Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Christmas Part 2 • Dr. Jeffrey Chadwick • Dec. 19 - Dec 25
Episode Date: December 14, 2022Dr. Chadwick continues to explore the historical significance of archaeological and historical findings and the spiritual significance of the life and birth of Jesus Christ. Please rate and review th...e podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & 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 TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
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Welcome to part 2 of Dr. Jeff Chadwick on the topic of Christmas.
Go back to verse 1 of chapter 2 in Matthew, which says,
When Jesus is born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod,
there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem.
There's an immediacy in that verse.
It doesn't say two years later they came to Jerusalem.
It says, When Jesus was born years later they came to Jerusalem. It says, when Jesus was born,
wise men came to Jerusalem and asked, where's the king of the Jews? We've seen a star in
the east. Now the east is going to be Mesopotamia. It's going to be either Babylon area or
Persia area. By the way, who were the wise men? We always debate this. They're called
Madgye, which means magicians, really.
But it actually means mystics.
There were Jewish mystics even back then.
I think the wise men were Jewish.
They were maybe Persian or Babylonian Jews.
But nobody else was reading Hebrew scripture,
other than Jews.
So nobody else is going to know this,
the prophecy of a star rising in the East,
that you see like say from numbers 24 or other places. And we know there was a real star, the book of Mormon tells us. So these Jewish
mystics in the east are looking for this sign. And when they see it, do they wait two years to
go to Judea? Oh, there's the sign in the side. Let's wait two years to go see it. No, they go immediately. There's an immediacy to this story. And it's about
five, six weeks to make the trip. So those Maggi in the East, those I presume Jewish mystics who
recognized the sign of the star. And we know it was a new star. Whatever actually in the heavens
happened, it looked like a star. And the book of Mormon
says there was one and those guys in Babylon are Persia sought. And they got ready as quick as they
could, takes a week to get a trip ready. And they made their way so that about seven weeks later,
they show up in Bethlehem. And in verse 11, they find the young child with Mary in the house
And in verse 11, they find the young child with Mary in the house that's been finished, which Joseph and Mary had prepared in order to live in Bethlehem so Jesus could grow
up there.
By the way, how do we know that it's that long?
How come it's not four, three weeks?
Because if you go to Luke 2, Jesus will be circumcised eight days after his birth, but then he's presented in the temple
40 days later. Actually, that's six weeks. You have to wait for 40 days and go on the
41st or 42nd day. So it's six weeks after Jesus' birth that in Luke 2, the baby is taken
to the temple. The wise men haven't arrived, and Joseph hasn't left Bethlehem. It's at least six weeks later
that Jesus has taken to the temple, and then it's sometime very shortly after that
temple episode in Luke 2 that the wise men show up in Matthew 2, and after they
leave, Joseph is alarmed by the revelation, and leaves Bethlehem in the middle of the night to escape to Egypt.
And this young couple who for now 11 months, 12 months, which includes Mary becoming pregnant, going to Jerusalem being with Elizabeth, being found pregnant, and the stir around Nazareth because
of that, the episode with Joseph and the revelation
They get married They understand who their child will be they move to Bethlehem
They go they become registered residents of Bethlehem so that when Jesus is born there must have been
Somewhere in the archive of Bethlehem a document that said yeshua Ben Yosef
No laud ba bet. Jesus, son of Joseph,
was born here in Bethlehem. But the Romans destroyed Judea in 70 AD and burned everything. And that
means that any document that said Jesus was born in Bethlehem wouldn't exist. But in any case, their great plan and bringing about the righteousness of God and being there
with a house so Jesus could grow up in Bethlehem is thrown into chaos then when having not been
the victims of circumstance before, having not been driven by a taxation law to Bethlehem
before, but having done that of their free will and choice,
all of a sudden because of Herod's murderous intent,
they do become victims of circumstance and have to go to Egypt.
And then when they come back, it's still not safe to go back to Bethlehem
and everything they had built. So they have to go to Nazareth
and make a new life there where their family is.
