to the Jewish
saints in Jerusalem. And this will be this kind of glorious fulfillment of Isaiah's prophecies.
And so you get traces of that, the end of Romans, at the end of first Corinthians, as
referred to very directly in Galatians, and then of course in Acts 24, when Paul goes
to Jerusalem, it's reported that he brings with him all this wealth.
Joe, do we know what's going on in Jerusalem?
What's happening that the saints there need so much assistance?
I don't know that we have a ton of detail except that the Jewish saints are very poor,
but they just seem to be very impoverished, gathering all of this up at the very least
would just be a question of alleviating poverty.
But on top of that, it seems Paul wants to make this symbolic gesture to signal the fulfillment of prophecy.
Okay. So here in chapters eight and nine, this is what Paul is talking to the Corinthian saints about.
He had apparently a year before they'd made a bunch of pledges about how much they were going to
contribute. And then he's gone up to Macedonia, the saints up north. This is places like Thessalonica
and Philippi and said, hey, guess what those guys down in Corinth are doing? They're really
leading the way on this. And the saints in Macedonia have given a ton. And then he finds out that the Corinthian Saints are backing out. So these two chapters,
right? So they're not making good on their pledge. And so he writes this
strongly worded recommendation that they get back on their program.
So the other Saints, the Saints in Galatia, the Macedonians, they're really giving what are you guys doing?
Exactly. And he even says, I mean, this is really early in the text, but he says that the Saints in
Macedonia have given more than they have, they're actually relatively impoverished, and yet they've
just given and given and given, and you Corinthians who have all this wealth are sitting on it.
This may be a side point, but I think it might help make some of this matter for Latter-day Saints because it kind of feel like, okay, there was this historical thing Paul was working on.
But this issue of the collection is actually directly talked about in the doctrine and Covenants.
So in section 42, when the Lord introduces the law of consecration to the Saints, the Lord opens it by saying,
so this is section 42, verse 29 and 30, if thou lovest me, thou
shall serve me and keep all my commandments and behold thou wilt remember the
poor and consecrate thy properties, etc., etc. That phrase, remember the
poor shows up in exactly two places in all of scripture, and it's right there
in that verse in doctrine of Covenant 42, and its engalations to 10 when Paul
explains the commandment to gather
this collection, to take to Jerusalem. And then, after the law of consecration gets described in
doctrine of Covenant 42, then this is how the Lord explains its purpose. So this is verse 39,
for it shall come to pass that which I speak by the mouths of my prophets shall be fulfilled,
for I will consecrate of the riches of those who embrace my gospel among the Gentiles unto the poor of my people who are of the house of Israel.
It's exactly what Paul was doing.
So sometimes it may feel like these details kind of weird old historical things don't
necessarily matter much now, but this is like the Lord himself draws all of this back
to our attention.
What Paul was doing and says, this is what the law of consecration looks like.
I'm going to read a section from the manual here, the opening section from the manual. this back to our attention, what Paul was doing and says, this is what the law of consecration looks like.
I'm going to read a section from the manual here, the opening section from the manual.
It seems to go right aligned with what you're talking about.
It says, what would you do if you heard that a congregation of saints in another area
was struggling in poverty?
This was the situation that Paul described to the Corinthian saints and second Corinthians.
He hoped to persuade the Corinthian saints to donate some of their abundance to saints
in need.
But beyond a request for donations, Paul's words also contained profound truths about
giving.
Every man, according as he purposed Seth in his heart, so let him give.
Not grudgingly, or of necessity, for God's loveeth, a cheerful giver. In our
day, there are still saints throughout the world who are in need of help. Sometimes the
most we can do for them is to fast and donate fast offerings. In other cases, our giving
can be more direct and personal. Whatever forms our sacrifices take, it's worth examining
our motivations for giving. Are our sacrifices expressions of love? After all, it's worth examining our motivations for giving, our sacrifices,
expressions of love. After all, it's love that makes a cheerful giver.
I think we're right in line now to learn about giving to those in need.
Maybe there's some listeners about to turn it off going, I don't want to give
anything. So don't turn off the podcast, stay with us here.
I think we're really going to dive into what this really means as a Christian.
I'm old enough to remember when President Spencer W. Kimball used to emphasize, he called it the
threefold mission of the church proclaim the gospel, perfect the saints, and redeem the dead.
And I believe it was during President Thomas S. Monson's time that he added forth was to care for the poor
in needy. And the most recent way it's been articulated in the handbook, I just
love it. It's like four verbs, live, care, invite, unite, live the gospel of
Jesus Christ, care for those in need and Hank, what you just read from the manual.
It didn't say the poor in needy.
I like how it says care for those in need
because any of us might be in need.
There might be a temporary setback or something
or maybe it is more chronic, I don't know,
but live the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Care for those in need.
