Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Nephi 1-2 Part 1 • Dr. Lili Anderson • Feb 5 - Feb 11 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: January 31, 2024What would be included in your Last Lecture? Dr. Lili De Hoyos Anderson addresses Lehi’s final lessons for his family and the importance of building Zion, awakening from spiritual slumber and streng...thening one another in relationships.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/book-of-mormon-episodes-1-13/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056YouTube: https://youtu.be/iBIXTdBLQMEInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part 1–Dr. Lili De Hoyos Anderson00:30 Teaser to the episode01:21 Dr. Anderson shares overview of today’s podcast03:01 Bio of Dr. Anderson05:54 Zion and the Gathering of Israel09:04 A land consecrated 10:57 The Bible and Jesus Christ12:41 Unique characteristics of North America16:33 Freedom and rights and the Restoration19:14 Lehi exhorts his children to wake up21:17 Covering sins25:40 Fearing other’s perceptions29:19 Divine discontent32:12 Hank shares a story of General Conference experience34:30 To cover37:45 Tips for teaching younger audiences38:15 Providing for families, men, and boys32:14 Inspiration and adaptability44:06 Trusting God and service in marriage49:57 The importance of the ideal and adapting when we don’t meet it54:55 A lesson from elephants57:30 President Russell M. Nelson urges us to awake59:06 Spouses building one another1:04:52 End of Part 1–Dr. Lili De Hoyos AndersonThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & 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's Hank Smith. I'm your host.
I'm here with my joyful co-host, John, by the way. John, men are that they might have joy. And I
would say that about you. You are joy. And there are days when I do. Yeah, there are days that you
might. That I might have joy. That you might have joy.
It's not guaranteed joy, but it's good.
You can choose joy.
Yeah.
John, we're in the first two chapters of Second Nephi.
What are we looking forward to today?
I think they used to have a lecture series at BYU called
Last Lecture.
Like, if this was your last chance to talk to people,
what would you say?
And this is, Lehi's like, gather everybody around.
I'm going to give you some final words that I never want you to forget. Well, that goes on to Second Nephi 3
as well. But today we're just looking at one or two. But it's interesting to see what he chooses
to talk about in that final advice. So I'm looking forward to that.
As you look at the Book of Mormon, there are certain chapters that stand out above the others.
And Second Nephi 2 is right there.
John, we are joined by a guest that we have had on the show many times, and our
listeners absolutely adore her. Dr. Lily Anderson is here. Lily, only two chapters
today, but wow, a lot in them. What are we going to talk about?
As John said, this is Lehi's last admonition and testimony. And I do remember that last lecture
series. And it does make us think, what would I say to my posterity at the end of my life?
Well, the last chance I had to speak to a class. Powerful topics here. As you mentioned, Chapter
2 is amazing. There are some real gems in Chapter 1, too. I would say that we get some particular
warnings to his sons and by extension
to all men about how to break the bonds of sin and how to change your life if that's what you want to do.
I would say that this message on the purpose of opposition and affliction is very powerful because that's relevant to all of us.
A deep testimony of the Holy Messiah, which is beautiful,
beautifully talks about his grace and truth and there's a lot to say about that.
And other honestly valuable little gems that I'm ready to delve into,
including how to become a non-victim Christian.
My desire always is to apply these things.
And Nephi is going to invite us in a few chapters to liken these things into
ourselves. I like hearing it in this context, but I like thinking about
therefore, what does this allow me to take away and do in my own life?
Excellent, Lily. This is the richness of the Book of Mormon. Every chapter is special.
I don't want to say the other chapters aren't, but second, if I want and two, these last words of Lehi,
they're special. There's something about them that can really impact your life.
Like you said, if you want them to.
John, Lily is not new to the show.
And I'm guessing most of our listeners are very excited looking forward to this.
We might have a few who are thinking, what, what have I been missing all this time?
Tell our listeners about Lily.
Yes.
Dr. Anderson has been on our podcast several times.
She's a licensed clinical social worker.
She has a full-time private practice
in individual marriage and family counseling.
She has eight children, 37 grandchildren,
and a great grandchild.
And we have more about her background
on our social media website.
She's been working on a book.
She was telling us about healthy boundaries,
that non-victim Christian
idea, which I love. And also, she has a choosing glory podcast that I hope our listeners know about
and probably have already listened to, I hope. So, we're really glad to have you, Dr. Anderson.
Thanks for coming back. Nice to be here. Lily, tell us just briefly about this boundaries book
that you're working on. I think this is a crucial topic. Yeah. I feel like almost everybody that I speak to clinically and in other settings as well
really need to know how God wants us to become non-victims and maintain our Christianity to not
be victim or victimizer, which too often is the conundrum. I'm either taking it or I'm dishing it
out. And there really is another way that God has given us to address chronic
difficulties in our lives, difficult relationships, difficult situations.
And it is this path of having healthy boundaries.
It's scriptural.
So I'm very excited to get that done.
It's been delayed.
Talk about that a little bit later when we get into that non-victim Christian
application, which comes right out of second Nephi.
At least there's a tie in here that it's going to be fun to talk about. Awesome. I have to say that if anybody is looking for an
uplifting, powerful educational experience, go back to some of the episodes we've done with Lily
in the past. Doctrine Covenants 49 and 50. We were in Genesis with the story of Joseph of Egypt.
We did Daniel, the book of Daniel. We did last year, Matthew six and seven. And every time,
Lily, you're like Hank Aaron. It's a home run every single time.
Not to set you up for too much pressure today,
but I'm guessing we're going to be just fine.
Let me read to you from the Come Follow Me manual.
And then let's dive in Lily. And this is again,
second e-fi one and two, free to choose liberty and eternal life through the great mediator
And this is how it opens if you knew that your life was coming to an end
What final message would you want to share with the people you love most when the prophet Lehi felt?
He was nearing the end of his life. He gathered his family together one last time
He shared with them what Heavenly Father had revealed to him. He bore testimony of the Messiah.
He taught gospel truths he cherished to the people he cherished.
He talked about liberty, obedience, the fall of Adam and Eve,
redemption through Jesus Christ, and joy.
Not all of his children chose to live by what he taught.
None of us can make these choices for our loved ones,
but we can teach and testify of the Redeemer,
who makes us free to choose liberty
and eternal life.
