Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Acts 6-9 Part 1 • Dr. Casey Griffiths • July 10 - July 16
Episode Date: July 5, 2023Why was Saul so unlikely to convert to Christianity? Dr. Casey Griffiths examines the conversion of Saul, the power of the Holy Ghost, and the martyrdom of Stephen.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Casey Griffiths01...:37 Introduction of Dr. Casey Griffiths03:09 Calling of the seven men05:33 Stephen and Philip influence Paul’s conversion07:08 Stephen’s recap of the Hebrew Bible10:55 Stephen is charged with blasphemy13:21 Uncircumcised of heart17:54 They rejected Jesus and resist the Holy Ghost19:49 Stephen full of the Holy Ghost and a scriptorian21:05 Stephen uses inflammatory language23:05 Saul is holding coats at the martyrdom of Stephen24:21 Right hand of God, figurative or literal? 25:38 Was Stephen a successful missionary?31:02 Parallel to Alma in Ammonihah 32:51 Philip is introduced and Saul needs a call 35:31 Jews are spread out over the Mediterranean36:54 Philip is performing miracles38:31 Simon is converted by the Holy Ghost40:26 Bad acts driven by good motives44:08 The eunuch from Ethiopia49:09 Story of Godelia and Guillermo55:17 The gospel going beyond Judea and Samaria59:56 End of Part 1–Dr. Casey GriffithsPlease rate and review the podcast.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: 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/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm here with the incredible John, by the way. Hello, John.
I hate good to be here again. John, we just reviewed Acts 1 through 5. Our little church is now being directed by the Savior, although he is in a different location.
The apostles have gained power and strength. Peter is performing miracles. He's giving these fantastic speeches. He is bold.
What do you think this little church is going to do now? Yeah, this has been really fun because we got
done with the gospels, which felt like the get ready, get set, and now the book of Acts is go.
And the first Peter just went fishing and Jesus came and said, what are we doing here?
We're reading this going, wow, what happened? These guys are on fire. They're going out, they're doing things and they're gaining converts by the thousands.
So how do we manage all of this? They're doing that great commission, go into all the world,
they're doing that. There's got to be challenges that go along with that, right?
Yeah, absolutely. I think the Lord and I've read ahead a little bit, but I think the Lord
is preparing a new generation of converts to really fuel this fire. John, in order to help us
understand this next section of Acts, Acts 6, 7, 8, 9, we have an incredible scholar and friend
joining us, Casey Griffiths. Casey, what do you think is going to happen in this next section?
This little section tells us how that little church of Jerusalem expanded through the whole world
with some help from some very unexpected people. In fact, maybe the last person you would think
that would help them with. Awesome. John, why don't you introduce Casey to our audience?
Yeah, we're so delighted to have Casey back. Again, we've seen his happy countenance
on here before. We've had Casey before. He was born and raised in Delta, Utah. Everyone there
has a happy countenance. Serve this mission in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, came back to BYU.
Got a degree in history, later a master's in a religious education and a PhD in education,
the leadership and foundations at BYU and his studies have
focused on the development of religious education programs among Latter-day Saints. His research
focuses on the history of religious education among Latter-day Saints, history of the church
in the Pacific, and diverse movements associated with the restoration. He is married to Elizabeth
Ottley Griffiths. They live in Saratoga Springs with their four adorable children.
And I like to watch Casey on Scripture Central videos and they're awesome.
So we're really glad to have him here. Thanks for joining us, Casey.
Thank you very much for having me. It's always a joy to be with you two, brethren.
We love the Casey on follow him. I didn't encourage anybody to go back to those
doctrine covenants lessons we did with Casey. They are
Fantastic. They were just they were really life changing to me and just being around Casey you get full of light when Casey's around Casey acts six seven eight and nine title of the lesson is what will thou have me do.
So I guess I'm going to ask that of view. What will you have us to do in moving forward in this lesson?
Well, the main story here is we're introducing
a huge character in the New Testament.
You know, the guy who takes over as the main character,
the book of Acts, and then writes a significant portion.
That's Paul.
But Paul, who here is known as Saul, isn't something we want
to rush into because there's a lot of really interesting figures leading up to Saul, who
later becomes Paul's conversion, that we want to take time to talk about too. So there's
Steven, there's Philip, James and Peter and John are still in the mix here. And the
story of Saul's conversion really has to start all the way back here
with these helpers that come into the church named Stephen and Philip, who we find a little bit
about in these early chapters. Should we go right into chapter six? Do you want to give us some
background? We're happy to do whatever you want to do. I'd be more than happy to give you some
background. So just like you mentioned, the church is expanding and it's getting bigger and they run into the basic problem, all expanding
movements have, we need more help. So the apostles meet together and in Acts chapter 6, starting
verse 3, they decide to choose seven men of honest support full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom,
who made me a point over this business. They need seven
people specifically to look after the poor. And they name each of these seven people, but we really
only get stories about two of them. That's first Stephen, who's discussed in Acts 6 and 7, and then
Philip, who's going to come in in Acts chapter 8, and get a little bit about him too. They
described them here as Stephen Stephen a manful of faith
in the Holy Ghost.
He is appointed to look after the poor,
but it's really his missionary work
that takes center stage and his goodness, his example,
that starts us down the road to where Saul
becomes a convert to the church.
Okay.
I don't want to get away from the Bible here,
but as you are describing
the situation, I couldn't help but think of the early church, the early restored church.
They're growing at a huge rate. They need some help to take care of the poor. Doesn't that feel
like the doctrine of covenants? You're speaking my language now because I'm normally a church historian,
but yes, the parallels here are very, very strong between the early church where they're growing, they're growing fast, they need help, they have all these unlikely
people come into the scene that can help them do what they need to do.
Now, that's beautiful.
So let's jump into chapter 6.
I walk us through Stephen and Philip and how they influence Paul's conversion.
Okay.
Well, Stephen gets right in there and Stephen appears to be kind of a firebrand.
He starts talking to people and speaking out and it gets accused of blasphemy down in
verse 11.
Stephen just kind of out of the gate is immediately set up as a dangerous person in verses 14
and 15.
