Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Daniel 1-6 Part 1 • Dr. Lili De Hoyos Anderson • Oct. 31 - Nov. 6
Episode Date: October 26, 2022Can we take away someone’s agency? Dr. Lili de Hoyos Anderson explores personal revelation and faith amidst trial in the Book of Daniel.Please rate and review the 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 Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith. I am your host,
and I am here with my co-host who is skillful in all wisdom and cunning in knowledge. His name's
John, by the way. Welcome, John. Thank you. I will try to live up to that one. You are. John,
when I was reading Daniels chapter one, I thought John, by the way, all the way, skillful in wisdom,
Daniel chapter one, I thought John, by the way, all the way, skillful in wisdom, and cunning and knowledge.
It wasn't the youthful part though, was it?
No, I actually skipped that part.
Hey, John, we are gonna be studying the book of Daniel today,
and we have a guest who has been beloved
to follow him a couple of times.
So tell us who's with us.
Yes, we are so glad, aren't we, Hank,
to have Dr. Lily Anderson back with us.
She came before, it was one of the ones I heard
the most comments about and really hit home
to a lot of people, hit home literally
because she talked so much about marriage and family.
So let me read this bio again for those of you
who may not have heard the first ones, you'll probably want to go back and listen to it. Lily DeHoy else Anderson,
first generation American, her mother is French and her father is Mexican. She was born in a
little board of town in Texas, but soon her family moved to the Midwest. She grew up in Michigan
in Indiana. When she started high school, both her parents began teaching at BYU. So the family moved to Provo. She graduated from Provo High School. Dr. Anderson attended
BYU, graduated in sociology, in fact social science, runs in the family. Both her parents
who retired professors of sociology and her husband, Chris Anderson, is also a social worker with
church family services. And she has a wonderful story after about 20 years of being a full-time homemaker. Dr. Anderson
completed her own master's and social work degree. She is a licensed clinical social worker,
has a full-time practice. In individual marriage and family counseling, later sister Anderson
completed her PhD in marriage, family and human development at BYU and for several years
Top part time there for the School of Family Life the Anderson Sav eight children. This is a fun part
They are the alphabet kids Adam Bethany Katelyn Dominic Eden Faith Grayden and Harper and 37 grandchildren is that up to date?
37. Yes, that's awesome. She's published in the end sign,
various journals.
Her book Choosing Glory is available
in a paperback in In Kindle.
And she also has a podcast called Choosing Glory,
which I'm sure our listeners will want to go
and listen to.
She loves to be able to teach, testify,
and defend the faith that she loves
in a medium that is accessible to people everywhere.
Thank you so much for coming back, Dr. Anderson. We're so happy to have you.
Thank you. It's fun to be back. We really appreciate the opportunity. It's a great way to share
the gospel with you guys. Enjoy it. We have a lot of fun. I'll say, John, that the two episodes
literally did. I'm going to just give a shout out to you and hope anybody who is maybe joining us just recently and hasn't heard
those. The first one was on Doctrine Covenants 49 and 50. Go back to last year and listen to
that episode. And then the one earlier this year was on Genesis 37 through 41. Both fantastic,
really worth your time. Take the time to go back and listen to those.
It's really a lot of fun.
Great material. The scriptures are just full of amazing things. It's great to be there.
I'm just going to add just because I know some people have asked about this. The website
that I've had for years looks ancient and some people don't know if it's functional,
but it has been finally upgraded and updated. So if you want any information, come to lianderson.com.
And we'll be announcing new projects.
I'm hoping to get another book out early next year
on Healthy Boundaries.
That's lili lii s-o-n Anderson s-o-n, right?
And you'll get it.
Lilyanderson.com.
All right, Lily, the book of Daniel,
how do we want to approach this? What do we do?
Our curriculum asks us to look at the first six chapters. Although honestly, I think I'm
going to say a few things about that second section, but what kind of keep that brief
since it's not really in the selected chapters for the curriculum. But Daniel is an amazing
profit. He is an amazing man. He had an amazing ministry. He was involved in so many
incredibly important events that happened during this time of captivity for many of the Jews who
had been brought into Babylon. And I just want to start by saying the meaning of Daniel's name in
Hebrew is God is the defender of my rights, which is really lovely when you
think about that. God is the defender of my rights. Now obviously their rights had been
abrogated when they were brought into captivity. And this had been prophesied by so many of the
prophets of Israel and Judah trying to warn them that if they did not repent that these things would
happen. And they did. And that doesn't mean that they were all wicked, but that as a nation they rejected God. And so these things were
fulfilled. Certainly Daniel and his Confederates here sometimes refer to as cousins, Shadrach
Meshach and Abednego. And it is kind of interesting that we tend to refer to Daniel by his Hebrew name,
but we refer to Shadrach Meshach and Avednego by their Babylonian names, right?
And that's funny. We do have in the record their Hebrew names, but they're not really referred to in that way,
so we tend to know them by their Babylonian names and Daniel by his Hebrew name. He also had a Babylonian name,
and that's used a couple of times, but we know him as Daniel.
Beltish is our, I guess, about the Shazar.
I don't know if it sounds as good. Belta Shazar and the lions then.
There's another ring to it that we like.
Yeah.
But God is the defender of my rights.
So even in captivity, the rights that mattered, his opportunity to choose God, to exercise
his agency.
And I want to make a little point here about that.
We often confuse agency with freedom.
That's a big mistake.
They're not the same thing.
So I think that sometimes we have parents asking,
well, I don't want to take away my kids' agencies.
And I'm like, you can't.
That's a gift bestowed by God himself.
You can't take away anybody's agency.
No one could take away Daniel's agency.
He was always able to choose God or not. And that's what agency is. It's
not the same as unlimited freedom where you can go or you want to and do what
you want to and have what you want. That's a whole different thing. Freedom is
a negotiable commodity and they lost the negotiations with Babylon when they
were conquered. So their freedom was abrogated but never their agency. So again,
just a little note for parents
or in other situations, stop saying things like,
I don't wanna take away this person's agency,
that would be way above your pay grade.
It's not gonna happen.
You could bury me in a stone box a mile deep.
