Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 137-138 Part 1 : Dr. Steven C. Harper
Episode Date: November 28, 2021What is the soteriology problem? Dr. Steven Harper returns to discuss Doctrine and Covenants, Section 137, and the centuries-long question of who gets saved by God. We discuss the nature of God, the r...edemption of the dead, and the reality that death isn’t a deadline to determine a person’s salvation.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
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Now, wow, we are, we're covering the globe here, John.
We have one, really one final episode
to talk about the profit, Joseph Smith,
before we move on to different curriculum.
So John, we brought in
I would say I would say the world's expert on Joseph Smith. He would say one of the world's experts
on Joseph Smith. He might even not call himself an expert, but talk to us. Who's here with us today?
We are so glad to have Dr. Steve Harper back again. I've got a couple of books of his on my shelf one that long before
I really met Steve personally, I read Joseph Smith's first vision where he talks about
all the different accounts. We know there were different accounts. People heard Joseph
talk about it right down. He wrote some and put those all together beautifully. There's
another book called Making Sense of the Doctrine and Covenants, which I have used a lot this year. And so we're just glad to have them back. And I got a
bio from the religious education website, and we'll let him update this if he needs to. But
Steven C. Harper is a professor of church history and doctrine at Brigham Young University.
In 2012, Steve was appointed as the managing historian
and general editor of saints,
the story of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
He was named editor in chief of BYU Studies Quarterly
in September 2018,
served in the Canada Winnipeg Mission
and married Jennifer Sebring in 1992.
They graduated from BYU in 1994.
And I love that. They graduated
in 1994. So was that a dual graduation Steve at the same time? Yep. She in art education, me in
history. At the same time. That's great. He has an MA, master of arts in American history from
Utah State, his thesis analyzed determinants of conversion to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the 1830s.
This is the part, when you hear this, it's going to sound really cool.
He earned a PhD in early American history from Lehigh University in Bethlehem, comma, Pennsylvania, but it's not. You know, Lehigh, you got Bethlehem.
That sounds really, but it's Lehigh, H-E-H-I-G-H, Lehigh, like high up.
He began teaching courses in religion and history at BYU Hawaii in 2000.
That's a rough assignment.
Joint religious education faculty in 2002.
I mentioned a couple of books, dozens of articles.
We're just really glad to have you back,
Stephen. I'm so excited and ready to take notes. It's thrilling for me to be with you again. You guys
are doing immensely important work and the vast number of people that are paying attention or
a testament to how important it is and how far we reach it. Thank you. Well, Steve, we are lucky to have you,
and I promised him I wouldn't gush,
but I just need to say he's gonna be like,
you promised.
I just need to say, the first time I saw Steve Harper
speaking on Joseph Smith,
my first thought was, no one this good looking
should be this smart.
Wow, this guy knows his stuff.
And I also didn't realize this is gonna become my friend.
And he and his wife are as faithful and as good
and as wonderful as you'd hope them to be
from someone who knows so much.
So I'm done gushing.
That was just a quick gush.
It was a mini gush.
Well, I, one of our previous podcasts, I think,
I don't know if it was part of the recording or not,
but I asked Steve
So were you offensive or defensive line and he said what did you say Steve?
I think this is kind of I think he said I was a mediocre quarterback
That was a overstatement John I was that was a radical overstatement
Media occurs a compliment. Yeah, that's yeah, that's an insult to all the other media ocher
companies out there.
Right.
It was a president,
iring that said there were two of us in our deacon's
quorum back in New Jersey.
And that may be an exaggeration.
That's funny.
I have a terrible arrogance problem.
And this is good for it. Yeah, for bad. I don't know. I have a terrible arrogance problem and this is good for it.
Yeah, for bad.
I don't know.
I bet, you know.
I remember you saying that one of your talks,
my wife says I have an arrogance problem.
I don't, obviously.
I don't know what she's thinking.
This week, I like how the manual starts out.
We have two revelations that are separated by more than 80 years
and 1500 miles. So who's better to walk us through these revelations 137 and 138 than Steve Harper?
So Steve, we're going to kind of turn it over to you and we'll just kind of be the side show.
We take us along with you.
Well, yeah, sections 137 and 138.
They come at the back of the book,
even though section 137 was revealed on the 21st day of January 1836 in the temple at Kurt Lentohio.
So we're jumping back in time.
Yep.
All the way back to the months before the dedication of the temple. And then section 138 comes as a series of
visions to Joseph F. Smith, the prophet's nephew, who's now the prophet himself
aged to prophet just one month from his own death. And the revelation comes on the
third day of October 19, 18. And we'll talk about the significance of those that year and the weeks surrounding it.