What a great opener to these two chapters.
Lily, how do you want to start this?
Should we open up 2nd E.F.I. 1 or do we need to talk beforehand?
Let's open up 2nd E.F.I. 1.
I think there are like three highlights that I'm going to focus on today.
V.I.
really talks a lot about this land of promise that they have come to. And
there are some really important things about that. Second, he asks them to awake from a
deep sleep. And that is an important idea to me, certainly clinically, but spiritually.
And third, to arise from the dust and be men. Oh my goodness, there's a lot of other wonderful
stuff here, but let's look at that. Start right here at verse 5. He said, Notwithstanding our afflictions, we have retained a land of promise, a land which is choice above
all other lands. Now, let's be clear. There are many wonderful countries and wonderful citizens
of all these countries. We know that Zion could be established anywhere now, but it's no longer
come to Utah like it was in the early days of the gathering of Israel and the beginning of the church.
But there is something special about this land that is good to talk about.
Again, it doesn't, this isn't about ethnocentrism.
This is about recognizing that God has an order and he does things in certain ways and he does designate certain people.
He designates certain places and certain events to happen in his orderly way.
And this has been a land of promise. We're going to look at that a little bit. Let's go on. A land which the Lord God
have covenanted with me should be a land for the inheritance of my seed.
Yea, the Lord have covenanted this land unto me and to my children forever. And also all those
who should be led out of other countries by the hand of the Lord. And as we said, for a long time it was gathered at the mountaintops, right? And then,
I, Lehi prophesy that there shall none come into this land, save they should be brought by the
hand of the Lord, which is fascinating, especially in our day with some things that are happening,
seven, wherefore this land is consecrated unto him whom he shall bring. Now my parents were in
that group. My dad is Mexican, Mexican my mother French now both passed away
But they came to this land and my mother specifically in France
They were in a tiny little branch with like seven people including the missionaries
Maybe it was eight with their missionaries and they went from our grand where my mother grew up to Paris to hear
Heber J. Grant who had come to speak to the members in France.
And in Paris, Heber J. Grant, who was the president of the church at that time, said,
Come to Utah. Come to Zion.
It took them like nine years.
But that's why my mother came to Utah and met my dad, who had been told by his mission president to go to BYU after his mission,
and he didn't know what b.y.u. was
it's a beautiful story they really were brought by the hand of the lord and
that's the foundation of my family now they loved their countries
we love france a great deal but love mexico i still have a lot of family there
so we can love our countries at my dad's funeral we actually had a mexican flag on the right and an
american flag on the left of his casket because
he loved both of these countries so much. So my point is, let's not get offended that God has
said America is a choice man. Let's recognize that there are things foreordained by God for
everyone, but that there is something special here and let's not skip it because there are valuable
things about recognizing this. So verse seven, this land is consecrated unto whom whom he shall bring.
I just read that.
And if it so be that they shall serve him, now this is the condition.
According to the commandments which he has given, it shall be a land of liberty unto them.
That's so important.
Having a land of liberty is something special and it's a beacon to the world and can bless all kinds of worlds.
As we know, many countries have copied the Constitution of the United States or used that as
a foundation for some of their own governance. Wherefore, they shall never be brought into
captivity. Now, that's a really huge promise given the state of the world today and in other times
where liberty has been at risk. If so, it shall be because of iniquities.
This is a principle with a promise,
but we have to live the principle.
We have to worship the God of the land
who is Jesus Christ, right?
For if iniquity shall abound,
curse shall be the land for their sakes,
and for their sakes.
I want to talk about that later with the boundaries idea,
but unto the righteous, it shall be blessed forever.
Can I just emphasize that last line?
Unto the righteous, it shall be blessed forever. That is an incredible promise. No matter what happens politically or
governmentally or socially or whatever
Unto the righteous, it shall be blessed forever. That is a beautiful
statement of comfort. Now, he talks about
how they've come out of Jerusalem, all this
kind of that they will do unto the Lord in belief. And he sees that his
posterity will have a time where they lose the light, they turn away from the
light. End of verse 10, if the day shall come that they reject the Holy One of
Israel, the true Messiah, their Redeemer and their God, behold, the judgments of
him that is just shall rest upon them." And then interestingly, look at this, verse 11,
he will bring other nations unto them,
and he will give unto them power,
and he will take away from them the lands of their possessions
and cause them to be scattered and smitten.
Again, there's a principle here that is so involved,
we need to worship Jesus Christ.
I want to go back for a moment to first Nephi
that we've read just recently here in his great vision, chapter 13, verses starting
with 19. Just let me read a couple of verses here. And I, Nephi beheld that the Gentiles
had gone out of captivity. Now he's already talked about the discovery of this land in
later days. And here come the Gentiles from Europe, the early settlers of the United States, before
it was the United States.
They were delivered by the power of God out of the hands of all other nations.
And it came to pass that I, Nephi, beheld that they did prosper in the land.
And then he says, why?
I beheld a book and it was carried forth among them.
They brought this book.
Well, what's the book?
Verse 23, it proceeded out of the mouth of a Jew.
And the book that thou beholdest is a record of the Jews
which contains the covenants of the Lord.
And verse 23, they are of great worth under the Gentiles.
This is important.
This country began as a Judeo-Christian country.
Why? Because they had the record of the Jews.
They had the Bible.
And it did contain the covenants.
Of course Nephi goes on and says there are some plain and precious things that have been taken out
and that causes them to stumble.
But because they had this Judeo-Christian background,
they had the Ten Commandments,
they had the covenants of the Lord, the understanding of how God works with His people, that
they came and they were prospered because of it, because they were worshiping
the God of the land who is Jesus Christ. That's so important to remember and to
see the consistent threat of God's work with us. If we will worship Him, we will
prosper. And to the righteous, this land
will be blessed forever. And I'm going to say to the righteous, any land is blessed in the way
that it needs to be, because God keeps His promises to His people. We need to worship Christ,
and from Him all blessings flow. So there's a condition there and a warning. Let's talk about
America for a minute. This is something so fun that I just have to mention. It's from a book called The Accidental
Superpower by Peter Zihon. I'm not sure how to say that. And there is something special about
the way God works again in the details. This is not a member of the church who writes this,
but he talks about the blessings of this country. And this is just one idea because there are
several that he specifically mentions.
