Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - 3 Nephi 8-11 Part 2 • Dr. Eric D. Huntsman • September 23 - 29 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: September 18, 2024Dr. Huntsman continues to explore the Savior’s visit to the Americas and examines the power of His one-by-one ministry to save His children.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcast...BM39ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM39FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM39DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM39PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM39ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/3OiH1nTkR1gALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part II - Dr. Eric Huntsman03:05 Depression, darkness, and God’s light05:52 “He’s my only son”08:25 Type of Jesus’s return11:04 A voice in the darkness13:25 The Father testifies of His Son16:17 Open your ears?17:56 Jesus descends21:22 When suffering, choose the Father24:42 Feeling Jesus’s wounds30:00 Why does Jesus have scars?33:12 One-by-one Savior37:07 Helped by better singers38:15 Hosanna44:48 Baptism50:27 Jesus Christ lives 54:21 End of Part II – Dr. Eric HuntsmanThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Eric Huntsman, third Nephi 8 through 11.
If we prematurely try to give gospel context and perspective, that almost hurts. I think of the
contrasting examples of Martha and Mary in John chapter 11. Their beloved brother has died.
of Martha and Mary in John chapter 11, their beloved brother has died. Jesus is buried for four days so that he's dead and buried. Martha reacts one way but
Mary reacts another. Martha comes and says, Lord, if that's been here my
brother would not have died. Then she expresses faith and says, say the word
and you know I know that God listens to you and he says your brother will live
again. She goes, well I know, I was busy doing the dishes, Luke 10. I was listening because I heard about the resurrection.
He'll rise in the resurrection and Jesus teaches another principle, he that believeth me shall
never die, etc. When Mary comes to him, she says the exact same thing. She falls at Jesus'
feet and says, Lord, if thou had been here, my brother would not have died. And she's so inconsolable. Jesus does not start making doctrinal or Christological pronouncements.
He weeps with her.
There's more than just a place or a time to sit for a while.
I mean, that's why our Jewish friends sit, shave up for seven days.
You don't do anything, but sit with the person who's mourning for seven days.
You need to let people grieve.
And the best thing you could do is just put your arms around and say, you need to let people grieve. And the best thing you could do is just put your arms around
and say you're sorry. Let the spirit guide you when it's time to start saying more. Because I
think sometimes, oh, I know this divorce is terrible. And I was divorced, but that was 10
years ago, and now I'm happy. I mean, sometimes we run the risk of minimizing someone's pain and
suffering. The darkness is real. The darkness. and these people had to sit there for three days in their darkness. In fact, even though
the voice of Jesus starts coming to them, he says a few things and then it's dark
for a while. He says a few things and then they howl for a while and then he
says a few more things and then they have some joy. But then he says a few
more things. There is a matter of pacing, which we're too impatient to do.
To sit with the sorrow, to sit with the grief, share a few things when inspired, then back off
and realize that the darkness lasts three days or a year or a lifetime.
There is not, I think, a panacea, a band-aid that fits everyone.
That's what we have to be careful with.
And that's why I think we have the scriptures, because you can talk about this is what the
righteous went through, and then the Lord came in chapter 11.
But you don't rush to say, okay, that's exactly what's happening to you.
You let people pick up from the object lessons as John describes them in scriptures. Let them apply them to you. You let people pick up from the object lessons as John describes them in scriptures.
Let them apply them to themselves. And can we sit with you as we talk about these wonderful
things on here and let you know that the days of darkness are temporary and as you said,
but they are absolutely real and we would never try to explain them away with a phrase or two.
There's an article in the digital only version of the Enzyme, September of 2020.
This man talks about going through depression. I won't read the whole article, but listen to this language in light of what
Eric's taught us here about 358, 99, and 10. He says, the darkness seemed to come out of nowhere. I started feeling
anxious and depressed about all the unresolved issues in my life. I lost confidence in myself.
I began questioning my faith. The list goes on. It seems like even small inconveniences were blown
out of proportion. My good life was suddenly catastrophic. I was fighting an internal battle with demons inside my head. Darkness seemed to
engulf me. And as these feelings got worse, I started asking myself things like, what if I
wasn't here anymore? Would people even care? Demons in my mind would answer. No one would even notice
if you were gone. It paralyzed me with fear. But while I was dealing with all this, I acted normal. I talked
to my family like everything was fine. I locked away my feelings from others. I felt like I
couldn't share how catastrophic my mind was." And he goes through all of the help he received from
doctors and counselors and all the tools that God has provided. And then he writes this,
and all the tools that God has provided. And then he writes this,
For so long I didn't think it was possible
to hear the voice of God's love in the midst of depression.
Eric, this is chapter eight, nine, and 10.
But a little glimmer of light from the Savior
helped me hold on to hope.
I opened up about my struggles.
I learned from friends.
And then he says, I wouldn't have the faith and testimony that I do in Jesus Christ today
if it wasn't for that period of darkness I went through.
I am beyond grateful for the light that he brings into my life
that helps me defeat the demons and fears in my mind.
He says we can always hold on to the Lord's hope and light.
Anybody who's out there struggling or suffering,
we have the guest of all guests who has more empathy than almost any other person I've ever met.
I hope that you can hold on and like Eric said, we don't know when the darkness is going to end.
We just do know it does.
