Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 37-40 : Dr. Susan Easton Black Part I
Episode Date: April 10, 2021Imagine growing up hearing the stories of Emma Hale Smith, Phoebe Carter, the Whitmers, Brigham Young, and Brother Joseph. This week’s guest, Dr. Susan Easton Black, didn’t grow up hearing fairy t...ales but true stories of bravery, faithfulness, betrayal, and courage. Dr. Black teaches us how the Lord taught His People that Zion and the Church were more than a place they visited on Sundays, how they received the command to “gather to the Ohio,” and how Joseph continued his New Translation of the Bible. Do we sacrifice as willingly for the Lord as our earliest Saints as we study Doctrine and Covenants 37-40?Shownotes: www.followhim.coYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together we follow him.
My friends welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
I am here with my prolific co-host, John, by the way.
Welcome, John.
Thanks, Hank.
I'm prolific.
I love to know what that means.
Yeah.
You are talented and amazing.
In fact, I was someone to ask me the other day what it's like to do this with you.
And I said, if you were to told me, see, I was 12 years old when I heard you speak.
And if you would have said to me that, one day, you young man are going to do a podcast with
John, by the way, you know what I would have said?
I would have said, what's a podcast?
That's what I would have said.
And I would have said, that's amazing.
John, this is just such a treat.
Every week we get to talk with one of the church's top minds
and we have another chance this week.
Tell us who's with us.
Oh, I'm genuinely, I mean, it's always,
it's always customary to say it's good to be here,
but I am so excited to be here with sister Susan
Easton Black joining us today.
I told my wife, hey, guess who's coming on the podcast?
And she said,
oh, I took two classes from her. I liked it. Like her first one so much, I took it again. And
just love sister black. So I'm going to read a short bio from sister Susan Eastern black here
so that you can be better acquainted with her. Dr. Black joined the BYU Religious Education faculty in 1976. She's a past Eliza Arsno
fellow and a past associate dean of General Education and Honors and a director of
Church History in the Religious Studies Center. And she was the recipient of the
Carl G. Major Distinguished Faculty Lecturer Award in 2000. And it's interesting because she was the first
woman to receive that award and believe the recipient before her was Hugh
Nibbly. This is an award that everybody wants and it's not just their religion
faculty. She has authored, edited and compiled over 130 books, 300 articles. She
currently serves as oh my goodness. I want to send my kids to your class.
Sunday school teacher for the 14 and 15 year olds.
And for the steak is a self-reliance course teacher.
And she and her husband, George, have since retiring, have served four missions.
And one of those was a curriculum writer under Elder Tad Collister for the Come
Follow Me manuals that we use here every week. So we are so excited to have Sister Black
with us here today. Thank you. Susan, thank you so much for taking your time.
It's great actually. It's so fun to see both of you and happy memories. For those of you who don't know who Sister Black is,
just know that this woman,
and I don't think I'm overstating this here,
knows more about Joseph Smith,
especially Joseph Smith in the Nauvoo period,
then probably any other person on the planet.
It's just, she's. Hey, this is a big compliment, probably not deserved, but. Just absolutely.
In fact, Sister Black, how long have you been studying the history of the church?
Well, I think it started for me.
My grandmother was in my home as I grew up and I would say to her, I wanted to hear Cinderella's
Snow White Sleeping Beauty and she actually didn't know those. She left school
in seventh grade and so she could say I can only tell you things that are true.
And so she then regaled me with stories of Joseph Smith and Hans Mill and
Carthie Jail and pioneers crossing the planes and I actually
thought in my mind then and haven't changed much that they were such amazing heroes. I mean,
who could rise up to be like them? Wow. Just yesterday, as I was looking for a good
a good biography, short biography for Sister Black. I stumbled upon a talk that she and George Durant gave.
And I got backstory to Joseph Smith running for president
that I had never heard and understood before.
So I read that whole thing yesterday
and told my wife and she was like, oh yeah, oh yeah.
Yeah.
Because she had you and she remembers everything.
So, but anyway, I help our listeners. We'll go find that because it was fascinating.
This week, come follow me. The lesson is sections. It starts in sections 37 and 38
of the Doctrine and Covenant. Susan, it's December of 1830. The church is what,
eight months old at this point. What, it's old. Now, what's been happening to this new church,
which would help our listeners
who are pretty new to the doctrine covenant,
some of them, what would help them know
what leads up to these revelations?
Oh, great.
Well, we know that the church was organized on April 6, 1830,
and we've got now an eight month gap
as we come to section 37, right?
Yeah.
So during that time we know that, no doubt one of the more exciting parts was the
missionaries sent to the borders of the Lamanites and we had at that time a
nation of 26 states and your farthest Western community was a place named Independence, Missouri, having been settled by people from
Kentucky and the Carolinas and Tennessee.
And so these missionaries are heading out that way,
about 1600 miles from where they started in Fayette.
And along the trail, we know that they stopped in a place
called Mentor and ultimately
Kirtland.