He's a geographer. But let me talk about the rivers as Peter Zihon in this book mentions.
The Mississippi is the world's longest navigable river, 2100 miles long. That's about one-third
longer than the mighty Danube and triple the length of the Rhine.
And the Mississippi is only one of the 12 major navigable American rivers.
Collectively, all of America's temperate zone rivers are 14,650 miles long.
China and Germany each have about 2,000.
America has 14,600 miles of navigable rivers, China and Germany 2,000 each.
France about 1,000.
The entirety of the Arab world has but 120.
The most compelling feature
of the American maritime system,
however, is also nearly unique amongst the world's waterways.
The American system is a network.
It has tributaries that combine these.
And what does this mean?
It meant prosperity, because people could connect, they could travel, they could expand and still stay connected with commerce and trade
and family. They had this network that exists nowhere else in the world. And we're talking
by leaps and bounds. All told, this Mississippi, an inter-coastal system, and they're talking about
the barrier islands that exist on either side of the United States that give another
Waterway that can go up and down the coast that is mostly protected from microcains and stuff like that not completely But that is more navigable waterway. It accounts for
15,500 of the United States
17,600 miles of internal waterways
Even leaving out the United States and North America's other waterways.
This is still a greater length of internal waterways than the rest of the planet combined.
The result is that the U.S. has the greatest volume and concentration of capital generation
opportunities in the world by an absolutely massive margin and that opportunity is very heavily
concentrated in a single unified system. That's just one thing that a geographer learned.
He's not religious and yet what do I read when I'm reading this book? My son's told me about
years ago and I read it and I was like, God is in the details. When he says this land is a land of promise and it is blessed,
he makes it happen in ways that are
quantifiable. If we have the eyes to see and the ears to hear, why do we bet against this God who
accomplishes his works
always in every way that is needful.
And like I said, that's just one little thing that that even
talks about. Now let's talk about our inspired Constitution.
Isn't that fun?
Yeah, that's really cool.
This could be a rabbit hole. We could go down forever. I'm just
going to mention a few things our prophets have said. In April
2021, fairly recently, Ted Collister, Joy Jones are doing
this great thing about the Constitution, light leaves spoken
to both of them recently.
Defending our divine Constitution was the name of this speech in April of 21.
President Oak said, without a bill of rights,
America could not have served as the host nation for the restoration of the gospel,
which began just three decades
later. Of course, the Constitution was not complete,
but it was inspired,
as we've been told by our leaders forever.
And then the Bill of Rights was inspired
and that this allowed for the restoration of the gospel.
Now, going on, President Oakes said,
our belief in divine inspiration
gives Latter-day Saints a unique responsibility
to uphold and defend the United States Constitution and
principles of constitutionalism wherever we live. These principles are universal.
Our country has been blessed in this specific way and it was so that the
gospel could come forth and be fully restored. Now let's just finish one more
line by President Oaks. We should trust in the Lord and be positive about this nation's future.
That is a fascinating statement. There are some reasons to be concerned, but I love that. Be positive about this nation's future.
And why? Because Zion will be brought forth on the American continent. We talk about that in our 13 articles of faith. We know that there is still a destiny that is going to happen here. The New Jerusalem will be here.
This is not again by chance. The Lord has a purpose in this and yes, He has a
purpose for all His believing people. So this again, this is not to try to leave
anybody out. It's about just to recognize that God works in very specific
ways that He brings to pass marvelous miracles.
The restoration of the gospel had to happen here. And Lehi sees all of this, and he's trying to tell
them, please appreciate the works of the Lord and appreciate the blessings of liberty that are
available if we worship God, that will always be protected if we worship God and unto the righteous this land will be blessed forever. Such an amazing promise. It's not about just one place. It's
about the light that yes, sometimes comes from Kamorah or Palmyra and then goes forth
and it is the going forth. All are invited, all are welcome to join in and become one based on universal truth and principle and worshiping the Savior.
That's where our strength is, is from coming together and building Zion.
Let's move on to another really great message of Lehi's to his sons to awake from a deep sleep.
So there's a chapter 1 still, verse 13 and 14.
Oh, that you would awake, awake from a deep sleep, yea, even from the sleep of hell, and shake off the awful chains by which you're bound, which are the chains which bind the children of men.
That they are carried away captive down to the eternal gulf of misery and woe.
This is such a poignant petition from a loving father to sons who he has seen reject the fruit of the tree. He has seen it, he knows what's going on,
and he's saying, I still love you, and I just wish you could awake from this deep sleep. And then
in verse 14, awake and arise from the dust and hear the words of a trembling parent whose limbs
he must soon lay down in the cold and silent grave from whence no traveler can return. A few more
days and I go the way of all the earth." And then he, of course, his own testimony,
the Lord hath redeemed my soul from hell. I have beheld his glory and am encircled about
eternally in the arms of his love. And he wants them to remember and observe in verse
16 the statutes and
judgments of the Lord and this has been the anxiety of his soul from the
beginning. I'm gonna stop there for a minute and talk about this idea of
awakening from a deep sleep because I think that this can be so good for all
of us to consider. Now as a counselor I've thought about you know what is it
that gets us into a deep sleep where we can justify and
rationalize some pretty awful behaviors.
And these are not terrible people.
These are good people who get caught in this sleep where they're not thinking well,
and they're not using the light of the gospel to move and progress in their covenants.
They're in a miserable place and they make others miserable too.
And whether they recognize it or not.
And how do they not recognize it?
Now I have a lot of clients ask me, how could this person do this?
I will never understand how this person can do these behaviors and justify them.
And generally they're talking about members of the church because that's pretty much my clientele.
It's so sad that they're in this deep sleep early in my counseling.
I was at home full time for almost 20 years and then got a revelation to go back.
After I'd been doing counseling, we had a reunion and all our kids were back.
At some point they asked me, so mom, what are you learning in counseling?
What are you learning?
I hadn't anticipated the question,
so I was just kind of off the cuff,
but I don't know that I would ever change my answer actually,
because this is what came to me.
Don't cover your sins.
That of course, let's look at that.
It's from section 121.
This is of course an amazing section
that has a million lessons in it,
but we're just gonna look at this one.