So, you know, why don't we put section 137 where it belongs chronologically, which would be
right between sections 108 and 109? I don't know. I certainly wasn't part of that decision,
but one thing that would happen if you did that is every footnote you've ever written or referenced
in any manual, the sections 109 through 136 would be bumped. So in 1976, the prophets proposed to the saints that we canonized these two revelations, and
we did so.
We put them in the Pearl of Great Price for a few years.
And then in 1979, I think put them, tacked them on at the end of the doctrine and covenants.
So there's going to be some of our listeners who remember this.
Yeah. Oh, yeah. Some of us are
alive in those days. Yeah. John, you don't remember this. I was there. I was about to 13. And I remember
that was momentous. I mean, my dad was, couldn't stay seated on the couch. He was, look at this and they even gave us a little insert
that we printed on the same type of scripture paper
to stick in there.
I wish I had that now.
I've upgraded, I guess, but I remember that.
And then I remember when they moved it
to the doctrine and covenants.
Wow, John.
Pretty cool.
We have church history on our podcast right now.
Like we're interviewing someone from church history.
We find the product to your life.
I was in seminary when they said,
turn in your Bibles and they handed us all a new one
and I will never forget opening it up
and seeing footnotes to the Book of Mormon in my Bible.
That was a moment I won't forget as a sophomore in seminary.
Yeah, it's pretty cool.
Awesome.
John, and you don't look it.
That's the good thing.
You do not look it.
You don't look a day over 80.
Who is friends with David O'Make and we work on it.
Helen Wilford and I room together, BYU.
Yeah, so that's...
Sorry Steve. Yeah, we're getting out of character. Yeah, when Wilford and I room together, BYU. Yeah, so that's Steve.
Yeah, we're getting out of track here.
Yeah, sorry.
Go back to it.
So it was 76 and then you, what'd you say?
79.
I was around then too, but John was paying better attention than I was.
I remember when Elvis died, I thought that was the present at church.
I was confused about all these things.
So it wasn't as well informed or or faith.
Well, since we're admitting things, I remember thinking Orville Reddenbacher was in the
quorum of the 12 because he looked like Marvin J. Ashton and I just could not tell him
to a part. So I thought, why is that a possible selling so much popcorn?
So sorry, we go through. sorry, we can go through that.
That's an honest mistake.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Well, the thing about these two revelations, though, there's a far separated in time, is
that they both address what in Christian theology is called a sotereological problem. And so let's start with that. The
sotereology is theology that is about salvation. Who gets saved? How do you get saved? And Christians
debate sotereology endlessly. And Joseph Smith's day, there's a serious
sociological problem. Christianity has it to this day,
continues to be debated. But sections 137 and 138 solve it.
They resolve it. The problem has three premises. And the problem
is that these three premises can't all be reconciled apparently.
Let me see if I can remember them. First is that God presumably loves all his children and
desires their salvation. He didn't create anybody to be damned. Second is that salvation comes only through ones knowing, willing acceptance of Jesus Christ as Savior.
And then third is many, maybe most people live and die and never know, never have any idea that they should or could accept Jesus Christ as their savior. So, this is a terrible problem,
is God too short-sighted or too narrow-minded,
or what's the nature of this problem?
He doesn't.
And the debates go back and forth.
Right, sending most of his children
to an eternal hell does not sound very loving.
I remember Joseph, Joseph Filling Maconkey talking about this once. He was a mission
president in Scotland and he said that he spoke to a minister there about the
sotaryological problem and you know the the fate of those who never heard as some some people put it
and he said the minister responded, that's their tough luck.
And that just makes me sick inside.
I don't worship a God of tough luck.
That's no kind of planning God.
And thankfully, the God of the restored gospel
of Jesus Christ is not the God of tough luck.
Is the God of a perfect plan
that resolves the sociorelogical problem.
And there's a great scholar named Jeff Trumbauer, he's not the only one,
but he's written the most interesting and compelling book
about the history of this issue.
The book is called Rescue for the Dead, not a Latter-day Saint, and doesn't
have a dog in the fight, doesn't care, you know, that the restored gospel has come back. He's
interested in it as a scholar. He's written about it, but what's the book called again?
What's the book called again? Rescue for the dead. And it's about the idea of posthumous salvation. Can people who have died without becoming Christian be saved? What's the history of thought about
that question? That's what the book covers. Prestigious press, Soxford University press,
prestigious press, Oxford University press, really well done, and talks about the restored gospel in it.
