Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 2 Samuel 5-12, 1 Kings 3-11 -- Part 2 : Dr. Michael Goodman
Episode Date: June 19, 2022Dr. Goodman returns and discusses the gift of human sexuality within the bounds the Lord has established, and the reign and downfall of King Solomon, the gift of wisdom, and the power of staying on ...the covenant path.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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
Doesn't necessarily define the entire lived experience of David, but this event is going
to have profound impact on David, on David's family, and on Israel going forward.
We've often turned this into a morality tale, and there's a reason for that, but let's
just start with verse 1. It came to pass after the year was expired. At the time when
kings go forth to battle, we often key on that. The David sent Joab and his servants with him in
all Israel, and they destroyed the children of Ammon, embeced Araba, but David tarried still at Jerusalem.
And we often make hay out of that and possibly for good reasons.
I want to be a little cautious on that simply because this isn't the first time that a king has sent his general to go do the fighting,
nor will it be the last time that the king does the same thing.
So it does appear that the redactors are making the same point that we often do, which is error number one.
Problem number one was that David Terry, instead of going forth and doing his duty.
And that that may be accurate.
That seems to be the point of the the verbage in one.
On the other hand, maybe that wasn't so strange for a king to not always go to every battle,
though I think on a regular basis David had in the past.
So problem number one, not being where he should be, possibly problem number two, he sees
something that you and I would say is probably not meant to be within his, his purview, his
sight. He sees a woman
washing herself in verse two. The woman was very beautiful to look upon. So he sees Bathsheba.
The seeing, we've got to be cautious here, it doesn't in any way seem to entail a purposeful
peeping that he was literally looking trying to find this. But one way or the other, he looks and he sees this beautiful woman bathing, becoming ritually pure. As a mission president,
I would sometimes have missionaries that would come to me. They'd be kind of calm, but
stoke on the outside. And then when we got into the room, they'd just start sobbing into
the office. And they'd start with something like president, you're just going to have
to send me home. Now you never want to say something like that to a mission president.
You're scared that it jabbers out of them. But you know, in Stepanek starting to rise
in the heart and I'd say, well, elder, and it was usually elders, elder, what happened.
And they would share that they had seen something that they probably shouldn't have seen.
Right?
So I remember one elder that came to me and said, present, we were teaching this lesson to
the sweet family.
I looked up on a wall and there was a large picture of a woman who lacked clothing.
And so he's telling me about this and I said, what did you do, Elder?
And he said, well, I looked away and I said, and I feel horrible. And I said, why do you feel
horrible? He said, well, I liked what I saw. I shouldn't have liked rather. Really, you shouldn't have,
do you see the problem here?
And instead of realizing, you know what?
You did exactly what the Lord would have you do.
You saw something, you were attracted to that,
and you realized, nope, that's not mine.
Therefore, you turned away and you went back and focused.
He did exactly what he's supposed to do,
but he felt because
he was attracted, that he was somehow dirty or broken or wrong. And our youth today tend
to experience very similar phenomena. They'll see something they shouldn't see. Their
body will react to it, their mind will react to it. And because of that natural reaction, they figure, I'm broke, I'm bad, I'm evil. But Heavenly Father created us purposefully so that we tend
to be interested in these kinds of things. This is not a problem. This is not a sign that
we're broken. It's a sign that something's working right. The question isn't, did you see something?
And therefore, are you guilty? It's, did you see something? What did you do next? What David did next becomes the
problem? Instead of turning back to his own business, verse three, David sent an
inquired after the woman. One said, is not this Bath Shiba, which by the way is a real cool name, it's a daughter of the oath,
is not this Bath Shiba or Bath Shiba, the daughter of Eliam, the wife of Euryah, the Hittite.
Besides simply seeing and turning away, he continues to
ruminate and actually inquires after her. There's probably number two, probably number three,
verse four, David sent messengers.
He didn't just think, he didn't just ask, he took her,
she came in unto him and he lay with her.
And then this next phrase really bugged me growing up,
I thought, what's strange morality?
For she was purified from her cleanliness,
almost as if that somehow justifying the adultery.
Now, since then, as I've done a little bit more study,
most commentators, both Jewish and Christian,
claim that that statement is not meant to justify the adultery.
It's meant to make clear that the child that is going to be born
is not Eureias. It's David's,
that she was purified from her. And cleanliness means that she was still having a period
she wasn't pregnant. And so one way or the other, he took her in, he slept with her, she
returned her house. Now, we won't even go to the concept of the difference in power structures and being
a king and ruler and the abuse of power that David did in that. But of course, that's
where the ultimate, well, almost the ultimate air came. Then he realizes when she sends back and says, I'm with child, then he realizes that
he's in trouble.
He knew better than what he did.
And this wasn't just simply a crime of passion.
This was intention.
He looked, he asked, he purposefully did what he did.
And we know David loved God, loved the law, but clearly there's a disconnect at this point
in David's love of God and what he's willing to allow himself to do.
And so we know the story.
He's going to ultimately end up murdering Yeraya so as to quote unquote hide the problem. It's one of the great tragedy stories
in all of scripture. Yeraya is an interesting character. The Jewish rabbis and the Christian
theologians and academics don't exactly know what to do with him. He's called a hitite, but the Talmud basically gives you two possible options,
the Jewish rabbis. One, that he was a hitite who converted to Judaism. That's possible.
Or two, he was a Jew from birth, but he lived amongst the hitites, so he was known as a hitite.
But his name is a Jewish name. It's, the Lord is my light. Yahweh is my light. He believes
in God and he shows himself so honorably. We know the story. David calls him back trying to get him
to go in and sleep with Beshe, but possibly hide his adultery. He won't go into his wife. He
says, no, the soldiers are in the field
fighting and am I going to go in and enjoy my home and my wife? No, I won't do it. Well,
that didn't work. David said, okay, let's try this. Verse 13, let's make him drunk. If
he's drunk, maybe he'll just wander in and know he didn't do it. And so finally, this is so tragic. David not only has him killed, he has the order
to have him killed brought back by himself, verse 15. David wrote to Joab and had Jiraya
deliver. So he's having Jiraya deliver the letter demanding his death. And he wrote
in the letter saying, set ye Jiraya in the forefront of the hottest battle, retire ye from him that
he may be smitten and die. This is beyond the pale. This isn't I had a bad day
and I yelled at my siblings. This is premeditated adultery, premeditated
murder. And as we're going to talk in the next chapter, the consequences are
going to be eternal for David. There's so much to learn from this. So when I'm teaching
in our eternal family classes at BYU, and we're talking about keeping the law of chastity
and staying emotionally, mentally, and physically pure, we talk about the safeties in the Lord puts in place and first and
foremost. We talk about keeping the spirit of God with us. I ask my students that the spirit of
God is actively in your life and you are currently under the influence of the spirit of God.
What's the likelihood that you're going to go out and commit adulterer fornication?
My students aren't dumb, they'll say, it's not going to happen and I'll say, you're right.
your fornication. My students aren't dumb, they'll say, is not going to happen. And I'll say, you're right.
The only way Satan can get a good, ladder-day saint to make this kind of a serious error
is to separate that ladder-day saint from the Spirit of God. That seems to be what's happened with David. You had these beautiful examples in five and six and seven were David's humble and going to the Lord and seeking guidance and following God's will.
