Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Samuel 5-12, 1 Kings 3-11 -- Part 1 : Dr. Michael Goodman
Episode Date: June 18, 2022How is our spiritual strength dependent on the choices we make today? Dr. Michael Goodman explores David’s uniting of Israel and downfall. We learn about humility and the importance of dependence on... the Lord.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith.
I'm here with my King Lee co-host, John, by the way.
Welcome, John, by the way.
Thank you for that, Royal.
Welcome.
Yes, you are royalty to me.
I'll tell you that.
Now, the reason I bring that up, John,
is because we are going to be discussing
the kings of Israel today.
Some more kings, we've studied one before, but let's,
let's keep going on this. One of BYU's brightest minds and one of my favorite people is with us
today. Can you share with our audience who's joining? Yes, I'm excited as I've read this
by this morning to have Dr. Michael A. Goodman with us. He's the Religious Studies Center Associate
Publications Director.
He's worked for their church educational system.
Since 1989 was the manager of the CES College Curriculum
before joining the Department of Church History
in doctrine in 2007.
He held a bachelor's degree in journalism
and public relations.
He has a master's in information technology
and a PhD in marriage, family and human development. Now here's where I got really excited. He
is a co-investigator on the family foundations of youth development, longitudinal research
project. His research focus is on adolescent and family faith development. He's been married to Tina Anita Goodman
from Latif inland since 1985. They have two children and five grandchildren and
so excited to have you here today. I'm eager to listen when you talk about youth
development and youth faith development. That's very interesting to me. So
thank you for joining us today.
You could tell from the intro that I'm a jack of many trades in the master few.
I think I'm one of the few people on B.O.U. faculty who have actually taught 10 different
courses at BYU.
Wow.
Yeah, that definitely beats me.
John, I have been excited to share Mike with our audience. Mike and I have been friends for over a decade.
And if you see Mike in the hallways at BYU,
you know what you're going to hear.
You're going to hear top of the morning.
And I think that comes from Mike, top of the morning.
I haven't a clue, but it's about 30 years old in my life.
And Mike, I didn't hear it in the bio,
but you've already served as mission president, isn't that right?
That's correct.
I was a mission president in Thailand from 1997 to 2000.
So literally I started my mission as a mission president 25 years ago.
I started fairly young. I was a 33 year old mission president.
It scared some of my my missionaries' parents because they had kids older than
the mission president of their child.
Yeah, I bet.
So I joined the church and I was 18 and I was walking Bangkok streets at 19, served there
and then married heaven and 13 years later went back as a mission president.
Unbelievable.
Unbelievable.
Yeah, 33.
Mike is also a cancer survivor, John.
For cancers, I'm an older achiever. Whoa.
My first diagnosis was about 14, 15 years ago, and it was lymphoma.
And then seven years later, I was diagnosed with leukemia. They got rid of lymphoma and theory.
And then that leukemia, I still have.
It's a chronic, which means there's no cure right now.
That's okay. My job's to outlive it.
Then I was diagnosed with a carcinoma five and a half hours of surgery later,
that one's gone. And then 10 months ago, I was diagnosed with another lymphoma and just finished
radiation treatments for that. If all's well and Zion, I'm back to one cancer. So I'm just back
to my leukemia. And it's my job to stay healthy. I asked my doc, I asked my oncologist, I said,
I want to live till I'm 80. What's my chances? He was an old cowboy doc, you just looked at me and said, not good.
No smile, no laugh, not good. He said, if we based it on today's science, but based on the future
science, who knows, it's possible. And I said, well, I'm a health freak. I work out like crazy,
I eat healthy, that should help to right you said no
He was not the bearer of a lot of good news
He did say the time will come when we have to treat you really harshly and if you're strong enough
You can endure the treatments my job is to stay alive while they're trying to find the treatment the cure for my current cancer
So it's all good. I'm healthy. I always tell people I'm healthy as a horse and my wife always laughs and says, yeah, cancerous horse. Nice cancerous horse.
I'm good. Life's good. Mike, you're an inspiration already. This week we're going to be in
second Samuel and first Kings, isn't that right? Correct. Okay, where do you want to take us today?
We've got a bunch of listeners who are ready to study.
Wonderful.
Well, maybe it's just wise to remind listeners
what they probably already know
because I'm sure you've passed guests have shared this.
It's important to remember that what we're studying today,
though it occurred around 1000 BC,
most scholars believe that what we're reading
actually was written between 650 BC. So we're talking
a four to five hundred year differentiation. And that's why we often refer to those who
are writing this as redactors, which shouldn't be a strange concept for Latter-day Saints because
that's exactly what Mormon and Marona are. They took written and oral text and they combined
them into what you and I understand as the book of Mormon.
And so what we're reading today is a re-doctor's version of what happened to David and Solomon.
And that's important. We're going to get the inspiration the Lord gave to the re-doctor,
but we're also going to get the re-doctor's understanding based in their current cultural context.
Understanding that helps us is we start to try to interpret and apply what we're
reading in the in the scriptures, especially because some aspects of it kind of get icky and don't
necessarily fit with our modern understanding of the way things should be. And then the second
thing that if I could just just set us up, when we're studying, especially the Old Testament, by
the way, I love the Old Testament. Having said that, it's important to remember
that it's dated, it's based in the different culture
and context.
When we're studying things,
especially like today, we're gonna see a lot about morality
and chastity and family and marriage,
we're going to see cultures and contexts.
It don't necessarily match exactly what you and I understand
and what we would think of.
And that's not good, bad, ugly, but it's crucial that we understand what God has revealed about each one of those topics.
And that doesn't mean we take our current understanding and put it upon what David necessarily understood or solemn and understood. But for us to get what we need to out of the story,
we need to make sure we're seeing it as the Lord has actually revealed it. And so we start by saying,
what did this mean to David? What did it mean in context? What did it mean to to back Shiba?
How would they have experienced this? That's important, but if we leave it there,
it's pretty hard to gain much and then take what the Lord wants us to take and move forward.
