Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 27-28 : Dr. Kerry Muhlestein Part I
Episode Date: March 14, 2021In the Church’s infancy, Joseph receives the Vision of Moses as he begins what he calls the “new translation” of the Bible. Join Dr. Kerry Muhlestein, Hank, and John as we learn what happens w...hen Joseph, Emma, Oliver, or others ask questions. We discover how the early Saints learn about the ordinance of the sacrament (do the emblems matter?), the power of the Abrahamic Covenant and how the Lord has much more in store for the entire human family via covenants via Elijah. Learn about our place in the Kingdom of God, why President Nelson constantly mentions the Gathering of Israel, and what great things the Lord has in store for His people.Shownotes: followhim.coInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcast/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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.
My friends welcome to another episode of Follow Him, a podcast designed to help individuals
and families with their come follow me.
Studies I'm here with the greatest co-host on the planet, John, by the way.
Welcome, John.
I've never been introduced that way, thanks.
You are.
Of all the co-hosts I've had on podcast, John.
I'm one of them.
You are.
You are the my favorite podcast host. I'm very excited to introduce
Carrie Mulestein and I'm reading this bio and just going, I don't want to do any talking
today. I just want to listen. Let me read and I can't even read the whole thing. There's
so much here. But Carrie received his bachelor's degree from BYU in psychology with the Hebrew minor.
As an undergraduate, he spent time in the BYU Jerusalem Center for near Eastern studies
in the intensive Hebrew program.
He received an MA master's varts in ancient Near Eastern studies from BYU and his PhD
from UCLA in Hebrew, no, Egyptology.
So Hebrew and Egyptology,
where in his final year, he was named UCLA
affiliate's graduate student of the year.
He's taught courses in Hebrew and religion,
part time at BYU and UVSC Extension Center,
which is now UVU, as well as in history at Cal Poly,
Ponoma and UCLA.
He also taught early morning seminary
at the Westwood UCLA Institute of Religion taught early morning seminary at the Westwood
UCLA Institute of Religion,
early morning seminary from an Egyptologist.
Sounds awesome.
He's the director of the BYU Egypt excavation project.
And I thought if that was an acronym that would be beep,
which I think would be a cool acronym.
If you go there twice, it's beep beep.
He was selected by the Princeton Review in 2012 as one of the three best 300 professors
in the nation.
My goodness.
He's published six books over 55 peer-reviewed articles done over 80 academic presentations.
He and his wife, Julianne, are the parents of six children. And together they have lived in Jerusalem. He's the co-chair for the Egyptian archaeology
session of the American Schools of Oriental Research. Well, thank you. Thanks. It's good to be with
you guys. I think we should add to the end of that the bio that I took a course on how to pat a bio.
So that's the only I ever got, but I got to be in that class.
All right, Carrie, let's jump in. We are going to be in sections 27 and 28 of the
doctrine and covenants. The date that I see here in the section heading is August of
1830. Our church is now just four and a half months old. I I tease my students when I
teach this. I'll say, it was just a little baby church picture, a just four and a half months old. I tease my students when I teach this, I'll say,
it was just a little baby church picture,
a little four and a half month old, right?
It's just a brand new church.
What leads up, can you tell us what leads up
to this revelation?
What's life like for Joseph Smith and his friends?
There, I think a number of important things
that are happening just before this.
So as you said, I mean, the Book of Mormon has just come
forth, they've just organized the church. important things that are happening just before this. So as you said, I mean, the Book of Mormon has just come forth.
They've just organized the church.
They're getting close to,
so that organization is at the first conference of the church.
That's in April, right?
And this comes in August and September,
they're gonna have the second conference of the church.
So they're getting close to that.
And another couple of significant things that have happened that will affect a little bit, section 27, but even more section 28 when we get there.
Sometime in June, so, you know, midway between April and when the Church is organizing this happens.
Joseph Smith has a revelation that he calls the visions of Moses, we now call it Moses chapter 1, but that has just
come to him. And sometime in between there, we know sometime in between July and the end of September,
most likely towards the end of September. And again, this may coincide with the reception of section
28. He gets a second, as he's working now on the Joseph Smith translation of the Bible,
he calls it the new translation. So that's a project he's starting right as these things are happening.
And he receives a kind of vision or revelation that will become Moses 2 and 3.
That also happens. All we know is sometimes between July and October for sure,
but evidence places it most likely towards the end of August or probably towards the end of September.
But that's the setting that's leading up to these things. So he's getting revelations that we
put in the doctrine of covenants, but he's also getting revelations that we later put in the book
of Moses for them right now. They're just a whole bunch of revelations coming from all sorts of
sources, including working on the translation of the Bible.
So that's some of the background.
I'll mention this.
One thing that I don't think I understood before, you know, looking into it was the role
of the Joseph Smith translation project of going through the Bible and the restoration.
I don't think I understood that early on, but I think it's pretty instrumental for our listeners
to understand. This was part of the process of the Lord saying, you're going to go through the
Bible and going through the Bible, you're going gonna start asking questions. And those questions are going to enable me to continue
to restore the gospel.
Is that, would you say I, okay?
That's absolutely better than me.
Well, I think a lot of the revelations we have
in the doctrine of covenants are the result of questions
that happen as they do the translation.
So this is something you can discuss in your next week's
podcast because for example, it looks like, we can't tell for sure, but it looks like
there's a pretty good chance that that Moses, two and three are received right at
about the same time that section 29 is received.
And section 29 is about the fall two and three is the creation.
And then the next thing is going to do is the Joseph Smith translation.
So I mean, all of this is interconnected.
They're just he's learning about creation and fall
in a number of different ways,
but all revelation from heaven.
So they're absolutely interconnected.
Very good.
Yeah, I, you know, I think I would have thought early on,
oh, the Joseph Smith translation,
I'm getting a correct version of the Bible,
whereas, prob, that was maybe a side issue was,
hey, we're going to correct some things that have been lost out of the Bible, but, hey, we're gonna correct some things
that have been lost out of the Bible,
but more importantly, we're going to be asking questions.