Well, I'm gonna start with verse 36.
The rights of the priesthood are inseparably connected
with the powers of heaven.
Now, he's talking to men who hold the priesthood,
but I am going to say that this has application
to every person.
But any rights, any covenant, the power of our covenants,
it's inseparably connected to the powers of heaven,
and that the powers of heaven cannot be controlled nor handled only upon the principles of righteousness.
This is so familiar, but let's think about what comes next here, that they may be conferred upon us,
it is true. And again, for women, we make these covenants that also are covenants of power,
we have access to all the same powers of heaven, But when we undertake to cover our sins,
now what does that mean? We lie to ourselves and then we lie to others. We
pretend that we're living in better harmony with our covenants, but we're
not and we don't admit it. We don't acknowledge it and repair it and
correct it in whatever large or small means are required to get square with God and His church.
That might involve a priesthood authority, it might not, but wherever we deviate and hopefully we
go, we even start before we get into serious problems, but we correct. We don't cover our sins,
we say like, you know what?
I should not be yelling at my kids like that. Or you know what? I shouldn't be so selfish
with my spouse. Or why am I letting my temper loose and then justifying it and saying,
wow, they made me really angry, which we in counseling, we say that sloppy language.
They made me really angry, which we in counseling we say that sloppy language.
He made me angry. She made me angry. Like really? There was a choice in there if I could or not.
This business of like justify covering our sins is rationalization. It's justification. It's excusing ourselves. It's dumbing down the principles of the gospel to match up with my behavior.
Here's the ideal and here's my real behavior.
And instead of like saying, you know what, I need to close the gap this way by repentance
and continuing and growing and becoming and refining and growing and all those wonderful
things that can help us conform to the image of the Son of God.
Instead, it's like, I'm going to bring this ideal down and say,
well, I wasn't that bad. And you know what? I pay my tithing, I go to the temple all the
time and I serve. It's okay. I'm a pretty good person. It was just, I was under stress.
I was just in a bad place. Things were not working very well. I was hangry. We have all
these words that we've used to like justify justify to cover our sins from ourselves and say, I'm fine. I'm fine. I'm
good enough. I'm good enough. Now, this is so dangerous. Look
what he says and look at the sequence because this sequence
I've seen it so many times it's heartbreaking. When we
undertake to cover our sins, or to gratify our pride, our bane ambition, now,
why do we cover our sins? To gratify our pride. Come on, they're completely connected. I
don't want to have to admit that I have to repent. I don't want to have to admit that
I was wrong, that I hurt people, that I betrayed God. I betrayed myself. I betrayed my kindness. I don't have to admit that
I want to feel good about myself, but the natural man self
We don't use that word gratify anymore. It means to indulge
right to indulge our pride to
Satisfy it and notice how much in our society we're doing this
We don't want wanna hurt anybody's feelings.
We don't want to offend their pride
or their good feelings about themselves.
So we water down the ideal.
It doesn't matter how you live, what you choose,
how you wear your garments, it doesn't matter.
You just have to be yourself.
The natural man's self is always what they're talking about.
Not the divine child of God
Self who can become like God and Christ and joint heirs in the kingdom like they're not talking about that self
They're talking about this earth in natural man worldly Babylon self don't be
uncomfortable
Because that that might hurt your feelings. Are you covering your sins?
Or are you encouraging somebody else to cover theirs
and say, you'll be fine.
Let's go on.
Cover our sins or gratify our pride, our vanishing,
or to exercise control or dominion or compulsion
upon the souls of the children and men.
And why do we cover our sins?
Because we wanna control what people think of us.
We wanna control how we look.
And how many times have we talked about,
like public self, private self?
We can be fighting in the family and pick up the phone,
hi, or go to the door, yeah, come on in.
We're just having a spiritual moment.
We are trying to exercise control
or dominion or compulsion.
It's not authentic.
It's not, and I'm not suggesting
we hang our laundry in public.
There are things that should be kept private,
and we don't have to go and do true confessions
and testimony meeting.
That's not the point.
The point is to be authentic.
And I'm gonna just say that this is a redundancy
that comes next,
because he says exercise control, dominion, compulsion
by the souls of children men in any degree of unrighteousness.
Well, can I just say that anytime we're exercising controlion, or compulsion, it is unrighteous.
Compulsion is never God's way. So there's a little bit of an emphasis there. Behold, now look at this cascade of events.
Behold, the heavens withdraw themselves.
That should be chilling.
That should be chilling. The heavens withdraw. Like all that power, all that light, truth, intelligence, blessing, protection withdraws. I think it was
Cleon Skousinger in an essay that he talked about the light of Christ. I read
it when I was an undergrad and it was about how it permeates every system that
functions, including our circulatory system and why our eyes can see.
And the light of Christ gives us photosynthesis.
It gives us those building blocks of life on this planet and it all comes in the
sun shines because of the light of Christ.
We have a breathable atmosphere because of the light of Christ.
So what happens when the heavens withdraw themselves?
The spirit of the Lord is grieved.
And when it is withdrawn, amen to the priesthood
or the authority of that man,
I would add amen to the light, truth, protection, blessing
that God can offer us because we have shut it down.
He does not take it away.
We separate ourselves from that.
And then behold, there he is where he is left unto himself. Again, those
should be terrifying words. Left unto myself. Are you kidding?
Like I know enough to steer my own ship? I mean, we have these
amazing sense of Messiah come back and go as to myself, I am
nothing. They have figured it out. That's my own strength.
Nothing.
But with him, I can do all things.
To kick against the pricks, which I think it means an exercise in futility, basically,
to persecute the saints and to fight against God.
You know, even Gamaliel in the New Testament knew better than that.
Like, what are we doing?
If we don't be careful, we're going to end up fighting against God.
Again, this is a very serious warning. I think that that is how we fall into deep sleep. We cover our sins. We lie to ourselves. And we justify and rationalize instead of allowing that divine discontent that we feel when we are not living up to our privilege.
This is our privilege, the covenants, the promises of God, the opportunities, exaltation itself.
Such great privileges and here we live beneath them because we're human and yes,
there is a learning curve and a growth opportunity and all of this doesn't happen when we're comfortable.
This is divine discontent or some people have called it cognitive dissonance.
