Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Nephi 6-10 Part 1 • Dr. Robert L. Millet • Feb 19 - Feb 25 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: February 14, 2024How does the Fall affect us individually? Dr. Robert Millet examines the greatness of the Plan of Redemption and the need for Jesus Christ.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://fo...llowhim.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/2hO9TMM97VAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part I–Dr. Robert Millet01:15 Teaser for 2 Nephi 6-1004:14 Introduction of Dr. Millet06:12 Not cast off07:16 2 Nephi 9:108:38 Gathered to Christ then gathered in location12:00 If no resurrection16:57 Needing Christ22:14 Praying to avoid the results of the Fall24:23 2 Nephi 20-23 Marriage and trust31:36 Loyalty to Jesus32:11 2 Nephi 9:25-2734:36 Elder Holland’s Pure in Heart35:45 2 Nephi 9:27-836:30 Alma 34:3337:52 2 Nephi 9:28-30 40:10 Hesitations about following the prophet41:01 Dr. Millet shares a personal story about education43:50 Wisdom and knowledge48:52 Hugh Nibley and Faith of an Observer51:06 Baby Jessica in 1987, Midland, Texas55:08 Joy in Jesus56:51 Gratitude for Adam and Eve01:01:58 The fall of me01:02:45 End of Part I–Dr. Robert MilletThanks 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 is Hank Smith. I'm your
host. I'm here with my great co-host, John, by the way. John, we are now well into the Book of Mormon,
Second Nephi. We've spent time last week with Dr. Jan Martin looking at Second Nephi 3 through 5,
and she showed us some things I'd never seen before. What are
you thinking about when we hit 2nd Nephi 6 through 10?
Well, the one thing I was thinking about was that 2nd Nephi 9 is in there. We know that
Jacob has his own book that's only seven chapters, but we get to hear from Jacob in
some of these chapters. The 2nd Nephi 9 is a profoundly wonderful chapter.
When you think of the Book of Mormon and the doctrines of the Book of Mormon, Second Nephi 9 should come right to mind. The thing I've been thinking about, John,
is the way this lesson finishes. If you go to Second Nephi 10, verses 23, 24, and 25,
this lesson finishes with such an uplifting few statements. Cheer up your hearts. Remember, you're free to act for yourselves.
You can choose the way of eternal life.
Talks about the power of the Atonement
and being received into the eternal kingdom of God.
So knowing that's where we're gonna end up.
Gets me excited to see what we're going to learn.
John, we're joined today by a man who needs no introduction,
Dr. Bob Millett.
Bob, what are we looking forward to today in these chapters?
I know they're some of your favorites.
I think Jacob may have been the most powerful philosopher slash theologian of the Book of
Mormon.
Jacob has such profound thought, and he obviously learned much of it from his dad, Elihi. You read 2nd
Nephi 2 and if you were to jump then to 9, you could see what a wonderful flow it is.
It's interesting that the chapters that precede 6, 7, 8 almost deal exclusively with the gathering
of Israel. Over and over and over, the gathering, the gathering. God will not forget you.
Can a woman forget her sucking child and so forth over and over and over the
gathering of Israel.
And even in the opening verses of chapter nine, you're reading along and you find
yourself saying, okay, he has just quoted in chapter six and seven from Isaiah.
And then there's this sudden leap.
I think it's a sudden one anyway.
By the time you get to verse one,
he's talking about the gathering,
following up on what's been talked about.
And then out of the blue, by verses five and six,
he's talking about the atonement of Christ.
Now, where's the transition here?
See what you think about this idea.
It occurred to me one day when I was reading this,
that the scriptures teach us, especially in Moses six,
all things bear witness of him, of Christ.
When you read those opening verses,
and you jump from there to atonement
for the rest of the chapter basically basically, chapter 9. Well,
maybe we're talking about types and shadows here. That is to say, the scattering of Israel
is a type of the fall of Adam and Eve. The gathering of Israel is the type of the atonement
of Jesus Christ. All things bear witness of Him, including the
scattering and gathering of Israel. Does that make any sense? Absolutely. The
following the atonement. There's so much here for us to see and understand,
obviously more than we're gonna have time to understand, but I see those
opening chapters as very important, but they're leading up to nine and they're sort of laying the
foundation for gathering. As we're going to say about ten times today, the
gathering is first and foremost to Jesus Christ. It's not to a land, it's not to a
place, it's to a person. That's where we come to Second Nephi 9. I'm excited to
get into this because, I mean, while there's so many wonderful things in 6, 7, and 8,
I think we ought to just jump to 9.
Let's spend our time wisely.
Really, Chapter 9 is a highlight.
If Joseph Smith only gave us this chapter,
he's a prophet, and it's one of many.
Now, John, if you had told me when I was a brand new seminary
teacher years ago that I was going to sit and have conversations with the likes of Bob Millet,
I never would have believed you. Bob has had a prolific career in church education,
but introduce him for maybe the rare handful that don't know that much about him.
We're delighted to have Dr. Robert L. Millett, former Dean of
Religious Education at BYU. He's emeritus professor now. He's retired. He's a
beloved speaker, author of somewhere between three and four thousand books.
And he recently received a mission call and I thought it might be fun to have you
tell us about that. Yeah, my wife and I are excited. We decided we wanted to do a church education mission.
Although I get a number of opportunities to speak still, I missed the in-class experience
of working with students and watching them come alive to the Gospel. And you don't always get
what you request as a senior missionary, but we requested
the Institute of Religion at Southern Virginia University and we were fortunate to get that
request and so we'll start there soon. It's a beautiful campus. They're great students.
There's such a sweet spirit there. I thought, I want to go there. I want us to go there.
I hope those students there know what they have now
Bob we better get underway as I was looking at the 14 or 15 pages of scripture for this week's lesson
I don't know if a section of scripture is more rich with doctrine
Really you got to work hard to understand these chapters of Isaiah and then to understand where Jacob goes with those. Let me give you an introduction here from the
Come Follow Me manual and then let's walk through it.
Second Nephi 6 through 10, the title of the lesson is Oh, How Great the Plan of Our God.
