Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 67-70 Part 2 : Dr. C. Robert Line
Episode Date: June 20, 2021Have you ever felt pressure to raise righteous children? Or felt inadequate as you try to do so? Dr. Robert Line continues and touches on the importance of parents teaching their children to underst...and the gospel. He reminds us of the fallibility of the church and its leaders and that God speaks to us through the small and simple things, once again emphasizing God’s mercy in our lives.Shownotes: https://followhim.co/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannel
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Welcome to part 2 of this week's podcast.
With what we've been talking about, if we could go back to section 67, verse 13, to kind
of complete this whole thing we've been talking about, let's see, Hank, would you like to read
that for us, verse 13?
Yeah, 67, 13.
You are not able to abide the presence of God now, neither the ministering of angels,
wherefore, continue in patience until ye are perfected. Isn't that beautiful with all we've
been talking about, you know, God's admonition? Not only to us individually, but the church too
and the restoration, right? You know, again, this infallibility narrative that we sometimes fall into, I think we need to be careful
and we individually and even as a church.
You know, I've spoken of patients, continuing patients.
You know what I'm hearing from a lot of people with all the changes the church has been making
and there's been a lot in the last couple of years, right? I'm hearing, I, uh, minister teach to some older people in my ward, and I have quaintances in ward, and, and, and, and these are really, really good, wonderful people.
I mean, salted the earth people, former bishops, former state presidents. Some of them are very concerned not only about what's going on in society,
but how rapidly a lot of the changes in the church are happening. Yet, when I teach institute and
BYU classes, a lot of my very faithful, young, single, adult students, sometimes they don't think
the changes are happening quick enough. Do you see the tension between those two groups?
And one of my thoughts is, boy, I'm so glad I'm not in the core of the 12.
Trying to hold onto this group and that generation and this group over here in that generation,
I mean, but continue in patience until you're perfect.
All of us, we need to continue.
We need to be patient. And I see the the
brethren bless their heart. I see so many wonderful things going on in the
church. And yet so many groups, oh, there's too much of this. No, there's too
little of that, you know, yeah. I love that. I think I am John, we've talked about this before, my patience problems.
And the idea that don't laugh at that.
You know, sometimes I, in my prayers, I say,
I'm ready for bigger miracles. I'm ready for angels and visions.
And I think the Lord is, all right, easy.
You are not able to abide the presence of God now, neither the ministering of angels
continue in patience.
You know, and it's very a parenting moment of, I feel like I'm ready, and the Lord saying,
I know that you're not ready.
So just slow down and keep doing what you've been asked to do. Because I'm one who jumps the gun. Let's
let's move forward fast, right? I just wanted to tell you something. I underlined in verse 14. I just
thought, wow, look at that. Look at that first phrase. Let not your mind turn back. As everything we've been talking about, I put my margin, and this is an application
of that, not necessarily what exactly tied to the context and the people, but I'm looking at
that going, don't dwell on the past. Let not your minds turn back. Everything we've talked about
and repentance and moving forward, And I just like that phrase.
That's a great phrase, John. Regret focuses on the past, worry focuses on the future,
but focusing on what's right in front of us. My favorite golf quotation is the only thing
that matters in golf is the next shot. So what do I do today?
The next shot, what do I do today?
Let not your minds turn back.
Yeah, you got the bogey, but what's right
in front of you right now?
And you see this in the gospel, kind of like you said,
it's verse 14, not your minds turn back.
What did Christ say in the New Testament?
He says, no man having put his hand to the plow.
Plow, looking back.
And looking back is worthy of the kingdom.
But then he says, on the other hand,
take in the sermon on the mount,
take no thought for the moral.
For the moral.
For the moral, right.
If I could add something, because I went right to it
before you said it, I went to the last verse of Matthew 6
in the sermon on the mount. Take therefore no thought for the
moral, for the moral shall take thought for the things of itself. Well, in our King James, the take no
thought, you look down below, it's spoken earlier in Matthew 6 and it says, anxious concern.
So I was reading a book years ago called, how to stop worrying and start living because I'm an expert in worry.
I'm really good at it.
And the Dale Carnegie dude wrote this book and he pointed out something that I have verified
since that in the King James translation, it says, take therefore no thought for the
moral, but take the NIV, the American standard, take a bunch of the other reputable new Testament translations.
The word is not thought. It's worry.
Worry. Yeah.
And our Bible changes it to anxious concern.
Of course, you think about tomorrow. That's very president.
You make, you make plans and goals, right? You have to.
There's a great verse in 1st Nephi 16 that, uh, uh,
S. Michael Wilcox pointed out to me once, where the daughters of
Ishmael, their father dies and they're mourning exceedingly, which is okay.
That's in front of you.
That's present.
They're mourning exceedingly.
And then Nephi adds, and they get upset because of all the sufferings they've had in
the wilderness.
And because of they're bringing up all their past problems, and now all their present problems,
they start to predict the future.
It's in first Nephi.
It's in first Nephi 16, they say, and we must perish in the wilderness with which hunger,
which never happens.
They're now suffering for future trials that are never going to happen.
This is first Nephi 16, verse 35. Our father is dead. We have
wandered much in the wilderness. We have suffered much affliction, hunger,
thirst and fatigue. And after all these sufferings, we must perish in the
wilderness with hunger. So now I'm suffering for future trials that are never
going to happen. And I find myself doing that too. What if this goes wrong? What if this? What if? And, yeah.