And Jesus would become known as a not-sree as the branch, as the Nazarene.
And this, to me, is what makes Christmas such a wonderful story, because Christmas actually,
the story is about Joseph and Mary.
It's about the parents of Jesus who were the servants of the Lord Jesus Christ, doing
what ultimately he needed them to do. Christmas is about the birth of Christ and the gift
to us in the world, and that's what we should remember. But the story itself is really
the story of the faithfulness of Joseph and Mary, these two wonderful people who would raise the Messiah and Savior of the world.
If you ever needed better examples of who to be like in mortality, Mary and Joseph are
the two.
And if you wonder why some of our friends, particular Catholic friends, revere Mary,
there was never a greater woman in the history of the universe,
even not withstanding, than Mary of Nazareth. And there was never a greater and more trusted
servant of the Lord, all the prophets not withstanding, than Joseph of Nazareth, whom
God the Father would trust to raise his son
That's great. So when I take groups to Nazareth and there's a church there the Church of the Annunciation
Which honors Mary and next door to it as you both know is a church for Joseph honoring Joseph
I like people to know that these two those those people in the holy family, that woman
and that man are my heroes.
The son of Mary is my Lord and my ultimate hero, but Joseph and Mary mean the world to me.
And if you don't read it within this context, you don't see the sacrifice.
Yeah.
I wrote this all up years ago in the book that you mentioned, Stone
Major, the untold story of the first Christmas.
And I was trying to find a muse how to write this story.
Tell us why you wrote that book.
Oh, well, I've been working for 40 years in Israel.
In fact, this year, this is 2022, marks the 40th year
since I began teaching for the BYU Jerusalem program. Way back years
before we actually built the Jerusalem Center, it was a privilege that they asked me to teach there
when we used to live at the kibbutz that overlooked Bethlehem at Ramadrokhel. And I've been involved
in the archaeology and the research of the land ever since and it's been a great and wonderful
blessing of a career. But I've always loved the Christmas story, and it occurred to me very early on that as
an archaeologist, the only artifact of the Christmas story that you see in the text of
the Bible is the manger.
The manger is mentioned, as stable as it mentioned, because there wasn't one.
And other things are mentioned, there's no Christmas trees, there's no drummer boy that's mentioned, okay? The wise men don't show
up for weeks, so they're not there on the night of Christmas. The shepherds show up, but
they do not bring their sheep because they never got there with them. So what's the only
thing that is material in this story? It's the manger. Well, I always thought I would
write a book called the archaeology of Christmas
and have it surrounding how you would tell the story from the perspective of a stone manger,
which is what these troughs were made up. So when I finally wrote the story up, I decided maybe
a book called the archaeology of Christmas wouldn't really be interesting to people. So I decided
to call it the stone manger. And the reason I wrote the book was that my mother of blessed memory,
years ago before she died, and I'd been involved in Israel for over 30 years by then,
said, Jeff, because she loved Christmas, she was the Christmas queen. She'd never gone to Israel
with me. And she said, sometime I'd like you to just sit down with me, and we're just going to
take an hour. And I want you to tell me about the real first Christmas because we have these major scenes
and these decorations and they're lovely, but every time I hear you talk about it, it's
very different than all my decorations.
I'd love to do that with you.
And I said, that sounds like such a great thing.
And we'll do that.
And I never did.
It just was one of those things we're going to do.
And then she contracted a terrible disease called ALS and died rather quickly.
As I was coping with that, the first Christmas after her death, I thought, oh my goodness,
I never got to do that.
As I was working through that the year after her death, I thought it's time to write down
that story that I would have told her.
What you can know and maybe assume
about the Christmas story based on the context.
So I did and it was great therapy.
So I dedicated the book to her
when I finished it the next year.
And it's really my gift to my mother, the story.
I hope that maybe she's heard of where she's at now.
But that's how Stone Major got written.
That's why I did not name it, the archaeology of Christmas.
I've always loved the idea too of Jesus being called
the chief corner stone and that his birth would start
with something about stone.