It had been at least 40 years since Lehi's family left Jerusalem. They were in a strange new land, half a world away from
Jerusalem. They were in a strange new land, half a world away from Jerusalem.
Lehi had died and his family had already started what would become a centuries-long
contention between the Nephites, who believed in the warnings and the revelations of God,
and the Lamanites, who did not. Jacob, who was Nephi's younger brother and was now ordained as
a teacher for the Nephites, wanted the covenant people to know God would never forget them,
so they must never forget
him. This is a message we surely need today. Then they quote Jacob here, 2 Nephi 10,
Let us remember him, for we are not cast off. Great are the promises of the Lord. Among these
promises, none is greater than the promise of an infinite atonement to overcome death and hell.
Therefore, Jacob concluded, cheer up your hearts.
So with that, Bob, we're taking on 15 pages of doctrinal and prophetic teachings from both Isaiah
and Jacob. How are we going to get through it all? Where do you want to start?
Chapters 6 and 7 and 8 deal with, especially 7 and 8, deal with the gathering of Israel. That's where we start. Consequently, it's not too unusual that chapter nine, which is the chapter we want to spend most
of our time on, begins with the same thing. I just want to read first one and two and then
make a comment. And now my beloved brother, and I've read these things that you might know
concerning the covenants of the Lord, that he has covenanted with all the house of Israel, that He has spoken unto the Jews
by the mouth of His holy prophets, even from the beginning down from generation to generation
until the time comes that they shall be restored to the true church and fold of God, when they
shall be gathered home to the lands of their inheritance
and shall be established in all their lands of promise.
We already understand that the gathering of Israel is always first and foremost to the
Savior.
We're gathered first to Christ, to a person, not to a place.
Secondarily, we're gathered to a place in the sense, anciently, they would be gathered
to a land or a place where they could settle as a people.
In our day, people are gathered to a place in the sense that they're gathered to the
congregations where they are as members of the church.
Well, II Nephi 9 adds a detailer to that is, we're gathered to Christ first, then later
to land. adds a detail or two. That is, we're gathered to Christ first, then later to lands, but look at that
language. Shall be restored to the true church and fold of God when they shall be gathered
home to the lands of their inheritance. The gathering is to Christ, to His church, which is the fold,
but I would add, back in 1 Nephi 15, we are gathered such that we come to the true points of doctrine that Nephi mentions.
So we're gathered to Christ, we're gathered to his church, we're gathered to his doctrine. This is not just geographical movement. This is movement toward Christ and his kingdom.
movement toward Christ and His Kingdom. These first two verses get us started. And I'll just mention,
as I thought about this through the years, it seems almost like an abrupt jump from the first few verses to suddenly we're talking about atonement. Until one day it hit me that maybe what we're
doing here is Jacob is suggesting that the scattering of Israel is like unto the fall of Adam and Eve.
The gathering of Israel is like unto the atonement of Jesus Christ. It isn't really a jump.
He's talking about a form of scattering and a form of gathering and
the greatest gathering of course is to Jesus Christ.
gathering of course is to Jesus Christ. Bob, I wonder if you could even add creation there. The creation of the Covenant, the
scattering of the Covenant people, the gathering, you've got creation, fall, atonement, the
pillars of eternity.
The creation of the Covenant with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and how often that comes
up in the Book of Mormon. The promises made to the fathers, the promises made to the fathers. The promise is made to the fathers that we would read in Genesis 13, 15, 17, but more powerfully in Abraham chapter 2.
So yes, let's go down to verse 6. plan of the great Creator. There must needs be a power of resurrection and the resurrection
must needs come into man by reason of the fall and the fall came by reason of transgression.
And because man became fall and they were cut off from the presence of the Lord,
they will have it again, creation, fall, atonement. Therefore it must needs be an infinite atonement,
save it should be an infinite atonement, this corruption could not put on incorruption.
Therefore, the first judgment, physical death, which came upon man must needs have remained
to an endless duration and so on and so on.
This concept of an infinite atonement, as you know, will come up again and again in the
Book of Mormon.
But here is the first time that mention is made to an infinite atonement. And in this case, it's infinite in the sense that it is the answer to the infinite question or the
infinite dilemma every human being will face as a result of the fall, namely, they're going to die.
It's infinite in the sense that it overcomes the one thing that every human being will have
in common with every other human being. They are born as immortal, they will die as immortal.
And so it's infinite in that sense. As we know, it's infinite in a number of ways, but
here is the first mention of it in the Book of Mormon.
I want to jump to eight and nine. These are not easy verses, but it's a great message.
Oh, the wisdom of God, his mercy and grace.
For behold, if the flesh should rise no more,
that is, if there were no resurrection,
our spirits must become subject to that angel
who fell from before the presence of the eternal God
and became the devil to rise no more.
And our spirits must have become likened to him
and we become devils, angels to a devil,
to be shut out from the presence of our God
and to remain with the father of lies
and misery likened to himself and so on.
I remember Robert Matthews telling a story
to a group of us once.
He said, you know, when I was a teenager,
we were sitting in Sunday school class and discussing a number of things. And one student
raised the question, what would happen to us if there were no resurrection? And the teacher answered,
well, I suppose what would happen is when we die, we go into the spirit world, and then we would go
to whatever kingdom of glory we would go to as spirits.
For Matthew said, I thought to myself, that's reasonable, that makes good sense.
He said, but later I came to appreciate when I read more of the Book of Mormon that our
teacher didn't yet understand Jacob.
These verses are pretty heavy because the question that can be raised here is why is
it the case that if there were no resurrection, we would be subject to the devil?
And you know, we're always talking about how the Scriptures, the greatest commentary on
Scripture is Scripture.
And most of the time, that means we'll read something in the Bible and we can think of
an occasion where Lehi or Nephi gave clarity to that issue.
But I want to do something a little different. I want to use the
Apostle Paul to bring some clarity to that question. If there were no resurrection, if there were no
resurrection, why would we be subject to the devil and be angels to a devil? 1 Corinthians 15,
Paul, as you know, is talking about to a group of people, some of whom have questions
about rising from the dead, the resurrection, and basically, if Christ rose from the dead.
