Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Kings 2-7 -- Part 2 : Dr. Krystal Pierce
Episode Date: July 3, 2022Dr. Krystal Pierce continues and discusses the translation of Elijah, the danger of rejecting prophets, and whether or not bears attacked a large group of toddlers.Please rate and review the podcast!S...how Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
Crystal, let's move on to the next story here.
What happens next?
We just had this huge miracle from Eliasha,
one of his big ones.
This basically heals and saves an entire city,
the entire city of Jericho.
We kind of get this idea that people who saw this miracle
are like, okay, he is really the next prophet and he's taken Elijah's place. And then he goes to Bethel. There's
a problem. In just a few three verses here, we have almost the exact opposite of what he
did at Jericho, reversing the curse, happen here. So let's talk about it. So he goes to
Bethel and it says that there are little children from the city
mocking his bald head. Very interesting here. Elisha ends up cursing them in the name of the Lord and then bears come and eat 42 children.
So this is why you love the Old Testament.
You just around every corner, you have no idea what's coming.
So, there's a lot to unpack here too, even in just these three verses, we can start with
the age of the mockers.
Let's talk a little bit about that because we're actually given two different descriptions
here.
So in verse 23, there's a noun and an adjective that's used that typically refers to older children,
more like we would say tweens, pre-pubescent children.
But then when we get to verse 24, there's a different word that's used here for the ones
that the bears end up tearing apart.
And the word used here across the Old Testament refers to, at some points, babies, babes and arms, all the way up to later in Second Kings,
40-year-old men.
So we're not exactly sure.
I know it's translated as little children,
but we're not exactly sure the age of the mockers
at this point at all.
Let's go to the bald head thing.
Because it seems a petty thing for Elisha to get so upset about that he ended up being
cursed and eaten by bears.
But when you hear about Elisha lacking hair, what do you think of?
Who is hairy?
Yeah.
Okay, so that's maybe a reference to the hairiness of Elijah.
And you're not like him.
Exactly.
So they're not commenting necessarily on how we might look down at a lack of hair baldness.
They're commenting on his ability as a prophet and as the new prophet.
They're saying, you're no Elijah.
You're not even a replacement for Elijah. This is
what they're commenting on, his ability to receive revelation and prophecy from God. And Elijah's
his main thing was he was hairy. And this is what they're actually commenting on. And that's why
the Lord almost immediately is going to show that Elisha is the prophet. And he is just as good as Elijah,
even if he doesn't have as much hair, they should believe that not only can he bless entire cities
like Jericho, but that there will be consequences for sin and for speaking against the prophet and his ability. That is great.
I had never connected him as a successor of Elijah
who was called Harry and now Elisha is bald.
I have a statement from brother Fred E. Woods
who wrote in BYU Studies in the summer of 1992,
an article called Elisha and the Children. He said,
evidence suggests that the mocking youths in the Elisha story were not simply
calling him a bald-headed man when they called him, helped me out,
Christo Carria, Curria. That's maybe the Hebrew for it. Yeah. Rather they were
speaking to Elisha figuratively. Certainly they were not simply teasing Elisha
by calling him Baldi as some interpreters have suggested. Instead, they were accusing him of being
a usurper of authority, an act that warranted serious consequences for speaking evil against
the Lord's prophet. As a result, they incurred the vengeance of God who had previously warned,
quote, if you want contrary to me, I will send wild beasts among you,
which shall rob you of your children. That's from Leviticus 26, 21 and 22. Anyway, I thought
that was one way to help try to make sense of it. That fits perfectly with it.
I have one other note here from one commentator who says, if you want to understand a Bible
story, pay careful attention to geography. This story takes place at Bethel.
At the time Bethel had become one of two main worship centers for the Northern Kingdom,
not worship, but rebellious covenant-breaking idolatrous worship. Is that the case, Crystal?
Yes. Some of these kings, it says they didn't worship but all anymore, but they still were worshipping
false gods at Bethel. And they still believed like the calves at Bethel, these golden statues
represented Jehovah and the Lord, and they were worshiping these statues.
And so it wasn't even necessarily who they were worshiping, but how they were
worshiping. And they just could not let go of these idols in this type of
worship in Bethel and Dan were these huge places
Where this happened it's related crystal. I think you've you've shown us here a good scripture study skill
When you read a story that you're like well, that's terrible and petty and awful
You might not understand one the geography to the Hebrew yep because we have a translation here
So just maybe look a little closer, consult scholars.
Yeah.
And the connection to Elijah.
The light went on for me.
I'd never thought of that, Crystal,
but Elijah was hairy.
You're bald.
And that may be what Fred Wood said about you can't be the successor.
You don't even look like him.
They're saying you're no Elijah.
Just like Fred said, they're like, you didn't come from the company of the successor, you don't even look like him. They're saying, you're no Elijah. Just like Fred said, they're like,
you didn't come from the company of the prophets,
the sons of the prophets.
He found you out of field, farming.
We don't accept you as a prophet of God.
And it's interesting because I think when consequences
or punishments come in the form of natural disasters,
like famine or storms or war, things like that were okay.
But we do forget, and like I think you had mentioned that sometimes it's in the form of wild animals,
lions, wild beasts, bears. These are just a symbol of the consequences of sin, these bears that come.
And now Elisha is shown as a full-blown prophet. Not only can he bring blessings and good things
like he did with Jericho,
but part of the prophet too is also to warn
and warn about destruction and what can happen.
And I love that he's shown as he can bring life
and he can bring death
and it's all representative of the Lord
and how he works.
So Crystal, I wrote next to this verse,
this is a display of open public rejection of this profit.
Do that fit?
Definitely.
And we're talking about a big group here.
It mentions 42, but I'm guessing it was a group
of different ages all come from the city.
Two knows maybe even some of the sons of the prophets were there,
and we're mocking him, showing that they don't accept him as the prophet.
And that's why the Lord immediately is like we need to show that he is the prophet.
And I have chosen him.
Here's another comment from Craig Keener, who is the author of the New King James version
Cultural Background Study Bible.
He said, the age of the mockers is uncertain. The Hebrew can refer to
pre-pubescent children, but can also refer to the younger generation. The same Hebrew word describes
reabomes peers in 1 Kings 12, 8 as young men and they are over 40. This is probably a group of young
teens, but whatever it is, the age is uncertain, and that's helpful to know.
Because if they're below the age of accountability, this doesn't make any sense to us at all. They're like five.
Yeah.