So the same people that targeted Jesus just a year two earlier, said, we've heard this man say, this is verse 14,
Jesus of Nazareth's child destroyed this place
and changed the customs the Moses delivered to us.
And all Senate Council looks at that fastly on him
and saw his face as it had been the face of an angel.
So Stephen straight out of the gate gets into trouble,
but the accusation is he's gonna wreck the system
of worship we have. He's
an acolyte of this Jesus of Nazareth who wants to change the law of Moses in the traditional
way we worship. And so Stephen kind of turns that accusation against them and gives a lengthy
discourse to point the entire Old Testament towards Jesus Christ and basically try to convince them
that the whole point of everything they're doing is to adhere to the teachings of the coming
Messiah, who's the person who gave them the teachings of Moses in the first place?
So chapter 7 is going to be his response to them saying, you're a follower of Jesus of Nazareth
and you want to get rid of the law of Moses and he's saying, let me show you what the law of Moses
really was doing.
Stephen's a good scriptural scholar,
and chapter seven is actually a great recap
of the Old Testament, it's kind of the Old Testament,
five minutes, basically, where he walks through
everything going back to all the way to Abraham,
is where he starts the story,
and hits the main major points of why they're here,
why they worship and where everything came from.
He walks through Abraham, Isaac, in verse 8,
he mentions Jacob and the 12 patriarchs talks about,
Joseph talks about the Egypts and now he gets to where Moses is.
But all of this is leading to the main point
that Stephen's trying to make, which
is basically, I'm not trying to change your system of worship.
I'm trying to show you what the point of your system of worship really is to begin with.
So you continue to walk through the verses and he talks about Moses.
He even gives us some interesting biographical information about Moses and how Moses got
in trouble with the Egyptians
and some of the things that happened there after Moses killed the Egyptian.
This is a good commentary on the Old Testament.
Yeah, this isn't in the Old Testament, some of this stuff.
He must have had other sources.
Yeah, I'm assuming Steven is drawing from a more pure source than we have today, or he's
giving inspired commentary by the Holy Ghost. Either way, this is good stuff where
Moses kind of is cast out as well and then meets God, verse 32. The voice of the Lord's bacon,
I'm saying, I am the God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, the God of Jacob,
and Moses tremble and thirst not the whole. And he just keeps going through explaining,
and there's not the whole. And he just keeps going through explaining, hey, this is your heritage. Let me explain to you what your background is. Then he starts talking about David and Solomon.
David and Solomon build the temple, but people misuse the temple. People use the temple to worship
these false gods. And David and Solomon are complicit in this in some sense because of their own
personal wickedness. But kind of his whole discourse leads to verses 48 and 49 in chapter
7. I noticed that he quotes Moses, verse 37, this is what Moses said, a prophet, shall the
Lord your God raise up unto you of your brethren. Stephen pointing to Christ right there, he's
saying Moses knew about Christ and told them
he was coming.
Yeah, he's taking their scriptures
and doing the same thing the Savior did to say,
hey, all of this history was leading to something.
Moses said there would be a prophet that would come.
David and Solomon were commanded to build a house,
unto God, that house in one form or another
is near the place where Stephen is
prophesying, but then he tries to take this house that they built all their faith around and
cause it to transcend what they're using it for. That's in verses 48 and 49. The most high,
well, not in temples, made with hands. Let's say at the prophet, heaven is my throne, earth is my foot still,
what house will you build me, say the Lord,
or what place of rest?
I thought my hand made all these things.
So he's trying to say to them,
yeah, the temple's important,
but the temple's not the point.
The point of all this is to understand a no God.
If the temple is helping you get closer to God, then that's good.
But you guys are so concerned with the ticketing-tackety of the law that you've sort of looked past
the whole reason of the law, which was to bring you to Jesus Christ. And in your obsession with
the law, you've started to see the law and the temple to a lesser extent as the point of your religion
when it never really was to begin with. Yeah, it's not the end. Yeah, we don't worship the temple.
That's right. We worship the Lord. The very thing that they said at the end of act six is he's
speaking blasphemy against Moses and here's Stephen. Let me tell you about Moses and gives this great detail. And by what he's telling us honors Moses, right?
And of course Moses is a type of Christ and then leads up to what you were just saying.
But I'm not destroying Moses.
I honor Moses and he gets all the way up to the temple.
How could he be speaking against Moses?
I guess it's the law of Moses. Is that what
he's they're saying he's speaking against? Yeah, their charge against Stephen is he wants to change
the customs which Moses delivered against us. That's what they say in Acts chapter 6. They're
accusing Stephen of sort of trying to subvert Moses and Stephen's turning it back on them and saying,
what do you think Moses was going for in the first place?
Why do you think Moses told you there was going to be
another prophet that would come along
if what Moses gave to you was the end of everything
that you're supposed to get to?
And Steven's trying to say, hey man,
it's not Moses that you're supposed to be worshiping,
it's supposed to be God.
And Moses, the temple, and the entire system
that Moses
gave you are only useful in the sense that they get you to God. And you can understand, verse 51,
chapter 7, you stiff necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears. You do always resist the Holy
Ghost as your fathers did so too deep. This isn't exactly how to win friends with people,
kind of thing, right?
Stephen is a little too blunt.
In fact, as I was reading through this,
the parallel that I kept going back to
is Stephen is like a benedite in the book of Mormon
where he just doesn't seem to be afraid
of what the consequences are going to be.
He's more interested in making sure that they know they're on the wrong track and they're misleading people.
So at risk of his life, which he very much is doing here, he tells him how it is, verse 52, which of the prophets have not your
father's persecuted and they've slain them, which showed before the coming of the just one of whom you have now been betrayers and murderers. So this is some strong, strong language.
You guys have betrayed Moses by killing the people
who were sent to do the same thing that Moses did
up to and including the very best of the best,
the just one, Jesus Christ himself.
I would love to offer our listeners a way to explain
to their children what uncircumcised in
heart and ears means. And I've always just figured that talking as much as the Book of Acts does
and starts referring to those of the circumcision are kind of refers to the Jews, but maybe to all
of the law of Moses, those that are following that, what would you say? You haven't made covenants in your heart and ears.
How would you explain verse 51 if you're a mom or a dad?