And before they left there, three weeks, trying to imagine this, they'd baptize 127 people
and then they're off to continue their journey.
And so what we've got, in the meantime, of course, you've got Joseph Smith, a little back
and forth between Harmony, Pennsylvania and New York,
kind of back and back, and as we pick them up today
with section 37, we're now in Fayette, New York.
And it might be interesting to our audience to know
that Fayette wasn't, it's a original name,
it was called Romulus, and at one point,
it was called the Town of Washington, meaning after George
Washington, but by 1803, Fayette, New York is Fayette, New York.
These four missionaries, this is Oliver Cowdery,
Pardy,
Syba Peterson, and Peter Whitmer, Jr.
And the one connection already there is Parlie, right?
Parlie is a wanderlust person. And the one connection already there is Parley, right?
Parley is a wanderless person.
You know, you'd say where other people are content to be home.
You'd say not Parley. He's he's up and off and he's willing to live in a wilderness area by himself and it actually spent time in the area and
became acquainted with the man who was
Minister at Sydney Rigden. He's been a Baptist. He's been a, well, you name it. He hasn't quite been all of those, but he's
been a Baptist. It kind of helps join in almost like a charter member of the Campbellite group and
and a seeker and for parley. As long as he's heading out to the borders of the Lamanites out to Independence,
it's not that far of a leap to say, let me go see my old friend, Sidney Rigdon.
And that's so he has been in that community before, comes back with a copy of the book of
Mormon saying, I've been baptized a member of a new church.
And of course, Sidney Rigdon, perhaps at first a little put off, but we're going to find
that Parley actually baptizes his old friend on November 14th of 1830.
So by the fall, they're in Kirtland and Sidney becomes one of those many, you know, over
a hundred that are baptized in by these missionaries.
Yeah.
And I don't know the number of members in New York, but that's got to be,
are we doubling the size of the church with this Ohio?
We probably have doubled it because you have, when the church is organized,
you've got 63 members.
We can name by name and who knows if we've got them all there in Colesville.
But then you have those in meeting in Palmyra and those also meeting in Fayette and
There's some up in Waterloo and other words the church is growing but
But definitely with those baptisms appears almost we doubled the church. Yeah, how would you like to say that as a missionary John?
How did you do in your mission? Well, I doubled the size of the church, you know, I think that'd be okay to say, that'd be all right.
Yeah.
I don't know much about Zyba Peterson or Peter Whitmer, Jr.
We have talked quite a bit about Oliver, of course.
And they're gonna make this 1600 mile journey on foot.
On foot.
Are you say for Zyba Peterson,
he doesn't stay in the church.
And you go, what's up with Zyba?
And apparently he seems to have a little bit of difficulties
along the way, but he ultimately ends out in California,
in a town called Dry Diggins.
I remember when there was a gold rush, right?
And in his part, it was Dry Diggins,
but he's credited in California with being the first sheriff to actually hang
a man, uh, once it's all taken over by the US, right?
And hang a man for a crime in his time.
And so, uh, they changed the name of his town to Hangtown.
So, if you've ever heard Hangtown USA has everything to do with cyber Peterson.
Wow.
Oh, kitty.
One of the original four missionaries.
When I do church history tours,
I don't think we can overstate
the importance of this mission.
And it's what it does to the future of the church, right?
Yes, it's dramatic.
What the missionaries did not only
do they make it out to independence,
which we know of as Zion plans to make it a New Jerusalem.
But, Curtland, we're going to, well, we learned today that the churches in Curtland from 1831 through
1837, a little bit into 1838. And so, it has a huge impact. And if you were to look at the 135
individuals mentioned by name and the
doctrine and covenants, where do the majority of them stem from? What do they all kind
of most have in common? You'd have to say, Kurt Lindohaio and it has something to do
with these missionaries sent to the laymen.
Absolutely. You're your friend and my friend Carl Anderson likes to say the church was
risked was organized in New York, but it was restored in Ohio. Okay, we all like Carl.
Hey, a couple of things about Peter Whitmer Jr. I think are pretty fun. He is a
tailor by trade and by the time he makes it out to independence, he's sewing a suit for Lillburn W. Box.
And so you get us right there on the very front.
And he also shows suit for Alexander Donovan.
And you get the two key players there in Missouri are also kind of picked up then by these
missionaries they make contact. Yeah.
And about what?
In about eight years, those two names are going to become crucial, crucial to the church.
Yeah.
So I might be jumping the gun here, but then is it fair to say that, and the Lord may
have had his own reasons, but it seems logical that let's move everything to Ohio because so many members are there, all of the sudden
because of that mission to the Lamanites. I mean, it makes me think of all sorts of things.
Giants camp that wasn't what they expected, but some great things happened. Mission to the Lamanites,
which wasn't what they expected, but look at these tremendous members, 120 that they got there.
So is it fair to say that's why the Lord
is now going to start talking about the Ohio? Well, I don't know if I can second guess the Lord
here. Yeah, exactly. But for sure, he knew that in the Ohio, the saints would receive an endowment
from on high. And we just needed to get them there
so they could have the priesthood power
as they went out to share the gospel
where you begin seeing,
I mean, it's just so dramatic.