But the most interesting thing I learned from this book is that the early Christians
did not make the assumption that makes the problem, the sociological problem, a problem. In other words,
the problem didn't become a problem at the time of Jesus. Peter didn't have the problem. Paul didn't have the problem.
It becomes a problem for 500 years later.
Because Augustine and others
have a powerful influence in turning Christianity to the idea that death becomes
a deadline that determines a person's salvation. That's not in the Bible. Paul preached that
baptism could be done for the dead. He took for granted that it was, and that it was a legitimate part
of the Gospel of Christ. Peter taught, as you all know, that Jesus visited the spirits
of the dead so that they could be judged just as justly as people who lived here on earth.
So the first Christians, the errors of the New Testament, don't assume that death is a deadline
that determines your salvation. It's not this arbitrary deadline, right? If you're saved by the
time you die, you're in, if you're not, you're out. But as you know, that becomes a determinative throughout much, if not all, of Western Christianity.
And it remains that way until January 21st, 1836.
When Joseph Smith is high in the temple at Curlin, he's up on the
top floor in the Garrett office on the far western end. He's there with his father,
with the two bishops, his counsel, some others, leaders of the church, and they're having a really
beautiful meeting, anticipating the solemn assembly that's going to come in March and the endowment
of power that the Lord has promised.
And they're praying, they're giving each other priesthood blessings.
And then the heavens open.
And that's how section 137 begins.
Section 137 is a text from Joseph Smith's journal for that day, January 21st, 1836.
It's a little different in our doctrine and covenants because it's been rendered
into the first person. In Joseph's journal, it's written in third person by his scribe. The heavens
were open upon us and they beheld, but we published it as if it's Joseph's first person voice in
the doctrine. Covenants, I beheld the celestial
kingdom of God and the glory thereof, whether in the body or out I can't tell. Here he's echoing
Paul who saw the heavens. I saw the transcendent beauty of the gate through which the errors of
the kingdom of heaven will enter, which was like circling flames of fire, the blazing throne of God,
whereon was seated the Father in the Son. I saw the beautiful street to that kingdom, which had the appearance of being
paid with gold. He sees Abraham and Adam and his mom and dad.
So this tells us that the vision is in the future.
His father sitting by him in the room.
So this is a prefiguration of what will will be.
And he sees Alvin, his oldest brother, who's been dead since 1823, he's been dead almost 13 years.
Now this causes Joseph to marvel as our listeners may know,
Alvin dies long before the Church of Jesus Christ is restored.
He dies just a couple of months after Joseph learns about the Book of Mormon plates.
And so as far as Joseph knows, Alvin has gone to hell. That's what the Reverend Stockton
said when he preached his funeral sermon. And Joseph didn't like it then. He doesn't like it now. It seems utterly unjust and unmerciful.
How could someone with Alvin's character, disposition, his goodness be consigned to hell just because of the timing of his death?
What kind of a plan is that? What kind of a God would do that? Yeah, tough luck, right?
Tell us a little bit about Alvin Steve,
just for those who maybe don't know much about him.
What do they say about him?
Good idea.
He was heroic to Joseph.
Joseph wrote in the book of the book of the Law of the Lord.
There's a beautiful entry in there
where Joseph says,
Alvin was the oldest and noblest of my father's family.
He was one of the noblest of the father's family. He was one of the noblest of
the sons of men. My heart broke when he died. It was tough. It was tough on Joseph. Alvin
was one who looked after Joseph. He was the consummate big brother. He was a great big brother.
He looked after his parents, right? He sacrificed quite a bit. He put off starting his own family, his own
marriage, and so forth to make sure his parents were looked after as they aged, make sure
they had a home. And the whole family loved him. Lucy, his mom and her memoir goes on
at length to about about his role in their family and about his goodness to all them. So it was heartbreaking. And it was devastating to have
a religious authority
condemn him to hell. Just didn't make sense.
To Joseph, and yet he feared it was true, right? Joseph feared for a long time that Presbyterianism was true.
That meant that God was arbitrary and sovereign and damned most
people to hell for no reason that you could fathom, right? It was his inscrutable sovereign will
said the most famous Presbyterian minister in American history. So that's what you've got to work with,
even into 1836, if you're Joseph Smith, right?
By now, the Book of Mormon has said
that unaccountable infants are not damned
just because they die, but as far as Joseph knows,
there's no salvation for Alvin.