I can still choose to worship God
or I can choose to reject him.
So agency continues even in captivity.
And that is the right.
God is a defender of my rights, the name of Daniel and the meaning of that name.
He always had that right.
And he exercises it again and again in this record.
He chooses to exercise faith and obedience and trust in God instead of rejecting him.
And even at the cost of his freedom, even at the cost potentially of his life,
as we'll see in many situations, the same with Shadrachmi, Shakhanabandagar. So,
kind of an important point there. I've got to say in that vein that I have a son who is probably
listening and he knows who he is, who believes that any rule placed upon him is taking away his agency.
If we have any rule, I thought we had agency.
So I won't name any names, but I will just say, you know who you are.
And you just heard it from Dr. Anderson that rules do not take away agency.
They're negotiated commodities.
We all give up freedoms in order to get benefits,
right? Like I was driving down here to Provo today and I obeyed the spade limit. I would have
rather gone faster, but I give up that freedom in order to not end up in trouble or have to pay
big fines or increase my insurance costs. He did give up some freedom in order to get the benefits,
you know, I pay taxes so I can be a citizen in good standing of this country.
Anyway, so we do that all the time.
We negotiate freedoms.
We can do that when your teenagers,
they can come and try to negotiate those things.
But then it's a negotiation.
And it's like, well, we're doing for you
and we expect some things in return.
Or while you're under our jurisdiction
and our response voting stewardship,
we need to make some parameters.
So good luck to your son.
So even in captivity, Daniel has agency. Always. Whatever our circumstances, we can choose God or we can reject him.
Now, I'm gonna make another little point. It does tie into a prophecy of Isaiah.
Earlier on that, we'll review here. It mentions right in the first chapter of Daniel, looking
at verse 7, I mean it talks about verse 6 that here were some of the children of Judah
that were brought to the palace. Daniel, Hananaya, Mishail and Azaraya, those are the three
names of Shadrach, Mishailanavendigo and Hebrew, right? unto whom verse 7, the prince of
the Unix gave names, and that's where we hear their
Abelonian names, Belta Shazar and to Hannaia Shadrach and Mishayal Mishach and then
Abednego, right? Notice that they're under the stewardship of the Prince of Unix. It is
strongly suspected by a lot of Bible scholars and Jewish scholars as well that have this in their
writings, writings of the prophets,
that they study, that these men were probably castrated and that they probably were made
uniques, which is sad. It's a really sad reality. It doesn't affect Daniel's ability or
the abilities of the others to gain revelation, to have tremendous faith, to fulfill their
purpose on life with the exception of being able to marry.
We have no record anywhere of Daniel marrying, which was pretty unusual. And he is almost always,
well, actually, I don't think there's an exception that is known, that when he's depicted an artwork,
he doesn't have a beard, even in his later years. Daniel is supposed to have lived well into his 90s and it would be
very unusual for a Jewish man not to have had a beard, but he's always depicted
beardless and this is also seen as an indication that he had been made into a
unique. Here they are under the stewardship of the Prince of Unix, so that
does kind of indicate that connection.
And the Isaiah verse that speaks about this, chapter 39 verse 6 and 7 says this,
Behold, the days come that all that is in the in-bind house, and that which their fathers have laid
up in the store unto this day, shall be carried to Babylon. Nothing shall be left,
say of the Lord. And of thy sons that shall issue from thee, which thou shall be get, shall they take
away, and they shall be unix in the palace of the king of Babylon." So Isaiah, seeing this day
through prophecy, warns them, he warns them that if you continue in this path of defiance
There are going to be great losses to you and to your children and some of your young men will become unix in the palace of Babylon
ripped away from their family and then abused like this
Traumatic it's traumatic and and then it affects their whole lives
because they will not marry, they won't have children. So great losses because
of somebody else's sin and this does happen but that does not prevent the
Lord from magnifying us. Whatever somebody else takes away from us does not
stop us from coming to the Lord, becoming his disciple
and having him magnify who we are so that we can fulfill our purpose remembering that all things
will be restored to us in the millennium. You as a counselor have seen probably many traumatic
abusive childhoods turn into profitable, wonderful lives where people can go to the Lord and what does he promise that he will
consecrate our afflictions for our good. And having trust in that is so important because, yes, bad things happen to good people.
And life is unfair. And the children suffer for the sins of the parents. This happens all the time on our planet.
Thankfully, it doesn't happen in every case, but it certainly happens. Nevertheless,
God can consecrate all of it for our good. He can magnify us in our weakness, in our injuries.
He can help us on that path, the healing, knowing that ultimate healing and complete restoration
is to come.
This is a temporary situation on this life.
And if we let our losses become our entire vision, we miss the opportunity that God gives
us to make something of our lives.
However they've been hurt, you don't see bitterness in Daniel.
You don't see bitterness in Shabbarak Mission and in a bed and go, they have incredible trust in God. You don't see bitterness and shabberak mission and a bednago they have incredible trust in
God. It's beautiful. And I think there's an important message there.
John reminds me a little bit of your dad who had such a tough childhood but was able to
such a tremendous wonderful life. Yeah, I think about that a lot. And I talked about it yesterday
in class. We were talking about the laborers in
the vineyard who came in at different times and how you joined the church in your 20s. Oh, so you
got to as if... That's a bonus somehow. Yeah, as if that's a bonus, as if wickedness was happiness
or something. And my dad would say, I never got to go to fire sides. I never had a youth conference.
I saw fires. I saw men dying around me. Yeah, his military, his world war two experiences, and
so wonderful to have him find the gospel and to embrace it. Thanks for being that I paint with
an interesting childhood. I love that verse in scripture that tells us that this is kind of the
plan of God. And I had a client that put it in a nice way not long ago that I loved and I don't know
I hadn't thought about this before, but maybe some of you have heard of the old efforts at alchemy.
Remember that word alchemy? And the idea was that these people who were kind of mystics and
scientists, they thought were trying to turn lead into gold.
That's what they wanted to do, was to take lead,
which is cheap and turn it into gold,
which is incredibly valuable.
So I was talking to this client,
a really great student in the scriptures,
and he said,
we can let them Lord do his alchemy.