Well, by the time we hit this story, David seems to have ceased to make that connection and that as that relationship with God became more tenuous. His wisdom, his decision making, his choices
began to follow more of the natural man than the Spirit of God. And so that tragedy of allowing
ourselves to disconnect from God is the way that Satan has the greatest chance of getting in and encouraging us and us using our agency to go down this horrifically tragic rabbit hole.
There's so many moments in here where you're like, David, just don't just stop. There's so many like morning signs going off, stop. Don't don't don't send an don't send an inquire. Don't send messengers. When I teach
Book of Mormon, I kind of equate this with Alma 52. I just think the
stratagem of war that we read about in the Book of Mormon are similar to the
stratagem that Satan uses against us and they're trying to get the landites to
leave their stronghold. And so they get a small number of men,
hey, walk by his, if you're delivering provisions
to another city, that's a small number.
We can take them, we'll be right back.
This is no big deal.
And they take a step out of their stronghold.
And this is what David does, a step, and then another step.
And so it's kind of a, don't leave your stronghold
type of a message.
And as you pointed out, it starts out with that a time when kings went to war, kind of like,
eh, David probably should have been.
But I have a President James E. Faust in October 1997.
He said, over my lifetime, I have seen some of the most choice, capable and righteous
of men stumble and fall.
They have been true and faithful for many years and then get caught in a web of stupidity
and foolishness, which has brought great shame to themselves and betrayed the trust of their
innocent families, leaving their loved ones, a legacy of sorrow and hurt.
My dear brother, and this was General Priesthood Conference, all of us, young and old, must
constantly guard against the enticements of Satan.
We must choose wisely the books and magazines we read, the movies we see, and how we use modern technology such as the internet.
So good.
That quotation is 25 years old, and I always feel like I have to say, there was a day when if you wanted pornography you had to go find it and now
It's like it finds you and I just hope our young people who ever is listening just
What was the phrase we learned last year Hank from one of our scholars repent relentlessly?
Just keep getting back on the covenant path. And you're going to encounter this stuff like your
missionaries did, but keep coming back and don't give up and keep getting back to the
sacrament table and getting the promise that his spirit can always be with you.
You know, years ago, I came across this from Dr. Wendy Watson, who's now Wendy Watson, Nelson, president, uh, Russell M. Nelson's wife, and she said,
what if like a package of cigarettes or something, what if
pornography had a warning label? And this is what she said, the
warning label might say, contents highly addictive, extremely
corrosive to the soul materials enclosed, be prepared to have
your mind twisted, your views of life ravaged and your spirit shrunk.
Be aware that the Spirit of the Lord will not be with you during or after viewing.
Be prepared that after an initial rush, you will experience feelings of depression, loneliness,
despair and guilt.
However, with repeated exposures over time, you can numb those feelings and enter into almost total amnesia,
listen to this, about who you really are and about the truth itself. That was from her book,
Purity and Passion on page 60. Those are strong words, but keep coming back. If that's a line
you've already crossed, please keep coming back. There's a way back, but this is powerful stuff.
The Lord knows the world he sent us to.
And section 46 verse 15, right, Hank, he suits his mercies according to the conditions
of the children of men, thankfully, but keep coming back to that covenant path.
Don't give up.
I love it.
Yeah. I think in teaching this,
you can point out how many different places
there are for David to stop and say,
wait, what am I doing?
I can stop this right now instead of continuing
down this path.
Those of you who are longtime listeners of our podcast
will recognize the name David Sonson
because David and Verly Sonson are our sponsors.
He gave a talk in the April
2001 general conference.
Doesn't seem like it should be that long ago, but we're talking two decades ago.
I'd encourage everyone to read this one.
It's called, you can't pedal rattlesnake.
What a great talk.
He says, quote, in the summertime, one of our responsibilities was to haul hay from the
fields into the barn for winter storage.
My dad would pitch the hay onto a flatbed wagon, I would then trump down the hay to get as
much as possible on the wagon. One day, in one of those loose bundles, pitched onto the wagon,
was a rattlesnake. When I looked at it, I was concerned, excited, and afraid. The snake
was lying in the nice cool hay. The sun was glistening on its diamond back, and after
a few moments the snake
stopped rattling. It became still and I became curious. I started to get closer, leaned over
for a better look. When suddenly I heard a call from my father, David my boy, you can't
pet a rattlesnake. The Bible records that King David was gifted spiritually, but he stood where he should not
have stood.
He watched what he should not have watched, and those obsessions became his downfall.
He says later on, we have all accepted the responsibility to pattern our life after
the master.
I think that's a crucial point here.
That David knows he is supposed to pattern his life after Jehovah.
This is back to the talk, Elder Swanson continues,
He has committed the keys of the priesthood and of divine revelation to our living prophet.
He councils, stay away from pornography.
I plead with you to get it out of your life.
Don't allow the poison to touch your souls.
What a great lesson.
That's just, this is a hard one. I remember once
walking out of a gospel doctrine class, what we talked about, David and Besheba, and I was with
my friend Shane Argyle. And Shane is one of the most righteous, incredible people. And here I was,
you guys, I was walking out of this class going, oh poor David. Oh David, you should have been smarter.
As I'm walking out with brother Argyle,
he said, that lesson scares me.
And I said, why?
Cause I didn't walk out of that class,
the least bit scared.
He said, if David can fall,
what does that say about me and you?
And I thought, oh, now I am scared. Because I just, you know, the whole time,
I'm just going, Oh, David, what a dumb decision. I would never do that where my friend Shane saw,
Oh, I've got to be more careful. President Kimball once said, if you take the paraphrasing,
if you take the very best boy in the church and the very best girl
in the church and you put them in the wrong circumstance long enough, they will fall.
None of us are immune to the mistakes that we can make.
This is why it's so crucial to stay connected to God, to recognize when we begin to disconnect.
When we read stories like this, we can sometimes just jump right
out of the story and into kind of a proof text version of, you know, what are lessons
to draw. That's good. We need to draw lessons from it. But there are times when we do that
that can send the wrong message. For instance, we talked earlier about the reality that
sexuality is not bad. Sexuality is part of the plan of salvation. I teach my students
that the entire plan of salvation depends I teach my students that the entire
plan of salvation depends on sexuality. There would be no continuation, no seed, no anything.
We shouldn't take from stories like this that sexuality is bad. We shouldn't take from stories like
this that the reality of our nature to be attracted to each other is wrong. That's somehow wrong.
We've got to be cautious even in stories like this, plural marriage.
We could use this as a proof text against plural marriage, where we know that that's going
to become a major issue. Ultimately, with David and Solomon, it's not that plural marriage
in and of itself cannot be commanded or ordained by God. What happened here was twofold, adultery,
obviously, first. This was Euraya's wife. This was not David's wife. And
second, the personal tragedy that comes when we disconnect from God to the point
where we're able to or willing to make these kind of mistakes. It reminds me of
a statement from David A. Bednar. He gave a classic talk entitled, that we may
always have his spirit to be with us. But he makes an interesting point in the first paragraph there, he says, hey, we do a great job in the church talking about how important
it is to invite the spirit and to have the spirit with us. He says, but we frequently overlook one
issue. He said, we should also endeavor to discern when we withdraw ourself from the Spirit of the Lord, that it may have no place in us to guide us in wisdom's paths.