So we have to take it from there and say,
what is it that the Lord wants us to learn from this?
And in order to do that, for instance,
we're gonna have to see marriage different than David did.
David's aversion to marriage,
and Solomon's aversion of marriage is we're gonna see,
definitely at times diverges from ours.
And it's gonna become important that we understand
what was cultural in David's understanding
and what was gospel or what was spirit directed.
The same thing for us, when it comes to chastity
and these issues we're going to talk about,
what may have been the cultural norm at that time?
Four, 500 years in the past,
we're getting a lesson taught to us by redactor
and keeping in context what's having based on the words
of modern prophets.
Awesome.
And these are two absolutely crucial scripture study skills.
If you really want to get the most out of scripture, having just those two basic skills
can really take you a long ways.
Let's jump in.
So we're going to go to chapter 5, second Samuel 5.
Again, if we put this in basic context, King David has already ruled over the house of
Judah for about seven years.
His kingdom, so to speak, was in Hebron, Hebron.
Now got the death of Saul, and ultimately the death of Abner, his general, Israel, who
Saul sonished, both Seth was ruling over, is now kind of rudderless.
And they end up coming to King David here in chapter 5, and understand there's this schism,
and this is just the very beginning of that schism between North and South, really.
But the Israelites come in and say, we'd kind of like you to be King over us right now.
In verse 2, also in time passed when Salah be king over us right now. In verse two, also in
time past when I was king over us, thou David, what's he that lets out and brought us in Israel.
And the Lord said to the thou shalt feed my people Israel, thou shalt be captain over Israel.
They're kind of selling David on the fact that he should be king here. Verse three, so also the elders
of Israel came to the king to Hebron, and King David made a league with him in Hebron before the Lord.
They annoying a David king over Israel. So we had a United Israel under Saul, a smaller version, but basically it was still down to the Persia, but it was still the north of the south.
But then they're going to come and anoint King David as king. And so that that starts us off by way of our historical context. He was
30 years old when he started to reign and then he's going to, as it says in verse 4, he's going
to reign over Israel and Judah for 40 years. I think this brings in one of the skills you told
us about, which was the later redactor knows that Israel and Judah are going to split. That's
exactly right. Maybe not at the time they wouldn't have known that, but they're explaining it in terms
that only someone who knows they're going to split later would understand.
Because even Sezim, verse 5, he reigned 30 in three years over all Israel and Judah, making
it like, oh, why would they be split?
Well, you mentioned there's a little bit of a division right now, but definitely not
as much as going to come later on the road, right?
That's exactly right.
You're going to see different textual hints as we go through where it'll say this happened
and it's this way till this day.
So in other words, he's saying yes, it happened four, five hundred years ago, we're still seeing
it today.
And so you can clearly see by just the textual evidence that what is written was written after.
And different scholars date it to different time frames,
but basically four to 500 years after.
I think this is important because it's easy to read
like the end of verse three,
they know into David, King over Israel,
and think that means over the House of Israel.
But here we're not talking about the House of Israel,
we're talking about political Israel, the kingdom of Israel and
Israel and Judah and after the reign of King Solomon, that's when they kind of split and we call it the divided kingdom.
When you read Israel, there's the person Israel, there's the House of Israel, there's
there's a herofa Israel in right which is all of us in you know other side of heaven, herofa Israel and there's the political Israel so it's nice to clarify okay he's talking over
boundaries and real estate right now, king over the kingdom of Israel and Judah.
Correct. Finally after it's many years of, we're going to make Jerusalem a capital for the Israelites
at least.
So in verse 6, the king and his men went to Jerusalem unto the Jebusites.
The Jebusites were the original, well, at this point the original inhabitants of Jerusalem.
And Joshua had tried to drive them out, but wasn't able to do so. They actually were able to kill the king in Jabu, in
Jabu, in Jewishness, not a Jata YAH, in Jabu, but they still couldn't drive out the inhabitants.
Jerusalem kind of sat at the nexus. Above Jerusalem, you have the kingdom of Israel, and below,
you have the kingdom of Judah. None of the Israelites had reigned or held Jerusalem.
And so David is going to be the first to conquer Jerusalem. It starts with this kind of really
strange story where the Jibru sites are kind of mocking him in verse 6. It says,
the inhabitants of the land which speak unto David saying, accept that, take with a blind and lame, thou shalt not come in here there.
And scholars have struggled with that for decades, if not centuries.
And we don't really have a good answer for it.
There's a few possible theories on it, but one way or the other, the redactor actually
is going to take it as a slight to David.
And David is ultimately going to
go in and take control of Jerusalem, the Jebisite.
So ultimately he's going to take away the blind and the lame.
Something those might have been statues on the walls that had to be taken down.
Some things those may have actually been people.
One of the things I think is crucial as we study and we learn how to study scriptures
to learn what hills are worth dying on.
And this is an example of what hills are worth dying on. And this is an example
of a hill not worth dying on. You don't need to know who the layman of the line are in these
verses to understand that that the Lord strengthened David. David was able to capture Jerusalem and
Jerusalem then becomes the capital of the ancient kingdom. This is another point that it took me a
while to learn, but like in verse seven, David took the stronghold of Zion.
The same as the city of David. So there's an ancient city of David, and then in Jesus' time, unto you, is born this day in the city of David, a Savior is Bethlehem, but this isn't Bethlehem, right?
Yep.
And you point out that there are many different definitions of Israel.
That's exactly true. There's different definitions of Zion.
There's different definitions of Gentiles.
And so, again, these are hills not worth dying on, but it's important to try to understand the basic context.
Interestingly, Zion is actually the name of a mount.
It's actually the name of a hill with Injuruslam.
So when we say Mount Zion, that's not just symbolic.
That's speaking of an actual geographic location.
The same is the city of David.
And so David goes in and is able to finally capture and begin to make that his capital.
He begins to build a fort and other things around there.