Is it lack of comfort with how I am because I'm recognizing that, my gosh,
I shouldn't have done that.
I need to stop that bad habit.
I need to improve my relationships.
I need to repent.
I need to really take that seriously, that problem that I've had.
Whatever it is, if the spirit has prompted us, rather than dumb it down and
cover those things from ourselves, let me embrace it and get on my knees and go
to the Lord and say, help me close that gap. Help me use this as an opportunity.
So I really think that's the deep sleep. And then, you know, I work with a lot
of people, of course, and I see marriages that they're on their last ropes. And I've seen them end.
And I've seen sad stories of men or women whose partners finally have had it and they leave.
And these people are active church members. They hold positions of responsibility. They
active church members. They hold positions of responsibility. They
in the world and in the church and they can be like, what happened?
We were in a deep sleep. Didn't you hear that your partner kept begging you to
address these issues that were causing pain and grief and alienation and separation?
You weren't coming together. You were like this on these parallel paths. Did you do a lot of good works?
Yeah, you did, but you were covering your sins.
You didn't listen to the people who loved you the most
telling you, I need you to change.
I need you to address this problem.
Please, please.
Let's work together on this. It's a deep sleep. And that's the way that
you wake up when your life goes through something so drastic, it's tragic. Well, here's Lehigh. He
loves his family. He loves these sons and he's saying awake. Awake and arise from the dust and be.
Awake. Awake and arise from the dust and be. Be who you are meant to be. Close the gap. You have this incredible potential.
What are your thoughts? Lily, 20-something years ago, I was sitting in a priesthood meeting.
I'm sure many of our listeners remember when General Conference had a priesthood meeting on Saturday night, I'd go sit next to my dad and sometimes it was really long.
And they'd turn the lights out and you're like, oh, this would be a nice place to take a nap.
But I remember this was October of 2002.
So I was just a brand new seminary teacher and F Melvin Hammond gave a talk.
Lily, you're going to love this if you don't remember it.
It's called, Dad, Are You Awake?
And this is a story he tells.
John, do you remember this?
He said, many years ago, I took our only son
on his first camping fishing trip.
He was just a boy.
The canyon was steep and the descent was difficult,
but the fishing was good.
Every time I hooked a fish, I would give the pole
to the eager boy and with shouts of joy, he would reel in a beautiful trout. In the shadows and coolness of the late
afternoon, we began our climb back up to the rim high above us. And he talks about racing his son,
and now his son just totally wiped him out. He said, after supper, we knelt in prayer, his small
voice rose sweetly, heavenward. Then we climbed into our large double sleeping bag, and after a bit of pushing and pulling,
I felt his little body snuggle and settle tightly against mine, for warmth and security
against the night.
As I looked at my son beside me, suddenly I felt a surge of love pass through my body.
At that precise moment, he put his little arms around me and said, Dad, yes? Are you
awake? Yes, I'm awake. Dad, I love you a million trillion times. And immediately he
was asleep. But I was awake far into the night, expressing my great thanks. And then he said, for every father, I pose that penetrating
question. Are you awake? Do your sons and daughters ever wonder if you are asleep when it comes to
the things that are most important to them? He goes on and says later, a father's relationship
with God and his son Jesus Christ can be a beacon which will lead his children
through the stormy shoals of life.
I was thinking about years ago when I first learned that the Hebrew word that is often
translated into Atonement is kaffar, k-a-p-h-a-r, and it means, among other things, to cover. I've always thought that Adam and Eve were
covered by Christ before they were even left the Garden of Eden. Then that
verse that you read from the Doctrine of Cognits from section 121, when we
undertake to cover, we can't atone for our own sins. When we undertake to cover
our sins, it doesn't work. Adam and Eve attempted to cover themselves,
but they were, as Alma might say, exposed to the whole law because we need Christ to cover us.
And I've always loved that idea of an intensely beautiful Christian symbol of being covered by
Christ is being atonement. We can't cover ourselves.
We need to expose ourselves to Christ by exposing ourselves to ourselves and seeing things as
they really are. We've been told that is truth. Truth sets us free and it sets us free from
a deep sleep and it allows Christ to cover our sins in his divine way that cleanses.
Cleanses us and then changes us. I love how I think it's Elder Bednar that's
talked about there's two parts of this. We're going to be cleansed from past sin
perhaps slowly but he can change our hearts and prepare us for our life in
the future where we eventually lose desire for sin. I think
Joseph Smith said, this is a station to which no man ever arrived in a moment,
so it's a lifetime thing, but cleanse us and change us. And of course, Alma gives
a great message and it's all through scriptures, but Alma 32, 14 to 16. Now as
I've said unto you that because you were compelled to be humble, you were blessed.
Do you not suppose that they are more blessed who truly humble themselves because of the
Lord? Do we have to wait until our partner is sick of us? The marriage might be on the ropes.
Do we have to wait until a child walks away from us and doesn't look back? When they grow up,
do we have to wait until we hit a wall? Do we have to
wait? Do we have to be compelled or can we humble ourselves because we have the Word?
Yea, he that truly humbled himself and repented the misins and endured the unassainable,
shall be blessed much more blessed than they who are compelled to be humble. Blessed are they who humble themselves without being compelled to be humble.
In other words, blessed is he that believeth in the Word of God.
And we open ourselves to change and repentance and Christ.
I remember teaching this chapter in
seminary and I set a bunch of alarm clocks throughout the class
and they would just go off random times and my students are like, what is happening?
And we kept coming back to these words in 13 and 14 and 23 these verses in second if I want awake awake.
We are awake, brother Smith. Are you? Are you really awake?
Hank, that's a great idea for moms and dads out there trying to, how do I teach this to
my younger children? They could set some alarm clocks around and I think Lena's children
were awake, but he was talking about a different level of awakeness. Is that a word? He was
talking about, you got to wake up spiritually. Yeah, Lily, you mentioned the prodigal son. He came to him. He came to himself
He woke up. Yeah, he woke up. What am I doing?
What am I doing? That's the moment. That's the moment
I'm gonna go jump to 21 now and in chapter 1 verse 21. Okay at the very end a
rise from the dust my my sons, and be men.
And be determined in one mind and in one heart, united in all things.