What does that mean?
It's a great question.
I mean, as a mom or a dad, you don't have to explain circumcision in great detail, I
would say.
But circumcision is very much an outward thing that's literally done to the outside of your
body to show a covenant.
What he says, you're on circumcised of heart. I think what he's saying is you're going through the motions
and you're acting like a righteous person, but inwardly, you're really not a righteous person.
The Savior and Paul are later on going to use this title called the Whited Wall
when they talk to people or empty sepulchres.
Basically, the idea was there's a tomb and it's full of dead bodies and it's got decay and death on the inside,
but they painted on the outside so it looks all good. And he's basically saying, yeah, to a person observing you on the outside,
you seem like a really righteous person. But on the inside, you're on circumcised of heart.
You've made those covenants and you walk in an outward way
that inwardly, you don't really believe this, do you?
At least you're not practicing fundamentally
the way a person should if they really believe this.
And this is Stephen.
I mean, I'm guessing because he was called to assist the poor
that part of his accusation could be linked to the fact that
these guys aren't doing anything to help the poor. They're spending all their time trying to tamp down Christianity
when the Christians are doing everything that they can to try and bring everybody together,
make sure everybody's fat, everybody has a roof over their head, everybody's taken care of.
Well, it seems like these rulers are more interested
in the appearance of good and the accumulation
of power and wealth.
Luke is a cinematic writer.
He's really good at what he does.
And he has Stephen have this dramatic confrontation
with the scribes and Pharisees.
And then it's kind of like the camera pulls back.
And there's this guy standing over to the side,
kind of listening to what Stephen says.
I guess if we're comparing Stephen to a benedite, this is Alma, the,
Alma the elder accepts, Alma the elder if he didn't feel bad about anything that happened to a benedite
and actually sort of participated in it as well. So it's possible, yeah, that what Stephen says
really does come down into Paul's work. I never realized that.
Paul quotes Stephen and takes this idea of temples built without hands and it's diffused
through all of his writings.
You are the temple of God.
He's going to say in 1 Corinthians.
That's an interesting connection.
He thinks we're going that out to me.
I was just wondering if he's like, that's a great point.
I think that's another thing.
We call the temple the house of the Lord,
but he's not limited to that place. Is that the way we would say it?
I would say that definitely that holy places can exist everywhere.
The other thing is, is there's a real tendency, sometimes in religion, to become obsessed with
ritual and place and misprincipal.
This would be like a person that goes to the temple once a week
and participates in ordinances, but then is mean to his kids
or talks bad about his neighbor or is dishonest
in his business dealings or anything like that.
But honestly, temples are there to point us towards the principles that make us better.
People and the lead us to God.
But the temple isn't the point.
When there was no temple, and in our faith there was a long period of time where there was no temple,
people could still make covenants with God in the hopes that those covenants would lead into their everyday life.
And Steve and saying, yeah, you guys have the temple, but what good is it doing to you? Look at how you treat everybody around you, and how you respond
when a genuine prophet comes into your midst. You can't see past the temple to the person who's
inspired the temple and everything that you've been doing.
I remember somebody speaking about the temple, and the more we go to the temple, the more the
temple is in us, it's that sort of an idea. Not just to going to it and we go to the temple, the more the temple is in us.
It's that sort of an idea, not just to go into it and showing up at the geography, but
having it become a part of us.
So thank you.
I appreciate that.
The manual brings up a great point here from Stephen's speech.
It says, the Jewish leaders were responsible for preparing the people for the coming of
the Messiah.
Yet they had failed to recognize the Messiah and rejected him.
How did this happen?
Part of the answer may be found in Stephen's words, Acts 7.51, you do always resist the
Holy Ghost.
And then it goes on to ask some great questions.
What do you think it means to resist the Holy Ghost?
Why does resisting the Holy Ghost lead to rejecting the Savior and His servants?
As you read Acts 6 and 7, look for other messages that Stephen taught the Jews. What attitudes was he warning against? Do you
detect any similar attitudes in yourself? What do Stephen's words teach you about the
consequences of resisting the Holy Ghost? How can you be more sensitive and responsive to
the promptings of the Holy Ghost in your life? Great little section from the manual where
you can take this verse, you do always resist the Holy Ghost and say, okay, this is happening to them. How might this also be
happening to me? Yeah, and it's interesting that they use a phrase in verse 55 to describe Stephen.
They say, he being full of the Holy Ghost. So they're comparing and contrasting Stephen saying to these guys, you guys know the law,
but you don't live the law or have the life of God within you.
To Stephen who's saying, I know the law and I'm trying to have the Holy Ghost with me to
direct me from time to time, because the scriptures are great, the temple is great, but all of
these things can become idols in a sense that we worship. I mean, even a temple or the scriptures can become idols if we see them as the end of the lot,
the end of the laws to connect with God, to always have the spirit to be with us,
and to receive direction and counsel and guidance that helps us when we're not in the temple,
or when we don't have the scriptures present, or when we have to make decisions
based on how the spirit directs us to do certain things.
I like what you're saying.
I like how when it starts out in X7,
it says that Stephen, verse three,
or pick men, pick seven men who are full of the Holy Ghost,
right?
Verse five.
So they chose Stephen, a man full of faith
and of the Holy Ghost. And all the way to the man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost. And all
the way to the end, he's full of the Holy Ghost. Back to the Christmas story, Herod had
scriptorians on his staff. When the wise man came, he was like, Hey, tell the work, where,
where would this Messiah be born? They knew they knew the answer. Maybe they weren't full of
the Holy Ghost though. So nice to be a scriptorian, even better to have the Holy Ghost like Stephen did.
And Stephen's discourse here proves he's quite the scriptorian. Seems like he really knows his stuff.
It sounds like off the top of his head, yeah.
Deliver a resounding discourse on a law where it came from. He knows his stuff.
He's just trying to get them to connect the law and their history to the fulfillment of that law, which, understandably, they were expecting
something different than a suffering savior, but at the same time too, they should have known that
the point that law wasn't to destroy their enemies, it was to free people from sin.