Invite all to receive the gospel
and unite families for eternity. I love that President Monson introduced that I used to be a very serious person, I used to be a very serious person, I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person,
I used to be a very serious person, I used to be a very serious person, in the minds of a Christian community is how do we care for each other? Part of the difficulty with reading second Corinthians 8 and 9
is that the King James version can feel really hard
to read here.
Paul and General can feel hard in the King James version, right?
Yeah, we've experienced that.
Yeah, yes.
These letters are actually quite forceful in the Greek.
So I was wondering if we might actually just read
a couple of these passages in a modern translation.
Sure.
Kind of get the feel of it.
So I'll read, this is the first seven verses of chapter eight.
I mean, this is from NT writes translation of the New Testament.
NT write as an Anglican scholar and clergyman
and just an amazing person.
He's been quoted on our podcast.
Before.
Yeah, he wrote a biography of Paul that we've had lots of people quote from, I think it's
just called Paul a biography.
So if readers want to go deeper, that's a great source.
Yeah.
So this is how he translates.
The first seven verses of chapter eight, and you can kind of feel the force of Paul's
prose here.
Let me tell you my dear family about the grace which God has given to the Macedonian churches.
They have been sorely tested by suffering, but the abundance of grace which was given to them
and the depths of poverty they have endured have overflowed in a wealth of sincere generosity on their
part. I bear them witness that of their own accord up to their ability and even beyond their ability,
they begged us eagerly to let them have the privilege of sharing and the work of service for God's people.
They didn't just do what we had hoped.
They gave themselves, first to the Lord, and then to us as God willed it.
This put us in a position where we could encourage Titus that he should complete this work of
grace that had begun among you.
You have plenty of everything after all, plenty of faith and speech, knowledge, and all kinds
of eagerness, and plenty of love coming from us to you.
So why not have plenty of this grace to?
It's kind of nice to just feel the flow, like Paul is writing with force and conviction,
and very practical concerns, as he's talking.
But what might be maybe most useful to reflect on together here would be a verse that comes
just a little bit later than that, just a verse or two on, where Paul trying to get the saints in Corinth to be a bit more
generous compares their task to Christ's atonement. This is verse 9. Now I'm reading from the
King James. For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that though he was rich, yet
for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich. That's a beautiful
description and a really nice way of connecting our task of consecration and of taking care of the
poor to the very active Christ's atonement. He is God. He has all these resources spiritually,
and yet he becomes poor so that we become rich. That is on a good motivation to take seriously our task.
Yeah, thank you for bringing in verse 9. I love the Paul of Dutus. It's kind of like, listen, the heart
of the whole gospel is generosity, maybe, of Christ. As he introduced, we must be generous with each
other. Look what the Savior did for us.
And I'm thinking of Isaiah.
He was bruised for our inequities.
The chastisement that brought us peace was upon him.
And with his stripes, we are healed.
And he descended below all things.
What I mean, the heart of that is such generosity and selflessness.
And then Paul's asking the saints to do the same
for each other.
They're like that connection you made.
I mean, it reminds me of King Benjamin of it too, right?
Benjamin says, look, you're begging.
And then here's the beggar, you were begging
and God gave you something you completely did not deserve.
He's redeemed you and poured out his spirit and so on
and he could have looked on you and said,
you brought this on yourself, but he didn't.
And now you're gonna look at the beggar and say,
similar kind of gesture he weaves together,
Christ's over abundant grace toward us,
and then says, now can't you get right
your relationship to those who need a bit of help?
I think Paul, if I had to sum it up,
he's saying to be a Christian is to become generosity.
It's not even enough to be generous.
It's you because this becomes an integral part of your nature
because you're trying to be like the Savior.
Sometimes you might think of,
let's give of our substance,
like let's pry it out of your grip, right?
Come on, just let go and give it away.
Where I think Paul wants a change of heart, right?
Not just giving money.
He wants them to become like Christ,
who is just so openly generous.
I just can't see the Savior going,
I don't want to, I don't want to give.
I don't want to bless,
but they'll pry it out of my hands. I don't want to give, I don't want to bless, but
they'll pry it out of my hands.
I guess I have to give it to them.
I mean, that's King Benjamin again.
In Mosiah 4, after Benjamin's people have had this experience of Christ, they've
fallen to the ground and they cried out for mercy and they've received it.
This is where Paul starts talking about the beggar, but one of the things he says, he
says, if you can get this kind of attitude right, if you can get this every day,
then he says, you will take care of the beggar.
He doesn't say, you had better.
It becomes a natural outreach.
And in fact, that famous verse where he says,
now you might say to yourself,
I'm not going to reach out, I'm not going to help.
It's interesting that he says there,
you might tell yourself, I will stay my hand,
which means my hand is already
reaching out automatically. I'm reaching out at this point and you might try to talk yourself
out of it. But if Christ has really worked on you, you can't but reach out and help.