Well, that's the interesting thing too,
because Joseph was a tech tone.
That's the word used in Matthew and Mark
to describe them in Greek a tech tone,
a builder, and you built of stone.
But Jesus was that too.
That's what Joseph would have raised him to be.
Jesus was a stone Mason.
If I ever write a sequel to Stone Major, I'm going to call it Stone Mason.
What was Jesus' life like before he became rabbi Jesus When you look through the teachings of Jesus he very frequently employs
Stone architecture or stone masonry imagery in his teachings
He doesn't ever use woodcarpentry imagery
But he uses a lot of imagery that has to do with stone and stone masonry the the chief corner stone, quoting Psalms, etc. The wise man builds his house.
He builds his house upon the rock. He knows how to build houses. Jesus probably built houses.
There are wonderful scholars that have done a lot of research into this that note that the great
Roman regional capital of Sephorus was being built just north of Nazareth and probably Joseph
and Jesus worked as builders in Sephorus, which was a short walk of Nazareth, and probably Joseph and Jesus worked as builders in Sephora,
which was a short walk from Nazareth.
And if you ever wanted to ask yourself, what would Joseph have done for a living moving
from Nazareth to Bethlehem?
Well, building had to happen there.
But within an hour and a half's walk of Bethlehem was the biggest building project in the Eastern world.
Herod's temple was being built and they needed builders. So there was work for Joseph to do. He had
to commute like I do, it'd take him an hour and a half to get the work. But Joseph could build and
use his talents all he needed to at Jerusalem and work on his own house a day or two a week,
and they would have money because a builder made two dinars a day if they were skilled. And Joseph
was. And Jesus, because he had this background, and I assume he worked as a builder, he even named
his chief apostle. He called Simon, which was the apostle named Shimon. He called him Kefa Kefa is an
Arabic word which refers to an unfinished stone Kefa. And you see this in the
New Testament occasionally spelled CEPHS, which most people pronounce as
Seifas, but the S is a Greek contrivance. If you take it off, it's actually CEPHA
and it's not C as in city, it's C as in
county, it's Kefa. And Kefa then means a rough, unhwn building stone that's only been roughly finished,
a rough rolling stone, shall we say. So that's why when Peter's nickname, given to him by Jesus,
is rendered in a Greek, it becomes Petros or stone.
I can find petrified wood. Jesus never called his chief apostle Peter,
because Jesus didn't converse with him in Greek. Jesus called Simon, Kefa. And that when you see
the Aramaic, there leads through in a couple of passages in John and a couple of passages in the writings of Paul
where they're actually giving you the
Aramaic that Jesus used to address his chief apostle Kefa and in John one where this appears it says
You should be Kefa and then it goes on to say it which interpreted it is a stone or you should be Peter
Which is a turpid of the stone?
What John was really writing is you're going to be Kefa and interpreted in a Greek, this
is Petros, a stone.
So Jesus is living using that stone-building imagery with his chief apostle.
It's interesting, too, that going on this in Matthew 16, Jesus says to Simon, right? Thou art Kefa, Thou art Peter, right?
And upon this rock, this Petros will I build my church.
Now we've always gone to great lengths, and I love President Kimball, who made a huge
statement about this back in my mission days, that the church is not founded upon Peter,
but the rock is revelation.
Remember that?
It's the rock of revelation that Jesus
is referring to. Yes, true, but actually at the very same time, it is Peter. It is that rock
that apostle, because Peter was the chief apostle, the senior apostle, the one authorized representative of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Well, the church really is built on the rock of Revelation, but it is built upon the person
who is that rock of Revelation. Christ Himself is the rock, first and foremost, but his senior apostle is that rock in perpetuity. It was Peter then, it's
Russell M. Nelson now, who is that one person, that rock upon which the
revelation to this church is delivered. Either way you look at that scripture
using Jesus' original stone imagery. It points to the very question
we're asked in a temple recommend. Do you recognize the president of the church as the person
who is authorized to receive revelation and manage the church?