That's awesome. I like what you said that he doesn't seem to be so fearful of the consequences
and they're coming. They're coming. Yeah. Stephen uses pretty inflammatory language. The interesting thing here is this
isn't a set execution. Let's take him to the Romans and let's find out if we can get this guy
executed. This is a spontaneous crowd reaction, verse 54, they were cut to the heart and they mashed on him with their teeth. I mean, that is visceral
language basically saying that instead of even submitting Stephen to the law, they're so angry and filled with
contention and hatred, they have to kill him themselves and kill him in a violent visceral way. This is one of the real painful deaths of the New Testament,
because Stephen is almost torn to pieces by these people he stoned it out. But contrasting that,
Stephen says, hey, the temple isn't the temple. It's being filled with the Holy Ghost. It's
knowing God. And in these dying moments, Stephen has his own vision. This was scripture mastery when I was a kid. So I have it memorized. I
remember quoting it multiple times as a missionary. I still refer to it in my class. Verse 55 and 56,
he being full of the Holy Ghost looked up steadfastly into heaven and saw the glory of God and Jesus
standing on the right hand of God and said, behold, I see the heavens open in the Son of Man standing on the right hand of God.
Stephen is going to be okay. I think Luke inserts this so that we know.
And for his courage, he's rewarded with a vision of the true temple, the presence of the Father and the Son,
and the Holy Ghosts inside of him.
And he's so like the Savior as he dies, right?
Verse 60, Lord, lay not this sin to their charge.
Which is amazing.
I mean, I'm a natural man.
I would have been going, you guys are so much trouble, right?
That's what I would have been thinking.
And he's forgiving.
That's, that's amazing.
Luke gives us this little tease here that Siemens being stoned to death, he's being executed. But Paul Camberback, verse 58, they cast him out of the city, they stoned him,
the witnesses laid down their clothes at a young man's feet, whose name was Saul. So Luke is setting
up the next chapter of the story by showing this person who
doesn't participate in the stoning, he's careful to say, but is okay with the stoning and actually
assists the people that are stoning Stephen who's going to become a huge figure in the stories it
goes forward. I think that could answer Hank's question. He was obviously in the vicinity when Steven said
that God dwells not in temples made with hands. He was obviously close by. Can I add something else?
My students sometimes when we say, why did they have to take Jesus to the Romans? Oh, because they
were the only ones who could do capital punishment. Execution. Right. And yet they stone Stephen, you kind of alluded to this.
Casey, this is more like mob behavior. This is, I mean, the idea of stoning is everybody throws it,
and you don't know who really killed him. Isn't that part of it? That's part of it. That's more of a mob.
That's more of a riot happening the way that they that horrifying way they stone Stephen.
And I think we probably need to, to at least mention that when we were younger and we used
this as a scripture mastery, it was meant to point out that, look, there are two separate
beings that Jesus is on the right hand of God.
So how do you be on the right side of something that doesn't have a body?
Or doesn't have a hand.
Yeah.
Jesus standing on the right hand of God. I
Did an exercise in my class when we were going through scripture mastery and said drop picture of
What this would have looked like and this kid ran up to the front and literally stood on his own right hand
And we all set there a confuse for a minute and said what are you doing?
And he goes well, if God and Jesus are the same person then this is Jesus standing on the right hand of God's own right hand. Yeah, that was a nice little
pithy image. I mean, I don't want to get into any tangles with Trinitarian Theologians, but
it is tough to square what you see here with the idea that God and Jesus are the same person. So
it's a useful text for for Latter-day Saints. And Joseph Smith borrows a lot of the language
in these passages, especially when we get
to Saul's conversion a little bit later on
to try and describe what happened to him
and what his experience is.
Oh, okay.
So we have that to look forward to.
Let me maybe add one thing here too.
It's Stephen a successful missionary.
We'd have to say, I mean, no.
Yeah. He kind of is a bright star,
that he's a shooting star that flames out immediately, you know, pretty much shortly after
his calling is given. He has this confrontation. He's killed. And it doesn't seem like he converts
anybody. But Saul is there. And you know that Saul paraphrases him later on.
And even though it's difficult to sort of discern this from the limited text we have,
you have to imagine that seeing someone stand up with the kind of conviction that Steven does,
and then also, I hope he heard, Steven say, lay not this into their charge,
starts to affect and work on it. And one of the things to keep in mind is what makes a successful teacher of the gospel,
what makes a successful missionary? It's not always those outward numbers.
What I was a missionary, some missionaries were obsessed with the number of baptisms and
confirmations and discussions and all those things. By those metrics, Stephen's very unsuccessful,
but by other metrics, he's real successful.
He converts or starts the process of conversion
for the most successful missionary, probably of all time.
Yeah, that's a great statement.
And Luke seems to be weaving this together.
This led to this and I can now introduce this young man
named Saul, he's going to have
some impact later on. Luke's doing a good job here too, kind of showing us who the real main character
of the story is. There's a lot of scholars that believe that Luke and Acts, the gospel of Luke
and the book of Acts, should be read together, that they're really one work with two parts.
Acts or the Acts of the
Apostles could be renamed the Acts of Jesus Christ through the Apostles, because
you see the Savior popping in, especially in these chapters, to assure Stephen
that he's going to be okay to visit Saul later on and perform his conversion. The
Savior is still helping all these people down the path, even if he's resurrected
and moving on to other things at this point too. Wonderful. What we had said last time too is that
it's kind of the acts of Jesus through the apostles, which I really like. Stephen is like a
Benedictine, Saul is like Alma the Elder. This idea of success in ministry or missionary work,
Stephen put me in mind of when I was reading through this,
a guy on my mission who was serving as a bishop.
He was a wonderful guy, happy guy,
blessed the lives of hundreds and hundreds of people,
but one night I made a dinner in his house
and he was talking to me about earlier in his life. He grew up in the church, but he left the faith.
He sort of became a prodigal son and went off the path and
drank and smoke and did all kinds of things that he wasn't supposed to do. And
he said one day he was after an all night bender laying on his couch and
he looked
out the window of his house and he saw two guys and suits coming up the sidewalk.
You know, his home teachers and home teachers walked up knocked on the door.
He didn't answer the door. He saw them knock again. He didn't answer the door.
And then he saw him turn around and walked down his path and leave.