I thought,
how brilliant and beautiful is that use of that term?
Because that's what he does.
He takes lead and turns it into gold in our lives if we let him. And beautiful is that use of that term because that's what he does.
He takes lead and turns it into gold in our lives if we let him.
And you see that in Daniel's life, in spite of the trauma,
taken away from home and family, put in the palace, probably made a unique,
and God makes gold of him and of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego.
It's beautiful. And then all those things which have been lost are restored,
because God is a restoreer. It all works out in the end, and nothing is lost to the righteous.
If we persist in righteousness, any losses are compensated for in abundance.
And you know how the Lord measures. Good measure, press down, shaken together, and running over.
That's from Luke 6.
So it's going to be fine.
And we can get lost in bitterness at the unfairness of life or not.
And bitterness takes away our chance to participate in the Lord's alchemy.
That's a great phrase.
Can consecrate thy afflictions for thy gain.
I'm reminded of Joseph Smith, all of your losses will be made up to you in the
resurrection. If you continue faithful by the vision of the Almighty, I have seen
it. And I love that idea of God as a restoreer, and it'll give you better,
beauty for ashes. So many ways that he tells us this, again and again, if we
can listen, we can participate and
partake of this amazing, amazing blessing. So Daniel served under five kings, which is
extraordinary, that his ministry covered five different administrations. The first three
were Babylonian, and then we get Cyrus of Persia and Darius the Meade, who was actually a general of Cyrus's.
So kind of two different conquering companies there.
But the first, of course, is Nebuchadnezzar.
And we hear him referred to a lot in these first six chapters.
He plays a large part.
We don't really hear of Nebuchadnezzar, who was the son of Nebuchadnezzar.
So after Nebuchadnezzar dies, Nebuchadnezzar becomes the king.
But he didn't like to rule and he didn't like being in the capital. So he kind of goes to another city and tries
to make Srimon Oasis city of that one, and he turns a lot of the governance over to his
son. So the grandson of Nebuchadnezzar is Belchazar. And Belchazar is only king for one night,
and we can talk about that later, and then Cyrus of Persia, Conqueror's
Babylon, and rules only one year but has a significant interaction with Daniel during that time
that we'll talk about.
And then Cyrus is general who is derriest the mead rules after that and again has a very
close relationship with Daniel.
So it's amazing that these are powerful men, powerful Gentile men who recognize in Daniel something amazing.
They see that light, they see that wisdom and they value it and promote him to great responsibility and learn from him.
And here witnesses and even see witnesses of the power of the God of Israel, even in their Gentile state, and they tend to be pantheists
in that time, meaning that they believed in lots of gods.
But we even see Nebuchadnezzar change that into understanding that there actually is
a God, which is kind of a fascinating story that, let's not jump ahead too well.
Daniel, he lived in the well in his 90s, it is supposed, an incredibly long administration.
I also want to say say this is an amazing statement
Sir Isaac Newton who was the inventor of calculus
You know, we have the famous story of the apple falling
High school I did not like him
Well calculus for sure, but yeah, but brilliant
Brilliant man, so in fact it was very common for people in his profession to be ordained as ministers,
Anglican ministers, just because of his scientific studies and so on.
And he refused being ordained as a minister because he did not believe in some of those
tenets.
So here's what he wrote about Daniel.
He who denies Daniel's prophecies undermines Christianity, which is founded on Daniel's prophecies
concerning Christ. We'll read that again. This is quite the statement from this genius Christian man.
again. This is quite the statement from this genius Christian man, he who denies Daniel's prophecies undermines Christianity, which is founded on Daniel's prophecies concerning
Christ. And we'll tie that in as we go along, but it's quite the statement. So Daniel
has been studied by so many religious scholars over the years because of the prophecies contained in chapters 7 through 12, which like I said, I think we should touch on them as we go, but we won't spend a ton of time on that.
The first story we have in chapter 1, of course, is that here with the Prince of the Unix, he's responsible for having these guys look wonderful and healthy and so on. So there are big portions of meat and wine that are given for that purpose and Daniel and his associates there that are
faithful to the gospel don't want to eat that rich food. They want to eat the simple
foods of pulse that have been part of their teachings from their youth. And the Prince
of Unix is concerned because he'll get in trouble if they don't flourish as well as the other young men in his charge.
So we have this experiment that is suggested in, I guess, is it verse 12 there?
Yeah, he says, prove thy servants. I beseech thee ten days.
And let them give us poults to eat. The footnote says, foods made of seeds or grains, poults pulls to eat and water to drink, then let our countenance
is be looked upon before the and the countenance of the
children that eat of the portion of the king's meat. And
as they'll see us, deal with high servants.
That's right. So let's do a scientific little test here.
A medical test where you can do a before and after and we've
got a control group because the other guys will be eating that rich food
and we won't and then you can see how we flourish and 10 days is a pretty quick turnaround for a study like that but there was
an apparent difference because after that time you can sense in verse 14 and 15 at the end of 10 days their
countenance has appeared fairer and fatter and flashed than all the children which had eaten a portion
of the King's meat.
So it worked.
And they said, the Lord will do this.
They had faith that if they followed their eating code,
that in spite of the fact that there was a lot
of pressure to conform.
And again, they must have been pretty nice guys
right to begin with because this guy who could get
in trouble, if they don't't flourish gave them this opportunity.
So it speaks a lot to how well they presented to others.
They were not obviously adversarial people.
They were working to find collaboration.
They were working to get along and to be able to have influence that's required.
So we don't come in like gangbusters.
You know, we're hearing a lot in conference these days and from our leaders about being peacemakers
Neil Anderson gave a wonderful speech last conference
About peacemaking, but we're hearing that from various leaders in our church
President Nelson get rid of contention. Yeah, that's right
It's really important that we realize that because we're in a very adversarial world and people love to engage in
Combat basically verbal and otherwise.
They didn't do that.
They didn't come in there with an adversarial or combative attitude, even though they are
captives, and they have very limited choices.
They obviously were peacemakers and are able then to ask for some things that people feel
like granting to them because they're not trouble makers.
