Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Alma 36-38 Part 2 • Prof. John "Jack" Welch • July 29 - August 4 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: July 24, 2024Professor Welch continues to explore how discovering chiasmus helps strengthen testimonies of Jesus Christ and His power and love, which is evident in the Book of Mormon.TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://ti...nyurl.com/podcastBM31ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM31FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM31DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM31PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM31ES YOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/SM2DAHgjDp8ALL 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– Professor John Welch02:52 Evidence convinces but this converts06:05 The Starry Night by Van Gogh10:32 Alma shares his conversion with Shiblon13:42 Neal A. Maxwell on King Benjamin18:53 Show Notes contains references22:20 The errors in the Zoramites’ prayer22:56 Professor Welch shares his testimony of Jesus Christ32:11 End of Part II– Professor John WelchThanks 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 2 with Professor Jack Welch, Alma 36 through 38.
Speaking of looking at both sides here, I'm using paper scriptures.
I'm looking at verses 12 and verses 19 and they're straight across from each other.
President Boyd K. Packer in April 2001 talked about verse 12.
He mentioned the words, um, racked and harrowed, and he said a rack, he
described in painful detail what a rack was, like an instrument of torture, and then he
described what a harrow was with spikes on it that is dragged over hardened ground, you
know, and how this was happening to his hardened heart so that God could plant a new seed. But one
of the things that on the other side in verse 19, he says, I could remember my pains no
more. And I'll bet that all of us have heard this and maybe asked the question ourselves,
how do I know if I've been forgiven?
I like the clue it gives us here.
I love this phrase, I could remember my pains no more,
yea I was harrowed up by the memory of my sins no more.
It doesn't say you don't remember your sins anymore.
Alma is telling us about his sins, but the memory of them didn't harrow him up.
It didn't hurt anymore.
And that seems to be a result of this repentance is that, oh, I remembered my sins, but it
didn't harrow me up anymore.
It didn't cause pain anymore.
And then verse 20, what joy and marvelous light I did behold, and my soul was filled
with joy's exquisite as was my pain."
Do you see the same thing there?
Oh, absolutely. How do I know? I like that you brought that up. How do I know if I've been
forgiven of my sins? As we work towards the center of the chiasm here, it's that your thoughts are
centered on Christ. As soon as your thoughts are centered on Christ
and you're starting to feel that strength, you know, you're feeling the Holy Ghost,
you know it's working. It's difficult to say at a certain point, oh, I'm forgiven, I'm done, right?
But you're trending in the right direction, but you're keeping centered there on Christ. And I remember some one of our guests earlier quoting President
Eyring that if you are feeling the Spirit that is evidence that the Atonement is working in you.
But a caution then, who would really want to keep reminding you of your sins? I love that little clue
right there. Here's how you know it's not going to harrow you up anymore.
But don't let Satan try to do that because he will.
John, I'm reminded of our discussion with Dr. Spencer who said the evidence can convince
you but this converts you. Verses 17 and 18, that center point, that is life changing from darkness
to light.
Oh, I agree entirely with that. We need a little help in knowing, so what is it that
we really should focus on? It's perfectly obvious to us. It's taken a while for us
to really focus on that as the main important part of what
the gospel of Jesus Christ really amounts to.
Now to us we kind of say, well of course it's that way, but it wasn't always understood
of course that way.
Alma has left us with a wonderful personal record.
Let's turn for a moment then to chapter 37.
It's rather straightforward. It's mostly personal instruction to Helaman about his responsibilities as the guardian
of the sacred treasures, where he's given the brass plates, the leahona, the other sacred
relics and artifacts that were brought from the old world.
These were in the custody of the high priest, and I imagine they were kept in what they
would have called their Holy of Holies.
Alma had used these.
They were part of his life.
He is entrusting those to his oldest son.
I imagine that he's already trained Helaman.
He doesn't say, just, well, put them in a box somewhere.
I think Helaman knows what to do with them.
He also interestingly gives Helaman the 24 gold plates, which are not to be made public,
but were very important treasures.
And they knew and understood that it contained the story of the Jaredites.
And we will get that in the Book of Ether much later.