I know, and it says the little children.
You even say children. It says little, so you're seeing these toddlers get, you know, eaten by the bear. And you're like,
What?
Wow. Is going on.
Now that's have family prayer now.
What?
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
The missing verse 26 says, and it came to pass no one ever commented on his hairless
condition for the rest of his life.
I will dad for Elisha.
He struggles with this, the people accepting him.
And even today, I think like if you were to ask someone
who their favorite prophet is in the Old Testament,
nobody says Elisha.
And if they did, you'd probably say,
you mean Elijah?
Did you say Elijah?
It seems like we just don't talk about him as much.
So the rest of the chapters that we're gonna talk about today
are a series of miracles that Elisha performed.
Some of them huge miracles, like we see in chapter 3 with the Moabite War, and then we'll
also get to some more specific miracles that he performed for individuals as well.
Okay.
So when we get to chapter 3, we kind of can return back to Chapter 1, verse 1, where it talks about this war with Moab.
In verse 1 of Chapter 3, now we're with King Jehorum. So if you remember Ahaziah died as Elijah
prophesied. Jehoza Fat is the king of Judah. And we find out that Jehorum did evil, it says in
the side of the Lord, but not like his parents, but he also had
problems. Now when we get to verses four and five, we're introduced to the king of Moab, his name
is Masha. So Moab is east of the Dead Sea. So Jerusalem is northwest, Moab is east, so modern
Jordan about today. And we find out that Moab had been a vassal of Israel under King David.
He conquered this land. They were paying massive amounts of tribute. In fact, it says in verses four and five
hundreds of thousands of
animals were being given in tribute to
Israel. But after Ahab died, the King of Moab rebelled against Israel and this started a war.
Now what's really great about Masha is we have information about him outside of the Bible actually.
We have this inscription of his that we call the Masha Stila or the Moabite Stone.
This is forfeit high stone where he talks about
being under Israel's control and rebelling against Israel and it actually celebrates his rebellion. And so it's great that we have here
evidence of this outside of the Bible that talks about this rebellion and this war that comes
because of it. Crystal, I think many people are surprised when they find out that before King David,
there's not a lot of evidence for what we read.
And that's okay.
Yeah.
I always want to talk about when we find things like this, like this outside extra biblical
information or archaeology, that it's not meant to make us more faithful, because of
course, faith doesn't come from provable facts.
Faith comes from just belief, believing even though we don't have the facts.
It's very exciting when we find things like this archaeologically that support what the
Bible is telling us and what it's saying.
So the King of Israel decides, I'm going to join up with the King of the Southern Kingdom,
Jehosa fat, who has one of the greatest names.
I think it's like great.
And he says, okay, let's go. We're going to go and we're going to go after Moab. And instead of going
straight south to get to Moab, we're going to actually go around completely around the Dead Sea
and come up from the south because there was another kingdom there that supported Israel and Judah.
Now the problem with this, there aren't a lot of water sources. The army, it says in verses 9 through 12,
they went seven days without water. So, Jehorm starts to think, well, maybe the Lord is actually
punishing us. What do we do? Jehorms of fat says, well, why don't we ask the prophet of the Lord?
fat says, well, why don't we ask the prophet of the Lord? We know that the prophets traveled with the armies. They were there to be a representative of the
Lord and help give information and advice. The servant says, well, we can ask
Elisha, but Elisha was the one who in verse 11 he says, poured water on the
hands of Elijah. I'm kind of commenting, he was a servant, right?
He washed the hands and the feet of Elijah.
As opposed to this is this great prophet
who can actually give us information.
He comments on him just being,
well, he was his servant.
We see again this issue of him always being
in the shadow of Elijah, always.
If we wanna take something from this, I think we've all
been at positions in our lives where we feel under the shadow of someone else, or we feel
like we're not living up to someone else's expectations. They expected him to be Elijah.
He's saying, I'm my own person, I am my own prophet. And I love the way he responds to Ja'horim when he asks him for help. He says,
if you don't believe I'm a profit, then why are you asking me? Go ask the profits of Baal and Ashera,
the profits of your parents. To me, this has always been the sign of what you do when you feel
like you have this imposter syndrome or people expect certain things of you and you're not living up to
what they think you should do.
Elisha stands his ground and he says, I am representing the Lord.
I, and I wouldn't even be here if it weren't for him supporting especially Jehosephat.
And that's what he says.
He has some serious confidence.
He knows who he is.
And notice the oath as the Lord of Hosts
liveeth, verse 14.
He's telling them, I am a prophet of the Lord.
I think this is something we can take from this.
Sometimes it's not up to the opinions of others.
In fact, very rarely is it up to the opinions of others.
And Elias says, I know who I am.
I know who I represent.
You just are going to have to change
your ideas about it. And I love this that he does this. So Jehosephat believes it's Jehorum who's like,
yeah, that kind of goes back to what we talked about at the beginning that the northern kingdom
kings seem to support the prophets a little bit less than the southern kingdom. Elisha goes on to
say, this is what the Lord says,
if you dig ditches in this valley,
water will come and your armies
that you've been marching around the Dead Sea
without any water, the water will come
and will fill this valley, but you won't see any rain.
This is probably a reference to,
there are a lot of waddies in this area.
So a wadi is a valley that fills up
with seasonal runoff water from up above.
Flash floods, things like that.
He's saying, this water's going to come dig ditches so you can capture the water.
He says, not only that, but the Lord is going to deliver the Moabites to you.
This ends up happening after this at this point.
The Moabites are delivered and they're able to take back control of this area a little bit of accepting
Elisha more comes into play because of this and because of what happens here
Crystal, what's the next miracle you want to look at?
So if we turn to chapter four
We find out that one of the wives of the sons of the prophets so from this group
of the wives of the sons of the prophets. So from this group, Telsi Lysha, her husband is dead and the creditor has come to take away her children as bondmen.
We can talk a little bit about debt slavery and servitude here. If you did go into debt in ancient
Israel and you sold off all your land and your belongings and your wealth and you had nothing left,
you could actually sell yourself or your
family members into servitude to pay off the debt.
This happened a lot to farmers because of the fragile nature of farming with good years
and bad years and famines and things like that.
Can you go back?
You said that you could sell your children, isn't it more that they take your children?
Yes, I think it was either you all get put in prison,
debt prison, or you could sell your children.
There were laws about it.
Sounds like this woman doesn't want this to happen.
Yeah, the creditor deserved to be paid back,
but also the one who had more gaged or sold themself
or their family into servitude.