You know, Hank, that I love Moroni.
And in Mormon chapter eight, the poor guy takes over.
My father's been killed in battle.
This was his life's work, the Book of Mormon.
I have no or.
I have no family.
I am alone.
My, all my kindred are gone. And the knee fights are like this. And he gets to this point where his whole tone of voice changes, if you read Mormon 8 and all the sudden, he just says,
I'm making an end of speaking concerning this people. I am Maroni, I am a son of Mormon, and I'm going to finish this record. And it's really, I'm paraphrasing a little bit,
but read it.
It's really cool how he says, okay, I'm done with the past
and my problems.
I am going to finish my father's record.
And I don't know how long it took him to write Mormon
chapter eight, but watch for that moment.
It's pretty inspiring to me.
Yeah.
Well, and you know, if I could add one more thing guys, going back to the story I told about my student, right, that said he finally owned it.
I think that's what we're talking about, right? He, we're peace and happiness finally came to him.
He had to quit dwelling in the past, right? And what had happened? And he once he finally owned it,
it was that step from the past sins to a step into the present
now and being there and being there with God.
So, you know, well, this is great.
We are never going to finish the doctrine of covenants if we don't.
Let's jump into 68, Rob.
What, what, what do, tell us about it?
What do you see there?
Yeah.
So, you know, just, you quickly, you know, revelation given through
Joseph Smith in response to prayer that the mind of the Lord had been known.
And it mentions foreign individuals, Orson,
Hyde, Lucas, Johnson, Lime, and E Johnson. And there he is again, right?
William E. McCollum. You know, one of the things real quick before we jump into
section 68. Here now, if you look at 66, 67, 68, and 75, you got four revelations
that deal with this guy, William E. McClellan, who not only becomes an anti-mormon critic, but he leaves
the church and never does come back. And I, in full disclosure, I wrote a paper once on William
E. McClellan. That's why I love to talk about this history so much.
And I think one of the takeaways from this, again, this is a microcosm and maybe off the beaten path here, but I think God not only works with imperfect people and people that ultimately leave
his kingdom, but there are things we can learn from these incidents, from these people and from these histories.
And so, I think that's significant.
Do I want to glorify and glamourize?
No, no, no, I'm not doing that.
But boy, what are the lessons God is trying to teach me
through other people, through incidents
that I might think are insignificant.
You have a bad day and you're like,
oh, I'm so glad I got through that day and passed it.
And now I can get on with life.
Wait, wait, wait, you might have missed.
Again, this comes back to living in the present.
You might have missed something in that
boring sacrament meeting or that unwanted trial.
I think, you know, it reminds me of what Elder Maxwell said one time.
He said, we not only need to go through our trials,
but we need to let our trials go through us.
And how often do we just dismiss things
because it's not a Nephi, Marona, Big Home, Run moment,
and maybe some of the most powerful lessons
God's trying to teach us are coming
through the small and simple things.
That's interesting.
These four guys, two of them are going to, I think, correct me if I'm wrong here, two of
them are going to die in the faith.
Orson Hyde is going to go on to, he was just 22 years old when he's baptized.
He's going to go, he's going gonna be the first missionary in the Holy Land.
Right. He's gonna, in fact, I correct me if I'm wrong, hang, I think he dedicates the Holy Land.
Yeah, dedicates the Holy Land. There's a, there's a monument there.
I've often complained because when we go to the Holy Land, it takes like a good 24 hours of
traveling to get there, 22 hours of traveling. I think it took him
six months of traveling to finally get to get to the Holy Land.
Luke Johnson is going to
die faithful. He's going to leave the church for a bit and return.
Lyman Johnson, if I remember right, Ly and Johnson is going to leave the church and then say to the 12 about a year later, quote, I have never seen a happy moment since.
It's such a heartbreaking story where he says, I have not seen a happy moment since, you know, I disaffected. And these two Johnson's, I mean, there's a billion Johnson's in the world, but these two are, are they not John Johnson's sons of Elsa Johnson,
whose arm was healed by Joseph Smith? Yeah. So they're living in Hyrum, Ohio at the John
Johnson farm. Yeah. Well, and the other thing about these four, all four of them, all original
members of the quorum of the 12.
At the time of their call, and I said,
little, little addenda, I said age 24,
it was 23, even younger.
So, Limeany Johnson was 23 when he went
to the quorum, Lucas Johnson, 27.
William E. McClellan, age 29, goes into the quorum of the 12, 1835, and Orson Hyde, age 30, all four of
the original members of the quorum of the 12. And this
Orson Hyde, did I get that right, is 20. He's born January of
1805. So would have been about 26, right? Yeah. All right, so
let's get into 68, Rob. You know, some cool verses, I don't know if we want to spend a whole lot of time,
but verse, let's just read verse three and four if we could real quick.
John, if you want to do verse three, Hank, verse four, and this is the insample unto them
that they shall speak as they are moved upon by the Holy Ghost. John, could you give us
an insam, an insample ensemble of what's been spoken of in verse
three, no, what, what do we have an ensemble? They give out free and samples at Costco. They
have had a free and sample. Yes, I love those in samples. They're very, very, very,
spaghetti sauce can be yours. And sample is just an old way of saying example, right?
There you go, there you go.
Okay, verse four, Hank.
And whatsoever they shall speak
when moved upon by the Holy Ghost,
shall be scripture.
Wow.
Shall be the will of the Lord.
Shall be the mind of the Lord.
Shall be the word of the Lord.