The numbers that now exponentially increase
once they've stepped and touched down in Ohio
and have those blessings they received in that.
Okay, if we now move to the content section 37, I like this maybe a little bit of background
story.
We know that Sydney Rigden had joined the church, right?
And is baptized by Parley P. Pratt in mid November of 1830.
We also know that when he finally comes to Fayette, New York, that he
brings with him or chooses to come with him and Edward Partridge, who is a
had her by trade. Edward had a similar experience with Sidney Righdon and the
fact that both men had met the missionaries to the Lamanites, but the
difference was Edward
Partridge had received a copy of the book Mormon. He actually sent an employee to go get him
a copy of the book Mormon so he could read it. He believed the book Mormon, but he wasn't
ready to be baptized. He wanted to meet Joseph. And so with that, you get, no doubt, two friends, both had been of different religious persuasions.
You get Sidney Rigden, who's a candlelight, and you get Edward Partridge, who's been involved
in the Unitarian Church.
And these two friends now travel 275 miles.
Now, try and imagine for that, we could probably do it in four hours, depending on speeding
trips and how long we go.
But in their case, obviously, days to be able to make the profit Joseph.
So one day after meeting Joseph Smith, Edward Partridge, who would live to be a bishop,
a man without a guy who's like Nathaniel of old, he will be baptized. So by the time we pick up
section 37 in December, you've got no doubt two men that are baptized. And as
they're baptized, they now Joseph receives this revelation and in the revelation Joseph is told
it's time to gather and to gather to where to basically gather to where
Sydney and Edward had just come from and so what you get is this amazing doctrine
of gathering it's a first introduced in section 37 but you realize if you're going to gather something, you had to have
scattered it, right? It's like, you know, you kids playing Legos on the floor, you scatter them,
then somebody's got to gather those up and you hope it's them or maybe it's mom or dad,
somebody else comes in. So I think first we need to say, well, what is scattered?
And what would you two say?
Oh, I love it.
I've often said this to my students.
Listen, if we're gonna talk so much about the gathering,
we better know what the scattering looked like.
So I go through those big three kings of Israel,
David and Solomon, and then talk about Israel
wanting a king and
breaking up, right, and kind of falling apart. Okay, so what we know is that the House of Israel then
becomes scattered. And then trying to imagine, I can't go many days and leave the Legos on the floor. But try and imagine the Lord is going to wait millennia before he says,
it's time to gather. So what we learn about the Lord is he has amazingly much more patients
than I do. You know, if the kids have scattered, I want to bring him home. I want him home at
Christmas. I want him home for family dinners, right? But suddenly they're scattered. And now the Lord says it's time to gather. And the Lord
indicates the first place of gathering. And I think that's so significant. He doesn't
say Hawaii, so everybody's going to be out on the beaches, right? He doesn't say Florida
and we're going to party on in Miami, right?
But he says, I tell you what, where I want you to gather
is Ohio.
The land that still has land almost free for the taking,
I want you to go to the Ohio.
So then, then you're going, well, what is Ohio?
I mean, it had been part of the Connecticut Reserve,
but now it's its own state, its own entity, and they're told to come.
My students will sometimes say, you know, why is Nephi so obsessed with the gathering of
Israel? Why is Isaiah so obsessed with the gathering of Israel? And I'll say, they were living
the scattering. They're in the middle of the scattering of visual. Of course they're interested in the future gathering that one day, right? A lot of
a lot of us just don't connect that here's Lehigh and his family being taken out of the promised
land and sent to a different promised land, right? And that's part of the scattering and they're
looking forward to what does Jacob say? We're on an aisle in a strange land, right? We're far away.
And one day, we're gonna go home.
One day, we're all gonna go home.
And here it is, section 37.
I don't know if we can understand the gravity
of this moment, right?
It's a huge moment.
And I think every prophet, if we had all of their writings,
we'd be talking about, you know,
it's, there'll be the gathering.
And then the
gathering starts under Joseph Smith, but what I think is so interesting, it was
always a place. So, Kirtland was a place of gathering. Independence was a place of
gathering, far west, Navu, Salt Lake, and then was settling missions, the whole Inter-Mountain West, I mean from Carson down to the colonies in
Mexico, you know, it's gathering and it's always been a place
until the 1920s. And in the 1920s in Los Angeles, you get
Hebrew J. Grant coming and he will quote then the Savior's words found in John 1519
where he basically is saying you can be in the world but guess what? Don't be of the world.
So when we describe gathering today it's different than they described in the 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s. You know, if you look the 19th century,
so since 1920s, I was born at a time
where you gather to your warehouse,
you gather to your stay, you gather to your temple.
You know, in other words, you blossom where you're bloom.
Does that sound familiar to you, Laura?
Is that the arrow we're all in?
Yeah. Okay.
Lift where you stand, right?
Lift where you stand.
In other words, and it's a different type of gathering.