Joe, as we're going along, I love for our listeners to have practical ways of practicing this.
listeners have practical ways of practicing this. Along the way, if you think of things.
Yeah, I mean, asking a philosopher to be practical.
Yeah.
That would be difficult.
But it is we're saying, I mean, right from the outset here,
there's this amazing talk years ago by Alter Holland,
called Arby Not All Beggars, right,
from General Conference.
And toward the end of that talk,
he says, now the problem is enormous.
What do we do?
And he literally says, I don't know, right?
And he says, but that's why you've got to get on your knees.
If there's no general program here,
you've got to take this up with God, what can you do?
And I think that's important that this is the kind of thing
we can't program.
It's the kind of thing we have to always feel a little uncomfortable with.
We can't be at ease in Zion.
I like a line from CS Lewis about this when he says, I often get asked, how much should
you give?
And he says, if it doesn't hurt, you're not giving enough.
Little uncomfortable.
Am I giving enough?
Am I reaching out enough?
If I feel like, yeah, I'm doing great.
It's probably'm doing great.
It's probably not doing great.
Yeah.
That's interesting because I often hear from General 30s, a generous fast.
That's never given an amount, right? It's never given.
Here's what a generous fast is.
It's a generous fast.
I'm fascinated when the widow through in her might that Jesus didn't say,
oh, give it back to her. He let her do that, which is amazing. That was all she had.
Yeah, and it's, I mean, maybe important to emphasize that Paul is writing to a community.
I mean, he's asking them to gather up what they can to send outside of their community, which of course we have that responsibility. Often that's what fast offerings end up doing.
They help locally, but then the extras head off and can help elsewhere. I mean, last time I read
statistics, a billion people go to hungry, go to bed hungry every night in the world, right? We have
serious responsibilities on that score, but he's also writing to a community. And in so many ways,
like this is the practical reality of what it looks like to take care of one another is
the kind of simple, everyday work that can only happen in the community.
So-and-so is struggling and it's their neighbor that actually reaches out and recognizes
that something's going on. I'm lucky in that I live in a ward in Provo where our whole ward is seven
blocks big, right?
But the result is the neighborhood is the ward, the ward is the neighborhood in a lot of ways,
and it allows you to see way more clearly the kind of work award community can do for each other,
than sometimes when you're spread out as more geographically, because you can just see
completely intertwined lives, and when someone's in any kind of difficulty,
what the saints are willing to do for each other. And I think that's very much a manifestation
of the same kind of thing. So Joe, let's keep going on this. I don't think this is all Paul has to
say on this, right? He has a lot to say. And I mean, a lot of it can feel very practical and sort of
focused on what's happening there in Corinth, right? But one thing that I think is interesting here,
there's a strategy Paul uses that we might pick out of a couple of verses that might feel a little and sort of focused on what's happening there in Corinth. But one thing that I think is interesting here,
there's a strategy Paul uses that we might pick out
of a couple of verses that might feel a little weird
in some ways, but I think it's actually really intriguing.
So this is actually jumping back a verse to chapter 8,
verse 8, and then we'll actually jump ahead
to a verse in chapter 9.
So chapter 8, verse 8, he says,
I speak not by commandment,
but by occasion of the forwardness of others
and to prove the sincerity of your love.
And then jumping to chapter 9 verse 2, he says this,
for I know the forwardness of your mind,
for which I boast of you to them of Macedonia,
that Achaea, which is where Corinth is,
that Achaea was ready a year ago
and your zeal hath provoked very many.
Those two verses show that part of Paul's
strategy in trying to gather this collection is to create a kind of contest.
Right. I tried to get the Saints in Macedonia to be like, no, we're going to beat the
Saints in the Saints in a chaos. It really does feel that way a little. And that feels
a little strange. We're kind of like, is that really the way you want to go about this?
Yes, that's, do we want this to be competition? But I don't think it's quite that Paul is trying to create competition, but he does want to use each other's successes to build up the other, right?
The one successes to build up the successes of the other. And to say, look, it's possible.
There's more that you can do because look over here, it's going on. That may be a helpful thing and a healthy thing to think about. Sometimes we can hear success
stories in the church and just feel like, oh, then that means I'm terrible. Here we go, right?
Someone else did something. Oh, that Relief Society present did all those things, which shows
me that I am not doing anything like I was supposed to do. I'm a worthless non-giver.
Right. But there's also the version of it where if we have the
right spirit about it, hearing the successes of others can make us go, oh hang on, there's work
that can be done here. There's more that we can do. I need to get over myself a bit here. So the
fact that Paul is sort of playing these two regions off of each other. Interesting and suggestive in certain ways, I think.
I believe it was the woman of Bethany that annoyed to Jesus's feet. Jesus just has this wonderful
phrase. She have done what she could. And I love that phrase because I can't do as much
as that person did. I can't do as much, but rather that comforting phrase.