Reminds me also of Joseph Smith history. And it seemed to me, and then these three words,
for a time that I was doomed. I always liked those three words. It's only for a time. You
probably felt that same way, Eric, with Sam's diagnosis. You think, this is going to destroy
me. But looking back, you can see, no think this is going to destroy me but looking back
you can see no this is for a time as Jesus is going to say for a season I
like that phrase too and we rejoice with people when they get to the light we
can't shoot prematurely I remember soon after Sam's diagnosis I was working my
Thursday temple shift I was so. I had some time in
between sessions and I was walking the third floor and just sad. I remember
saying, Lord, all these righteous desires I had for my son that he would go on a
full-time proselytizing mission and they'd marry in the temple and they'd have
a family, you know, none of these things are gonna happen now. It turns out that
Thursday was the day before Good Friday.
Okay, so we're in Passion Week, right?
The Spirit came to me and said,
well, there are lots of young men in this church
who don't do those things,
and it's because of choices they make.
If Sam doesn't do those things,
it's because he didn't have the opportunity.
And I said, but he's my only son.
And the Spirit smacked me upside the head and said,
what about my only son?
The day before Good Friday, I was a little outbashed
and later I was reflecting on that
and I wrote a little essay and I said,
so often we say we wanna be more like Jesus.
And then the Lord allows us to have the trials
and the heartaches and the disappointments
that will make us more like Jesus.
And what's our first impulse?
Lord, take these away! I don't want them!
Sometimes we have to just go through.
You can't go around, you can't go over, you can't go under.
You just have to go through.
Our role as fellow saints, as friends, as sisters and brothers,
is to be there with people as
they're going through, to hug them, to weep with them. We're supposed to mourn
with those who mourn. We're not supposed to talk them out of feeling bad. We're
not supposed to give them platitudes. We're not supposed to say, oh isn't it
great they're having a wonderful reunion on this side of the veil. We're supposed
to be sad that they're not with us, the person's loss. We have a lot to learn,
and we'll learn it together and we'll get there. People were weeping and howling in these chapters,
and the Lord worked them little by little, and eventually the light and the day and the morning
will come, and it's going to be wonderful as we talk about 35-11. I loved how you pointed that out. The mourning and the wailing of the people
turned into joy, praise, and thanksgiving.
Eric, we've hinted at it a little bit so far,
but I think we're ready.
All of our Come Follow Me studies,
all of our Follow Him episodes
have led us to this moment, 3 Nephi chapter 11.
Walk us through it. What I would like to say before we start is we're
talking about a historical event that we believe and that we accept that the resurrected Lord
Jesus Christ appeared to a group of the righteous as John put it last time, but also the people
of Nephi as described in the text. This is also a type of how he appears in our lives and it's also an
anticipation of how he will appear to the entire world after the great and
wonderful day at the Second Coming. Let's keep multiple levels of interpretation
and application as we go to this. Now I think it's not insignificant that the
Lord, and I'm sorry I keep using this casual term, touches down I think it's not insignificant that the Lord, and I'm sorry
I keep using this casual term, touches down, but it's almost like we have a
lander, right? I mean we've got something coming down from heaven and touching
down at a temple in a place called Bountiful. And what does Bountiful conjure
up for us? We think about Lehi's family wandering through the desert for so long
and they finally get to a place of plenty and wonder and where they can get ready to build their ship and go forward.
It's a land that's prosperous.
It's a refuge.
The old capital, Zarahamn, has been burned up.
This is the backup capital, if you will, but it's also at the temple.
And for those of us who are Latter-day Saints, particularly temple-going Latter-day Saints,
the temple for us is that place where heaven and earth meet. Whether
you're going up on a mountain like Mount Sinai or you're going up to the
Mount in the Lord's house, you're reaching up to heaven and heaven reaches down to
you. So it's not insignificant the setting here. As we're looking to apply
3rd Nephi 11 to our encounter with the risen living Lord, I would say for me at least, it is the
temple.
The other thing is we mentioned towards the end of part one that we don't know exactly
what the timing is.
Both Nephi, son of Nephi and Mormon have peppered this with some dating, but all we had in verse
18 of chapter 10 was soon after the ascension into heaven he manifested himself unto them.
There's been some time here when we talked a little bit about struggles and having to go through darkness and we had those three days. We don't know how many days after that people had to prepare
and think about it, but it's interesting to me that when the people gather at the temple in the
Lambenthal, verse 2 of chapter 11 says, They were conversing about this Jesus of whom the sign had been given concerning his death.
You know, revelation comes when we are looking for it.
And we talk about thinking and pondering and hear they're talking about it.
And it was in this moment of really wanting to know more that this next revelation happens. This is the famous passage
where he's introduced by the Father first through a voice that they don't recognize
in verses three and four. It came to pass while they were thus conversing, one with another.
They heard a voice as if it were out of heaven. They're looking around, who talked to us? But
they understood not the voice. It's not a harsh voice, it's not a loud voice, it's notwithstanding it was a small voice,
it pierced them to the center. There's not a part of their frame that did not
quake, and it's pierced them to their very souls, causing their hearts to burn.
This is replete with a lot of scriptural imagery. Of course, we're thinking of
Elijah after some of his darkest moments. He has fled from Ahab and Jezebel and he's
gone down to Horeb or Mount Sinai and he's been so depressed at one point he
says, Lord take away my life. There's an earthquake and there's a fire and the
Lord's not in the earthquake, he's not in the fire, but then there's that still
small voice as the King James renders it. Interesting, it caused their hearts to
burn and I naturally gravitate to Luke 24 32
to disciples on the road to Emmaus. They don't understand what it's saying, they don't know who
it is, but their feeling and that's how the spirit affects us. Sometimes it happens with feelings
first. Came to pass again they heard the voice, they still didn't understand it. And again the
third time they heard the voice and they did open their
ears to it and their eyes were towards the sound thereof and they looked towards the heaven. And
the third time, verse six, they understood the voice which they heard and said unto them,
Behold my beloved son whom I well pleased and whom I have glorified my name herein.