When I think about the saints, especially so many in the United Kingdom, you go to
Na'avu and you see that British pageant that they put on.
And to gather was a tremendous sacrifice to a place, to an exact place. And I feel like today
it's gathered two stakes of Zion wherever, wherever you are. And that started in the 1920, huh?
With, right. Hebrich, Grant, interesting. So before that, you know, you're in Denmark,
you pick up and move. Yeah. You know, other Scandinavian countries, you pick up and move. I think they're sacrifice.
And I think as we realize that some don't choose to do it.
I mean, it's a choice, right?
We may say, well, it's easy to go to church and take the sacrament,
even do it weekly, but are you telling me, I've got to sell out
and everybody knows that if I want to follow a profit,
that I'm selling my home and they can get it dirt
cheap. And I'm going to trade brick and mortar for a wagon where I can stuff everything I can
possibly stuff in and go 270 miles and find that I'm moving into a place that's already crowded.
And it's not like, I mean, many are going to live outside
of the Kirtland area just because there's not room.
I mean, it's a huge sacrifice.
Well, I like what you said there about a choice
because that's verse four, let every man choose for himself
until I come.
And this is what I'm asking you to do.
And you have a choice, but this is what I'm asking you to do.
And like you said earlier about,
what did you say, 275 miles, you can speed in your car,
but what was moving your house like back then,
your whole household for that far?
And just, okay, everybody, come to the Ohio.
I was gonna say, I know that Lucy Mac describes it almost
like an exodus of Israel out of Egypt, right?
I mean, this is a big thing. She does is she talks about hey, we got to get go to Buffalo. We got to go on that canal
We got to go on the you know Lake Erie and end up at Fairport Ohio. I mean, it's huge
But what I think so interesting is that you look at say say, section 37, and now we go to section 38.
Section 38.
I always think this is so, so interesting because you've got the Lord who's now basically
saying, hey, I told you guys, go to the Ohio.
And the question is, after section 37, did anybody go?
And the answer is no. You know, it's like going to sacrament meeting and listening to talks.
And when you come home, did your life change?
You go, oh, absolutely not.
So it's like when one ear, out the other, and then the Lord now says, okay, I'm going
to make this more clear.
But before we leave section 37,
in verse 1, the Lord says,
because of the enemy and for your sakes.
Okay, this is a pretty difficult time in Western New York.
The church is not well received.
There's persecution.
There is even some talk as we go into 38
that people are even plotting death
to some of the leaders of the church.
Very, very difficult time, I think.
Now we live in a society where you can believe something,
I can believe something, and they'll just say,
oh, you know, she's not on target.
But back then, they had solid beliefs
and solid feelings about if you didn't share those beliefs.
See, I think if they're plotting to kill me,
I think, okay, let's load up the wagon.
It'd give you an incentive, right?
Yeah.
Okay.
What do you think, Susan, about, I mean,
this is a church of 100 and something people.
Why is it getting so much attention from outsiders?
Is it just because it's,
I mean, they had new churches coming in,
they had Methodism coming in, you know,
and blossoming.
What is it about this group that bothers non-believers
so much to start threatening them?
Because, I mean, I don't know, it's a small little group.
Is it that they're threatening maybe to take members of their family and convert them?
Is it?
Well, I'm sure the quote, sheep stealing was part of the issue, but truth, well, think
of the savior.
There's a lot that will fight against truth.
And especially if it totally impacts our way of life.
Yeah, to me, it's just an indication of a darker force wants to stop this before it can
get started.
Right.
Right.
You know, just nip it in the bud because it's going to roll for it to fill the whole earth,
right?
Right.
Remember the book of Revelation, when the dragon wants to eat the child as soon as it
is born. Right. The moment it is born, it reminds me of that like let's stop this before it can even
start. And here's the Lord is saying, all right, we got to move. We got to get out of here. You're in
trouble. Well, section 38, notice it said a conference of the church. So I wanted to say something about conferences.
We know about conference, we gather, we listen,
we either gather in, we listen on television,
some kind of electronic device now.
But you get the church organized in April
and the first conference is in June
and their second conference is in September
and their third conference, what we're talking about in section 38,
is January 2nd, 1831.
And I think we'd all go hold it.
We know that conference was not held in June September, January.
Conference has to be held the first week and what?
October and October.
Perfect. So that conference being held in April and
October did not start until the Saints moved to Navu. And it's interesting that the April and
October had everything to do with parading. And what would happen? You get Navu is like the hub of a wagon wheel, and you get 23 little communities that Joseph
founded on the Illinois side of the river, and then you can find 15 on the iOS side, and
when did they all gather?
They gathered for parading.
And it was a military parade, because every man, 18 to 45, is in some kind of a military unit.
In this case, we called it the novel Legion.
So when was the time to gather them?
It was always April would begin it. That was your first parade.
Obviously bigger parades, July 4th.