She did what she could and we can have peace in that.
I did what I could.
The woman who anoints Jesus' feet,
that's the same story that Elder Holland brought up
in the talk we mentioned previously,
are we not all beggars.
He talks about that phrase.
She has done what she could.
And then he says this, what a succinct formula.
A journalist once questioned Mother Teresa of Calcutta
about her hopeless task of arresting the destitute
in that city.
He said that statistically speaking,
she was accomplishing absolutely nothing.
This remarkable little woman shot back
that her work was about love, not statistics.
Notwithstanding the staggering number beyond her reach, she said she could keep the
commandment to love God and her neighbor by serving those within her reach, with whatever
resources she had.
What we do is nothing but a drop in the ocean, she would say on another occasion.
But if we didn't do it, the ocean would be one drop less than it is. Soberly, the journalist concluded that Christianity is obviously not a statistical endeavor.
He reasoned that if there would be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents
than over 99 who need no repentance, then apparently God is not overly preoccupied with percentages.
So, as much as we'd love to eradicate all poverty, that's probably
not within one person's reach. So we can't say, well, because I can't get rid of all of it,
I'm not going to do anything. Yeah, and it's so easy to feel like we aren't doing what we can,
and we alternate between extremes. We tend to either think that we're not doing anything like
what we should do when we're actually doing all right. Or we tend to think we're doing everything great when we're not doing everything at all.
I was speaking to a fireside recently up in the Salt Lake area and a woman asked a question
during the fireside about I just feel like I don't do enough and so on.
And we talked about it a bit, but she came up to me afterward to talk and said, so here's
my situation. I'm from Zimbabwe,
I'm just here visiting. And she said, and back home, I'm in the State Relief Society presidency,
I'm in the word primary presidency, and I run all the music for the word. And I just don't think I do
enough. You're doing my heavens, my heavens, my heavens, you're good. You're doing a whole lot. But then, yeah, the other extreme, we can feel like,
oh, my heavens, you can't really ask that of me, right?
So, yeah, we tend to alternate between extremes.
But if we can see the kind of work that others are doing
not as competition, but as encouragement,
and a kind of collective spirit, then there's something I think
could come out of this kind of thing.
Yeah, so maybe Paul's not wanting them to compete as much as he wants them to be inspired by
these other congregations.
In chapter 9 verse 7, Paul says this, every man according as he purposed in his heart,
so let him give, not gargingly, or of necessity for God's love with a cheerful giver.
I'll go ahead and read from NT Rights translation again so we get the flow and feel of the larger passage.
So, starting in verse 5,
So I thought it necessary to exhort the brothers that they should go on to you in advance and get everything about your gracious gift in order ahead of time.
You've already promised it after all.
Then it really will appear as a gift of grace, not something that has had to be extorted from you.
This is what I mean.
Someone who so sparingly will reap sparingly as well.
Someone who so generously will reap generously.
Everyone should do as they have determined in their heart,
not in a gloomy spirit or simply because they have to
since God loves a cheerful giver.
And God is well able to lavish all his grace upon you
so that in every matter and in every way,
you will have enough of everything,
and maybe lavish in all your own good works.
Just as the Bible says, they spread their favors wide,
they gave to the poor their righteousness and doers forever.
He's quoting from the Psalms at the end of that.
So yeah, the context, I think, makes quite clear
what's going on there.
He's worried about these saints in Corinth
getting a bit stingy and not quite coming through
on what they had pledged, but he says, look,
I could have just shown up and told you all off
or something like that, but I thought I'd write you
before I get there and see if I could encourage you
to set something straight so that when we come
and when these brothers show up to get the collection, it'll have been done out of the goodness of your
heart and not regretfully and not resentfully so that the way, again, is translated here,
right?
Everyone should do as they have determined in their heart not in a gloomy spirit or simply
because they have to since God loves a cheerful giver.
This ought to come right out of the abundance of your heart.
I don't want this to be extortion.
I don't want this to be the kind of thing you do
because you whitenuckle your way through giving.
Right?
I want this to be something where you have been genuinely transformed
by Christ.
You get this clear in your mind and then you give
and God can celebrate that in every way.
Thanks, Joe. That was fantastic.
John, what do you have
for us? I'm back with King Benjamin still how he said, okay, what if you see the beggar and you
don't have anything? And he talked about King Benjamin says, I would that you would say in your
heart, if I had, I would give. So he's talking about where your heart is in all of this. That ultimately is
the doing what you could think. And I appreciate that King Benjamin is talking about not just
the amount, but, but where's your heart? I think it probably pains some people, like
think King Benjamin said that, that they can't give more. And then, and that makes me think
of the person you mentioned, Joe, from Zimbabwe, that was doing all this stuff. And then, and that makes me think of the person you mentioned, Joe,
from Zimbabwe that was doing all this stuff. And still didn't think they were doing enough.