And I think that's such a good lesson too.
And then they show the truth of the blessing that comes from obeying our Lord and God.
And so we see the number 17, God gave them knowledge and skill in all learning and wisdom.
That's the compliment that Hank gave John today.
And Daniel has understanding in all learning and wisdom. That's the compliment that Hank gave John today. And Daniel has understanding in all visions and dreams. So these gifts come and they're tying
it into their obedience, which makes perfect sense because God reveals his secrets to people who
obeyed, people that he can trust. And then in the last verse of chapter 20, almost the last verse,
in all matters of wisdom and understanding
that the king inquired of them, he found them ten times better than all the magicians and astrologers
that were in all his realm. Well, yeah, God against sorcery. Another little detail, if you'll forgive
me, that I found interesting, is that he did associate Daniel and Shadrach Mishak and Abednego
associated with the other people in the court that were considered wise men.
And as they mentioned here, they're called magicians and astrologers and so on.
And it is suggested in some writings that it is because of Daniel's influence in his long tenure of being a counselor to kings and interpretive dreams and so on, that and because of his prophecies concerning the coming of Christ,
that he would have taught those men of the east,
who were magicians, magi astrologers of the coming of Christ
and the signs concerning his birth,
and this may be why the three magi came to bring gifts to Christ.
And that may have been under the direction of Daniel, This may be why the three magi came to bring gifts to Christ.
And that may have been under the direction of Daniel who knew when Christ would come.
And may have said, teach this to all the people who are coming, who are these wise men of
the East, because there is a king coming and he should be worshipped and take these gifts
to him, because he will need them. That's awesome.
This is coming and the angel has shown me the time.
So you be watching and these signs will appear
and then you are to take these kingly gifts,
these royal gifts to the real king
and it will bless him and his family
when they need to go to Egypt.
So in chapter two, we have the famous dream of Nebuchadnezzar. We throw
around this term all the time in our era about narcissists. And there are so many YouTube
videos on, you know, are you married to a narcissist or how to deal with a narcissist? And
I kind of worry about that because I think we overdiagnose. And although there are some
patterns, I like to say that narcissism isn't so much a disorder as it is a sin because it's really just selfishness
run amok.
And so can you recover from that?
Yeah, you can repent.
And you don't have to be a narcissist your whole life,
even if we cross that line into some narcissistic behaviors
or even a lot, we can repent.
And yet here we have kind of a real narcissist
in Nebuchadnezzar and we'll even see that he can change
to an extent at least under the tutelage of Daniel and Daniel's God who is the God.
But here we see that Nebuchadnezzar, I mean, is so used to getting his way. His power was absolute.
Whatever he said was done, there are legends. We're not sure if this is exactly to there is some question about where these gardens were,
but it is rumored so to speak historically that there were these hanging gardens of Babylon that were one of the ancient wonders of the world
because things should not have grown like that, but they used the river Euphrates
and they had these these screws that brought the water up into these terrorist things
that apparently he built because his wife missed her home
which had mountains and
Babylon didn't have the mountains. So he created these artificial mountains that were watered by this elaborate system
because Nebuchadnezzar says, I need this for my wife and so they go to work and they create all these marvels
just because he said he wanted it. So he had incredible power, incredible wealth, and anybody around
would run at his back and call. So here he dreams a dream, and in a typical narcissist fashion,
even though he can't remember the dream, he's going to demand that his magicians of the court
tell him what the dream is, and then interpret it, because it disturbed him. And they're like,
well, can you tell us what it is?
No.
No, you tell me what it is.
You tell me.
And if not, I'm wiping you all out.
And it would have been death to all of them,
including Daniel, Shadrach, Meshik and Abednego,
because they were housed with these wise men,
even though, like we say, their wisdom was ten times
that of their confederates.
And look, one of them responds, in verse 11 of chapter 2, it is a rare thing that the
king reclined.
I mean, he's trying to hold back from crazy and insane, and certainly unfair, and there
is none other that can shoot before the king except the gods, whose dwelling is not with
flesh, like there's nobody on the planet,
who can do this for you.
And the king gets angry, verse 12,
he's gonna destroy all the wise men.
And the decree goes forth in verse 13
that everyone should be slain.
And they find Daniel and his fellows,
where they are to kill them as well.
And then in verse 15, Daniel says,
why is the decree so hasty from the king?
Can we pause for a moment? Daniel,
in verse 16, goes in and desires of the king that he would give him time and then he will show
the king the interpretation. And then he goes and talks to Shadrachmi Shadrachmi Shadrachmi
and Abednego, his companions, and they all pray together for the mercies of the God of heaven.
This is verse 18 concerning this secret
that they should not perish with the rest of the wise man of Babylon. In verse 19, the secret is revealed
unto Daniel in a night vision. So they go exactly as we all should petition the Lord for light truth
understanding when it's needful. And God who knows all will impart as appropriate for our circumstances.
He knows when to give that information and when it's not the time. But in this case, it certainly was the time to get that.
And he gives that in a night vision to Daniel and Daniel blesses the God of heaven. And what bless him forever and ever was them and might are his.
He changed at the time of the seasons. And he gives this beautiful kind of testimony of God's power, and he praises him versus the next
verses. He remove of kings and set it up kings, give it wisdom and the wise, knowledge them that
no understanding, reveal it the deep and secret things, know it's in the darkness and the light
dwelleth with him. I thank the impraise, it is a Psalm. And bless you who have given wisdom and might.
And as they may, they've known it to me. So then he goes to the guy with the messenger.
And then he sets him up with the king. And in verse 27, he answers in the presence of the
king and says, the secret which the king has demanded cannot be wise men, the astrologers,
the magicians, the Sussex shoe under the king, but there is a God in heaven that reveal a secret.
Man, he is bold.
He is a witness of Christ. He's always a witness of Christ. He never takes that honor into himself and says, I had the answer. And then he reveals it according to his will to people on this planet.
And he is a messenger of this great message.
And so he tells him what the dream is.
But look again, verse 30, but as for me, this secret is not revealed to me for any wisdom
that I have more than any living.