But I'm going to go back, arise from the dust, my sons, and be men.
And I think this is worth talking about.
Proclamation defines manhood this way.
God says, are you willing to provide?
Are you willing to protect?
And are you willing to preside? Now, my definition, I think this is what God means by preside. I'm sure it encompasses
other things is to honor your priesthood, live worthy of that power and be able to use it to serve,
lift, bless and save others, provide, protect and preside. Are you a conduit between the heavens and the earth
for those for whom you preside, in your family particularly?
That's what God describes as manhood.
Now, it doesn't matter how athletic you are.
It matters if you are willing to provide for a family
and protect and preside.
That's being a man to God.
Men are under attack, now everybody's under attack. Satan's pulled out all the stops and
we know that these are the last days and they're fierce in
many ways. Let's look for a second. Let's pretend we're
going around the church building in the second hour of the
non Sunday school weeks. What we got, we've got the primary,
of course. And then let's look, we've got young men, young women, Relief Society,
Alders Corm. Which group is most at risk for suicide? It's the Alders Corm.
It's the Alders Corm. According to the CDC, the suicide rate for males in 2021
was approximately four times higher than females. And this is in those 25 to 64 years.
Four times higher. They are 50% give or take, but pretty close to 50% of the population,
but 80% of the suicides. What's happening? They're under attack. I am going to say something quickly from a book that is called Wild at Heart by John Eldridge.
Men need a battle to fight, an adventure to live, and a beauty to rescue.
And there's some nice stuff in there that helps us know what our boys need.
We know that the educational system is failing our boys. They are falling behind at just astonishing rates. Higher education is being taken over by more and more female students. And it's good for females to be educated, but not at the expense of males. I mean just going leaps and bounds when it comes to reading.
And their studies have been done
by the National Daven of Arts.
All these things about how much voluntary reading
is being done by our girls and our boys.
And while they're both dropping,
boys are dropping precipitously.
In reading, there was a Leonard Sacks
who's written a book called Boys Adrift, really interesting.
And he has some interesting things to say
in interviews and so on. He even goes so far. He's an MD who has written some really good
things about parenting and boys and girls. And he says that his way of checking a school
to see if it's good for boys is to look at their honor roll. But if there are roughly equivalent
numbers of boys and girls on the honor roll, then that could be a school that works for boys.
And he said it has really shifted.
If you go historically and look at those honor rolls, it used to be roughly equivalent,
even sometimes slanted toward boys in earlier decades.
And now it is almost exclusively girls.
There's something's wrong.
That school is not teaching boys in a way that works for boys.
And he gives some fun examples of those kinds of things.
But I mean, it's a serious issue.
So that's just one component here.
Like there's an attack going on.
Now, I don't want to make people paranoid, but maybe just a little.
At least awake.
Like how about we wake up to the fact that if we don't teach our children these things and it's just as important to teach our girls what a man is and what a woman is.
As it is to teach our boys what a man is and what a woman is because they need to work together.
God's plan is this divinely inspired division of labor.
God has specified we have these different divine roles.
Are we very much alike in our capacity
to do things? Absolutely. And it makes us very adaptable. So if there is not a man in the home,
women step up and they can cover a lot of that, not all of it, but they can cover a lot because
God blesses us and allows for us to deal with different circumstances that might occur. Same
thing with a man. Can he do a lot of what his wife or a woman of the family can do?
Yes, he can step up because we do have a lot of overlap.
But the differences are so important.
They are divinely decreed and we should not dismiss them.
Or think that everything is fine when we act as if there's no difference at all
and we try to teach our children this foolish, worldly philosophy
that frankly isn't even mingled with scripture. This one is so far off. It's not even close.
Can we just like really reject this idea that men and women are exactly the same? Like,
please, please don't fall into that trap of the world that is not even subtle. Now, I
love this hymn, Rise Up, O Men of God. And this is one of our men even subtle. Now, I love this hymn,
Rise Up O Men of God, and this is one of our men's hymns. I love to hear men sing it, but I listen to it
just myself sometimes. Have done with lesser things. Give heart and soul and mind and strength
to serve the king of kings. Now, the king of kings is the ultimate example of manhood.
I mean, there's nothing toxic about the Savior Jesus Christ.
A woman asked me, there's a dear friend actually,
and she said, she knows a woman who's been so hurt by men
that she has a hard time praying to a male God.
Because she said, what would you say to her?
And I said, I would say this,
I am sorry you've been hurt by men.
And she has, starting with her father,
serious abuse, a husband that was very abusive,
other men in her life that were really betrayed their trust, a lot of injury that's so awful and
against the will of God, of course. But I said, her savior and mine is a man. And he is the only
name given whereby we can come to God. Let me help you heal from your hurts. Let me
help you understand that men are not the enemy. Evil is the enemy. Sin is the
enemy. It's not men and it's not women and we fall into these traps that Satan
has put out there for the unwary foot and we sometimes we jump in with both
feet in fact because we think we have to be adversarial. We have to be in competition rather than cooperation
that synergizes. We are designed to synergize in the differences. The differences are such
a blessing to children, women, elder D. Todd Christoffers in October 2006 who was then
in the presidency of the seven in a speech called Let Us Be Men.
It's a beautiful speech.
It is a great story.
When my brothers and I were boys, our mother had radical cancer surgery.
She came very close to death.
Much of the tissue in her neck and shoulder had to be removed and for a long time it was
very painful for her to use her right arm.
One morning about a year after the surgery, my father took mother to an appliance store
and asked the manager to show her how to use a machine
that was there for ironing clothes.
The machine was called an iron right
and it was operated from a chair
by pressing pedals with one's knees.
So instead of using her arm that was very hard
for her to use, she could do this with her knees.
You can see that this would make ironing much easier,
especially for a woman with limited use of her arm.
Mother was shocked when dad told the manager
they would buy the machine and then paid cash for it.
Despite my father's good income as a veterinarian,
mother's surgery and medications had left them
in a difficult financial position.
On the way home, my mother was upset.
How can we afford it?
Where did the money come from?
How will we get along?
Finally Dad told her he had gone without lunches for nearly a year to save enough money.
Now when you iron, he said, you won't have to stop and go into the
bedroom and cry until the pain in your arm stops. She didn't know how he knew about that.