I mean, this is so significant because this
is the voice of the Father. The Son is the mediator, he's the representative of the Father,
so when he's been speaking in chapters 8, 9, and 10, that was the voice of the Son. Here is God the
Father, master of all universes, speaking to these people.
Of course, my beloved son, in whom I'm well pleased, we immediately think of the baptism.
We think of the transfiguration. We think of the sacred grove.
And as was the case at both the transfiguration and the sacred grove, the first vision,
Hear ye him.
Those particular episodes aren't in the Gospel of
John, but I need to let my Gospel of John have a role here. I have glorified my name. That is
such quintessentially Johannine language. I'm thinking of John chapter 12. This is during
Passion Week. Jesus is in the temple. Some Greeks want to come and see him. It's what I call the
Johannine Passion prediction. In the synoptics three times Jesus tells his
disciples, the Son of Man is going to go to Jerusalem and he's going to be betrayed and
suffer at the hands of the priests and the leaders of the people and he's going to die.
Only once in John, he tells the story about how he needs to lay his life down and unless an ear
of corn falls into the ground and dies, it won't live. And then the voice of God speaks in the temple and says I have glorified
it and glorified it again. And that's what we have here. We think from a Latter-day Saint
perspective, Moses 1.39, this is my work and my glory to bring to pass the eternal life
and immortality of men, which is exactly what Jesus has been doing, right? The last hours of his life and through the resurrection, he's bringing
about the glory of the Father. And all of that's wrapped up into this powerful verse, all these
times when the Father has directly interacted with us in this fallen world, praising his son of the
baptism at the transfiguration. He will do this to Prophet Joseph in the Sacred Grove. He did glorify and testify to his
son in the temple according to John 12. And he says, hear ye him. Now he's talking
to the people of Nephi gathered and powerful. But remember, this book was written for us. The Father is testifying to us.
Jesus is my Son.
Hear ye Him.
And everything we're gonna read
in these rich chapters 11 through 27,
you need to picture yourselves as if you
were at the land bountiful,
that He is speaking to us.
This of course is the entree act, because then as we move into verses 8 through 12,
Jesus actually descends. But verses 3 through 7 with the voice of the Father speaking is just so pivotal, so pivotal.
I'm so glad you ran through those verses. Those are the footnotes right there. If you look at footnote 7a, Baptism of Jesus, Man of Transfiguration, First Vision,
where that very consistent language. I heard our friend Brad Wilcox say once, and this is an application,
here is a perfect father talking about his son in public. Notice how he did it.
I love him. I'm so pleased with him. I thought about that as in public. Notice how he did it. I love him. I'm so pleased with
him. I thought about that as a father. How do I talk about members of my family
in public? Could I use that as a model? That's an application, but I like that
idea. How do I talk about my members of my family, my spouse, my children in
public? Eric, you pointed out a phrase, open their ears.
That's an interesting, I've never seen someone
close their ears.
What do you think that means?
Of course, it's symbolic at some level.
Those who have ears and will not hear,
we hear their eyes and will not see.
We through our obstinance or rebellion
or just our ignorance sometimes refuse to hear.
So it's not like they're necessarily making a choice
to close
their ears, but because of where they are in life or choices they've made up to
this point, they haven't been able to hear the voice of God. But you need to be
willing to do that. We have to be willing to use our ears to hear the Word of the
Lord. Yeah, I really like that, that there's a choice there
of do you want to hear?
Cause it's there.
It reminds me of Amulek.
I knew, but I would not know.
I heard, but I would not hear.
They did open their ear.
They did something different.
This is an interesting, I mean,
the father could have just spoken once,
all they're not listening.
He speaks again, they're not listening. But he,
apparently the repetition is significant. I mean three is a symbolic number on its own. There's
something happening, not that we have a favorite recent general conference talk, but Elder Kieran's
talk of being relentless now, he's pursuing us. I mean, this is that. God wants us home and the way to get us home is through his son
and he is so eager to introduce us to his son because his son is going to do it. He's going to
bring us home. Verse 8, it came to pass as they understood, they cast their eyes up towards heaven
and behold they saw a man, capital M here, descending out of heaven and he was clothed in a white robe and think of
all of the visions I mean think of father Lehi we've been anticipating this
for a long time a man in a white robe coming down and he came down and stood
in the midst of them and the whole multitude turned upon him and did not dare
open their mouths they thought it was an. And that used to always perplex me.
What do you mean? This is Jesus, obviously. But they don't know what Jesus is going to look like,
and they didn't have a three-year mortal ministry to get to know the man of Nazareth who's going to
be resurrected and then wear a white robe. They've only known the pre-mortal Jesus as Jehovah,
who's been speaking through their prophets,
despite the prophecies of taking upon flesh and doing all those things that
we've read, it still just must have been just so mind-boggling to them that a God
was gonna appear looking like a man. We mentioned our friend Daniel Becerro and
he said that this unexpectedness of Jesus,
that Mormon is saying, don't try to pigeonhole Jesus. He's so much more than you can expect.
