Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 51-57 : Dr. Maclane Heward Part I
Episode Date: May 15, 2021Are members required to live the Law of Consecration now? Dr. Maclane Heward joins John and Hank to discuss righteous stewardship, Zion, and how our covenants prepare us to meet the Savior. You will l...earn to love Edward and Lydia Partridge as much as Hank and Dr. Heward after listening to this episode. Also, we learn about Lucy Mack Smith as a powerful leader and a bold witness. This story is not to be missed.Show notes: https://followhim.co/episodesYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast00:00 Introduction to the Podcast01:32 Introduction to Dr. Maclane Heward03:33 The Saints Move from NY to Ohio05:06 Temple Covenants Help Us Prepare to Meet the Lord and Consecration Examples (Good and Bad) 08:14 Section 37 is the Saints Asking for Clarification Regarding Moving Again10:38 A Lesser Noticed Parable in the D&C13:20 Edward Partridge is a “Man Without Guile”14:20 Backstory about Edward Partridge by Dr. Heward16:20 Taking Offense on Someone Else’s Behalf (Who isn’t Offended) Can Lead to Murder Attempt of Joseph18:35 We Don’t Get Zion, We Build It20:15 Consecration is Given By Invitation26:56 The Colesville Branch Stays Together From New York to Utah31:30 Lucy Mack Smith Saves Her Company and Preaches the Gospel like a Lion37:39 The Importance of Mothers46:23 The Structures in Place to Help the Poor49:05 Bishop Partridge Is Told How to Administer Property and Land52:16 The Difficulty of Expression Through Writing but the Importance of Keeping Records55:25 The Meaning of Wants and Needs01:01:37 Leman Copley Returns to the Shakers and Kicks Members Off His Land01:08:32 The Saints Learn in Their Very Short Time in Ohio01:15:57 End of Part I
Transcript
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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. My name is Hank Smith and I am here with
the illustrious John, by the way,
my wonderful co-host, welcome, John. Thanks. Before we get started today, we need to mention
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So we've got a lot going out there that we want everybody to know about and come give it a try.
But let's get to it, John. Every week we get to bring on one of the church's great minds.
get to bring on one of the church's great minds. And we have another opportunity this week
to hear from a great mind of the church. Who's with us today? We do. I'm so excited about this. This is Dr. McLean Heward. And I've got a little bio here. He
graduated with a PhD in the history of Christianity and religions of North America
graduated with a PhD in the history of Christianity and religions of North America
from Claremont Graduate University in 2019 just over two years ago.
He met his wife Maria who is a professional pianist on a piano bench in high school.
I'm gonna go to that story. And they have five fun, active, happy children. They probably also play the piano.
I bet he currently teaches
at the Institute of Religion adjacent to Utah Valley University has spent time teaching
in BYU religious education as well as the seminary system primarily at Lone Peak and
McLean welcome. We're so glad to have you here today. Thanks for being with us.
You know, to say that it's my pleasure is an understatement. This is, um, I am so
excited to be here. I really appreciate you letting me come on.
John, did we want to hear more about the piano bench before we got started?
Yeah, that's a fun story. Where did you go to high school and, and how did it, was
I an assembly or a talent show or what? A couple of my friends walked up to me and they said, hey, we think that you should like Maria.
And I was like, wow,
do, who's Maria?
And they pointed down the choir steps
to the girl sitting on the piano,
the piano bench, she wasn't on the piano.
Sitting on the piano bench,
and I walked down the stairs and I sat next to her
and I said, hi, my name's McClein, what's your name?
And that's, I mean, that's, she's a red head,
she's got beautiful freckles and big blue eyes,
and her face went red, and I was like,
this is gonna be a fun experience.
So I was a senior, she was a sophomore,
and she's just so cute, man.
That's so fun.
That's wonderful, Eminem.
Eminem McClein, I just met a girl named Maria.
I bet she's never heard a song about that.
Now we know the origin.
Yeah, exactly.
All right.
Let's jump into this week's Come Follow Me lesson.
We are studying sections 51 through 57 of the doctorate and covenants.
Let's jump into section 51.
The heading says we're talking
to Bishop Edward Partridge who needs to make arrangements for the settlement of the members moving
to Ohio from New York. We've talked about that move. So McClain, let's start with Edward Partridge
and what it's been like for the Saints moving, migrating from New York to Ohio.
it's been like for the saints moving, migrating from New York to Ohio. I am a personal fan of Edward Partridge. I love this man. He is a disciple. Maybe I
could just say one thing really quickly that helps maybe contextualize all of
these sections. The Lord is very much focused on Zion. Joseph Smith makes a comment in the history
where he basically says that Zion is the focus,
the temporal focus of the church.
And in the minds of the Latter-day Saints,
this is the kingdom of God.
Zion and the kingdom of God are really synonymous.
They're equal to each other.
And so they're trying to establish the kingdom of God
on earth. And we know're trying to establish the kingdom of God on earth.
And we know today, we would say that, you know,
the temple and ordinances are preparing us
to receive the Savior here on earth
and prepare to be in his presence,
whether that is something that happens
because we're on earth during the second coming
or we die and we go to meet him.
But those temple covenants are central to enter God's presence. So as you think about those temple
covenants, I can say this without getting struck by lightning because it's on the church's official
website. This is not anti-mormon.org. This is church of jesuschrist.. They they list the covenants that we make in the temple the law of obedience
the law of of sacrifice the law of the gospel faith repentance baptism repentant, you know repentance and being cleansed
The law of chastity and the law of consecration
So although the temple the formal organizational structure of the temple and the temple ceremonies are yet to come.
God is already leading the members of the church through the process of becoming temple
centric, Zion centric, kingdom of God centric, presence of God centric people.
And today, we talk about going to the temple and symbolically learning through
the life of Adam and Eve. But we've got to understand that although we go to the temple
and learn symbolically through Adam and Eve, God is attempting to teach us those same
five principles, those same, same five laws in our daily walk in our daily activities, commandments,
obedience, sacrifice, repentance when we don't get it right. Chastity, one of the main natural
inclinations, desires, impulses, the controlling of that, and then finally to control all things.
And as we see in these, yeah, consecration, as we see in these sections, we're going to come up
with a whole bunch of different examples of people who both exemplify consecration and who don't,
who fall short of the expectation.
And I hope that we can see in these sections
that there's a lot of temporal type things,
there's a lot of administrative type things,
but we've got to remember that, like God says in section 29,
he's never given a direction that's temporal.
It's always spiritual to him.
And so although we have these structures
that help place us, this really is
to help prepare us to be in God's presence,
to help prepare our hearts.
O Lord, prepare my heart to meet with theon Zion's mount
and never more to part.
That's what we're attempting to do
is institutionalize or systematize
these directives and laws that God is laying forth
in the restoration of the church.
When Dr. Sweat was here, he said that a general authority
once said to him, never underestimate the spiritual power
of doing temporal things well.