Look at this incredible
understanding and humility. It's not me and I don't even want you to think I'm
better than anybody else. I want to make that clear. I want to make that really clear
that the Lord reveals, according to his will, for their sakes that make
known the interpretation of the King and that thou mightest know the thoughts of
thy heart. So this is a blessing for Nebuchadnezzar as well.
And then he says, this is what you saw a great image verse 31, and then he talks about this image of metal.
And this is fascinating. This ties into some pretty cool history, but the image's head is of fine gold,
the breast in his arms of silver, belly and thighs of breasts, legs of iron, and his feet, part of iron, and part of
clay. And all of this has such specific meaning that's pretty exciting that we get to talk
about today. And then in verse 34, this phrase that we're very familiar with in the restored
church of Jesus Christ, thou sawst till that a stone was cut out without hands, which
smote the image upon his feet that were of iron and clay and break them to pieces.
Then was the iron and clay and brass and silver and the gold broken to pieces together.
And the wind carries it away. No place was found for them. And the stone that smote the image became a great mountain and filled the whole earth.
This is the dream. and we'll tell the interpretation
now. So first I'm telling you what you couldn't even remember. As Nebuchadnezzar hears it, undoubtedly,
he's saying, he's sitting there. Oh yeah, that's it. I forgot it, but that's the dream and it
disturbed him. And now Daniel through the goodness and revelation of God is able to tell the King this and then he says,
you're the King of Kings for the God of heaven half given the kingdom. And again, look at the
boldness with which he tells this narcissistic King who has absolute power.
And anything at his back in call and he says the God of heaven has given the kingdom.
You only have this because of God, yeah.
Whether you know it or not, God is in charge.
You think you did all this?
Yeah.
The walls around Babylon were so enormous, and they even give measurements in some of the
histories, but I'm just going to say that at the top of the wall, it was wide enough
that two chariots drawn by four horses each could race on the top of the wall. It was wide enough that two chariots drawn by four horses each could race on the top of the
wall. That's a really big wall. I mean, it's not just a turret for a guard to look out. So he's
pretty full of himself and has all that power, but Daniel never, never quails at telling him it's God that has given you this.
And then you are the head of gold at the end of verse 39, and then there will be another
kingdom in verse 38, the end of it, that is where the head of gold is nebuchadnezzar, and
then another kingdom in 39 will arise.
It's inferior to thee, and then the third kingdom of brass, and the fourth kingdom shall
be as strong as iron.
And then in verse 41, the kingdom shall be divided,
but there shall be in it of the strength of the iron, because that's what's mixed with
the clay in the feet of the statue, and the toes of the feet are part of iron, part of clay,
so the kingdom shall be partly strong and partly broken.
This is fascinating as we get into talk about that.
Then God will set up a kingdom in verse 44,
which shall never be destroyed. His own kingdom back on the planet after the
great apostasy has come to an end. And the kingdom shall not be left to other
people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms and
stand forever. For as much, verse 45, as thou sawest, that the stone was cut out of the mountain
without hands, and that it breaking pieces, the iron, the brass, the clay silver, and
gold, the great God have made known to the king what shall come to pass hereafter, and
the dream is certain, and the interpretation thereof. Sure. Another witness, Daniel, is
a witness of truth, he is a witness of Christ, a defender of
all that truth, in a situation in which he could lose his head at any moment.
Oh yeah. Be cast into furnaces or cast into the lions as he and his colleagues are.
And never can ever fall on his face and worship Daniel. Verse 46, he says of a
truth, it is that your God is a God of God. Again, he's a pantheist,
so he believes in lots of gods, but he says, wow, your God seems to be better than a lot of them,
and a Lord of Lords, and a revealer of secrets. So the King makes Daniel a great man. It's
understood in Jewish tradition also that several times during Daniel's ministry with these kings he's offered airship to the throne. Nebuchadnezzar apparently offers him to be an heir and
Daniel refuses. That's not his role and he's not there to govern. He's given a
lot of governance and he certainly does handle things for the king. He wants to be
a servant of the Lord and do what the Lord asks of him, but he does have
some pretty impressive moments here, and the kings admire him. We can see that as we go
through these different administrations that he works with. The silver, which are the arms and
the neck of the statue, is the Medea Persian Empire. So that is Cyrus and Darius. And we see later that they don't have
quite as much power as Nebuchadnezzar did because they're actually bound by some of their own
edicts in a way that Nebuchadnezzar is not. Nebuchadnezzar can do whatever he wants. But there's a
change that's made in the government so much in so much that Cyrus and then Darius, later with
the lions, doesn't feel like he has a choice.
And his counselors in the kingdom, hold him to something that he has said, which would
not have happened with Nebuchadnezzar.
So there is a lessening of power that happens with the silver in the statue in the Medeo
Persian Empire.
That seems to happen during Queen Esther, her story as well.
That's true. Because the King seems to say, I can't change certain laws.
He's part of the Persian administration.
Yeah.
And, you know, you can see that because actually when people get rid of a King who has absolute
power, they often institute those kinds of protections that, like, wait a minute.
And this happened in Great Britain.
Maybe some of you know a lot of this history where after King Richard, the Lionheart,
his brother John takes over,
who is the bad guy in the Robin Hood stories.
He becomes the king after anyway.
And he is a really vile king
who also kind of has this absolute power of royalty.
And it is because of King John
that the other nobles gather together in Great Britain and
demand that he sign the Magna Carta. And the Magna Carta is one of those big beginning points of
the restoration because it limits the divine right of kings and holds them subject to some laws.
And this allows for more growth towards freedom. It often comes as a result of somebody who abuses power
and then people kind of try to combine and say like,
wait, this is too scary that you have this absolute power.
So they put some restrictions.
And that's the silver is the Medeo Persian
and then that has somewhat less power.
And then bronze is Greece.
And in some of the prophecies of Daniel, the person who is being discussed there, it's
pretty clearly Alexander the Great.
Alexander the Great.
And he made his kingdom huge from southern Europe all the way over to India.
Right.
And then after Greece comes Rome.
The iron is Rome.
Those are the legs of iron, imperial Rome.