And so his point is, listen, it's not enough to just seek for the Spirit when you can get the Spirit and expect it on Sundays,
or maybe when you're in the temple, or maybe when you're reading your scriptures.
But seek to recognize when the Spirit is no longer guiding us in our life.
Because that's the point where we can begin to make these
kind of errors. And even if they're not going to be these massive errors, that's when our
path begins to diverge from the covenant path from God. And in this case, that's what happens
with David, the man who was the greatest king that Israel ever knew, the man who did so much
good, and the man who, after this, will continue
to try to do good.
But my goodness will try to become from this event.
I really like what you said.
I want to call you President Goodman because as a mission president, telling that missionary,
of course, that would be hard for David because that was attractive to him, if I can use
that word.
It was what he did with that afterwards, the fact that
it was attractive is normal and natural. And I love how Alma, when he's talking to Shiblon,
says bridal all your passions. That word bridal is so good. And Elder Bruce C. Hathen, whom
we've had on the program, has commented on that. He didn't say kill your passions. He didn't
say passions are bad. He said, bridle of
them, which is a horse is powerful, but useful if we control it. Then there can be a righteous,
beautiful use of that as we have talked about.
Mike, I think there is also something to be said here of unrighteous dominion. Yes, right?
This idea. I am the king. I can do what I want section 121
I mean it almost outlines David's fall here in section 121
It never it doesn't name him but it says when we undertake to cover our sins to gratify our pride our vain
Ambition or to exercise control or dominion
Upon the souls of the children of men in any degree of unrighteousness.
The heavens withdraw themselves. The spirit of the Lord is grieved. And when it is withdrawn,
that's what you said, Mike, when you lose the spirit, amen, to the priesthood of the authority of
that man. And that's really what second Samuel chapter 11 is, isn't it? It could be called sad
experience. We have learned by sad experience, that's second Samuel chapter 11,, isn't it? It could be called sad experience. We have learned by sad experience,
that's second Samuel chapter 11,
that it is the nature and disposition of almost all men.
As soon as they get a little authority, right?
Here he is, he's king.
As they suppose, they will immediately begin
to exercise unrighteous dominion.
It's an abuse of David's power.
That's right, absolutely. I just remember as a teenager when I learned that, wait, the
same David that slew Goliath is this day, aww, and I just remember going, aw, that's
too bad, you know, because I wanted him to still be the hero.
It's a tragedy, so I would hope that we can maybe take a little bit of what your friend Hank brought out of
this, which is it's a reminder that none of us are safe from the temptations that are
part of life and that's safe with throw at us.
You can see the reason, one of the reasons why President Nelson and President Oaks were
the entire First President and Coral of To, are so strongly emphasizing the need to stay
covenant-connected.
And sometimes we use that almost as to be perfect, but covenant-connected is meaning
connected with God.
We need to stay connected with God because then he, through his spirit and through his
servants, can guide and help us so that we don't end up in a tragedy like this.
I think there could be a tendency for us to blame the woman sometimes in saying, well, she shouldn't have been wearing that.
She shouldn't have looked that way. She was kind of causing that to happen.
And we've got to stop that, right, Mike? I mean,
Absolutely.
Somehow, this is best she was fault.
You know, if a man has a bad thought, it was because the woman was dressed this way,
if she wouldn't have dressed that way, then this man wouldn't have had this thought.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
Correct. We have to take accountability for our own agency.
Yes, the Lord has asked us male and female for modesty,
male and female for modesty, but someone else's immodesty is never reason for our violation of principle and commandment. We have to take responsibility and especially
in a situation like this where the power dynamic is so different. Hank you said it so
well this is not kind of this is a complete and utter abuse of power.
Bashiba we have nothing in the text that would lead us to think that she was doing
anything other than literally keeping a commandment.
She was becoming ritually pure and doing what she was supposed to do.
And ultimately, David is accountable for his actions, and especially in a situation like
this.
So often, we want to blame someone else for our decisions.
And it's kind of like a difference, too, between where your thoughts go,
but then it became a behavior.
It became actions, as you're talking about.
So yeah, your thoughts might go there, and that's when you have to decide,
okay, and that, I think, is a more helpful question for our brothers,
sisters in the gospel is how have you learned to respond when you are faced with a temptation
like this?
I love the fact that we're all three kind of poking at a similar thought here, which is
there is a lot to be taken from this.
It has to be taught with nuance.
We have to be cautious not to completely proof
text and pull things out of context, but also even within context to see it accurately.
See that difference in power. See David's accountability. See that the problem isn't sexuality.
See that the problem isn't the physical body. The body is meant to be exalted. I love a statement from from Elder
Holland. He said, this highest of all physical gratifications, you were
designed and created to enjoy. It is as natural as it is appealing and then
listen to this, it is given of God to make us like God. In our attempt to teach the importance of avoiding immorality,
we must never teach it in a way that leads our brothers and sisters,
young or old, to begin to believe that sexuality is evil.
But see it for what it is.
It's a God-giving gift that is ultimately meant to help us become like God when approached right justly.
Oh, and that just makes me want to finish Alma. Bridal all your passions, comma, that ye may be filled with love.
Alma 3812, that's the con, it's a wonderful outcome. You bridal ear passions that you may be filled with love.
Not bridal ear passions, that's bad.
Oh, no, no, no.
Bridal ear passions that you may be filled with love.
Very positive.
If I could bring in a little bit of the social science research, the research is pretty
darn clear on this.
The reality is that immorality, whether that's pre-meral sex or sex to those that you're
not married to, does not correlate with good outcomes.
One of the famous studies that was done, it's got a bit of a provocative title, hooking up and hanging out.
Surveyed university students at five different universities around the United States, and they talked about the hookup culture where
basically sexuality is an entertainment factor, not a relational factor.
And the findings from that study were very stark.
These were not Latter-day Saints students.
These were just run-of-the-mill students in American universities, and they pointed to the
problematic nature of this.
And if you look into the research, it's very clear, immoral sexual behavior does not correlate.
I've got to be cautious with cause because we have a harder time with cause and effect,
but it correlates with bad things.
In fact, yesterday before coming on to this, I thought, I'm going to poke our own data.
So I pulled up our own data set.
We're our study that we're in the middle of, we got 2,000 families that were following
for 10 years.
2,000 parent and child groupings, so 4,000
plus people. Every two years we survey them. I pulled up our latest wave, wave three, we're
in the middle of gathering for the next one. And I pulled it up and I just did some basic
regressions to say, okay, what does first age of sexual experience correlate with? What does
number of sexual partners correlate with? We've got a lot of detail in this. I pulled it five or six
sexual related constructs. I regress them on suicidality, on depression, on unwell being.
The data is clear as glass. It does not correlate. Good. In fact, one of the, I can't remember
which one of the constructs were that was first age or frequency correlated with two times
the likelihood of suicidality, feelings of wanting to commit suicide. And so I'm not trying
to say anyone who's been immoral is going to instantly fall to pieces and be mentally ill.