Now, I'm just going to read in 1 Corinthians 15, verses 12 through 17, and these are short.
Now, if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how say some among you that there
is no resurrection of the dead?
But if there be no resurrection of the dead, then is Christ not risen?
And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith is also vain.
Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God, because we've testified of God that he raised
up Christ, whom he raised not up, if so be that the dead rise not for if the dead rise not, then is not Christ raised.
He said the same thing here about three times, but here's the key verse at 17.
And if Christ be not raised, your faith is vain year yet in your sins.
I think Jacob skipped a step or jumped a step, theologically, but Paul lays it out for us.
And that is, if Christ did not rise from the dead, as he prophesied he would do, as he predicted
he would do, if he didn't open the door for us to regain our body for this union or body and
spirit, if he didn't do that, if he didn't have the power to
do that, why should we believe he has the power to forgive people's sins? We would go become angels
of the devil because we would have no way whereby our sins could be forgiven. That's not an obvious
thing, but I think it's a profound thing. No resurrection, no atonement. If he didn't rise from the dead, why should we believe he could
forgive our sins? Does that make sense? I have a statement from a great scholar here. Let's see.
What if a man had lived a good life, a commendable and noble life? Why would such a one be subject
to Satan in the world of spirits? Simply stated, if Christ did not rise from the grave as he stated he would do,
then he was not the promised Messiah.
If Christ has not the power to save the body from death,
then he surely has not the power to save the spirit from hell.
If he did not break the bands of death in the resurrection,
then our hope of deliverance from sin through the atonement is futile and unfounded.
And that's Robert L. Millet in the power of the Word. and our hope of deliverance from sin through the Atonement is futile and unfounded.
And that's Robert L. Millett in the power of the word.
I thought it was awfully good.
Yeah.
Didn't you think, who said that?
That was great.
That's a part that really, yeah, if he can't save the body.
Why should we think he can save the spirit?
Yeah.
Resurrection is part of the Atonement.
That's right.
We sometimes think of them separately when it's all one package.
It's the greatest dramatic illustration of joining two things that had been separated back together again.
Things at one.
Bob John, I have my students at BYU memorize a couple of quotes when we go through the Book of Mormon this first half. And one of those quotes that I make sure they know by the end of the semester is an older
quote by Ezra Teff Benson.
This is so crucial, I think, to these chapters.
Ezra Teff Benson said, just as a man does not really desire food until he is hungry,
so he does not desire the salvation of Christ until he knows why he needs
Christ. No one adequately and properly knows why he needs Christ until he or she understands and
accepts the doctrine of the fall and its effect upon all mankind. Not just understands it, but
accepts the doctrine of the fall. No other book in the world explains this vital doctrine
nearly as well as the Book of Mormon. This is crucial, Bob. You and I texted about this before
you came on that so often we try to teach the atonement without teaching the fall,
and it's ineffective. If someone does not understand and accept the fall, why would I even need a Savior?
Can I suggest why we perhaps have been weaker on that than we should be?
I think it's the case that in an effort not to come across as believing in the doctrine of human
depravity, which is so common in Christianity, the doctrine of human depravity that men and women
Christianity, the doctrine of human depravity that men and women are basically worthless. They are in sin.
They are twisted.
Their heart is twisted.
Their desires are crooked.
And on and on and on, that so pervades Christendom that we've tried to be careful not to go
that way.
But the Book of Mormon says you've got to go that way in the sense that you've got to at least understand that there was a fall and that the fall has a real effect
upon us physically and spiritually. And you're right. I mean, you know, later, way later,
we'll have the brother of Jared saying in prayer to the Lord, we know that because of
the fall, our nature has become evil continually. Now Now again, that's not human depravity so much as
we're in the position where we can't, we're not going to make any progress unless there's
something that helps us overcome that fallence. And I don't sanction what you say, but I want to
reinforce it and that is if we don't teach the fall very well, then we'll have young people, for example, who see Jesus as kind of, he's my bud, he's my helper, he's my advisor, he's kind of my spiritual
cheerleader.
Instead of, he's the person who will redeem me from my sins.
He's the person who will forgive me yes, but will eventually help me reach the point where
I have no more desire
for sin."
And you're right.
You're only telling half the story if you just talk about atonement, you don't talk
about fall.
And so often we can find ourselves frustrated when we teach the atonement over and over
and over and someone doesn't respond.
Right?
Our students, our children, they don't respond.
You think, why are you not responding?
This is such a beautiful doctrine.
It gets more beautiful when you understand
how dark the fall is and how the position you're truly in.
Yeah, I share that same President Benson quotation
in my classes and I tell him,
if I could go back on my mission,
one of the things I wish I had taught better,
because I remember people saying things like, well, this happened to me and I don't
believe in God ever since that, or this tragedy happened, and I wish I would have
at 19 been able to go, thank you for saying that. May we come and teach you
about the fall and its effect upon all mankind, and sickness, and death, and
problems, and all of the things that came with it and then we can understand
the expansive nature of the atonement as we're gonna get to in Elma 7.
And I think I quote you, Brother Millet, that Jesus is more than our best friend in heaven or our celestial cheerleader
that he's the Lord God omnipotent and he is mighty to save and we are in trouble.
I like the way he said that. We're all in trouble. And maybe this is why we see Ammon and Aaron quote creation fall
atonement. Just boom, boom, boom when they're teaching King Lamona and King
Lamona's father because they wondered about death and the nature of death.
Yeah, I think whereas Jacob is assuming the fall, we might miss the fact
that underlying all of this is the need for an atonement, the dramatic need for an atonement
because of the effects of the fall. Now, again, we don't believe people are depraved, but we do
believe that the fall takes a measurable effect on us mentally, spiritually, physically. We must have help from that,
but you have to appreciate the sore or the malady before you appreciate the medication.
I've wondered too if, here's another type, that the church was created. The church went through a
fall and the church went through a restoration and atonement. I've wondered if that's another type
of the apostasy was the fall and the restoration was like the atonement bringing us back at one again.