They're gonna lead to the restoration
of certain principles and doctrines.
Yeah.
That, yeah, the Lord's,
he's gonna soon read about Enic, right?
And he's gonna start asking questions about Zion.
And that's going to become a huge part of their lives.
Yeah, in fact, I think the revelations about Zion and Enic also coincide. And we're going to see that
this, I think Moses chapter one casts light on section 28. So we'll talk about that when we get
to section 28. But I think all of these things interact with each other in ways that we, because
we compartmentalize them, we put them in little boxes.'s a DNC box that's a book Moses box we sometimes don't recognize how well they they interacted for as far as the saints
just receiving a flow of revelation that restored truth. Yeah it was when I think I find remember
I was when I met Bob Matthews and I thought who's Bob Matthews and then all of a sudden this Joseph
Smith translation project took on new role. John, anything about Joseph Smith translation before we jump in?
Oh, so glad you you mentioned that.
I know that Joseph Mokonky used to tell us he said that for Joseph Smith,
translating the book of Mormon was gospel 101.
It it's so strong on first principles faith in Christ, repentance, baptism,
holy ghost.
And when he went into the JST, it was graduate school. That's
the way Joseph McConkey put it. And I think that's a wonderful thing for people to see.
It reminds me of the line in the Spirit of God like a fire is burning. The Lord is extending
the saints' understanding. And I feel like it's almost like the the funny metaphor of trying
to drink from a fire hydrant where it's all coming at once.
And now we've had years to go over and pour over these things, but imagine the volume of
it coming all at once.
And trying to, as Kerry said, we're putting it in boxes, but they were getting it all
at once.
That's a really cool idea, right?
The moment they just get one, here comes another one out of the pipeline.
In fact, to tie that together with your Book of Mormon thing,
sometimes we forget this time, right?
So they translated the Book of Mormon
and took him a little while to get it published.
But for the saints receiving it,
the Book of Mormon comes in spring of 1830.
Book of Moses starts in summer of 1830, right?
It's just, the Lord doesn't, he's not given him a break.
He has given them plenty to try and digest.
Yeah, we've had decades, you know, decades centuries
to look at these things while they're getting them hot off the press,
literally off the press.
Anything else before we get into section 27,
Kerry, that you'd say, hey, you need to understand this as background?
Yeah. And I think some of this, you can get, I brought this in my picture to see, but
some of this you can get from the, the come follow me manual. So at the time, Joseph and
Emma, just before section 27 has received, they've visited the night family, the night
family, you know, were some of his earliest supporters. They were in New York. They've visited the night family. The night family, you know, were some of his
earliest supporters. They were in New York. They were involved with the translation of the book
moment. And it is a support and so on. So just before this, Emma and Sally Knight, that's
Newell Knight's wife, had been baptized, and they were going to confirm them and make that you
give them the gift of the Holy Ghost when there were some threats from mobs and they were going to confirm them and make that you give them the gift of the Holy
Ghost when there were some threats from mobs and they kind of had a stop and break up at that point.
So they weren't confirmed for a period of time. So now Joseph and Emma are in harmony and the
knights are going to visit them and they decide let's let's confirm. And Sally let's let's give them a gift to Holy Ghost and get this done.
And so they're going to do that at a meeting. It's kind of like we did recently. They're
going to have sacrament meeting in their home, but they want some wine to do that. And so Joseph
is on his way to get that wine. And it's as he's doing that, that this revelation comes to him.
Messenger, he says, a heavenly messenger meets him and and delivers this information
It's almost I hate to say this, but it's almost old hat to say this now Joseph Smith
Talk to a heavenly messenger right like at this point
I was on my way to the forum and to get some wine and an angel came right?
Just how it goes. Yeah, this is just Joseph's life.
Just Joseph's life is interacting with divine beings.
You know, I think that it's significant too
that I like to tell my students
and I almost all of the sections
of their alternate covenants came as a result of a question.
There are some exceptions,
John Taylor announcing the martyrdom
and this one I think,
because it wasn't, it was just,
I'm going to get some white.
And he's interrupted in that process,
which makes this kind of unique, would you say?
Yeah, oh yeah.
Well, let's jump into the section itself
and maybe give us a big picture.
What is the message to Joseph and the church
and why is this important for us to have today?
So I think there are a couple of different messages.
They're intertwined, but we'll miss some of them
if we don't look carefully for them.
So, I mean, the first message is really about the symbolism
of the sacrament, and that it doesn't always have
to be the exact same thing that we'll convey that symbolism.
Right? So he's on his way to get wine.
And if we look
at verse two, well, verse one is worthwhile. This is, we've had this a couple times. We've got it
in this verse. We're going to get a whole string of sections in the doctrine of covenants where the
first verse is always Christ introducing himself and telling us something about his nature or who he is.
Right. So in this one, he says, he's your Lord, your God, and your Redeemer, who is word is quick and powerful.
So all of those are things that tell you something
about who he is, and he just does that in section after section
to make sure we know who he really is.
And I think that's worth looking at.
That word quick, if one of my children said,
what does he mean that his word is quick?
Is that the same quick as you see in both the quick
and the dead, that idea?
Many people take it that way.
I mean, he doesn't give us a definition, right?
So typically, it's scripturally when we talk about quick
or being quick and it means life, right?
It means that you've got some kind of a power and life to it.
And so there's probably something to that here,
but it may also be because often this
quick and powerful word is associated with the sword that cuts through things and there may be
something to the fact, you know, I think that word can play a double purpose here because it is a
live power, but it also is something that, you know, a sword that's going to cut through joint
and marrow, that's the kind of thing that's associated with his word frequently.
That's moving quickly, right?
So I would guess that there's more than one meaning intended here.
And that's a book of Mormon idea, right?
Mormon love that idea.
The word is like a sword.
Yeah.
It will pierce you to the soul.
But the next verse is when he's really going to move into talking about the sacrament.
And I love this phrase.