What I'm saying is if you look at the aggregate
data, if you look at it just from a secular point of view, not even looking at it from the gospel,
which is more powerful, it's very clear. Immorality does not lead to good outcomes or it does not
correlate with good outcomes. Ready to go to the consequence? Yes, now here comes Nathan here comes Nathan. Okay, chapter 12. This is where of course the the consequence of
David's actions are going to be brought forward. The Lord sends Nathan to David and shares this very very sad
Parable and to me this is this is just so tragic because David's response to the parable is exactly what you'd expect it to be
It was exactly what you would expect it to be.
It was exactly what you would hope it to be.
He's outraged that someone would do this.
The parable is a poor man had a little U-lam treated it like it's daughter, which by the
way is a fun play on the even the name Betheba is daughter and took and dressed that poor
man's lamb and gave it to a rich man and instead of taking
from his own flock. And look at verse 5, David's anger was greatly kennel against the man.
He said to Nathan, as the Lord liveeth, there's an oath, the man that had done this thing shall
surely die. Oh my goodness, there's where you get your Hebrew atah-ish, thou art the man. Look at verse
6 though, even before that, this is because, and he'll pay for fold because he had no pity.
The sad tragedy here is David seems oblivious to the reality that he has just pronounced
a sentence upon himself, that his actions fit exactly into this.
It's fascinating to me, my cow Nathan approaches this.
He doesn't come in screaming and yelling.
He comes in, David, can I tell you a story?
I've always thought highly of Nathan here,
that he could come in and really just start to skewer David.
Instead, he just says, let me tell you a story.
And it's called an entrapment parable.
Because you pass the verdict,
and then you realize you just pass the verdict on yourself.
Yeah.
Jesus is going to use entrapment parables in his life.
It's going to have consequences for generations.
So of course, Nathan calls him out on it and two David's
Credit, I guess you'd say he acknowledges it and then listen to the consequence go to verse 10
Now therefore the swords shall never depart from thine house
Because thou hast despised me and has taken the wife of Euryah the Hittite to be thy wife.
So, Consecence number one, the sword will continually be part of your existence, your house,
your experience.
Number two, eleven, thus saith the Lord, behold, I will raise up evil against the out of
thine own house, as we know the story going
for it, that's exactly what's going to happen.
And I will take thy wives before thine eyes and give them unto thy neighbor.
And he shall lie with thy wives in the sight of this son.
We know, of course, that has at least partial fulfillment and abselons actions. We'll talk about that in a moment.
And then 12, for thou ditzed it secretly.
But I will do this before all Israel, before the sun.
I was reading in a Jewish commentary. By the way, when you're reading Old Testament,
yay, grab the best study Bibles you can.
But most of those study Bibles are going to be written from Christian perspectives.
There's power and reading a little bit from a Jewish perspective because they're seeing
things sometimes that we don't.
There's a great Jewish study Bible that said this, that the punishment corresponds to David
Sins in a typical measure for measure fashion.
Because he put your eye to the sword, the sword will never depart from
his house, alluding to the violent deaths of Amnon-Abson and Abindajah, Yah in the following chapters,
and because he took your eyes, his wife, so be taken by another. Absalom and others. But it's not
just those two things, it's not just that there's going to be some sword plan and things, but as I
was pondering this, I thought, what are some of the things that seemed to flow? And I want to be some sword plan and things. But as I was pondering this, I thought, what are some
of the things that seemed to flow? And I want to be careful with this. I actually made
a note to myself. We want to be careful not to claim that we totally understand causation
with something, when someone does something bad. And then something bad happens to that
person. You and I better be a little cautious before we say, see God's punishing that person. That's not a safe bet. That's not our role.
But if you look at David's life after this event,
whether it's causative or not, oh my goodness, do you see the tragic correlation?
Think about these things. His son from Bash, that comes from this union, is going to die.
Tamar, his daughter, is going to be raped by his son from a different mother.
Absalon, David's son, by the brother of Tamar, is going to take vengeance on Amnon and kill him.
Absalon is going to try to steal David's throne.
Absalon is going to sleep with ten of David's wife's concubines.
Joab, his general, is going to slay Absalon, his son, and 20,000 soldiers in the
midst of trying to retake the kingdom that Absalon was trying to tear from him.
Joab is ultimately going to be alienated from David. There's going to be
constant warfare. His other son Adonia is going to attempt another coup with Joab's help,
then we won't even go into Solomon's life and what happened to him. And then ultimately,
of course, the biggest consequence is clearly what happens to David in the Eternities.
You look at the consequences and it's just heartbreaking, just heartbreaking.
I believe that God can punish.
But just like what we saw earlier,
I believe that God often allows our own actions
to bring there the fruits forward.
And what you're seeing in David's life
from this point forward,
so often seems to be fruits
from these kind of poor choices.
The mistrust he inserts into his family at this point is going to, it's going to sow the
whirlwind.
Yes.
And ultimately, of course, he turnily, Joseph taught that he has fallen, quote, unquote,
this section 132 verse 39.
Therefore David, he
have fallen from his exaltation and received his portion. And he shall not inherit
them, meaning his family, his wives out of the world. Say at the Lord, such
tragic painful consequences to his actions. Hank, you brought up earlier, and I
think this is important to acknowledge
Jewish religious authorities and others have basically taken, they agree that David's
actions were wrong, but they believe that David has been forgiven. And that belief comes
from verse 13 of chapter 12 that we're studying here. Verse 13 says, David said unto Nathan, I have sinned against the Lord.
Nathan said unto David,
the Lord also hath put away,
which in Hebrew just means to cause to pass.
Thyssin, thou shalt not die.
That has been taken as evidence
that David did make a serious mistake, and that there are
going to be consequences, but David is still a redeemed forgiven man.
And you see David throughout the Psalms pleading for that forgiveness constantly, but it's
very important to note the JST to that verse.
It's in the footnote, God hath not put away thy sin. The punishment, if it passed, it didn't
pass away, it was paused. And tragically, some people also proof Texas to say that punishment
was passed on to the child. That's why the child died. But you and I have to understand
the nature of God well enough to know that that's an impossibility. God's not punishing our
children for our sins, though our children are impacted as a result of our sins.
To realize that consequences sometimes continue even after forgiveness comes.
In David's case, there's not going to be, I mean, there's going to be forgiveness.
He's not going to be damned to hell forever.
Joseph Smith taught explicitly that the time would come where he would get
root forgiveness.
The exact quote, David sought repentance at the hand of God, carefully with tears for the murder of
Euraya, but he could only get it through hell. He got a promise that his soul should not be left
in hell. So David will perceive forgiveness. But one of the things we all learn in life is when we make mistakes, sometimes those consequences
stay around even after we've completely repented and moved on.
And it's not that God doesn't like us, it's not that God doesn't see us as beautiful
end of value.
And it's not that we can't grow and become at all that God wants us to do, so as we're
not doing murder. But the reality is sometimes those
consequences stick around. Those consequences aren't evidence of God's lack of love.
God wants us to experience the joy and happiness that comes from living well. One thing that I think
is crucial to understand is that the severity of the consequences for David, both in this life as well as the
next life according to Joseph Smith, section 132, were not simply the result of his adultery.
His adultery was incredibly serious, but it was a result of the murder of Euryah.
We know that in this life adultery, sexual sin is, series is, it can be fully forgiven,
fully overcome. We know that
this is something that as serious as it is doesn't have to have eternal
consequences. Murder becomes much more problematic and David didn't simply
commit adultery as bad as that was. He premeditatedly had a Bathsheba's husband killed.