But when was the last parade, the first week in October. And since that time, we have celebrated conferences
for the most part in April and October, but all right. So with that, we are now at the
third conference on January 2nd of 1831. So notice, section 38 is the first revelation given in the year 1831. We now start off the
place where the revelation where the conference is being held is Peter
Whitmer seniors farmhouse there in Fayette and one of those attending was
Orson Pratt and Orson Pratt as he described as their meeting for this
conference he said you know the whole church in New York we all met in the one Orson Pratt. And Orson Pratt, as he described, is there a meeting for this conference?
He said, you know, the whole church in New York, we all met in the one room. And no one there
took notes. So we do not know what goes on, you know, the secretary can make or break you,
right? And sure enough, just, you know, it was a disaster. So with the fact that no notes
were kept, you know, all of this is during, historians were like, where are the notes? But we assume it was kind of
business as usual, passing of sacrament. We know that Joseph Smith was sitting at a
table in front of him. We also know that he asked Sidney Rigdon to bebe. And then Joseph received a revelation. And what we have now in section 38
is what Sydney wrote down on that occasion. Just just thinking about it, you realize how fast
we all talk. Can you imagine Sydney going, hold it? The last words I got were, could you, would you mind? Go back, go back, slow down, slow down.
So can you imagine how slow Joseph would have had to have spoken?
I mean, Sydney did not know Pitman Shorthand,
which was starting to be big at that time,
but he's going to write it out longhand word for word.
We're talking about a long process to be able to get out the entire
section 38, which is by the way much much longer than section 37. Yes. You got to wonder if Sydney
and Edward Partridge knew what they were getting into when they took that trip from Ohio to New York
that they would be sitting recording a revelation. Pretty amazing, pretty amazing opportunity for Sidney Riggand as well as all those that
sat there and listened.
Well, kind of getting into the section, we know that the first seven verses that the
Lord is introducing himself.
He wants them to know and then we get into what is the crux of it.
But he wants them to know that he is a great I am. In other words, he's Jehovah. He's the God of the Old Testament, the New Testament, the God today.
He knows all things. He made the world. He's a great creator. In other words, he establishes who he is and
that he even indicates I'm in your midst, but you cannot see me. So what you get is he
wants everybody to know it isn't just Joseph Smith winging it. And that this message is
a revelation from Jesus Christ even talks about the atonement in those first seven verses.
What he wants them to know is that, hey, if you're going to call myself, your selves, my disciple, then when you receive a law, you have to do the law. So the question is, what's the Lord noticing about these people? And what
is noticing he then repeats? And repeats and repeats and repeats. And you're kind of pivotal
verse, if you're looking for what's the bottom line, it's verse 32, where he says, for this cause, I gave unto you the
commandment that you should go where? I'm telling you, you need to go to Ohio.
Then he explains why. You know, it's easy to talk about history and say, who
what when where, but also all of a sudden you get the why? Who what when where was
not moving them into action? You know, you you are to go, but now he gives you the why. And he says you go to Ohio. And there you was received the law. And we can look at Curtlyn Delaun. What do you have 48 revelations in the doctrine of covenants? You know, in other words, hey, you're going to get my law, but then he says, and there you shall
be endowed with power from on high.
And from that point, men can be sent forth to gather this great house of Israel.
So and telling it by the end, every man worn his neighbor.
And so as you conclude with the last verse, go ye out from among the wicked,
save yourselves, be clean that bear the vessels of the Lord. As I look at section 38, I say,
here's section 37, they're told, go to the Ohio's. And no one budgets, right? No one's packed
a barrel of suitcase, you know, no one said, I wonder if one's packed to barrel, it's okay.
You know, no one said,
I wonder if I'm gonna need this for my trip.
And all of a sudden, section 38 just pounds the nail.
And go there and now here's why you're gonna get my law,
you're gonna be in doubt with power from Unhigh.
You're gonna have power as you go out
to gather the house of Israel.
I can't help but think of how I've done this in my own life.
You know, I get a feeling, a prompting, something, and I go,
oh, that is a, that's an interesting prompting.
And then I just go about my day, right?
Like what an interesting.
And then almost you can feel the Lord going,
okay, are you going to do it?
Right? Let's follow up here.
Let's, let me tell you again.
I have a question about the timing of mentioning Enic
and the timing of Moses 7 being completed.
Before, it wasn't just before this revelation
and then the Lord mentions the sign of Enic in verse four.
Right, in other words, it's so obvious,
the Lord knows what's going on. You know,
he's not an absentee father that just occasionally checks in, you know, email, I don't know,
something, you know, but, but he is, he is aware of what's going on where Joseph is in
the translation. And he's also aware, you got to get out and you got to get out now.
Susan, do you think in verse 32 and you got to get out now.
Susan, do you think in verse 32 that you mentioned,
you know, go to Ohio, I'll give you my law,
and there you'll be endowed with power.
Is that the Lord starting to hint at a temple?
It sure could be, because you look at the Kirtland temple
and you get the keys of the restoration.
I mean, if we were looking at the blessings,
they're going to get there.