You know, one of the things I love about Alma 37 is this phrase.
It's in verse 8, and now it has hitherto been wisdom in God that these things should be
preserved for behold they have enlarged the memory of this people.
You know, I've enlarged the memory of my laptops back in the day, but to enlarge the memory,
I think my mission president used
to say, the weakest ink is better than the strongest memory.
And the scriptures enlarge the memory of the Nephites by preserving their history and their
testimony and keeping it alive just the way our personal journals can enlarge the memory
of our children and give them a sense of our family history.
There's another thing my mission president used to say, that wise people learn from experience,
but super wise people learn from others' experience.
I think, what are the scriptures? They're the experiences of others.
They can enlarge our memories. I remember reading about this like in sixth grade and
I didn't understand it at all, but people that thought that language and books are miraculous.
And now I kind of get that. This is miraculous that we can preserve memories with little
marks on paper called words, that we can enlarge our memories, our experiences, we can benefit
from the experiences of others.
Absolutely.
John, since you talked about your favorite part of Alma 37, if you don't mind, I'm
going to jump in.
I've always loved these opening verses six and seven, where it seems Alma is thinking
Heleman might not take these things as seriously as he hopes him to.
Because this sounds like a dad saying, now look, I know what you're going to think.
He says, you may suppose that this is foolishness in me,
but behold, I say unto you that by small and simple things
are great things brought to pass.
It's a common phrase, I think, in the church, right?
Is this by small and simple things
are great things brought to pass.
I think I could start it with almost any church member and they would be able to
finish it. But I've always loved it because if you look at a painting,
for example, if you take starry night,
I think it's the most valuable piece of art in the United States. I'm not sure,
but I think it's up there in the hundred and eighty million dollar range.
Let's say you were to cut it up. I would cut up a replica. I
wouldn't cut up the original. But let's say you take a replica and cut it up into
little pieces. You would find that Starry Night, this masterpiece is created of just
individual brush strokes. They're not all impressive. Each individual brush stroke isn't
super impressive. But man, when you back up and look at all those little tiny brush strokes,
one after another after another, they become a great thing.
They're very small and simple brush strokes are great paintings brought to pass.
Can I read a little bit from, I wish I could say I got this idea myself,
but it comes from Elder Bednar. This talk from 2009, more diligent and concerned at home.
He says,
In my office is a beautiful painting of a wheat field.
The painting is a vast collection of individual brushstrokes, none of which, in isolation,
is very impressive or interesting.
In fact, if you stand close enough to the canvas, all you can see is a mass of seemingly
unrelated and unattractive streaks of yellow, gold, and brown paint.
However, as you gradually move away from the canvas, all of the individual brushstrokes
combine together and produce a magnificent landscape of a wheat field.
Many ordinary individual brushstrokes work together to create a captivating and
beautiful painting. Then he relates that to our homes. He says each family prayer, each
episode of family scripture study, and each family home evening is a brushstroke on the
canvas of our soul. No one event may appear to be very impressive or memorable,
but just as the yellow and gold and brown strokes of paint complement each other and produce an
impressive masterpiece, so our consistency in doing seemingly small things can lead to
significant spiritual result." John Jack, he adds this little discussion he and his wife had. He
said, Sometimes Sister Bednar and I wondered if our efforts to do these spiritually essential
things were worthwhile. Now and then, verses of scripture were read amid outbursts such as,
He's touching me. Make him stop looking at me. Mom, he's breathing my air."
Sincere prayers occasionally were interrupted with giggling and poking, and with active,
rambunctious boys, family home evening lessons did not always produce high levels of edification.
At times Sister Bednar and I were exasperated because the righteous habits we worked so
hard to foster did not seem to yield immediately the spiritual results we wanted and expected.
Today if you ask our adult sons what they remember about family prayer, scripture study,
and family home evening, I believe I know how they would answer. They likely would not
identify a particular prayer
or a specific instance of scripture study or an especially meaningful family home evening
lesson as the defining moment in their spiritual development. What they would say they remember
is that as a family we were consistent. By small and simple things are great things
brought to pass.
Ah, I really like that.
Jack, what are we going to look at next?