There's nothing in the restoration to this point that says that Alvin and the millions of others like him have any chance.
Even section 76, right? I mean, 76 came what year?
32.
32. And they saw the heavens, but no indication of those who had died.
Yep. There's nothing in the text that I can see that that answers the question,
what about those who never heard? Okay. What about rescue for the dead? So the Lord is letting
this go on. And the Lord must have a sense for a dramatic tension, right? This is brilliant.
If you're a, that's a great line. What's Halvin doing here?
You're writing the narrative arc of the restoration. Let's say you wanted to give the
authors of saints some real opportunity to have some dramatic tension and tell a true story.
This is the way you would do it if you were the breeder of the world. You would let Joseph wait and stew about this terrible problem,
the problem of death, and the disruption it causes to your cherished relationships.
All right, this is the problem that afflicts every family, every person who ever lived.
every person who ever lived. It's the awful, terrible problem of death. And one very fine scholar of religion, the British scholar Douglas Davies, has written a
couple of books about the restored gospel and he says that the the brilliance of
of it is this story it gives for the conquest of death. Let it say it's not
typically used those words but all he really means there gives for the conquest of death. Let it say, it's not typically used those words,
but all he really means there is that the theology of the restored gospel has a better plan of
salvation that solves the problem of death than any other. And he's exactly right about that.
Hey, Steve, I could use, um, I, I listened to Christian radio a lot when I'm driving, and sometimes I hear that phrase that you use, the sober in God, and it's not one that we use that much.
I guess that's true. When you use that right now in talking about predestination, philosophy, what did you mean? That's a great question. So, you will hear many Christians, especially certain wings of Protestantism, put a lot of emphasis on the sovereignty of God.
And that's an important doctrine to them, because what is at stake is God's power. And it's oftentimes
understood in terms of contingency. Is God contingent? Is God
influenceable? Is there anything that could happen that could make God anything less than absolutely, completely and totally
sovereign. So think about that, yes, in control. So a person who puts highest value on that
attribute of God is not inclined to like things like the restored doctrine of agency.
For example, okay, that's what I thought. Yeah. The idea that we can act and have free
will to them is a threat to God's sovereignty. Right. Who knows if it might, you know, if
Hank's decision to do something might upset God's plans, right, Hank might be
predestined to do one thing by God, and then he does something else, and all of a sudden
God's whole plan is upset.
He didn't think of coming.
Yeah.
And so they can't, they can't imagine that.
They don't allow for it. So Martin Luther wrote about the bondage of the will,
for example, and certainly John Calvin, probably foremost, is among those who emphasize the sovereignty
of God. So it's followers of those traditions, especially the Calvinist tradition, who will not like
any part of the restoration that says, God is passable.
Passables, in other words, you'll sometimes hear, meaning God has passions, right?
The Presbyterian Creed, the Calvinist Creed says God is without body parts and passions and let her to saints know and
Talk a lot about oh, he is with body and parts Joseph saw him in the vision, but at least as important theologically
in in the earliest days is and still is passions is God
able to feel love does he is? Is he influenced by love? By mercy? By, or his heartstrings ever pulled?
Yeah, he next saw him weep. Right. That is the foremost text of many in the restored scriptures
that testify that God is indeed passable. But if so, then that may mean he's contingent,
and if so, that may mean he's something less than absolutely sovereign, and if so, that may
mean he is not God. Not at least in the Greek philosophical sense where God is the one thing that really exists, and he's wholly and entirely and completely
other than us.
He doesn't have passions because that's what humans have.
That's what the Greek gods had, and the Neoplatonic Greek philosophy reacts against that
and says, that's not God.
Anything like the Greek gods of mythology is no god at all. And so the earliest Christians
adopt the Greek neoplatonic ideas and attribute that that's how their God forms up in their
imagination. And those ideas pervade early Christianity, Augustine, who defines social theology, largely for the
Protestant tradition, has those views. And Joseph Smith just breathes them in. He doesn't know any
different until the 21st day of January 1836. And let's let people let people know Augustine is oh, sorry Hank is is what about fifth century.
Yeah, fourth and fifth century. I can't remember his exact years, but
Christian era, Northern Africa
in the Roman Empire. It had a huge influence on
Christian thought after that. So what was the book Confessions of St. Augustine? Yeah.
Yeah. Which is an unbelievably brilliant book. It's so deeper, so much deeper than me.