They're just really shocked. He has to say to them, Behold, verse 10, I'm Jesus Christ,
whom the prophets testified shall come into the world. And I think of course, Jacob 7 verse 11,
no prophets have spoken. We may not have their records or have their testimonies,
but it says no prophets have spoken except they have testified of Christ. And then here,
I am the light and the life of the world. Doesn't get much more Johannine than that. The life of the world in John 8, the life of the world,
I have drunk out of that bitter cup. Now, we actually tend to think about that as the
Gethsemane experience in the synoptic gospels, Mark, Matthew, and Luke. Interestingly,
that bitter cup is mentioned in John 18 during the arrest, even though John doesn't tell us about
the Gethsemane experience. He drinks that bitter cup and taking upon myself
the sins of the world in the which I have suffered the will of the Father in all things from the beginning.
So we've got another one of these verses with so many
familiar concepts that Jesus spoke in other contexts wrapped into one powerful verse.
But what I wanted to share here was a quote I found from President Holland when he was president of BYU. He gave a talk back in
1989, though John and I were still at BYU, called The Will of the Father in All
Things. It was based upon this verse, I cannot think it either accident or mere
whimsy that the Good Shepherd in his newly exalted state,
appearing to a most significant segment of his flock, chooses first to speak of his obedience,
his deference, his loyalty and loving submission to his Father.
This is when it's done. I suffered in the garden. I carried that bird in the cross, I died, I rose again, I ascended into heaven, I'm it.
Your next guest will talk about how some of the Sermon
on the Mounts kind of recast.
So you have in Matthew 5.48,
be perfect as my Father in heaven is perfect.
But now I can say, be perfect even as I
or your Father in heaven, 35, 12.48.
But look what Elder Holland says next in an initial and profound moment
of spellbinding wonder when surely he had the attention of every man woman and
child as far as the eye could see his submission to his father is the first
and most important thing he wishes us to know about himself. Even the triumphant Savior, the resurrected Lord,
the glorified man coming down in a white robe, who's about to say, I'm the God of
Israel, the God of the whole earth. What he wants to say is, I suffered the will
of the Father in all things from the beginning. That's the only lesson
he could teach. It's going to be that one. In your own times of
suffering, choose the foth.
Now, of course, the multitude, they fall to the earth and they start to put things together.
Oh, that's right. King Benjamin did say that. And Abedai did say that. And Eve, I did say that.
Oh, I see how this is working.
All these things were prophesied and we were told that the Christ would show himself unto
them after his ascension into heaven.
It came to pass the Lord spake to them saying, arise and come forth unto me that ye may thrust
your hands into my side and also that you may feel the prints of the nails in my hands
and in my feet, that ye may know that I am the God of Israel and the God of the whole earth, and have been slain for the
sins of the whole world."
And I want to unpack almost every phrase there.
But before I do that, I want to go back to what Daniel has said about this unexpected
Jesus.
Just as Elder Holland, President Holland emphasizes that Jesus at this moment of triumph,
emphasizes submission to the Father. Daniel's pointed out in his study of
third and fourth Nephi, it's this wounded God that is what no one's expecting,
right? They didn't even expect him to look like a man, they thought it was an
angel. And now he says, I'm the God of Israel and the whole earth, and he says, oh by
the way, look at these scars I have.
This goes against Alma 11 and Alma 40 and everything we were told about the resurrection and things being put into their perfect frame. Let me read this quote from our friend real quickly.
In the gospels where we have the luxury of three years of getting to know the man of Nazareth,
Jesus made flesh, we have miracles, we have walking on water,
we have caring for people, we have all these different things. And Daniel says, rather than
appealing primarily to the Savior's miracles and power as proof as divinity, as the gospel authors
typically do, Mormon sees evidence of Christ's Godhood in his wounded body. Not what you expect from
after the Father, the greatest being in the universe. Mormon would have known
this, Nephi would have known this, but we as readers of the
scriptures as we've been fortunate we see them, of course, think of poor Brother
Thomas in chapter 20 of John, who isn't around
when 10 of the disciples see the risen Lord in the upper room, and he shows up late, don't know
where he was shopping, I don't know what he was doing. When he shows up and he's like, we've seen
the Lord, he's like, I don't believe it, until I can feel the prints of the nails in his hands and
put my hand in his side, I'm not going to believe it." And then of course, Jesus shows up.
After eight days, this is John 20, 26, again, his disciples were within and Thomas with them. Then came Jesus, the doors being shut, stood in the midst and said to them,
Peace be unto you. Then said he to Thomas, reach hither thy finger and behold my hands
and reach hither thy hand and thrust it into my side and be
not faithless but believing and Thomas answered and said unto them my Lord and
my God Jesus said unto him Thomas because thou has seen me thou has
believed blessed are they that have not seen and yet believed and that's why he
earns this unfortunate sobriquet you know doubting Thomas remember Thomas
isn't any old disciple he is one one of the surviving 12. He's
supposed to be a special witness. And in terms of being able to feel the wound marks and his side,
it's interesting to me that Acts 1, I think it's verse 3, talks about Jesus showing himself after
his passengers, disciples, by infallible proofs. In Greek that's techmerios which means sure
token. In the ancient world you'd break a coin in half and you give one half to
your friend and you have the other half and they fit together. Thomas is a
special witness. He's supposed to not only say I believe Jesus rose from the
dead, he's supposed to say I know he rose from the dead and I know he
is the savior of the world.
And that's what these wounds represent, is his sacrificial death to save the world.
This wounded God is showing up and the experience that is important for special witnesses in
John 20 and Acts 1 ends up being the privilege of 2500 people. If we're using 3rd Nephi 11,
not only as a powerful story of a historical event and also as an anticipation of a future encounter
with the Lord after the Second Coming, but as a template of the kind of spiritual experience we
should be having in our own lives,
there's something significant going on.