And those home teachers, I would guess,
would have said were a failure.
We tried, we didn't do anything.
He said he saw them walking away
and he thought to himself, I want what they have.
And a couple of days later, if he came back to church,
he cleaned up his life.
And when I knew him, you know, 10 or 12 years later,
he was serving as a bishop
Blessing and helping the lives of hundreds. Now again, it's one of those things where you think
Am I a failure? Am I successful?
Especially in mystery work where sometimes there's so much pressure to be an amazing baptizer
There's all kinds of success that happens and sometimes
Even something that seems unsuccessful,
a Stephen or a Zion's camp or two home teachers
walking up to a door can have profound long lasting effects
on a person in their lives.
So you never know exactly how your actions
are gonna affect other people.
You do what you think is right.
And sometimes those blessings are multiplied
in the lives of the people around you.
Yeah. David Larson from Scripture Central writes,
Stephen was an example of the believers, and one who was a witness of Jesus' exaltation to the right hand of God.
The Greek word, Martyrus, means witness. This is the origin of the word martyr, which in English
contains the additional concept of one dying for his or her testimony.
As one who died for testifying things he had both herdened, herdened, seen Stephen became
the first Christian martyr.
Appropriately, the name Stephen Stefano's means crown in Greek.
Although he was convicted of blasphemy and stoned to death by those who would not believe
his testimony, Stephen most certainly earned the crown of life, promised to those who are all faithful unto death.
So Stephen can be someone we think about and talk about maybe more in the church.
Wonderful insights.
It's really cool.
And he's a great figure, a Christ-like figure.
Especially that forgiveness in being full of the Holy Ghost.
You guys remember how Alma stepped down from being chief judge, went to Zara Hamla, then
went to Gideon, and then he went to Aminaiha, and in Aminaiha they spit on him.
It was horrible, and as he was leaving, this is an Alma 814.
He came to pass while he was journeying thither,
being weighed down with sorrow,
waiting through much tribulation and anguish of soul
because of the wickedness of the people
who were in the city of Aminah.
He came to pass while Alma was thus weighed down with sorrow,
and angel of Lord appeared not in him saying,
blessed art thou Alma therefore lift up thy head and rejoice.
And I can imagine Amin Alma going, why they hated
me.
No success in Amen.
I, Hollywood, do I possibly have to rejoice about?
And I love what the angel says, for thou has been faithful in keeping the commandments
of God from the time which thou received us thy first message from him.
And then I'm so glad Mormon left us in.
Behold, I am He that delivered it unto
you. It's the same angel that stopped him when he was out trying to destroy the church.
And now he's like, how am I going to do it? It's so great. But notice that you have caused
to rejoice. Why? Great cause because you kept the commandments since you first heard them.
And I love to share that with missionaries and you both know I have a son on
a mission right now that if you are keeping the commandments, if you are trying to keep the mission
rules, whatever, you'll have not only cause to rejoice, you have great cause to rejoice. Even if nobody's
listening to you, I love that little message from the Book of Mormon about why you can rejoice even when nobody's listening.
That's beautiful. Thanks, John. No, I really like that. Yeah. So Casey seems like we end our
story of Stephen and pick up a new story with Saul, but then we get a new character also
in Philip. Yeah, there's a little deviation because earlier, I think you and I both compared Steven to Abinadai
and said, Paul's like Alma the Elder,
but one major difference is Alma the Elder Repents.
Saul does not.
In fact, it picks it up in Acts chapter eight, verse one.
Saul was consenting unto his death.
Yeah, he needs a bigger intervention,
and he doesn't need.
Imagine if Alma the Elder saw Abinadai get burned to death, and was like, yeah, he needs a bigger intervention. Yeah, imagine if Elma the elder saw Abinadi get burned
to death and was like, Yeah, I'm okay with this. That's that's Saul basically says at that time,
there was a great persecution against the church, which was at Jerusalem. They were all scattered
abroad throughout the regions of Judea and Sumeric, except the Apostles and jumped down to verse
three. Saul, he made havoc of the church,
entering into every house and hailing men and women
and committed them to prison.
Therefore, they were scattered abroad
and whenever we were preaching his word.
So is he setting up the story here?
You see, Alma, the elder, repents.
He sees a benedized example and he changes his life.
Is Saul like Alma the younger?
I don't know if that's a fair comparison either,
partially because you get the feeling
that Saul isn't like Alma the younger
where he's wicked and he knows he's wicked,
he's the more dangerous type of persecutor of the church.
Someone who believes they're right
and thinks they're doing God's will.
He's a zealous disciple of the law of Moses
and thinks, hey, these people, they gotta be stopped.
They're gonna wreck everything that God has set up.
And that makes him maybe a little scarier
because he thinks what he's doing is right
until right up to the moment when the Savior
changes the course of his life.
And that is scarier.
I love the phrase that Jesus uses. It's such a haunting phrase.
People will kill you and think they're doing God a favor. Whoa. Yeah. And yeah, here's Paul. These
blasphemers have got to be stopped because he's a Pharisee and he knows all that. Yeah, he needed a
bigger intervention. And he's got a powerful motivation. When you
think you're doing God's work and you're not, you still have quite a motivation.
Yeah, when you watch a TV show or a movie, the scariest type of villain is the one who thinks
they're the hero of the story. And you get the feeling that until the road to Damascus
saw sees himself as the hero of the story, the person who's doing
what he thinks God wants him to do, doing the right thing, which makes him a little,
a little more frightening. One of the things I noticed in reading the book of acts that I kind of
hadn't considered before, the Jews were spread out all over the Mediterranean. There were synagogues
all over the Mediterranean. I guess I had always kind of imagined everybody was right there in Jerusalem, but it sounds like they're spread out already.
I guess there were ships and people could get on ships and move around. You know, I'm jumping
the gun a little bit, but here they're going to spread out and they're going to find Jews all
over the Mediterranean. Is that a fair statement, guys? It's fair to say the Lord is preparing for this worldwide church to kind of spread out.
You've got the Roman Empire creating these good conditions for missionaries to travel and travel safely.
And you've also got Jews being spread throughout the Roman Empire.
And now you've got Christians.