We actually get this phrase a number of times in the doctrine of
covenants as well, where he says, it mattereth not, and then, you know, sometimes it's matter
eth not to me whether you go by land or by sea or whatever else.
It just gives you this idea that some things matter and some things don't matter, right?
So for him, it doesn't matter exactly what we're going to drink if it's so be that you do it with an
eye single to my glory. Remembering that of the Father, my body, which was laid down for you,
and my blood, which was shed for the remission of your sins. So those, here we have Christ telling us
what the key elements of the sacrament are that we have to do it in remembrance of what he's done
for us, and with an eye single to the glory of God.
Whether it is wheat bread or like we've just started using gluten-free bread in my work,
whether it's wine or grape juice or water is not the issue.
Now there's symbolism actually in all of those things and it's worth looking into the symbolism.
I love the symbolism of the water and I love the symbolism of wine.
They're both great. I don't want us to stop taking the symbols seriously because there's
a power in symbolism and I think we don't address that enough.
The actual thing we're taking he's telling us is less important than our intent as we
take it. And I think that's one of the key elements of this revelation.
I like that. I like that a lot because it helps me in my own home
to try to say, okay, what's the most crucial point here?
Some things are important, some things are crucial.
To me, that's, yes, the symbols are important,
but why we do it is crucial.
I've read in in war to earn Europe, World War II,
they, there was no bread to be found.
So they had to use potato peelings.
And I think the Lord would say matter of not, right?
That's right.
Matter of not.
It's okay.
It's okay.
I think I, you know, it's some soldiers, all they could find was a candy bar and my
kids would love that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It was.
It was candy bar.
And if I remember correctly, sometimes they use
shell casings to put the water in to protect of the sacrament, right? That's okay. Whatever,
whatever works. Right. I love it. I mean, the actual items themselves are important,
but they're not the most important. I really like that. Yeah. I'm intrigued with things that the Lord has us repeat. And the sacrament is a weekly thing.
And the word remembering, I just had to remember in there.
And I love quoting this.
I think it'll change the way my students read the book,
Mormon To Watch, for Remember, and its opposite forget.
And there's an old president, Spencer W. Kimball quotation,
where he said,
when you look in the dictionary for the most important word, do you know what it is?
He said it could be remember.
Because all of us have made covenants to remember.
And we think of Nephi saying, how could you have forgotten three times in a row
to his brothers?
We think of Heliman saying, oh, remember, remember.
And how quickly that pride cycle goes up and down.
And here's a weekly remembrance and keep your eyes single. remember and how quickly that pride cycle goes up and down.
And here's a weekly remembrance and keep your eyes
single to the Savior, what's important.
And there's a hierarchy like you said,
yes, the symbols are beautiful and we can draw meaning
from them, but it's all about remembering Christ.
Yeah, and I think, as you say that,
you hit on a really key element.
We often don't recognize
that helps us see a theme that I think often is under recognized in this chapter.
And it's kind of fun that you talked about how often the Book of Mormon says remembering
because I have not quantified this for sure, so one day maybe I'll sit down and count and say,
but I tell my students at least my impression is if you're just gonna
Talk about the themes in the book more than that are talked about most often. It would be number one Christ and his atonious sacrifice
It would be number two promises made to the House of Israel and
Three remembering but two and three are actually intertwined because one of the covenantal obligations for Israel is to remember what God has done for them.
And I find that really interesting because here we're talking about the sacrament, which is when we renew the covenant, right? And that's interesting because Emma and Sally are
about to renew the baptismal covenant so they can do the confirmation. But we're renewing the
covenant. So this is the covenant. And this is another thing that I find members of the church
are sometimes a little confused on.
We talk about the new and everlasting covenant, the Abrahamic covenant, our baptismal covenant,
and we don't know how they relate.
They're all the same thing, right?
So new and everlasting covenant, Abrahamic covenant are two different names for the same thing.
I mean, Abrahamic covenant has some connotations of a specific time and place that the new and everlasting covenant is renewed and so on.
And baptism is the way
we enter into that, right? So it's not a surprise that, that right after we get him talking
about renewing this covenant and remembering, and then he goes on to tell them that you
shouldn't purchase wine from your enemies, right? So we have him still addressing this
specific thing. And that's always a good idea. Don't get drinks from your enemies, all right?
I'm just gonna throw that out as general advice.
And then he says that at some point,
he will come and partake of this with them.
I think that's what he means when he says
he'll drink of the fruit of the vine.
And then he goes through this list of people
who he will do that with.
So he will go through this covenant renewal ceremony with. And he starts with with Moroni
and the tainted in with the Book of Mormon, but immediately says the stick of Reifram. So
immediately he's tying that in with Israel. And then he's going to talk about alias.
Now alias here is a title that's getting used
for a number of people.
So this is a part that can also be confusing to people.
Elias is the Greek version of the name Elijah.
So sometimes Elias means Elijah,
but often it's a title for a forerunner,
which Elijah is a forerunner,
but so is John, so is Gabriel actually so zekaraz.
And they're all gonna be mentioned here, right?
So he talks about the forerunner for John,
which is Gabriel who comes,
he's gonna talk about John being a forerunner.
And then John, of course, is the one who was sent
to Oliver, Caldrian, Joseph Smith, to give them the priesthood.
You know, the Baptist will come in it
when they partake of the sacrament. That was, and Joseph Smith to give them the priesthood, the Baptist will come in it when they
particularly the sacrament, that was,
that ability was given to them by John the Baptist, right?
And then he immediately takes that into Elijah,
and Elijah is an Elias who will turn the hearts
of the fathers to the children
and the hearts of the children to the fathers.
Now, this is an important thing to stop and think about as well,
because we typically as members of the church,
think of that as temple work, right?
Turning it into a family history work,
turning the hearts of the children to the fathers
and the fathers to the children.
And it is that, but I think that we're getting
a smaller piece of the puzzle if that's all we think of.