Are we having that encounter with the wounded God?
But he says, I am the God of Israel
and the God of the whole earth.
We already mentioned this in part one,
title page of the Book of Mormon,
bringing us to a knowledge that Jesus is the Christ,
the eternal God.
And this of course goes so along with Johanna in Christology.
And it says the God of Israel, it also says the God of the whole world.
I think of John chapter four, after the story of the woman of Samaria who comes to believe
in Jesus and then runs and shares the news with her entire village.
And what do they do?
They come and they say, oh, now that we've heard him,
we don't believe because of your word,
but we know of ourselves, he is the savior of the world.
A lot of people don't know this.
The word savior, applying to Jesus,
only appears twice in Luke and once in John to Jesus.
We don't always realize that because that's our common way
of respectfully referring to Jesus Christ
without always using his name.
He's the savior, he's the savior.
But when it says he's the savior of the world, it's taking the promise to the covenant people
and applying it to everyone. And I have been slain from for the sins of the world.
This is another one of those verses that's overwhelming. The people come one by one,
verse 15, and thrust their hands into his side and felt the prints of the nails in his hands and his feet and
They went one by one and did see with their eyes and to feel with their hands. They had heard the voice
During those three days of darkness
They have seen him the voice of God and they've heard Jesus announced himself earlier in the chapter
but now they are also feeling with their hands and did know of a surety. See,
that's what Thomas wanted. Thomas wanted not faith, he wanted that surety. And they bear record that
it was he of whom it was written by the prophets that should come. This wounded God. I'm thinking
about verse 14 and this invitation the Savior actually extends,
Come forth unto me that ye may thrust your hands into my side,
and also that ye may feel the prints of the nails in my hands and in my feet.
Hank, you might know that I donated a kidney to my brother in 1990s.
I have sizable scar on my side. I don't show it to people. There is a level of intimacy.
The Lord is inviting them. That is just amazing. To touch someone's hands is a level of intimacy
to shake someone's hand. But imagine having him invite you to touch not just his side,
but a wound in his side. That's amazing. That he would extend that kind of an
invitation and now that is something you would never ever be able to forget.
Absolutely. I've often wondered in the order of these things because normally
it's come feel the prince in my hands and then the wound in my side. But I
wonder if these people of Nephi have no concept of crucifixion,
but a wound to the side they would know. That's a fatal wound.
What he is inviting them to do is such a close personal experience.
That's a little too close for me, right?
Yeah. I've had students, hey, wait a minute. I thought when you're resurrected, everything's
made new again. Why does Jesus still have wounds? How do you answer that usually, Hink?
Agency is eternal. He chooses.
At the second coming, they will say, what are those wounds in your hands? And he will say,
those with which I was wounded in the house of my friends. Section 45 repeats the same story, but says, what are those wounds
in your hands and in your feet?
Isaiah said the Lord is what engraven you in the palms of his hands.
Yeah, I have graven thee upon the palms of my hands.
I always think of the sign language when I, what's that?
First Nephi 21 15 talked about these wounds. He said,
this is from a talk called Teaching, Preaching and Healing, January 2003, End Sign. Elder
Holland wrote, Jesus has chosen even in a resurrected otherwise perfected body to retain
for the benefit of his disciples the wounds in his hands and in his feet and in his side.
Signs, if you will, that painful things happen even to the pure and the perfect.
Signs, if you will, that pain in this world is not evidence that God doesn't love you.
Signs, if you will, that problems pass and happiness can be ours.
Remind others that it is the wounded Christ who is the
captain of our souls. He who yet bears the scars of our forgiveness, the lesions
of his love and humility, the torn flesh of obedience and sacrifice. These wounds
are the principal way we are to recognize him when he comes. He may
invite us forward as he invited others to see and to feel those marks.
You don't have to be scared of the wounds that you get when you're fighting
on the right side. Yeah and if you have wounds it's not signs that you're not
loved. It's signs that all of us go through things like this but I love that.
Problems pass and happiness can be ours. Now, this is an interesting thing.
We get the number 2500 later.
Todd Parker, some of you may remember,
Todd taught forever in ancient scripture at BYU
and in his old packet, he calculated that if each person,
let's see if I get this right,
had only 10 seconds with Jesus,
it would have taken seven hours.
And if each person had 20 seconds, it would have taken seven hours. And if each person had 20 seconds, it would have taken 14 hours.
And something is telling me that Jesus didn't say, next, next, next, or Nephi wasn't there
saying you only get 10 seconds with Jesus.
Something tells me each person had as much time as they wanted to fall at his feet and
feel love, which means there must be some bending of the space-time continuum here. I mean, something's going on. But once again, let's not get hung up on
the historical particularities of this. What it's saying is each person gets this opportunity
to take what is still for most of us, faith, and turn it into a sure knowledge of this wounded God
who took upon himself the sins of the world.
Seems that we have a one by one savior, doesn't it? We could go to the temple and baptize someone
for everyone, but he wants this done one at a time, one name at a time. Each person is important.
Each marriage, each ordinance, could we just do them all at once?
Nope, it's not about efficiency.
It's about that personal savior one by one.
When I first started serving in the temple, we used to almost always pride ourselves on
how quickly we could do the ordinances and how well we knew them. They kept saying to us and it's finally caught on, take
your time. The words are power, the words are precious, it's important for the
patron but it's also the only time the person for whom you're performing the
ordinances is having that experience. That goes along with what you were saying
John, one by one and meaningful. It needs to be a meaningful experience.
What is the experience they have after they've all done this however much time it took?