Jeff, I wanted to ask you something out of the manual. There's a section called, I rejoice in my Redeemer. And this is Christmas is known as a joyful season
because of the joy that Jesus Christ brings to the world. Even people who don't
worship Jesus as the Son of God can often feel the happiness of Christmas.
Ponder the joy you feel because Heavenly Father sent His Son. And then later on,
there's another section called,
his name shall be called Wonderful. I want you to comment on your thoughts on
both of those sections. As I was saying when I told the story before, Christmas is
just a time that we should be happy. And our climb, you need something to rejoice
about occasionally with these short cold winter days,
but that's just our local climate.
Wherever you're at in the world, the whole season of Christmas and the whole theme of Christmas
is something to rejoice over.
And this is simply the follow-up on what the angel said to the shepherds who came to Bethlehem
to that grotto and saw Jesus in that stone
manger on that very night. If you go to Luke 2, you see the words that the angel said to
the shepherds. This is 2 11, Luke 2 11, for unto you is born this day in the city of David, a Savior which is Christ the Lord, a Savior, Yeshua, that is Christ,
the Messiah, who is the Lord.
And this shall be a sign unto you.
You'll find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in that stone water trough, right?
But before they said all of that, they described this as being good tidings of great joy. Verse 10, the angel said
unto them, fear not, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people,
not in that era only to people of Israel, but eventually to all people. Now in our day,
all people have the right to claim their Israelite heritage
through the covenant. But the point is the joy of the birth of Christ is for everyone.
Maybe even if they don't know what we are, what we know, maybe even if they're not Christian,
this should be the most joyous occasion because it's joy to all people. So that when you go back and you alluded to, I think Isaiah 9 there, right, the word wonderful.
We read that wonderful scripture in Isaiah 9.6 unto us a child is born unto us a son is
given and the government shall be upon his shoulder.
He'll be the king and his name shall be called wonderful counselor.
The mighty God, the everlasting father, the prince of peace, the increase of
his government and peace, there shall be no end upon the throne of David and upon his
kingdom to order it, to establish it with judgment.
This is all joyous.
It's also all very political.
Going back to that earlier question of Jesus and his kingship and what the Messiah
was to be. Yeah, the Messiah is the king of Israel, but very often in our classrooms,
and I giggle a little bit about this because I often sit back and think, boy, I wish I
was teaching his class so I could get it right. And then I think to myself, you just
ruin the class, Jeff, just keep your mouth shut. Let the teacher teach. That's my rule when you're sitting in somebody else's
Sunday school class is sit on your hands. I do not make comments in people's classes because
it's not my show. I let the teacher teach. Now I'm on your show now and you've asked me to
talk. If I'm sitting in a Sunday school class, I am not tearing apart somebody else's lesson.
That's just not what we do.
Let the spirit speak through the teacher that's been called.
But occasionally I hear something like this when we talk about Jesus and his relationship
to the Jewish people and the New Testament.
The teacher will say something like, and I'm exaggerating now, but they'll say something
like, oh, those silly Jews of that age because they were looking for a political Messiah, and they
didn't realize that that's not what they should be looking for. They should be looking for a spiritual
Messiah, not a political Messiah. Well, no, a political Messiah is exactly what the Scriptures predict.
They predict he will be a king of Israel.
They predict that he will have the government upon his shoulder. They predict that he will reign
upon the throne of David. He will change the political order. And whether that is at his coming
in mortality or whether at his second coming, the expectation is the same. Latter-day Saints expect a political Messiah. Now we have the
story of his first coming and while we see that he was regarded as king even by the Jewish
people. On Palm Sunday, on the last Sunday of Jesus' life, he rode into Jerusalem in the
biggest parade Jerusalem had ever seen to that time. And what were the people saying? Hosanna to the King of Israel, Hosanna to the Son of David, the populace recognized that
he was the candidate to be this king. And it didn't turn out that way because the Romans
killed him later that week with the collaboration of the Sadducees, the chief priests. And the
great untold story of the New Testament is
obvious on every page, and that is that Jesus was wildly popular with the Jewish people.