Everybody should at least read some Augustine and I'm not saying you're going to figure
him entirely out. He's a complex, wonderful character, wrote the City of God, and his confessions is his memoirs
autobiography. A huge influential figure in Christian theology. He had a huge influence on the
Protestant reformers, and they had a huge influence on the world into which Joseph Smith launched the restoration.
And the restoration is a response against and alongside and with these ideas.
Steve, I've heard critics of the church say, oh, Joseph Smith is just borrowing from the ideas around him.
He's just grabbing the ideas around him.
And I, and from what I'm hearing from you and from others that I've listened to,
these are not common ideas around him.
He's going to complete the opposite of some of the common ideas around him.
Is that true?
Well, yeah, it's a great question, Hank.
So where, where does the, where does the restoration come from?
And if you're not willing to be open to the possibility that it comes from God, then you
have to explain it.
It exists, right?
You can't pretend the restoration doesn't exist.
So the way you explain it is to say, well, it's just in the air.
There's... He's just in the air. There's, he just
grabs it everywhere. And Joseph has just clever enough to, to grab it and paste it together.
And that works if you're not really, really interested in the answer to the question, in my opinion.
But it doesn't work if you want to know in your bone marrow where the restoration comes
from.
It's an answer that satisfies your need to know and you can sort of put the restoration
behind you.
But I can't do that.
It doesn't work for me.
Unsave it in the middle.
The evidence is just not there.
Not for me, it isn't.
There's just too much in the restoration.
I mean, I've read everything Joseph wrote
that's still on record, 1,500, 88 pages of his journals,
his letters, and his revelation texts are deeper than he is.
They're more profound.
They're beyond him.
When he got done with section 76, he said, dang.
He says that revelation is so far beyond the narrow-mindedness of man.
I am constrained to exclaim it came from God.
He marvels at his own revealed products. He's
not the originator of these ideas. Anybody who who suppose a sow should read his earliest
subtle biography, it's easy to access. If you Google circa summer 1832 history, it will
pull it up first thing.
It's on the Joseph Smith paper's website,
six pages long, two sentences,
and there you'll get a sense for what it's like
to listen to Joseph Smith write his own stuff.
Two sentences, six pages.
Yeah, he was economical with his punctuation.
I'm sparing.
He spared.
And then if you think two and a half years before he wrote that with his own hand, he dictated
the Book of Mormon in a single spring.
And then if you'll pay serious attention to the Book of Mormon, you will like Joseph
say, dang, that came from God.
There's no chance that he is the original. I don't want
people to misunderstand. I'm not saying he's dumb. He's anything but, but he is not the
mind that gave us the Book of Mormon or section 76 or even section 137. A Section 137 was foreign to Joseph.
He wasn't expecting it.
It caused him to marvel.
He had not thought of the idea.
He had not realized that the so-tur biological problem
was based on an assumption that nobody was identifying.
Was hidden in plain sight that the whole Christian world was assuming
that death was a deadline that determined everything.
And Jesus had to show Joseph a vision of his big brother
in heaven to get Joseph to be open even to the question
or to the insight of the revelation he needed.
And as soon as Joseph says, I'm marveling,
how is it that Alvin could be there?
The Lord says, I was hoping you would ask.
I've got some restoration to do, right?
The dramatic part of section 137 is the vision
of Alvin in heaven with a host of VIPs.
But the most important part of the revelation, the part that's vital, the part that Jesus wanted Joseph to know at this point is in verses 7, 8, 9, so the voice of the gospel, who would have received it if they had been permitted to,
will be airs of the celestial kingdom, and that's true for everybody in the future in that situation too, because
I the Lord judge everybody according to their works according to the desires of their hearts.
Not the timing of their death.
What a person does with the Savior's atonement,
when they know it, is the determining factor of their salvation,
and everyone will know it.
Now, 137 doesn't tell us everyone will know it yet.
You'll see that Joseph has already begun thinking that way. He wrote a newspaper article
not long after this where he said, you know, the gospel will have to be taught to the spirits in
who are dead, but it'll wait until section 138, the Joseph F. Smith, before we have a prophet who elaborates how
the so-tereological problem gets solved the mechanisms that Christ put in place the process the plan
that
Resolved the problem so 137 says the problem is going to be solved
The Lord always had in mind that this would be part of the plan. And 138 tells us how
the problem will be solved. Okay. So this revelation every family, every family in Joseph's mistime
has the sociological problem affects them personally.
Joseph and Emma and their babies, right?
The Book of Mormon was huge for them.
Every family has lost to death.
And this revelation is the beginning of the restoration of knowledge that gives every my family and every other family a great big sigh of relief and praise the Lord for his great plan. But this precedes, though, baptism for the dead in section 124, right?
