Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 30-36 : Dr. Robert L. Millet Part II
Episode Date: April 3, 2021Does missionary work scare you? We can help! In Part II, our Fantastic Four (and others, especially Orson Pratt and Edward Partridge) discover the “field is white and ready to harvest.” Dr. Robert... Millet shares how we are 11th Hour Workers and the Lord of the Vineyard is with his Servants and this episode will excite and encourage you to “open your mouth” and share the Good News. Additionally, if you know a Bishop, you’ll want to learn how Edward Partridge is a hero we should celebrate for “wasting and wearing out” his life for the Lord. You will never see missionary work or Bishops the same way again.Shownotes: www.followhim.coYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
What stands out over and over, John, in our reading is that what section is it?
He who repents is my church is my church is my church.
Yeah, the contending on snow church.
Save it be the church of the devil in section 18.
Yeah, that was section 10 verse 67.
Who so repentant and come at thundamee the devil in section 18. Yeah, that was section 10, verse 67. Who so repenteth and comeeth unto me?
The same is my church.
Hey, let's move to,
or should we pray?
34, yeah, 34 and 36.
Two names that are very important
to the history of the church,
Orson Pratt and Edward Partridge.
So let's talk about Orson Pratt here for a minute.
What do we know about Orson?
And maybe Edward as well.
You know, obviously Orson is the younger brother of Parley.
Parley goes back when he gets the gospel and he visits with Orson, teaches him the gospel.
He's baptized on the 19th of September, 1830, his 19th birthday.
And then what does he do? Within a matter of days, he's on a mission.
He goes to Colesville as a ambassador of the Lord to preach the gospel.
This revelation to Orson Pratt, to me, is just, so let me just say, and of course Orson
Pratt became one of the great minds of this dispensation.
When you start listing the great intellects of our dispensation, you know, you think of
James Towne, you think of John Widso and so on and so on, or some Pratt would be right up
there.
A brilliant man not formally trained as far as education goes, but trained by God.
I mean, he had an amazing mind.
He does.
He's one that I've read about who wants to learn Hebrew.
He wants to learn Greek. He's studying math. He's studying that I've read about who wants to learn Hebrew. He wants to learn Greek.
He's studying math.
He's studying English grammar.
He is, and we're getting ahead of ourselves here,
but he's gonna be, I think, one of the first two people
to enter the Salt Lake Valley.
He just seems to be a go-getter.
He wants to be in front learning and leading.
And he lives until 1881.
So he lives to be 70.
He is another illustration of someone,
for example, who had his disagreements with President Brigham Young. I think that's worth noting.
They loved each other, they respected each other, but they have a differences. In this case,
Brigham was right on those issues, but Brigham Young also said of Orson Proud, I believe if we took
this man and cut him up into a hundred pieces, each piece would cry out. Joseph Smith was a prophet of God. That's a great
statement. So he's converted by his brother. As I'm just, we've read it just a couple of
sections here. Part of the Pratt is instrumental. Well, if he didn't teach him, he baptizes him.
He's gonna bring John Taylor
is gonna be a product of the P Pratt.
That's correct.
I don't know.
Partly P Pratt never becomes,
he never becomes the president of the church,
but the impact of Parly P Pratt still is with us today.
Maybe our greatest literary mind,
is with us today. Maybe our greatest literary mind. Just to read all the poetry that Parli Piprat wrote. I mean, we'll think of the Hems by Parli Piprat that we're saying. Amazing
man. This section to me is fascinating for a number of reasons, but I just want to show
you one or two reasons. Obviously, it begins with the Lord bearing His witnesses
in terms of who He is, the Redeemer,
verse three, who so loved the world that He gave His own life.
It sounds very much like John 316.
So, Orson is called to prepare the way of the Lord
for the Lord's second coming,
but I want you to look at verse 10,
wherefore, lift up your voice and spare not for the
Lord God hath spoken, therefore prophesy, and it shall be given by the power of the Holy Ghost.
I think that's the only person in the doctrine and covenants that's told prophesy.
And you know what? He does. Just yesterday, I grabbed my 26th volume set of the Journal of Discourses
and went through and glanced at all of the sermons by Orson Pratt between 1851 and 1881.
Okay? Now, of that time period, Orson Pratt delivered 23 addresses on the signs of the times,
the second coming, and the millennium. Therefore, prophesied. Orson Pratt had more to say about
the last days than any other person in this dispensation. Wow. He took it seriously. That's incredible.
You know, it talks about him preach my gospel. You are called of me to preach my gospel.
I think I read, maybe it was in Susan's book,
he crosses the Atlantic Ocean 16 times in missionary work.
He was, it was, he say,
lift up your voices with the sound of a trump,
long and loud.
These were, he was gonna do this for a long time.
Like you said, till 1881,
I think he's gonna be the last surviving member of the original 12.
That is correct.
And think about this as a distinction for Orson as well, while Orson is a basically mission
president over in in Scotland, he writes a little pamphlet about Joseph Smith's visions,
which includes the first vision is published in 1840 and happens to be the first published
account of the first vision,
or some prats account of what Joseph told him. We have got missionary section after missionary
section after missionary section. I think those of us who want to do more missionary work who feel
it, I just want to share the gospel more, I think you can gain inspiration from these sections from come follow me this week.
It's, let me just study this verse by verse and say, how, how can I be a better missionary?
What can I gain for myself?
And for me personally, it's open your mouth.
And maybe today the Lord would say, and post on Instagram and post on Facebook and, you
know, tell people who you are and what you believe.
Here's a thought. I get asked occasionally, you're reading and studying the doctrine
and covenants, how do you know which things are time specific and specifically intended
for that person versus which things really do apply to all of us. Right. And maybe this
is superficial, but it occurred to me, those things that are doctrinal in nature,
that's available to all of us, the Lord's teaching.
Occasionally, you'll read something, whether it's to Emma Smith about what she's to do with
a hymn book.
On the other hand, what does it say at the end of section 25?
What I say and a one I say and a whole.
So many, many times we can read a revelation.
We see certain things pertain to
Orson Pratt. He was to prophesy, but so many of these verses are for everyone.