Verse 17, Hosanna,
Blessed be the name of the most high God and they did fall at the feet of Jesus and did worship him.
Hosanna, blessed be the name of him who
cometh the name of the Lord is what we cry at what? Triumphal entry, yeah.
Triumphal entry. Now of course everything that's done in the Book of Mormon, you're
talking about object lessons, John, it's got done on a bigger scale, right? So we had
palm branches and people shouting in Jerusalem, but here we've got people who
have felt the wounded God shouting that.
And of course, what does Hosanna mean? It means save us now, Hosanna.
You could also back up to the glory in Excelsis, the Host of Heavens in Luke chapter 2.
I have another quote for you from April 2020. Elder Gong gave a talk, Hosanna and Hallelujah, the Living Jesus Christ, the Heart of Restoration at
Easter. He said, Hosanna is our plea for God to
save. Hallelujah expresses our praise to the
Lord for the hope of salvation and exaltation.
In Hosanna and Hallelujah, we recognize the Living Jesus Christ.
You know that I spend a lot of time in Jerusalem, so I love Holy Week, In traditional Christianity, between Ash Wednesday until Easter morning, you don't say
Hallelujah. I don't know if you're aware of that. As part of Lent or being solemn,
Hallelujah is a praise of joy. But it originally meant praise be to Yah, to Jews.
And it's not just about the praise of Yah. It's about the praise of Yah.
And it's not just about the praise of Yah. It's about the aware of that. As part of Lent or being solemn, hallelujah is a praise of joy. But it
originally meant praise be to Yah, to Jehovah. They do say Hosanna because they're praying for
Jesus to save them. And then they wait till Easter morning because they are now saying,
praise be to Jehovah. But it's recognizing that this Jesus is resurrected
is now revealed as God.
Here as I said, we're having kind of our Nephite post resurrection triumphal entry.
I will follow with Elder Gong there and say, hallelujah is not portrayed here.
Although I just had this come to my mind, it is in chapter 20 after they have the sacrament
for the second time, they shout out and cry with one voice and gave glory to Jesus. So they don't
say hallelujah there, but it's implicit that we are praising this man and asking him to, this
wounded God asking him to save us, but we're also praising him. Hallelujah.
What a moment. Have you ever been in one of those moments, Eric, singing with the choir and it's just,
What a moment. Have you ever been one of those moments, Eric singing with the choir and it's just, wow, everybody's feeling it.
I had one and this isn't going to sound immediately like it's pertinent, but I hope it will be. When President Hinckley was in his final months, we had a moment when we sing in general conference, we thank the Oh God for a prophet. It was one of these wonderful Mack Wilberg arrangements. But we were aware that he had colon cancer
and it wasn't his last conference, but we thought it might be and we were all so emotional.
We got a little forklamped to use the Yiddish term. I was crying and I wasn't really singing.
We have boxed lunches in between the Sunday morning and Sunday afternoon session. During
lunch I kept asking all my friends, were you able to sing? That was so emotional. The spirit was so strong because we
were so grateful for President Hinckley and the spirit was so strong. And everyone I talked to
said, I wasn't singing. You know, it's one of those moments that we kind of felt like we were
being helped out by better singers than ourselves. The reason I bring that up, I mentioned the
than ourselves. The reason I bring that up, I mentioned the host of heaven with the angel of the Lord in Shepherd's Field that first Christmas Eve, singing glory to God in the highest.
I think of the crowds on that first triumphal entry,
Hosanna, blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord. I think of these people saying,
Hosanna, blessed be the name of the most high God.
I think of what we will shout, sing, and feel at the second coming. That's what I always tell my students when we prepare for that Palm Sunday procession in Jerusalem. They say, this is not
commemorative. Once again, John, past, present, future. It's not looking back to Jesus's triumphal
entry the last week of his life. It's accepting him as our King in our lives now and shouting, save us
Lord now, but it's certainly proleptic or anticipatory looking forward to that
real party. You think it's a joyful thing seeing two or three thousand Christians
come down the Mount of Olives waving palm branches and singing for a couple
hours. You just wait till all the mess our world is in right now is over
and Jesus is appearing and the heavens are being unveiled like a scroll and everyone sees the face
of the Lord at once and we know, wow, finally, finally it's over. That's what gets me about this
chapter, Eric, is I don't think they thought it was today. I don't think anybody thought it was
going to be today.
They were just some incredible things that happened and they were all gathered and
talking and here he is of that idea of the second coming.
And once again, not just the past, which is 3511 and not just the future, which is the second coming,
but using this as some kind of type of, on a different scale,
we should seek for in our lives now. We recognize him as our king. We recognize him as our wounded
God. We recognize him as our Lord. We recognize him as our friend. Are we shouting, Hosanna? Are
we shouting, Hallelujah? Or singing it? Or whispering it? Is this what we're looking for after those days of darkness that we talked about in part one?
When there's been such hard times and the Lord unveils himself in our life now.
Yeah.
I want you to explain again Hosanna, because I've seen, oh grant salvation or show us the way to be saved or
save us now. Hoshyat Na literally means save now,
so it's a command or a plea, so save now. Now we read into that save us now or give us salvation.
I mean there are different ways of rendering that. By the way, we're talking in a Christian context
of Palm Sunday and here in a Nephite context, when you hear most joyfully proclaimed in a Jewish context
is during the autumn festival Sukkot, which is called Tabernacles in our Bibles. You go down to
the Western Wall, for instance, and they're waving their branches, it's palm and willow, and they're
waving them, and they do a lot of the Hosanna Psalms. You hear them, Hoseanna, Hoseanna. The first time I saw that, I thought, oh, that's was the template for the disciples at the Triumphal Entry.