Shall be the voice of the Lord
and the power of God into salvation.
How should we interpret verse four?
How might, maybe a better question is, the Lord and the power of God into salvation. How should we interpret verse four?
Maybe a better question is how might we miss interpret verse four? Yeah. Oh goodness. Yeah. I think our definitions, we have to be careful with the definition of
scripture, if you know what is binding. Right. Scripture. But there have been times where I've had conversations with John or
other friends with my wife, of course, where the conversations have been full of the spirit
and it's been so uplifting that it is like writing scripture. It just feels so powerful
and uplifting like we're opening the doors of heaven. I don't think
it should be recorded, printed, and handed out in, you know, the enzyme, but not it's
liahona, sorry, but it is has the same feel to it as scripture.
Yeah, scripture is, is that which is written? I think that was the definition in Joseph Smith's day.
And I think we're on the right track here as I understand it that there are there is scripture that is binding on the whole church that is the canon.
There are other things.
President Benson called patriarch of blessings personal scripture, but those aren't published to the world and they're not binding on the whole church.
So something I may have said to someone as a missionary,
hopefully I was moved upon by the Holy Ghost,
but that for that setting in that place,
you know, maybe reach that level.
But yeah, so I think we're not saying anything anybody ever says under the inspiration is
scripture on par with the book Mormon of the doctor. I don't think we're saying. Imagine our
can imagine our our scripture sets we'd have volume 900 and seven. I need to get that out. So
what do you think Rob? You know, going back to Joseph Fildin McConkey, I remember one time he gave an in service to us.
And he bore the most interesting testimony at the conclusion
of this one in service that he gave.
And he said, he goes, and I want to bear you my testimony
that all those things that I spoke by the power of the Holy Ghost
are true.
And he said, and those things which were not spoken
by the Holy Ghost, do with those
what you want. That is awesome. Like one of my great moments in life is when I submitted a paper
at Joseph Filding Maconkey in my master's program. And he returned it not with a letter grade,
but with a check plus smiley face. That's pretty good. Yeah, it's framed on my wall. So yeah. I really like verse six.
When I was, when I first got started as a scripture reader, you know, when I was a, when I was a
teenager, when I really tried to take it seriously, I would oftentimes, for me reading the scriptures,
was like finding, finding those just really powerful chunks. I didn't really understand the setting.
I didn't understand who the Lord was talking to like I do now, but at those times these little verses, you know, that I would find really stood out to me.
And this was one of them, verse 6, Wherefore be of good cheer and do not fear, for I the Lord am with you.
I will stand by you.
You shall bear record of me, even Jesus Christ,
that I am the son of the living God that I was,
that I am, and that I am to come.
That can kind of stand on its own,
is to my little, you know, ninth grade heart,
as absolutely.
The Lord bearing testimony to me.
Let's go down to verse 25.
And again, in as much as parents have children in Zion or in any of her stakes which are
organized, how many stakes were there?
Right.
If he was forward looking here or in any of their stakes which are organized and teach them
not to understand the doctrine of repentance, faith in Christ, the son of the living God,
and of baptism and the gift of the Holy Ghost by the laying on of hands when eight years old,
the sin be upon the heads of the parents. John, could we have a prayer right now for all of those
parents that have very sinful children because their, those parents are in trouble at the final judgment.
That's a lot of sin to be heaped upon their heads. Yeah. And no, it is a sin, a word that can be plural and singular.
Yeah. I mean, obviously, I mean, this can't be talking about, um,
all of that sins, the sins plural of the children are upon the heads of the parents. So, John, I mean,
what, what could we take away and say, what, what sin is this that's upon the heads of the parents. So John, I mean, what could we take away and say, what sin is this that's upon the heads of the parents?
Yeah, that this sin wasn't teaching them to understand.
And I appreciate that it doesn't say teaching them
or forcing them to accept,
but at least you're teaching them to understand.
There's gonna come a time where it's going to be
a very individual thing for each of us, I think,
but teach them to understand
the doctrine of repentance of faith in Christ.
And if you don't even make that effort,
if you don't try to teach them to understand
that sin is upon the head of the parents,
that's how I read it.
Yeah, there's a difference between teaching
and teaching to understand.
Yeah, to me, that's a different way of teaching. between teaching and teaching to understand. Yeah.
To me, that's a different way of teaching.
I had a wonderful teacher in my doctorate program
by the name of Sterling Hilton.
He's a statistics, incredible statistical,
statistics mind, right?
And I was lost in statistics.
And I remember when he would try to teach me,
and I say try, he would try to teach me statistics,
and he would listen so closely to me
because he wanted to see what I understood.
He could just teach statistics
and I would be sitting there lost,
or he could teach me to understand.
And I learned that probably from any teacher, mostly from him, on really trying to focus
on the student or the child on what they understand and then build from there instead of just
teaching.
That little phrase teach them not to understand the doctrine,
but the Lord doesn't say that teach them not the doctrine.
Right.
That little phrase to understand has helped me focus more
on the learner and where they are individually.
What is it that we can hope or what would be good for all of us
to do as members of the church as we read the Scriptures?
What care should we take?
Yeah, see I I like what you're what we're doing here because I
Think what the Lord if I was gonna say K. What the author's intent here is with Joseph and the Lord I
Would guess the author's intent is
Joseph and the Lord. I would guess the author's intent is make teaching your children a very high priority.
Right.
Because this is very important to me.
It's so important to me that, you know, it'll come up at judgment.