Yeah.
Right. And I think that's what I heard here.
We're going to institutionalize this, but it's a spiritual thing.
And you know, I think that the foundation of what we're going to be talking about
is actually, it actually begins in section 38.
You're going to see this individually, but section 38 is collective, right?
So, so section 38 is the temple ceremony and the sections that we're going to be covering
are the individual lives of saints that learn these truths.
But, you know, section 37 has just said to the saints, move to Ohio and just imagine, right?
I know you've covered, we've covered this in the podcast.
So I don't want to spend a lot of time, but just this idea of like move to Ohio and the
saints are like, wait, wait, what?
And it doesn't seem, from my perspective, it doesn't seem like they're complaining as
much as, can you give us a little bit more information about this?
And then section 38 comes, right?
That does give a lot of information.
But one of the things that God says is, if you have a farm, which you got to remember, this isn't,
you know, you and I, Hank and John, we can go anywhere in the world and be teachers,
anywhere there's humans, right? We can go and be teachers. but these people are predominantly farmers. They
Their retirement is bound up in a location in a place and so in section 38 God saying to them
Hey, if you are leave it sell your farm or rent it or leave it. Are you kidding me? Yeah, like what I that's
Yeah, that's that's hard that's hard to emotionally get into that space. Like how do you, how do you actually feel? But, but let me just say one thing about this parable
that God gives in section 20 or in verse 24, 25 and 26, well, and 27, because I think it's the
foundation, the root of what we're going to be talking about today. You know, God says, let every
man esteem his brothers himself.
And then to really help us understand
that this is the context of the parable,
he says it again, verse 25,
let every man esteem his brothers himself.
Yeah.
And then he gives a parable teaching the principal.
And so the way I like to contextualize this,
it's like what do we put in between the space
between us and other humans?
Like what's the feeling?
What's the emotional thing that we put in that space?
And like with Hank with you, I hope that this is okay
to get a little personal, not embarrassing, just personal.
You know, I remember the first time I met you
as a master student, you were a PhD student and I was a master student at BYU and I remember getting a vibe that here was a man that
had a great heart and was just trying to bless people's lives, right?
And so in between you and I, I put a feeling, it was respect, it was admiration, it was
tenderness, right? I mean, there's a feeling, it was respect, it was admiration, it was, it was tenderness, right?
I mean, there's, there's a feeling.
But to be honest with you, most of us put apathy
between us and other humans.
But then check out this, this parable
for what man among you having 12 sons.
So he wants us to think that we're the father,
what man among you having 12 sons
and is no respecter of them,
like we love them equally and they serve us obediently.
And you say, I think I'm going to be that clothe in robes and sit out here and be that in the other
be that clothe in rags and sit out there and look at the ponder of sons and say,
I am just. So this this may be a false
description of this parable,
Alonzo Gasko, he might fight with me about symbolism here,
but from my view, I think God is saying,
where are the parents and people surrounding us
are clothed in robes and rags?
How will we treat them? are clothed in robes and rags.
How will we treat them? How will we esteem them?
What emotion will we put in the distance between us and them?
And it's really important, I think,
that he puts us in the shoes of a father.
John and Hank, I know you are both fathers, right? The love that we have
for our children, the love that a righteous father should have for their children,
I think is what God is saying we should attempt to have for everyone, all of our brothers and sisters.
And that becomes a foundation for what we're going to be talking about today.
Do we love God and understand that He's given us everything?
And then do we love our fellow men so passionately
that we cannot think of them suffering without extending a hand, without lifting the hands that hang down.
That's our baptismal covenant.
We've got to be Christians in that way.
So those two things I wanted to mention at the beginning to help contextualize what we're
going to be talking about here in section 51.
Well, what you just said reminds me of Edward Partridge, who is kind of the center of section 51.
This man, as I've studied him, I keep thinking, oh, I can't be more and more impressed by Edward Partridge.
Then I hear something. I'm like, I'm more impressed with Edward Partridge. The first bishop of the church,
I mean, the Lord himself is, here's a man without guile, right? He's complimenting him. And he is,
he literally gets, receives the gospel, is baptized, is thrown
into leadership, and that's the rest of his life. Is sacrifice and consecration, and helping other
people sacrifice and consecrate. I mean, the man, one of my goals, John, I've said this before,
for some of these lesser-known names for our podcast to kind of bring them out and say this is someone you want to know Edward and Lydia Partridge
Let me give a tiny bit of the story behind because because one of the things I love about Edward Partridge is he's human
You know sometimes sometimes we learn about people and we think oh wow
Is this is this person even human? I don't do they ever make mistakes.
And you see his humanity and you see his wrestle with,
with trying to, to, to, to live these laws that God is attempting
to have all of his, all of his children live.
And so let's just give a tiny bit of background story.
So he does become the bishop.
He in section 52, he and Joseph are asked to go to Missouri, right?
Edward Partridge is a successful businessman in the Kirtland area.
He's used to a type of lifestyle that comes with success.
And he's also, as he is Joseph, are traveling to Missouri to the land of their inheritance,
to Zion.
He knows that there's been a group of missionaries
that have been there preaching the gospel.
And these are high octane missionaries.
This is Oliver Caldry.
This is Zybe Peterson, this is Parley Pratt.
These are really great missionaries.
We've recently talked about Parley Pratt with the shakers.
And he was, you couldn't
hold party back. He was, you don't mess with that human. You don't mess with that guy. So,
you're a party pratt, Zyba Peterson, Peter Whitmer, and Oliver Cowdry. Yeah. Yeah. So those four.
So they've been there preaching in Missouri for months. And so there's a certain expectation
that the Edward Parchidge has as he comes to Zion,
that there's gonna be kind of an energy,
there's gonna be some converts to the church,
but then also I think he has some expectations in terms
of this is going to be Zion, right?
When we talk about Zion, we think,
oh, this is gonna be nice, right?
This is gonna be nice.
This is the kingdom of God on earth. Here we go. And when he gets about Zion, we think, oh, this is gonna be nice, right? This is gonna be nice. This is the kingdom of God on earth.
Here we go.
And when he gets to Zion, he finds that those expectations
are not met.
Oh yeah.
And he gets in such a heated argument with Joseph Smith,
Edward Partridge and Joseph Smith,
and there's two, at least two spectators,
Ezra Booth and Sidney Rigden.
After the conversation has done Sidney Rigden,
his reaction is basically,
how could Edward Partridge talk to God's prophet that way?
Ezra Booth takes the exact opposite experience and says,
how could God's prophet talk to Edward Partridge that way?
Right?
And this is one of a couple of different things
that will eventually lead to Ezra Booth leaving the church,
writing nine letters to, I think it's the Ohio star,
Expose about Joseph Smith that eventually lead to the John Johnson farm and the persecutions and the attempted murder of Joseph Smith, right?