No.
Interesting. How much did they know about the promise of his coming and how much they must have marveled that I got to be here today.
I wonder how long that marveling went on with them.
And Elder Holland in the quotation you used talked about that.
Now is the time and you are there.
He said something that dates a little bit.
You're less inclined to check the film in your camera than you are the faith in your
heart.
Now, anciently we used to film in our cameras, anciently, but that idea of he's there right now, as you alluded to before,
come to Christ. Don't worry about when he will come, because if you just come to Christ,
you're already there. When he comes, he's right there now with them. And he wants you to come
and see him one by one.
Hard to wrap your head around that.
We talk about one by one
and how each person had that experience
to feel the prince in his hands.
18 through 21, I've written my margin, Nephi 3 called.
So here you are in this big group.
And then all of a sudden Jesus picks you out and says, Hank, come forward!
And Nephi comes and he bows before the Lord and kisses his feet.
The Lord commands him to rise and he says, I'm going to give you power that you may baptize
and you'll have other opportunities to talk about this.
He's going to talk a little bit in this chapter about having no disputations and commissioning people to
baptize. This may seem a little off-subject, but it's connected. So, yesterday on my
temple shift, my first assignment was to record in the
Baptistry. Love so many aspects of the temple, but there's just the special
spirit of the Baptistry. Especially these days when you see these
youth just coming in in numbers. We're there and I was watching a young man, 16,
and we didn't have enough baptizers and this kid ended up baptizing 11 people
till we could get another one. And I remember thinking when some procedures
had changed and they started to let the young people perform proxy baptisms.
I don't know, maybe I was a little old fashioned.
I'm like, oh, I used to be only down people who did it.
And I had been reading in advance of our discussion today about Nephi being called forward and
commissioned and given power to baptize when Jesus would go into heaven. I thought this young guy and he was nervous
and he was given the same commission as I heard him say having been commissioned of Jesus Christ.
Same thing that Nephi's son and Nephi's son of Helaman received and it was in a temple. So this
is having the temple at Bountiful and I don't know for some reason I was unusually moved by that. I wonder if when the Savior comes again if we're all getting ready to hear some
grand new thing we've never heard before and he decides he's going to speak on faith, baptism,
repentance, and the Holy Ghost. Doctrine of Christ. Oh, in other words, the gospel. Yeah, the gospel.
Doctrine of Christ. Oh, in other words, the gospel.
Yeah, the gospel.
Right?
No.
It's always interested me that Nephi was among the multitude.
Just so humble.
If I was Nephi, you both know me and how prideful I am.
I would probably say, Jesus, Jesus, I'm Nephi.
Where do you want me?
Do you want me right next to you?
Where do you want me?
Do you want me in front?
Kind of pushing forward to make sure he sees you.
I can't find my name tag.
It's me, it's your main man.
And said, there's Nephi just among the multitude.
Reminds me of that parable in Matthew where he says,
you know, when you're called to a wedding, don't get a front seat, sit in the back.
It's better to be called up.
It's better to be called forward. Than to be sat down, yeah, than to be humbled. Well, it's interesting that you anticipate with
this next section, verses 22 through 29 or about, that Jesus comes and we're expecting this great
big thing, millennial thing, and he talks about baptism. And that's exactly what he does.
The Lord called others and said unto them, I'm giving you power to baptize. And by the way,
let's not argue about how to do this. And he says there's been some disputations, but
whosoever's repented of his sins through your words and desires to be baptized,
you're gonna go in the water, you're gonna baptize him. Having authority, giving
me of Jesus Christ, I baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son of the Holy
Ghost. And our current wording, having been commissioned of Jesus Christ, it's
the 1835 Book of Commandments,
they changed it from having authority to having been commissioned.
And that's just semantics.
The concept is the same.
Name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, then you're going to immerse him in
water and you're going to come out of the water.
Now remember, this is different.
We've been baptizing unto repentance since at least Alma and presumably sooner. People
were being baptized into repentance by John the Baptist. We even see this in the book
of Acts that Paul runs to people in Ephesus who had been baptized according to John but
not in the name of Jesus Christ. And by the way, baptizing in the name of the Father,
Son, the Holy Ghost and baptizing in the name of Jesus Christ are not in tension with each other because Jesus is
one of those three. But we have something new going on here. It's not just being
baptized into repentance. And of course later, in your next episode, I think we're
talking about how he establishes the church here. It's being baptized in this
new church. So presumably a lot of these people certainly Nephi son of Nephi
Son of Helaman had been baptized under repentance
Under the system that they had been following in the Book of Mormon up until this time
But the name of the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost
Of course is something we read at the end of Matthew 28 that this is the Great Commission
Up into this point the encounter with deity
that these people had had, I mean obviously it's the power of the Spirit, but it was the
pre-mortal Jehovah. But we've actually heard God the Father for the first time earlier in this chapter
and now we have the full Godhead completely revealed to them. We now know the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Now the Son being this wounded God, the risen Lord, and we're now being baptized with the Holy Ghost.
But he says in verse 27, the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost are one, and I am the Father and the Father me.
And I'd already mentioned these passages in John 10 and John 17 that have alluded to this before.
But there shall be no more disputations. It is about
baptizing them in the Father, Son, and the Holy Spirit, immersing in water when you have authority.
And that's how baptisms are going to be done from now on. And it's not, oh, we're going to talk about
a simple principle of the gospel when you have this Christophany, you know, this appearance of
Christ. Baptism is how you come to the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.