And that is why Joseph Smith says the consequences are eternal.
We don't want anybody listening thinking, oh no, I'm as bad as David.
I've done what David has done.
David is in a unique position, right, Mike, as the king, as the leader of the army.
This is his unique
situation. The Lord is judging here. And I wouldn't put my own sins into this chapter and think,
oh, I've done this. We've talked about David. Can we, can we feel a little better talking about
Solomon as we look at first Kings? We're supposed to look at first Kings three, eight, and eleven.
We look at first Kings. We're supposed to look at first Kings 3, 8 and 11.
Throw us a rope here.
It's going to get better for a bit, right?
First Kings 3 and 8 are really beautiful.
Well, there's a little foreshadowing in 3 that we got problems coming up, but 3 and 8 are gorgeous.
To be very frank, you see a very strong parallel here. In David, you got five, six, and seven were David's humble and seeking the Lord and the Lord's answering his prayers and he's doing all this good stuff.
And then you have Levin and Basheba and 12, the consequence. You have a similar trajectory with
Solomon. You've got three where he's anointed king and he has this tremendous gift of wisdom that is promised him we'll talk about that is we look at it
chapter 8 is the
dedication of the temple the house of the Lord that Solomon was allowed to build actually command
it ultimately to build and so you've got these happy chapters Solomon being humble and doing good and
Then you've got chapter 11 where it all goes south.
Quickly. So, shall we start with three? Let's get some happiness.
Yeah, I know. Show us the highlights here.
We have a little bit of a foreshadowing of problems to come in verse one.
Solomon made affinity with Pharaoh, King of Egypt. That's not a problem,
but it's the way he did it.
He took Pharaoh's daughter and brought her into the city of David until he had made an
end to building his own house. In other words, it was a dynastic marriage. He married the
daughter of Pharaoh. By the way, scholars contend that there's not a prayer that he actually
married a living daughter of the Pharaoh, but someone in the Pharaoh's house that he married to make an alliance with Egypt.
It's these marriages out of covenant, out of Israel that are going to end up being Solomon's,
Achilles heel. Some of the scholarly data looking at this says that first kings is likely not
written chronologically as much as it is theologically. You see chapters 1 through 10 that largely show us all the good things Solomon does.
With a little foreshadowing that things aren't always good in River City, so to speak, then
you hit 11 and you go forward and that's the bad things.
And so you can kind of have as much of a theological ordering as you do a
chronological ordering. So you have a little foreshadowing verse one, but nothing's made of it.
I would simply make this point because sometimes you look at things in chapters one through ten,
you say, well, there's just this is the good stuff. So everything must be good. No, the stuff in one
through ten is happening at the same time as much of the stuff
that's happening in 11 onward.
Do you see what I'm saying?
Yes, they separated them.
Exactly, the red actors did.
We got a little foreshadowing of problems with verse one,
but then we get this beautiful intro
into the spirituality of Solomon, verse three.
Solomon loved the Lord,
walking in the
statutes of David as father. Only he sacrificed and burnt incessant
eyeplaces. Now that sounds really, really bad, but this is pre-temple. And so one
way or the other, at this point, he's doing good things. Now that the redactors at
this point would be very sensitive, anything that looked like sacrifice outside
of the priestly order
that should happen.
And so that might be a little bit of a hint there.
But Solomon's loving God, walking in the statutes of God, verse four, the king went to
Gibyon to sacrifice there for that was the great high place.
Now you can see numbers are often problematic in the Old Testament.
A thousand burnt offerings did Solomon offer upon the altar.
Maybe, or maybe just a bunch of them.
A lot, right?
A lot.
He made a lot of sacrifices, which is meant to show two things.
One, he is very faithful and two, he is very well to do.
And then, look at verse 5, so beautiful, the in gibbian, the Lord appeared to Solomon in a dream
by night. God said, ask what you shall. Ask what I shall give thee. So, so Solomon, what do you want?
It's almost a 3-ney fight, a 12-ney fights and 3-ney fights story here. And I love the beautiful
answer of Solomon. Verse 6, thou is shown shown unto thy servant David my father, great mercy.
According as he walked before the untruth and in righteousness and uprightness of heart with thee,
Thou has kept from him this great kindness, building the temple,
that Thou has given him a son to sit on this throne, as it is this day.
Now, O Lord, my God, Thou made disurvent King instead of my David, my
father. And I am but a little child. I know not how to go out or come in. You see, the
beautifully this exactly what we were talking about earlier, right? The servant is in the
midst of thy people, which that was chosen, a great people that cannot be numbered nor counted from altitude. Maybe a little hyperbole again, but verse 9,
Give therefore thy servant an understanding heart to judge thy people that I may discern
between good and bad. For who is able to judge this? Thysoe great a people. So you got this this beautiful plea Lord give me an understanding heart and I don't speak Hebrew
But I know enough to be dangerous and though the words here for an understanding heart
actually mean a hearing heart a heart that hears a listening heart, which is beautiful.
Lev Shomeiah indicates a person that is open to divine direction from God.
Give me a heart that's willing to listen to you because you're the one who can judge
this people.
And by the way, quick note on the word judge, you and I understand this already.
The word because of your work in judges, the book,
Sefer Schoftin, which is the book of judges, judge in the Hebrew doesn't simply mean to sit and
adjudicate cases. It's to lead, to rule, to guide, to administer. So when Solomon's asking for
to be a great judge, he's not simply asking help me to make good decisions like he will at the end of this chapter.
Help me to be the kind of leader of Israel
that Israel needs.
And the only way I can do that is if I have a listening heart,
an understanding heart.
Mike, I'm seeing all three of our kings,
Saul, David, Solomon, all started out so well.
Yes.
They all started out with this, who am I?
I'm a nobody.
I can't do this.
Power doesn't corrupt everyone, but it sure does these three.
It sure has.
And again, I would put it back to the concept of they disconnected from God. If they were currently under the influence of the spirit of God, strongly,
regularly, daily, they wouldn't make these decisions. Oh, they'd make mistakes.
But go back to Elder Scott's promise. God won't let us go too far if we have a listening and humble heart. He'll pull us back.
Well, clearly in the case of David and as we're going to see in Solomon's case up ultimately, they don't pull back. Well, clearly in the case of David and as we're going to see in Solomon's case, up ultimately, they don't pull back. They make the air. And so this plea, this plea for
an understanding heart pleases God, which I think it does for us. With the Lord's, the
Lord's just saying, I want to be your God. I want you to be my child, not just in a literal distance sense, but I want us to walk together. And that's
the plea. And so God, when we say I want to listen, I want to learn, God is so pleased
with that. Look at his response. Verse 10, the speech pleased the Lord, the Solomon
asked this thing. And God said unto him, because that was asked this thing and has not asked for
thyself long life, neither has thou asked riches for thyself nor has thou asked
the life of thine enemies, but has asked for thyself understanding to discern
judgment. Behold, I have done according to thy word, low, I have given thee a wise and an understanding heart
so that there was none like thee before thee neither after thee shall any arise like any thee.