So so I mean, this is a this is a significant argument and so Edward Partridge is is is feeling like this is not Zion and
These people are not Zion like people, right?
And in section 58, God has to review him,
which I know is not our assigned topic,
but he has to review him.
And the beauty of it is that he is reconciled
to Joseph completely.
And their relationship is better.
God's in effect says to Edward Partridge,
which you'll cover next podcasts.
He in effect says to Edward Partridge,
you thought that I was going to give you Zion.
You've got to build Zion.
That's awesome for all of us. Yes.
Yes, it is awesome for all of us.
I think of, to tell you the truth, you know, as an institute teacher, I think of some
of my institute students.
And I know some of them don't like to admit this, but I know some of them shop for wards.
Right?
They're like, which w ward should I go to?
I got to find the ward with the leadership and the party, the good time. Yeah.
The opportunities for dating, right? And I think that God has a message for us about
creation of Zion. Like, we got to get in there and we got to create Zion, like we gotta get in there
and we gotta create Zion, not expect it to happen.
Same with families, right?
I mean, I think there's a lot of mom and dads listening.
I hope there's a lot of mom and dads listening that,
you know, and this is a constant rest,
I was a parent, how do I create Zion?
Yeah.
With my kids.
And you know, later in the Dr. Covenant,
God talks about how our dominion will flow to us
without compulsory means.
You know, as parents, we wrestle with this,
forcing our kids to do what is right,
or strongly encourage, you know,
and this idea of like eventually those kids
have to flow to us without compulsory means.
They have to want to be a part of us.
They have to want to be led by us just like our relationship with God.
He doesn't force prayer.
He invites prayer.
In the Come Fall Me curriculum, there's a fantastic video by Stephen Harper where he talks about consecration. He and Kate Holbrook two beautiful minds, brilliant minds, talking
about consecration. And in the end, one of the things that Stephen Harper says, he
says in effect, some members of the church currently say, well, when is God going to require consecration?
Again.
And Stephen Harper in this beautiful, in a way that he can with his research and with
all that he knows, he says, God has never required consecration.
He has invited consecration.
He's never required it.
And it's never been enforced. And then he talks about, you know, this is us.
God is inviting us to pray.
He calls it a commandment, but in section 82, the doctrine comments, commandments according
to God are directions, how to be saved.
And we know that salvation is becoming like God. So in some ways commandments are just directions, how to be saved. And we know that salvation is becoming like God.
So in some ways commandments are just directions,
how to become like God.
Yeah, invitations, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And so commandments, we think of them as these
domineering things, but it's a beautiful invitation
to become like God.
So yes, consecration is a covenant.
It's something we covenant to participate in
with the love of consecration and the temple ordinances,
but it's an invitation.
Yeah.
So anyway, I guess what I would say about Edward Partridge,
you know, he gets to Missouri, he argues with Joseph Smith
and then he has to realize that he's gonna bring his wife and five daughters that are
used to this type of lifestyle to Missouri.
That is not ideal in any way, shape or form.
I don't think our listeners would quite understand, but I think it was Joseph who said, the people
of independence are a hundred years behind the times.
And this was 1831.
So he's thinking,
these people got to come out of the 1700s.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, it's a frontier.
And I love when we can help paint a backdrop
for people of what, I mean,
how many states are there in the Union 26 or something?
And this is the edge of the wild frontier.
And I think Edward Partridge tells Lydia something
as in every other establishment is either a bar
or a house of ill repute.
Like that's every other business in your anxiety.
You're gonna take your family there.
Yeah, let me read this quote from Joseph Smith history.
He characterizes this as the
residents as the quote, bassist of a man who, quote, had fled from the face of
civilized society to the frontier country to escape the hand of justice in their
midnight rebels. Their Sabbath breaking, horse-raking, racing, excuse me, and gambling.
We got to understand that the Western frontier provides a lot of opportunities.
Who needs opportunities?
Well, there's a couple of different groups of people that need opportunities.
We have people that are distanced from society, right?
Because of perhaps religion, perhaps legally, they're absolutely as an element here.
Divorce is not really an option in this day.
And so if you don't like your family, what do you do?
You move to the West.
They'll never find you.
Right?
And so there's a whole bunch of stuff and a whole bunch of types of people that are
interested in this type of a place.
Also people who are speculating on land, right?
Those who want to come out and make some money by buying up some land and trying to sell
it later.
So this is going to lead to an interesting recipe of people in a couple of years.
You know, in 1832, the popular American writer, Washington Irving, he traveled through
Independence, Missouri in 1832 and listened to what he said.
This actually comes right from the Joseph Smith papers, from some of the historical background,
some from sections 59, just as a plug for this, for your listeners.
I often, when I read a section, go to Joseph Smith papers,
I look up the section and I begin
by reading the historical background.
That gives me a good sense of what's happening.
But so Washington Irving, who traveled through independence
in 1832 on an expedition with federal Indian commissioners
also commented on the, quote,
rougher and rougher life.
End quote.
What does that mean?
Right?
We have a rough crowd, but this is the rougher
and the rougher crowd.
We got both.
This is rougher squared for all the mathematicians
listening, right?
And then he said that,
is he got closer to town?
One of his companions described independence as full of promise,
but containing quote, nothing but a ragged conjuries of five or six rough log huts, two or three board houses, tour three so-called hotels, Elias grog shops, and a few stores.
And from what I understand, a grog shop is a state liquor store, basically.
Right.
Right.
This particular dictionary defines it as a saloon bar room,
especially a cheap one.
All right.
So McClain, let me, let's do this.
So we're not in Missouri yet.
Section 51, we're still in Ohio,
but you're saying over this summer,
this is going to be the trip to Missouri.
Yeah.
So, so really the, I guess the immediate context here
of Section 51 jumping right into this is the Colesville
Saints have traveled
from New York and they are now, they're now in Kirtland and it's where do we go?
Where do we take up residence?
Why don't you remind everybody just quickly the Colesville Saints, those are the ones from
Harmony, Pennsylvania, right, right in that area?
Yeah, so these are the knights, right?
These are the knights that help Joseph,
help assist Joseph in the work of translation.
They first meet Joseph when he's engaged in...
Silver mine and speculation.
Yep.
And Newell Knight has this beautiful story
where he's drawn his hardest drawn to Joseph,
and he has trouble praying vocally.
And Joseph kind of takes him under his wing and just in this really sensitive way, just
ministers to him in such a delicate and beautiful way.
And so he, Newell and Joseph really have this friendship starting in 1826 if if my memory serves me correct right yeah and
And so the night families always been interested in Joseph in his work and they've always seen him as an honest
Seeker of truth and they created a branch there so when the church was organized
They created a little branch in what we say Colesville
But I want everyone listening to kind of attach Colesville and Harmony together
because that's kind of where that group is.
I think it's Hiram Smith, who's the first branch president
of the Colesville branch.