So they were so excited about that too.
Very much so. That's the next step.
This revelation comes 1836, and then the world falls apart.
Joseph ends up out of Ohio into Missouri, out of Missouri into Illinois,
and just about as soon as he can, when things get settled enough in Illinois,
he will restore baptism for the dead there. And that's the trajectory for the rest of
his life, right? He's implementing the knowledge and power he receives in the Kirtland temple
for the remaining few years of his life amid a massive onslaught of opposition against him.
Years ago, I remember reading an essay that said, well, yeah, I mean, Joseph came up with
the very comforting doctrine in section 137 because he was hurt by Alvin's death and I thought you know, that's a non-sequitur.
It does not necessarily follow.
That's just a person who doesn't believe, explaining the fact that Joseph is devastated by
Alvin's death, so he invents the doctrine of redemption for the dead.
Okay, that's one conclusion you could draw.
Why not, though, just as easily and more faithfully decide,
every family is afflicted by the problem of death,
including Joseph's, and he seeks and receives a divine revelation
that is the solution to the problem.
I favor the second interpretation of the same facts.
I don't know why we can't believe that.
The statement that I believe Joseph Smith made and you can tell me if I got it right,
but didn't he say I can taste the principles of eternal life? And so can you, and good doctrine,
taste good? And isn't this one of those that you just hear it and go, of course, the God that I love
and the God that I worship, of course, it would be like this.
Yeah, compare that to the God of tough luck or to the God of arbitrary sovereign will.
Think about that.
Arbitrary will.
Whatever there's God's inscrutable will, he there's no method to the
madness, no plan, at least not one that we can know or discern. It's just God in
all his power. We are powerless, ponds, and most of us damned to hell for reasons
we can't fathom. Some us are virtually saved. I don't,
and if that's God, I just want to throw my hands up in the air and quit, but that's not the God
of the restored gospel. It kind of reminds me of those ormites. We have been elected to be saved
and you haven't. And there's no explanation, no reason. It's just for which holiness, oh God, we thank thee,
which is almost laughable when you read it.
We're elected to be saved, you're not.
And it sounds arbitrary, like you said.
Arbitrary.
Arbitraryness and God seem to meet
antithetical to each other.
We believe in a planning God, a loving God, a capable God, right? In the
revelations of Joseph Smith do something more profound than Luther or Calvin ever accomplished
in my opinion or Augustine. Those theologians who were way smart. I mean, much, much smarter than me by many times. They could not
conceive. And this is partly because they're still looking through Neo-Platonic Greek philosophical
lenses. They could not conceive of a God who could be completely sovereign and decide to use that sovereignty to endow his children with agency
and provide a plan for them and say,
here's the plan, and if you decide to go this way,
this is what will happen.
If you decide to go this way, this is what will happen.
And if so, we'll provide a savior
and bring you back through redemption and resurrection.
Right? That kind of God and bring you back through redemption and resurrection.
That kind of God who can think of endless permutations to the plan
and provide everything you need without stealing your ability to determine your own destiny,
that's a great God.
That's why I'm a Latter-day Saint. That's the only gospel I know that
reveals a God who is powerful enough, loving enough, capacious enough to endow all of his children
with agency and still be able to say the works and the designs and the purposes
of God cannot be frustrated.
Neither will they come to not.
You revealed that all through to 30 something year old far boy, a kid, right?
A kid, he's young.
That was beautifully articulated.
And I underlined three statements in 7, 8 and 9 that kind of say,
okay, who would have received it? Verse 7, who would have received it? Verse 8, and according to
the desire of their hearts, we worship a God who can read our hearts and knows where we're at. And
those lines give me a lot of comfort because I do stupid things, but the Lord knows I love him the Lord knows I regretted that okay, that was dumb. I'm sorry
I often you know people don't think maybe I'm a Christian because of
Whatever but God knows I'm a Christian Jesus knows I rely on him. He knows my heart. And that's I love that he could say that he would have
received, well, how do you know that? Because I know men's and women's hearts. And I can read them.
You you sound like Nephi, right? I'm a wretched man easily be set by sins. But I know in whom I've
trusted my God has been my support. My desires are right and he knows it. And even though he watches me sort of
falter, he knows the desires of my heart. There's a there's a great moment in the end of the new
testament where Jesus says, Peter, do you love me? Right? And Peter, his actions have not said
that I love you, right? If you take the denials to be moments of weakness,
his actions haven't said it, but Peter says,
search me, you know everything, Lord, you know all things.