So I think, and maybe right you know, right now, President
Nelson has told us to look at the blessings promised to Israel and study the ad. And I've
just written a book on that and so, and people are asking about that a lot right now because
they're trying to figure this out. So maybe I'm just like super covenant focused right
now. And I'm seeing it everywhere. And you'll have to tell me if I'm seeing it where it's
not. But I think being super covenant focused is probably a good thing.
I hope you can.
I'm just gonna throw that out there
as a good, a general piece of advice.
Like you said, don't, we have to now,
don't buy drinks from your enemies.
And super covenant focused is okay.
All right, so we'll keep a list
of good general advice today.
Yeah, good general advice.
So this is talking about Elijah,
but it's talking about Malachi's prophecy to Elijah, right?
And if you were to go back to Malachi's original audience, the Israelites, and you say the
fathers turn your heart to the fathers, the fathers they think of are Abraham Isaac and Jacob,
which by the way is who is mentioned in the next verse, right? And so if you mention Abraham Isaac
and Jacob, what you're really doing is you're talking about the covenant God made with them.
And that would have been clear to the original audience, Malachi's original audience, the Israelites.
I think when Christ comes and quotes Malachi to the Nephites who are Israelites and are very conscious of being Israelites, that it's clear to them. In our day, we kind of, we're not quite as covenant conscious,
well, President Nelson's getting us there, but we haven't always been quite as covenant consciousness.
And especially in Joseph Smith's day, that idea of a covenant had really been lost.
And so it's interesting that when Moroni quotes this to Joseph Smith, he quotes it differently
than it is in the Book of Mormon or in the Bible and he says he will turn your hearts to the promises made to the fathers.
Now that's very clearly about the covenant and Abraham Isaac and Jacob.
And it's almost, it seems to me that he's just, I mean, I don't know, but I would guess he's changing it a little bit because his current audience needs that change to know what they're talking about.
The early audience has got it,
needed a little help at that point. And again, it's in case we're missing it when we read verse 9,
where it says Elijah, unto whom I've committed the keys to the power of turning the hearts of
the fathers to the children and the hearts of the children to the fathers, the whole earth may not
be smitten with the curse. In case we're going to miss that, he immediately goes to verse 10,
and also with Joseph and Jacob and Isaac and Abraham
your fathers by whom the promises remain. You cannot get more clear than this, I think. He
is telling them, you are part of the Abrahamic covenant. This is essential for you. And it's tied
to the sacrament in this section, right? That's the covenant you entered into a baptism. So when
you're taking the sacrament and renewing it,'s the same covenant and so he's just walked them through how at some point he will renew that covenant with all of these key covenant players
including verse 11
also with Michael or Adam the father of all the Prince of all the ancient days
Which is is again crucial because when Abraham receives the covenant in Abraham chapter one
because when Abraham receives the covenant, in Abraham chapter 1, he's very, very specific that what he's looking for is the same covenant that Adam, the first of all, had. Right? And so
Christ is making that same connection here. This is a crucial point that we call the Abraham
and covenant, but really it was started all the way back to Adam. And like you said, it's all
the way through till today. It might come by different names, but it's the same idea of I'll make you certain promises, right? If you will live up
to the certain obligations that you've been that you've been given. And I think one of the kind of
fun things about the book of Abraham is when it begins, Abraham is is saying I sought for the blessings of the fathers and you're like wait a minute
You're one of the fathers you're the father your Abraham is he can Jacob and so I think you're right
It's that God made the same covenant with with Michael with Enoch with Adam with Enoch and others and so
We've called it the Abrahamic covenant
Because he he kept it so well modelled so maybe it's similar to why we call the Melchizedic priesthood after Melchizedic because he was
such a great high priest and called this the Abrahamic covenant because he wanted the
same thing that his fathers had received.
Does that fairway to put it, Kerry?
Yeah.
I think so.
I think there's another element as well, but I think that's absolutely correct that that's
one of the reasons, but, but additionally,
there is a change that comes with Abraham.
And that is that after Abraham, anyone who will become part of the covenant will be Abraham
seed.
Right.
And so I think that's also part of the reason why we'll refer to it as the Abraham
covenant because that's that's now the next source.
We'll also talk about it as, and this is what President Nelson did in general
conference as the blessings promised to Israel because additionally anyone who becomes part of this
covenant will become part of the House of Israel. So the the names Abraham and Israel get continually
associated with this covenant from here on out because that's the family that you will now
belong to and I think this is important
to understand that salvation is a family affair. God is saving families. And so what he's
done is he's tasked a family with getting everyone else to become part of the covenant
or become part of that family. And this ties into what I was talking about with the,
you know, the returning the hearts of the fathers to the children and the children of the fathers.
And we think of that as family history. Well, it is, but we need to think of it as not just
a great grandma, Joanne, who we should think of,
but also great, great, great grandma, Rachel,
and Rebecca, and Sarah, and Asinoth, and so on, right?
We need to think of this as a huge family history
that ties us back to Abraham and then to Adam.
And the idea is that God wants us all to become part of this family so that we're connected,
the covenant connects us vertically to God, but it connects us horizontally to each other
in a family, right?
So that, I think that's fantastic.
We talk about the human family, but he's wanting us to become on another level,
the human family, to be sealed together
through that covenant to each other and to him,
which is beautiful.
And again, I think as people,
I mean, this has become such a big thing right now
where people are trying to understand
the blessings promised to the house of Israel.
And sometimes they're struggling to find those blessings.
Well, when you recognize what's going on here,
you see this whole section actually is about
blessings promised to Israel.
And one of them is you can renew your covenant
by partaking of the sacrament.
And you be connected to everyone, right?
So this section is absolutely about
blessings promised to Israel.
Yeah, this is fantastic stuff.
And when I explain this to my
students, you'll see the light bulb go on, oh, I didn't know that, you know, oh, those are connected,
those stories are connected. For example, we use the name Israel, but a lot of people wouldn't know
where that comes from. So let's do a little gospel 101 here, Kerry, where does the name Israel even
come from that you you use them interchangeably Abraham Isaac and Jacob and then you talk about
the Israelites or Israel, where does that come from? And that's interchangeably. Abraham Isaac and Jacob, and then you talk about the Israelites or Israel.