So Saul's acts, even though they're not, I guess you would say, outwardly helpful to the church.
Do you sign of set the stage for the next part of the story with the Luke's trying to tell,
which is how the church grows and spreads throughout the known world at that time?
I just think it's interesting. They were all over the place. That's coming up,
but he always goes to the synagogue first and in Corinth and in Athens and
Cyprus and I just oh, I guess they had synagogues up there.
Now Casey, why does Luke take us away from Saul and go to Philip?
Well, Phillips, the second of the seventh, like I said, only two of the seven get their stories told. Who knows how many interesting stories are left out? But of the seven introduced in Acts chapter 6, Philip is one of them as well.
And this story also is going to set us up for a couple of things that become important down the road.
For instance, Philip goes to Samaria, he's preaching Christ, and then a couple of interesting things happen.
People hear what Philip is doing, and the miracles that he's carrying out. And there is a man, their named Simon.
It mentions, this is verse 9, in the same city he used sorcery, in which the people of
Samaria giving out that himself was some great one to whom they all gave heed from the least
the greatest saying, this man is a great power of God. So Philip comes along and everybody says, oh, if you heard of Simon,
he's this guy who can do wondrous things too. And they start to set up a contrast in this chapter
between people that exercise the power of God for good reasons and Simon who exercises some
kind of power, probably not of God, but for more nefarious reasons.
So they're also contrasting between genuine disciples of Christ and the miracles they
can do and the kind of counterfeit miracles that sometimes are performed by people who
pretend to be great, who do them for less than pure motives, I guess you'd say.
So he looks at this and he's like, that's quite a trick. I want that. Yeah. Yeah. I could add this to my repertoire. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. Here's what Philip is doing. And it actually says Simon himself believed also. This is
verse 13, and was baptized and continued to Philip and wondered by holding the signs and miracles which he had done. So Philip's kind of a new preacher,
he brings in this convert, but then we have the more experienced church leaders come on the seat. Peter
and John show up in verse 14. They're invited from Jerusalem to come to Samaria and meet with those
who have received the word of God, but who it mentions here have not yet received the Holy Ghost.
the word of God, but who it mentions here have not yet received the Holy Ghost. So they're setting up another contrast here between genuine ministers and people that are false ministers along the way,
and it's all going to come to a conflict. So verses 15 and 16 says, they were come down and prayed
for them that they might receive the Holy Ghost, which implies they've been baptized, but they
haven't been confirmed yet. They haven't received the Holy Ghost, which this is a major theme throughout all of Acts, right? A genuine teacher of Jesus Christ will
be filled with the Holy Ghost and have the power and gift of the Holy Ghost with them. As verse 16 says,
it had fallen upon none of them, only they were baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, and then Peter
and John, authorized ministers. They had their hands on them and they received the Holy Ghost,
Peter and John, authorized ministers, laid their hands on them and they received the Holy Ghost.
And Simon sees this and says, this is great.
He even offers them money.
Verse 19, give me this power that on whomever I lay hands, they may receive the Holy Ghost.
I'll pay for it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Hey, could I buy into your racket here because this is really amazing what you're doing.
Peter rebukes him, showing
a sign of a genuine minister. I'm not doing this for money and that's not where the power
comes from. It's not mine to give away. Verse 20, Thy money perished with thee because
thou hath thought the gift of God may be purchased with money. Thou hast neither partner,
laud in this matter for thy heart is not right in the side of God. Good stuff. It's pretty brutal of
him, yeah. What was the story they used to tell? I can't remember someone who was very wealthy died
and how much did he leave behind and the other person at the funeral said all of it.
And just the idea, your money's all gonna go too. But but I also it reminds me of Peter saying I
just love that in the last episode silver and gold have I none such as I have
and such as he had was so much better than silver and gold such as I have
give I am to be when at first it sounds like well I don't have any of that but
I'll give you but it turns out what I have is so much better. And what he is offering
here is so much better, giving the Holy Ghost than anything that can be bought with money.
I wonder if the contrast here is between Paul or Saul who's doing bad things, but with a sincere
motive. And Simon who's doing good things, but with an insincere motive.
The worry here is pre-scrapped that the person like Simon is in this sort of for the power
of the fame and the money and thinks because of that, he can manipulate people with money
too when the apostles are trying to say, hey buddy, this isn't a business, this is a way
of life, this is a gospel that we entered into that had genuinely helped people not become rich and famous.
Peter does soften on him here towards the end, right? Your heart is not right in the side of God.
Repent, therefore, of this thy wickedness and pray, God, if perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiving.
Simon's an interesting character, isn't he? That he does want this gift, he wants to pay for it. He's kind of a very confused new convert,
probably still wants to go out and be a sorcerer,
make money off of this.
And yet, Casey, you call it from Peter.
This is good administering.
Is that what you call it?
This is, I can't remember what I said.
But I think the contrast here is between
bad acts driven by sincere motives. That's
Saul and good acts driven by insincere motives. That's Simon. So I don't know what's better
in the side of God, at least Peter recognizes unless he repents and gets as hard on the right
place. He's not going to be able to help very many people. I wonder why Luke put this story in here,
because he started with Saul, then he has Philip.
Is it just to tell us more about Philip's ministry
or is Luke trying to tell the reader,
you can't be this way, you can't be like Simon,
you have to be sincere.
I wonder if he's doing this to try and soften Paul
a little bit later on.
Where when Paul comes into the story of the major
thing we have to remember is he thinks he's the good guy until the Savior intervenes.
And so I think that Luke might be wanting us to not judge Saul so harshly just because
he causes havoc in the church. I mean, he's doing what he thinks is right. Where with Simon,
there's this kind of deep cynicism of he's doing what's good on the surface,
but he's doing it for the wrong reasons.
It Luke's estimation Simon is lesser than Paul, even though Simon at least outwardly appears
to be doing really good things.
He's helping people, but for the wrong reasons.
So so far Luke has introduced us to these seven men
that you told us about. He's told us about Stephen and his martyrdom. He's introduced
Saul, who is going to be a major player later on. He's walked us through a little bit of another
one of the seven Philip and his interactions with this sorcerer, Simon. What's going to happen next? I think it's Philip.