There was a time limit, right? They could only serve for so
many years and it didn't matter how big the debt was, they were done.
But the problem is by that point you had lost everything.
And so a lot of people it led to a life of servitude.
There was no way to come back from that.
But if you were able to serve and pay off your debt,
it was
called redeeming yourself. You were able to redeem yourself from this life of servitude.
And this is where we get the concept of the Kinsman Redeemer as well. If you couldn't do
it yourself, redeem yourself, a member of your family could come in and pay off your debt,
redeem you from your debt. We're definitely meant when this debt slavery
issue comes up to think of the Lord as our kinsman redeemer. He's the one who comes in. He redeems us
from our sin, from our debt. He's the one who paid it off. He saves us. I love this because we're
going to see this through every miracle. Elisha performs love this because we're going to see this through every miracle
Elisha performs after this. We're meant to see him as a representative as symbolic of the Savior
and what he does for us. Didn't we mention that a little bit with Boaz? The Kinsman Redeemer.
It's the same thing. Boaz is able to redeem Ruth and be able to save her from debt and servitude.
And so this is what he likes just trying to do.
So he tells the woman, he says, what do you have?
And she says, I just have a little bit of oil.
He says, go get all the vessels from your neighbors.
Start pouring the oil and it'll fill up every single one of those vessels.
And she says, she's able to sell the oil to pay off the debts and live on the remainder.
And what's perfect about this is the word for oil here is shaman, which is a reference to olive oil
specifically where we get gasemini from right the oil press the olive oil press and how perfect is it
that it's oil. We're meant to think of the Lord and
the atonement and guess Semini it all comes together and he's our kinsman redeemer and that he saves us
in the same way that Eli Shia is able to save this woman through oil and
It's this beautiful miracle and this is to show that the Lord cares about everyone whole cities
one woman, everybody. The oil, the atonement, the blood covers everyone.
And it's like everything in between.
The whole city, in one story, a mother and child,
and another, and everything in between.
It reminds me of, you've got the Luke account of Christbirth.
You've got the Matthew account from kings to Shepherds and everybody in between
It's glad tidings of great joy type of thing. I love this how he clearly represents the Savior and so many of these
In saving this woman and her children in the same way that we are saved from our debt and
You know servitude to sin and the consequences and punishments all which we can't pay ourselves.
Yeah. Exactly.
Yeah, if I wanted to see myself in this, I could see myself as this woman saying,
I'm going to lose my family if I'm not redeemed.
And here comes the Savior saying, I can give you more than enough.
As much as you need, I can give you to save you and your family.
Oh, yeah, that's great crystal.
Yeah, I love this and and this continues on in chapter four.
Eli should goes to a new place called
Shunam and this is in the Galilee. It's actually not too far from the site where I excavate that so I love talking about
Shunam and I'll be there and in wow two or three days.
Yeah, when this comes when this comes out you'll beam and I'll be there in, wow, two or three days. Whoa. Yeah, when this comes, when this comes out, you'll be there.
I will be there.
So he travels through this area a lot.
It's in the Galilee area.
And so the woman invites him to her house.
And she says that he's a holy man.
And she says, let's make him his own little room because he comes through so often.
And Elias says, well, I want to
repay you. So he tells us, sir, then ask her what she would like. Does she want a good
word with the king or the commander? And I love her response in verse 13. She says, no,
I kind of just like to stay home. So I'm good.
I dwell among my known people. Is that what you mean? That's the phrase. Yeah, I'm good.
She said, I want to stay here. I want to stay here among my own people. I don't need the
king and the commander and these things. His servant Gehazi does tell Elisha. She doesn't have a
child and her husband is old. So we get this idea that they were past the child bearing years.
The Elisha says to her, you will have a son in one year. Her response is interesting because
she says in verse 16, nay, my lord, thou man of God do not lie unto thine hand made. And it's
interesting because she clearly believes. Too good to be true. He's a prophet and a man of God,
yet when it came to this miracle,
she struggled believing it was gonna happen.
And I'm sure she had heard about the oil or Jericho
or the Moa Byte War, but when it came
to her own personal miracle, she struggled.
And I think sometimes we are so ready
to accept others' miracles, big miracles of healing
or getting exactly what they need.
And sometimes when it comes to us,
we're like, that would never happen to me.
I don't have big miracles in my life.
And in reality, it's just, I think,
sometimes believing in our own miracles
and recognizing our own miracles in our life.
I love that.
My friend, Tony Sweat likes to say,
faith is when you believe God can help.
Everyone, hope is when you believe God can help you
when it becomes specific.
And I can almost hear this woman saying,
don't do that to me, don't give me hope, right?
Don't lie to me because I've been hurt before.
This is a very touching story.
Yeah, I think that people might have a problem
with you're saying to the prophet, don't lie to me,
but I do think it's kind of a, oh,
I don't even know if I wanna entertain that thought
because it would hurt so bad if it went the other way.
Definitely, and it kind of ends up going the other way.
Oh, no.
No.
Oh.
She does have the child, and that's the child's growing.
It says one day the child goes out to the father in the field and says that his head hurts.
They bring the child to the mother and then he dies. The child ends up dying. This miracle child.
So of course she goes looking for Elisha. Of course she finds him on a mountain where Elisha always
always is, like Elijah.
And he's at Mount Carmel.
And when she gets there, she grabs his feet,
which is a sign of distress.
The servant tries to stop her body, Elisha says,
it's okay, like let's find out what happened.
When we get to verse 28, she says,
did I desire a son?
Did I not say do not deceive me?
Kind of saying, like, now it's as if I never even had this miracle child
that he's been taken away from me.
So brutal.
It would be hard.
I mean, this woman definitely went through some things
and you see her develop and grow as time goes on
and as she has these things happen to her.
Elisha says we're going to heal this child.
Not only heal him, bring
him back from the dead. It's an interesting way that he does this and this is definitely
meant to remind us of Elijah also raising a child from the dead. So let's look at these verses
because I think sometimes there are a lot of questions about what's going on here.
So in verse 34, he goes and he lays upon the child and it says, eyes to eyes, hands to hands.
And this is something that Elijah does too. Now they believed in healing touch like we do, if healing hands on the head and a blessing and consecrated oil things like this,
but for them you could not only heal through your hands, but you could also heal body part to body part.
And so in order to raise this child from the dead, it was a full body healing that needed to take place.
It was a full body healing that needed to take place.