Where does that come from?
And that's a great question.
Again, the same top president,
Nelson kind of highlighted that, right?
That when Jacob wrestles,
and man, we could go on,
I could get into this wrestling
with the angel story for an hour.
I think it's so fantastic.
When Jacob is there,
but he's coming back into the land of Canaan
because God asked him to,
and he is afraid his brother is going to kill him
and his entire family.
So much so that he's sending gifts to his brother,
he's divided his family in half
so that if maybe half of them be killed,
half can survive.
I mean, it's a real concern for him
that his brother might kill them all,
but he's going anyway, not because he wants to,
not because he's hoping his family will get killed,
but because God asked him to.
So he's making a Abrahamic sacrifice, right?
He's willing to sacrifice his entire family if that's what God is asking him to do.
But then he prays, once he's done everything he can think of doing, he prays, and he
asks God, save me and save my family.
And that's when he starts to wrestle with an angel. And again,
that's that symbolism, right? And the text seems to make it clear. It's a real wrestle because his
thigh gets thrown out of joint, but it's also a spiritual wrestle, right? And because he wrestles
and the angel tries to leave and he will not let go, he's hanging on. He is not going to let go
until he gets the blessing he wants. Then God says, as a prince, you have prevailed.
And so I'll change your name to Israel, which you can translate that a couple of ways.
One is that he has prevailed with God so that Sar, part of that, is wrestler prevailed,
persevere, and the L is God, right?
So he will prevail with God is one
way of translating it. And another is that God will prevail, right? And I think both are intended.
I think it's a name that's intentionally just vague enough to mean both. And so that's part
of what President Nelson has been talking about, that God will prevail, right? Or let God prevail.
And so on. And frankly, that's why the book I just
wrote on the Abrahamic covenant I call God will prevail, because this idea is that when you make
this covenant with God, you are allowing him to prevail in your life, and as a result, he will
cause you to prevail. And that's what Jacob's name has changed to. And so inherent with the name change,
which denotes a change in nature,
he's a higher, holier being and so on,
is the idea that he's leveling up in the covenant.
We could, if we're gonna use gaming terminology
that might cancel him.
So leveling up in the covenant.
Yeah, he's leveling up in the covenant.
Made the covenant of Bethel, but here at Penniel,
he levels up further into the covenant.
Kind of like we do, we enter into baptism, but we level up as we go to the temple, level up in the covenant, made the covenant of Bethel, but here at Peniel, he levels up further into the covenant. Kind of like we do when we enter into baptism, but we level up as we go to the temple,
level up in temple marriage, he's demonstrated that God fully and completely prevails in
his life.
And as a result, God is promising him, now you're going to prevail.
And that is available to us because we make the same covenant and we renew the same covenant
in the way that it's being talked about here in section 27.
Oh, I love that.
That's excellent.
And oftentimes, you know, someone might say, why did the Lord change Jacob's name to Israel?
And I'll say it happens in our life all the time.
The Lord gives us a new covenant and he changes our name.
When we were baptized, we took upon us the name of Christ.
When you go to the temple, you get a new name.
And I've had students say, is that the name I was known by
in the pre-mortal life?
And I'll say, no, not at all.
That's the name that it's a symbol, just like you said.
It's a symbol.
Because you're a new person, right?
You're a new person.
I hate to burst their bubble, but you're a new person.
It's a symbol that you are, that you're brand new.
You know, Kerry, I've noticed in the book of Mormon,
the parts that talk about the Abrahamic covenant
are the ones that everybody skips.
Second Nephi, right, with all the Isaiah chapters, people are like, well, I don't really understand
that. I'll just keep going. Then they get to Jacob five. Completely about the Abrahamic covenant.
But anyway, you're actually right. Yeah. Then you get to Jacob five and you're going, I don't
that's a lot of pruning. There's a lot of dunging going on. I don't know what's happening. I'll skip
that. And I don't like dunging anyway.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Move on.
And then you've got the Savior's second day with the Nephites, which whenever I ask
my students about the Savior's visit, they talk about him putting, you know, letting
them come up and touch his hands his feet.
He blesses the children, which are all incredible events, but they never talk about the second
visit the next day, which is all house of Israel.
So you could, if you read the Book of Mormon and skip second Nephi, Jacob five,
and the Savior's second-day of the Nephites, you're going to miss,
you're going to miss what we're talking about here.
Yeah.
You're going to miss all of that. Exactly. Right.
And, and I, I'll say it's dangerous to get me going on this topic because I'll
go for forever, but keep going.
Um, but I do see an interesting parallel.
So I've actually, I have gone through and counted
how many times something about the covenant
is mentioned in the book of Mormon
and what prophets are doing it the most.
So you get covenant mentioned a ton, as you said,
first Nephi, second Nephi, and Jacob,
are those are the places you find it the most.
Then it really kind of starts to drop off.
It's still pretty good in Ena and Jerum, but it really drops off.
So by the time you get to Healum, it's barely mentioned at all.
And the first part of third Nephi is barely mentioned, mentioned.
Where it comes back is third Nephi 10 with the voice of the Savior.
And then like you say, chapters 15 through 20 are all Abrahamic covenant, 29 and 30 are all Abrahamic coming.
I mean, it's a ton that it really feels like that Christ issues a little bit of a corrective
to them and says, you haven't been thinking of turning as much.
So I'm going to talk about it.
And again, Christ talks about the covenant more than any other theme when he's with the
Nephites by far.
It's worse every other theme.
It always makes me laugh in third Nephi on the Savior's first day. He starts to
quote Isaiah to them. And then he says, I notice you're getting, you're getting a little sleepy.
Yeah. Yeah. Why don't you go home and we'll talk about this tomorrow.
And we do the same thing in our classes, right?
No, I was going to say those of you who are listening to this going, I'm kind of lost and
I don't understand it. Don't worry. Don't worry. It's, uh, it happens to everyone, including record right in the
book of Mormon from Jesus himself. So keep going, Kerry.