Alma 38 is interesting because it's kind of a short chapter,
but it divides exactly in half, but in a different way.
Alma begins by telling the story of his conversion to his son
Shiblon, and he starts where he starts in Alma 36, and you can read through and in
about four or five verses he goes through exactly those same steps, not in
quite as much detail, until he comes to that point where he cries out, oh Jesus, thou son of God, have mercy upon me.
And Shiblon knows that that's the turning point. You read through that
he finally ends there in verse 8, it came to pass that I was three days and
three nights in the most bitter pain and anguish and so on
and never until I did cry out unto the Lord Jesus Christ for mercy
did I receive remission of my sins and then I did find peace. Now what he's done here is he has given
Shiblon half of Alma 36. Under Jewish law and this comes out of the book of Deuteronomy chapter 21,
and this comes out of the book of Deuteronomy, chapter 21, the oldest son in the family was entitled to what was called the double portion of inheritance.
If you have three sons, you divide your estate into four portions.
The oldest son gets a half, two fourths, and the others each get their fourth.
Now why would the older son get double?
He's got more responsibilities.
He's got to take care of his mother.
He might have to take care of other relatives or other people, but he's the older son who's
taking the place of the father and will need more resources.
Now Elma doesn't have a lot of money. He's not leaving his sons with an estate.
He was out on the missionary field. We don't know where he lived or what kind of home he had,
but he seems to have been more out on the road than he was at home. But what he gives to Helaman
is a double portion, and what he gives to Shiblon is one portion. And then just like he gave to Helaman
personal instructions about what Helaman was supposed to do in his calling as record keeper
and guardian of the treasury, now what will he do for Shiblon when the second half of this,
you know, gives him personal advice on how he
should live in his personal life. This is your responsibility, your stewardship, to
be a good man. And you go through what you're supposed to do, be diligent and temperate
in all things. See that you're not lifted up in pride, use boldness but not to overbearing.
Bridal all your passions that you may be filled with love. Don't pray the way the
Zoramites did. Can you see this as personal advice that Alma is now giving? It's advice,
but it's not the official advice like he would give to his first son.
That explains why Alma's giving a shorter blessing to Shiblon. Jack, I'm glad you read that verse. I was one time in the JSB and
Elder Neal A. Maxwell was there. This is probably before you were born, Hank. It
was a conference on King Benjamin's speech, but I don't know how Alma 3812
came up. He said if you were to compress the missionary handbook into one verse,
it could be Alma 3812, and I had never
thought of it that way.
But think of this as the missionary handbook.
This is prior to Preach My Gospel.
We had this little white handbook we carried in our pocket.
Think of this as a missionary.
Use boldness, but not overbearance.
And also see that ye bridle all your passions, that ye may be filled with love, see that ye refrain from idleness."
Isn't that interesting? Great advice for a missionary.
I've heard lots of people talk about this idea of bridling your passions.
That is a sermon in a sentence. He doesn't say, kill your passions or destroy your passions
But what's a bridle? What do we use that for?
I'm not a horse person, but I'm pretty sure it's a horse right let me quote elder Bruce C Haytham he said is self denial wise because there's something wrong with our passions or because there is something right with our passions
Alma taught his son see the e bridle your passions, that ye may be filled with love.
He did not say we should suppress or eliminate our passions, but rather bridle them.
Harness, channel, and focus them. Why?
Because disciplining our passions
makes possible a richer, deeper love.
And I love what comes after a pride lawyer passions comma
Not because that's bad by lawyer passions comma that you may be filled with love. How positive is that?
sounds a lot like our
appetites and passions are
Better used when they are within the bounds the Lord has set
when they are within the bounds the Lord has set. We bridle a horse, not because horses are bad,
but because they are so powerful and useful
if we bridle them.
I love that.
That brings us to the end of today's lesson.
We might want to end with Alma's blessing there,
which I think is a beautiful farewell.
May the Lord bless your soul and
receive you at the last day into his kingdom to sit down in peace.
Now go, my son, and teach the word unto this people. Be sober, which is a way of saying
be wise. My son, farewell. Now does Alma know he's leaving?