I think that's right. I've noticed that my own children, when we pray,
they don't like the fall either. They just don't know they're describing it. Please bless this food
that will nourish and strengthen our bodies, right? I don't want to get sick. Please bless grandma and grandpa that they'll never die. Please bless that we'll have a good day
It's all I think we're just praying over and over. I don't like the fall. I don't like the fall
I don't like the fall. That's pretty much our our prayers
And if we can notice that then all of a a sudden, I think what President Benson says,
you become hungry. You become aware that you need a Savior.
Well, looking ahead, beginning with verse 10, how great the goodness of our God,
he prepares away, and he begins to talk about death and hell. Death meaning the physical body,
hell meaning spiritual death. The physical death and the physical body, hell meaning spiritual death. The physical
death and the spiritual death, he calls the death of the body, the death of the spirit.
And so he gives here kind of an intro to what Alma will deal with in Alma 40 in more detail.
That is, that at the time of death, as Joseph F. Smith taught, we undergo pre-judgment, a partial judgment as President Smith called
it. That is, we die and we either go to paradise, the abode of the righteous, or we go to what
is called here hell, what is called variously elsewhere, spirit prison, what is elsewhere
called outer darkness, and Alma 40, one of two places. And
he's basically introducing that idea to us here, which Alma will spell out in greater detail.
Thirteen sort of sums it up, who have great the plan of our God. For on the other hand,
the paradise of God must deliver up the spirits of the righteous. And the grave did
love broke the body of the righteous and the the grave did deliver up the body of the righteous, and the spirit in
the body is restored to itself again, and all men become
incorruptible and immortal, and they are living souls. Now
that's exactly the same way section 88 of the doctrine
in Covenants defines the soul, the spirit and the body
constitute the soul. And by the time we get over to 15, 16, 17, he
begins to extol the goodness of God, the righteousness of God, the greatness of God,
the holiness. Look at verse 20. This is fascinating to me. Oh, how great the holiness of our
God for he know knows all things.
And there's not anything save He knows it.
When you think of holiness,
are you thinking about God knowing all things?
No, it's a strange way of putting it, isn't it?
We would say the holiness of God
because He's perfect in all things.
No, this says, holiness, the word holiness,
has a number of definitions, but one of them is this,
that which is set apart, that which is set apart. God in many ways is set apart from you and me
in that He knows all things and we don't. The holiness of our God, it's an unusual
holiness of God for He knows all things. Not anything save He knows it. Yeah, how'd the prophet Joseph say it?
The past, the present, the future are and were with Him,
one eternal now.
I thought that an interesting thing.
21, He cometh into the world, Christ does,
that He may save all men if they will hearken
unto His voice, for behold, He suffereth the pains of all men,
yea, the pains of every living creature, both men, women, and children, who belong to the family of
Adam. We want to stop there, but he doesn't stop. He goes on. He suffers this, that the resurrection
might pass upon all men, that all men might stand before him at the great and judgment day.
pass upon all men that all men might stand before him at the great and judgment day."
I suppose there are those who would read the tail end of verse 21. He suffers the pains of every living creature of referring that to the Savior's atoning sacrifice, whether he gets
Semini or Golgotha. But I think really verse 22 is saying the pain we're talking about here is the
pain of physical death. You notice that? The pains of every living creature.
What is it?
He suffereth this that the resurrection might pass upon all men.
That dimension of the atonement, again, that we don't appreciate sometimes is the resurrection.
Everybody will suffer that pain of separation.
23.
This one could be troublesome if you read it really carefully.
He commanded all men that they must repent and be baptized in his name,
having perfect faith in the Holy One of Israel,
or they cannot be saved in the kingdom of God. Perfect faith.
Who in the world do you know that has perfect faith? I don't think
that's intended to depress us. What occurs to me when I read those lines are
the number of times that you hear language like this. Lehi to Jacob says
the following, how great the importance to make these things known. There is no
flesh that can dwell in the presence of God, say
that be through the merits and mercy and grace of the Holy Messiah who layeth down his life
according to flesh and takeeth it again by the power of the Spirit.
The number of times in which we're told that it is only through faith, in this case perfect
faith, what is perfect faith? Well, in my mind, the
Book of Mormon synonyms for faith, total trust, absolute confidence in Christ.
In other words, it isn't as forbidding as it sounds, only those who have perfect faith.
Now, I think he's saying only those who can trust in Christ, only those who put their
trust in Him, only those who put their trust in Him, only those who put their
total trust in Him that totally and completely have confidence in Him that what He says He'll
do, only those who actually reach that point where they rely upon Him.
Does that make any sense?
I don't know how else to interpret perfect faith except total reliance, total trust,
total confidence of a language later of both of Moroni, relying alone upon the mercies
of him that is mighty to save.
So I think perfect faith means let's trust him completely.
It does get to the issue of what good works does and what grace does.
I was reminded of the passage in Philippians chapter two,
where Paul says, work out your own salvation
with fear and trembling.
You read that and you sell them.
Sounds like that I have the greater responsibility,
but you read the next verse where Paul says,
for it is God which works in you,
both to do and to know his will.
C.S. Lewis in talking about that says, you read verse 12
and it sounds like it's totally man and you read verse 13,
it sounds like it's totally God.
He says, you see we're trying to separate
into watertight compartments.
Two things, when in fact, it is God and man working together
to save the human soul. I think the perfect faith back here,
perfect faith in Christ, is totally trusting Him. I was thinking one day, what does it
mean to trust the Savior totally? And I thought, well, what does it mean to trust my wife?
Here's what I came up with. How do we come to trust someone in this life?
What does it mean to say I trust my wife, Shauna?
Well, here's some thoughts.
I trust her in the sense that I know she loves me,
that she knows me well enough to understand my heart,
my deepest desires and longings.
I trust her in that she knows only too well my weaknesses
and my inclination to be less
than I should be, and yet she displays regularly the patience and long-suffering and forgiveness
that are so often required on her part.