I almost feel like, and this is just my opinion, this isn't doctrine or anything,
but I almost feel like we're seeing the same thing in modern
trick history. At the beginning of this dispensation, Joseph Smith,
uh, partly P. Pratt, John Taylor, these guys are talking about,
Dr. Brigham Young, they're talking about the covenant, partly P. Pratt, John Taylor, these guys are talking about,
they're talking about the covenant a ton.
And they're tying us in with Abraham, with Isaac and Jacob all over the place.
And it's really strong at the beginning.
And then it slowly kind of starts to go down.
And President Nelson is bringing us right back up,
just like that same curve we saw in the book of Mormon.
President Nelson is serious about us understanding
the Abrahamic covenant and what it has to do with our lives. And he tells us this is the
greatest cause on the earth today. And he says that two or three times, right? And yet I'm
finding that a lot of saints, they catch the enthusiasm he has for it, but they're not quite sure
what to do about it. So that's kind of become one of my little missions of latest to like I'm created websites with this written in articles. I'm just
trying to help people understand what President Elton is doing with all of this.
Well, and I teach Book of Mormon. I love to just joke about, hey, if you're going to write a book
or give a talk, here's a formula, tell them what you're going to tell them and then tell them
and then tell them what you've told them. And I'll put the title page of the Book of Mormon next to the last page. And on the title page, it says, which is to show
unto the rendering of the house of Israel, the great things the Lord have done for their fathers,
that they may know the covenants of the Lord, that they're not cast off forever, and then convincing
you and Gentile that Jesus is the Christ. In the last line you maybe found spotless at his judgment
seat.
And then I show him the last page.
And in verse, the Book of Mormon ends with Moroni 1034, Moroni 1031, that the covenants
of the eternal Father, which heath made into the O'House of Israel, may be fulfilled.
And then come unto Christ, be perfected in him. And then, in verse 33,
that ye may become holy without spot.
Christ, covenants, and you can become spotless
through the Atonement title page, last page,
and every page in between.
I think it was Elder Bednar
that said the central recurring theme of the book Mormon
is the invitation to come unto Christ.
But covenants are in there constantly.
And I'm telling the same thing with Isaiah, watch it with the Isaiah chapters, watch unto Christ, but covenants are in there constantly, and I tell them the same thing with Isaiah,
with Isaiah chapters, watch for Christ, watch for covenants. Yeah. And Marone, I actually twice equates
the covenant with Israel with the glory of God, right? And then we have in Moses where he says,
this work in his glory is to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man. Well,
the covenant is where we're promised eternal life,
right?
I mean, it's all intertwined here,
but sometimes we miss a part of it.
So it's fun stuff.
It is.
And I didn't think we'd be talking about Camoram,
but that's fun because I think that,
can I say this in the modern day,
we talk more about I'm a child of God.
And I like to say we are and so is everybody, but we have
another level of understanding. We are also Abraham's seed. And what does that mean? And then that's
when we can talk about the covenant and the last part that all the families of the world can be
blessed. I mean, I just love that part as you've talked about. So beautifully, Kerry, that's what
it's about. We're going to unite this family and bless all of the families of the world because
of the Abrahamic covenant.
Right.
And I think one part that is missed on us is that we don't understand the, quote, gathering
of Israel because we probably don't understand the scattering of Israel.
And if you go back, if you do a little bit of your history and you look at what happened
when Israel decided they wanted a king, right?
They come into the Promised Land with Joshua centuries later, they want a king.
And Samuel says this is a bad idea, but they go for it anyway and they choose Saul, David
and Solomon.
And just kind of, you know, told you it was a bad idea.
There's a lot of my told you so along the way.
And then it divides into two separate kingdoms.
You have the Northern Kingdom and the Southern Kingdom.
The Northern Kingdom is called Israel.
The Southern Kingdom is called Judah.
And they eventually both are taken.
And what we don't recognize is that Lehigh, Nephi, Jacob,
they're all part of the scattering of Israel.
That's why they talk about the gathering so much.
They love Isaiah, because he talked about the future gathering. I got to read, I
do this with my students. This is from Elder Bednar from Enzine from the general conference
of 2005. He said, I give them this part of the quote and see if they can finish it.
We were for ordained in the premortal existence and born into mortality to, and I'll stop it right there.
What, why were we born?
And the typical answer is to get a body, right?
To get a body and to be tested.
And that's not what he says.
I'll show them the end.
We were forwarding in the pre-mortal existence
and born into mortality to fulfill the covenant
and promise God made to Abraham.
I have two nine year old twin boys.
It'd be funny if they, their primary teacher said, why did we come to earth? Right? They say, to fulfill the covenant
promise God made to Abraham. Right? Because that, that we've forgotten it, Kerry, you're exactly right.
We've forgotten it. And we've, some of us have missed it in the Book of Mormon entirely
that we're not just here to do that. We are here to bring to pass the promise
gathering made by Isaiah, right? And I want to ask you, Kerry, about this verse. And we've
already read it. But and please fill in any thoughts that you just had come to you. Section
27 verse 9 about Malachi, the prophecy of Malachi about Elijah. Correct me if I'm wrong,
but I think this is probably one of the most,
if not the most quoted verse,
it's in all of our standard works,
it keeps coming up over and over again.
And yet when I see it,
I don't know if I quite understand it.
Morone, I quoted it as Joseph Smith,
Jesus quotes it to the Nephites,
this verse isn't going away.
This is the second time it's in the
doctrine and covenants. Right. So how would you understand it? And then one other thing is why does
he list of all the tribes? But why does he list? He list Abraham Isaac and Jacob. But you also see
Joseph there. Yeah. One of the 12 tribes. And I'll ask my students, I'll say who saved the family
from the famine? And they all know it was Joseph. And I'll say who students I'll say who saved the family from the famine and they all know it was Joseph
and I'll say who's gonna save them from the spiritual famine and again
I think the Lord has called on the tribe of Joseph or his sons E from and Manasseh to save the children all right
I'm gonna turn it over to you. What else what are you thinking?