What I think could be dangerous is someone who is a grandparent now reading this verse
and just feeling ashamed because their children
are not on the path.
I think that would be the wrong approach.
Right. Right.
To take this, because the Lord does not mean it,
I would say, as something to flog yourself with,
but as a motivation to what you're dealing with right now,
whether it be children
or even grandchildren or even great grandchildren, that you can start today if you've never done so
before or even better to teach these basic principles of the gospel. John always quick to point out
that when the Lord wants things taught,
he, it's, it's, it always comes back to these four. First principles, I love it. It's, and I think
too of this idea, I love that the stripling warriors did not say we know it's true. They said,
we knew our mothers knew it. And sometimes with my kids, I'm not sure where they're at,
but I want them to know that I know. And there will come a point where they'll get older and they'll
want to get that same testimony. But here, I'm going to teach them this is what I believe.
This is what I know. And then they're going to do to do something with that.
An agency can be very, can be very painful. But did I, did I strive? Did I try to teach
them, if, even if imperfectly, that I have faith in Christ, that I believe that he forgives,
that I can repent, you know?
John, you know, I love that idea. You know, sometimes we'd, I think, downplay.
But that's a gift to the spirit, right?
I mean, one gift to the spirit is to know in and of yourself that Jesus is the Christ, right?
Others to believe on their words.
And the other is to believe on the words.
And I wonder if we downplay.
I hear people sometimes say, you can't live on borrowed white.
And I think we understand that to an extent.
I mean, we don't want to stay there, right?
We want to, as George Cucannon we don't want to stay there, right?
We want to, as George Cucannon said,
you want to develop more spiritual gifts.
But when I hear that, I think, you know,
that in going to the, you know, the,
as you said, the stripling warriors,
that is a gift to the spirit that I think we need to respect.
You know, if I could real quick,
we flip over to section 58.
There's a verse that I love in section 58, it's in verse, section 58, verse 59.
And I've shared this with people before because I sometimes I think there's a culture in our church
when we give testimony that we have to say, I know, I know this, I know that. And you know,
this is a tricky thing because President Packer, you remember that quote
that he gave one time the candle of the Lord.
Remember that beautiful talk?
And he said that the gaining of a testimony
is found in the bearing of it, right?
And I think that's a true principle, right?
But I also think that maybe we need to be careful
and maybe we need to teach our children.
And again, this is sensitive
of how do you bear testimony? There's, again, there's there's cultural things we have in the church
like infallibility, right? There's cultural things that aren't correct. And do we bear testimony
of things that we know are true? Absolutely. But look at this verse, verse 59, let no man return from
this land. This is the Lord speaking to Joseph Smith,
Oliver Cowdery, Sidney Rigdon, and other other missionaries, right? He says, let no man return
from this land, except he bear record by the way of two things. That which he knows and most
assuredly believes. And I thought, isn't that beautiful? And I wish we had a culture
sometimes in the church where maybe we can stand and say, you know, I don't know this. I'm
growing, I'm progressing. But oh, I absolutely believe in this. And I think that kind of goes
to Alma 32, right? When it says that, you know, once you start to feel those movements and those
swellings is your knowledge perfect, no, it's not. But you do know that you have felt those
swellings and those movements in continue. And so I love that idea of bearing testimony,
not only of that, which I know, but that which I most assuredly believe. And again, that's,
I think that could be a sensitive
topic because the gain of a testimony is found in the bearing of it. Hey, one more thought, and then
let's go on to section 69 and 70, but back it back to 68 and in verse 25, you know, when eight years old. And so it we're supposed to teach them
those principles by eight years old, but now going down to verse 27. And their children shall be
baptized for the remission of their sins when eight years old and receive the laying on of hands.
Let me get some thoughts from you because, you know, eight is the age. It's the specific age. The Lord has designated, you know, I've had students
and even parents before asked me, why do we baptize at age eight? It doesn't say that in the scriptures.
And it's like, yeah, it does. But anyhow, but then you get a scripture like DNC 137, if I could read this verse 10, and I think this is in one other place. It's it's a similar thing in section 29, but it says I also be held that children who die before they arrive at the years plural, years of accountability are saved.
Any thoughts hankered John about the difference?
A.J. specific arbitrary time when the Lord reveals we baptize, but I mean does any child
when you look at all children that are so different, do they automatically become
all of a sudden accountable right on their eighth birthday?
I think the Lord chose a year,
but I think he knows when people are fully accountable
and when they're not, and they chose a year,
and I really love number symbols.
Eight is a symbol of new beginnings throughout the scriptures.
And so I can see eight were saved on the ark, you know.
And so I think they chose a year, but ultimately the Lord knows when people are really accountable.
And that's why I like the one verse that says they begin to become accountable.
Right, right. I don't know about you guys, but I've known some kids at age six and a half or seven are
really jealous
spiritually. Yeah, and others are 15 and they're not getting it. I
Like how John is talking here that the Lord has common sense. Yes, we needed to choose an age
But any age would would probably you know would would be
The same right it would be well. That, would be the same, right?
It would be, well, that's too late.
Oh, that's too early.
There's just because everybody's different.
So the Lord knows each individual.
I think that's a beautiful idea that we're going to choose an age here,
but I know you all individually.
I think that's a beautiful idea.