Like a birth, you become His.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're in my family now.
Eric, you've walked us through these most significant chapters in the Book of Mormon,
especially 3rd Nephi 11, this majestic moment in all history. It is such a crucial belief of ours that the Lord
came to the people of Nephi, that he will come again, and that he can, like you said,
come to each of us in our own lives. If I've been at home listening with my scriptures open,
learning all that you've taught me as a scriptural expert. What do you hope I would do differently? What do you hope I would change? Well, you know, we
looked at that one passage in part one about repentance and conversion and
repentance daily not being just about sin but about turning our hearts to the Lord.
What we see in all of these chapters, and especially
chapter 11, is how that focus really needs to be about Jesus. John, I heard you in a previous
episode talking about being converted unto the Lord. It wasn't about being converted to church,
or converted to X, converted to Y. It's natural as a human being to think in terms of group identity and institutions and of course the church is divine
It really is about Jesus Christ
Now this is his church
It provides us the covenants and the structure and the direction but it is here to bring us to Christ
In terms of what your question started out with, Hank, for people particularly as they're suffering or they're in their darkness of chapters 8, 9, and 10.
The day and the light is only going to come with Jesus.
And it's when we're expecting other people or even institutions or communities to bring the day, when the day is the light of Jesus Christ.
I am Jesus Christ, I'm who the prophets have testified, I'm the light of the world, I'm
the God of Israel and the whole earth.
And our response should be, bless it be Hosanna, bless be the name of the most high God and
fall at His feet.
Some of this can be experienced symbolically at this point in our experience.
When I was growing up as a younger person in the church, we didn't talk about grace.
We hardly even read the Book of Mormon, which I know sounds crazy to people today.
When President Benson got us reading the Book of Mormon, we had to grapple with grace.
We had to grapple with Jesus Christ as the main character of that book.
We had to talk about salvation in ways we
didn't before. Throughout my adult life, I have seen us talking more and more about Jesus Christ,
not the inclusion of the Father, the Spirit. This is why I think President Nelson has just stressed
the name of the church so much. This is the church of Jesus Christ and if I could just go on a hobby horse
for a moment or soapbox. You know when President Nelson asked us to use the
correct name of the church, I don't think he expected us to say ten times as often
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I think he wants to say we're members of
the Church of Jesus Christ. And not just use the correct name of the church but
actually start living like we
were followers of Jesus Christ. In another context and other subjects I've
often said the most two sacred things we say in a prayer is Heavenly Father, Jesus
Christ, the name of Jesus Christ. Because that tagline in the name of Jesus Christ
is so frequent and used so often in ordinances and at the end of talks and testimonies,
it becomes almost disrespectful the way we say it.
We're not gaining anything if we use the correct name of the church or if we talk about Jesus Christ
and it almost doesn't bring a lump to our throat to say Jesus Christ.
If he's as real to us as he was to these people who felt the wounds in his hands and his feet
and his side, who fell at his feet.
I've got this genetic problem with my tear ducts, so you don't have to tear up or pull
a huntsman.
Some people, our friend brother, Lloyd Newell gets soft and gentle on the channels as Richard G Scott and other people have different styles.
This isn't about style. This is about feeling and experience.
I believe the more and more people who come to know Jesus Christ, they will get through their days of darkness and they
will be there for other people and they will perform the ordinances like
baptism that we see here. And they aren't going to be performing ordinances because
it's something you got to do to get into a certain kingdom. It's like, wow, let's
take upon ourselves the name of Jesus Christ. Let's go to the temple, make
covenants to be closer to the Lord
Let's get the blessings of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Let's be sealed
Let's go to the temple to work in the laundry just because we want to be in the house of the Lord
This is what our church
Praxis, you know, we often talk about
Orthodoxy correct belief something called orthopraxy
Not correct practice in terms
of rules and things you got to do just right. Remember I said at the beginning of
this episode, I don't consider myself a theologian. I try to be a practitioner. I
just want to experience what the Lord has for me in this life. So that's what I
would share with people. It's wonderful. What is it, Ether chapter 12?
Seek this Jesus.
Eric, we want to thank you for taking your time
to be with us today.
Decades of being a religious educator,
having someone like you walk us through these chapters
is such a blessing to have someone who's spent so much time
studying all of this
and to say, let me walk you through it.
We're really grateful that you'd take the time to do that.
Well, thanks for giving me the mother load.
Yeah.
That's part of the Book of Mormon.
Amazing.
Yeah, and we had one of the best educators here.
You did it justice, which we appreciate.
We love how much you love the Lord. It's evident every time I talk to you, it shows on your face and in your words.
With that, we want to thank Dr. Eric Huntsman for joining us on Follow Him Today. We want to thank
our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, and every
episode we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen. He would have loved
this episode, Eric. We hope you'll join us next week as we walk through the Savior's first visit
with the people of Nephi on Follow Him. Before you skip to the next episode, I have some important
information. This episode's transcript and show notes are available on our website, followhim.co.
On our website, you'll also find our two free books, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old
Testament and Finding Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
Both books are full of short and powerful quotes and insights from all our episodes
from the Old and New Testaments.
The digital copies of these books are absolutely free.
You can watch the podcast on YouTube.
Also, our Facebook and Instagram accounts have videos and extras
you won't find anywhere else.
If you'd like to know how you can help us,
if you could subscribe to, rate, review, and comment on the podcast,
that will make us easier to find.
Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nilsen, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra,
and Annabel Sorensen.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings
of Jesus Christ.
Turn to Him.
Follow Him.