Blessed are you because you are called of me to preach my gospel. That is a say unto all type
type. Yes. Yes. Preach, teach and heal. Should we talk about Edward Partridge in 36?
Sure. I'll tell you what, you're going to see me get excited. I sure love Edward Partridge in 36. I'll tell you what, you're gonna see me get excited. I sure love Edward Partridge.
And anytime I see a bishop just wearing out their life
in the service of their ward,
I gotta think of the church's very first bishop,
Edward Partridge.
Tell us about Edward, what do you know, Bob?
Well, born in 1793 in Pistfield, Massachusetts. I know Pissfield, Massachusetts. That was in the Eastern States mission
And so we used to go to Pissfield on Monday and play in basketball the elders did in the gym there
So that's my connection
1793 so he's what 12 years older than Joseph?
He's known for being a hatter. He he he apprenticed for four years under a hader, a man who makes hats and he went into his own business,
owned his own hat shop. And for those who are listening who are thinking what in the world a
hader, we got to say that a hat, a top hat, any hat was part of formal wear. If you're going to
dress up nice,
you're gonna wear nice hat.
It's a different world now.
When I was on a mission in primitive times,
we, I was in the Eastern States mission.
Our dress was to be the dress of the men on Wall Street,
which meant dark suits, dark tie and a hat.
I wore a hat the first six or eight months of our mission. Hats added some dignity, you know? Yeah. And so, you know, someone might today might think,
what, he may have a job making hats. Yeah, it was very much like making a suit coat, right?
Or being a tailor. Here's an interesting thought for you.
Edward Partridge was fascinated with Unitarianism and Universalism.
Now, I understand, I think, almost perfectly why that's the case.
Joseph describes this as what a very, a man filled with piety, one of the great men he
describes him.
Unitarianism, especially Universalism.
Universalism is in the notion
God will eventually save everyone. Okay, it's a positive affirming thing.
Father Smith and his father, Asel Smith, they started the first universalist society in their area. Now why? Because President Smith had a soft heart, President, President Joseph Smith
saying, you had a soft heart and just wanted God to save everyone. I see this fits, this
great man Edward Partridge so well. His wife on the other hand is drawn to the candle lights.
He is a friend of Sidney Rigden. I mean, here we go again, okay? So that when Sidney comes to Ohio,
or to New York, excuse me, he brings Edward with him.
So let's explain that.
So Parley comes to Kirtland, tells them
about the Book of Mormon,
and the whole Kirtland group sends,
basically, to go check out Joseph Smith
and what he's about, they send these two men,
Sidney and Edward Partridge,
saying, go, we'll trust you,
you'll trust your judgment.
Is that sound about right?
We'll trust your, come back and tell us about him.
Yep.
Once he heard the message, he said he wanted to be baptized,
but he said, if Joseph Smith will do it.
And so he wants to meet him.
Joseph baptized him.
He returns to Ohio.
He looked us.
He returns to Ohio and three days later,. He returns to Ohio. And three days later,
he's called the first bishop of the church. Now, John and Bob, John, I know it served his bishop.
Bob, you served his bishop, have you? Twice. Twice.
Isn't Edward Partridge the one who said, I don't think I have a bishop in me?
I identify with that.
Oh, maybe that's Newell Whitney. Well, I didn't think I had one in me.
I'm still not so sure.
The second bishop. Newell, okay, Whitney's going to be the second bishop.
But I just have a burden. It's a heavy burden.
And it would have been even heavier then, because he's dealing with property and real estate.
Oh my goodness.
He's called as the first bishop,
and he sent to independence.
He writes back to his wife, Lydia, saying,
I don't know if you want to come here.
It is not what we're used to.
It's rough.
Yeah, it is a rough time.
He's going to end up being tarred and feathered.
I mean, we can talk about this later, John,
but he dies young.
Our first bishop dies at 46.
46 years old.
And Navu.
But what a noble soul.
Oh, just every time I don't want that to be a sign for bishops.
Right.
You're gonna wear yourself out and die young. But if there's
anybody who, who to me personally demonstrates the character and goodness of a bishop, it's Edward
Partridge. He's just that good. And he has a wonderful burial plot and a large, a large
headstone there. Headstone telling what kind of a man he was. And he really was a great man. beautiful burial plot and a large, a large...
Headstone there. Headstone telling what kind of a man he was.
And he really was a great man.
And the Lord you know later in the doctrine of covenants,
what section 124 pays serious tribute to Edward Partridge.
What a great man.
I mean, again, here's Joseph's language,
a pattern of piety.
One of the Lord's great men. All right, one of the Lord's great men.
All right, what's the Lord's message to our soon-to-be-called first bishop, Edward Partridge?
Well, look at the first two verses of section 36, thus saith the Lord God, the mighty one of Israel.
Behold, I say, you are blessed, and your sins are forgiven you. By the way, how often does that come up when the Lord talks to someone when they receive the revelation? And you
are called to preach my gospel as with the voice of a Trump. Now, look at this. I will lay
my hand upon you by the hand of my servant, Sidney Rigden. Isn't that beautiful? And
you shall receive my spirit, the Holy Ghost, even the Comforter, which I'll teach you the
peaceable things of the kingdom.
Lay my hand upon you by the hand of my servant, Sidney Rigdon.
I'll tell you what it brought to my mind many years ago when I first read that seriously.
It brought to mind this.
I remember when I first read Elder Maconke's the Promised Messiah, came out in 1978.
The preface in the preface to the Promised Messiah, look what he writes.
These are the opening words of the preface.
Since the Lord laid his hands upon me on October 12, 1972, by the hands of his servant
present, Herobie Lee, in ordained me to the Holy Apostleship, I have had but one desire
to testify of our Lord's divine sonshiphip and to teach in purity and perfection the truths of its everlasting gospel.
But there it is, you see, by the hands of His servant, Harold B. Lee.
That is the Lord's hands.
I will lay my hand upon you by the hand of my servant, Sidney Rigdon.
That's a beautiful idea that you can see those as the Lord's hands.
Look at verse 7.