And then this group, the reason I we wanna talk about this
is because this group stays together.
Yeah.
Throughout church history and all the moves,
this Colesville branch, which people will go,
why are we still talking about them?
It's because they stay together.
Even I think through the Trek West, some of them.
Yeah.
And so Stephen Harper says that there's just, so there's persecutions that are happening
in Colesville.
They're moving out of persecution, but they're also facing persecution as they travel to Ohio.
They, Stephen Harper says there's just one person that doesn't make it.
So you see this sense of unity.
Speaking of the creation of Zion, the substance that they put in between them is love and
compassion and care and concern.
So they make it to Buffalo Harbor, which is, and I think a moment where you're listening
to, might enjoy a story, they make it to Buffalo Harbor.
The harbor is frozen over.
So there's no boats that can leave.
And there's a couple of groups of members of the church
that have gathered in the Buffalo Harbor.
You have one led by Lucy Max Smith, Joseph's mom.
You have one led by Thomas Marsh
and one led by the Colesville Saints
that are led by a new all night if I remember right.
And they get to the Buffalo Harbor,
it's all frozen in and Sister Smith
is just a spitfire, right?
And she starts preaching and just really fantastic way.
Some of the laurels, some of the young women in the group
are, they're getting their flirt on with
some of the pastor buys, right?
And she, some of them or other, like they're just, they're just kind of rough around the
edges and she just calls them to repentance.
All four foot ten of them, right?
I mean, she said, we're saints.
We got to represent God, right?
Oh, you're gonna love this.
This is my anticipatory statement.
You're gonna love this.
I guarantee it.
She gets there.
Oh, man, she's so good at writing.
It's tempting for me to read like four pages here.
This will be appropriate for our particular context.
Here we met the brother in from Colesville
who had been detained a week in this place to wait for navigation to open. Since Mr. Smith and
Hiram were directed to be in Kirtland by the 1st of April, they had gone the remainder
of their journey by land. I inquired of the Colesville brother and if they had told the
people that they were Mormons, they seem surprised at the question and replied, no, by no means.
And don't you do it for the world? For if you do, you will not get a boat nor a house.
And here you must stay or go back. I told them, I would let the people know exactly who I was and what I professed.
If you said I are ashamed of Christ, you will not be prospered as much as I shall.
And we will get to Kirtland before you.
Right? This is the race.
So check this out, it gets better.
While we're yet talking with the Colesville brethren,
another boat came up which had on board
about 30 Mormon brethren and brother Thomas Marsh was one of the company.
He came to me and perceived the drift of our conversation said, now before I share what
he says, he's going to be the president of the quorum of the 12.
Okay. President of the quorum of the 12. Okay, yeah. This is, not, I mean, he falls away and comes back,
like he's got a storied life,
but he says, now mother Smith,
and I almost think that she's probably like,
don't you mother me, son, right?
Yeah, yeah, it's like this is not the way to start.
Does that usually work with your guys' spouses
when you first say calm down?
Right? Does that usually just go off great? Yeah, that now, now thing then. Yeah, now, now.
Okay, keep going McLean. Now, Mother Smith, if you do sing and have prayers and acknowledge that you
are Mormons here in this place, as you have done all along, you will be mobbed before morning. Can you
almost hear the condescension? Come on. Then she says, well, mob it is then. For
we shall sing and attend a prayers before sunset mob or no mob. Now here's the
beautiful part of the story. She lives it, right? So she sends, there's some people that have been exposed
to the cold, they're getting sick, there's little kids,
there's women in her group,
and she sends Hiram Page out into the city
to try and find a room where at least the women,
the children can go and receive some protection.
And she says to them, it might be difficult just to let you know, find a room where at least the women the children can go and receive some protection.
And she says to him, it might be difficult just to let you know from what I heard of these
faithless, from these faithless home skillets, it may be difficult, y'all.
So she kind of preempts it a little bit and Hiram Page doesn't have success.
And then, so it comes back and you know what's gonna happen next, don't you?
Knowing Sister Smith, she says, well, well, I said, I will go myself and see what I can do for you.
And a room you shall have if there is a possibility of getting one on any terms whatsoever.
So here's the miracle of what she does.
She goes into the community, she talks to the first inkeeper, the inkeeper says, yeah,
I got a room for you.
And then another tenant says, no way, like no way, they're not coming here.
They could be sick with who knows what they're not coming here.
And sister Smith, she says, never mind, it's no matter,
I will go somewhere else.
I presume I can get another room just as well.
And then the lady that's kind of being a pill says,
no, you can't though, for we hunted all over the town
and couldn't find one single room until we came here.
So, I mean, just a sad moment, right? What is she filling between?
What is she putting in the distance between people? Clearly not love. So she goes to the next
in and she says to the proprietor, Jeva Room, she's a cheerful old lady, she's nearly 70
years of age.
She said, sister Smith's like, we'll pay anything. We just need a room.
The woman says, well, I don't know.
Where are you going?
To Kirtland, I said, what be you?
That's a cool question.
Be you Baptist.
And she says, no, said, I, we are Mormons.
Mormons, she said in a quick, but low and good nature tone,
why I never heard of them before, what be they?
I told her, we did not, this is like,
this is present Nelson's gonna love this.
When he listens to the podcast,
he's gonna make a comment like, Hank, this is beautiful.
This is my favorite part.
Yeah.
I told her that we did not acknowledge the name,
but the world called us so,
and I said so that we might know who we were,
but our proper name was Latter-day Saints.
Mm-hmm.
I guess in that like, wow.
Here we go.
Anyway, that she says,
Latter-day Saints said she,
I never heard of them before.
Sister Smith said,
I am the mother of the prophet
who brought forth the work
and translated the book of Mormon.
What?
She said with increased surprise.
A prophet in these days?
Why, I never heard of that,
of the like in my life.
Will you come if I let you have a room?
I told her that I wanted the room for the sisters who were with me, but that I would come
with them and stay that day with her.
You will come in and sit with me and tell me all about it.
I don't know why it was, but just as soon as I saw you, I felt as though I wanted you
to stay with me, and I could not bear
to have you go away.
They go, she goes back to the boat, she gets all the sisters and then this happens.
This woman says to her, now come and sit down with me and tell me all about what you are
talking about.
She stays up practically all night with this woman teaching her, right?
And you know what an example,
speaking of consecrated life.
And you know what?
We're people that believes in a present God,
a close God, a miraculous God
who is working in our lives,
who we see every week in church,
we see it with our neighbors, we see it in our communities.
God is active in our life.
Instead of leading out with, oh, I am a lot of day saint and to tell you the truth,
it is a beautiful thing to be.
We sometimes think, oh, I'm a Mormon.
And then we let them react or we say, I'm a lot of day saint. We let them react and then we decide how we're, I'm a Mormon. And then we let them react, or we say, I'm a Latter-day Saint, we let them react,
and then we decide how we're gonna take the conversation.