You know, the temple, the restoration of priesthood keys,
Moses, Elias, Elijah, we're gonna get the office of Bishop,
first presidency, Cormor the 1270s.
I mean, you know, all this law and the organization
to move forward the church to gather Israel. I mean, it know, all this law and the organization to move forward the church to gather Israel.
I mean, it's just all there.
They need to go.
I think one indication that this is, the Lord is very serious about this is we've talked
in previous episodes how crucial the Joseph Smith translation is to the restoration and the
Lord in section 37 says, stop.
Almost as if we're pausing the restoration and tell you move.
I think as we're looking at, you know, the Peter Whitmer farm,
Peter Whitmer, I mean, there's been 20 revelations
where you can directly put Fayette and assume they're at his farmhouse, right?
And we know the witnesses, three witnesses,
see the Andrew Moroni in the place.
I mean, such a significant place.
But Peter Whitmer, when he sells out,
he's selling out for bottom dollar.
He gets $2,200 for his farm.
And then if you were to say did the church acquire the farm back?
They eventually get the farm in 1926 and then
during my lifetime I can remember of all the general conferences. Since we're on general conferences,
the one I most remember was in 1980 they had restored that Peter Whitmer farmhouse and Spencer W.
Campbell was a prophet. And suddenly, you know, you think
you're going to get it from the tabernacle. It's going to be broadcast to the world. And
you get this great, great profit. Spencer W. Campbell is saying, Hey, I'm standing up.
Right in the now restored Peter Whittmer Farmhouse. And I'm going to kind of conduct and speak
from here. And I don't know.
I just think it's just such a marvelous place.
That was the 150th anniversary, right?
150th anniversary.
I remember that.
I was a teenager and I remember,
I remember President Kimville in that farmhouse to Fayette.
That was amazing.
That's the only time I ever remember general conference not being
from the tabernacle.
I mean, same, same in my memory also.
So I wonder, we're only nine years away from the 2030.
Yeah, where are we gonna come from?
What's gonna happen?
What's gonna happen?
I think it one part where we've quoted this
quite a bit in the church, I think, is in verse 27.
The Lord says,
Be one, if you are not one, you are not mine.
The idea of unity in this church, he talks about, you know, everyone to steam his brother as himself,
because some people are going to be more well off than others, right?
To move, and it's this idea of you are a family, you're
a group, you're a team, move together. I imagine some would have the means to pick up and
go, and others would say, how am I going to get there?
Right. I think that was dramatically felt, and John Whitmer, who ultimately becomes a
church historian, wrote that there was a great division. Because you get those that are saying,
I want to go and those that just like you're talking about that can go and have the
means and those that do not. And are you willing to help your brother? And I think that's
always the question even today.
Well, and I think that I'm looking at here we have one of Jesus's parables that we don't
find anywhere else in verse 26. About the 12 sons. Yeah, I've never seen this parable before,
but he is 12 sons and is no respecter of them. And he says to one, be clothed in robes and sit
down there and be the other, be thou closed in rags and sit there and look
upon them sons and say, I'm just, I've given this unto you
as a parable. And then the B1, and if you're not one,
you're not mine. And right after talking about the Zion of
Enic, talking about this kind of oneness, I also think,
if the Damao say like it's a precursor to the law of consecration, right?
When you consider, when I teach this, I love to say, okay, if we're not his, what are
the alternatives?
They're not very good.
They're not good.
They're really not any good alternatives to that.
It's kind of like the, will you also go away?
Well, where would we go? There's, there's no good alternatives.
Sometimes if, if Satan's gonna try to get us sometimes it's from the outside in, but sometimes it can be from the inside out and
trying to cause dissensions in our wards, branches, things like that. And that's where this, this council of being one is such a protection for us
to, to forgive and to be forgiving,
to extend mercy and to ask for mercy.
So I think that's one of the most quotable things
in section 38, is the B1.
And I think maybe the other one,
if I can skip ahead, is if you are prepared,
you shall not fear.
Don't we say that one a lot?
Yeah, I was gonna say,
there's another phrase we hear a lot.
At verse 37, Susan, you can speak to this if you'd like. He says, and this to me is so,
just it's just said in passing, but it might have just been a punch in the gut. They that have
farms that cannot be sold, let them be left or rented, as seemed me good. You know, you work your whole life on a piece of property,
you build it up, you do everything you can,
and the Lord says, yeah, leave it.
Walk away from it.
To me, maybe it might be better off to not have much,
because then I don't have much to leave,
but if you're the whimmers, they've spent time and effort,
even the Smiths have spent time and effort
cultivating these acres chopping down.
Who was it, John, that was telling us about chopping down a hardwood tree?
Steve Harper, remember, he said, I don't know if you've ever cut down a hardwood tree, but it is not easy.
And here they've done acre after acre of acre.
And now the Lord says, yeah.
And then you have to go.
And here we are, a third party observing from the future, going,
don't get too comfortable
and curtling either. Oh, don't get too comfortable and na'avu either. And then it's, it's scorched
earth policy in Salt Lake, right? We're going to burn this to the ground before we're going to let
you take it. So Susan, what's it like for these people to just walk away from their, their land,
their homes? I think it's even more than land.