This is an interesting expression.
This command much shall be given unto the elders of my church that every man which will embrace
it with singleness of heart may be ordained and sent forth even as I have spoken.
I don't think we've talked enough in the Church about what it means, for example, to have an eye single to the glory of God.
I mean, it's such a... to me, it's a sobering verse, singleness of heart.
The great philosopher, Kirki Garde, said, purity of heart is to will one thing.
Or it's the early brethren of this dispensation, the kingdom of God
or nothing.
It reminds me of a story.
I'm sure we'll tell in the future when Brigham Young asked, I think it's Lyman Johnson,
who's kingdom are you trying to build?
Right?
The words were Lyman Johnson's.
Which one do you really focus on?
I've noticed over and over in these early sections, Bob, that the Lord, he'll drop little hints
here and there, and it seems that he drops another one in verse 8. I think this might be the first time
this comes up. I will suddenly come to my temple. And they don't have one yet. Yeah, and they're going
wait, what? Which one? He did that earlier with, you know, Zion, the cause of Zion, and he's kind of
just saying, I'm just going to give you a little taste here.
Let that sit for a little while.
And we'll, we'll be talking about this, you know, we'll be talking about this later.
So don't forget it.
That's good.
Yeah, I read that too.
That's a first mention of temple.
And then I put underneath it because I started, I started noticing in the end of section 33,
behold, I come quickly in the end of section 34, behold, I come quickly in the end of section 34, behold, I come quickly in the end of section 35, behold, I come quickly, but in end of section ago, I don't think that's very quick.
But if you look at as a synonym with suddenly, I think that Maconkey says it's kind of,
there's no, it will be in an hour you think not.
There won't be time to prepare.
Unexpectedly.
Yeah, it'll come with suddenness.
And I had to find a way to to notice quickly, suddenly, maybe, or synonyms there, but maybe
not because it says,
suddenly to my temple, the Kirtland temple experience
hasn't happened yet, but that was fairly...
That's gotta be recent in those terms.
Yeah, more recent for them.
Relative serbs.
And that whole expression, I will suddenly come to my temple.
It also on occasion means to the earth.
I will come to the earth.
It's a Malachi phrase, isn't it?
It's right.
Of the, I love to see the Lord laying out these just line upon line here in the,
in the Doctrine and Covenants, helping these, this tiny, what we call that the toddler
church right now, John, just grow a little bit at a time, never overwhelming them with
too much.
That, you know, it's just given enough to where they can chew on it for a
little while digest it.
And I'm going to give you a little bit more.
Well, I have to admire him because I would fill overwhelmed if I were Thomas
B. Marsh and the Lord said, Oh, yeah, you just joined.
You're at 16 pages.
The book Mormon rejoice.
The hour of your mission is come.
See you later.
Wow.
Go be vision. Right. Yeah. Now you're going to imagine. So we've looked at all these missionary
sections, but in the, the sections that we have this, for this lesson, section 35 stands
out as a little bit different. This one comes to Sydney, Rigdon. They talk about the translation
of the Bible here. Now we've mentioned this a little bit on
our podcast, but I'd love to hear Bob tell us what we know about Sydney first of all. We've talked
a little bit about him today. What we know about Sydney because I think most members of the church
at least have heard the name. They know a little bit about this man. He becomes very important to
the early church. And then also the project
of the translation of the Bible. We'll let you take it.
I'm born in 1793 in St. Clair Township, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania is his home. He likes to go back
to Pennsylvania and sometimes when he shouldn't. As we said, he was an associate of Alexander
Campbell, eventually called, as we know, to be the first counselor to Joseph Smith in the first presidency in 1832.
He's with Joseph Smith in the John Johnson home when they received the vision of the
glories. Only a short time later, he and Joseph were both dragged out of their homes in the
middle of the night and Tarden feathered. And in the case of Sidney Rigden, if I understand the circumstance, they tied his legs together
and dragged him from a horse, dragged his head at hitting the ground as they went. It was a
March 20th. That means really cold, solid ground. Sidney Rigden. I remember hearing the milk backman,
which one of the great church historians say,
he said, my study tells me Sydney Righdon
was never the same after that.
And so I've been a little more patient with Sydney Righdon.
You know, that's a tough thing.
I mean, basically, you know,
he at least had a concussion,
but it may have done some major damage.
There are times when he just does crazy things, you know, like in Liberty Jail, or in Jail
where he cries out and says, I'm no one has suffered.
I've suffered more than Jesus Christ.
I've always been a little more patient with him than to prone to condemn him because of
that.
But we're talking about somebody who played really significant role.
Let's talk about the JST. We don't know the exact date that the Lord commanded that this be done,
the Joseph Smith translation of the Bible. But we know on two different places in the doctrine of
covenant, section 42 and section 76, the words that are used, the work to which we were appointed,
the work to which we were appointed.
I mean, when in 1st Nephi 13, we're told that part of the restoration will be the restoration
of plain and precious truths and many covenants of the Lord.
Well, the Joseph Smith translation and the book of Mormon have to be the bulk of the
restoration of those kinds of things.
The earliest date we have would be June of 1830.
If you look at the manuscript, you'll see that's the first thing.
And what we read right away is what you and I have as Moses chapter one.
That is, the revelation given to Moses on an unnamed mountain.
And so then they begin working with the book of Genesis, move through Genesis and make it,
they get as far as chapter 19, I think it's verse 42, when the Lord gives a revelation,
that is to us section 45 of the doctrine of covenants, saying, so on March 7, 1831, I
want you to turn now to the New Testament. So they've only gone 19 chapters
into Genesis and they begin the very next day, Brother Matthew's, Robert Matthews who had
such influence with this great work said, I'm convinced they must have gotten that revelation
at night or he to start it right then. Bob, you mentioned that they're working on the Bible.
What does this look like? Do we know
Joseph Smith? Are they reading together? I think we have a pretty good idea.