He was not rejected by them, not in his lifetime.
He was so popular that the crowds thronged him everywhere. You couldn't get close enough to touch the him of his garment most times.
And the only place we see him cast out of on one occasion was his own hometown of Nazareth
because of their jealousy.
But everywhere else he went, he was not cast out.
He was welcomed and Jerusalem welcomed him.
It was a very small group, powerful political sadgacies that opposed him.
But most of the Pharisees were intrigued with him, like Nicodemus. The people did not reject him.
Sometimes even in the videos we depict the Jewish people
as rejecting him and spinning on.
This did not happen.
He was wildly popular.
So why did the Jewish people not wind up
recognizing Jesus as the Messiah?
Well, because their understanding of what the Messiah would be is that Messiah
would bring them freedom and redemption and throw off the yoke of their burden, which they understood
as being foreign government that imposed upon their freedom. And everyone expected in the New
Testament that Jesus would do this. No one expected him to die, even Peter,
when Jesus indicated he would die,
said, Lord, this be far from thee, you know?
No one expected, even if they believed that Jesus was Messiah,
and even if they believed he was Son of God,
the way the apostles and many of his followers did,
that he had been sent to die.
That was the last thing they expected.
They expected that if program went on another year or two. He would become the King of Israel.
And when instead he died, this was a huge blow to the church membership, but to everyone
who had looked at Jesus as the best candidate for Messiah ever, that expectation
he comes and overwhelms the foreign government and sets up the redeemed kingdom of Israel, Jesus
didn't wind up providing that during his mortal life.
Jewish people who in the New Testament were quite excited about him must have simply reasoned
he would have been a great Messiah, but I guess we look for another.
Because he didn't fulfill the expectation that the scriptures make of him becoming the head
and king of the government and changing the order and bringing in an age of redemption.
Now, we know that that's still coming at a second coming of the Messiah.
coming at a second coming of the Messiah. So yes, we too expect a political Messiah who will change the order and usher in the age of redemption. But the differentiation between a first coming
and a second coming is only something that even in the New Testament, the apostles gradually
came to understand. They didn't understand it during Jesus' lifetime
They did not expect he would come to die We have the advantage with 2020 hindsight of looking back on the New Testament and saying oh
They shouldn't have thought that he was coming as a political Messiah in his first coming
Well, nobody even Peter understood that his first coming wasn't the political change that only came gradually
So our sometimes saying of those Jewish people,
oh, they're so silly to have not understood what was going on. If we'd have been there,
we wouldn't have understood it either because Peter didn't understand it until after it had happened.
And none of the best of them did. So I like to tell folks that I teach, let's not be so smug.
And think that we're so much more insightful than people of past generations.
The marvelous thing about the four gospels is that Jesus was wildly popular with those
Jewish people, and the reason they did not ultimately accept him as the Messiah throughout
Jewish history is because he did not do what the expectation was that was clearly
there in Scripture. It clearly was. And we have the advantage of knowing something more than the very best of the former
day Saints in the New Testament did not know when he walked among them.
So if a teacher said something like that,
they'd be correct in thinking that they were expecting a political Messiah,
but that wasn't what Jesus was going to do at his first coming.
Those prophecies of Isaiah,
King of King and Lord of Lords,
and government upon his shoulder was,
and ultimately, that's a millennial expectation type of the thing.
It's coming, but it wasn't the first coming.
Yeah, right.
Well, what you see in all of the Messianic passages of Isaiah is this triumphant royal king
Messiah.
There is essentially no prophecy about the coming of the Messiah that points to his death
that was recognized by anyone in that age, even the apostles.
Now we always point robustly to Isaiah 53 as a prophecy about the suffering and death
of the Messiah.
But in all of Isaiah, that's the one thing that's not like the other.
That's the one suffering Messiah passage when everything else is triumphal Messiah.