We keep following Philip. Yeah, Philip goes on another adventure that seems designed to highlight
how the church is spreading and expanding beyond Judea. It's going to be more than just a
Jewish offshoot. It's going to be its own thing that goes out into all the world. And so they
mentioned the conversion of this eunuch from Ethiopia actually verse 27 is the biography of the guy.
A man of Ethiopia, a unit of great authority under Candice Queen of the Ethiopians. We have the
charge of all our treasure and it's come to Jerusalem to worship and was returning sitting in his chair, reading Isaiah the prophet. Now, if he's reading Isaiah for fun, this is a golden investigator.
This is a guy we can work with.
He's got the kind of hobbies that seem to give him a proclivity towards the gospel and everything like that.
But again, he may be run into the same thing we have with Isaiah.
Verse 30, Philip sees him and says, understand what thou readest. The eunuch says,
how can I accept some man should guide me? And he desired Philip that he would come and sit with
him. So I guess he's reading Isaiah, but he's like the rest of us. He doesn't understand what the
heck he's reading. He didn't wait back then. Yeah. Yeah, let me explain it to you. And Philip does, what Steven
does here. He takes an Old Testament passage, or the story from the Old Testament or Old Testament
teaching, and says, let me explain to you what exactly this means. He goes to verse 32, and he's
going to be quoting here in Isaiah, passage that talks about Jesus Christ. He was led as a sheep to
the slaughter and like a lamb done before the shearer. So he opened he nod his mouth and his
humiliation and his judgment was taken away. And who shall declare his generation for his life
is taken from the earth? And the Uniconsored Philip did say, I pray thee of who speak of the prophet
this, of himself or some other man. It interpret this for me.
In other words, this is a contrast again between Simon and
insincere, outwardly good person.
Here is a sincere seeker of truth that just doesn't really know
what these passages mean and need somebody to come along
and put it all together for him, which Philip gladly does.
He has some great questions.
Who's he talking about?
Where is that in Isaiah?
Is this Isaiah 53?
Absolutely.
Well, 33 is, who shall declare his generation?
It was taken from judgment in Isaiah when you see judgment,
if you change it to justice, it makes a little clear.
Verse 33 in his humiliation,
his justice was taken away.
What happened to him wasn't just,
we shall declare his generation.
And then, you know, I've been at I says,
he will see his seed.
When his soul is made an offering for sin,
he will see his seed.
Because here he has no generation.
I mean, I just wrote that my margin,
Philip uses Isaiah 53 to teach.
Christ.
This is a golden investigator, right?
Someone who's like, who is he talking about here?
Well, let me tell you.
Yeah, who is this person?
Yeah.
Who's this suffering servant as the Isaiah scholars call it?
And boy, does he T Philip up for the right thing?
Philip, verse 35, opened his mouth
and began at the same scripture and preached unto him,
Jesus. So he's ready to go. He's without much guidance, but very sincere, very clear on what
his desires are. And Philip sees him ready to go. There was a guy in my mission. I didn't teach this
guy. One of my companions did. They gave him a copy of the book of Mormon. They said, read it and we'll
come back. They came back, messed with me, ready, said, yes, which when you're a missionary,
you're over the moon, right? If they said they've read, they said, did you pray? He goes, yes,
they said, did you get an answer? He said, I'm not sure. They go, what do you mean? He said,
I did have a dream. It was kind of funny last night. And the guy literally said, in the dream, a guy named Maroni came and told me the book is true.
Do you think that's my answer?
And my companion was like, yeah, we're pretty sure that's your answer.
I mean, the unit has been completely prepared before Philip comes onto the scene.
He just needs an authoritative teacher.
So this might tie into this theme of authority too,
because Peter and John have authority.
They are able to give people a Holy Ghost
Simon wants to purchase it.
Philip has authority, and all the unique needs
as a person who has authority to come along and say,
yeah, this is what that means.
And then surprisingly, again, showing a golden investigator,
they came to a certain water and the unique said,
here's water, what does hinder me from being baptized? Holy cow, how would you like to have
somebody just say that to you? Can we do this right now? Yeah. Yeah, let's do this right now.
Philip said, if thou believe us with all thy heart thou mayest, in the answer that said,
I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. Commander of the Church stands still.
They went down to the water, both Philip and the Unique, and he baptized him.
You know, one of the things that you've heard me joke about this Hank probably,
but it appears in the NIV that one of the early nicknames for this movement was the way.
But King James puts it this way, like in Acts 9-2, that if he found any of this way,
whether they were men or women, he might bring a bound to Jerusalem. And I be calls it the
way, which I think is so cool. It's referred to it as the way until they call it Christianity.
And I always love that because that is like 66.6% of my last name is the way.
Casey, this story with Philip running into this golden convert seems like he's even on the right page of Isaiah at the right moment.
This is a story told in the desert news by char friend Trent tune. He wrote this story. The Lord's guiding hand is often quiet, subtle, and simple.
We can miss or overlook his tender mercies if we are not watchful. We may discount them as
just chance happenings. If we're not humble, or do not truly desire to follow the Lord's
individual plan for our lives. In the late 1940s, a young man named Guillermo Gonzalez
was visiting his sister, who was a sales clerk at the department store in Monterrey, Mexico. When he noticed another clerk whom he found to be very attractive, her name was Goudelia.
Guillermo had recently completed his obligatory military service in the Mexican Army and declined
a commission.
After he noticed Goudelia, Guillermo decided to visit his sister more often.
He wanted to talk to Goudelia.
He would walk her home and they would
talk for hours. After several months of dating, Gaeaermo suggested that they should get married
so that their conversations could continue. That's a good reason. Yeah. Goudelia agreed. They were
married a few months later. Gaeaermo and Goudelia continued to have long talks after they were married,
often they would discuss religion. They decided they needed something more than what their current
situation was offering. It was time to start looking for a new church. It was during one of these
conversations that Guillermo made a rather remarkable prophecy. He said to his wife, Gidelia,
prophecy. He said to his wife, Goudelia, one day two young ladies will bring us the true religion.
What? She asked.
What did I say? He asked. G'ermo honestly had no idea why he had said what he just said.