Backing up just a little bit on the 8th of October 1829, Oliver Cowdery goes to
E.B. Grandin store and purchases a large pulpit style edition of the Bible. It's produced
by a King James version, produced by H&E Fenty Company in Cooper's Town, New York. It weighs
about five pounds. This is the Bible they worked with. And by that, what do I mean? Well, in
the beginning, Joseph begins reading from the Old Testament and dictating to his scribe.
Now his first scribe was Oliver Cowdry,
but Oliver's called on a preaching mission
to the Lamanites, right?
So John Whitmer steps in.
Emma, Emma was involved.
I've seen the manuscripts and there's a section
in Genesis, beautiful handwriting,
the only beautiful handwriting of all the scribes.
But it's Emma's handwriting.
And eventually Sidney Rigden becomes the principal scribe.
Sidney Rigden is to the JST, what Oliver Cowdery was to the Book of Mormon.
So Sidney joins them.
So it seems to me they're sitting down.
Joseph is reading and as he reads dictating what's to be changed.
At this point early in the process, the scribe is writing out everything long-hand.
I mean, the whole Old Testament, okay?
And in there, there would be the changes.
And so it's holding the Bible, reading from it, the scribe copying down.
As they move into the New Testament, and as they get to about John 6, I think it is,
they determine upon a shorter method.
And the shorter scribal method works like this. I'm going to read this and include the changes,
but you're just now on the manuscript just going to put the change, just put the change. In other
words, you'd have a line and then here's the word that's going to be changed. And so that's the way it looks. And now, at that point, you have a problem.
How do you know when you look at the manuscript,
where the change is going to go,
or where it should be fitted?
Answer, if this point Joseph began first in pencil,
marking the Bible, he would make, for example,
a colon, as we know it, two little dots. That had a meaning. He would make four little dots, two around the Bible. He would make, for example, a colon, as we know it, two little dots. That had a meaning.
He would make four little dots, two around the word that meant remove the word. The two
little dots meant insert something. Occasionally, he would circle a word, underline a word. Those
markings in the Bible become very important. When the RLDS Church produces the first edition in 1867,
they hadn't yet figured out the relationship
between the manuscript and the marked Bible.
They're 1944, a new corrected edition, as it was called,
that they finally figured out by then
where the changes were to go exactly.
And so they're moving through, making, now making just changes on the manuscript.
For example, when they're working on John 5 and they're still writing things out at length,
they come to verse 29, talks about the resurrection of life and of damnation. And at first, they just went
unwrote it out. But you can see that life and damnation have been crossed out and above
them have been written just and unjust. Now, Joseph then says, we marveled at that change.
I remember thinking many a time, well, it's not what you call an earth shaking change.
Right. But I, maybe they're marveling at why would we change it, but they, well, it's not what you call an earth-shaking change. But maybe they're
marveling at why would we change it? But they did. And it's at that point that the vision of the
degrees of glory is given to them. A remarkable thing. And of course, in that room, you have
Spencer Flumon can talk to you about this more, but you have in that room 12 people.
They're watching as Joseph Smith and Oliver Caldery are just lit up with light and they
know something's happening and they'll occasionally hear follow Dibble says Joseph would say,
what do I see?
I see this and Sidney would say, I see the same and Sidney would say, what do I see?
I see this and Joseph would say, I see the same. Well, they did this at some length,
and these 12 men just sit there silently watching
a cute little episode where at the very end,
to Joseph is robust and just on top of the world,
and Sidney, he's described as being as limp as a washcloth.
And Joseph says, Sidney's not as used to this as I am.
Great moment. That is a great moment. I think the other thing I'd say about the JST, Hank, is that
tremendous influence upon the revelations that are received thereafter. The number of key
revelations that came directly as a result of the translation or indirectly.
And so we're talking, this was not just a parlor game for Joseph and Parley to play.
This was serious stuff. Joseph called it a branch of my calling. And I think as a church for many,
many years, we just did not take it seriously enough. And it wasn't really until the work
of Robert J. Matthews in the 1960s and 70s, in which he was finally given access to the marked
Bible and to the manuscripts that were able to determine the fact that the published version
1944 on of the JST is to be trusted. It's accurate. It's what Joseph Smith intended. Robert J. Matthews
is one of those who has had such an impact on the modern church and people don't even know who he is.
And he was a giant who was of a man who was not very tall and had a bald head. Do we have a number
of directly or indirectly sections of the doctrine of covenants received during the process of doing the work on the JST?
76 is one. 91, which is an interesting short revelation and what do we do with the apocrypha?
So that Bible had the Old Testament.
It had the apocrypha in the middle, and then the New Testament.
And they crummed to this, and Joseph asked the question, what do we do with this Old Testament
apocrypha?
It's what it was.
And the Lord says, there's some things in there that are true, some things that are the
interpolation of men.
There's no need to translate it.
So 91, maybe one of the more powerful ones they would have received as early as 1831 was section 132.
The revelation that came to the prophet about eternal marriage, he first had inclinations of that as early as 1831.
It's not recorded until 1843. They know about this as early as 31.
And there are a number of sections as you go along. You can see that
this is directly related to the translation. I think the other thing I want to say is this.
It wasn't that Joseph would take six months and work on the GST and he'll take the next six
months and receive some revelations. It's happening at the same time. I call it a concurrent revelatory process.
Revelations are coming as a result of Bible translation.
Revelations are coming in the doctrine and covenants, all at one time.
And so it's a pretty remarkable thing.
I believe the JST is one of the greatest evidences of Joseph Smith's prophetic call.
I think it's changed my life. You read along and you'll
see some of these changes. And so when someone says to me, well, why isn't he basic? I remember someone
asked Brother Matthews. Was he just kind of basically Mormonizing the Bible and Brother Matthews answered
this way? He said, well, you know, if Elder Maconkey had written Mormon doctrine in 1830, it would
have been a really short book. That was this way of saying there wasn't much Mormonism
to use in 1830, you know? Yeah, that's a fantastic statement. He's learning the doctrine as
he goes. And that's one of the the major reason obviously a central reason is to restore plain and precious truths
But boy what takes place in Joseph's mind and heart as he goes through
You watch him when he sermonizes. He's always almost always quoting a biblical passage
often Paul by the way I
Have no record of it saying he picked up the Bible and read. No, no, he's quoting.