And then what's so fascinating here,
if you look at the history and many of you are probably familiar with this, but maybe some of you
aren't, Imperial Rome, which was the Caesars, those emperors of Rome and so on, morphs into
papal Rome, meaning the Holy Roman Empire, but that's still Rome.
The Vatican is in Rome.
So we have this transition from this absolute power of the Roman
emperors and Caesars into a church power, which is the Holy Roman
Empire. And that is where the feet come in and the toes that are
iron still, because they're still
rome there and some of the power of Rome, but it's mixed with clay, meaning other worldly kingdoms.
So you see this shift from these powerful kingdoms to a powerful church, but it's mixed with clay
because there are these other kings that have armies and in fact sometimes they stretch that power.
because there are these other kings that have armies and in fact sometimes they stretch that power.
We'll see what stopped the power of the papacy in preparation for the restoration. Because what was the other part of the dream? That this weaker mixture of iron and clay.
Iron and clay, the toes. Which is that Catholic consortium of countries with lots of different kings there in Western Europe is broken
in preparation for the restoration. Napoleon Bonaparte played a big part in
ending that absolute power of the papacy. Napoleon Bonaparte, very impressive and
obviously charismatic leader. His men loved him. So he's got this incredible
ability to lead men in battle and be successful.
And he invaded Italy in the year 1798. 1798. Now that's after the French Revolution,
after the American Revolution, and then after the French Revolution, Napoleon Bonaparte
invades Italy and he defeats the papal troops. So he defeats the Pope's armies.
And he effectively, in that year, dethrones the Pope
from that position of great power.
He removes his power as an earthly king
and he declares the papal lands free.
So he's really divesting him of property
which there's power in property, right?
And demanded that the Pope renounce all temporal authority.
This is Napoleon.
Now, the Pope won't do that.
He won't go that far.
He loses his lands, his army is defeated.
He won't denounce his temporal authority,
but it kind of ends anyway because he's imprisoned.
He's arrested in August of 1799.
The Pope dies in captivity.
And papal authority is never restored to previous
levels.
They don't have an army anymore that can counter or intimidate the kings of Europe.
And Napoleon then clears the way for something that happens seven years later when Joseph Smith is born, and then in 1820, just not that many
years after that, we have the first vision in the beginning of the restoration. I just
think that if we read and study these things, we get a better understanding of omnipotence and omniscience that God sees all things as present
and that God has all power and he works in the affairs of men to accomplish his purposes
with or without their knowledge. I'm not certainly not saying that Napoleon Bonaparte was on a mission from God, but God knows
who's going to be where when.
And so he can tell his prophets, this is going to happen.
And that will set the stage for this because he uses, of course, both the righteous choices
of his people, and he uses unrighteous choices of his people also to accomplish his good. All of this is a testament to omniscience and omnipotence that comes from God and can
really increase our understanding and our trust in him.
He never gets it wrong.
He's not guessing.
We see the trajectory.
We see the message.
We see the testimony and the witnesses of Christ, always of Christ, and of his doings.
And of who he is.
Lily, we would pick up on this if we didn't know our history.
Babylon, then Persia, then the Greek Empire, then the Roman Empire. That's exactly how it went.
I'm looking at section 65 of the Doctrine and Covenants.
The wonderful thing is Peter James and John came and so I'm reading verse 2 at section 65 of the Doctrine and Covenants. The wonderful thing is Peter, James, and John came,
and so I'm reading verse two of section 65,
the keys of the kingdom of God are committed unto man
on the earth, and from then shall the gospel roll forth
unto the ends of the earth, as the stone,
which is cut out of the mountain without hands,
shall roll forth until it has filled the whole earth.
So there's the
fulfillment. Peter comes back, restores the keys, and now the stone, and I think maybe our listeners
wondered, what does it mean without hands? Well, I think it means without earthly hands. It's going
to be something that man didn't do. Shows of Smith didn't have power. That's right, he wasn't wealthy,
he wasn't famous. He certainly had no armies at his command. It was done through the gift and power of God and the Holy Ghost, given to
a steward on the earth to be the restore, but he had no power of his own life to make those things
happen. President Hinckley spoke about the stone cut out of the mountain. All the time, I remember as a teenager listening to President
He said at one point, after centuries of darkness and pain and struggle, the time was ripe for the restoration of the gospel.
Ancient prophets had spoken of this long, awaited day. All of the history of the past had pointed to this season.
The centuries with all of their suffering and all their hope
had come and gone. They all mighty judge of the nations, the living God determined that the times
of which the prophets had spoken had arrived. Daniel had foreseen a stone, which was cut out of the
mountain without hands, in which became a great mountain and filled the earth. He goes on later to say,
that glorious day dawned in the year 1820 when a boy earnest
and with faith walked into a grove of trees and lifted his voice in prayer, seeking that wisdom,
which he felt he so much needed. There came in response a glorious manifestation. The stone was
small in the beginning. It was hardly noticeable, but it has grown steadily and is rolling forth
to fill the earth.
I love the excitement in President Hinckley.
God does reveal His secrets to the prophets, and it is exciting when we see that happening
and recognize the hand of the Lord is never halted.
It's never halted by the affairs of men.
He utilizes it.
And we're going to get that information even more here with Nebuchadnezzar going going back to Daniel and chapter 3
We have the famous story infamous story of Shadrach Meshach and Abednego. Now it's interesting that this doesn't involve Daniel, but it is suspected that because of some of the writings that he was out of the capital of the time.
What's interesting is here Nebuchadnezzar has heard this dream given to him again and then
Interpreted by Daniel and he knows he's the head of gold. So, you know, what is it? Narcissistu?
I
Think I'll make a statue to myself of gold and I'll make people worship it
He doesn't really get the overarching power of God. It's just kind of like oh, I get to be the gold so
I get to be the gold head. Yeah.
He makes a statue, which must have been at least 90 feet high. We're given a measurement here.
Three score and six qubits. And the Statue of Liberty for reference is just over 150 feet high.
So it's almost two thirds the size of the Statue of Liberty. Wow. And he erects this in one community and
then he assigns some musicians to play it mentions what the different instruments
are to play basically his theme song every once in a while. He asks his own theme music.