And that's why he's eyes to eyes, hands to hands, legs to legs, because this child had died.
And this was the way of healing the whole body of this child.
And that's why he does, he does it in this way.
And that's why Elijah does it this way as well.
This is one of those times you don't want to be ethnocentric and say other people's cultures
are wrong or right.
We believe in healing through touch too and that's the way the Savior healed.
And so for them, it was just, if you needed to heal ahead, you could touch the head or
do head to head because they believed that this transfer could happen. But if it's a whole
body and raising from the dead, they sort of believed that you needed this full sort of
healing. And that explains why he does this. And then we read that the child sneezes seven
times. And this seems like a really specific thing to put in here. What does this mean?
So we get the number seven again. So completion.
And the word that's translated as sneeze, that's what we call a hapax. This is the only place in
the entire Old Testament where this word shows up. Let me tell you what the word is. The word is
Zarrar. Zarrar. People think it's it's an onomatopoeic, right? So it's a noise or a sound or something
right? So it's a noise or a sound or something that the child made. So on a monopayak of course means that the the word sounds like what the word is. So it's
our word for B right is on a monopayak because it sounds like the noise a B
makes. And so that's why people think he sneezed or he groaned or he yelled
Zaraar whatever that is. On my dad like let's see Zaraar, whatever that is. On my dad, like, let's see, Zaraar, some people,
it's a two, the King James translators don't know what to do,
right, Crystal?
I mean, you got this one time, they're like,
how about sneeze?
Sneeze sounds good to me.
It's important it's seven, so he's completely healed.
He's completely over whatever it was
and he's brought back to life.
We can again bring the Savior into this,
healing, raising from the dead, but not only that, saving us from death, from physical death
through resurrection, from spiritual death through the atonement and our repentance. So we already
have the Savior as Kinsman Redeemer through Elisha.
Now we get the Savior as literally the Savior, saving us from death.
It sounds a lot like comparison to Lazarus.
You can't do this. It's way past the time. No, I can bring him back.
Yeah, he deliberately waits for four days.
We never should put limits on the Lord ever.
And sometimes when we say, oh, this miracle can't happen to me,
or it's too hard, if we actually step back and think about it,
what are we saying?
Things are too hard for God, too hard for the Lord.
They never are.
And so it's us, right?
And it's our faith and it's our understanding
that needs to be worked on. And I think this,
this woman goes through a few things with this child in order to learn that for herself.
And it's great. She still had the faith to go back to the prophet.
Do you think Matthew 8 and 9 where Matthew hits the Savior's miracles over and over and
over and over? Do you think he's trying to replicate this?
I think he's definitely trying to tie the savior
to the profits of the Old Testament and to the Jehovah
for us and our interpretation,
the Jehovah of the Old Testament as well.
Absolutely.
That he is following all of these profits,
Elijah, Elisha, every single one who performed a miracle,
it was a type for the Savior who was going to come, I think.
So, yeah, well, that's the conventional wisdom as Matthew was writing to the Jews and saying,
look, this is the one.
This is the one that prophecies are talking about.
It just feels very Matthew 8.9 to me, this section, like one after another.
Here we go.
And it's perfect because the next miracles are about feeding people, you know, with either
not enough food or poison food and fixing it.
So our next miracles are about food.
So Elisha goes back to Gilgal again, there's a d'Earth, a famine in the land.
The sons of the prophets are there.
And Elisha tells his servant to make a stew for them.
So he goes out to gather herbs and gourds,
it says for the stew.
The men start eating and they say,
there's death in the pot.
And so this is a reference to,
there's something poisonous in here.
And people have actually researched this and look at this
and think that this is a reference to
the special type of gourds that they call bitter apples.
These are found wild in Israel.
They have chemicals in them that burn mucus membranes.
So your mouth, your throat, your stomach, your intestine,
it would happen immediately.
So they've used the wrong kind of gourd.
You think jalapenos are bad.
What kind of apple is that?
It's called a bitter apple.
They kind of, when they're not ripe,
they look like watermelon, like little round watermelon.
So don't eat those if you're in Israel.
I feel like you want to make stew.
There's death in this pot.
It sounds like it's dad's night to cook.
I love the way they describe it.
Yeah, it's dad in this pot.
Sounds like something one of the kids would say.
I remember one time, I scooped my wife's
a big plate of casserole, whatever my wife had made.
And I turned in my two-year-old son,
said, dad, you throw up.
And I was like, no, it's dinner.
He's trying to feed them.
And instead, there's this poison in here. So he asks them to bring him some flour some meal.
Flour was believed in the ancient Near East to be able to combat or remove evil and poison and things like this.
Many times Elisha is using things that people believed in and is showing that every miracle that you're believing, whether it's flower or salt
in the water or whatever, this is coming from Jehovah. This is coming from the Lord. Even if you think
it's been coming from other gods, and so he uses things they believed would work, and he's showing
that this comes from the Lord. So he puts the flower in and it overpowers the poison and he's able to feed this starving group of the
sons of the prophets here and show them that the Lord has the power to also heal people and feed
people and save people. It's perfect. I love that. Every other miracle we think is coming from other
sources or other places. It's all coming from the same source. Yeah, absolutely. And so I love that every other miracle we think is coming from other sources or other places, it's all coming from the same source.
Yeah, absolutely. And so I love that he uses some of these objects or things that people believed other gods were performing magic or things with.
And he's showing, no, it's the Lord who has the power and control over everything, even using this flower to heal the poison in the pot.
Wow.
So we have another feeding miracle towards the end of chapter four.
A man brings Elisha, it says, the bread of the first fruits.
And so this is the bread made out of the first part of the harvest.
It was meant to be dedicated to the sanctuary through the prophet.
So he's bringing it to the prophet so he can take it to the sanctuary through the prophet. So he's bringing it to the prophet, so he can take it to the sanctuary. It can be offered sort of a harvest type festival to give thanks to the Lord.
And we read that there are 20 small loaves. These are not the loaves we're thinking of like a French
loaf. These are probably rolls, very small, very tiny rolls. He says, give it to the people to eat
because again, they said there's a famine at this point in time.
And the servant says, how are we going to feed a hundred people with these 20 small roles of bread?
Andy Lysha says, well, it's going to work because the Lord says not only will there be enough to feed everyone,
but there will be leftovers afterwards. And this ends up coming true.
And of course, this can remind us a lot of Jesus feeding
the 5,000 with the bread and the fish.