I trust her because she is ever ready and willing to forgive me.
I trust her in that I know I can share my heaviest burdens, my darkest moments, my lingering
doubts, and that she will think no less of me.
Finally, I trust Shauna because I know that ours is a winning team.
There are companionship, blessings, and elevates my life and makes me so much more, so much
better than I could be on my own.
Further, I have confidence in her in that I know that she will always come through.
And Heaven only knows how much I rely on her wisdom and judgment, her discernment, and
her unending devotion and loyalty.
When I sat down and I wrote that up, I came to appreciate some ways that we trust the
Savior.
It's just interesting.
There are so common words, trust. What does it mean to trust the Savior? It's those kinds of things.
And maybe that's why those Old Testament prophets use that analogy of marriage
for the church and the Lord. That's right. And do you know what I love it? Trying to help my
students see that as we're going through a less prescriptive approach for the strength of youth and ministering and children and youth
program is the question of just being loyal, be loyal to Christ. And when you can compare
a marriage covenant to our covenant with Christ and how nice it is to be in a covenant with
Him and to be loyal to Him who, like you said so beautifully, He knows our foibles and He
knows our weaknesses, but He's loyal to us and we can be loyal to him
I like that idea very much. Thanks for sharing that you bet in the verses that follow
He get verses 25 26 27. I think this is so comforting
It's the notion that no person will ever be held accountable for a law that he never
knew about, for keeping a law he never knew about.
No person will be accountable or condemned for not obeying a principle that he was ignorant
of.
That one of the blessings, unconditional blessings of the atonement is that God will only punish those who have the law
and knowingly sin against it. Those who don't have it have the law will not be
condemned. One of the subsets of this would be obviously the salvation of
little children. In other words, this principle which later is expanded, if you will, in Joseph Smith's
vision of the celestial kingdom, section 137.
He's essentially saying, Joseph is saying, how did Alvin, my brother, get in the celestial
kingdom?
He never had the gospel.
And you and I, we're sitting here, if we knew, knowing what we know, we could turn to Joseph
and say, with Joseph, obviously somebody did the boy's work.
I think Joseph would have said,
what do you mean they did his work?
As far as we know, there was no notion in his head
at that point in time of the redemption of the dead.
When the voice of the Lord says that all those
who would have received the gospel
if they had had the opportunity
are heirs of the celestial
kingdom.
That's the same message being sounded here by Jacob.
One of the beauties of the Atonement is God's not going to punish anybody for not living
a law or knowing a principle that they never had.
In other words, we focus a great deal of our attention on sin and resurrection, you know,
overcoming sin through the Savior's
forgiveness and resurrection, there are those unconditional benefits of the Atonement that
are so priceless, this one of not holding us accountable. And I would add there too,
you remember later in Alma chapter 41, the reference that Alma makes to Corianton that,
yes, we're going to judge according to the law and keeping the law, but also according to the desires of our hearts.
For if our desires, the desires of our hearts are good, God's going to judge us that way
as well.
I remember Elder Oaks years ago writing in his book, Pure in Heart, he said, I often
think of my father-in-law.
He said whenever someone would come to him
and offer to do something for him,
but later was unable to do so
because of circumstances that had arisen,
he said, my father-in-law would say, thank you,
I will take the good will for the deed.
And I think the Lord treats us the same way, which is,
it isn't just the good works we perform.
It's all the things we wish we could do, but are not in a position to do, that He'll bless us as
well. And that to me, that's terribly comforting. Yeah, what a healing doctrine, because sometimes
we feel guilt from all we can't do. And you're saying that's a wonderful feeling. The Lord's going to count all that desire as need.
So Bob, instead of what am I doing wrong, it's look at all you want to do right.
Yeah. And that desire counts. It counts for something. And sometimes the only person who knows
those parts of your heart is God. That's good company.
person who knows those parts of your heart is God. That's good company.
It is. And I thought how interesting we've talked about all the different things, forgiveness of sins, resurrection, but you come to this really important,
like the salvation of little children is an illustration.
This is an illustration of we're not going to be held accountable for what we
didn't know, for what we didn't have. Almost as if kind of abruptly in verse 25,
well, maybe we better read 27, 28,
but woe unto him that has the law given,
yea, that has all the commandments of God like unto us,
and that transgresseth them,
and that wasteeth the days of his probation.
For awful is his state.
I'm reminded of later Book of Mormon teachings of Alma
about how we handle our lives. Let me just turn quickly to Alma 34, verse 33.
And now, as I said in to you before, as you've had so many witnesses, therefore be
each of you that you do not procrastinate the day of your repentance until the end, for after this day of life which has given us to prepare for eternity, behold, if we
do not improve our time while in this life, then come with the night of darkness. Improve
our time, I think, as like unto what we just read here, wasteeth the days of his probation.
Every time I read that improve our time,
I'm thinking of the hymn we sing,
improve the shining moments.
The one thing God asked us to do is to use our time wisely,
knowing we have limited time on this earth.
I've heard it goes by pretty quick.
It does.
Well, this is a phrase that Alma uses.
He calls life a day so many times in here.
The day of this life.
It's this probationary period that goes by quick.
This is the day for men to prepare to meet God.
John and Bob, isn't it Jacob who later says,
our lives passed unto us like a dream.
I'm 75 years old.
I'll be 76 in a matter of days. And I'm thinking,
very often I'm thinking, where did it go? What happened? Where did it go? Before too
very long, I'll be elsewhere. And every time I read that, John, I find myself thinking like he does.
It seemed to us to pass like a dream.
In the verses that follow, he goes through a series of these are his woes, but notice that he starts with this one, verse 28.
O that cunning plan of the evil one, O the vainness and the frailties and the foolishness of men,
when they are learned, they think they are wise, and they harken not unto the counsel of
God, for they set it aside, supposing they know of themselves. Wherefore, their wisdom is foolishness,
and it profiteth them not, and they shall perish. But to be learned is good if they
harken unto the counsels of God.
When I was reading through this, knowing we would be together to discuss it,
I came across these, you would know these.
This is from President Joseph F. Smith.