Before we go on, unless you two have thoughts,
I wanted to just grab verse 28. Yeah. Actually, I have two thoughts. One, I wanted to share because
verse 25 can be like we just talked about, can be a difficult verse for people who
feel like, oh, I should have done more. We should have had more family prayer. We
should have had more scripture study. I should have taken advantage of more, you
know, this is my fault.
And I remember Bruce Haifin, Elder Bruce Haifin said once,
he quoted David O. McKay that no other success can compensate for failure in the home.
And he talked about how President McKay was talking about give your best efforts to your to your family. Don't leave them with the leftovers."
He said, but President McKay was not saying that if somehow your children stray off the
gospel path that you don't deserve any other success, that's what we've turned it into.
That if your children stray off the gospel path, you should have no happiness anywhere ever We've kind of turned it into a from an encouraging quote to a to a kind of a flogging quote, right where we where we beat people with it
And then Elder Haven said this he said there is a success that will compensate for failure in the home
It is the atonement of Jesus Christ
for failure in the home. It is the atonement of Jesus Christ. It can compensate for any failure in the home or without. So go to him. I just remember that you almost could feel the size of
almost the belief of parents throughout, you know, who read that quote or that can go, yes, there is. Including Lehigh and Saraya for crying out loud.
You know, and what's the old story?
Was it Terrible Bealee?
I can't remember.
Hey, the Joneses are having trouble with their kids.
Yeah, and Heavenly Fathers haven't trouble
with some of his too.
Right.
No.
And you can look forward.
My parents weren't perfect, but my father who recently passed away just last month,
he really tried with all of his grandchildren to teach them these principles. To his last days,
he was really trying to teach these principles because it was forward looking to him.
I can't fix what the mistakes I made in the past. I can't, you know, I, but I've got these
grandkids in front of me. I'm gonna, I'm gonna try to teach them these principles.
And then this other, this other story I wanted to bring up, just real quick is section 68 verse 28. Teach their children to pray.
Teach their children to pray. And it immediately came to mind a story from President Henry Beiring.
He talks about a time his father taught him to pray. This is from the 2003 enzyme.
He said 2003, let's see what month is it?
November 2003.
The afternoon my mother died.
We went to the family home from the hospital.
We sat quietly in the darkened living room for a while.
Daiv excused himself and went up to his bedroom.
He was gone for a few minutes.
When he walked back into the living room,
there was a smile on his face.
He said that he'd been concerned for mother.
During the time he had gathered her things
from the hospital room and thanked the staff
for being so kind to her,
he thought of her going into the spirit world
just minutes after her death.
He was afraid—oh, sorry—he was afraid she would be lonely if there was no one there
to meet her.
He had gone to his bedroom to ask his heavenly father to have someone greet mildred his
wife and my mother.
He said that he had been told, in answer to his prayer, that his mother had met his
sweetheart.
I smiled at that too, President Eiring says.
Grandma Eiring was not very tall.
I had a clear picture of her rushing through the crowd, her short legs moving rapidly on
her mission to meet my mother.
And then he says this, Dad surely didn't intend at that moment to teach me about
prayer, but he did. I can't remember a sermon from my mother or my father about prayer. They prayed
when times were hard and when they were good. And they reported in matter of fact ways how kind
God was, how powerful and how close. That's awesome.
Yeah, that story has always just stood out to me when I read that phrase, teach their children
to pray.
You know, teach your children to pray.
Teach your children how to pray, right?
I know you're probably both familiar with this, but I, you know, when I think of teaching
children to pray, not just to pray, but maybe
how to pray, you know, I think that phrase could be interpreted both ways. I think you're both
familiar with that definition in the Bible dictionary under prayer. There is, you know, for the listeners
that we have here that are not familiar with this, in the Bible dictionary under the heading prayer.
that are not familiar with this in the Bible dictionary under the heading prayer.
And this is in the entry on prayer,
and it's, oh, let's see, it's about eight prayer,
eight probably seven or eight prayer graphs down.
It says prayer is the act by which the will of the father
and the will of the child are brought
and correspondents with each other.
The object of prayer is not to change the will of God, but to secure for ourselves and for others,
blessings that God is already willing to grant but are make conditional on our asking for them.
And I love that idea. You know, when we work with investigators and even with children the
first time when we teach them to pray, we do the heavenly Father, we ask thee, we thank thee, you know, the four-step thing, right?
But isn't that beautiful that, wouldn't that be a wonderful thing for parents to teach
children that you're not just asking for things, that might be where we start, but we want
to come in correspondence with God's will and prayer is a reverential act. It's a it's a form of worship. And what are
those scriptures? There's a couple of scriptures that says,
and it shall be given you what you shall pray for, right?
Remember the disciple Nephi God said, Hey, I'm going to give
you whatever you'll ask, because I know you will not ask
a miss. And when I get in the proper framework of prayer,
I'm not really praying for what I want. It's almost this worship revealed form that happens where
God reveals to me what to pray for. Does that make sense? I think that's a more advanced concept. But,
boy, you know, an alignment, that's right. You know, hopefully we're teaching children
not just to pray, but how to pray and how to get that might those first four steps that
we do with investigators. That's probably a good place to start, but hopefully as we teach
children to pray, we migrate over to this higher form of worship
where we commune with God.
And we don't just get through the prayer, right?
You know, looking at verse 25,
I think of Elder Lawrence Corbridge's talk
called Stand Forever and how he talked about primary questions
versus secondary questions.
And Sister Joy D. Jones in page 109 of the Come Follow Me
manual said this,
a key to helping children become sin-resistant
is to begin at very early ages to lovingly infuse them
with the basic gospel doctrines and principles.