And again, it's meant us to see
Elisha as representative of the Lord,
of the future and what he would do.
There's that great question in John chapter 6, verse 9,
when they have the five Barley loaves
and the two fishes, what are they among so many?
Without Jesus, it's a couple tuna fish sandwiches,
but with Jesus, it's more than enough.
Yeah, bring what you have, I will multiply it.
So we've had,
Ken's been redeemer with the oil.
We've had the savior with the child being raised from the dead, and now we have the nourisher, the bread of life. So all of these different aspects of Jehovah.
And then we can go to chapter five where we have the miracle with Naaman.
Naaman. This is where his parents said, what should we Naaman? And then that's it was out there like that was good. That's fine.
Let's name him Bob.
Name man.
Okay.
Name.
Name.
Sorry.
Okay, Crystal.
Thanks for putting up with us.
Okay.
So, name in is a we hear that he's a Syrian army captain.
And so Syria, this is actually a room where we get Aremia from the land of
Arem Damascus and in Greek they called it Syria. So it's the same place. And it says he was a great man.
The Lord actually used him to deliver Syria, but he has a problem. He's a leper. It says.
Now at this point in time, it's not the same clinical, contagious leprosy that we know of today.
That doesn't show up until Alexander the Great in about 500 years.
Interest after this.
But definitely a horrible skin disease because it's described as having lesions and scales
and swelling, weeping, flaking.
I don't want to lessen what this horrible thing is.
It's some combination or form of psoriasis,
eczema, dermatitis, fungal infections, something like this.
People who had these skin diseases were seen as outcasts.
They were made to quarantine
because they saw it as a punishment from God.
People were definitely wanted to stay away
from those who had leprosy.
Name and wife has this servant,
and it says she's a captive Israelite. So somebody
they had actually captured and wore. This servant says to namon's wife, hey, he should visit
the prophet in Samaria because he would cure him. Namon goes to the Syrian king, he says,
this is what she said. The king says, go, we're going to send this letter and we're going to send
a ton of money with you. This money, of course, we read this, ten, you know, talents of silver,
six thousand shekels of gold. We have no clue what that means off the bat, but this amount is
meant to shock us. This would be almost a billion dollars today, almost a billion. I mean, it is definitely meant to show us that
the king of Syria and name in are serious about paying for this cure that they're going to receive.
Sometimes I think we kind of move past this quickly, but I do want to take a moment and talk about
who is the one here who sets the miracle in motion? Who is the one who took the opportunity to bring up this idea of the prophet?
This girl.
I mean, she was a...
Yeah.
She's young.
She's female.
She's a captive.
She's a prisoner of war.
She's a servant.
Yet she takes this moment to talk about her belief in the profit and that he can heal this man that
she works for. It reminds me a lot of Abish. At the moment, she felt like she could do something,
she could change something, she does it. I mean to me, it shows that it doesn't matter what your age,
your gender, your status, your wealth, you always can have these opportunities come up,
status, your wealth, you always can have these opportunities come up where you can share your beliefs or talk about the profit or say, you know what, you can be healed from whatever
problem you have, whether it's physical or spiritual or any of these things.
I love this part of the story that sometimes we kind of skip over quickly.
Yeah, that's a great thing.
Verse two, a little maid.
Any idea for age?
Is she a teenager? Any idea? Probably like a teenager is what I'm going to guess. I
didn't look at the word in Hebrew, but she was young and she was a servant, even a prisoner of war.
And she still took that opportunity to say, hey, there's this profit and he can cure you. You never know the effect you have on
others, the influence, anything.
Story pivots on her.
Yeah, she's the one who sets it in motion. So, Naman does end up going to the King of Israel,
probably Jehorm. He's not named here. He reads this letter from the King of Syria.
He tears his ropes in response to this letter and he says, I can't cure him.
I am not God.
Now we're going to have a war with Syria because of this.
I mean, not even thinking, probably thinking of the prophet.
And the tearing robes, of course, is this sign of distress earlier Elisha tore his robes
after Elijah was gone. It's distress at anything,
distress because someone's gone and has died. So morning, distress because of sin. Sometimes
it was part of the process of repentance. And when the king does it, this signals a national crisis
and emergency. And Elisha hears about it and is like, why didn't you just send him to me?
Like, and so we still see that there are some issues here with the king and
and you know, thinking, yeah, and trust.
They just don't believe this issue with faith.
And even the king says, yeah, Elisha is a prophet, but yet he doesn't turn to him
when he needs help
and when he knows Eliasha could talk to the Lord
and receive information.
And this is great when Naaman shows up,
Eliasha doesn't even come out of the house.
He's like, yeah, yeah.
No, he sends his messenger and he says,
tell Naaman to wash in the Jordan River seven times.
Seven again, this idea of completion
and he'll be cured of this skin disease.
It's like, what is contact info? I'll just text him. Just go do this. Right.
And so I think we can understand why Naiman sort of reacts. He's angry. He's angry at this.
Not only would the prophet not come to talk to him, but he thought, and he says this, I thought the
the prophet would strike his hand
over the place and cure it. The prophet would come out and heal his leprosy using his hands.
And now he just wants me to go and dip in the Jordan. And he says, I know a better rivers,
cleaner, pureer, nicer rivers than the Jordan river. I know you guys have been to the Jordan River, probably a few
different places. I mean, up by Caesarea Philippi, kind of the headwaters, it's pretty beautiful
and clean, but when you're down at the traditional baptismal size, pretty muddy, isn't it?
Yeah, there are springs, natural springs and rivers in Israel that do have healing properties
for skin, think of the Dead Sea and Dead Sea mud and things like that.
And so, a name is kind of saying, well, I can go dip in a river.
That's not amazing.
He's saying, didn't even tell me to go to the good river.
But it's great because the servants turn back to name and and say, hey, if the prophet
had asked you to do something more difficult, would you do it then?
They say he just told you to do something really simple. So why won't you just do it?
So Naaman does end up going and washing in the Jordan and is healed. So it's perfect to see here. He thought it was too easy.
Yeah. Hank, didn't you mention this in a talk about I love my friends?
Yes, John, you're so nice to bring it up.
I really love this story because when I was out speaking to a group of teenagers, I had
them right in their scriptures.
This is what a good friend does.