So there are some really important elements in there. So let's first of all, we'll do the first part of the question in a second.
So with the promise, and note how he says,
the keys of the power of turning the hearts of the fathers
to the children.
These are keys that were bestowed.
And we know in the Curtlyn Temple that Elijah and Moses
come through restore keys.
And they're both associated with the covenant
and the gathering of Israel, both of their keys are. We usually think of it as just sealing keys to perform
temple marriage, but it's more than that. Again, temple marriage is specifically about sealing
us together as a family with Abraham. It's entering or leveling up more in the Abrahamic
covenant, right? So this idea is really, I mean, so let's take the way more or more own, I quote it to
Joseph Smith, it is that our hearts are turned to the promises made to the Father.
We have to become more covenant conscious.
We, family history is absolutely part of that and doing temple work is absolutely part
of that crucial parts.
Let's not forget that I'm not I'm not dissing that right, but
But we lose some of the power in doing it if we don't recognize that it's part of this great overarching covenant that God wants us to turn our hearts to so that again, I hope people read
Genesis and Exodus as family history every bit as much as they read
Their grandma's journal, right? I hope we think of Sarah as much as they read their grandma's journal.
Right.
I hope we think of Sarah as much as we think of our pioneer ancestors or ancestors that
joined the church in Zimbabwe or wherever else.
Right.
I hope that we understand that what we're trying to do is have our family be part of this
covenant and participate in the blessings promised to Israel.
That's what I think those keys are about.
And then it's interesting that you mentioned Joseph.
Joseph is mentioned in there along with Abraham Isaac and Jacob, right?
He's that next line in.
And then as you said, the next line down is E from a manassah.
So what happens is, and if we're going to talk about this, I think we need to have a little
bit of a larger discussion and make sure we understand it correctly because the world doesn't want us to understand
this correctly. And it's been trying to get us to misunderstand this. All right. If Joseph
receives the birthright blessing, and now Judah kind of does too, that's another story, but Judah
kind of does too. And he's going to have kings come through him most especially Christ. Right. So
let's not ignore that's that's a pretty important thing, right? But Joseph receives the birthright blessing.
And when we hear birthright, we think power, privilege, prestige.
It's a call to leadership.
It's for sure a call to leadership.
But when we hear leadership, the same thing, the world has conditioned us to think power
and prestige.
It's conditioned so much that Joseph Smith later, so you'll do this in a podcast at the
end of the year,
where it says, as soon as you get a little authority,
you use it for your vain ambition, right?
I'm right just dominion.
That's exactly right.
That is not what authority or that's not what leadership is about.
Leadership is called a service.
So Christ explains this well,
when he talks to James and John, who come to him,
and they say, let us sit on your right and your left hand, And he says to them, and I think this is an exact quote.
He says, you guys don't get it.
You just, you're not getting it.
It says an exact quote.
Yeah, that's the exact quote.
That's in my version.
It was lost in translation that King James Translator
has put it a different way.
But I think originally he said, in English, you don't get it.
So, and then he says, the princes of the Gentiles
want to exercise authority over them,
but that's not how it should be with you. Whoever would be greatest should be least, whoever's
going to, you know, be, uh, I can't remember now exactly, but you have to be the servant of all
is what he says, right? Right. That's what according to Christ leadership really is. It's not
authority or prestige. It's you serve. You're the lowest, you're
the least you serve everyone else. So when Joseph is given a call to leadership, it's not to say
you're better than everyone else. And when he's given blessings of great posterior ulcers of other
things, it's not so he can be more cool. It's so that he has enough people to do what he's being
asked to do. And what he's being asked to do.
And what he's being asked to do is to gather all of Israel, and then as Israel is gathered,
they need to gather all the world.
And that's part of the benefit.
They're scattered because they're wicked and they need to be humbled.
But the side benefit, and I think it's an intended side benefit, is that once you're scattered
to all the world, when you're gathered, you can bring the whole world with you.
And that's exactly what they're supposed to do. And, and Ephraim and Manasseh as well, and Ephraim will be the, the, the
lead of those two, but they both receive this charge and this blessing. And President
Nelson's been specific. They both have this charge to lead out in gathering Israel. And
if you compare their blessings, they're, they're given the same blessings. And Ephraim
is told, he'll be given more of it, but the more seems to be like literally more people,
more descendants numerically,
so that you can do what I'm asking you to do.
So basically, and that's what the birthright always was.
The birthright child was given a lot of things
he was supposed to do to take care of the family.
So he's also given an extra inheritance,
a portion of the inheritance,
so that he was given the tools to do what he needed to do.
And so that's exactly what this this birthright or leadership call is for Joseph and his two sons
E from a manassah is that they are given a task and God is giving them enough people and and ability
to go out and do that task. And that task is get the whole world to be part of this family, get them all sealed
to me and to each other so that we can be exalted together and have the kind of relationship
that we should have with each other.
And God promised Abraham he would do that.
And he's using the latter day, Ephraim and Manasseh and others, those who can be adopted
in to go out and be the net.
I like what you said there. The scattering is like a big net. I'm going to throw you all over.
So when I gather you, grab on to people because I'm going to bring you home.
And what I think it's Nephi who says they carry them on their shoulders, right?
They carry them in their arms as if they're these, these, these service oriented people, say, in the gospel of John, the Savior washes their feet.
This is how we lead in this church.
I liked it in my kingdom.
I like to tell my students being chosen doesn't mean to sit on a throne and be
admired. It's more like being chosen to mow the lawn.
And, and then we talk about the, the, to bear the ministry is one of the phrases in the Abrahamic covenant.
So it's obviously a blessing because we have the blessings of the priesthood and and they give
to the Holy Ghost and everything that comes with it, but it's a burden as well. And so they're
calling it now a lot of times, President and else in the work of salvation. In any time, you do
anything that helps anyone to come closer to Christ, make a covenant with him in the temple, you're helping to gather
Israel, you're doing the greatest work in the world. So I'm excited to, I want to get your book,
Kerry, I want to read it. I hope you do and it may put you to sleep, but I hope not.