I was not aware of my father's sacrifice and act of love for my mother at that time, but
now that I know I say to myself, there is a man.
This is such a tender story of what God invites us to be and women to join with them in this synergy. Now, this is another statement from that same speech by Alderka Jefferson.
We who hold the priesthood of God cannot afford to drift.
We have work to do.
to drift. We have work to do. We must arise from the dust of self-indulgence and be men. In large measure, he says later, true manhood is defined in our relationship to women.
What an inspired statement. One of the true litmus tests is how we as women
treat men and how you as men treat women. That that is the measure of godly womanhood and godly
manhood. How do we interact? Are we at odds? Are we critical and complaining and adversarial? Or are we trying
to build Zion together? To come together in our differences and synergize rather than destroy?
President Gordon B. Hinckley, and this is Elder Christopherson again quoting the Prophet,
President Hinckley, speaking this meeting in in April 98 gave specific counsel for young men
The girl you marry will take a terrible chance on you. I
remember this talk
You will largely determine the remainder of her life
so
Get all the education you can he's talking about the providing part,
which is so serious and which blesses children and blesses women.
I do want to say this,
God did not condemn his daughters to a menial task.
I learned things in the trenches of full-time motherhood.
I could have learned nowhere else.
I am ever grateful and will ever be
grateful for those years where God expanded
my soul. He expanded every part of me. I became much more intelligent. I became a much better person
as God does not condemn anybody to a place of no growth. Ever. There's always the potential for exaltation in whatever we do.
And men can give that to women and the great gift of their children. What are we teaching our boys to
provide? To take responsibility. I know it's a tough economy and sometimes it's worse in other
countries and it doesn't mean a woman can't be a help me. Obviously, again, we pray and we when we think things through and we try to find our way. But there are
irreducible needs that God is asking us to prioritize that require sacrifice and sacrifice brings forth the blessings of
heaven. Can we testify to our children of the importance of these roles and not see them as afterthoughts? Or if you have
nothing better to do? Or if you don't have the intelligence to go to school or have a career. Like, are you kidding me? There was nothing more
challenging that I've ever done in my whole graduate school was a breeze. But being home with my
children and trying to understand how best to teach them about the gospel of Jesus Christ and the
other good things of the world, that was the most soul and mind expanding thing I have ever done.
And I learned more from that than I could have ever learned in any other setting.
It is not to be looked at as if it doesn't matter to provide anymore.
Like this is a mistake.
Are we preparing our sons and helping them take this on as a sacred responsibility,
which we adapt.
The proclamation talks about that.
Some circumstances require adaptation
and extended family and all kinds of other things.
President Oakes had a father who was a doctor.
He died when President Oakes,
the eldest of three children was seven years old.
His dear mother Stella raised those kids on her own.
And they were young.
That's so sweet and beautiful.
And he said something wonderful about his mother, but he said,
I was blessed with an extraordinary mother.
She surely was one of the many noble women who have lived in the
latter days.
Now there are a lot of single moms in the church and God loves them
and he will bless them.
So this is not about you're doomed
if the ideal situation is not part of your life.
It almost never is, but it is about not losing the ideal
and still trying to teach our children
that this is something to try to cherish
and do what we can to participate.
Now, let me just say a couple of things.
Our kids are bombarded with confusing and incorrect ideas, a lot of false ideas about
men and women.
That's gently but unapologetically teach them God's plan.
It includes his plan for men and women.
Differences matter.
They are designed to synergize.
Women he talks about nurturing and women,
whether mothers or not, and are we not all mothers, that lovely speech by Sherry
Dew, because women warm up a cold planet. And there are again lots of studies that
show that, but I do want to say that the role of a helpmate is vital. Children
need both fathers and mothers. There is a huge increase in fatherlessness in our society.
In fact, we have over 200 urban societies where there is over 90%
fatherlessness.
And there's something I want to mention called protest masculinity,
which is the direct result of the absence of fathers.
So what this is talking about, and this is written about one of many
things that has written in a book called Life Without Father by David Popano written several years ago now but this is a great point.
This protest masculinity means here's a baby that comes in and of course mom is the immediate bond.
She bore that child in her body and brings forth the child and often nurses the child so here we
have this really really amazing bond but then, as they grow up and become more autonomous and separate or whatever,
don't go too far because they realize that there's a lot about her that's a lot like mom.
She's a girl, mom's a girl, and there's kind of a role model there.
She's going to be separate, but she's also like her in many ways.
But a boy gets to that point of separation from that initial mother-child bond
where he's trying to now become his own person and
What does he do in a family with a father?
He looks to dad. Oh
I'm more like dad. We're both guys
So there's this wonderful role model and it brings him to a place where he can see what he's going to be or how he can be.
And hopefully that's a good, appropriate bond as it should be.
But either way, at least it gives him kind of a place to land when he separates from mom. What if dad's not there?
There's no place to land.
There's no place to stop him.
Because he realizes I'm different from mom and from my sister.
So I need to be different, but there's no place to land on.
and from my sister. So I need to be different, but there's no place to land on.
He keeps going in his effort to separate from femaleness.
They have now identified something called protest masculinity
where they become anti-female, hostile toward women.
Look at what's happening in these urban communities
with over 90% fatherlessness.
What music has come out of there?
Rap music that in so many cases is vile in the way it talks about women.
And it talks about violence against women and control and use and abuse of women. This is protest masculinity.
And it happens because there are no fathers there. Like, this is essential.
Why do we act like it doesn't matter who raises children?
It absolutely matters.
My husband and I were watching one of those animal planet
or national geographic, I don't even remember, specials.
And it was about this reserve in Africa that had elephants
and how they were culling the herds or relocating some.
They had taken some male adolescent elephants and moved them from one reserve to another place.
And then they were kind of keeping track on how those elephants were doing or whatever.
And they start to look around the park and they find that rhinos were being killed.
Now they thought, oh, the poachers are back.
But you know what poachers want? They want the horn.
That that's what's the valuable part of the rhino on the black market.
The horns were left.
So they're like, these aren't poachers.
They would have taken the horn.
So they set up cameras and whatever.
And you know what they found?
They found that the male adolescent elephants were killing the rhinos.