Yeah.
Instead of us managing the conversation and saying,
I'm a member of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, and can I just tell you,
we just had conference, and I felt the windows of heaven open,
and God touched my soul.
I know God lives, right? I felt the windows of heaven open and God touched my soul.
I know God lives, right? That's who we are.
That's what we believe.
No need to be timid.
No, man.
This is an exciting message.
I love the idea of managing the conversation.
I was, we had some brother come home in our ward
who was recently a mission president
and he just walks up to people.
Your new hearing, do you have any friends?
Would you like about a couple of hundred more?
And just you should come with me.
You should come with me to church.
And I think that normal and natural way that President O'Courfeus talked about, it's what
you're talking about, McLean.
And I want our listeners to know where you got that story.
I think I saw, is that the history of Joseph Smith
by his mother?
Is that what you were holding?
Just be careful.
I mean, I'm not getting royalties, but man, be careful.
This book may just change your life.
She absolutely.
It almost has a feel of the saints.
The saints volume is very readable.
Stephen Harper, the other editors,
did a fantastic job with it, but it reads like that.
It just reads so beautifully in her language
and the way she describes it.
It will help, for me, I use it every semester in my class,
but it helps my students to see just why Joseph
becomes what he becomes.
Yeah.
And who better to tell you about someone
than their mother, right?
Then their mother.
It surprises me when people say,
well, it's his mom, what does she know?
It's his mom.
Right.
This is a silly example.
We, about a year ago, we ended up moving homes and we kept our,
our pre-somely started rented it out and we just got new tenants in and they're the most
wonderful people in the world.
We love them.
But on their rental application, they put their mom down as one of the references.
And my first inclination was exactly like you just said, Hank, it was like, oh, yeah,
the mom, yeah, Hank. It was like, oh yeah, the mom. Yeah.
Because I mean, we all have moms.
We all know moms.
And my mom is like the greatest cheerleader in my life.
But after a 15 or 20 minute conversation with that man's mom,
I was like, oh man, please rent my home.
Because I knew exactly how that son was raised.
I knew the principles that that mom was teaching from day one.
I knew, and that's what's going on here, right?
I mean, some people are like, oh, yeah, it's his mom.
And I get that, and we need to read it, understanding that it's his mom, but we also need to read
it, understanding it's his mom, but we also need to read it, understanding it's his mom. Yeah.
The most intimate witness of the restoration of Joseph.
Knowing all sides of Joseph as his mother.
And is this the same story, McLean,
where the ice kind of parts is there?
Yes.
Would you please,
you're a girl storyteller.
Would you please tell us about it?
What's going, man?
Some people part the Red Sea and some people part the ice.
So, I need to throw in a disclaimer here.
I've always wanted a voice acting job.
Like driving in the car with my wife
when we were just dating.
We'd be driving down state street
and I'd do info mercials for local businesses.
Saturday, Saturday, Saturday Taco Bell, Taco Bell,
you know, and I'd just go off.
And so you just need to know you are feeling
a part of what I want in my life
that may be unhealthy for my kids, right?
Like I read the story to my kids and they're like,
Dad, could you please read it with a normal voice?
Yeah, I can.
So, so getting back to the story.
So she has to rebuke some of the members of the church.
Well, here's what she says,
I found several of the brethren and the sisters engaged
in a warm debate, others murmuring and grumbling,
and a number of the young ladies were flirting, giggling and laughing with gentlemen passabiers
who were entirely strangers to them.
Whilst hundreds of them on the shore on the boat were witnessing this scene of clamor and
vanity among our brother and with great interest, I stepped into the mix.
And this is what she said, quote, quote, brother and sisters, we call ourselves saints and
profess to have come out from the world for the purpose of serving God at the expense
of all earthly things.
And will you at the very onset subject the cause of Christ to ridicule by your own unwise
and improper conduct?
You profess to put your trust in God, then
how can you feel to murmur and complain as you do?
You are even more unreasonable than the children of Israel were.
For here are my sisters pining for their rocking chairs and brethren from whom I expected
firmness and energy declare that they positively believe they shall starve to death before they
get to the end of their journey.
And why is it so?
Have any of you lacked?
Have I not set food before you every day and made you who had not provided for yourselves
as welcome as any as my own children?
Even so if this were not the case, where is your faith? Where is your confidence in God?
Do you not know that all things are in His hands, that He made all things and over-rules them?
If every saint here would just lift their desires to Him in prayer,
that the way might be open before us, how easy it would be for God to cause the
ice to break away. And in a moment's time, we could be off on our journey. But how can
you expect the Lord to prosper you when you are continually murmuring before him?
Just then a man cried out from the shore. Can you, can you get this image?
I mean, this is loud.
Like she is preaching loud enough for everybody here.
Just then a man cried from the shore.
Is the book of Mormon true?
Oh, he asked the right person.
That book said I was brought forth by the power of God
and translated by the same power.
And if I could make my voice
sound as loud as the trumpet of Michael, the archangel, I would declare the truth from
land to land from sea to sea and echo it from aisle to aisle until everyone of the whole
family of man was left without excuse for all should hear the truth of the gospel of
the Son of God, I would sound in every ear
that he would again reveal himself to man in these last days and set his hand to gather
his people together upon a goodly land if they will fear him and walk up rightly before
him.
It shall be unto them for an inheritance.
But if they rebel against his law, his hand will be against them to scatter
them abroad and cut them off from the face of the earth. God is now going to do a work upon the
earth for the salvation of all who believe it unto the uttermost, even all who call on him,
and man cannot hinder it. Yes, right?
Then she turns to the group of members of the church,
now brethren and sisters, if you will all of you
raise your desires to heaven,
that the ice may be broken before us,
and we be set at liberty to go on our way
as sure as the Lord lives, it shall be done.
At that moment, they hear this loud thunderous noise.
The ice breaks, the captain of the ship says,
every man who is post, and they are one of two ships
that make it out of the harbor.
And as it goes out, a man says something to the effect of,
there goes the Mormon, here's the quote,
there goes the Mormon company,
that boat is sunk in the water nine inches deeper
than it was before, and market, she will sink,
there is nothing sure.
So there's so much of this animosity,
they're so sure that the boat will not make it to Fairport Harbor
on the south side of the lake that when sister Smith and the rest of the saints dock,
they read of their own deaths in the newspaper.
Are you kidding?
Yeah.
Yep. Reports of our deaths have been greatly exaggerated.
The bystanders were so sure we would sink that they went straight to the office and had it
published that we were sunk so that when we arrived at Fairport, we read in the papers the news
of our own death. Right? Like, sister Smith. Sister Smith is so powerful. You know, it's almost like,
it's almost like you're surprised that the whole boat wasn't taken up to meet the city of Enic,
you know? Yeah. Oh, there you go. This, we haven't, we haven't talked enough about her, so I'm so glad you shared this story of them making
this journey.