Now, how would he know that?
That Bible translation was an intense process.
And so it was a great preparation for him.
It seems that it may be another indication of what we talked about earlier with the Lord
saying, I want you to do this, but he has a completely different purpose in mind.
Joseph and Sydney are saying, yes, we're going to make some corrections here.
We're going to go through the Bible and the Lord is thinking, yes, you're going to do that,
but you're also going to be asking questions, which are going to lead to the restoration.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
That's exactly what happened.
You know, I'd like to backtrack just a little bit and tell our listeners that if you go to biutv.org,
go under the faith section and watch a documentary
called that promised day.
And it is all about the publication of the scriptures,
the quad that we have now, incorporating the JST,
and it is fascinating.
I make my students watch for extra credit
and you'll meet Robert J. Matthews
and he was on that scriptures publication committee. I believe he had a lot to do with the Bible
dictionary that we use now. He wrote it. Yeah, that's what I heard. He wrote it. He had a lot to do with it.
And like I said, people don't even know how much of an impact he's had, but just you will be so
to know how much of an impact he's had, but just you will be so your appreciation
for the scriptures we now have.
And the JST, which we're talking about now,
just go watch that promised day
about the publication of the Bible.
I was in seminary, Hank was a toddler.
I was in seminary the day that they said,
pass in your Bibles, we're gonna to give you a new one right now.
And I will never forget personally the moment of opening my Bible and seeing Book of Mormon
footnotes.
That was an amazing moment.
And doctrine and covenants.
And doctrine of covenants.
And Bible dictionary and topical guide.
And you'll watch that documentary and you'll see that the footnote system that they invented
was revolutionary. And three columns. You'll see that they footnote system that they invented was revolutionary.
And three columns, you'll see experiments they did, it is real, it's really good.
It was an award-winning Bible.
Cambridge had never produced anything of that sort before.
By the way, I'd say this, one of the questions, the brethren, I mean the highest brother,
the senior brother, and had to make during the production of the new Bible, the eldest edition of the King James Bible, was whether the
Joseph Smith translation would be included.
And the person that made that decision was Spencer W. Kimball, who said, we will use it.
Brother Matthews told me about that.
And so what we have here in our Bibles now, we have about, I'd say,
800 to 1,000 of the 3,400 and 10 change versus, but we have basically the most important ones,
especially the most important doctrinal ones. So that, that LDS Bible is something, that
letter they say in addition. Let me, let me say, you know, I was being, I was about to be hired at BYU and I came out and Brother Matthews
offered new job and this is in the summer of 1983. And I had a free day or two and education week
was coming up. I went to education week and Brother Matthews was speaking in the Marriott Center
on the new Bible. And I remember him making reference to the chapter headings in the Bible, that they'd
all been written by Elder Bruce Armakonky.
And at that point, where the Matthews became, excuse me, became very emotional.
And he said, a man like Bruce Ar'Meconky comes around about once
predispensation. But the thought I had because I knew by the
Matthews pretty well is a man like Robert Matthew comes
around about once predispensation as well.
Can I share I got a share story? I've never I don't I don't think
I've ever told you this, but both of you teach university
classes. So you'll you'll understand this. I would I went to to a class, it was maybe a one-a-clock class.
I had already taught an 11-a-clock class
and I had mentioned the JST.
I just said, oh, look at the Joseph Smith translation
on this first.
And I remember this distinctively,
it wasn't that long ago, maybe a year or two.
I said, do you know the story of the Joseph Smith translation
and they all just kind of looked at me? I said, do you know the story of the of the Joseph Smith translation? And they all just kind of looked at me.
I said, do you know who Robert J. Matthew, that Robert J. Matthews is?
And they all just kind of looked quizzically at me.
And I said, let me tell you this, because I heard him, you know, one before he passed away,
I got to hear him tell the story, right?
Just fly out, tell the story about when he's listening to general conference on the radio.
And he hears Joseph Joseph, Joseph feeling Smith,
Joseph, in inspired version.
And he said, what is that?
And he started asking everybody, what is that?
What is that?
And he said, my mind was just, I couldn't, I was obsessed with it.
Even his mission president said, why are you so obsessed with this?
Elder Matthews, why do you keep asking me about it?
Do you know who his mission president was, by the way?
No, Oscar Maconkey, senior Bruce's father.
Of course. So I am I go into intersections and just so you you you both know this the how rare this is I use
almost the bulk of my time telling this story which just doesn't happen you know
in a university class I just I've got to go.
We've got to move forward.
We've got things we've got to do.
But I spend the book my time in just this one class,
and I thought to myself, well, that just threw us off.
Right? Now, this one class is going to be behind.
But I get an email later that day, and I actually have it right here.
A young lady in my class said, I just want to reach out and tell you thank you
for sharing
the story of Bob Matthews in class today.
He was my grandfather.
I knew that he had done a lot of work with the church, but I had actually never heard
the story of how he got the Joseph Smith papers, Joseph Translation.
Listen to this, my memories of him usually consist of gardening and bugging him while
napping.
Today, Brother Smith, before class, I was talking with a friend and I mentioned, I really want to learn more about my grandfather. And I was so surprised when not even a half
hour later, you shared the story of Bob Matthews and the Joseph Smith translation.
Thank you for sharing that story. It was an answer to a granddaughter's prayer.
translation. Thank you for sharing that story. It was an answer to a granddaughter's prayer. You know, we had a we had a course in Bob had created a course in the Joseph Smith translation.
And I had begun working on it myself independent of Bob. I was in Florida working on a doctorate
and at Florida State. And I was doing some work with the JST and so I began to write Bob and
we have some of the treasured letters I have asking him questions about the JST and him
writing back. When I started at BYU, Bob came to me and said, listen, I'm going to teach
the JST class. He said, I want you to teach the JST class in the fall, and I'm going to teach it in the winter. I taught it for 25 years.
And I have to say, I love teaching the Book of Mormon.
It's obviously a favorite of mine.
I love the New Testament and so on and so on.
Perligray Prize, Stockton Cummins, taught them all.