A good friend will stand between you and a terrible choice and will say something. It took some courage for this friend to come up and say, you're about to make a terrible choice and we'll say something. It took some courage for this
friend to come up and say, you're about to make a terrible decision. Do you want to
rethink this? And it changes name and life. If you really love your friends, I
think that's what you'll do. Thanks, James. Yeah, Hank, and I've heard you say that I
also love is, yeah, don't, don't mix up your friends with your enemies.
That's what they did with the Benadai.
That's what Leontai did with the Malakaya.
A friend will tell you, hey, wait a minute,
because they have your best interests in mind
as this one did.
No, this is good.
He gave you something easy.
Go do it.
You don't have to be condemning, right?
A friend doesn't have to come up and say,
repent, swine.
You don't have to do that.
But if you see a friend,
I mean, Naaman's about to make a terrible decision.
He's just gonna go home.
Well, I love what it says.
He turned and went away in a rage.
How many times have we gone away in a rage
from good advice because it hurt our pride,
or our sense, or something?
Hopefully we turn around and think about it.
Or have a friend that helps us turn around and think about it. Like, or have a friend that helps us turn around
and think about it.
It really seems like this servant is just reminding
Naman of his faith.
You believed you could be healed.
You believed this prophet could heal you, this holy man.
So just because he's doing it in a different way
than you expected, still believe.
Maybe you just have to change your perspective.
And I think Naman either thought the prophet himself you expected, still believe. Maybe you just have to change your perspective. And, you know,
I think, name and either thought the prophet himself was going to come out and do this big
healing, or maybe he thought that he was going to ask him personally to do something very,
very difficult. And instead it was simple. Go wash and in the river. And I think times we do this
too, we want things to be complicated and difficult and hard.
So many times it's not like that. The Lord wants us. He's got these simple things. He wants us to do.
And if we do them, we can be healed.
Crystal, that's so good. Sometimes we sit at general conference and we go, okay, President Nelson,
what he got for us and he says, go to the temple.
Well, don't you have something else?
It doesn't matter.
Bigger or don't you have something?
Yeah.
Well, and I'm thinking of Jesus, Peter,
cast your net on the other side.
Listen, we have toiled all night and caught nothing.
We have tried that.
And then there's this long pause.
Nevertheless, at thy word, okay, fine.
And then it works.
Wow. What a it works. Wow.
What a great story.
It reminds me a lot too of the brass serpent
with Moses and the children of Israel
when the snakes are biting them.
And the Lord says, make, yeah, make this serpent,
put it on the pole.
All people have to do is look.
And Alma and Helaman and others talk about it.
A lot of them wouldn't look.
They just wouldn't look.
And I love the way Alma says, when he's teaching the Zoramites and he says, if you knew that
just looking could save you, wouldn't you break your neck to look so quickly to save yourself?
And instead, we want it to be difficult.
It's a faith thing here, right?
And I love the servant, Remind name and, hey, you believe.
You believe in this.
So keep believing.
Remember, you believe and follow through
with what the prophet has asked you to do.
Isn't it wonderful here that these pivotal moments
in the story are coming from a little maid
and some servants saying to the kingly people,
hey, I mean, where's the wisdom coming from?
It's coming from a little maid
and from servants
right here. I think one of the things I love about these stories is they're a little more focused
on miracles than just on words. In the first page of the manual page 121, it says, a prophet's main
mission is to teach and testify of the Savior Jesus Christ. Our record of the prophet, Alisha,
however, doesn't include much of his teaching
or testifying.
What the record does include is the miracles Alisha performed, including raising a child
from the dead, feeding a multitude with a small quantity of food, and healing a leper.
So while we don't have Alisha's words bearing witness of Christ, we do have throughout
Alisha's ministry powerful manifestations of the Lord's
life-giving, nourishing, and healing power. Such manifestations are more plentiful in our lives than
we sometimes realize. To see them, we need to seek the miracle Elisha sought when he prayed on
behalf of his fearful young servant. Lord, I pray, the open his eyes that he may see. That's actually
coming up in the next chapter, but I thought about this, I think it open his eyes that he may see. That's actually coming up in the next chapter,
but I thought about this,
I think it's Matthew 4 about verse 23, 28,
where it says Jesus went forth,
teaching and preaching and healing.
And I'm not exactly sure sometimes
what the difference between teaching and preaching is
if it's audience size or whatever,
but this Elisha, I love that it was kind of leaning
towards the last part.
There were healings and miracles that people were seeing
as he was taking over from Elijah,
which makes this just a fun chapter
because one after another, these kind of amazing things happen.
Yeah, and that name in is, he's not an Israelite.
Yeah, he's a Syrian. He's a serious from a completely different place. And so he's, it's this
perfect example of the Lord is going to heal and the atonement covers everyone. No
matter where you are, your age, gender, wealth, any of that. And also that the
Lord is going to put his message through as many people as possible, a little maid,
a servant, a king, a prophet, and it's perfect.
And I can even use the Jordan River to wash you.
Yeah, I love this.
I don't know why, but I'm feeling the power of these young missionaries who send people
to a prophet who just go out in the streets of Chicago and say, there's a prophet in Israel. You can go to him and be healed.
And then look at verse 15, Naman says, now I know that there is no God in all the earth, but in Israel.
The maid bore her testimony, which led Naman to getting his own testimony, to the Natalie, by the ways out there,
the Juliet Sonson's out there. Keep going. You wonderful missionaries.
And that promises, we're not sending out scholars. We're sending out
what is section 35. I call upon the week and simple things of the world to
thresh the nations by the power of my spirit. And there are
and shall be my arm. And it's this, whoa, this amazing promise. So I
love this a
little maid and some servants pivot the whole chapter I can't imagine when
Victoria Pierce goes on a mission she'll be like so when I did this dig I
here's what I found wait what you did I was with my parents you know how they
are what we did for fun yeah they like dig now, but we'll see in a few years how much they want to go and spend their entire summer's digging.
All right, Crystal, what miracle do you want to do next?
Let's not slow down.
All right.
So when we get to chapter six, we have another miracle at the beginning.
And Elisha is with the sons of the prophets,
and they tell him that the place,
it's translated as where they live,
is too narrow or small.
So they need to go to Jordan to the forest,
cut down some trees and make it bigger.
Now, this is a good sign because we know
the sons of the prophets have been having a hard time
accepting Elisha.
Now we hear that the place where they're going
to listen to him is too small.
So he's a mast, this group of followers at this point
who are accepting him, that they even need to make
the place where they go to listen to him to teach,
that where he teaches them bigger.
And so they go to Jordan and they start cutting down
the trees, one of the men loses his axe head,
his iron axe head in the water.