Hiram, verse 11, King of Tire, bring some gifts.
This is the same one that's going to give Solomon skilled workers a material later to build
the temple.
Then you get this verse.
It's a foreshadowing, but to be very frank, I'm not quite sure where a solid is, we could
be on what the foreshadowing is.
Go to verse 13 with me.
And David took him more concubines and wives out of Jerusalem after he was come from Hebron.
And there were yet sons and daughters born to David's.
And then you're going to get a list of some of those sons that were born to David.
Now, we know David and Solomon are going to have problems when it comes to their marital
relations, especially Solomon, as we'll talk about later.
And so we might look at this and say, ooh, foreshadowing, there's a problem.
He shouldn't be doing this.
And there's also a very understandable modern feeling that plural marriage isn't where
we want to go.
We know the prophets have taught that, but it's crucial to remember that that's not the
way it always was.
We have clear scriptural evidence, even, of course, going to Joseph Smith, section 132, that at times the Lord does command or allow plural marriages.
And we know from section 132, verses 38 to 39, that Joseph said in none of his marriages, did David sin save in the case of Bashiba. We're definitely seeing a tendency towards
plurality of wives and we can say, and I believe accurately so, that the Lord at
times has commanded and or allowed prophets from Abraham through Joseph Smith to
take part in the practice of plural marriage. And so we can say, it is possible to
practice plural marriage in a way that is righteous.
It becomes absolutely crucial that we not then therefore say that every instance of plural
marriage or every way it was practiced is according to God's will.
That makes sense.
So we're going to see that as we go forward with Solomon, that at least in verse 13 with
David, we know from modern revelation that the other plural marriages weren't necessarily a problem
spiritually,
Righteously, they'll socially who knows what was happening in those days. We have enough information on it
but we do know that a tendency towards that in this case, especially when it comes to Solomon, is going to head us in a direction
that's not going to be helpful. But at this point, we simply know David has multiple wives
and has multiple children by those wives.
Now, two of those children is going to become interesting in verse 14.
These be the names of those that were born unto him in Jerusalem.
Shamu'a, Shobab, Nathan, and Solomon.
Now, it becomes interesting because Nathan and Solomon are going to come into play
in that New Testament. Luke actually has Christ being born of Nathan. Matthew has Christ being born
of Solomon. Interesting. Now we know that that's not physically possible. Christ couldn't have come
through both of them.
So it has to be one of them.
This again brings me back to the point of
choose what you're going to hang your head on.
Choose what is going to matter most to you, right?
It's important to the redactors
and it's important to the gospel writers, Luke and Matthew,
to say, listen, Christ is going to come of Davidic lineage. One has him come
from this son, one has him come from that son. That's kind of outside of the perv you of where we're
going today, but traditionally Luke's genealogy is thought to be that of Mary's and Matthew's is
traditionally thought to be of Joseph's, but scholars have problematized that enough to the point where we're
not so sure that's accurate. One way or the other, they follow divergent paths. Suffice
it to say at this point, verse 14, those two sons are used by the gospel writers to say,
listen, Christ comes from this lineage. Mike, I would say, for Jews even today, David
has seen as a great figure,
where if there's a lot of day saints,
we kind of see this could have been great,
but disappointment.
That's not how Jews see David in general,
especially in the days of Christ.
Yeah, we're gonna be talking about that.
And then the redactors are incredibly positive towards David,
even in relation to Besshiba, they don't whitewash the problem.
They just believe that that didn't overshadow the rest that he did.
And in some ways, hopefully, you and I can come to the point where we can also give grace,
acknowledge mistakes without completely negating all the good that is done.
And David is going to do a boatload of good.
Isn't it just a good principle in life?
Try not to define people by their worst moments? Yes. And don't define people by what others say are their worst moments. We're going to talk more about that as we go forward in this story.
I love the beginning. Well, this isn't the beginning of David's, Saga. You've got a whole bunch
in first Samuel that goes there. But I love the beginning even here. Go down with me if you would to,
verse 18, after the Philistines heard
that David had become a king of all of Israel,
they came down into the valley to say,
okay, we're gonna take you on.
Now remember, David has a relationship with the Philistines.
He's fought with them and there's no real great love loss
going on here, right?
Where is Goliath anyway?
So David is going to be faced with this army. Now David, we already know he's a very capable military leader and that's what he's going to be known for, right? But look at verse 19, this is so
beautiful in such an example for us. And David inquired of the Lord saying,
shall I go up to the Philistines? Will thou deliver them into mine hands? Now
before I go into the Lord's answer, I love the humility. This isn't a boy
facing Goliath for the first time or a soldier for the first time. This is a man
who has succeeded wildly
in his military endeavor. So he's not a neophyte, he's not a newbie. He is capable and able,
but he still remembers his dependence on God. I tell my students at BYU, the fact that they got into BYU tells us that they're capable.
But when we begin to hold on to our own broids, we can do everything that we need to do,
that's when we get into trouble.
Just quick aside, I used to love it as a mission president.
When young missionaries were getting close to becoming seniors, when they were, they were,
they were still juniors, but they were, they were experienced seniors.
At that point, they pretty much figured they knew what they needed
to know, and they kind of probably knew more than their senior companion, and they were
going to, they were just, they were just chomping at the bit. To my favorite times in mission
life, were A, when they first got in country, and B, when they first become seniors, because
all my goodness, do they come to realize quickly, You know what? We didn't know as much as we thought we knew and humility strikes.
And it's those humble missionaries that the Lord's able to do wonders with. And at this point, David seems to still recognize his need for the Savior for helping. Look at the answer from the Lord of the last part of verse 19.
The Lord said unto David, go up, fry, well, doubtless deliver the Philistines into vine hands.
How he got that answer, a year-min thumb-um, voice, inspiration. We simply know that he had
the revelation to go. He went and if you look at 2321, it would work just like the Lord said it was
going to work very successfully. It reminds me of Captain Maroni when he is fighting the Amalakites,
here's a guy who knows quite a bit about war and it says I'm in Alma 4323, Maroni,
knowing of the prophecies of Alma,
sent certain men unto him,
desiring him that he should inquire of the Lord,
whether the armies of the Nephites should go.