From the scriptures, the articles of faith,
the For the Strength of Youth, booklet, primary songs, hymns, and our own personal testimonies that will lead
children to the Savior.
And when she says, basic gospel doctrines, I look at 25, that's it, faith in Christ, the
doctrine of repentance, which Elder Holland said is the most hopeful, encouraging word in the Christian vocabulary,
repentance is the gift of the Holy Ghost and then how we use that moving forward in our daily life, you know.
So I appreciate
whenever we get
but there are so many different things we could talk about. I love it when the scriptures come back to,
okay, let's come back to okay
Let's go back to first principles once again and mention those
That was in that that was in the manual John the yeah, that's not in the come follow me manual page 109
Are we ready to keep going here Rob? Yeah, let's go to section 69 a shorter section
You know these are revelations all coming in November of 1831,
all centering around the printing of the Book of Commandments.
Verse six, for the land of Zion shall be a seat
and a place to receive and do all things.
Back in section 57, and I'm sure you guys have already
talked about this, you know, Jackson County,
that's the place that's appointed.
And when you get a verse like this, it seems to be pretty definitive.
The land design shall be a seat and a place to receive into all these things.
You know, a question that often comes up from some of my students is,
is Zion the New Jerusalem?
Is this still the seat?
Is it still the center place? Is it still the seat, is it still the center place,
is it still the gathering place for the saints,
as it says in the doctrine and covenants.
And let me just read, I mean, maybe a quote or two,
there's not a whole lot we have that is current about this.
The Brethren haven't said a whole lot,
but there are a few things that have been said.
First of all, let me back up and just read something.
This is from, oh, this is from President Joseph
Filding Smith and Dr.
and Zasalvation.
He says, the center place where the city of the New Jerusalem
is to be built is Jackson County, Missouri.
It was never the intent to substitute Utah
or any other place for Jackson County.
So kind of interesting, right?
2003, here's two of the most recent statements we have on Zion, the New Jerusalem, still
be in the center place, not Utah.
This is President Dallin H. Oaks, October conference 2003.
And I love this statement.
He says this, many of us or our descendants will doubtless participate in the fulfillment of the prophecies of the building of the city of the New Jerusalem.
But in this matter, the timing is the Lord's not ours.
We will not be approved or blessed in clearing the ground or pouring the footings for that great project until the Lord has said that it is time.
In this, as in so many other things,
the Lord will proceed in his own time and in his own way.
Yeah, I often tell students that bring up that question,
I'll read them that quote,
and they're like, why aren't they talking more
about Zion the New Jerusalem?
And I'm like, here's your answer right here.
The Lord proceeds in his own time.
And is it an interesting? Some of the questions
we have, I'll often, the students have, I'll direct their attention back, well, what are the
prophets saying? If they're not commenting on certain things, that's probably the answer right there,
right? It's not that it's not a doctrine, but there's not a whole lot more to say. Here's the
most recent thing that's been said on Zion, the New Jerusalem. And this is October
conference 2008. And this is Elder Dittad Christopherson of the Cormul 12. And I
would love if any of your listeners Hank and John or if you guys have more
current stuff, I have a whole PowerPoint deck that I do on this both in
education weekend and in a BYU class. I'd loved it, but this is the most current thing that I have.
Elder Christopherson said this,
Zion is both a place and a people.
God has called for the elders of his church
to be sent forth across the world
to accomplish this gathering,
commencing an effort that continues in full vigor today.
In our families and in our stakes and districts,
let us seek to build up Zion through unity,
godliness and charity,
preparing for that great day
when Zion the new Jerusalem will arise.
So, you know, as late as 2008,
you have Elder Christopherson saying,
yeah, the place will rise one day,
that's gonna happen.
But let's, right now, let's build up Zion through unity,
godliness and charity.
I love that focus on not Zion the place,
but Zion the people, the condition of the heart.
I think that's one of the fun things going through these
sections has been noticing that Zion is a place
and Zion is a people, and even Zion is a state of being of unity of oneness and
it seems to be going in and out of that. I know Hank takes church history tours back there
and it's I mean you go to Adam and I know there's pretty much just nothing there except for a farm
or whatever and you try to imagine what is gonna happen here.
And it's usually so hot, I'm like, get back on the bus.
John Whitmer has quite a bit to do
and quite a few specific things, right?
You know, let's look at those things again.
I think there's a lesson in this preaching,
expounding, writing, copy, selecting, obtaining.
Let me read to you, you're both familiar with one of my favorite teachers.
You know, we've talked about Robert Millett, you know, oh, you know, let me read to you
something that he says about those things, all those specific activities in the context
of preaching the gospel. This is one of my favorite all-time quotes. He says, the word of
God is sufficiently powerful
that gospel teachers or preachers
do not need to assume the burden of converting their listeners.
There is sufficient for the gospel teacher
to do by way of reading, studying, preparing, praying,
organizing and presenting that here she need not
fill the obligation to create a spiritual experience. We need not you
serve the role of the Holy Ghost. Ultimately, he is the teacher, he is the converted, he is the
member of the eternal Godhead charged with carrying the word of truth into the hearts and minds of the children and men. he is the agent of the new birth who sanctifies and empowers human beings. I think that is so, so wise,
you know, to look at that verse. There's so many things that God wants us to do and that we can do,
but what he doesn't want us to do is you surp the role of the Holy Ghost. And I wonder if
sometimes we violate that a few ways, one in which I know I've done before is where I try to create a spiritual experience, right?