Among the Latter-day Saints,
the preaching of false doctrines
disguised as truths of the gospel
may be expected from people of two classes
and practically from these only.
They are, first, the hopelessly ignorant,
whose lack of intelligence is due to their indolence and sloth, who make but feeble effort,
if indeed any at all, to better themselves by reading and study. Those who are afflicted with a
dread disease that may develop into an incurable malady, laziness.
Second, the proud and self-vaunting ones who read by the lamp of their own conceit, is
that not a powerful statement?
Who interpret by rules of their own contriving, who have become a law unto themselves and
so pose as the sole judges of their own
doings and now listen to this part, more dangerously ignorant than the first.
That is, those who were hopelessly ignorant, who didn't pay the price, far more
serious and former dangerous to those who suppose of themselves they don't need to follow the counsel of God
or the counsel of the prophets. I remember Elder Maxwell asking one time when he was talking about
what hesitations do we have? Why do we have hesitations about following the prophets,
following the counsel of our current church leaders? And he said, is it the case that
we feel confident for the church
leaders as long as they don't get into my specialty and as long as they don't try to
talk about something that I'm an expert in, you know, these are sobering verses 20 and
29 as someone who who went through a doctoral program that was extremely difficult. When I was being called
upon to learn things that weren't true, but needed to know, it's hard not to be caught
up with what you've learned to the extent that you begin to believe it. I'll just confess
a sin here. When I was going through my doctoral study, I was working in the church education system.
I was a CES coordinator in Tallahassee, Florida, an institute director.
We would meet about every three or four months as a group of us.
We were in the southern states area that went everywhere from North Carolina down, Tennessee,
Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama.
Just all of that area was in our area.
We would meet together and it was just delightful to be with my colleagues.
I remember one night being in the pool.
We had a long day and we were outside in the swimming pool just talking to one another.
One of my colleagues, one of my dear friends who I think felt he could be honest with me, said to me, how are you enjoying your
studies? I said, well, I'm learning a lot. I really am. And he said to me, and I
think this took some courage, he said, Brother So-and-So said something to me
that got my attention. I said, what was that? He said, Bob's a brilliant man. But you know, since he's done his studying
and religious studies, he talks differently. And there was something about the way he said
that. He talks differently. I knew what he meant. I remember teaching an institute class,
and I made some reference to the methian community, meaning the community of Matthew.
And a student raised his hand and said,
Brother Millet, what is the mathian community?
And I said, nothing at all.
And it was because I found myself repeating things I had learned.
Then I'm saying?
Education is a wonderful thing,
but it's always a bit of a risk, isn't it?
Because we have to have that kind of wisdom
and discernment that allows us to learn the things
we need to know to better understand, in my case,
where those who are academicians in the field of religion
treat religion as an academic
discipline, I needed to know all of that and I'm grateful I do. But what things that I needed to
reject personally, things that were simply not in harmony with the gospel. I think of this verse
regularly that is, we're only in trouble with learning when we think we know more than the brethren know,
when we think we know more than the Lord knows, or when, as Elder Maxwell suggested, we're
offended when someone starts talking about things that are in our area of specialization.
I think these are sobering things.
It's a wonderful thing to learn as much as we can, but at the same time, recognize how
little we know, and to follow the prophets,
they know a whole lot more than we do.
When I look at this verse, I think about learned,
give me some synonyms, guys.
When they're educated, when they have lots of degrees,
when they're learned, they think they're wise.
And I love the James 1.5, if any of you lack wisdom,
and Hank, you've heard me joke,
if you lack information, ask of Google. The most important question of you lack wisdom and Hank, you've heard me joke. If you lack information,
ask of Google. The most important question of all is where's the nearest five guys? But
if you lack wisdom, that's an entirely different question. And I've got my own footnote here
to just one of my favorites in section 45. They that are wise, there's that word, and
have received the truth, and have taken
the Holy Spirit for their guide, and have not been deceived. Very laya saying to you,
they shall not be hewn down and cast into the fire, but shall abide the day. Just the
idea of, well, who's your guide? If you're wise, you've taken the Holy Ghost for your
guide. Not social media. As President Nelson warned, if most of the information you get comes from social media,
your ability to fill the spirit will be diminished.
But if you're wise,
you're taking the Holy Ghost for your guide.
And I love what Sherry Dew said about Jesus
not only being our last hope, as if there are other options,
but our only hope.
And our only hope is to take the Holy Ghost
for our guide. Siri, Alexa, Google will tell you something. They'll tell you something
every time. And there's a chance it might be true, but also what Sherry do said, why
not go to sources that only speak truth?
Yeah, that's good.
You know? There's a difference between knowledge and wisdom we need to understand that that you can have a lot of knowledge and not be very wise
some of the most wise people I've ever met have not been that
educated but the wisdom that comes from experience
it's on a different level than the
Knowledge that comes from a degree which again, we're not
downplaying that, right Bob?
The Lord wants us to read and study.
We need to be competent.
I mean, what's Peter's counsel?
In answering people's questions, we need to do what?
We need to provide an answer, a reason for the hope that's within us.
I'm going to tell a little story, but I know that there are people who get really upset
when they hear this story, and that's okay.
After I'd had my interview with President Holland
and five or six of the vice presidents back in March of 1983
for joining the faculty at BYU,
Brother Holland said,
go on back, Dean Matthews wants to talk to you.
So we went back to the Joseph Smith building,
we sat down, we talked a while,
he talked about procedures and policies and so on.
And then he said, now Bob,
we find that it takes members of our faculty
about five years to get over their doctor's degree.
He said, and unfortunately, some never do.
Now
there are people who have chewed me out for saying that because it sounds like I'm a post-education. No, not at all.
But I saw the same thing when I was
department chair and dean at BYU. The temptation
to want to have your students learn everything you learned.
I was thinking, here's what came to mind when we were talking about this.
Do you remember Nephi and 2 Nephi 28 later in our story?
Speaking of evil attitudes of the last days, they were stiff necks and high heads. Yein, because of pride and wickedness and abominations and hordoms, verse 14,
they have all gone astray.