I remember mine it is something that really blessed me from President Henry B. Eiring. I'll
have to paraphrase, but in this talk, he mentioned someone who might have a calling that
feels overwhelming. So I'm kind of shifting gears a little bit here And maybe like that person in Zimbabwe that's got three callings and he said you might even feel resentful
Even might want to complain
But the Lord has given you not demands on your time
But opportunities for service and then he said this and I just oh, thank you for saying that
So when you approach the Lord just you can't do it all. Just ask what should I do next?
I thought, oh, that's perfect. I can't, what's the the game? Wack-a-mole or something?
You can't get it all. So ask the question, Lord what should I do next? And that blessed me a lot
when I was a little bit overwhelmed. What's the next best thing I can do? And then I can
try to be at peace with that. That's really nice. Yeah. I like to put myself in the mind of our
listeners and saying, okay, I want to help. I think my heart's in the right place. What do I do?
Well, one thing that's very simple to do is to give a generous, fast offering.
We've already mentioned this before, but I'll tell you a little story.
I was a financial clerk.
It was a long time ago.
It's probably 20 years ago now.
This is back when people used checks.
I don't know if either of you remember this time.
Phase of our history.
People wrote out checks.
And it was my job as financial clerk to open those
tiding envelopes and count everything up. And I remember one person specifically, a very
wealthy man in our board. And he gave a, it was a very large tiding check. But then I
always noticed that at times his fast offering was more than his tithing,
which shocked me. I remember pointing that out to my bishop, bishop weighed,
Sparry. I remember, I said, Bishop Sparry, you know, this is pretty incredible. And he just,
he kind of nodded and said, that's, you know, that's who he is. And yet, maybe I can't do that.
Maybe I can't give all of that. So maybe on a smaller scale,
this is from an article written by Mindy Ray Friedman
back in 2014.
It's called Giving More Than Just Money.
Now, last anybody think,
oh, okay, I'm not gonna give money.
I'll give other things.
Giving money is, I think, central to this message. It's, you have resources,
give them. Are there other things we can give, though? This is what she writes. She writes one young
woman deciding after reading her patriarchal blessing that she wanted to do something grand
to help put her in need. After unsuccessfully trying to give aid to some people she saw on the street,
she thought she'd fail. Then she got home and found her brother crying because he'd
been teased at school. After taking him out for some ice cream and listening to his troubles,
she learned a lesson. The poor are just as likely to be in your home, as on the streets,
she says. There are all sorts of needy people in the world, those who need food and shelter of course,
but also those who need love, council, and encouragement.
So there's two things we can do.
One, we can give a generous fast offering,
increase that fast offering, and then second,
just look around to you at your family,
and then look in your neighborhood,
like you said, Joe, those seven blocks of your ward, you're bound to find someone who needs your help.
The older I get, the more astonished I am at just how much hurt there is in the world.
In big ways, but also in small ways, and just how much of it is hidden behind the front
walls of a house or how much of it is hidden in the heart. The impoverished is a much bigger crowd when we take into account things beyond just what's
physically necessary, though also my heavens what's physically necessary.
Yeah, I frequently joke with my students that Latter-day Saints get together a couple times a
week to lie to each other about how they're doing. How are you? I'm doing great. How are you?
Fine. Fine. Doing really well. Can't complain, right? When everybody is struggling in some way.
Can't I remember hearing a bishop say that he figured everybody was okay. And then when he became
a bishop and started hearing what was going on, he'd sit on the stand and go, that family's going through this, that family over there's going through this, that family over there's
going through this. And then I got to sit there too. And that's exactly right. Everybody's going
through something and it really softens you up to let you know everybody's dealing with something.
you up to let you know everybody's dealing with something and you're so glad that they are there
and pray that they'll feel that outpouring from being there and taking the sacrament, feel the Savior's love because everybody's going through something.
Now, yeah, let's hit one more verse in chapter 9 and then all of this really leads well into what
we're going to find in chapters 10 through 13, But this is the way that Paul ends these two chapters about the collection.
And it's just beautiful in the King James.
Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift.
So all this grace we've been talking about how much God is giving us,
and then what that means for us, and so on.
We want to talk about a cheerful giver, a grateful giver, right?
Thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift.
Paul has spent two chapters speaking about gifts, but the gift that God gives us is the unspeakable gift. Paul has spent two chapters speaking about gifts,
but the gift that God gives us is the unspeakable one.
So I like the way that that juxtaposes again,
Christ, a measurable bounty and what he's given us,
and then the measurable, but so hard for us,
but the measurable gifts were meant to give.
The contemporary English version of the Bible says,
thank God for his gift that is too wonderful for words. I look at that word
unspeakable, I'm like, what does that mean? The gift that is too wonderful for words.