I remember writing in my scriptures,
who knows more about war?
Alma or Maroni, Maroni could say,
I'm not gonna talk to that guy about war.
He doesn't know what he's talking about with war,
maybe spiritual stuff,
but he relies on the prophet,
even in his own expertise. To me,
that is, that's a beautiful thing, right? That you can rely on a prophet, even though you think
to yourself, I've studied this more. I've got in my scriptures there, because he does two things.
He sends spies to watch them. The question he asks is, whether shall we go to defend ourselves,
which is a great question to apply that
to our families today?
Where will we defend ourselves against worldly influences, right?
But he sends spies and he asks the prophet.
And I put in my margin, faith, and works there.
Having a prophet is better than Google Earth or an SR-71 or satellite reconnaissance, right?
But he also asked God.
So, sensepies and ask God and kind of does both.
But yeah, that's a good parallel
because he's asking God, what do I do here?
Do your part, but make sure you realize what God's part is.
And like you said, Dr. Goodman,
go up, I will doubtless deliver the Philistines.
This is something God is doing. It's not David
saying I got this. Exactly. The Philistines are going to come up again. And even though David just
experienced this amazing victory, liquid, he does in 23, when David inquired of the Lord, he said, this is the Lord speaking, this time, thou shalt not go up.
But fetch a compass behind them and come upon them over against the mulberry tree. So there's
mulberry grow there somewhere and there to go behind them. And so no frontal attack here,
just go behind and I love this. Let it be when now here is the sound of the going in the tops of
the mulberry trees that then thou shalt bestur thyself for then shall the Lord go out before they
to smite the host of the Philosite. So wait behind the mulberry trees till you hear the wind come.
When you hear the wind coming rustle those leaves, that's when you're to go.
I want to be in the room with the King James translators right now. Fetch
a compass behind them, meaning is that like part of the word encompass? So it's kind of circle around
them. Is that kind of what you think that means? Must be must be. Come around them is definitely what
it means. That's what the Hebrew means. And wait, wait until I give the signal. And of course, David O'Base, and as he did
so, he again ends up smiting the Philistines from Gibbott until they come to Gazoo. And so
another great victor. So I love the beginning here. We were talking before we started about
the fact that these are these are kind of tragic chapters. These are heavy. In both David
and Solomon's case, we're going to see tremendous mistakes made.
Tremendous not meaning good, meaning very bad.
In both cases, with David and Solomon,
you have this tremendous beautiful humility
where they start fully understanding
their dependence on the Lord and going to him
and continuing to keep that connection with God.
Such an important lesson, and then as we'll see as we go forward, is when that connection ceases to
be a central in their life, that they begin to make the mistakes that they make. These chapters
can serve as a warning to be careful. Don't let this happen to you. Look how humbly is
the inquires of the Lord, inquires of the Lord, he trusts in the Lord.
You just want to say, David, keep doing that.
Hank, I like what you said about a warning because I've heard it said that when you see a name in the scriptures,
it's either an example or a warning. And sometimes we have those that start as an example and end as a warning.
So here's the first paragraph in the come follow me manual King David's reign started out with so much promise
His undaunted faith in defeating Goliath was legendary as King
He secured Jerusalem as his capital and united Israel the kingdom had never been stronger and yet David gave into temptation and lost
His spiritual power and then it says the reign of David's son Solomon, like I started out with so much promise.
His divinely received wisdom and discernment were legendary.
As King, he extended Israel's borders and built a magnificent temple to the Lord.
The kingdom had never been stronger, and yet Solomon foolishly allowed his heart to be turned away
to other gods. What can we learn from these tragic stories? So that's kind of how the manual paints that.
To me, there was kind of an endure to the end message
in there.
Your past successes are great,
but stay on the covenant path.
It's all about relationships.
When we keep that relationship bound,
covenant connected to Christ,
it not only protects us from the errors that we might make, it gives us the power
to do all the good that the Lord needs us and wants us to do and that we need to do.
And so it comes back to, are we keeping that covenant connection? Are we keeping that
binding tie with God? And even after David, we have a little less information on Solomon,
even after David's tragic mistake, he's going to spend the rest of his life trying to
make it up and showing humility and wanting that.
Let's keep going.
I love it.
All right.
Chapter six, we have basically two things happening.
We've got the arch being brought into Jerusalem from Ghibia, which is what's been residing for
a while since it got back from the Philistines.
And then we have David's dance and Mikhail and David's disagreement.
It's beautiful to me that in the beginning of this chapter, David wants to bring the
arc into the new capital of the kingdom, because as I'm sure, well, I know, because I've
listened to your podcast before, your audience knows very well that the ark is intended to be representative
of the presence of God.
And so David's basically saying, we want to do this right.
We want to have God in our midst.
They go to take the ark and bring it from Ghibliat
and bring it up to Jerusalem.
But of course, as our readers will know,
and listeners will know, a tragic event
happens in the travel there. We get the story of Usa, and it's such a heart-wrenching story. But
again, I think it's a powerful one to teach some important scripture study skills. Let's just go
ahead and take us down to their wagon down the path. Go to verse 6, when they came to Nakhon's
Path, go to verse 6, when they came to Nakhon's Thressing floor,
Uza put forth his hand to the Ark of God and took hold of it
for the oxen chuket. So it looks like from what is written by the redactors, it looks like he's simply trying to study an ark,
right? And that very well might be what's happening. But in verse 7, it doesn't temporarily end well for him.
Verse 7, in the anger of the Lord was kindled against Usa, and God smote him.
Therefore his error, and there he died by the ark of God.
And so it appears that it was fairly instantaneous that he died.
Now, again, readers and listeners will know that the arc was only to be carried by specific
Levitical Priesthood holders.
We struggle with stories like this.