Save it be a few who are the humble followers of Christ.
And at that point, you can feel comfortable.
And then he says, nevertheless, they, the humble followers of Christ are led that in many instances they do err because
they are taught by the precepts of men.
Nobody feels more strongly about the need for education and for producing Latter-day
Saints who are experts in their fields than I.
And yet I've seen and you've seen the danger when people begin to trust what they've learned
academically more than they trust what the prophets of God have to say.
We've witnessed that in recent times, people fighting fault with the leaders of the church
are teaching.
These verses to me are extremely sobering,
and I think we all have to watch ourselves that what we're seeking for is not just more
knowledge, but we're seeking for wisdom. Bob, just on a side note, the 15 leaders of the church,
those are some pretty educated men. Not exactly a, right? You've got PhDs from Harvard, Yale, you've got a Rhodes
scholar. We would never want to sound like we're saying never mind education or being learned.
I think it was Elder Russell M. Nelson at BYU. I remember sitting there and him saying that the
difference between hoping to make a difference in this world and actually making a difference in
this world could come down to one thing, education.
But you remember Hugh Nibley, Truman Madsen did a video I called Faith of an Observer about Hugh Nibley.
And here's Hugh Nibley, he's literally in the video walking around reading hieroglyphics off the side of the Temple of Karnak or something.
He's just reading it.
And the cameraman tries to follow him, but Hugh Nibley doesn't want to be on a video, so he just keeps going.
It's really funny. But anyway, at the end, Hugh Nibley says,
Well, none of us is very smart. None of us knows very much.
But the thing the angels envious for is we can forgive and we can repent.
I'll never forget that.
That's beautiful.
Hugh Nibley, who could read 33-something languages, but was humble.
I think that somebody said, the more you learn, the more you'll realize how much you don't know.
And that was kind of a Hugh Nibley thing.
Absolutely. Hugh Nibley could get away with saying things that you and I could never say.
We would get in trouble for it. He never did because the brethren had such complete confidence in him
because they knew he was trustworthy. Brilliant and trustworthy. I love it.
The first class I had at Florida State in my program was an Old Testament seminar. The professor
said, now we're going to put some parameters around us here. We're going, for example, to bracket out the
following in our studies. Divine intervention, predictive prophecy, miracles. Now, when you
take those out of the Old Testament, you don't have a whole lot left. You begin to study the Bible from an academic perspective.
When you begin that way, it's sad that that should have to be the case, but those are
some of the rules.
So we won't fight and argue among ourselves.
Let's bracket out miracles, predictive prophecy, and divine intervention.
Well, again, you might as well be reading Tom Thumb.
Before we move on to chapter 10, both of you, I want to share with you an illustration I do
with my students and have you both maybe comment on it so I can make it even better the next time
I use it. When I talk about the fall and we've spoken about how crucial it is to understand the fall if you're really going
to desire the atonement. I used this story and maybe both of you will remember this. It's back
in the 1900s, so it's a while ago. It was October 14th, 1987, when an 18-month-old girl, Jessica McClure, was in her aunt's backyard in Midland, Texas.
She fell into a well 22 feet down.
And I don't know if either of you remember this, but she is in a very difficult situation.
I tell my students, I show them a couple of pictures from the news where her aunt called
the police and the police bring the paramedics and they bring search and rescue. And pretty
soon you've got news cameras all around this home and this little 18 month old girl is
22 feet down in a hole and they can't go get her. You can't go down to get her. They knew she was
still alive because she was singing Winnie the Pooh songs. It's just so heartbreaking and yet
I'll ask my students, can she get herself out of there? And they all shake their head. No,
not only can she not get herself out,
she has no concept of what situation she's in.
All she knows is everything went dark. These rescue workers have to figure out a way to get
her out and the only way to get her out without hurting her is to go below her, To descend below her, crawl under her, which would be a traumatic experience for
the rescuer. To go in a freshly dug, unsupported hole, it could come down on him at any moment.
This man, Robert O'Donnell, is going to go down a freshly dug hole, go underneath her and get her out. I don't know if either
of you remember that.
I do remember it.
I remember I was six years old and my parents were glued to the TV watching to see if this
girl would get out. It took them 56 hours to free her, but she comes out with a broken arm, but okay.
With that illustration in mind, can you see why Jacob would say, oh, the greatness of our God,
oh, his mercy? We can be like baby Jessica. The fall can be that well and we
Have no power to save ourselves
Isn't that Aaron to King Lamorne's father?
Because of the fall man could do nothing of themselves
So do you think we truly understand the fall in a way that we?
Desire an atonement right Bob once you understand the position you're in, as you described earlier, you're looking for a Savior.
Yeah, it seems like when we really understand the fall, as it's taught in Scripture, particularly
in the book of Mormon, you don't come away depressed. You do come away rejoicing in the fact,
you do come away rejoicing in the fact I don't have to stay this way, that somebody greater than I can lift me out of this situation. In other words, we've said this
before in the Book of Mormon, fall and atonement are companion doctrines. They
just go together. You can't find a place where you're teaching the fall where the atonement is not mentioned
or alluded to. I was once asked to work with a young seminary teacher who wanted to teach
the fall, but he kept teaching it in a way, in such a way, that his students were going
home depressed every day.
Right.
And I was asked to visit with him about it. And I tried to explain, no, let's explain the fall
so we see the reality of our condition
and help the students to rejoice in the fact.
There's a way out of this.
It's not like the fall came about and we have no solution.
In fact, when you think about,
there's another way of saying this.
C.S. Lewis in his book, Miracles, says something like this. He says, if we could imagine a planet somewhere on which there had been no fall, what would
be the condition of things there?
He doesn't say it exactly like this, but I'm saying it this way, he said, redeemed humanity will rise far higher than unfallen humanity.
You follow me?
Yeah.
Redeemed humanity will rise far higher than unfallen humanity.
Why?
The atonement of Christ doesn't just bring us back to where we were. If we continue to cultivate it in our lives, it makes us much more than we were, much higher
than we were.