And since you know all things, I know that you know
that I love you.
I mean, that is a search me.
Search my whole soul.
Yeah.
And you'll find that every answer me. He loves you even though sometimes my actions
Don't reflect that there's just there's just great
Comfort in that who would have received it. I love that. He he knows us and he knows for
Since what a hundred AD to 1831 none of this was on the earth
He can read their hearts and
that's that's being sovereign. That's sovereign too, right? He's got a plan for that.
Oh, man, he's got a plan for that. And we can then that penetrates, like you said, Steve,
every family who has, you know, this problem, I I think of those who have lost sons or daughters or a spouse to
suicide and to think, oh, well, they must be, that action is, they must be going to hell and God
saying, I know them. I know them. I know them. Inside it out, I just think this doctrine, this kind of sovereign
God is the God you can, that can calm your fears.
He may be the only being who knows the despair of a person who takes their own life and
therefore can relate and redeem that.
What comfort that is by that what what comfort a god of that has justice and mercy perfectly
He what comfort to know that's the one who's gonna judge me my relatives who have passed
those who have made mistakes and I remember on my mission once
Somebody treated us really rudely and I remember leaving and kind of saying to my
companion, do you, I mean, I'm 19. Do you think that was their chance? Because you know, say they have
a chance. And I thought, I don't, if, if they believed what most people believe about us,
maybe they wouldn't want to listen to us anyway. And I don't think that was their chance because they don't know.
And that gives me comfort too.
The Lord can read that.
A lot of people, it's not what they know.
It's what they think they know that isn't true.
And the Lord can sort that out too.
Great comfort in the, in 7, 8 and 9 for me.
This is a beautiful revelation, isn't it?
Unbelievably profound, powerful, tastes good.
It is the restored gospel.
I had a friend say to me once, you know, after leaving the church, she said, I now get to
believe that everybody's a good person.
I now get to believe that non-Latter-day Saints get to go to heaven.
And I, I, I, I,. And I was so frustrated going, you didn't leave that church because that church doesn't
exist.
The church you're describing, I'm not a part of.
This is Steve, you've said it before, section 76 and now section 137, section 138 opens
up heaven and makes it huge, right?
Available to everyone who wants it.
I believe the same thing as the good sister except exactly the opposite.
I believe almost everybody is a wretched person, including myself.
An animated God from the fall who wants to become a saint through the atonement of Jesus Christ.
who wants to become a saint through the atonement of Jesus Christ. And I believe he's mighty to save
all, as he puts it repeatedly in section 76. And I believe that the restored gospel as taught by the Church of Jesus Christ, the letter of saints, is the only consistent theology that has Christ
at the center of that redemption for everybody and still leaves people to choose, right?
A universalist would say he's going to save everybody whether they want to be or not.
The restored gospel says he's going to save everybody who desires
salvation and to a degree of salvation that they choose that they want.
That's pretty darn great. That's the section 76 thing and And I circled in verse 7, in verse 8, in verse 9, and in verse 10,
the word all, all who have died, all that shall die, the Lord will judge all, and be held all children.
That's really inclusive and merciful. Letterty saints tend to get a bit of a a whipping for being exclusive, but
and then, you know, individual Letterty saints
like my, sometimes rotten self might deserve that,
but the restored gospel does not teach that.
That's, that is not the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.
If someone were just just listen to Steve's episodes,
I mean, listen to how they connect.
And we didn't mean to do this on purpose.
Yeah, section 76 connects to this. Right. We did Joseph Smith's first vision with him and Alvin's death with him.
Then we did 76 with him. And now we're doing 137138. It's almost as if there was a hand behind this saying,
if someone just as a Steve Harper fan is not going to listen to any others, they're going to get the whole thing
the whole set In those three episodes. So so Steve, we think you're inspired. That's all
Well, I'm pleased to be here and this whole thing is inspired. It's brilliant work
You you've articulated some things just beautifully. I that's
You've articulated some things just beautifully. That's a sociological problem.
This is just great. Let's keep going.
I was going to mention that, look at verse 9,
I will judge you according to your works and the desires of your hearts,
according to the desires of your hearts.
So I'm going to find my elder Ballard quote.
It's taking into account everything that went into your decision making.
Well, I put a footnote there to section 46 verse 9, which does have the word and according
to the works and according to the desire of their hearts.