And maybe I, I hate to even say this, but maybe I try to get too weepy sometimes.
I think new tears can come naturally, right? overly sensational story rather than just doing the simple things, you know, kind of like
what we're doing today, just going through, uh, and teaching the basic principles, John,
like you said, with the first four principles, and we sprinkle a little humor in there, right?
Uh, along the way, I wonder for parents, you know, maybe parents get too worried sometimes,
you know, that they didn't like, like we said before, that they didn't like like we said before that they didn't do enough
with their home evening lessons and and with their fireside chats and whatnot and and to trust.
Let's trust Heavenly Father. You don't need to do that mom and dad and grandma and grandpa.
That never was your assignment to be the Holy Ghost to convert them. You weren't supposed to convert them. The Holy Ghost did.
You had enough to do by way of training, raising, changing diapers, and reading scripture, and living the Gospel.
Let's stay in our lane and do our stuff and trust that God will do his stuff. Yeah, there's a great moment in the Old Testament where Jehosa Fad is told to go out and battle
an army and what does the prophet tell him? The battle is not yours, but God's. This is not your
fight. This is my fight. And we can say that with children, right? These are the
Lord's children, not yours. Right. And he'll, this is his fight. I love what Robert Millett said about that.
The scriptures themselves have sufficient power.
Just read him.
Yeah.
Just read him and share him.
And people will sense these words are beyond,
you know, an object lesson or something.
These words themselves have power. I like it. Rob,
what's going on in section 70? Can you give us the backstory and then we'll jump in?
Yeah, yeah. In fact, if you look in the heading there, you know, this is another Hyromohio
Revelation, November 12, 1831, the Prophet's history states that four special conferences were held
from the first to the 12th of November inclusive.
And the last of these assemblies, the great importance of the revelations that would later
be published as the Book of Commandments, and then the Doctrine and Covenants would be
considered.
This revelation was given after the conference voted that the revelations were, quote,
worth to the church, the riches of the whole earth.
I love that. I want to come back to that.
I want to come back to that. It then says Joseph's history
refers to the revelations as, quote, the foundation of the church
in these last days, and benefit to the world,
showing that the keys of the mysteries of the Kingdom of our Savior
are again entrusted to men, in. Can I read a statement from President Benson about the
doctrine and covenants that I think goes perfectly along with this and the context to section 70
and in fact when I teach it my BYU classes, whenever I teach a doctrine and covenants class,
we always read this quote and I'll try to excerpt it,
so I just get to the meat.
But President Benson said this, he says,
excluding the witnesses to the Book of Mormon,
the doctrine in Covenant is by far the greatest
external witness in evidence, which we have from the Lord,
the Book of Mormon is true. Isn't that interesting?
That is fascinating to me.
And then he goes on and he says this,
the Book of Mormon brings men to Christ,
the Doctrine and Covenants brings men to Christ's kingdom.
The Book of Mormon is the keystone of our religion,
and the Doctrine and Covenants is the capstone with continuing
revelation. And then I love this. The Lord has placed his stamp of approval on both the keystone
and the capstone. And then he concludes, he says, God bless all of us to use all the scriptures,
but in particular, the instrument he designed to bring us to Christ, the book of Mormon, the Keystone of our religion,
along with its companion volume, the capstone, the doctrine and covenants, the instrument to bring us to Christ's kingdom.
I love that idea. And how often do we talk? I mean, I think all of us know, Book of Mormon is number one in the church, right? It's always emphasized. And rightly so. But how many of us
not only use the doctrine and covenants as a companion volume, but view it as a companion volume,
on par with the Book of Mormon. I mean, that's pretty powerful. And what a wonderful, if I can just,
you know, as I was preparing for today and going through this part
of the history of section 70,
and I remember this quote from President Benson,
and I thought, what an amazing thing.
What a tribute, Hank and John, to you guys and your team
for doing this type of stuff with the doctrine and covenants,
where we can go in and dig and call out these powerful principles that
Absolutely should stand on par with the book of Mormon. Yeah, that is beautiful
In fact the only other place and you reminded me of something Rob the only other place we've heard that quote is when we did our very first
episode with Tony Sweat and I went and looked at section one and
This is where it would fall chronologically.
That's right.
So to anyone who has yet to go back,
we would encourage anyone, go back,
if you can this week,
go listen to our very first episode
with Dr. Tony Sweat,
because it would fall in line right here,
November of 1831, when they wrote the preface that we talked about, talked about then.
And I'll tell you, from that first episode until this one, this book has changed for me.
Absolutely changed. I am, we're only halfway through, and it has absolutely changed the way I view the history, the church, and these revelations, because
I had a little bit of knowledge about them before, but talking to people who have studied
them like you, Rob, has really changed my view on them, and they have become more of a
companion than they just kind of out their scripture.
It reminds me of, I think a heunably statement that the scriptures
will wear you out before you wear them out type of a thing. Just the idea that there are
levels of meaning that you may have never even seen there before. And that's why we don't
ever say, oh, I've already read that book. It's read it again, read it again, read it again
because there will be new levels of meaning that
the Lord will inspire in you that you never thought of before. It's the liahona, isn't it? There
was a new writing on it from time to time, right? And you go into the scriptures and sometimes there
there's a I mean, the words are the same, but there's a new writing, a new spiritual writing from time to time.
I've definitely had that experience doing this podcast, John.