And probably a good place to settle here to start would be in chapter 12.
So chapters 10, 11, set up some things and I think we'll want to circle back
and look at that a bit, but Paul really kind of gets going here. What he's been doing for a little bit in chapter 11 is
fake boasting. What's going on in these chapters, he's upset about some people that he actually calls
super apostles, these people who are claiming to be like, they're not just missionaries, they're like
the best or something like that, and he's kind of fed up with what's going on in Corinth there and really starts going after them.
And so in the kind of parody of them, he boasts a bit.
So for example, in verse 21 of chapter 11,
I speak as concerning reproach as though we had been weak,
how be it wearin' so ever any is bold,
I speak foolishly, I am bold also.
Are they Hebrews?
So am I.
Are they Israelites? So am I. Are they the seat of Hebrews? So am I. Are they Israelites? So am I.
Are they the seat of Abraham? So am I. Are they ministers of Christ? I speak as a fool. I am more.
In labor's more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more frequent, in deaths offed.
Of the Jews, five times received the forty stripes saved one. Thrice was I beaten with rods. Once I was
stoned, Thrice I suffered shipwreck. A night and a day I have been in the deep.
In journeyings often in perils of waters
and perils of robbers and perils by my known countrymen
and perils by the heathen and perils in the city
and perils in the wilderness and perils in the sea
and perils among false brethren and wearingness
and painfulness and watchings often and hunger
and thirst and fastings often and cold and nakedness
besides those things that are without, that which come with upon me daily, the care of all the churches.
So Paul does a little bit of a parody boasting, right?
Perotic boasting here, kind of making fun of these supposed super apostles who are claiming
that they have so much spiritual authority.
But all of that sets up what he contrasts with that attitude.
And that I think is what we really want to spend some time on.
So this is now chapter 12.
He opens chapter 12 with a little further fake boasting.
But he talks here about revelations. Whenever I boast, I'm gonna say that from now on. This is just fake boasting.
I just fake boasting.
Don't take me serious. Don't take me serious.
But let me tell you how great I am.
Right.
Because one thing, I mean, back in chapter 11,
all the boasting is, look, I have all the same credentials as any of these people
and on top of that, look at all I've gone through.
But at the beginning of chapter 12, he focuses on revelations.
And he puts it in the third person.
He's like, I know a guy, right? I know
someone who, and of course he's talking about himself, but what he does here, I think, is really
interesting in a lot of ways. So, so chapter 12, verse one, it is not expedient for me doubtless
to glory, to boast. I will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. I knew a man in Christ
above 14 years ago, whether in the body I cannot tell,
whether out of the body I cannot tell God know it.
Such an one was caught up to the third heaven,
to divine vision.
And I knew such a man,
whether in the body out of the body I cannot tell God know it,
how that he was caught up into paradise
and heard unspeakable words,
which it is not lawful for a man to utter.
Of such an one, will I glory yet of myself, I will not glory,
so he's playing this little game, right?
But I will glory in my infirmities.
So he's built up this whole story,
all these things he could boast of, could boast of,
could boast of even to the point of, look,
I had a vision, something like Section 76 of the doctrine of covenants.
I was carried up into the heavens, I saw all of this,
and he's like, of all of that, who cares?
None of that, who cares?
None of that is worth boasting about.
And presumably the people there claiming
they've had revelations and so on, right?
But he's like, all of that, meh, this isn't the thing.
I wanna talk about my infirmities.
That's really quite a thing.
And he's gonna spell this out further.
I think to note before we go further,
notice that he can't say anything about that revelation
that he had in heaven.
He says that he heard unspeakable words.
It's not lawful for a man to utter.
He can't pass that on, but he goes on
to talk about another revelation and he can utter it.
So this I think is very interesting.
So this is jumping to verse seven.
Last I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations, there was given to me
a thorn in the flesh. The messenger of Satan to buffet me, lest I should be exalted above measure.
For this thing, I besought the Lord Thrice that it might depart from me, and he said unto me,
here's a revelation. My grace is sufficient for the, for my strength is made perfect in weakness.
Then Paul adds, most gladly therefore,
will I rather glory in my infirmities
that the power of Christ may rest upon me?
So this I find very interesting.
The chapter opens with, there's a revelation I had,
I can't utter it, I can't explain it,
I can't pass it on, all I can say is that it happened.
But he can go on immediately to talk about his weaknesses and he says,
Here God spoke to me and this I can share.
This is the kind of thing to boast about.
God spoke and he said, Yeah, you're pathetic.
Right? But my grace is enough.
So this I think is a passage really worth dwelling on some here.