And our friend and colleague Brad Wilcox used that in his general conference talk about
the kid who says,
I'm just too much of a hypocrite. And he says, well, you're a hypocrite. If you hide it or lie about it,
or blame the church for having high standards, but if you confront it and are trying to do better,
that's not a hypocrite. That's a disciple. And then he quoted, I think it was section 46 verse 9,
which sounds just like this. I mean, and there's another text in the book,
Mormon that has that idea of commandments
and the desires of their hearts.
I can't remember where it is right now.
Let me read this and then we'll turn it back over to Steve.
This is Elder M. Russell Ballard.
Quote, I feel that judgment for sin
is not always as cut and dried as some of us seem to think.
I feel that the Lord recognizes differences
in intent and circumstances. When he does judge us," Elder Ballard says, I feel, he
will take all things into consideration, our genetic and chemical makeup, our mental
state, our intellectual capacity, the teachings we have received, the traditions of our fathers
and our health, and so forth. That, to me, is a sovereign God who can know all of that
and make decisions based on all of that information.
That's the God of the restored gospel.
Let, I mistreated that.
Let me read verse 46, verse nine.
Very, I say unto you, they are given
for the benefit commandments.
Not see what's given, the gifts. The gifts. Spiritual they are given for the benefit commandments. Not see what's given the gifts, the gifts spiritual gifts are given for the
benefit of those who love me and keep all my commandments, comma, and him that
seeketh so to do. And that that's a good parallel text for this, I think.
One way to read these passages is, is the Lord saying, look, your works might sort of be, you know, amateur or juvenile
or half, but I can see the desire that's motivating them. And I will take that into account, too.
Right. That, to me, is very comforting and powerful. Yeah very comforting and powerful.
Yeah, comforting and powerful.
Absolutely.
It calms your fears and say,
you know what, I'm willing to put my judgment in those hands.
Right?
Like, I know that that judgment will be just.
Right?
It'll be right.
Do we want to talk about the last verse before we move on?
All the children who die before they arrive at the years of accountability are saved in
the celestial kingdom of heaven.
Did they realize what that meant at this time, 1836?
They do realize what it means because Joseph has received a couple of revelations before
the section 29 talks about the way people
become what I call a fully developed free agent. It talks about the four components you
might say that you have to have to be a fully developed free agent. You have to have, there
has to be a law in the universe that says this choice is wrong and this choice is right.
You have to have knowledge of that, right because the law exists if I don't know it
I'm not able to act on it in my own free will
So I have to have knowledge of it. I have to have power I
Have to have the ability to to choose between the alternatives and that requires also as section 29 says and second if I says an
opposition and that requires also, as Section 29 says, and Second Nephi says, an opposition, a bitter and a sweet, some force influencing me to pick the wrong choice, as well as the enticement from the Lord to pick his.
When all those things are present, you've got a fully developed free agent. And section 29 teaches them. And then it says, children begin to become accountable.
This doesn't happen.
Like 12 o'clock in the day.
12 o'clock in the day.
Right. Right. But generally speaking around eight, you know, kids are capable of this kind of agency.
And they grow into it.
Then section 68, if I'm remembering right, says Joseph,
it's it's age 8 when you can generally speaking count on kids to be able to exercise their agency
sufficient that they can choose to make the covenant for themselves. Verse 10 of section 137
says years of accountability. The letter of Saint Snow that that means around age eight. And
this is incredibly comforting doctrine. There's almost none of these families that have not lost
infants or children before age eight, including Joseph and Emma Smith over and over and over.
And it's really beautiful to them to know that their children are not damned
as much of the Christian tradition would have them be, if not for this restored truth.
Wow. This had to be fun for Joseph's dad, who was a universalist. He'd be like, oh, I was so
close. Right. I was I was I was on to something there. Yeah, he was on to something this he he and his
ancestors swung to universalism from Calvinism, which said just about everybody's damned by God's
arbitrary sovereign will. And then universalism says everybody's going to be saved by God's arbitrary sovereign will.
And the restored gospel says, well, it's more complicated than that.
God's will is not arbitrary.
It is sovereign.
He has decided in his master plan to make his children agents so they get to pick for themselves.
Whether they want to be saved or damned, it's their will. Not just his that matters
to him. And that is the best gospel. And when Joseph Sr. heard that gospel, he said, ah, that's the
one. That's the one that tastes good. That's what I've been waiting for. Yeah. That's fantastic.
I've heard you say before to Joseph's mom, any church is better than no church, and to Joseph's dad,
no church is better than the wrong church, right? And that's a perfect tension for Joseph to be a part
of growing up. That gives us the sacred growth, the kid in the sacred growth.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.