At rightly so, one of the things that I try to teach my students in all of my classes is you have to know the character of God
to be able to correctly interpret any scriptural story,
modern or ancient.
And we know God loves his children
and we know that God is forgiving
and we know that God is merciful and gracious
and wants to help all of his children be saved.
So the first thing we would know about the story
of Uza is Uza is not damned. Nothing in this story would tell us that Uzza has lost salvation
or that he's damned. Having said that, in this life, there are sometimes consequences
that are, we call them larger life, that they take us beyond this life. And at times, tragedy
strike either accidental or based on our own actions that
might take us out of this mortal sphere.
I remember listening to Kerry Mielstein once where he was talking about when God zots people,
when he takes someone from this side of the veil to the other side of the veil, Kerry spoke
of it in the context of it's kind of like God, like a parent saying, I need to take you in your room, but I love what Kerry said, which is, parents never
put you in your room to leave you there.
God doesn't take something from this more alive and say, now you did bad, you're damned
for eternity. God's
desire for Uza as well as all of us is our exaltation, our
salvation. Though Uza may have been removed from this temporal
sphere, from mortality. We don't want to have Uza damned
whether it was whether his error was simply didn't think straight
and touched what he shouldn't touch or whether he was, whether his error was simply, didn't think straight and touched what he shouldn't touch,
or whether he was trying to use serpent authority
he didn't have, and different authors
have gone back and forth with that.
But know the character of God, know God's love for Usa
is the same as is God for us.
He's going to do all he can to save us.
Now with that, there are lessons to be learned.
I love probably the person who's who spoke most on this prophetically was present David on the
K and he was trying to teach the lesson. Don't try to go outside the sphere that the Lord has given
you to work. So if you're Sunday school teacher, stop pretending you're the bishop.
Stay within your stewardship. But listen to what he said because there's a powerful
lesson no matter what exactly Uza's motivation was. This is what President McKay said.
It is a little dangerous for us to go out of our own sphere and try unauthoritatively to
direct the efforts of a brother. You remember the case of
Usah who stretched forth his hand to study the ark. He seemed justified when the
oxen stumbled in putting forth his hand to study that symbol of the covenant.
We today thank his punishment was very severe, I'd say so. And then even
at present, the case says, be that as it may. Yes, it does look pretty severe. The incident conveys a lesson of life. Let us look around us and see how quickly men
who attempt unauthoritatively to steady the arc die spiritually. Their souls become
embittered, their minds distorted, their judgment faulty, their spirit depressed, such as a
pitiful condition of men who neglecting their own responsibilities spend their
time in finding fault with others. Now we don't have to proof text Uza to get
there. We don't have to say, yes, he was trying to usurp it. We don't know! We just
don't have enough in the text to know
exactly what Usain's heart words, heart was there. But what President McKay is doing is saying,
listen, we can draw a lesson from this. And the lesson he's drawing, think about how pertinent
that is to today. How many people in our day and age in the blogosphere, on the internet,
in social media, sometimes in Sunday school,
are seeking to direct the work of the Lord.
And to inform the world that the prophets are nice old men,
but they're missing it on this.
So they're good, but they're bigoted on that,
or they're right, but they'll figure this out
as they get a little more wise.
And we have this tendency to want to put the prophets
in a place or their place and take their role. Now, we do not believe in prophetic infallibility,
but we do believe in God's infallibility. And we believe that God directs his prophets not
that they can never say or think in error,
but if they're in error, it won't be our job to correct them.
It'll be the Lord's job to correct them.
And we're gonna get a great example of that
in our next chapter with, with, with, with, made.
Let's be nice to Usa.
We'll give him the benefit of the doubt.
I've always found reading scripture
or listening to others with charity
is not only nice, but more often than not is more accurate.
We can look at Uza, give him the benefit of the doubt, and still say, you know what, there's
some things we can learn from this.
And that's what prophets have done ever since.
I have written in my scriptures here, Mike, quote, from Brigham Young, he said, the person
full of light and intelligence knows that God can study his own arc. This is about faith in the Lord.
You have your own stewardship. Stay inside your stewardship. We saw that last year, John,
in the Doctrine and Covenants. So often, the Lord said, yes, I can give you personal revelation,
but it's within bounds, within boundaries. Your personal revelation is for your specific stewardship.
And that's true, even if our education or background level is greater.
I had a great lesson taught to me probably 25 years ago in CES.
I was an institute teacher, back in Oregon, love Oregon.
We were being taught by our leaders at that time.
And there was a real strong tendency of full-time
church educational system, SNI people,
to try to push priesthood leaders to move the program
to what we knew was more effective.
Move from home study to early morning,
move from early morning to release time.
And we had the numbers.
We could show
this program's better than that program statistically speaking. But our member, Tom Tyler was
someone who actually did this. Tom Tyler teaching us they fought they the priesthood leaders. Those
who have the keys following the inspiration they receive will do more good for their ward and steak members than any amount
of good we as professional educators can do. Remembering who stewardship is who's. So we've
been religious educators for a few years, right? One or two or 30 or 40. And we've spent our life
studying, studying, scripture, studying things. I do social science, so statistically speaking, I can tell you the outcomes of different things.
It's very important for us as religious educators to remember.
Yes, we might know more of the Hebrew or the Greek, or might know more of the social science.
But those who hold the keys are the ones that the Lord has tasked with guiding Israel in
our day.
We can have faith and do our part.
This does seem harsh.
We've got to leave that up to the Lord.
Now, because I know my daughter will read this and go, man, I'll try to do is make sure
it didn't fall.
And who knows?
Are we getting the whole story or not? So I love that.
We can find an application, but let's leave that to the Lord. And someday we'll have the full story.