John, I'm just going to have to say this this that I was reading up on my timeline of world history
and August of 1830, which is when we were receiving this exact section of the doctrine
covenant, is when the lawn mower was patented by Edwin Beard budding the exact same time.
So I think you're inspired to talk about chosen the Mothalon.
Let's get back into the section. We did do a little tangent there off into the House of Visual,
but I think it was an important tangent. Well, actually, the central part of the section.
But yeah, we're right. Yeah. Yeah, you just can't. The Lord's just not saying,
hey, we're going to have a big sacriot meeting and look who's going to be there. It's going to be star studded, right? He names these people on purpose because this is the covenant
of Abraham. And it goes with the next verse as well, right? Peter, James, and John, who are
apostles, but again, those are people who restore the keys of the covenant. So anyway, sorry, keep going.
No, I think you're right on here. This meeting, when we said in 27.5,
when the Lord said,
I will drink of the fruit of the vine with you.
I thought of my New Testament, Luke 22,
this ties in beautifully when the Savior's
with his last evening with the apostles.
This is Luke 22 18.
For I see you, I will not drink of the fruit of the vine
until the kingdom of God shall come.
To me, that's a big verse. Because the kingdom of God, here we are, the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God shall come. To me, that's a big verse because the kingdom of God, here we are,
the doctrine of governance, the kingdom of God is coming.
Yeah.
And I think it's a clear illusion.
I think when Christ is in verse five, a section 27,
he is absolutely alluding to what he told his apostles and he wants us to make that connection.
22. Yeah.
I think sometimes I've taught my students, oh, isn't this great, all the sacrifices that were offered
pointed to those events of the of the atonement. And now the sacrament points backwards to those
events of the atonement. But now I'm seeing as I've reading these, it's there's also a future
sacrament reading that it is pointing to. And I like verse 14.
And also with all those whom my father has given me out of the world that, yeah, those
people are going to be here, but it sounds like we are too, or maybe have that opportunity
that all of us will be there speaking of blessing all of the families of the world.
And there's a future sacrament meeting.
Let's have Kerry answer that. But John,
I really like that. That idea of the sacrament isn't now just about looking backwards to the atonement.
We're looking forward to the second coming of the Lord. Here he comes. I think that's a crucial point.
That could that could really change your sacrament experience, not just looking backwards, but also
looking forward to the Lord's coming
and having the sacrament again.
All right, Carrie, over to you.
Oh, no, that's right.
And to the full fulfillment of the covenant, right?
Because again, we're renewing the Abrahamic or all of our covenants at the sacrament.
And the full culmination of that is exaltation, but this is an important step along the way
when we do this with Christ, right?
All those who my father had the giving me out of the world, which again, I think is a clear
illusion to both John 17 and John 6 where he talks about those who the father has given
him, right?
So this section alludes to scriptures all over the place, including the next part, right?
The next part is all in Ephesians 6, illusion.
Before we go there, just wanted to mention that the manual has you go to DNC 110,
and I thought, yeah,
because a lot of these wonderful individuals
who have been mentioned showed up personally
at the Kirtland Temple to restore keys.
Yeah.
And so I thought, hey, I'm looking at the list here. This list
sounds familiar. Yeah. Well, I think this is the prophecy that those keys will come and
be restored, right? It's going to be a few years, about six years, but still they're
working towards that. If anybody listening is able to go on a church history tour, hopefully they'll start those up again and open the sites.
Make sure you see the painting just inside the door at the Kirtland Visitor Center area of,
there's a line of angels coming down one at a time and Joseph and Oliver there behind the pulpit to the Kirtland Temple.
It's, it's beautiful. That's the Walter Rain is, right? I don't know if it's a Walter Reign. I would be
surprised. It's beautiful, but it's just when I saw it and I think of 110, I think of that line,
the visions and blessings of all, the returning and angels are coming to visit the earth. And
the look on Joseph's face in that painting, you've got to see it right inside the Kurt Levisitor's center.
There always reminds me of this.
Sorry.
Oftentimes I feel like, you know how you watch a fitness video and there's two really good
ones and then there's a modified version.
I feel like the modified version sometimes in this podcast because I had never realized
that each one of these people that are listed in this section were part of the restoration.
And if you, I probably had never realized it just because
of the inclusion of Joseph Jacob, Isaac and Abraham,
but now Kerry's taught us this is part of the restoration
is the covenant.
And you've got Adam, Peter, James, and John, Elijah,
John, Elias, right?
This is a restoration.
We're going to bring everybody back at once and have a big sacrament meeting.
You know what?
It's elegant and it makes sense.
It's symmetrical.
I mean, to me, it wasn't just the first vision.
It was, that was the beginning of this delegation of all these others with keys was just makes me go.
I love the symmetry. I love the elegance of that to use a couple of lofty words.
And even in the first vision, and one of the accounts of the first vision,
Christ says that the reason he's appearing is because they've broken his everlasting covenant.
And then in one of the versions of Moronai's visit, he says that he's there to restore the everlasting covenant. And it's all aiming, I mean, in many ways, the first vision, the book of
Mormon, the building of the temple are aimed at being able to have this covenant fully restored.
And that's what all the people here are associated with covenant and keys. All the people listed
in here, right? Here they are in Northern Pennsylvania. And Joseph has no idea, I don't think, maybe.
Maybe a some idea at this point
that this meeting is gonna take place,
at least to my knowledge, at a place,
he's actually gonna set foot out in the middle of Missouri.
I wonder in his mind if he's going,
I wonder where this meeting's gonna take place
and Lord's going, well, funny you should ask about that
because we're gonna take a long trip, right?
Yep. I'll tell you later, but it's going to take a while.
Yeah, just yeah, it's going to be a few years before all of this, this pans out.
And I've noticed that in all of these opening sections, Kerry,
is that Lord kind of drops little hints here and there of things that are going to come later.
Yeah, always preparing. He's always just getting you ready for the next thing
and then ready for the next thing
and ready for the next thing, right?
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you