Well, as it turns out, Isaiah 53 was not understood
by Jews of that era as pointing to the Messiah.
And Jews today do not look at Isaiah 53
as a Messianic scripture.
It's called a suffering servant scripture, but Jews do not regard Isaiah 53 as a Messianic scripture. It's called a suffering servant scripture,
but Jews do not regard Isaiah 53 as Messianic
in the way Christians have come to recognize it.
Now, the story of this and how Christianity in general
comes to recognize it is in Acts chapter eight
when Philip meets the Ethiopian government official
who's come to Jerusalem to worship.
And that individual from Ethiopia,
who by the way, I point out was African and came as a African Jew to Jerusalem to worship.
And then was on his way back to Africa, back to Ethiopia. He meets with Philip and the Ethiopian
is puzzled as he's reading Isaiah. And he asks, Philip, can you help me with his passage? And it says in Acts
8 that the passage he was reading was Isaiah 53. And the Ethiopian's question, he's Jewish, he says
to Philip, of whom does the prophet speak of himself or some other man? But this very informed Isaiah Izea reading, African Jewish government official does not understand that Izea 53 is about Messiah.
It simply wasn't a Jewish tradition that Izea 53 about a servant who would suffer and die
was about the Messiah. It's only in the aftermath of Jesus' death that the early church came to understand that you have to look
at Isaiah 53 and see Jesus in that scripture as well as all of the triumphant scriptures,
which is what Philip pointed out to the Ethiopian.
And that's why Jewish people today don't see Isaiah 53 as Messianic, whereas we as Christians
do.
But that's only with hindsight.
Because all the New Testament saints were doing it in hindsight. It sounds like when you read the
Gospels, they're like, Oh, yeah, he did say something about this that he
would be killed and rise again. And it's like they're writing the
Gospels after this going, Hey, wait a minute, he did talk about this.
But I've often thought, when we read about the triumphal entry, I've
wondered what was going on in the Savior's mind is kind of like, yeah, thank you for this conditional support,
but I'm not gonna be what you're expecting this time around.
I don't think he would have in any way been
remonstrative of the crowds.
It's hard to put yourself in the mind of anyone else
and particularly to put yourself in the mind of God.
But the way I might characterize that is that he may have thought,
oh, what disappointment that I'm not doing. Yeah, exactly. That's way I might characterize that is that he may have thought, oh, what
disappointment. Yeah, exactly. That's what I was thinking is that would not have been,
oh, well, it serves them right for not understanding. But I'm sorry at this time that you're not
going to have what you expect, but it will be coming. And that's exactly what I've
thought. They're thinking here comes he's going to throw off the Romans. Well not yet
There'll be another Rome to change
There'll be another Babylon to overcome
Isn't that how it is in life as well? We have certain expectations on the Lord and
When he doesn't fulfill them we get frustrated when he might say to us if he's old as I am and served your mission
25 years before the year 2000, you were
conditioned back then to look to about the year 2000 as maybe when Yannis start thinking
about the millennial glory arriving.
And we're as far from 2000 now in the other direction as I was from it on my mission prior
to 2000 and no the millennium
has not started. Jesus has not come back and all those notions of like the six one thousand
year periods being six days and then the seventh thousand year being the Sabbath which would
be the millennium which means Jesus must be coming about 2000. Well, we've all experienced that that wasn't what maybe we had been taught somewhat incorrectly
to expect. And now we just wait patiently for him to do his work.
Well, Hank, what you said fits with Joseph and Mary, doesn't it? They're expectation.
They thought they would be going back to Bethlehem and Joseph is sworn in a dream.
We've got to go back to Nazareth.
Yeah.
To me, what that whole story going back to Joseph and Mary,
and the way at least that I understand the story,
being very different than tradition,
not victims of circumstance,
but anxiously engaged people,
coming to understand through revelation,
what they needed to do and being brave enough
to go do it as a couple.
What an example for every married couple, every young couple.
Just go and do and serve and do what you need to do.
But that's what life does to us.