Realize this is being written by a redactor. 700 years removed and he knows Solomon's going to
come this great judge and ruler, but you and I know the laws of eternity well enough
to know that God doesn't pop open Solomon's head, pour in wisdom, so back up and say,
now go get him tiger. This is a process that's going to happen. God will help Solomon
become wise as Solomon does wise things. At Solomon seeks God's wisdom and God's insight and God's inspiration. God will give that inspiration.
So, so lest we think that somehow this comes by osmosis. Solomon was going to have to do his part
and clearly did because he became an incredibly wise and good leader for many years.
So say, I know, I know we're already starting to mourn, but wait, don't mourn yet.
Let's find some more good stuff we can.
So, back to verse 13, I have also given thee that thou, that which thou hast not asked,
you didn't ask for money, I'm going to give you riches and honor.
So there shall not be any among the kings like unto the all-Idae.
God's always more gracious to us than we could ever hope or deserve. But there's
also always a caveat. Look at verse 14, and if thou wilt walk in my ways, to keep my
statues and my commandments, as thy father David did walk, then I
will lengthen my days. And so there's always a covenantal if then. God made
this tremendous promise, but it's going to be up to to Solomon to live worthy
of that promise. I think that's important for our members to
understand kind of in a different context, but I think equally important. We sometimes see
in the church and in life, in mortality, we see good marriages that end up broken and
divorced and lives shattered. And especially when that has happened after confirmation has been received by a person
or by both people that this was a good thing that God was pleased with it. Sometimes it causes our
members to question, well, did I not understand God? Did I not get that inspiration? Or am I broken?
Am I the one who's done this? But we have to understand the nature of the God we worship.
That God honors agency.
And the only way God could guarantee that a marriage will last for eternity would be
to freeze our agency, to take it away, to make it so that he controlled us kind of joystick
us through life.
But he doesn't do that.
And so God can make the tremendous promise, yes, this is good.
If you and your sweetheart will continue to exercise your agency
righteously, exaltation is your lot in life.
But it's going to take both.
And by the way, not just one, it's not enough for just one person
in that relationship to live true to their covenants. It'll take both to live true for those promises to be fulfilled. And so
and I read verse 14 and I see that if then context of a covenantal relationship
that's the way all of the blessings of God come to us. They come to us based on our
honoring our agency, our using our agency in a way that ties us
and binds us to God.
All right, let's keep going here.
Mike, oh, it's just, I don't mourn yet.
I'm trying not to.
Yeah, no, don't mourn yet.
So we've got the happy story.
We're gonna build a temple, but even before that,
let's do just a smidge with the judgment.
You've got this really
tragic story of these two mothers who both had babies and one of them died and they both claimed
the living child and they bring it to Solomon. And we don't have to go into great detail here,
but you see the redactors using this story as evidence of Solomon's great wisdom in which he basically notices one of the mothers is continually
basically advocating for quote unquote justice and to have the baby taken away.
The other mother is constantly advocating for the life of that child and saying that
that child was theirs.
And so he of course says, bring me a sword.
We'll chop the child in half.
You get half you get half.
And of course the real mom saying, no, no, no, yes, I want my baby, but please don't
kill the baby. Give the baby to her. Give the baby to her, you know. And Solomon says,
okay, I think we now know who the real mother is. Brilliant, bright. There are tales like
this in other ancient texts, but it's just a beautiful example that the authors are giving us to help us see that the wisdom and Solomon.
The next several chapters, four, five, six, seven, are all the goodness of Solomon in the building of the temple.
It's gorgeous, it's lovely, and it brings us to eight, which is the dedication of the temple.
And just as David, once he established his kingdom in Jerusalem,
sought to bring the ark, the presence of God, the symbolic,
and literal presence of God into the midst of the people,
Solomon seeks to bring the ark, the symbol of God's presence,
into the temple.
And so that's exactly what they do. The priest took up the ark, verse three.
They brought it in. It's just the Levites and the priests. They bring it in.
They place it in the holy place or in the holy of Holies is what we would call it.
They describe the cherubum with this wing spread forward,
representing the presence of God. They pulled out the staves.
And so, by the way, this is one of the clues that this was written before the destruction
of the temple in 586, because they're describing what's happening, verse 8. And there they
are unto this day, so that the temple's still there when this is being written. But then
you have this symbolic presence of God brought in the temple and the Lord says,
I can do better than that. Go to verse 10.
And it came to pass when the priests were come out of the holy place
that the cloud filled the house of the Lord.
So that the priests could not stand a minister before the cloud for the glory of the Lord had filled the house
of the Lord had filled the house of the Lord. This was the purpose.
This is why God wanted to be there with His people. We, like the Israelites, need to
learn how desperately we need and need to learn to want the presence of God in our lives. Not necessarily bodily each day, but at least through his spirit.
It actually reminded me of a statement from President Nelson that I use regularly in my classes,
I think is so important. We need to experience God regularly.
That's how we can know and stay covenant connected, but President Nelson in April 2019 said,
understand that in the absence of experience with God,
one can doubt the existence of God.
So put yourself in a position
to begin having experiences with him, humble yourself,
pray to have eyes to see God's hand in your life
and in the world around you. Ask him to tell you if he is
really there, if he knows you. Ask him how he feels about you. And then listen. The prophet is pleading
with us to have regular experiences with God. He doesn't want us to just be a churchy people, a religious people.
We're not seeking to be bound to the church, we're seeking to be bound to God
through that covenantal relationship, and that happens as we daily seek to see
the fingerprints of God in our life.
Sounds like when I read your bio talking about building faith and youth,
it's the kind of thing we want them to notice is to have experiences with God
and to see that and notice it.
And write it down and keep a journal.
It's the best reason to keep a journal is document the hand of God in your life type of a thing.
Absolutely, absolutely.
This is in the scripture so rarely.
How did Moses recognize Satan's counterfeit?
Well, it's because he just got done
experiencing the real thing.
Who are you?
I'm a son of God, made in the image of his only begotten.
And who are you that I should worship you?
He, mind you, Satan is pretty good at his deceptions. He's pretty good at his
imitations. If we would stay safe from the imitations, the world, or Satan would give,
we have to have regular experiences with God. So like Joseph Smith, we can say, I knew it,
I knew that God knew it, and I could not deny it. Those young people that I work with who are able to weather the storms of doubt or faith
crisis or even sin, those are the ones who've had experiences their own experience with divinity.
Those are the ones who seem to make it all the way through.
They can say, well, no matter what that person says or that website says, I've experienced
God for myself. This is kind of a fun, I don't want to call it a throwback, but it's kind of a re-iteration of what
Israel earlier experiences they were coming out of Egypt.
The pillar of fire, the cloud and the pillar of fire by day and night was a visible symbol to Israel that God was in their midst. When the pillar moved,
Israel moved. When the pillar stopped, Israel stopped. God was doing a 40-year training program to help them learn
to follow him. You're going to have to depend on me. So the Lord gods, quote-unquote, that are of stone or wood.
He is the God, and he lives,
and he wants to be amongst his people.
And this is one of the times after the Exodus
that you literally see the presence of God
come down amongst the people.
This is a long dedicatory prayer here.
It's massive, but it's it's got
a neat order to it actually. There are seven pleas in it, and we don't necessarily have
to take a lot of time for this, but it's kind of a fun inverse of what God promised Solomon.