Reminds me of President Dalin H. Oaks that talked about final judgments, which we are forbidden to make,
and intermediate judgments were to are commanded to make, but upon righteous principles. And we don't really know. Let's leave that final judgment. Let's leave
Usa in the hands of God who you already expressed is kind and loving and
merciful. And let's just draw the lesson from it for ourselves. I like the way
you put that. And I like what Hank said there. We can acknowledge the
dissonance that something like this causes. I remember once coming in
the bedroom of my daughter, she was reading the book of Mormon and she said, Daddy, I don't
like the book of Mormon. I like the doctor and the covenants. She was in a little girl.
We're talking about a nine-year-old, I don't remember. And she's young. And I said, sweetheart,
why? She was noticing how in the book of Mormon,
it speaks harshly against sin and harshly against actions
that are wrong.
And she was saying, daddy, I know I'm not perfect.
Is this the way God sees me?
And I brought my arm around her and say, no,
let's talk about the character of the God we worship.
He loves you.
He doesn't look unsin with acceptance, but he loves you.
Yes, we can acknowledge this harsh story here.
Let's not let that color or perception of the nature of the very God we worship.
Mike, I think it's important to note here that God has boundaries.
We don't want a boundaryless God who just says, hey, rules don't matter. Right?
Commandments don't matter.
So there are boundaries.
And we're going to see throughout this entire lesson, aren't we?
Yes.
That God has boundaries in behavior so we can learn.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
All right, let's continue on.
As Uzas tragic incomes, it really freaks David out.
Scars him and he says, you know what?
Maybe I'm not ready to have this here in Jerusalem.
And so he asks it to be carried aside
to the house of Obad Edom, who's a Githite
so somewhere in this land, and they leave the ark there
for a few months.
David looks and says, oh wow, God's blessing,
oh, but, oh, Adam, maybe it's not so bad.
And so he goes, and he says, okay,
let us bring that ark all the way back in.
And so they start to bring it in.
As they start to bring it into the city,
David goes before the ark, verse 14.
And danced before the Lord with all his might.
And David was girded with a linen effod, the joyful dance. He's dancing before the Lord with all his might, and David was girded with a linen effod.
The joyful dance.
He's dancing before the Lord.
We know this is going to cause some problems with Mikhail in a moment, but it's kind of curious
that he's in a linen effod because we would normally associate that with priesthood.
And Jewish commentaries actually do point to that and talk about the concept that David
Seems to at times take
Presley
Responsibilities upon himself. We'll talk about that as we go a little bit further in the chapters
But one way or the other he's girded about with this linen effort. He's dancing. He brings it in
Saul's daughter Mikhail, his wife sees him dancing and is not
amused, so to speak. And so they bring the Ark in, they offer burnt offerings, they offer
peace offerings. David goes home, go down to verse 20, and David returned to bless his household.
And Mikhail, the daughter of Saul, came out to meet David and said,
how glorious was the King of Israel today, who uncovered himself today in the eyes of the handmaids of the servants,
as one of the vain fellows shamelessly uncovered themselves.
This is not a happy wife.
She was bothered by what she saw.
So important to remember, we are getting the story
four to 500 years later through the eyes of a reductor.
We do not know what David's dance was like.
We don't know how modest her,
and modest her, appropriate her,
inappropriate what we do know from the story
is that McCalla was not happy with what happened. This is kind of tragic.
Look at verse 21.
David's response, you can tell there is
a relational problem going on here.
Verse 21, David sent a McCall.
It was before the Lord which chose me before I father.
There's a little dig to start.
And before all his house to appoint me rule over
the people of the Lord over Israel, therefore I will play before the Lord. So he's claiming
I'm not dancing for the girls, I'm dancing for God, but then verse 22. And I will yet
be more vile than thus. I will be based in my own sight,
which sounds humble, but then look at this next part.
And of the made servants which thou hast spoken of,
of them, shall I be had in honor.
We don't know the dynamics of this marriage,
but as a person with a PhD in marriage and family,
I think I can safely say this is not a healthy relationship
dynamic at this moment, at least.
And then, in fact, the redactors, knowing the future, of course,
throw in, therefore, McCall, the daughter of Saul
had no children under the Bay of Ordef.
We don't know if that was as a result of this fight
or what caused this.
How, this is a great little application here
of learning how to have a little bit of conflict
without contention?
Yes, yeah, as we can learn some lessons.
And so again, we can do that without harshly judging
either David or his wife.
Yeah.
You're a marriage and family PhD, you're an expert.
Tell us how David and McCall,
how this could have gone better.
And McCall says one thing, and that may be upset David.
And so he's, he responds with not only am I going to do that, I'm going to do this too.
And just kind of spirals.
The research on this is actually pretty, pretty straightforward.
And it doesn't take a PhD to get there.
You've heard this statement before.
I think it's a caviarism. and it doesn't take a PhD to get there. You've heard this statement before,
I think it's a caviarism,
seek to understand before seeking to be understood.
That's the opposite of what you see happening here.
You have hurt and hurt leading to striking out.
Instead of, let's replay the tape and say,
okay, I can tell that my sweetheart is feeling wounded,
is feeling hurt, and
trying to understand what is it that caused that hurt.
And by the way, as we know in the research, as well as those who do professional counseling,
often the hurt manifests itself, not based on what's happening at that time, but prior
hurt, prior relational challenges.
And so that's where I'd say we don't have the background
to know exactly what led to this fight.
But one way or the other, it would have been
wise or probably for both David and McCall
to try to understand what the other person intended
instead of what they simply received
from the outward expression.
Most the time, most of us are not
even even when we're struggling, we're not trying to hurt another person. Our intent isn't necessarily
evil, but our actions can be hurtful. And so in this case, if David and his wife would have sought to
understand what the other person was thinking and feeling
and why and empathized with the real. Even if there were some parts of that that weren't based on
what you intended, just by feeling understood, it lowers the temperature and then allows couples
to begin to talk through issues in a way that leads to what most of us ultimately experienced,
but without all the pain,
a reconciliation. I hear it. I'll take a book of Mormon example. Lehigh, you're a visionary man.
You've led us out here in the wilderness. My sons are going to go and talk to Laban,
and there are no more. And Lehigh doesn't say, how dare you. He agrees with her.