When they hear the theme music then almost bow down and worship the statue or
be burned in the fire. He's already got the consequence in mind. So Shadrach Meesha can embed
it go are there, but they won't do it. And as is usual when some people are
favored by royalty, and there's a lot of vying for royal favor. So they already
have people who don't like them who are obviously envious of this great
revelatory power that they're able to tap into because they worship the true God.
So they point out to the king that this is in verse 10, they tell the king,
you've made this decree and they're not doing it.
In verse 12, yeah, they won't do it.
Whistleblowers.
Well, sometimes whistleblowers are good, but anyway.
Snitches get stitches, John.
These are stitches.
These guys are trying to get him in trouble for so what are you going to do about them?
You never can, Ezra. So he goes right to them because the king kind of values these men already.
And he says, in verse 14, oh, shed, wreck me, she's going to bend to go, do not e-serve my gods,
nor worship the golden image of me, which
I have set up.
And then he says, if you're going to be ready to do that, fine, but if not, you're going
to be cast in this of a burning fiery furnace.
This is verse 15.
And who is that God that shall deliver you out of my hands?
Like you really think anybody can save you from that.
And they give such a beautiful answer. It should be remembered
by all of us forever. In verse 17, if it be so, our God whom we serve is able to deliver
us from a burning fiery furnace, and he will deliver us out of vine hand, okay. But if
not, verse 18, but if not be it known unto the O King that we will not serve thy
gods nor worship the golden image which thou has set up.
We only worship God.
We will not worship you.
You may be all powerful in this earthly sphere, but this is not the power that we're concerned
with.
We're concerned with the omnipotence of a God who is good and just and merciful and we will only worship him.
Talk about pressure. You're facing an immediate fiery death, but no.
And as mentioned in the curriculum in our Come Follow Me curriculum, there's a great conference speech by Elder Dennis Simmons, who was actually
our state president for a while in Vegas. And then yeah, just kind of at the end of his
tenure, there was state president. And then he gave this wonderful speech in April 2004.
But if not, and quoting from that speech, Elder Simmons says, they knew that they could trust God,
even if things didn't turn out the way they hoped.
That's powerful.
They knew that faith is more than mental ascent, more than an acknowledgement that God lives.
Faith is total trust in Him.
In the good times and in the bad times, that that doesn't change who God is or who he can be to us
if we choose to have that complete trust.
And this is different. It's harder to do than it might sound at first
because we love these stories and we like to think that we would try to be the same
in our life's choices.
But when I find, when I work with people, good people,
really good people who haven't quite understood this
completely yet or been able to fully embrace
this level of trust in God.
Because sometimes we want to dictate
the way our blessings come.
We have a good idea of what we think would be beneficial
in our lives.
Like I want to get married at this time, or I want to have children at this time,
or I want to get this job, or I want to have this illness taken away,
or this challenge taken away, or whatever, I want to avoid these hardships.
And are those righteous desires?
Sure.
I'm not saying they're not righteous desires, but remember when we pray that we're invited to
include something along the lines of all these things according to thy will in
an
acknowledgement that God's will may not be the same as ours and that he is a superior to ours
So we can petition for blessings that we think would be good for us or our stewardship,
our families and so on, our loved ones.
But there should be that at least internal, if not articulated,
acknowledgement that God's ways are better.
Remember, we talked about IZ, I recently.
You know, my thoughts are not your thoughts, nor my ways, your ways, mine are higher.
They're higher because I do see everything. Not just now, but the end from the beginning, I know how this
ends. I know what will really be the best in this situation, considering our eternal trajectory.
And sometimes that is granting our petitions. And sometimes it is not because it's better
not to, because there's growth or stretching,
or it leads to another experience that ultimately is consecrated for our gain.
And the Lord knows those things, and we don't.
So if we try to get things to our way,
and then we don't think God is God,
because we don't always get things our way,
we're missing out on this level of faith
as demonstrated by these three amazing men, who say,
we know he can save us from the furnace, but if he doesn't, that doesn't change a thing,
in the way we believe in God and when worship only him, because that would be for a higher purpose
than perhaps we can see at this point in time, but we know that it is the case because God never fails to do what's best. For us,
those three words, but if not, it reminds me of Abinadi. He was not saved from the flames.
And yet Abinadi's last words, I'm intrigued by last words in the book Mormon, Abinadi's last words in the book Mormon, Abinadai's last words were, Oh God, receive my soul.
And he went through it.
He did burn.
And the opening paragraph of the manual says, most likely, no one will ever threaten to
throw you into a fiery furnace or a den of lions because of your faith in Jesus Christ.
But none of us get through this life without a trial of faith.
We can all benefit from the example of people like Daniel, Shaderak, Meshach, and Abednego who are taking captive as young men
by the mighty Babylonian empire or surrounded by an unfamiliar culture with different values
and faced great temptations to abandon their beliefs and righteous traditions.
So this but if not story, it reminds me of Job too. Well, I keep my faith
in God even when things don't work out. God is able to do this, but if he doesn't, I'm still going
to love him and be devoted to him is. That's right. And trust in his higher purpose. I'm going to trust
the outcome, like a minute I must have. Trust that it is a manifestation of his love
that he doesn't always give us what we want.
And trust that he has a higher purpose
and that all will be restored in the end again,
to know who he is and know that I'm not gonna end up
on the short end of the stick if I trust God.
That is a different level.
I love what you read there.
From the lesson, always a good reminder,
we were another one who did that was Joseph Smith who gave his life and sealed his testimony with his
blood at age 38, with a young family and having already gewisted many trials. High-room his brother
as well. We were recently in Na'avu, so great to be back after 20 years when we went to the temple
open house. And we're there to speak for a conference, but one afternoon we drove over to Carthage, which is sacred ground as well.
And you really feel the spirit of Jeze Smith in Naboo and Carthage, and I had forgotten how
that felt.
But you feel it strongly in those places.
It's such a tender reminder that God does require hard things.
Nobody would pray that they could seal their testimony with their blood.
Nobody would pray for that.
Nobody would pray that they leave their family at a young age.