I think it's for many of them,
they're gonna be walking away from families.
You know, there are mothers, fathers
that hadn't joined the church, been baptized.
So I think, you know, it's taking them
from the known to the unknown.
And it's your ultimate faith, trust in the Lord
that is promises will
be fulfilled. But I like what John is saying. They've got to have unity to pull that off,
to make such a... It can't be backbiting, murmuring. So we're going to give you a real chance here.
With what Susan said, there's a really nice story in the come follow me manual about Phoebe Carter and
Her 21 years old
Telling your mom I'm leaving and are you sure and if you find out it's not true will you come back and and so as you were saying
It's more than just leaving your piece of land. It's your family your background and your history because many
Obviously Western New York
was settled long after you get the 13 colonies.
But nevertheless, like Martin Harris,
you know, he's a second generation.
And say in his case when he leaves,
he leaves his wife and no doubt most of his children behind
to leave the sacrifices huge. And I think would give any of us
pause. I think one thing we do and I have a tendency to do this. I'm sure neither of you do, but I
think, well, of course, you've got to move. How are we going to get to Salt Lake and have the conference
center and the jazz? I mean, you know, don't you see when they don't, they don't know about Utah,
they don't know about Navu, they don't know about independence, and if we forget that, if we forget their point of view, we will lose the sacrifice.
Because they don't know how this is going to turn out.
Okay, what you also I think is just so significant is that you don't say Joseph Smith staying around to help, hey, you got to go, you got to go. So if you were to say
who's the first Latter-day Saint, you know, to bring his wife Emma and to leave then that area to
go to Ohio, it's Joseph Smith that arrives around the first of February of 31. So then you have these other people, will they follow? And you always think of
mom and dad saying, come on, come on, we can't go without everybody in the car. But to try and
imagine the bishop, we can't go. And then the bishop goes, you know, the question is, will you follow?
Because now it's between you and the Lord, right? I mean, Joseph
had his brother Hiram and he had Nule Knight going around, encouraging people to
pack up and get ready, but Joseph's out of there. So he's serious. He's
going. Lord wants him to go there and he's going, but then you've got to also
realize, Joseph doesn't have property to sell like
the Knights or the Wimmers.
I mean, he's, you know, he's not encumbered that way.
He's more free to move on out.
Well, and Emma's pregnant, right?
Right.
And I really like it when he arrives in Kirtland.
He goes up to the Nulke Whitney story and he sees Nulke Whitney, a man he's never met
before.
And he says, Nul, that story and he sees Nulke Whitney a man he's never met before and he says
Nul that's the man and Nul goes oh you have the better of me sir you know I can't call you by name and Joseph says
I'm Joseph the prophet you called me here now. Now what do you want of me?
So you get Nul and his wife
Elizabeth praying for the prophet to come and you get I I mean, this kind of tension. The people in New York, they've got to get ready,
they've got to organize and you get Thomas B. March
with a group, Lucy Max Smith, Martin Harris.
I mean, it's going to take a month to get out of there.
And you've got an April going,
you've got it all the way into May,
going with Martin Harris bringing the last group.
But as newspaper editorials
described the period, they said it looked like the whole world was moving to Kirtland.
But of course, the major exaggeration, but they are going to come to sprythe fact sacrifice.
The church is not going to get the Smith farm back for another hundred or so years, right?
Right.
And it will be through the efforts of Willard Bean.
Willard Bean.
Willard Bean, Great Man, you know, the fighting person, who will be instrumental in getting
that land back.
So the place is, we always call the cradle to the restoration. It's been a
process of having them then acquired by the church and wonderful place to go
visit. If you haven't seen them, it's a true. That is really fun. Verse 39, it seems
the Lord says, if you seek the riches, which is a will of the Father to give
unto you, shall be the richest of all people for you. She'll have the riches of
eternity. And then he talks about the Book of Mormon. Beware of pride,
lest you become as the Nephites of old. To me, as I've studied the history of the Church,
there is, and I think this is profoundly difficult to be honest, I like building the kingdom of Smith, right, and trying to build enough to retire and have a comfortable
life.
And it seems that these early church members are going to be asked to sacrifice, sacrifice,
sacrifice, almost to the point where it's, do you want to have material or do you want
to be a member?
Because you almost can't choose both.
Because you're just always constantly giving
and giving and giving.
Why do you think the Lord talks
about the book of Mormon there?
I haven't seen that in the earlier sections,
but these Nephites of old, right?
I think he's trying to show us,
we always call it the pride cycle.
You're humble, you're forced to be humble.
The Lord blesses you, you get the riches of temporal things, and then you get pride.
And then all of a sudden you're in trouble, you don't keep the commandments, and then back you go,
you're humble and force, you know, it's a constant circular event. And something I think all of us
need to be aware about, that a fluency, you'd say it has its benefits, you know, but it also has
with it a great concern that we always need to remember the sense of unity and who needs
help.