But there's something special about this because I saw more students eyes just opened
to when I gave them the historical background. because I saw more students eyes just opened to,
when I gave them the historical background.
I remember we were covering some history
and the student, more than one student came up and said,
oh, we were gonna get to the changes themselves.
Yes, we're going to.
But the historical setting, the background,
was so inspiring.
And of course, I had to tell them about Brother Matthews
because I sat in on his class.
He never mentioned himself.
And he was so instrumental in the church having it now.
The only time I ever heard of say anything related to, I was responsible for that.
He told a story about being in Evanston, Wyoming.
Is that where he grew up?
He grew up there.
And he was like in the teachers' quorum or something.
And some guy that he worked with in a garage or something said
Hey, I've got an airplane. I'm gonna take you flying this weekend
And he's pretty excited about it and every day I'm gonna take you flying this weekend
I'm gonna take you flying and this would have killed me because I love airplanes
But finally it was Saturday and the guy said I'm going flying tomorrow and brother Matthews was like
Well, I don't think I could go I gotta go to go to church, you know, and, and turned down that and went to church. Well, that was in the days and went to church
and the morning came home a little bit, went back to church in the afternoon. He said in the afternoon,
I came out of church and I think he said my sister-in-law said, hey, that airplane crashed. And is the
pilot okay? Yeah, the pilot's okay, but his passenger was killed.
And brother Matthew said to us, now I don't know had I gone up
if I would have been killed, but if I had this the only thing ever,
he said, you'd have a different Bible.
And then he just went on with class.
Then he just went on with class.
And I thought that was so funny.
So only time I ever heard of say anything
to pat himself on the back even a little bit, you'd have a different Bible.
I've heard many of the faculty ask Bob in small groups, do you think you were raised up to do this?
And every time he said, oh, oh, no, no, no. One to me and I, one of the privileges was to spend so
much time with him over a 20 year period. We were on a church history jaunt.
He and I were just traveling between independence and naavu.
And I just poured question after question after question.
And one of them I said, you think you were raised up to do this?
He said, yeah, I think so.
That's the only time.
That's the greatest boasting I ever heard him do. He did, he's very behind the scenes and that's why I hope I end up where he was because nobody
even knows who he is, but what an impact he's had. And if memory serves, he called the church
historian of the community of Christ, the church, the reorganized church 13 years in a row.
Can I see the manuscripts? No, no. And finally, there's a change in leadership. He
calls and the guy says, yes. Richard P Howard became the new church historian there. And Richard Howard,
I'd say it this way, is a little more left-leaning. And so it was more open to it. And so Bob became
good friends with Richard Howard. And for I don't know howamini years he would go back for three to four weeks at a time.
He stayed in a cheap motel, walked to the auditorium in Independence, which is where the manuscript and
the Bible were housed at the time and would sit there with his typewriter and type it up. One of my treasures is that he made his own copy of every change, including
marking where marks were made. He even created a little circle in one page and written in the middle
of it is coffee stain. Somebody had spilled coffee on the original manuscript. And so,
and for him to be able to say, I brought you something you walked
in one day, and he gave to me a Bible that was the same Bible that was printed in 1828, like the
Finney Bible, and the Old Testament and New Testament manuscripts typed out by him with a manual
typewriter. That's one of my treasures. Oh, you know, I think that just for those listening, we need to say, okay, he
asked about the inspired version over and over again. And the message he got
back, correct me if I'm wrong, guys, was that, well, we're not sure how accurate
the printed inspired version is, how well it corresponds with the actual
manuscripts. And we don't have the manuscripts through organized church
dust. Did I get that right?
And so that's why he called every year.
Can I look at the original manuscripts?
And got the nose for something like 13 years in a row.
Then finally, and my memory is that he said he had photocopies
at first, and then because he had made such friends,
well, here's the originals, because he couldn't tell us
little marks were from the photocopier or whatever. And so he made friends there. And that's why he had to
go back there to find them. And then was his master's thesis, the JST or PhD or something?
His master's thesis was a comparison of the King James and the JST on the Sermon on the Mount.
His doctoral dissertation, which is this thick, is the change, the differences between the JST on the Sermon on the Mount. His doctoral dissertation, which is this thick,
is the changes, the differences between the JST and the King James of the entire Bible,
and what is called the Bern Heisel manuscript, a manuscript that John Bern Heisel, a friend of
the prophet, made his own, Emma allowed him to do his own copy of the JST. That dissertation was huge. And what Bob established
among other things, he learned one, there are key dates on the manuscript, which shows
where these things happened in the history of the church and what it would have to do with
certain revelations in the doctrine comes.
Two, this is crucial. The reorganized church had been people of integrity in terms of retaining
what Joseph Smith had done. The Bible could be trusted. One of the issues was, yeah, but
it was never finished. Well, it depends on what you mean by finished. He attended from
everything from Genesis to Malachi, attended to every book. Did he change every change
that he wanted to make or felt he should make? No,
but for that matter, the book of Mormon is not complete either. We got more to see there.
We got more revelations in the doctrine of covenants to come, so forth.
So it's a majestic work. It's one that Latter-day Saints neglect at their peril. It's just too
important to miss. I've always been not very happy with the JST being back by the maps
in some cases. Who's looking back there? Let's bring it up forward. That's our own sealed
portion back there, right? We'll talk about the Lord orchestrating events when John, when
you talked about the 1981 edition, that coincides with what Bob had been doing in the background
for decades, and those lined up perfectly. They just lined up perfectly. So it's another example
yet of, you know, the Lord's working his work over here. He's working his work over there,
and they're going to, they're going to hit at the right moment with the right players in place.
And it continues today. I think let me point this to one verse,
verse 20 of section 35.
This is one pregnant verse, okay?
And a command that I give unto thee, Sidney,
thou shalt write for him, he would become his scribe.
And then get this language.
And the scripture shall be given even as they are
in my own bosom.
Think about that, What does that mean?
These are the way I understand the Scriptures.
It's not bad.
To what?
To the helpfulness of the saints,
to the convenience of the saints.
No, get that.
To the salvation of my own elect.