At least that's the way it hit me. I'm not grabbing this from
anyone else, but God, Solomon said, give me an understanding heart. I want to have
a listening heart. This dedicatory prayer is Solomon giving the inverse of this.
Lord, would you have a listening heart for us? We need you. So look with me. See
what I see what I mean by this. Verse 29,
Harken unto the prayer, which thy servants shall make toward this place. Verse 30,
Harken thou to the supplication of thy servant, the end of verse 30, and hear thou in heaven.
Verse 32, then hear thou in heaven. Verse 34, then hear thou in heaven, Verse 36, then hear
thou in heaven, Verse 39, then hear thou in heaven, Verse 45, then hear thou in heaven,
Verse 49, then hear thou their prayers.
This is Solomon's plea, Father. We've built this house to the
we have done what you have commanded us to do. Please be our God. Please hear our prayers. Forgive our sins as we repent, forgive our sins. Guide us. Help us to live worthy of the life that
thou would have us live. It's a beautiful prayer where Solomon's saying, we need you.
Please hear us.
Yeah, it's a beautiful prayer.
All the way from 22 to 61, just this begging God for His help, let your heart therefore be
perfect with the Lord our God to walk in His statutes and to keep His commandments as at
this day.
And the King and all his year Israel offered sacrifice before the Lord.
And by the way, a lot of sacrifice. Go to versus that from that if we could real quickly. Verse 60,
that all the people of the earth may know that the Lord is God. that there is none else. Let your heart, Israel,
therefore be perfect with the Lord our God
to walk in His statues and to keep His commandments
as at this day.
So, so this is, let's bind ourself to God at this point.
And then they make sacrifices.
And by the way, they make a lot of sacrifices.
This is another of those cases where we're thinking
There might be some hyperbole in numbers
Solomon offered a sacrifice a peace offering which he offered under the Lord
2 and 20,000 oxen and
120,000 sheep
So the king and all of the children is will dedicated the house of the Lord. Some academic did a study of this and said, if they did this nonstop every minute, it
would take two weeks.
I talked about that much.
Sacrifices.
So this is definitely their doctors who I've said, everyone came together.
We totally laid it on the altar and we have become bound dedicated to God.
Reminds me of when Mormon says, they all cried with one voice.
You're like, well, I'm not so sure.
They all yelled at the exact same time.
Exactly.
Be cautious on the literal nature of that.
So you have happiness here.
You have Solomon, a wise king.
He, by the way, he expands the area that is Israel.
It becomes broader, longer, wider.
He does good.
He builds the house of God, dedicates it.
God comes and accepts it. This is beautiful stuff. All leading to the tragedy that is chapter 11.
Mike, I'm sorry. We brought you on for the episode that just has...
I did notice that, hey. They don't like me very much.
Both of these stories and so sadly, isn't it?
Is it just sad? They're tales to help us learn, though. That's obviously why the authors put them in there.
Chapter 11, shall we wrap this up? Chapter 11, that just has an ominous town, sounds like Solomon loved many strange women.
Together with the daughters of Pharaoh, women of the Mawbites, Ammonites, Edamites, Zidah
Nights, and Hittites, most of which they were commanded explicitly not to marry with
in the Mosaic law.
Verse 2 of the nations concerning which the Lord set
under the tuner, is, or you shall not go in unto them, neither shall they come in unto
you. Why? For surely they will turn away your heart after their gods. Solomon
clave unto these in love, and he had 700 wives,
princes, and 300 concubines. His wives turned away his heart.
Again, I'm not going to lose sleep over what did he really have a thousand wives.
He had a lot of wives. Many of them were not within the covenant.
And as was promised, that is exactly what happened
like at verse 4.
For it came to pass when Solomon was old, that as wives turned away his heart after other
gods, and his heart was not perfect with the Lord God.
Now this is interesting as was the heart of David, which the JST changes and it became as the heart
of David, his father.
For Solomon went after Ash-Trat, the goddess of the Zedonians, and after Mille-Com, the
abominations of the Ammonites, basically Baal and Ash-Trat.
And Solomon did evil in the side of the Lord, and went not fully after the Lord as did David his father.
By the way, I really liked one of your episodes where it was pointed out.
Israel likely never totally turned from Jehovah.
They had a pike.
They didn't just walk away from God and start worshipping God.
They just mixed it up.
Supplemented it in.
And there's such power for that for our day.
An act of laterity, St. Louis, the testimony is not about
to just walk away from God in the gospel in Christ,
but are we beginning to mix and mingle other aspects
of the world's wisdom and philosophy in with God?
And it doesn't mean that we don't love God.
It doesn't mean that we don't think God is the greatest,
but we don't fully go after God.
And that ultimately can end up doing the same thing
that happened with Solomon.
And he goes pretty far afield, then did Solomon build
in high place for Chimouth, and abomination of Moab
in the hill that is before Jerusalem and for Malak,
the abomination of the children of Amen.
And likewise did he for all his
strange wives, which burnt incense and sacrifices unto their gods. Again, this isn't just, I'm being a
little, being a little soft, and this one wife has this one God, she really feels firm, and I'm letting
her do this. This is Solomon, kind of like David, going fully far afield. And as a result, breaking the Lord's heart and breaking the heart of Israel.
The Lord was angry with Solomon, verse 9, because his heart was turned from the Lord God of Israel,
which had appeared unto him twice.
He'd had visitations with God and still turned away. And the redactors are pulling punches like a verse 10, and had commanded him concerning
this thing.
God had told him explicitly, don't do this, that he should not go after the other gods,
but he kept not that which the Lord commanded.
The power of agency is all throughout these stories. The power of agency to do great
amazing things, build a temple, kill Goliath, right? And then the power of agency to destroy
your own life. It's heartbreaking. It's heartbreaking. And so it's far enough for it to remove from
our day. We're probably not likely to go worship other idols, quote, unquote, in the same
way. the president came
to obviously pointed out we have our own version of that. And, and we're probably not
going to marry 700 people. And yet, to me, there's a powerful reminder, it goes back to
David, David and Solomon, the two areas where they fell, the two areas where they didn't stay faithful were in their sexual intimate relationships and in their families.
Well, it's no surprise that those are the two areas that Satan most actively seeks to get us to walk a stray,
to not realize that our sexual nature is part of our divine nature meant to bring us to God. That
family isn't just a nice 1950s construct to hear in America, but that it's a that it is meant to be
our exaltation. That as President Nelson has taught again and again, salvation is an individual
issue. Exaltation is a family issue. who you marry and your faithful to that marriage covenant
is not just a nicety. It's not just this is a good thing if you're in the mood. It is
necessary for our exaltation and that knowledge is being challenged in our day. Yes, most people
still believe that marriage is a good thing, though not all. The number of marriages definitely
droppings, statistically speaking, in the church,
for the last several years there are more singles than married in the church. And so singleness is
not a curse. Singleness does not mean we're broken. Singleness does mean we are in process,
which by the way, married, you're still in process. But to understand our theology, we cannot become as our eternal parents without an eternal
companion by our side.