He says, we do get this comment, he's worried
because it was borrowed.
And so this iron axe head, he borrowed from someone
and probably paid to rent it or something
because the iron was very, very valuable and expensive
at this point in time.
And honestly, I think why we're told it's borrowed
is because this loss of an axe head
probably would have put this man and his family into debt,
an incredible amount of debt because of this.
And might have led to this eventually debt servitude
or slavery.
And that's why Elisha does this,
because sometimes I think we look at this as a man
Lost something and the prophet helps him find it, but there's a lot more going on here. We are in the iron age
But it was very difficult to make iron and it was expensive
Elisha is not just helping someone find a lost thing
But he's saving him and his family probably from this this debt
So he asked where it fell.
Elisha cuts down a stick, throws it in the water,
and the iron axe head comes up floating because of this.
The iron did swim.
Yeah, and it's amazing because once again,
Elisha is using the different things they believed in.
And they believed that properties could be transferred
from one thing to another thing.
We've already talked about transfer healing.
We already talked about the salt, curing the poison in the water, the flower,
curing the poison in the pot.
Now we have that the properties of this stick,
flotation properties, is transferred to the iron.
And that's why it floats.
This is the way they would have understood it happening. They would
have seen this as clearly a sign from God that Eli Shoe was a prophet and that Jehovah was doing
this miracle and not some other deity or magic. Wow. So transferring the, what did you call the
the properties? Yeah, or the characteristics of... Characteristics of the stick. Yeah. In the same way of the salt
and the water and the flower and the stew, they believe that this is how it would work. And
it would definitely be a sign that Elisha is a prophet. And the Lord has the power to
help people and save people. Man, I'm writing so much in my scriptures today. I'd look like a real scriptorian here.
I know. I need to go back and write it in the Eater because mine
is, I'm scribbling too fast to try to get it all.
This, now we're getting to the, the biggie.
The biggie.
The biggie.
Yeah, the biggie.
Everybody has someone.
And now the verse you've all been waiting for.
What are they going to get to it.
Oh, I know, I love this part.
Oh, it's so good.
Let's get to our last huge lesson or miracle that Elisha performs in these chapters.
We read, starting in chapter 6 verse 8, that the King of Syria is warring against Israel.
Elisha is warning the King of Israel every time the army moves.
And I love the King's responses.
We have must have a spy because how do they always know where we're going and what we're doing?
And the officers, again, somebody we wouldn't expect to say,
actually, there's a prophet who is probably telling them where we are.
And so the king of Syria wants to seek out Elisha. He says he's in Doton and we know where Doton is.
It's this huge site. It has a teller amount 200 feet tall. So once again Elisha and Elijah
like going up to these tall places. And the horses
and the chariots, that whole King's army of Syria comes and surrounds Doton, surrounds the city.
And the servant asks Elisha, what are we going to do?
Can you imagine coming out that morning? He said, he got up early and he looks up.
Oh, wow, he runs back in. What are we going to do?
And I love that Elisha sleeping, right? He's not too concerned about it.
I can sleep when the weather looks.
Elisha says, Damn, don't be afraid. And then we get this, this amazing
verse 16, where Elisha says, fear not for they that be with us are more than they that be with them.
The servant doesn't see it.
So he prays for the servant to see the servant's eyes are open to
and he sees a mountain full of chariots and horses of fire surrounding Elisha and this area.
I like to think that Elijah was there. That's just me though. The horses
and teriets of fire, right? Elijah's back. One of those chariots was definitely had Elijah on it,
for sure. So of course, again, we have the hosts of heaven, the armies of the Lord were meant to be
reminded that his armies and his support and his angels are way more
than any army or enemy or anything that is coming at us.
And sometimes we may feel we're surrounded and that there's nothing we can do.
And so we need to pray to be able to recognize all of the help and support and love that
the Lord gives to us now as
our protector. He's going to fight for us. These chariots and horses are meant to show us
that the Lord will fight for us and that he's there for us. This goes right along with
all these characteristics that we've been talking about of the Lord that we see through
Elisha.
I can't believe how much when I teach in I Matthew 8.9, how much I've been missing, that Matthew
was borrowing from these stories.
He wants his Jewish reader to go, wow, this sounds awfully familiar.
Yeah, I think this is one of those stories that let's us know that we're part of a work.
Oh, how did Sherry do say it once, that stretches across the street, across the world, and across the veil.
This is the way that we have articulated the new mission of the church.
President Kimball's day, it was proclaiming the gospel, perfect the saints, redeem the
dead.
Now, it is, live the gospel of Jesus Christ,
care for those in need, invite all to come into Christ
and unite families for eternity.
And so President Nelson has said,
we're gathering Israel on both sides of the veil.
And this sounds just so big,
what we're a part of right here,
that they to be with us are more than they to be with them.
And I love verse 17, open his eyes. So a lot of times see the scriptures say, what was to the blind? And you think,
well, that's rude. But then it says that will not see. It's a, it's not the kind of blindness of
physical, but they're refusing to see. And I don't think he was a bad person, but Elisha was so excited to say, Lord, open his eyes that he can see what's going on.
All of us, I guess that's a testimony.
Do you know what this big thing is
that you're a part of?
President Nelson, Hank, you mentioned the June 2018
President Nelson talking, I think you did,
the greatest work
you could be involved in is the gathering of Israel, right?
That's why you were sent to Earth,
that's why you were sent to Earth now.
And this gives a real big picture to me.
They that be with us are more than they that be with them.
So I love this.
Yeah, John, you have a quote on your wall,
don't you from Elder Holland?
About your family? Yeah, I do. quote on your wall. Don't you from Elder Holland? About your family?
Yeah, I do.
On the other side.
Get right there.
Don't underestimate your family on the other side of the veil.
Got mom and dad, grandma and grandpa,
different periods of their life.
And my mom and dad are gone now.
They're on the other side.
And they are also part of this work. I sometimes jokingly say,
my mom and dad are now the office couple in the Hell Spirit Prison Mission. But we have we have
felt their influence and it's exciting. For any of our listeners who are struggling in any way,
I want to encourage you to go read a talk called For Times of Trouble,
where Elder Jeffrey are Holland way back in.
This is 1980 at BYU.
It's in the January of 1982 enzyme.
There's some about Elder Holland where he can take a scripture story and make it,
make it sing.
I'm going to read a pretty long quote here if you guys don't mind.
He's talking about the moment where the servant looks up and the city is surrounded that they're in.