I know I am a visionary man, but you can almost hear,
but sweetheart, I've obtained a land of promise.
You know, you just hang on with me here
and pretty soon the boys come over the hill.
And then Sir, I says, now I know the Lord has commanded
my husband and it's a nice moment for Lehigh, I think.
John, you probably found the absolute perfect antithesis
to this.
Lehigh truly does really fun in an ancient context,
model what modern therapists try to help individuals do.
I wonder if McCall is still mourning her father and David just doesn't see that.
Like you said, Mike, even takes a dig at her father.
Chose me before thy father.
I'll be more vile than thus.
And you've also got the situation that she's childless.
And we know that in these times, as you've studied with Hannah and others,
there's some heartache and pain that comes from not being able to
have children together.
And so there's so many possibilities here as to a cause this challenge.
We would simply say that based on the text we have right now, it didn't go the way that
we would generally hope it would go.
And this can work not just in marriages, but in any relationship.
Seek first to understand.
Let's try to understand before trying to be understood.
I like that we brought in a brother cubby there.
Lehigh, what a perfect example.
I want to be like Lehigh.
I want to be that way for my sweetheart, for my daughter, for my son,
for our students to seek to empathize, understand, even acknowledge what can be acknowledged.
Lehigh didn't say, you're right, I'm being rotten.
He acknowledged all the pain, he acknowledged the, I am a visionary man, that's my nature.
But there's a reason why I'm trying to do this.
And that's where the understanding can begin to be built.
Don't be so quick to get offended and to go right into defense mode. Oh man, I love to see real people
in real relationships in the scriptures. This is the Old Testament. It's sure it gets kind of messy.
How many times in our reading do we go, oh David, I wonder if the Lord is the same way with me.
Oh, what do you do? What do you do? He face palms whenever I pray, I think.
Johnny, Johnny, Johnny.
Oh, John. Chapter seven, I love this chapter. It's very simple, not a lot that we're going to dig
into, but I love the example of what happens with a prophet. In this situation, David, he settled in nicely
into his home in Jerusalem,
verse two, see now, I dwell in a house of cedar,
but the ark of God dwelleth within curtains.
And so what David proposes to the prophet Nathan
is let me build a house to God.
Now, the thought of building a house to God is a beautiful thing as a general
Prince will you say this is good and Nathan encourages it. Verse three, Nathan said to the king,
go, do all that is in line heart for the Lord is with thee.
Quick note, this isn't the same Nathan that we talked about earlier that's the son of David.
This is Nate.
This is Nate, that was Nate.
There you go.
So we got Nathan saying to the king, oh, that sounds good.
You should build a house.
This is a good thing.
Well, that night the Lord comes to Nathan and says, I have a little bit of a different plan here, right?
If you go to verse four, it came to pass that night
that the word of the Lord came to Nathan.
And then he explains, the Lord explains to Nathan,
no, David's not to build me a house.
We're gonna let his son do it,
and I'll give you some reasons later,
but this is what I love about this.
We sometimes in our modern era,
especially struggle with the concept of prophetic infallibility
where prophets aren't even people.
They're not allowed to breathe, eat, have bad days, have a toothache, get grumpy.
And we know Joseph was very clear that he wasn't perfect.
This isn't necessarily popular in our day, but he also said, I'm not perfect, but there's
no error in the revelations that I've given to
you. Well, you have a situation here where David comes to Nathan and says, I want to build a temple. Nathan
thought, that's good. Go do it. But it wasn't the Lord's will. So the Lord came to the prophet and said,
can I give you a little new instruction? And I love, I love Nathan and David's response to this.
Nathan comes to David and says,
nope, not gonna happen.
We'll go down and read a few other verses,
but no, it's not gonna happen,
maybe for your son, but not for you.
Nathan immediately takes the Lord's direction
and turns around and gives it to David.
David's bombed, he wanted to build a temple, but he says, okay, I won't do it.
But it reminded me of a teaching from elder,
richer, G-Scott.
That is not necessarily in the same context.
I don't want to proof text them together,
but the principle, I think, is beautiful.
Elder Scott was speaking of our experiences in life
and we're seeking revelation and we're not
getting it.
How should we feel about that and what does it mean?
And he teaches some concepts of revelation that I think are crucial and that in some ways
Nathan exemplifies here.
This is Elder Scott.
By the way, it's General Conference May 2007.
He says, what do you do when you have prepared carefully, have prayed fervently? Wait at a reasonable time for a response and still do not reveal an
answer. Now, I teach the eternal family class at BYU. That's my primary class.
Hoodamary, Wendamary, things like these are so heavily on our students' mind.
And so most of my students will take this and go right to the marriage decision,
but it really applies in any other aspect of life.
But the answer that Elder Scott gives is kind of counterintuitive. Most people wouldn't think about this in the beginning.
He says, what should we feel about this? He says, you may want to express thanks when that occurs. For it is evidence of his trust.
When you are living worthy and the choice is consistent with the Savior's teaching, and
you need to act, proceed with trust.
And then this powerful teaching, and this is what I think applies to Nathan's situation,
Nathan and David.
As you are sensitive to the promptings of the Spirit, one of two things will certainly
occur at the appropriate time. Either the stupor of thought will come, indicating an improper choice, or the peace or the
burning of the bosom will be felt, confirming that your choice was correct, and then listen
to this, when you are living righteously and acting with trust, God will not let you proceed too far without warning impressions if you have
made the wrong decision. Think of the applicability of that both to Nathan's
situation and to ours. Nathan gave a common sense, normally right answer, but it wasn't
what the Lord's will was, so the Lord came to him and immediately said,
no, thank you for trying that wasn't right. Let me give you the right answer. But to me, the power in
this comes for you and I today. How many issues are being debated today by our brothers and sisters,
friends and foes, you could say, saying that prophets are wrong, pick your issue.
They just haven't figured out.