Probably that's where President Benson's that monumental talk to me, April of 89, beware
of pride.
And I think it was terribly lead it said that right what we have
right now is the test of gold. We don't have the same material type of tests. It doesn't seem
at least for some of us. I want to be careful how I say that because there's people all over the
world suffering even members of the church. But but President Benson in another place said,
do you know what prosperity can do to a people? It can put them to sleep. And he said, we must be shakened and
awakened from a spiritual snooze. And I love that idea of a spiritual snooze button because we
reach over and push this snooze button. I'll get my act together sometime. But here, bringing
in the Book of Mormon, and have you noticed that pride cycle, you're doing this. And so be careful, but I'm with you, Hank, how hard this would be to
to move a family back then with what they have. And I don't know how well-equated people are
with the Book of Mormon back then. Maybe you can speak to that. Susan, how they have it? Are they
reading it? Are they thinking I got to go back and read that now? What did the Lord just say?
or they think, and I gotta go back and read that now, what did the Lord just say?
I'm not quite sure by December
that you've got a lot of readers of the Book Mormon.
One thing copies are hard to get.
They're expensive, obviously they're printed,
but you don't see a lot of people quoting
from the Book Mormon in the New York period.
You can pick them up much more in Kirkland, and then obviously as time goes on, they're
familiarity.
Did they understand the pride cycle like we do?
Probably not as great.
Wasn't it Brigham Young who said, when they come out to Salt Lake, he said, my greatest
fear is that this...
My greatest fear.
This people will stand robbing, mobbing, persecution and be true, but my greatest
fears that they can't stand wealth. They'll get rich in this country, wax fat, kick themselves
out of the church and go to hell. He says, that sounds like a sack quote. That's pretty
young. I, I showed that to my students and say, how many of you had a nightmare last night
that you got rich and just woke up and it calls, well, it was terrible brother, by the way, I got rich, I'm so glad to be wake up now to reality
that I'm not rich.
And yeah, robbing persecution, robbing, no problem there,
but I'm afraid that they can't stand wealth.
That's a fascinating statement.
When he says, be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.
Do we know what the vessels of the Lord mean?
When I read that, I think that sounds Old Testament-esque. Sounds ancient temple. Yeah, sounds Old Testament.
Trying to imagine, you know, the same hands that pass the sacrament, the break, the sacrament
bread, you just can't hold a can of beer, right? You know, and smoke the cigarette. I mean, you just gotta be clean,
whatever we call the vessels of the Lord
for not just yourself,
but for those who are there to take of it
and hoping for a great spiritual experience.
Yeah, that's wonderful.
I think, yeah, back in the Old Testament,
it would mean if you're gonna carry the tabernacle,
be clean, but today it's if you're carrying the trays of the sacrament or anything else that we use.
If it's you, you are my body.
The temple, the Holy Ghost can dwell with you.
So, you know, way you are the vessels of the Lord and so be clean.
Interesting in verse 42, he says, go ye out from among the wicked.
Almost symbolically, they're leaving New York,
and it's almost this idea of we're leaving Babylon,
and I'm going to Israel, right?
I'm, I'm, I'm, what is that, oh Babylon?
We, we bid thee farewell, right?
And I'm willing to go.
I'm willing to follow the Lord.
You know, I would think that a lot of these people,
in their minds, they're going to live
in New York and die in New York.
That they're going to stay there forever and the Lord changes plans.
We are going somewhere else.
The sacrifice is immense.
You hear you and your husband have served four missions.
It's somewhat similar, right?
Get up and move.
Get up and go.
You just get up and go if you want the blessings. You know,? Get up and move. Get up and go. You just get up and go.
If you want the blessings.
Yeah.
You know, you get up and move.
You get up and move.
I think just one more thing that I just love
is Susan, you emphasized 32 is kind of, okay, listen.
I told you before, all of this is a preface.
I told you before, go to Ohio, but I love the promise there. You'll
be in doubt with power from Ohio and from vents.
Whosoever I will show go forth among all nations. I mean, I bet Carl Anderson has
those verses marked, right? Cause he's the resident expert on on curtland. But I think
I mentioned this before. So forgive me. but I just there's a painting right inside of the Kirtland Visitor Center of Joseph and
Oliver in the Kirtland Temple with these angels coming one at a time and
bestowing keys and I just I love it the look on Joseph's face and I think of that in doubt with power from on high because we know
It's not the full endowment, but the Kirtland Temple was a step towards that and everything and the amazing things that happened in Kirtland.
I guess we're kind of seeing, because we're looking backward and seeing that going, yeah,
you've got to get to Kirtland because some amazing things will happen there.
Yeah.
Oh, John, you've mentioned that painting before.
I talked to Alex Baugh, who will be on our podcast coming up here in the next
couple of weeks, and he said that that painting was done by Gary Smith, who is the brother of his
mission companion. So I just thought we'd give out the proper credit on the paintings, because I think
I credit it to Walter Ring. Please join us for part two of this podcast.