Now that is not typical elephant behavior. They brought in adult bull elephants, the males, fully grown men,
and they whipped those adolescents into shape. Elder Christopherson again, from that wonderful
speech, we must arise from the dust of self-indulgence and be men. It is a wonderful aspiration for a boy to become a man, strong and capable.
Someone who can build and create things, run things. Someone who makes a difference in the
world. It is a wonderful aspiration for those of us who are older to make the vision of true
manhood a reality in our lives and be models for those who look to us for an example. And that means that you look at the fatherless families
in your wards and neighborhoods and help invite that boy
to do things with you.
Take him on outings and adventures with your own sons
or if your sons are grown, go and do that.
Help that mother out so that there are good men.
We have ministering brothers, but you know, I went to my son's ward the
other day and two people came up and said, well, once that I've
been in this church 43 years and your son is the first one who
has done his ministering visits. And then another younger
couple told me that he's the first time they've ever had
ministering brother that actually showed up. God gives us
answers all over the place. But we need to pick them up and use them. It really blesses that fatherless child to have access to a good man
Who takes interest in him and helps with that single mom who is doing a great job?
Everything she can do and the Lord will bless her
She has access to all the powers of heaven and to priesthood powers if she's
Living her covenants and asking for them, but we need men in those boys lives now. Here's something
Oh, I know I said and sent me this morning because he knew I was talking about this brethren
We all need to repent. This is our dear prophet Russell Nelson
We need to get up off the couch put down down the remote, and wake up from our spiritual slumber.
It is time to put on the full armor of God, which is exactly what Lehi says here in verse 23,
put on the armor of righteousness.
Put on the full armor of God so we can engage in the most important work on earth.
It is time to thrust in our sickles and reap with all our might, mind, and strength.
The forces of evil have never raged more forcefully than they do today.
As servants of the Lord, we cannot be asleep
while this battle rages.
The Lord needs selfless men who put the welfare
of others ahead of their own.
He needs men who intentionally work to hear the voice
of the spirit with clarity.
He needs men of the covenant who keep their covenants with integrity. He needs men of the Covenant who keep their Covenants with integrity.
He needs men who are determined to keep themselves sexually pure, worthy men who can be called
upon at a moment's notice to give blessings with pure hearts, clean minds, and willing
hands.
I bless you to become those men.
I bless you with the courage to repent daily
and learn how to exercise full priesthood power.
I bless you to communicate the love of the Savior
to your wife and children and to all who know you.
I bless you to do better and better.
And I bless you that as you make these efforts,
you will experience miracles in your life.
John, I'm doubting you've ever had the experience, but I have, be a little bit vulnerable, where my wife needed to do, needed to do some correcting in me. I, you know, brought some difficulties,
I think, with me from an abusive childhood. And there was a couple of conversations that needed
to take place. Well, right at the end of 2 Nephi 1,
I noticed something that really fit.
Lehi is talking about Nephi and all he's trying to do for Laman and Lemuel.
And all you need to do is switch he, Nephi, to her and it becomes your wife.
Look at the very end of verse 24.
I'm going to read a couple of verses here and see if this doesn't fit exactly for any husband her and it becomes your wife. Look at the very end of verse 24.
I'm going to read a couple of verses here and see if this doesn't fit exactly for any husband
who's listening going, this is painful.
I don't want to hear this.
End of verse 24, she has suffered much sorrow because of you.
I exceedingly fear and tremble because of you lest she shall suffer again.
For behold, you have accused her that she has sought
power and authority over you, but I know that she has not sought for power nor authority over you.
This is your wife, but she has sought the glory of God and your eternal welfare. You have murmured
because she has been plain with you. You say that she has used sharpness. You say that she has been angry with you.
But behold, her sharpness was the sharpness of the power of the word of God, which was in her.
And that which you call anger was the truth.
According to that which is in God, she could not restrain manifesting boldly concerning your iniquities.
It keeps going. It must needs be that the power of God must be with her, even unto her commanding you
that you must obey.
But behold, it was not her, but it was the Spirit of the Lord which was in her, which
opened her mouth to utterance that he could not shut it.
That's a moment where you think, that was you call anger.
Why are you mad at me?
Is the truth?
Sorry, there was a professor at BYU.
I tried to remember his last name.
He was a wonderful guy.
I can see his face.
And he sometimes spoke to groups of men.
He would say, brethren, how many of you want to have a revelation from God?
And every hand would go up and he'd say, go home and ask
your wife how to be a better husband. That is exactly what you're putting here. I think
it's inspired. We have to be in this together. All of us need to be humble and come to the
Lord. But who is in the best seat in the house to see how we really are. And it is our partners.
It's our husbands and it's our wives.
And we should go to them and ask, how am I doing?
Are there some things that you're seeing
that I could do better?
Not, and this is not session to them,
just bash or criticize, but to bless
all the beautiful things there.
He has sought your eternal welfare.
She is seeking your eternal welfare.
Can we give that grace to each other?
And of course it requires that we stop being enemies
and we stop being warlike and contentious and mean and petty,
but that we seek the spirit and then yes,
pray that our spouse will be open and humble
and we can bless our whole families.
Honestly, I think we
should do this with our children too periodically. How are things going in our
family? What do you like? What don't you like? Are there things I could do more
that would bless our family that would bless you? This is priceless feedback
waiting for the taking. Can we be enough? And it is that humility that allows us to actually listen and change and say I will do better
Thank you for helping me see some things where I can be a better version of myself
And we can grow together. Oh my goodness. I like the way you did that. That's beautiful. Yeah, I love switching those
That's amazing. Yeah, I love switching those. That's amazing. I feel like
If the plan of God and I love that president
Oh, it's like two conferences in a row or was it one conference and then the next one a year later talked about
God's plan both times
Because it's where you look but God's plan is that we need each other
Then what would Satan's wanna do?
Drive a wedge between not just husband and wives,
but men and women.
Let's look at, oh, women are like this,
or oh, men are all like this,
and drive a wedge in there when we need each other.
And life is so much more wonderful with each other.
I have teenage boys, so does Hank. If we don't show and
model how to be men, where are they going to go? Where are they going to learn that?
That's what I hear you saying.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
If we think that charity means I must tolerate abuse, we are mistaken.
That is being acted upon.
And we are not sent to be acted upon.
We are sent to act.