Oh, I love it.
A strong, a strong, powerful woman who basically got up there and prophesied, right?
All four foot, I think she's like four, 10, four, 11.
She's a tiny woman.
Do this and the ice will break in front of us.
I mean, this is the immediate context of Section 51.
The Colesville Saints eventually make it.
There are a couple of weeks later.
So then you get Section 51 that really comes in context of all of these,
all of these happenings, right?
So you got to remember that the context of this is a very practical view on living and life.
But you can never lose the root of consecration and the root of
consecration being love, love, and acknowledgement of God that he provides us with all things, and
the idea that we must elevate our views of all mankind and love. I mean, this is, and so they put in place these structures that help them to formalize
the care for the poor.
And so you can see things like verse two, it must needs be that they be organized according
to my laws if otherwise they will be cut off.
Wherefore let my servant Edward Partridge and those whom
he has chosen and whom I am well pleased appoint unto this people,
their portions, every man equal according to his family,
according to his circumstances and his wants,
let my servant Edward Partridge,
when he shall appoint a man his portion, given to him a writing that shall
secure into him his portion, that he shall hold it even with even this right and
this inheritance in the church until he transgresses and is not accounted worthy
of it by the voice of the church, according to the laws and covenants of the
church, to belong to the church. It's all, it's this language of,
we're gonna give you stewardship.
And one point, Joseph says, private stewardship, right?
Private stewardship.
So that you have something to manage
that you can be anxiously engaged about the building of Zion and the establishment
of the storehouse that comes in these later verses.
Well, I loved in verse 9.
The Lord is saying, this will work if you're all honest, right?
If you're honest and alike and receive alike and be one because so many people, I think the first
thing you hear this idea of, oh, we're gonna kind of, we're gonna, you know, we're gonna donate and
take and then all of a sudden the greed comes in of, well, who's stopping who from just taking more
in the Lord saying, you are, you are stopping yourself. This will work, honestly. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
You are stopping yourself. This will work. Honestly. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Let me let me share a little bit. So verse three, as you compare this with the Joseph Smith papers and some of our earliest
records of this revelation, there's two things that are different about this revelation. Verse three
actually has a portion that we don't have. So there's something that's been removed. And verse five is added.
Later, it comes in print in the 1835 edition, but it's not in the original revelation. So let me just read to you some of the original in verse three.
Wherefore, let my servant Edward Partridge receive the properties of this people. This is the
new stuff. Receive the properties of this people, which have covenanted with me to obey the laws which I have given, and let my servant Edward
receive the money as it shall be laid before him according to the covenant, and go and obtain a
deed or article of this land unto himself, for I have appointed unto him to receive these things.
And thus, through him the properties of this church shall be covenanted unto me,
things. And thus, through him, the properties of this church shall be covenanted unto me, wherefore, let my servant Edward Partridge and those whom he has chosen, which actually
end up being Isaac Morley and John Coral, and whom I am well pleased, appoint unto this
people their portion, every man alike according to their families, according to their wants
and needs. So you get even some more of this practical element of these revelations.
Like, this is how we're going to manage this.
Then later, as Edward Partridge moves to Missouri,
this basic idea of we're going to take the money from the members of the church,
we're going to buy land for them to gather to in Missouri.
And then we're gonna divviate private stewardship.
Some people are going to have more money and land to give
and they're going to receive eventually
a smaller portion than what they donate, right?
I mean, at least that's the idea behind this.
And so this man named Bates, his last name is Bates.
He donates $50.
He ends up leaving the church and he wants his land.
He wants $50 worth of land, which to us is like 50 bucks of land.
Right.
He actually legally sues the church and seems to win this case, but this man is his name's
baits.
And so verse 5 is actually added in, which Joseph is at, fills at liberty to do. I think one of the scholars that I go to
on this is Steven Harper, but, but, but even present Packer has statements about this. Joseph
and the early members of the church saw these revelations as able to be continually massaged
to come closer to represent the, the, the word of the Lord.
Tony talked about that in our very first episode.
These are fluid.
These revelations.
They can be altered and changed.
They're not set in stone.
So check out this quote from Joseph Smith.
This actually comes from a letter that he writes to William Phelps.
And he writes it in 1832.
The historical background of the revelation
is that he writes this letter to encourage record keeping,
which is really a powerful historical context.
But he writes this letter, he ends up,
it seems that he crosses this portion out.
But he says,
Oh Lord, when will the time come when brother William, thy
servant and myself behold the day that we may stand together and gaze upon eternal wisdom
engraving upon the heavens while the majesty of our God holdeth up the dark curtain until
we may read and record of eternity to the fullness of our immortal souls. O Lord, God deliver us in thy due time from the time, from the little narrow prison,
almost as it were total darkness of paper, pen, and ink, and a crooked, broken, scattered,
and imperfect language.
And we get other places where Joseph makes these statements about the pressure it is to write in the name of God. And so Joseph is like, well, I'm going to add to this because it's going to better clarify what I was seeing and feeling.
And the early members of the church, they understand that and they're okay with it.
They know that it's the reality.
And as members of the church, we should, all of us, men and women should understand this,
right?
Men, men give priesthood. And we try for me, we try and give voice to, for me, mostly feelings, impressions, feelings.
But let's make sure that we understand that this is not just a male thing, right?
The doctoric confidence is very clear that we need to pray with the spirit, right? The doctrine of covetous is very clear that we need to pray with the spirit,
right? We ought to be praying and being beguided by the spirit as we pray. And that's how prayer
can be a conversation. It can happen as we pray. We can be prompted and directed to speak and act
and say certain things. And so this should be something that all of us understand,
this idea of we're trying to put in words,
the feelings that we have,
and the impressions that are coming as we pray.
There are two things here that I think are absolutely
beautiful and incredibly applicable for us today.
First of all, verse three talks about wants, verse 13 talks about wants, verse 14 talks
about wants.
There's this, this is kind of the beginning of this, the use of this term and this word. Verse 13, it could be, it could be even problematic for us,
depending on how we read this and how we interpret these words. Again, let the bishop appoint a
storehouse into this church and let him let all things both in money and in meat, which are more
than as needful for the wants of this people be kept in the hands of the bishop and let him also
reserve unto himself for his own wants and for the wants of his family.
Now, I, there's a reason why I haven't been called to be a bishop because I would be like,
check this verse out, President, Stake, let me, right?
I get to keep my wants.
And man, let me tell you, Tesla would be really fun to drive right now.
He's all right.
But here's the important part for all of us to understand.
The doctrine coming to like we've already talked about
is a book of sacred scripture
that Joseph felt at Liberty to Massage
in terms of word choice,
in terms of verses.
He adds a verse five later, like
he just adds it, right?
And we've got to understand that, let me, let me say it this way.
Do we believe that God can send a perfect revelation or message to his prophet.
I think we do believe that.