Well, he says farewell.
Well, he's not through.
Next week we'll go through Alma 39-42, where he now will speak to Corianton.
The topics he will cover there, of course, are the kind of things that a wayward son
needs to know about the plan of redemption, the plan of restoration, the plan
of mercy, the plan of salvation. Alma will mention the word plan ten times in those four chapters.
I think it's kind of his way of saying, well, we know that there are ten commandments,
Well, we know that there are 10 commandments,
but the reason behind those 10 commandments
are these 10 expressions and explanations of the plan of salvation, of mercy, of redemption,
of restoration, and of happiness.
And I'd like to conclude with a comment by Elder Maxwell.
You know, sometimes we just talk about the plan of salvation.
We've gotten better now,
and we sometimes talk about the plan of mercy.
All of these different attributes of God's plan
are a part of Alma's explanation
of what is the plan really all about,
and how will it work in your life?
And the point that Elder Maxwell made at the end of
one of his books was that the principles of the gospel need each other as much as we as people
need each other in the church and in the kingdom of God. That the principles of the Gospel are altogether dependent upon each other.
They are an organ with all the pipes and you have to have all the pipes playing.
I think all of these ways in which Alma explains what the plan of happiness, salvation, mercy,
redemption, restoration and atonement are all about is a really unusually profound
insight and a way you read through those chapters and you can see a great mind and a great
spirit and a fantastic testimony at work on his son Corianton and it works.
He converts. he repents.
And wouldn't that be a blessing to all of us as parents?
So everyone knows all that we've been talking about today.
Our wonderful team member, Lisa Spice,
we'll make sure it's in our show notes,
go to followhimm.co, we'll link it all over
to Book of Mormon Central
and all the other articles we've mentioned.
Well, that's great. Thank you for doing that. And again, you can go on the Book of Mormon
Central archive and you can look up another book that I've written. It's called The Sermon on the
Mount in the Light of the Temple. And it was published by an academic press in London called Ashgate Publishers.
What I wanted to do was show that each of the words, the elements in the Sermon on the Mount,
have temple significance. So for example when it says you put your light on a candle,
send your lamp it says really, but don't put it under a bushel. Well the word there for candlestick is the Luchnia, which is the word for the Menorah.
Put your light on the Menorah, so you're adding your light to the light of the temple.
There's a temple connection and you go through the Beatitudes, blessed are the pure in heart,
for they shall see God."
That's coming right out of Psalm 24, where it says,
the pure in heart shall see God.
And that's a psalm the pilgrims sang when they were coming to the temple.
You can go down through all of the elements in the Sermon on the Mount,
and almost every one of them has important temple connections. And I'll mention one last one. You remember when it says if you come to the altar
and you realize that your brother has ought against you. The altar? How many altars were there in
Jesus's day? There's only one altar. Here you come into the altar of the temple and
you're told if you have ought against your brother, stop what you're doing,
leave your sacrifice, and get out there and get reconciled. If there are any hard
feelings, we can't do at the altar what we need to do. Does that sound temple-ish to you?
It sure does. Yeah. The last time I was at the Mount of Beatitudes, I was drawing on my iPad and
I thought, oh, this is kind of cool. If this is a Moses thing to go up into the Mount. And I thought
it was interesting that it was the pre-mortal Christ at Sinai, it was the mortal Christ at the Mount of Beatitudes,
and it was the resurrected Christ at the Temple at Mount Afol.
I thought, how interesting, He was at all those places, but it was a different time.
In the Sermon on the Mount they're astonished because He taught them as one authority and
not as the scribes and I love what the JST does with that with authority from God and not with
authority from the scribes, but then in the Book of Mormon it sounds like they're astonished because
The law of Moses was coming to an end
We were talking our last episode about how often people get astonished in the Book of Mormon. You've heard me talk about this
episode about how often people get astonished in the Book of Mormon. You've heard me talk about this before. Yeah, it's great. Well, one other thing, what you've noticed there is you have Jesus
in the pre-existence, in the mortals, and then in the resurrection. So you have the three stages
of the plan of salvation. Oh, that's a good way to look at it, yeah. When the Zoramites say in their prayer that you are the same yesterday, today and forever,
I always ask my class, well at one time he was a spirit, at another time he was immortal,
and another time, well sort of, another time he was resurrected.