I knew you had two.
Yeah, good stuff.
We had a comment that came in from somewhere, Hank,
where someone said,
I love to see you guys taking notes.
Like, you're all learning this too,
and I thought, oh boy, am I ever.
And in fact, John, I think the exact quote was, it's fun that old people are still learning too.
I'm really...
Clear that, that was me, not you, Hank, that had to be that me.
I really liked that quote.
Do you love how the Lord finishes these sections?
With his mercy, right?
Yeah, he said, there's so many times where John has pointed this out to me that you know the Lord gives them a parting thought that is usually just so
just uplifting and
Kind of a shot in the arm like you do and great be hold I the Lord
Immersible and will bless them and they shall enter into the joy of these things. I mean, it's just I
Love how the Lord chooses to speak to these,
chooses to speak to these people.
They're not perfect and he could point that out.
My patriarchal blessing could have been Hank,
it doesn't look good, but it was a positive message.
It was, and what the Lord could have said
versus what the Lord chooses to say is an important lesson to me,
that we can choose to speak this way, to speak hopefully and encouragingly.
Rabbi, we have a last question for you.
I think our listeners would love to hear your personal thoughts on Joseph Smith,
the restoration, and what it has done for you and your life.
Well thanks, that's a great question and thanks again for having me on and I'm honored to be
able to do that. You know, I think everyone's journey, everyone's journey is a journey. It evolves, right? I, one of the things that
I often do is I have, in fact, your listeners can't see this, but this is my old ninth grade
high school seminary copy of the scriptures. I still keep it. And the reason I keep
it is every now and then I need a little bit of humor to go back and read what I wrote.
And there's some truth to that. It's interesting to see, you know, sometimes we laugh at ourselves
where we were. You know, I don't know if you two have ever had this before, but I go back and I look at some of the things,
some of the lesson plans that I had 20 years ago,
or even 10 years ago, and I have a pretty good laugh sometimes,
and I'm like, oh my goodness, what was I doing, you know?
And you know, if one of, I hope your listeners,
if one thing that maybe,
and Hank you mentioned this earlier,
one of the things we've really focused on today
is God's love, right?
His love, his compassion,
and I love God's love.
I love that he's merciful to us in our weakness.
I love that he's merciful to Joseph.
Some people might say this is wrong or they might not understand what I'm gonna say,
but I think we need to be so careful with Joseph
with trying to deify him
and trying to make him into something that he isn't.
I think Joseph didn't take himself that seriously.
And now I don't wanna downplay Joseph, section 135.
Boy, Joseph's done more save that,
some people misinterpret that, right?
I wish we could add a little thing in 135,
the Savior has done way more than Joseph, right?
But Joseph has done a lot with the restoration.
And I think what I would say about Joseph and the restoration
and my journey, I'm so grateful for God's grace, his mercy, and that he allows us to change.
I will be completely honest with you guys and your listeners. There are so many things
listeners, there are so many things that I have an absolute rock solid testimony of in this gospel, the truth of the gospel. I will freely admit too that there are some things
that I that I haven't fully resolved. And I, I don't know if some of those things all ever fully resolve. But I, I'm so grateful for God's mercy, his patience,
his love, and that he invites us to do the same. He says go and do that likewise, right?
I want to share with the listeners something that has become a big part of who I am and what I
teach to my students. But often when I get students that get perplexed and they get, they're like, I got to leave
the church over this or that or the other, I'll often say this to them.
I'll say, let me give you two lists, okay?
Two lists.
And this is what I did on today.
List number one is this.
Book of Mormon translated with sear stones. Garden of
Eden is in Jackson County, Missouri. Don't date till you're 16. I mean we can keep
going with that list. Here's list number two. Patients love charity, kindness,
godliness. You see the difference between those two lists, don't you? I always tell my students,
don't become overwhelmed with becoming a scholar of list one, but be a disciple of list number two.
number two. If you want to find something over which to leave this church, you'll find it.
But there are too many beautiful things. And so many things I see in the church and in the restored gospel that we not only do well, we do better. Like Elder Ballard said five,
six years ago in conference, where else are you going to go? I worry about saying that the church
is perfect. I think it's better said the gospel of Jesus Christ is perfect. But the people in the church, hopefully we can repent.
Hopefully God allows change to happen.
I know He's allowed change to happen with me.
And I'd like to think that He has mercy and compassion and love for His church leaders.
Joseph included.
And that changes can be made. Does that mean I need to go out and be
overtly critical of the brother and no? Is it okay to have a healthy understanding
that sometimes mistakes are made and sometimes course corrections are made? Yeah,
that's good, but I don't want to give up what I have because I know I know that
those truths of the gospel which have been revealed to me. I do know I don't
just believe anymore. I know those are true. There are some things I believe.
There's some things I don't know about, but those are very, very few. But I'm so
grateful. I'm grateful for Jesus Christ and his restored gospel.
Leave that with you in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
Amen.
Thank you so much.
We want to thank Dr. Robert Line for being with us today.
John, isn't that just another awesome episode of Follow Him?
And it's not because of us, it's because of our awesome guests that we have.
Absolutely.
We want to thank, of course, our listeners.
None of this would happen if it weren't for you.
We're grateful for your support.
We're especially grateful for our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Swanson.
And then we have an amazing production crew. We want to mention them,
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Kyle Nelson, Will Stoughton, and Maria Hilton. We hope that
you will all join us again on the next episode of Follow Him. Thank you.