When they pass away, someone will come and they'll fix it all.
But this principle, I think, is so powerful when we are sensitive to the promptings of the
Spirit.
God will not let us proceed too far without a warning impression.
I think we can testify.
I testify.
I say what I know to be true, that God is leading his
prophets.
No, they are not perfect, and yes, they can have their own opinions, but the Lord's not
going to allow his servants, the prophets, to guide us and take us off the path in a way
that is going to endanger our progression towards God. I think there's a powerful
principle that other Scott's teaching and that is trust the Lord to guide. Trust the Lord to guide
his prophets. Trust the Lord that if we do make an air hill, course crack force and get us going.
And he's not going to let us go too far down that road before that happens.
That's a great principle here, Mike, is that he and David's like,
let's make a temple and Nathan says,
sure, great idea.
And then you get the Lord quickly.
No, no, no, no, no.
Don't, don't do that.
And they both respond in kind.
It looks like with, okay.
They really do.
Perhaps we should be following that example.
Am I reading this right? But then in verse 12 and 13,
when Thay days be fulfilled, Thal shalt sleep with Thy fathers, I will set up Thy seed after the
which He'll proceed out of Thy bals. I will establish His kingdom. He shall build and house for
my name. So this is the answer. I love that He is getting an answer. No, that's not for you.
It's going to come through a sense, Solomon. Of course, he is getting an answer. No, that's not for you.
It's gonna come through a sin, Solomon.
Of course, as we know from the story,
it's not just that Solomon's gonna be allowed
to build a temple,
but that God will build a house through Solomon,
meaning David's house will forever be a staff family.
Exactly, exactly.
Verse 16 and thine house house and thy kingdom shall be established
forever before thee, thy throne shall be established forever. It's almost like we get here. The Lord
says, I'm the one who builds houses. Not you. It is. It is. Exactly. And you know, it's interesting
because the Lord says here that listen, I'm going to establish your house and it's going to be through Solomon. But remember, agency is still an issue.
And that doesn't mean Solomon is guaranteed to always be perfect as we know. He's going to make
some real serious errors. And it's interesting. Go back to verse 14 if you would. This is Jehovah speaking
to David about his son. I will be his Solomon's father. He shall be my son.
If he commit iniquity, I will chase in him and then look at this with the rod of men and
with the stripes that children are men.
And I thought to myself, yep, that's so often the way it is.
When we make mistakes, God doesn't generally have to zod us.
He doesn't have to lightening bolt us.
The consequences of our actions often are what the Lord uses to teach us
the error of our way and to help us understand. We're going to see that in spades when it comes to the story of David and
Bashiba.
Consequences are good instructors, aren't they?
It's the Lord's way, isn't it?
If the Lord's way, isn't it? I loved verse 18, then went King David in and sat before the Lord and he said,
Who am I, O Lord God?
I just think if we could get each of us to ask that question, I remember just recently
President Nelson talking to the young adults, remember that where he said,
you're a child of God, you're a child of the covenant and a disciple of Christ, and had them
wanted them to remember those three eternal identities, you know. And that question, who am I?
I think that can be answered by patriarchal blessings. And I just love that David would
ask that question, what am I supposed to do? What am I supposed to be? What would you have me to be?
And in fact, I had an elder Monty Brough commenting on this verse in April 1995, General Conference.
He elder Brough said,
Among the magnificent and abundant teachings of President Howard W. Hunter,
Is this assertion?
The greatest search of our time is the search for personal identity and for human dignity.
Then he said,
This search for personal identity is essentially a search for role models that can become instructive
in the conduct of our lifestyles, with only a few exceptions.
A young person cannot find adequate role models among those in athletic, entertainment, or
commercial music.
Not only did these public figures fail to provide positive examples, but they were often
the exact inverse of the type of role models that are acceptable to most of us.
Access to these contemporary icons is expensive and unproductive. We are almost always disappointed
when we come to witness the shallow and murky standards by which the public heaps its
praise. No wonder the public areas of so many cities and towns are crowded with young
people who are possessed with these same shallow and murky standards of personal behavior.
Yet there is an abundance of role models who can be found much closer and who can have much deeper
influence upon each one of us. Most of us with relatively little effort and much less cost
can provide for our families a veritable list of important role models. This list can be created from a modest
search into the lives of our ancestors. I thought that was fascinating, but I just love the question,
who am I, O Lord God? And don't you think he's eager to answer that question for us?
Isn't that the humility that we hope all of us will exemplify?
It's again what we see with David and Solomon as they start, they recognize their need,
their dependence on God. He's just realizing the difference between He and God.
Who am I, God, in comparison with you?
I just love that every week our young women are standing up and saying,
I'm a beloved daughter of heavenly parents
with a divine nature and eternal destiny.
And we have a young man standing up and saying,
I'm a beloved son of God and he has a work for me to do.
Imagine if every teenager in the world could stand up
and say, this is who I am and this is what I believe
and this is what I will do, this is what I will not do.
I mean, it changed the world.
I just love the question there.
Who am I, O Lord God?
And I think he wants to answer that for us
and the best answers we get are within the gospel
and the scriptures and the prophet.
Excellent.
I wanted to add here before I moved on, Mike.
David wanting to build a temple is a good revelation.
Good desire.
It's just the timing is off a little bit.
I've noticed that sometimes we can be a little bit frustrated
when we have a good revelation, but the timing is off.
Why doesn't this happen in the church?
Why doesn't this happen in the church?
Why are we not moving forward with this?
Let the Lord be in charge of his timing, where he says,
yeah, building a temple is a good idea. It's a good idea, but not yet.
Yeah, not yet. Let's be okay with not yet.
Not yet, and in this case, not by you.
Yeah.
And so sometimes it's not going to work the way we think or that we want.
But if we truly come to know this comes back to what we started with. If we know God, if we know his character,
we know his relationship to us and his perfections, we can trust that he knows best how to move
his own work forward and we how to move us forward towards our own exaltation. He knows his work.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.