So what must that mean then about being the same?
It's a different, his reliability maybe instead of his form.
The Zormites sort of had a truth in there, but they weren't looking at it right. I always thought
that's interesting. Yeah, yeah, that's good. That's good. Jack, before we let you go,
I was wondering if you could answer a question for us. And John, I'd like you actually to answer
this question as well. I often ask this of our guests. So John, why don't I ask it of you and then Jack.
We have people who listen all over the world. It's one of the fun parts of our job is hearing
from people in Germany and in Japan and in Madagascar and in Farmington saying, I'm listening to the show, John and Jack.
Let's say I've listened to these stories of Alma talking to his sons,
Helaman and Shiblon. What do you hope I walk away with? Maybe I haven't told you this before,
but we even have prisoners in jails and prison facilities who are allowed to listen to our podcast. What would you say to them? What's your hope?
I love that Alma is not saying Healman
I've done everything in my life perfectly and here's how you should do it, too
this is more like
Healman
Shablon I was a mess I This is more like Helaman, Shiblon.
I was a mess.
I was in a bad place doing bad stuff.
Here's how I got through that.
It was through Christ.
He is our hope and our anchor.
And the way it's presented is dazzling in Chiasmus.
But please don't miss that this isn't a perfect father talking to perfect
sons. This is a father saying, I had really messed up. And let me tell you how I got out of that.
And it was all because I was delivered by Christ. The same way he delivered the Egyptians, he can
deliver me and he can deliver you. That's, I think, kind of central
to the whole thing. I think of anyone who's in Alma 3745, anyone who's in a veil of sorrow,
that you can listen to Alma as he says, the words of Christ, if you follow their course,
can carry you beyond that veil of sorrow. So anyone who's listening can know that it will
come to pass. The Book of Mormon says frequently, and it came to pass. This veil of sorrow will
come to pass. Jack, how about you? How would you answer that question?
Oh, that's a great question. And I hope first of all, that anyone in that position will see Alma as a friend.
See Alma as someone who has been in prison. He was imprisoned for several months,
tortured, almost put to death. They hoped that he would die.
He was delivered from that. I don't think he ever forgot that. He knows your condition.
He knows your condition and how he himself was
suffering and under a type of captivity before he was liberated. Now that
liberation can occur no matter where you are even if you're in prison. And then he
talks to his son Corianton and he wants Corianton to realize that when you die, when it's over, it's not over.
There is more to come. Alma makes a big point about how some people that he had had to work with there in his own society denied that there would be a judgment and an afterlife.
that there would be a judgment and an afterlife. And what Alma promises them in chapter 42
is that God will provide a way and a time, a length of time, that judgment will not be entered until everyone has had time to repent and Alma says that he will even give you a space of time. I think that's very interesting that the
word space is used there because that's an opening. You're not being confined. The
time will be open and whether it's in this life or before the resurrection in the next life Alma says
the law of mercy is not that he will somehow just forget what you've done but that you
will be given time to repent and that's mercy because God will not execute judgment.
He will give you a stay of judgment and he
will not execute that judgment until you have had all the time you are asking for
and in His righteousness know that would be good for you and will leave you to
have. This is something that you won't find taught anywhere outside the Book of Mormon.
I know that this is true and I know that the Lord loves his children and everyone, no matter their condition, no matter their place in the world, no matter their problems,
their problems, no matter their successes. He loves all of us and wants us to come back to Him voluntarily that we choose Him. And if we do, He will magnify us, I promise.
Jack, thank you for spending time with us and telling us about Chiasmus and walking through these chapters with us. I promise. Jack, thank you for spending time with us and telling us about
Chiasmus and walking through these chapters with us. You're sure welcome. Thank you.
And with that, we want to thank Dr. Jack Welch for being with us today. It has been an absolute
treat to walk through these chapters. We want to thank our executive producer,
Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, and
every episode we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We're looking at Alma speaking to his son Cory Anton on Follow Him.
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