The Lord is saying, this is...
This is the way I want it.
This is near to my heart.
Yeah.
Right. These scriptures are near to my heart. Yeah. Right.
These scriptures are near to my heart and it's going to bless you.
Here's a statement from Joseph Smith that's found in what's called the far west record.
Under the date of 25 October, the far west record reads his follows.
Joseph said, the Lord will cut his work short and righteousness and get this, except the
church received the fullness of the scriptures, which was an expression described, V. J. S. T. unless the church receive the fullness of the scriptures,
they will yet fall. I think that's saying we better take them seriously.
Yeah, so one thing I really, I think we've hit over and over, so we don't need to
hit it again, but the Lord tells Sidney he has been prepared. Can we see that over
and over and all the stories we've shared today that the Lord is preparing people for work ahead.
When it comes to Robert J. Matthews or Edward Partridge or Orson Pratt, the Lord is preparing
these people. Maybe Sidney even a little more than some of the others because, I mean, that language of the verses, what, four, five, six, he's saying, you were an Elias.
You laid a foundation for what took place.
The people in Kirtland were ready for the restoration.
But then I like in 17 and 18, it's like, but Sydney, Joseph is the prophet.
And verse 17, I've sent him in weakness,
have I blessed him, and I've given unto him
the keys of the mystery of the things
which have been sealed.
So Sydney came with such a different background
of talent and experience and everything
than this weakness of Joseph,
but it's cool to see the Lord say, now, okay,
I know who you are, Sydney, but keep your eyes on Joseph. Do you remember the story of that
Parley P. Pratt tells Philadelphia when Parley's in Philadelphia and Joseph contacts him and says,
I'm coming to visit. And so Joseph and Sidney came to Philadelphia. They had a pack house so Joseph could speak.
Joseph called upon Sidney to speak first
and the accounts, Parley said,
and Sidney spoke about the gospel,
illustrating all his points from the Bible.
And then he said,
Joseph stood up like a lion about to roar and said,
if nobody else can give the credit or something
like that to the visions I've had, the dreams, the revelations, then I will do so and leave
the event with God is the way he said it.
And I've heard historians in other zoos a lot better than I do say, in some ways Sidney
never occupied quite the same place with Joseph after that. In other words, he gets up because he's a wonderful Bible scholar.
Yeah.
And he does everything from the Bible and Joseph gets up and says, no, we have a modern revelation to talk about.
That goes back to what we said earlier with for each the revelations.
And I've from what I've read, Sydney was a powerful speaker.
I hope so because he spoke for two hours at the dedication of the curtain temple.
I know that he, he was represented himself out of Liberty jail in a court case,
laid on a table, flat on his back and had the court in tears, they said, of his cause.
So a powerful speaker, and yet the Lord says,
I call upon in verse 13, the weak things of the world, those who are unlearded and despised to
thrash the nations by the power of my spirit. So I think, I think, I think, I like what you said,
they're John. Yes, you have this incredible gift. You have these incredible talents. Joseph is
the prophet. And I'm going to use him almost because he is weak
in these things. Well, and that that kind of says you're going to be converted to the message and
not the messenger. If you're looking for credentials from Joseph Smith, you're going to get three years
of formal education. So I'm going to take in the world's eyes, weak and learn it and despised. Yeah.
And Sydney's the type that you would think now there's a speaker, a Bible scholar. There's, you know, there's a prophet. And yet he's,
he's a member of the first presidency, but he is not the prophet. And that might, that might
teach us a good applicable lesson that, you know, you might not think the person, the Lord calls
as the release site president or the bishop or the state president or even a general
authority is the most talented, right?
Or the best for for you might not see them as best for the job.
But the Lord is saying that's who I want.
That's who I'm going to use.
He mentions the parable of the fig tree.
For even now already summer is nigh. What is the parable of the fig tree. For even now, already summer is nigh.
What is the parable of the fig tree?
That's verse 16.
Okay.
The parable of the fig tree, if I remember right,
is the Savior pointing to a fig tree
and teaching a lesson to His apostles.
Just like the fig tree brings forth its.
Right, you know that summer is n night. I think that with fig trees leaves
and fruit come at about the same time. So the idea is once you see something happening there you know
it's taking it's taking yeah right so there's another example of the Lord using something in
right in front of me to teach a teacher principal you know and the cursing of the fig tree that was
a different story right the cursing of the fig tree, that was a different story, right?
The cursing of the fig trees, you are all hat and no cattle.
You are all leaves and no fruit.
And so, but yeah,
Defined and interesting look over in verse 25.
Well, look at 24.
We're getting in contact.
Keep all the commandments and covenants by which you're bound.
And I will cause the heavens to shake for your good and Satan shall
tremble and Zion shall rejoice upon the hills and flourish, and Israel shall be saved in my own due time.
And by the keys which I have given shall they be led, and no more be confounded at all.
That's much of the same language Paul used in Romans 11, verse 26, where he just says,
Israel will be saved.
All Israel will be saved. This is something
present. Nelson, of course, has hit over and over something we've talked about on the
podcast is the idea of the Lord remembers the promises he made generations ago to Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, whose name was changed to Israel. And he's going to keep those promises.
You said Romans 11. Romans 11, 26, where Paul says,
and all Israel will be saved.
That's a very interesting thought, you know.
Jesus will say to all Israel, come home.
Amen. Right?
I'm glad you pointed that out,
because that is very much like you said, Hank,
that's a President Nelson theme is gathering.
I think a theme today in our come follow me lesson is yes, this is the Lord's work.
Yes, we are his tools, but he is really preparing the way.
All people, he has a plan for and is going to use you if you want to be used in this work in an important way.
Hank, I just thought maybe a nice way to, uh, nice verse to look at last, if we're ready
for that is verse 26.
It's just so positive.
Lift up your hearts and be glad, your redemption, draw, thnye.
There's a lot of church history that we look at is pretty hard, a lot of trials, a lot
of work, a lot of leaving your family, doing missionary work, but the Lord always has a very positive way of saying things.