So that verse 9, the language that I should sound familiar to Latter- Saints, not just from Paul, but from the Book of Mormon, right? This is the same language
we get in ether 12. What we have happening in ether 12, of course, is it's Moroni. He's been telling
this Jaredite history and then pauses to talk about faith and he gives a long series of examples
of faith from Nephite history and how witnesses come after our trial of that faith. But at the end of that long history, that long series of examples, he mentions the brother
of Jared and his ability to write and so on.
And kind of loses his mind.
Marona just starts going, yeah, I can't write.
I've read the brother of Jared.
He's a good writer.
I'm terrible.
And eventually seems to just kind of cry out to God and say, fix my writing.
And God's response to him is very like this.
So this was Moronizedorn in the flesh. Paul's, we don't know exactly what it was,
but whatever it was that kept him humble. But the language is really remarkable here. So
coming back to verse 9 and chapter 12, what God says is, my grace is sufficient for the,
and you could translate that more humbly, I think. NT writes is very nice.
I think he just translates it as,
my grace is enough for you.
So how do we hear sufficiency or enoughness here?
To say, my grace is enough for you,
it's just to say, why do you want more than that?
Like, why are you trying to be something?
I haven't made you to be.
Why are you trying to reach beyond that when I have given you everything you could possibly
need here?
Why do you need to do this on your own?
That's a hard but also a really beautiful thing to hear.
This is what Paul can reveal that he's heard.
Grace is enough.
Even if they're good things we can do, my heavens find whatever graces enough, God is enough.
Why do we want to somehow be beyond that, above that, better than that? What on earth are we thinking?
And he goes on to say, this is just to finish the words of the Lord there, and then we can dig into
it further, I think. The Lord goes on to say, for my strength is made perfect in weakness. That might
sound kind of strange. For God to say that his strength is made perfect in weakness. That might sound kind of strange.
For God to say that his strength is made perfect in weakness.
Yeah, but there are a couple of obvious ways to hear that.
One, of course, if this is Christ speaking to Paul,
then that's exactly how it happened.
His strength, his divine strength,
was made perfect in that he came down in the flesh
and was nailed to a cross in utter passivity, utter weakness. My strength is made perfect in that he came down in the flesh and was nailed to a cross in utter passivity,
utter weakness. My strength is made perfect in weakness. Why are you any better Paul?
But the other way it can be heard, of course, too, is that God's power, God's strength,
is made perfect in humans, embracing their weakness. If human beings are strong enough
on their own, if they're somehow good enough to do
it all on their own, then where would God's strength show up?
We wouldn't need it.
We wouldn't ask for it.
Only in as much as we are weak and we stop running from the fact that we're weak, can
God's strength be made perfect?
Show up in the world.
Joe, I love that you brought up Marona, it sounds to me when I read Mormon chapter 8 that his father's
death was a surprise, was not expected, and all of a sudden the book of Mormon, the whole
book of Mormon fell into Marona's lap.
And it's like, this is my father's work.
I have no or.
My father's been killed in battle. All my kids folk, I don't
even know how long I'm going to live and all of a sudden he has to to finish it. And it's an
amazing moment when later in Mormon chapter 8, Maroni says, I make an end of speaking concerning
my interpretation the past.
I am Maroni, I am a son of Mormon.
I'm going to finish this record
and has this amazing transition
but he still keeps confronting his own weakness.
I just feel like when Nephi said,
oh, wretched man that I am,
that was one of his greatest moments.
And maybe for all of us when we see our
weakness, and that's the ether 1227, right, what would prevent you from seeing your weakness? Well,
you know, pride would, but that could have been one of Nephi's greatest moments when he felt wretched
and Paul used the same language. So this whole message, I think, sounds like when we can see our weakness,
that's when God can do something with us.
Yeah, that's beautifully put. Thanks for bringing up Mormon 8. I think that's exactly right
that Moroni is just crushed by the way this has played out. A detail that's way too easy
to miss in that chapter. In fact, when Moroni actually puts a date in there for the first
time, it's maybe first six or something. If Mormon eight, it's the year 400. And the final war when his
father died was 384. It takes Moroni 16 years to write six verses, which I think makes
us feel the weight that he apparently felt like he just was crushed under this burden for
years. But when he finally comes out of the fog by the
at was verse 12 or so when he's like, okay, I'm Maroni. Let's do this thing. He's still boy,
there's anxiety, right? He comes out of a what seems to be a really serious about with depression
and probably PTSD. But he's not on scale. He comes out anxious and worried about whether he's good enough,
whether he's strong enough. Restles with that for the rest of his life is either 12 makes clear.
Thank you.
And I think of how different the Book of Mormon would be if he were not there, if he didn't
come back in Maroni chapter one and say, I have not supposed to have written anymore,
but I'm not dead yet.
So I'll write a few more things. And boy, imagine without Marona 10 without his
father's letters. I mean, there's some great stuff in those last 10 chapters. Thank you,
Marona for persisting in times when you felt weak. So anyway, I love it's going to be fun
to talk, book, Mormon next year about that very thing.