And hence the commandment, not just the suggestion that we marry in the Lord's house to someone of the opposite gender who we can't spend eternity with is not a suggestion,
but is in very essence, section 131, section 132, it's the Lord's commandment that we approach sexual relations and approach marriage as the Lord has commanded. Not because God doesn't love others,
not because being single is wrong,
but because this is the purpose,
the process of life and Solomon and David both,
but he almost wish they would have aired with,
the word of wisdom or something,
but not where they did,
because ultimately this is going to have
the strongest impact on their
eternal destiny. I go back to first Samuel A when Samuel said the people won a king and the
Lord said this is a bad idea. This is a bad idea and we're we're over three here.
Saul David Solomon each one started great and fell great. Huge falls.
There's going to be temporal consequences. So Solomon is going to have all but one.
Sometimes we say two tribes taken from him. And that's going to happen in his lifetime.
But in his lifetime, the authors say, based on the promise God made to David that he would never fully take the kingdom from him. He kept one to kingdoms, Judah and likely Benjamin.
It's not the temporal that ultimately matters the most.
It's the eternal.
And we know that both David and Solomon are not in the best of shape when it comes to that,
based on their use of agency, having to do with their own sexual nature and
their familial
decisions. Mike, I want to finish on an uplifting note here as a marriage in a family researcher.
How have you seen people do this right? How do you get your relationships right?
Let's put David and Solomon over on the side for a second and tell us how to do this in our own lives to make sure that we're saying in a healthy connected to God relationship.
You're kind, Hank. Thank you for pulling us back from the abyss.
God's sadness with this.
The reality is, and this is what we try to do desperately in our classes at BYU. I don't know if everyone that's listening realizes this,
but now BYU has four religion classes
that are required of all students.
One based off the Dr. N. Covenant,
one based off the New Testament, the Bible,
one based off the Book of Mormon,
and then one based on the eternal family.
And by the way, the eternal family is the only one
that's primarily based in modern prophetic teachings
rather than just scriptural.
And I'll be honest, that made some of our friends
our fellow faculty members nervous in the beginning.
But the Board of Directors is the first
presidency in the corner of 12.
They're the Board of Education for the Church.
And they weren't nervous on this.
They wanted that.
And so every student who graduates from BYU
has to take the eternal family class.
And so in that class, we are anxiously seeking to help our students understand that our nature
is God's nature.
And God's nature is relational, that we are intended to be in relation to God, and that our eternal destiny is based on living true to our
eternal marriage covenants. And so one of the things we try to do with our students is to help
them to pull back from the culture of the world when it comes to marriage and family and sexuality
and gender issues. There's good things in the world, but there's also problematic things.
There's good things in the world, but there's also problematic things. To try to see marriage and family and sexuality and gender from God's perspective.
As we help our students to see what God has revealed through his prophets
and catch a vision of why God values family.
Why God commands eternal marriage in the temple? Why God institutes these
chances for us to become like Him? Or should I say them, our Heavenly parents,
that Heavenly Father, our Heavenly parents, want us to become as they are, and that that's only possible as we follow
the eternal principles that God Himself knows and God Himself reveals through His prophets.
As we do that, John, I like what you said, it won't be perfect. I have a glorious happy family
I have a glorious happy family that is very much not perfect. I tried to be a really really good daddy and a really good grandpa. By the way, the Grand
Paratin gig is really good. But I know I fall short. I lost Dr.
and Count 6434. The Lord requires the heart and the willing mind. He didn't say I required perfection
yesterday. The Lord requires the heart and the willing mind. What he needs us to do, what
we're trying to do with our students is to help them catch the eternal vision of what
sexuality, gender, marriage, family is according to God.
And then do our very best to pattern our lives after that.
Realizing that none of us will do it perfectly and also realizing that in this life,
not all will experience these things in its fullness.
And that God has promised, and this I think is so crucial, God has promised that nobody will be
denied every blessing that God has promised His children based on anything that is outside of their
control, that you and I can know that if we stay covenant connected to God, we will lose nothing.
God, we will lose nothing.
We will become as our father and mother in heaven.
We will receive every blessing God has promised all his children.
That has been reiterated by almost every profit of this dispensation. That is without question.
So when we see tragedies, I come from a family, my, my family are not LDS,
but my parents were the most amazing
alcoholic parents you'd ever want.
My family is the poster child, my birth family,
the poster child of dysfunctionality,
and they're so good, they're so loving.
We've got so many challenges in our family,
and God loves us, and God has promised nothing that is outside of your
choice. You'll have to choose. You still have to use your agency. If you choose
to stay covenant connected to me, I promise you all things. Both joy in this life,
this is important. You don't have to wait till the next life, joy in this life, and a fullness of joy in the next life.
That's the Lord's promise to us. Beautiful. How has your scholarship and research influenced
your faith? I think our listeners would be interested in your story of becoming a scholar, not just a scripture scholar, but a marriage and family scholar,
and being an active, ladder day saint.
I think that there's some misnomer out there
that if you somehow get more education,
you'll lose your faith, but that hasn't happened to you.
No, no.
In fact, I would honestly say my education has strengthened my faith tremendously.
My PhD is in marriage and family, marriage family human development. I study what makes
marriages and family successful, and I study explicitly dealing with adolescents,
suicidality, LGBTQ issues, are the areas where I publish and where I research. But you know,
Q issues are the areas where I publish and where I research. But you know, I've got to update this in the last probably two years, but it was about three, four years ago. I decided I wanted to look at
every single study that had ever been published that is in the major databases to look at what is the influence of religion, one, and the Church of Jesus Christ, to on well-being.
I have reviewed every thousands of articles. Yeah, this took a long time. But I want to see,
what does the best social science say about God, the gospel, and family, and church. I would testify with all the surety of my heart.
Corlates with well-being. Yes, religion can turn toxic. There can be problems, but
the vast majority correlates with well-being that the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, that membership in the church and living those
principles correlates with flourishing, with
well-being.
And by the way, I know, I know the world is struggles to believe this.
But if you look at the research, that is true for every group, straight, gay, pick your
congregation. When you look at representative samples, and studies that look at the impact or often
not causation, but the correlations between research on well-being and religion and research
on well-being in the Church of Jesus Christ and Trinity Saints, the church is far from perfect.
We have so many things we have to do better, but the research is far from perfect. We have so many things we have to do better.
But the research is clear as glass.
If you want to flourish in this life, faith in God, faith in Christ, membership in the
church is a powerful, powerful way to do that.
So my scholarship, even on the most sensitive topics, I do a lot of work
on LGBTQ suicidality. I have a great love and desire to help. The best research that
looks at anything close to a representative sample shows that the gospel is protective
for all. Now, does that deny that there are people who struggle?
No. People aren't statistics. Individuals definitely struggle and we need to do better to help all.
But I would simply and answer to your question, Hank, I would say that my study of the best social
science has strengthened my testimony, has strengthened my testimony in God,
my Savior Jesus Christ,
and in the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Thank you, Mike.
My friend Mike, so grateful that we were able to share you with our listeners.
Thank you for being here.
Happy to be here. Thank you.
We love, we love to have a new,
I'm happy we were able to finish on a positive note.
We want to thank Dr. Mike Goodman for being here today.
We want to thank our executive producers,
Steve and Shannon Sorenson and our sponsors,
David and Verla Sorenson, to our production crew.
Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, David Perry, Kyle Nelson,
Will Stoten and Scott Houston.
We love you, thank you, and we hope all of you
will join us on our next episode of Follow Him.