We'll do the best we can.
And then something will broadside us through the intersection and change the direction of everything.
And then what do you have to do? Start over and keep going. And that again is the
story of Joseph and Mary and Jesus. Start over and keep going. Man, the manual is
really waxing poetic this time around. They did a great job with this. I want to
read something from the manual, the second paragraph, their hope
began to be realized when Jesus Christ was born in Bethlehem. The mighty deliverer of Israel
was born in a stable, not really a stable, and laid in a manger. It's okay, it's okay.
But he wasn't just the deliverer of the ancient Israelites. He came to deliver you, to bear your
grief, to carry
your sorrows, to be bruised for your iniquities so that with his stripes, you can be healed.
This is why Christmas is so full of joyful anticipation. Even today, the Messiah came over
two thousand years ago, and he continues to come into our lives whenever we seek him.
What would you add to that? Jeff, our listeners to come away with?
The one thing about all of this is that it all wraps up together because we would have
this same discussion in this same joy at Easter.
We would have this same joy and the same discussion.
If we were Jewish, we would have it in the fall at the Feast of Tabernacles.
We do it anyway because we have general conference in this spring in the fall.
So we have this same joy at all these great occasions, but particularly Christmas is
important because of its advent aspect, the beginning of our hope, the birth of this great thing,
the birth of the King of Israel. Yeah, that joy is first and foremost to Israel because Jesus would be the king, the Messiah of Israel,
but because everyone would become Israel, but because we would gather Israel from all nations,
this joy is to all nations.
And our combined messages, Latter-day Saints, is refining itself into a better understanding
of that. One of the things that the spreading of the Christmas joy
is an instrumental part of is in our message
to all people as we gather Israel, all people.
The Christmas message is just the beautiful annual way
that we phrase what our entire life is about, which is that we are the servants of our King, Jesus Christ the Master, and we bring that covenant to
you with the message of His first coming and the expectation of his next coming. I testify that these things are true,
that Christ was born in the humblest of circumstances,
to marry and her husband, a young couple,
who were valiant in their faith,
and that he grew up to fulfill his destiny
in saving us at his first coming, and that he reigns over us now, and will reign personally upon the earth in a day to come.
That's what I always remember with Christmas, because that's what the angels said. Unto you is born this day, a Savior, Christ, the King, the Lord.
And this will be a joy to all people.
It's my testimony that this is true,
and that he stands at the head of this church today,
and that through that rock who is his present chief apostle,
he reveals to us our joy and our assignment to spread this with all.
May we have a Merry Christmas? May we spread this joy to our family, to all around us, and
radiate it so that everyone can see it, would be my prayer for everyone.
would be my prayer for everyone.
Well, Mary Christmas to you.
Mary Christmas everybody.
We want to thank Dr. Jeff Chadwick for being with us today and giving of his
expertise. This has been so fun to see the real story of Christmas and to see it in this new way has been really fun for me. John, I know it's been great for you as well.
has been really fun for me. John, I know it's been great for you as well. Got a page of notes and it's beautiful. And getting some of those interesting
facts just makes it more beautiful and joyful. And as you said, Jeff, more
admiration for Joseph and Mary. Yep. Hey, by the way, I would also say that I
still love all the Christmas traditions and anything that I've said that
make conflict with what's
a joy to you, don't let that bother you at all.
Keep your stables, right?
I'm not an expert on Christmas, okay?
I'm just a guy trying to understand it better.
If anyone out there understands it differently from me, the Lord bless you.
I'm completely satisfied with that.
This is God bless us, everyone.
We want to thank again, Dr. Jeff Chadwick for being with us today.
We want to thank our executive producers Steve and Shannon Sorenson and our sponsors David and
Verdless Sorenson. We hope you'll join us next week. We're starting a brand new year of the new
testament. We hope you'll all join us for that full year. Come join our team of Follow Him.
We have an amazing production crew.
We want you to know about David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Will Stoten, Crystal
Roberts, and Al Kuwadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.
production team.