Do we believe the prophet has the capacity
to perfectly receive that message?
I'm not sure.
I'm not sure if we believe that or not.
Do we believe that a prophet has the perfect ability
to communicate a perfect
revelation that God has given to a prophet in word?
I don't know if we believe that.
I don't know if we believe that.
I mean, even the Lord says early, early in the revelations, you're going to receive these
as if from my own mouth, in all patience and faith.
That kind of implies.
Section one, he talks about,
they come to an understanding in their weakness.
So we do have some application here.
I wanna be a little bit sensitive.
Some people would probably say,
yes, we do believe that.
And some people would say, no, we don't believe that.
I think that as a historian, I would say,
we don't believe that.
We shouldn't believe that.
We shouldn't believe the profits.
We shouldn't believe the profits,
perfect ability to perfectly understand a revelation
and perfectly communicate it.
Now, here's the complexity of that.
Even if we did believe that, language changes over time.
I still remember saying to my grandpa, right?
Like, that's, man, that's sick. And
grandpa's like, what? Someone's sick? Like, no, grandpa, that's sick. Right? Like, like
language changes over time. And this is a case. This is a really important case where
language has changed. This is from Stephen Harper's book, but he said, the Lord uses the
word wants four times in section 51. That word no longer means what it did in those
revelations and others. The word want has undergone a major sense change in our society in
the last 100 years. Noah Webster published his great dictionary in 1828. That's a really
good date for reference for the restoration of the church. In it, we find the reverse of
today's usage, the primary meaning he lists,
and the next three definitions all deal with lacking or poverty or deficiency or necessity.
Joseph Smith used the word once and needs as synonyms. Perhaps by using both words in section 51 verse 3,
the Lord means to emphasize them, or perhaps he intends
to expand the idea of needs beyond mirror necessities, it is most unlikely that he used
want with today's definition, something desire demanded or required.
Do you know what a reminder of is the parable of the prodigal son who went into a far country
and he began to be in want? And I thought, that's that, that kind of a usage, you know.
Let me take this one one step further because I think it's really important for our readers
to understand because you might think I am, I am reducing confidence in scripture.
That is not at all my point here in bringing this up, I think it actually helps appropriately
place scripture in our religious life.
So if someone was reading this scripture and didn't have access to some of Stephen Harper's
work, he's written a fantastic article talking about communication theory and scripture.
And this is where much of this comes from.
We've got to read scripture with God,
with the Holy Ghost, with the Holy Spirit,
a member of the Godhead, to help us to make an end around.
So I've kind of charted this out for you.
God gives to prophet, prophet interprets,
writes into scripture, and then scripture is read by us. Well, we've got to
have an end around. We can't just go back up the ladder. We've got to read the scripture,
understand the historical context, but then make an end around and include God in our scripture
reading so that he can help us to understand the nuance and the meaning, his initial impulse.
And we call this exegesis and isegesis in nerd talk.
But in order to appropriately make personal application, isegesis, we got to understand
the exegesis, what God initially was talking to them about in their situation and time. So as we create ice of Jesus with the appropriate understanding of the historical context,
it helps us to understand God's message and God's message to us specifically.
Now here's one of those message.
So language and revelation in the scripture.
This is one of the most beautiful things
about the restoration for me.
God is so committed to personal interactions with us.
He asks us to pray multiple times a day.
He asks us to read scriptures,
which after our conversation just recently, right?
Just barely, that's an opportunity to interact with God.
Not just mind information, but interaction, right? We per take of the sacrament once a week, another
opportunity for interaction, right? And you see clearly God is trying to interact with His saints. This whole attempt at Zion, creation of Zion
is to get God to be with us and in our midst.
Now, and you kind of see that in this section,
but also come with me to verse 16 and 17.
The Colville Saints are to be moving to Thompson. They're going to
begin to establish themselves on Lehman Copley's farm and very quickly, you know,
Lehman Copley, Parley Pratt, Sydney, Reading, they go up and they have this teaching experience
among the the shakers. And shortly after Copley invites Ashbell Kitchell to come back with him and
teach the members of the church, there's a confrontation with I believe it's new all night with
Ashbell Kitchell and new all night. Coply goes back to the shakers. He's out.
But Coply ends up saying, I'm going back to the shakers, so off my land.
Yeah. Yeah, but in context, people might think, well, God knew that. God knew that.
Why didn't he just send the members of the church straight to Missouri? That's what he's going to do.
And you have a few sections later. Why doesn't he just send him straight through? Well, first of all,
there's something to be said about God treating us in our moments.
He doesn't treat Lehman Copley poorly because of what Lehman Copley will eventually
do.
He treats Lehman Copley as Lehman Copley in the moment.
He says, this is an opportunity for Lehman Copley.
He's going to learn.
He's going to develop.
He's going to learn, he's going to develop, he's going to grow.
And does he measure up?
Well, no, he doesn't seem to measure up, right?
He goes back on his agreement and in a really fun entrepreneurial way, the saints, their
original agreement is come.
I'll let you stand by my land.
You can build me fences.
You can plant my crops.
You can even build some houses.
And it'll be perfect.
You know, we'll exchange.
And then he kicks him off the land and he's like,
well, I'm going to charge you $60
because you planted my crops.
You built my offense, right?
And it kind of a twist.
But check out what God says to the saints
as they begin to establish himself on Copies farm.
And I, this is verse 16,
I consecrate unto them this land for a little season,
until I, the Lord, shall provide for them otherwise and command them to go hence.
But verse 17, and the hour and the day is not given unto them, wherefore let them act
upon this land as four years, and this shall turn unto them for their good.
Can we just spend a second dissecting those two thoughts? The fact that he wants them to act upon this land
as for years, and then the next phrase,
it shall turn unto them for their good.
Right, these are two powerful thoughts, I think.
And to be really honest with you,
I'm really curious what comes to your guys' mind
as you read mind as you
read, as you think about those two in context of the history.
Yeah, I was going to say, first of all, the Lord knows they're not going to be there long.
Yeah.
But it's not going to be, he's subtly, it's a little season, but you never know what a
little season means with the Lord.
He also says he comes quickly, right John?
But also the idea of, you're going to be a little bit disappointed in how this turns out.
So just know beforehand, it's going to be for good.
It's going to be okay.
Yeah, I had marked that act upon this land as for years because I've heard people
who have served in different colonies in the church and some who have to be kind of mobile, you know, institute teachers
of seminary teachers who don't know where their new assignment will be that just say,
you know, we just figure we're going to be here. And so we're going to do exactly that.
We're going to act as if we're going to be here for a long time, put down our roots
and everything. And then we'll see, but it'll be for our good. So that's why I'm marked it because I have no,
I've heard that thought expressed before.
That interesting you say that, John, because I've had moments in my life, and I know some
others have well, probably have them as well, is the idea of, well, I'm probably almost
done with this calling. So I'm kind of gonna let up a little bit, right?