Four months later, G'ermo was out of town working for the railroad when two sister missionaries
knocked on the door of G'ermo's parents who lived next door to Gidelia and Giermo.
Gidelia's mother asked for help to get them to go away. Gidelia helped by bringing the two missionaries over to her house.
Gidelia had never heard of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, so she accepted a pamphlet with contact information.
After the missionaries left, a neighbor came over and warned Gidelia to stay away from those, girls and called them emissaries of the devil.
When Guillermo returned home, Gidelea told him about the two missionaries.
He told Gidelea that these could be the two young ladies he had spoken of months before.
Gidelea had the missionaries contact information so the two walked over the missionaries' apartment,
no one was home, they left a note asking the young ladies to come visit them the next day.
The Missionaries taught the Gonzaleses their first gospel lesson
the next morning.
Guillermo was so excited about their message.
He asked them to stay and continue teaching.
The two Missionaries stayed all day.
When they felt that they had taught them all they knew,
he declared he was ready to be baptized.
On May 30th, 1953, Guillermo and Goudelaya Gonzales
were baptized. 10 years later, Guillermo and Goudelia Gonzalez were baptized.
Ten years later, Guillermo was serving as the district president and later was called to be
the state president of the first state organized in Monterey, Mexico. In 1974, Guillermo and Goudelia
were called to preside over the Mexican, Himosilo, Mission. Under their stewardship, tens of thousands
of people have joined the church. How easy it could have been for either Guillermo or Gidelea to dismiss what they had talked
about that night.
They may have dismissed it as odd and simply gone on with their lives.
Instead, they acted by tracking down the missionaries because of their faith, thousands of
lives were changed forever.
Awesome.
Golden investigators. Might be a Nolan and Whitney. Nul Kay and Elizabeth and Whitney,
who goes by and Whitney have this experience. There are a little couple living in Curland, Ohio,
Nul's a storekeeper and writes this later on. She said, one night it was midnight as my husband and
I in our house in Curland were praying to the Father to be shown the way. The Spirit rested upon us and the cloud overshadowed the house.
It was as though we were out of doors.
The house passed away from our vision.
We were not conscious of anything
but the presence of the Spirit
and the cloud that was over us.
We were wrapped in the cloud.
A solemn awe pervaded us.
We saw the cloud and felt the Spirit of the Lord.
Then we heard a voice out of the cloud saying,
prepared to receive the Word of the Lord. Then we heard a voice out of the cloud saying,
prepared to receive the word of the Lord
for it is coming.
At this we marveled greatly,
but from that moment we knew the word of the Lord
was coming to Kirtland.
A few days later, the slave pulls up in front of their store,
a man walks in and says,
Nulke Whitney thou art the man.
Nulke Whitney pauses and says, sir, you have the advantage of me. I could not call you by your name as you have called me by mine.
The man says, My name is Joseph Smith, the prophet. You pray be here. Now what would you have be do?
The whole story with Philip and the Unic kind of illustrates the Casey Griffiths form of missionary work, which is, I do everything I can and everything I do fails.
And then somebody who's just really prepared shows up. That was how almost all the people I helped join the church came into the church.
It didn't have a ton to do with me. I think all my efforts were just to demonstrate my sincerity. The Lord was working among all these people from different backgrounds,
different areas, and getting them ready to just sort of fall into my lap and be ready to join the church.
Exactly. I had a guy knock on the door as a bishop once and said, my wife passed away,
and the last thing she said was was take us to the temple and get
us sealed and I don't even know what that means.
You helped me.
So yeah, sometimes they walk up to you.
I'm going to start noticing chariots when I'm out and about.
And if anybody is sitting in their chariot reading, I'm walking over.
What are you reading?
It just happened to be reading this perfect thing.
These are great stories.
The work is moving forward, despite the opposition coming from Saul, and then he's going to turn
around and join the team.
It kind of shows the gospel going beyond Judea and Sumeria, too.
This is an Ethiopian, which is pretty exotic compared to where they're at showing that,
hey, the gospel is going to extend to all things,
all people, there's going to be no boundaries,
but they're just getting the first hints here.
The major stuff is going to come in X10
when Peter gets his revelation.
This story of Philip and this Ethiopian man,
the question that the man asks, Philip,
how can I accept some man should guide me?
I really like that because so often we think
if I just sit down with me and the scriptures, that's all I need. I don't need anything else.
And there is something to be said for that, right John? To get the, what do you call it? The pure
source or get it? Yeah, clink to the rod of iron, but there's don't drink downstream from the herd.
I mean, we've heard that. Yeah. I'm so thankful for good scholars out there and mentors that can help me understand
when I'm reading just like the Ethiopian. I think that's where you're going, right?
Yeah, I'm with you on this, John, that some of the greatest gospel insights I've had
have not come from me just reading, but me listening and asking other people that know
a little bit more than me, what do you think?
President Ballard said, it's okay basically to consult the works of recognized, thoughtful,
and faithful, LDS scholars.
We have one right here, Casey Griffiths.
He said, in addition to counseling us to seek words from church leaders, President Ballard
said, we should ask those with appropriate academic training, experience
an expertise for help.
This is exactly what I do when I need an answer to my own questions that I cannot answer
myself.
Elder Ballard says, I seek help from my brother and in the corner of the 12 and from others
with expertise in fields of church history and doctrine.
We're not trying to say we want to replace your scripture study.
We want to help you with
your scripture study. I've learned a lot by listening to both of you. Let's be discussed this today.
I like that the story and even the story of Simon the Sorcerer shows us that this missionary work,
though, they're joining the church by the thousands, is still done just one person at a time.
I like that point. There's probably a thousand different stories of these type of meetings.
Yeah, individual conversion narratives, people like the Unic that are primed and ready
to go, people like Simon who really want to join, but for the wrong reasons so they're
not right.
And then we get to the main event of this passage in Scripture, which is someone who almost, you know, has to be dragged in kicking and screaming, but turns out to be exactly
who we need at the time. I've heard it said before that Jesus is the message and Paul is the messenger.
He becomes the major missionary of Christianity, taking it from its local area, Judea,
Samaria, Galilee, and making it go global, at least global in their mind.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you