And Elder Holland says this, I'm going to read the last couple paragraphs of this talk.
Quote, if Alisha was looking for a good time to be depressed, this is it. His
only ally is a boy who in modern times might be the president of the local
teacher's quorum. It is one prophet and one lad against the world. And the boy is
petrified. He sees enemies everywhere, difficulty, despair, problems, burdens
everywhere. He cannot leave. And all he can see is an evil and merciless city.
With faltering faith, the boy cries,
how shall we do?
An Elisha's reply?
Fear not.
For they that be with us are more than they that be with them.
In the gospel of Jesus Christ, you have help from both sides of the veil, and you must
never forget that.
When disappointment and discouragement strike, and they will, you must remember and never
forget that if our eyes could be opened, we would see horses and chariots of fire as
far as the eye can see, writing at reckless speed to come to our protection.
They will always be there, these armies of heaven, in defense of Abraham's seed,
and Elder Holland goes on, I close with this promise. Verily,
I say unto you, you are little children, and you have not as yet understood how great blessings the Father hath in his own hands and prepared for you.
The kingdom is yours. The blessings thereof are yours, and the riches of eternity are yours.
Oh yes, Elder Holland says, we'll find the place which God for us prepared. On the way, we will make the air with music ring shout praises to our
God and King above the rest these words will tell all as well, all as well. Man, you guys, is that
not the pen of heaven right there? Yeah. I mean, some of this I feel like is we need to pray and ask for our eyes to be open to.
In the same way that this servant's eyes are opened, in the same way that, you know,
the woman with the child, her eyes became opened.
And she was a believer.
We're not talking about unbelievers.
Sometimes we just need that extra push, that extra little help or like name and washing
in the river, right? Just a little reminder every once in a while that we're not alone, that extra little help, or like name and washing in the river, right?
Just a little reminder, every once in a while, that we're not alone, that the Lord is there
and His armies are there, and on both sides of the veil, and our eyes just need to be
opened to these miracles, I think.
Crystal, I'm going to do that.
I'm going to add that to my prayers.
God, open my eyes.
Please help me.
I want to see. Please open my prayers. God opened my eyes. Please help me. I want to see. Please open my eyes. I think
that's beautiful. In the eyes of those we love. John, what are you going to say?
Yeah, I have a John, President John Taylor quotation, August 6, 1882, Journal of the discourses volume 23 page 221 I
Thank you. I love this statement
God lives and his eyes are over us and his angels are round and about us and they are more interested in us
Then we are in ourselves
10,000 times, but we do not know it. That said, just an amazing verse to me that they've always been there and they're 10,000
times more interested in us than we are in ourselves.
Crystal, why don't you take it from there? Okay.
Okay.
I love this aspect of the Savior that we get here.
You know, if we go back through some of these miracles
and we talk about how Elisha represents the Savior,
we talked about the Kinsman Redeemer, all right,
with the oil, saving us from servitude
to sin, saving us from from debt. We talked about him as the Savior overpowering death for us.
We talked about him feeding and nourishing us. He's the bread of life. We get here. He's a fighter.
He's going to fight for us. He wants us to win in the battle against sin in the battle against
Every horrible thing that happens to us
He wants us to win and all we have to do is ask him for help help opening our eyes
realizing our full true potential
Ask for help realizing that we're not alone, that there are way more
who are helping us than are against us. And every single one of these
aspects of the Savior, we see later in the New Testament and in the book of
Mormon when he teaches the people. He's on our side and he wants us to win and
he wants us to go out there and make sure everybody knows it.
This is part of the gathering,
making sure everybody understands their true identity
as children of God and their true potential.
And this is part of why love Elijah and Elijah
because they're meant to show us this.
There's a confidence in second king 16 that can really only come when you know God.
You're surrounded. What are we going to do? Fear not. Fear not. We're fine. We're okay.
I remember when President Hinckley was interviewed by Mike Wallace for 60 minutes. Mike Wallace asked
by Mike Wallace for 60 minutes. Mike Wallace asked President Monson and President Fals,
who were his counselors at the time, he said,
how is he so positive?
How is he so upbeat?
And President Monson said, oh, I think he knows
how it all works out.
There's a confidence that comes when you know
how it's gonna work out.
Fear not, we're fine.
And we want for that, for each of our listeners, right?
We want you to have that confidence in the Lord that you can see something as scary as this and say,
fear not.
The law work out.
In fact, Sherry Doe and her biography of President Hinckley had mentioned that,
that if you're around him, you will hear him say things will work out.
And he always had that kind of faith. The Lord is on our side. I love what you've done here, Crystal.
He's a finder, he's a healer, he's a feeder, he's a fighter. With all of these miracles,
you can put a role to each one of those that is foreshadowing the savior.
Thank you for that.
Absolutely.
Crystal, this has been fantastic today.
If anybody wants to hear about your journey of faith
and scholarship, they can go back to your previous episode
with us that we did on NOAA earlier this year.
And anyone who has not heard that, please take the time
and go back and listen to that episode.
It was fantastic in
every way. Crystal, so to finish this episode, I think our listeners would be interested
in your major takeaways from this section. What would you say to our listeners who are
like our listener, Amy, Rye, or Mo and the Lawn, or doing the gardening? What do you hope
they take away from this week's lesson?
I especially want to focus on this word, hope hope that you said, what do I hope for?
I hope that this brings hope to everybody who's listening.
I hope that you realize that miracles can be any size shape form and it's just about us recognizing
them from losing an axe head to being healed from leprosy to curing the water in the well
that miracles are for entire cities but also for individuals and that God cares about every single
one of his children and part of it is opening our eyes seeing the miracles in our own life
and realizing our true our true potential and that God loves every single one of us and finding hope in these chapters.
I think that's definitely the final takeaway from these chapters.
Beautiful, absolutely beautiful.
We want to thank Dr. Crystal Pierce for being with us today.
She is just brilliant and wonderful and we've shared her with all of you. Thank you so much for being here us today. She is just brilliant and wonderful. And we've shared her with all of you.
Thank you so much for being here, Crystal.
It's a joy to really is.
But a fun day.
We want to thank our executive producers,
Steve and Shannon Sorenson, whom we love
and our sponsors, David and Verla Sorenson.
And we hope all of you, please come back next week
because we're gonna have another episode of Follow Him.
We have an amazing production crew we want you to know about David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Will Stoten, Crystal Roberts, and Al Kuhadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.
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