And maybe the Lord's going,
why don't you just perform in your calling
like you're never going to be released.
And then I'll let you know.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, and think about it in this way.
This next phrase, this shall turn unto them for their good.
I'm close to finishing the biography of Leroy H. Miller.
And he, at one point in his book, he's not being recognized for his work.
He's kind of revolutionizing the auto parts business.
And he basically stops giving work his, his heart.
And his, if I remember right, it's his grandpa that says to him,
you, you better stop that right now.
You have got to be, you've got to develop the character
of hard work in an entire, this has nothing to do with what you get out of
it.
It is what you're becoming, right?
And that I think is a really powerful thought here in this context.
I think God is saying act upon this land as, as for years knowing well assured that they
will be moving way, way quickly, very quickly, right? But he also knows that this is not a
temporal thing. This is a spiritual thing. And if they approach it correctly, it will change their
very nature. And they will become more God-like, more divine, more fit for the kingdom, right? More used would I be, right?
And so it has to be a part of what they're doing.
That has to be a mentality, it has to be a mindset.
Okay, now, no, I did it.
Well, it's a such an applicable,
it's such an applicable principle for all of us,
in that sometimes when we don't see the fruits
of the hard work we put in,
sometimes we think, oh, I failed or that, why did we even do that at all? when we don't see the fruits of the hard work we put in,
sometimes we think, oh, I failed or that,
why did we even do that at all?
It didn't help and the Lord's going, it did help.
It did help that, you know.
I got science camp coming up, you know,
and look at the same thing.
What they thought, but what really happened.
Yeah.
Yeah, science camp is one of my favorites
because Brigham comes back and and and
everyone's like, well, what good was that?
Well, that was a waste of time.
That was a waste of time. And you and you
read Brigham's statements.
First of all, it's Brigham, right?
It's it's powerful line of the Lord Brigham
who says, I was well paid paid with interest
to sit at the foot of the prophet.
And it and it just and he says that from that point on,
angels never watched Joseph closer.
Right, but how many of us in our life
are asked to, we feel like we're asked to do something
from the Lord.
And it just the expectation,
like the Edward Pardridge expectation is not met in any way.
And we've got to have the faith of these members of the church
to realize that we're building character.
It's not always about the outcome that we think of.
It's about the eternal outcome.
It's about the character development.
It's about more than that.
It's about more than having a place to live temporarily.
It's about a character that they are going to need in Zion.
Can you imagine if they approached Zion with that idea,
like, oh yeah, God told us that we're gonna get kicked out
of our homes.
So we're just gonna kinda,
we're gonna wait for that to happen.
We're gonna survive, right?
And let's just put up the tent instead of,
you know, cut down some wood.
Yeah, never plant the trees, never, right?
Never put up the fence, never cultivate the land.
Cause you're, we're not gonna be here that long.
So this principle is absolutely crucial.
You know, a student of mine at BYU
had a serious impact on my life when she gave a,
what's called a student symposium message.
Her name was Onika and she talked about,
she talked about going on her mission 18 months,
she spends in Italy and she doesn't baptize a single person.
While her brother is in a country in South America
and is writing to her going,
we can't, I can't stop the flood of people that were baptizing here, right? Like,
prune singers, right? He's like, yeah, I'm in the baptism spot so much right.
Like, there's a permanently pruned. And she, she, um, she came to this, she came to this same
realization on her own that it's not about the outcome. It never was about the outcome.
If there is an outcome great, if there's not, that's not what it was about. It was about
this, this will be for your good. This shall turn unto them for their good. It took her
while to come to it, but when she did, it was a powerful lesson for her to watch out for expectations and to be not to be so disappointed when the Lord
doesn't meet my expectation. I've heard it's been attributed to Mother Teresa. I don't have it in
print, but that she had said once, we are not called to be successful in all things. We are called to be faithful in all things.
And I've always loved that.
Part of that conversion is about what you're becoming.
I love that President Oaks, what was it?
October 2000, the challenge to become.
Do you remember that talk?
Because I think we all have a little love, Moses Moses in us that wants the check boxes and focus on
what do I do what do I do what do I do and President Oaks was like it's not so much what we know or
even what we do it's what what we're becoming and I was loved that idea. I love that the Lord
drops a tiny little hint in verse 16 so when they go back and they look at the revelation,
they're like, oh, you knew the whole time.
All right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is the same one though, who says, I come quickly
and he's been saying it for 200 years.
Right.
Eventually we're going to get to this idea of plant yourself.
Act upon this, act upon this land as if for years.
Use your agency.
This is there's references here to section 58.
I'm not going to command you in all things.
You should be anxiously engaged about many things and bring it back past
much righteous without being directed in everything.
You just use your agency act and be a steward and and and as if for years and as if for years,
as if for years, right?
And the idea is the, I love this.
Yeah, that the expectation isn't the point.
It's the product, the final, whatever ends up happening
at the end, that's not the point.
Because they're gonna end up leaving Missouri
and they're gonna go, what was all that for?
And Zion's camp, I'm thinking of, you know, not only missionaries who maybe don't have a lot of
success, I'm thinking of someone who's married for 25, 30, 35 years and then ends up getting a divorce
saying, well, that was all a waste. And the Lord is saying, no, no, no, it was not. It was not a waste.
Did I know that was going to happen? Yes, I knew that was going to happen. But it will, I can turn this for your good. I can turn this investment you made for your good.
So, oh, McLean, I think this principle that you found here in Section 51 is, is, I mean,
life changing for a lot of people. I have a daughter who is going to, has been called to serve into Heady,
but she's first going to Tucson in light of COVID
and everything.
And this principle kind of fits right there.
We don't know how long she'll be in Tucson.
What was the elder Bednar said?
Look, it says you are called to serve
and another phrase in your calls
as you are assigned to labor.
The assigned to labor thing might change, but you are called to labor. The assigned to labor thing might change,
but you are called to serve. That's the main thing. And so act upon this land as for years.
We don't know how long she'll be in Tucson. She'll be...
So she needs to not pretend. She needs to believe, hey, I might be here the entire mission. I'm going
to... I'm going to act as if I'm going to be. What a great principle.
It's a great principle.
I was just talking to a return missionary
just the other day here at the Institute
and they said that one of their siblings
is doing the home MTC.
And she just mentioned that this has
absolutely changed her whole family, right?
I mean, like it's not just the MTC
is no longer just about the individual missionary but it's about the whole family, right? I mean, like, it's not just the MTC is no longer just about the individual
missionary, but it's about the whole family and the influence that that can have in the
home. And you think about Elder Bednar, is an elder Bednar that talks about home centered,
right? Like, like, the home is temple prep and mission prep, and, you know, and, and we need to do a better job of extending that longer than just the
three weeks or the two months of the official home MTC, but yeah, beautiful, beautiful
thing.
That's a great change, his family.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
podcast.