And I redemption, drawth and I redemption, cometh of men that I said and lift up your
hearts, be glad. Glad tidings. Great joy. I love those phrases here.
Yeah, that is beautiful. I've noticed in over and over, you point that out, John, in these
sections that the Lord finishes very positively for a lot of these, a lot of these. There's always,
that the Lord finishes very positively for a lot of these things. It's always, can you not read these things in rejoice?
Yes, section 19.
Lift up your hearts and be glad.
Well, that's verse 27.
To me, it's, you're going through some difficult times.
You're going to go through some tough times.
But I'm coming.
I'm coming.
You won't have to do this forever.
If you're not little flock, the idea of, I'm your shepherd. Right. I'm coming, I'm coming. You won't have to do this forever. If you're not little flock, the idea of,
I'm your shepherd, right, I'm coming.
Bob, Dr. Miller, you're a scholar in every sense of the word.
You have, I mean, just prolific.
Yeah, and it's okay that we gush a little bit here.
John and I, I mean, when I think I told,
before you came on, I think I said,
every religion department faculty member
that wants to write a book wants a forward from Robert Milley.
He was best to do a forward, you know,
because it's almost a stamp of,
it's really a stamp of this book knows what it's talking about.
Really, you've done incredible work,
and I would say that you, like all the people
we've talked about, have been called and raised up for this work. I would love to just for a minute,
if we could, get into personal feelings of Bob Millett. Here's someone who has studied this full time
for upwards now of five decades. You don't look that old, but upwards now of five decades as a
teacher of the gospel. Longer than a lot of our listeners have been alive, you have been doing this.
How do you respond to those who maybe are going through a bit of a faith crisis or a
fearful to learn too much because they don't want to go through it.
And experience.
During one of our interfaith meetings, I think we were in Washington, DC, the group of
Latter-day Saints and Evangelical Scholars came together.
And it was just before Richard Bushman's book came out.
Roughstone Rolling came out. And Richard was with us and we asked Richard to make a presentation of his book.
It was now chit, but he was going to talk about it to this group, most of whom were a large
group.
By the way, many more than were in our dialogue group, but a number of evangelical people
were there.
And Richard stood up and his opening line was this. He said, may I ask, is Joseph Smith an impossibility for you?
Just a dead silence.
Richard said, maybe you didn't hear my question.
Is Joseph Smith an impossibility for you?
One of their very prominent historians spoke up and said,
well, Dick, no, he's not an
impossibility.
We know God can reveal himself that way.
He said, we don't necessarily believe that happened to Joseph Smith, but we know those
things happen spiritually.
They went on and talked some more, and one of their number cried out, well, Bob, I was kind of conducting
the meeting. Bob, you have to understand, we take the Savior's words very seriously when
He says, beware of false prophets. And I said, and you should, and we should. I said, nobody
wants to be deceived. I said, but one day, maybe you might consider taking seriously the very next verse in the sermon on the
Mount. What's that? By their fruit, you shall know them. I said, and I think one of
the important questions is, how could Joseph Smith pull this off? How could he do
it? That same historian, I was at a conference a couple of years later, he was
there. I wasn't talking to him. I was two rows behind him.
I had made a presentation at this conference.
I'm sitting there.
We're waiting for the meeting to start.
This fellow by the historian said, hey, what do you make of a Millets presentation?
He said, well, it was kind of interesting.
The guy says,
what do you make of these Mormons? And this very prominent historian said, well, I'm not
ready to accept gold plates or even the first vision yet, but the Mormon community haunts me. He said it again, the Christian nature, the Christianity
within the Mormon community haunts me. Now, that's a long way of saying this for me. It's
important to know the history. It's very important to know the backgrounds. It's important
to know what was going on when, and I salute all the historians, I only wish I had more training in
history." Now having said that, the way to judge Joseph Smith that we haven't given enough
emphasis to is what came from him. The Latter-day St. community are very Christian, he said. Now why is that the case? Because what you believe affects what you do.
What you profess affects how you act.
And so for me, the greatest treasure from Joseph Smith is the doctrine that came from him.
The doctrine that derives from this simple plowboy that became a prophet.
And I think maybe sometimes we haven't stepped back enough and just asked,
how could someone like this have come up with this on his own? No one claims for Joseph
Smith that has any sense or knows any history, that he was a perfect man because he certainly
didn't claim it. But you know what? God certainly worked through him. I mean, I feel regularly
like Brigham Young who said, I feel like shouting,
hallelujah, when I think I ever knew Joseph Smith the prophet. One of the sayings that Joseph
uttered to me is so powerful as this. Do you remember the occasion in the New Testament when
Mark's Gospel gives this best, I think, where they're in the boat, they're in the sea of Galilee. The storm comes up. Jesus is asleep.
And of course someone, they cry out saying, Master,
carousel thou not that we perish?
Jesus still is the storm.
And then what did they say?
What manner of man is this that even the storms and the winds respond to Him?
Well, in much less way, we worship Jesus Christ, we worship God the Father, and we do not worship Joseph Smith.
But I'll tell you what.
I hear sayings like this, and they move me.
When Joseph said, it is my meditation all the day, and more than my meat and drink to know how I shall make the saints of God
comprehend the visions
that roll like an overflowing surge before my mind and I say
What man or man is that?
That's my thought
Wow
John
again Wow. John, again, how does this happen every time? I'm so full, I just don't want it to
stop. Dr. Millett, thank you. Thank you so much for your time. And not just the time
here on the podcast, but your time being a mentor to people like John and me and to so many others, thousands of students. I just, I at least want to give
my public thank you for all that you've done. And my pleasure to be with you. It's been fun.
Yeah. We'll have to do it again. We'll have to do it again. We're grateful for you, our listeners.
Thank you so much for spending time with us. You're out of your busy schedules. We hope that this
is blessing your life. We hope you'll find us on social media on Instagram and on Facebook. Come to our website
follow him.co for show notes. We're grateful for our producers, Steven Shannon Sornson. We're
grateful for our production crew, David Perry and Lisa Spice and our social media expert, Jamie Nielsen.
Until we meet again, my friends, come join us on our next episode of Follow Him.
you