The beauty of understanding the fall is that it creates within us a grander appreciation
for what Jesus can do for us that no one else can do.
That's why often I've heard it in our theology a fortunate fall where I'm pretty sure the
rest of Christianity doesn't see it that way.
Yeah, it's a beautiful concept.
I had a pastor, a friend of mine once, he said, let me dramatize for you the difference
between your view of the fall and our view of the fall."
I said, okay. He said, if the day ever comes when you get to see Adam and Eve,
you want to embrace them. You want to thank them for what they did. He said,
from our perspective, if I ever get to see Adam and Eve, I want to yell at them. I
want to scream at them. I want to scream at them.
I want to take a swing at them for what they've done to us.
Well, obviously they've missed the whole concept of the fall
because the fall was necessary.
I used to hear Elder McConkey say how important it was
that the fall came.
And I remember thinking, wouldn't it have been better
if there hadn't been a fall?
The answer is no. No, because the fall allows us, in regard to the fall, to rise far higher
than we would have risen, even if we had never sinned.
Pete Slauson Wouldn't you say the same thing about what you alluded to earlier,
the gathering and the scattering? They're better off at the end result than had they never been scattered.
The mercy and the grace that can be extended to an entire nation as well as to one person
is far greater.
And you certainly have a grander appreciation for it as you're able to move out of that
fallen condition into a redeemed condition.
Yeah.
I'm thinking of the Pearl of Great Price. They taste the bitter that they may know to redeemed condition. Yeah. I'm thinking of the Pearl of Great Price. They taste the
bitter that they may know to prize the good. Yeah. What is
that Moses? 655 or something. I love to show my class when
we're doing Second Nephi 2. I love to show them Section 138. I
love to show them a couple of comments about Adam and Eve, one
of them. Well, some people just don of comments about Adam and Eve, one of them.
Well, some people just don't believe in Adam and Eve at all. That was a fable.
Some would say that Eve was the devil's gateway.
And I love to read this out of section 138,
the vision of Joseph F. Smith,
among the great and mighty ones who were assembled in this vast congregation of
the righteous were Father Adam, the ancient of days,
the Father of all and our glorious Mother Eve, with many of her faithful daughters who have lived through the
ages and worshiped the true and living God. And I think we have thrown Eve under the bus and the
restoration has said, oh no, that's exactly wrong.
This is our glorious Mother Eve and her faithful daughters too, who have been affected by feelings
about Eve and womanhood since the apostasy.
I love to show them in that verse and say, you find me that anywhere in mainstream Christianity,
our glorious Mother Eve.
Yeah.
Beautifully said.
John and Bob, this is from Elder Oaks. Some Christians
condemn Eve for her act, concluding that she and her daughters are somehow flawed by it,
not the Latter-day Saints. Informed by revelation, we celebrate Eve's act and honor her wisdom and
courage in the great episode called the fall. In fact, Bob, I quote you in my class when I teach second Nephi two and nine to my
students at BYU where I don't know if you remember writing about this,
but you said you were listening to a Christian radio station and they were
taking calls and someone asked Reverend, why did Adam and Eve take the fruit of
the tree of knowledge of good and evil?
And the minister answered, I don't know. Well, that's the dumbest thing anyone could have
done if Adam and Eve had not been so selfish, so power hungry. We might be in paradise today.
And then you said, Bob, I have since thought again and again about his answer and looked
sympathetically upon a Christian world that desperately needs what Latter-day Saints have to offer.
And that's 2nd Nephi 2 and 9, right? I remember that so well. I remember hearing that and thinking
it's like a light came on and these lights come on to all of us every once in a while,
a grand appreciation for the distinctives of Latter-day Saint theology. Things that are so simple
and yet to the world, if they only understood them, they would be so profound. That changes
the whole plan of salvation once you understand the goodness, the greatness, the grandeur of
Adam and Eve, what they accomplished for us.
This idea, though, is that we would all be living in paradise today, if not for the fall.
And that those lines go by so quickly in 2nd Nephi 2 and in Moses, they would have had no
children.
Nobody said it better, I think, than our friend Brad Wilcox.
I love the way he put this.
The Atonement was Plan A, not Plan B. The Atonement wasn't plan B to clean up the mass Adam and Eve made of things.
It was from the foundation of the world.
The Atonement and the Book of Mormon
adds that sometimes when it talks about the Atonement,
which was prepared from the foundation of the world.
That was always the plan, plan A.
Brother Gerald Lund, before he was elder Gerald Lund,
he asked us once, everybody raise your hand
if you're responsible for the fall of Adam and nobody raised their hand.
And he said, well, raise your hand if you've been affected
by the fall of Adam and everybody raised their hand.
And then he taught us something I've never forgotten
is that there's the fall of man,
we've all been affected by it.
But then there's the fall of me.
We had those two on the board,
the fall of man and the fall of me.
And the fall of, we all know better and we sin. All of sin comes short of the glory of God, Paul would say. And because of that,
we need redemption from our own fall. And that really helped me. It's helped my students to kind
of see what we're talking about here. Adam has been forgiven his transgression in the Garden of
Eden, but we have each fallen and need the Atonement. Yeah, I remember him teaching that in a summer August symposium, CES symposium, and I remember
taking that and putting stars by it and thinking, why didn't I come up with that?
It's a beautiful thing, fall of man versus the fall of me.
Yeah, we don't have to repent of the fall of man, but there
are things that we do that we need to. And I think that to me that has two parts. There
are the particular sins that we commit that we need to repent of. But there's something
else and that is what could be called sin, singular, or sinfulness.
That is, when we begin to understand this, I think we start to pray, not just forgive
me for the sins I've committed, please somehow bring to pass a change in my very nature that
I won't even have the desire to sin.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
I began appreciating great doctrine that's found in the Book of Mormon.
And I thought, maybe I've arrived in my studies.
But lo and behold, a few years later I found myself moving, I still believe strongly in
the story. It
was an amazing thing. Those are all real people. I had great love for the doctrine
and it began to dawn on me that there was a third stage I was moving into and
that was...