Yeah. Well, and maybe we should dwell with Marona a little further, too, on either 12.
Yeah, because it's footnote at there.
Footnote 9c, you've got your ether 12, 27 reference there.
Made perfect in weakness, right?
Exactly.
And there's actually a line in ether 12 that I think we often read poorly if we don't read
it with Paul.
So ether 12, 27, there actually a lot of things in this verse often read poorly if we don't read it with Paul. So either 1227, there actually a lot of things
in this verse we read poorly, I think,
on everyday ways, right?
So the Lord speaking to Marona here
and we're seeing very similar language to Paul.
If men come unto me, I will show unto them their weakness.
I give unto men weakness that they may be humble.
And my grace is sufficient for all men that humble themselves before me, for if they humble themselves before me
and have faith in me, then will I make weak things become strong unto them? I think we
have a tendency to read that last line as meaning something like, I have things that
are particular weaknesses to me, and yet I can replace those with strengths. But I wonder
if that's the right way to hear it.
When the wording is, I will make weak things become strong.
It's not necessarily replacement.
It could be that once we recognize that weakness is in fact a gift,
which is how the Lord talks about it there,
then those weak things embraced as weak things are strong.
At least that's the way Paul talks in the very next verse
back in 2 Corinthians 12 and verse 10, therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches,
in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake, for when I am weak, then I am strong.
It's not that the weakness has to be replaced with a strength. It's when I finally stop resisting the fact that I am weak.
Oh, wretched man that I am, that's the very moment that I'm strong.
And it may be then weak things becoming strong is not at all replacement.
Weak things are strong in their weakness.
And I'm struck, either 12 just going on, verse 28, this is still the Lord speaking.
He promises to show the Gentiles their weakness. And that might feel like it's unconnected from what he says next, but I think
it's actually directly connected. So he says, I will show into the Gentiles their weakness,
and I will show into them that faith, hope, and charity bringeth unto me the fountain of all righteousness.
So what is showing the Gentiles their weakness have to do with showing them that faith, hope, and
charity brings to Christ. And I think the answer has to be that faith-hope and charity are perfect examples of something
that is profoundly weak and profoundly strong.
If I have faith, it means I don't know, I can't prove, I can't just knock everyone over
with it.
It's weak.
It's a position of weakness.
And yet faith is what moves mountains.
Faith is the strongest force we can have in Christ.
Hope, the future could turn out different. I could be hoping for the wrong thing. My hope could be
completely misplaced. The future is unknown. It's always a position of weakness to be in a position
of hope. As we all know, hope is the kind of thing that makes us strong enough to keep going through
very difficult things. Charity or love, there's no more vulnerable
or weak position than being in love, whether that's romantic or whether that's just fraternal or whatever.
Love opens you up to abuse and hurt and sorrow and sadness and so on and yet nothing moves the
world like love. So I think these are perfect examples of, we don't need to take weak things out of us
and get strong things instead.
It's when we get weakness right.
It is itself strength.
Wow, never thought of that before.
That is great stuff.
I knew where you're going with faith and hope
and then I thought, where is he gonna go with charity?
But you're right. I remember Truman Madsen, I thought, where is he going to go with charity? But you're right.
I remember Truman Madsen, I think, saying, when you truly love someone, you have doubled
your capacity for pain.
Yeah, right.
So true.
It's so true.
So true.
Because you hurt for them or you worry about them and that makes you vulnerable because
you love and care for them.
But then when they go through hard times, you go through hard times too.
That's great stuff.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Weakness is a gift.
Weakness is a gift.
I mean, to concretize that a little,
my own experience as a missionary years ago
went along these lines.
I spent the first year of my mission
trying to be everything as a missionary, right?
I was gonna do all the things missionaries do right and well and
Couple of experiences about a year out just humbled me to the dust
Refugee realized I had no idea what I was doing
And but then as a result somehow over the next year
I began to realize that well, there are some things I'm I've I seem to have gift for. And there are other things that I'm just really, really bad at as a missionary. And instead of then
trying to like, okay, my job is to take those things on bad at and just work on those
all the time. I thought, well, what if I leave to others who have those strengths, right?
That stuff. And I work on the thing, God seems to have given me certain gifts for. I got
over my weakness. I stopped trying to be good
enough. I stopped trying to do all things and the transformation in my experience as a
missionary was night and day, immensely more success, immensely more happy and just completely
different. But my heavens, if I continue trying to make sure I do all the things, this is
not talking about obedience, right? I was still obedient, but I didn't have to be the perfect tractor and the perfect
discussion giver and the perfect leader and the perfect companion and the perfect, you know, I just had to find the couple of things
where God could work through me really clearly and give myself to that
week and then strong.
Please join us for part 2 of this podcast.