We don't pray for those things, but as we pray, if we can plumb the depths of our heart,
our soul and mind and say, am I willing to submit to all things that the Father see a
Thit, to inflict upon me with the trust that it is ultimately for my gain, that he
would not do these things for any other purpose than love, for any other purpose
than perfect charity, because he knows and sees everything and knows what my customized curriculum and Neel Maxwell phrase should be
for my best outcome
And I able to trust at that level so that I truly can say nevertheless
I will be done which is the example of Christ
I will not mine and
That is the pattern for each of us to come to that place where we
don't just trust when things work out the way we want. We trust when they don't. It's a great essay,
if anyone who wants to read it, I think it's collected in the book, Approaching Zion by Hugh Nimbley,
but this essay, which he wrote singly first, was called Work We Must, but the lunch is free.
which he wrote singly first was called, work we must, but the lunch is free.
But the main message of that essay is that God requires us
to do what he has commanded us to do.
Then that includes the work of this life
and then certainly obedience is commandment
into our covenants.
But sometimes we want to act as though it is our work that brings the blessings.
And what Nibbli is suggesting is that we should detach those two things.
Because we don't earn our blessings.
The lunch is free. It's because God is good, because He is merciful, because He is generous, unfailingly so.
That's where the blessings come.
And they come in the time and in the way that the Lord
in His omniscience knows will best benefit us eternally.
I mean, He does make promises,
but they are eternal promises
that are gonna be fulfilled in the end,
not necessarily now.
And that's why we see people like Abinadi and Joseph Smith
and Job go through very hard things
that are certainly not fair, and certainly not the results of their hard work or their obedient lives.
But if we can disconnect that, we don't lose our faith as so many sadly do when prayers are not answered. But as we get into these higher levels of faith, the Lord is telling us, trust me. You do the work because that's what I've asked you to do,
in keeping your covenants and doing the work of this life,
and trust that the blessings will come at the time,
and in the way that I know will most benefit you.
And it may not look like that to you, but you trust me.
That's exactly the message of Shadrach Meeshach and Abednego.
And we can become more like these men,
as we honestly submit our will to his,
according to thy will, according to thy way,
not my will, but thine.
And I love that it's not just Daniel.
It's the three of them saying,
we are not careful to answer the,
so this example of young men that are so strong
in an unfamiliar place with a threat of a very unpleasant death
is really inspiring.
It's also making me think, man, could I do that?
I'm not sure I could do that.
I don't think burning to death would be a fun way to go.
But they were prepared.
If not, do what you have to do,
but we're not gonna worship your gods.
Hank, didn't you do a talk called,
I love my friends or something like a,
something that Yothan here in testimony meeting
about Daniel and his friends?
Yeah, because I had heard that so many times
from my students.
I love my friends, right? I like my family. I love my friends.
And so I talked a little bit about how important it is to have good friends.
And I went to these chapters because you can see we talked about in Daniel 2
that when Daniel had his problem, he went to Hananiah, Mishayel and Aziraya and said,
we need to work together on this and desire God.
And then you pointed out the pronouns of we are not careful.
We're not careful.
This wasn't a, well, I don't know about these two, but I'm not
going to do it.
Yeah.
That's true.
That it's important to surround yourself with friends who
believe it's hard to follow when you're surrounded by
friends who believe. So thanks John, yeah. Now the other side of that coin is that as awful as it is
to be slain for your beliefs. And we have talked about some great people.
Like Abinadi? Yes, and the early Protestant reformers and other good people through the ages who
because of their desire to be
have integrity and to be honest in their beliefs and true to them.
Anyway, lots of innocent good people have been slain as martyrs.
We may not be called upon.
Most of us will not be called upon to die for our testimonies, but are we living our
testimonies day by day and seeking to yield our wills to the will of the Lord and do things in his way, not in our way when it concerns what seemed to be pedestrian things but are sometimes exactly where that rubber needs to hit the road like how we wear our garments or do we pay a full tithing? Do we honor this Sabbath day?
Are we honest in all our dealings?
Are we kind?
Do we harness our tempers to not have the destructive
anger and tempers that Christ warns about in the New Testament?
Are we living the gospel of Jesus Christ?
Are we strengthening our marriages,
our partners in marriage, our husbands or wives?
Do they feel our love?
Do our children feel safe with us?
Are we living the gospel of Jesus Christ?
This is where we can get the same demonstration of trust in God that I can overcome my
pettiness or my bad temper or my weaknesses or my selfishness in order to demonstrate that I trust that God's blessings are greater than that moment of natural man
pleasure that I get from indulging those weaknesses or those bad habits had to add to that I do these things not because I have some
expected
Blessing not guy have some picture in my head. I remember growing up and over and over in the book of Mormon it says,
if you keep my commandments,
you shall prosper in the land.
If you keep my commandments,
you shall prosper in the land.
And then I, it finally occurred to me
that I was like, I don't think my definition of prosper
and his definition of prosper is the same.
It was a couple of years before I went,
define prosper.
The blessing will come in the time and in the way
that the Lord knows is best for us,
which is so different from how we were,
yeah, I want that candy bar right now.
I found my dollar, yeah.
I had a definition of prosper in my head
that I think the Lord let me have
and for until it hit me in the face,
that that's not the ex week, that's not the his definition.
I don't think that word means what you think that word means.
Yeah, yeah. I'm gonna say that to word. I don't think that word means what you think that word means. Yeah, yeah.
And you'll think that's what I do not think it means what you think it means.
Exactly.
And that is building our trust in the Lord.
And it is a gradual day by day process.
It doesn't have to be in extreme moments.
Here it is as a great example to us.
But it really is in these day by day,
yieldings of our natural man desires in order to do things in God's
way.
That's how we progress in our lives.
And that's what builds the kind of trust that if required would lead to these kinds of
sacrifices.
But whether or not it's required in this life, it is required that we build that trust
in God and that we not try to carve out the blessings that we want and say, if you really
love me, Lord, this is what you'll do for me. And this is how it will look. And this is when it will happen.
And that we don't do it because it works. Sometimes it does. We do it because it's right.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
this podcast.