Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 89-92 Part 1 : Dr. Jed Woodworth
Episode Date: August 14, 2021What guiding truths that guide decision-making can you find in Section 89? Dr. Jed Woodworth opens up the Word of Wisdom and shows how the Lord rebukes without rebuking. Dr. Woodworth illustrates new ...historical relevance in a section that addresses more than health and clarifies spiritual truths in a groundbreaking section for health and obedience codes in the Christian world.Shownotes: https://followhim.co/Â Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannel"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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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.
Hello my friends, welcome to a new episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith.
I am your host.
I am here with my Marvelist co-host, John, by the way.
Hello, John.
You're supposed to use the list of adjectives.
I sent you, hey, I think that was longer.
No, no.
That your Marvelist was at the top of the list.
I get them from your wife, Kim, not from you, not from you.
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John, today's guest, another brilliant mind
from the church that we have the privilege to talk to
comes highly recommended from his peers.
Oh, we're delighted to have a Jed Woodworth with us.
He's a historian with the Church History Department, and he's
also right now currently the lead or the managing historian of the book Saints, which I think
we're all reading and really enjoying two volumes now. I'll have to ask him if a third is coming
someday. And he's got his PhD from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, specializes in American educational history.
He's married to former Shana Kluft. They have six children from ages 15 down to one.
So we're delighted to have him. Thank you for joining us today, Dr. Wardworth.
Thank you. I'm happy to be here.
Hey, I want to ask you, will there be a third volume of saints?
And will the second one, will they come out with a
really good looking leather bound one like they did the first one? Absolutely. Yes. So volume three is
pretty much in the bag. The first half is a translation and the second half is just awaiting
the first presidency review. So it's pretty much done, but they've offered excellent criticism
in the past.
They're very careful readers, so we look forward to getting some comments back from them
soon.
The volume won't appear until next spring, and the reason is that we now live in a church
where all the languages need to go live at the same time.
And so we're awaiting translation.
Saints goes live in 14 languages
on the day it comes out in English.
Wow.
So it won't be coming out this year.
The volume is outstanding.
It's gotten great reviews by our readers, internal readers.
And so just hold on, it's coming.
What a wonderful project.
Thank you for working on that.
We've enjoyed it.
If someone hasn't read the two volumes
that are available on Saints,
I don't know what we can do, Jon and I,
and I'm sure Dr. Woodworth would say the same thing,
to encourage you to take advantage of this.
It is worth your time.
Maybe it's the idea that we get it for free,
that we think, oh well, it must be like a manual.
It is special.
Yeah.
And you can listen to it.
My wife listens to it as she's getting ready sometimes.
And so you can, it's never been easier.
Right.
I would like to make a plug for a different part of saints that many people I find do not know
anything about. So if you go to your gospel library app, there is an icon that says church history and
restoration. And you click on that, it's a profile of Joseph Smith or used to be they may have changed
it. But you click on that. And at the top, you'll see
Saints Volume One, you'll see Saints Volume Two. And you'll also see an icon that says,
Church History Topics. And Church History Topics means that there is a special essay written
on over 100 different topics. And that we've conceptualized that as a deep dive
into topics that we know people will be interested in,
that we don't have time to stop and linger
in the writing of saints,
because saints is a narrative history.
And narrative histories need to go at a brisk pace.
So these are things like the angel Moroni,
or gold plates, or sear stones or what politics,
like 19th century politics.
And so if people are wondering, well, where do I get the detail that I want on other topics?
I tell them to go there. You can find the list, if you look in the footnotes of
saints, these topics are noted by a bold heading. It says church history topic and then the subject.
And so many people don't know anything about these topics. There are also a number of videos
that we've made that are outstanding. I'm sure you've shown some of these to your students, but so there's a large apparatus of content that isn't on
the running text, isn't, you know, in the regular text that you read that it is connected with
saints, it's still outstanding. One of my favorite parts of the, and this is just kind of the history, I want to be
historian in me, is I like to go read the sources cited and just see everything that, and just
read some of these papers and journal entries, and you can really go to the sources themselves
and read. And it's just, and the, as a historian, that's got to be pretty fun to have all that at your fingertips.
Right, it is. And Hank, I'm sure you read online, you see that in the footnotes, you can click on a hypertext and any document that the Church History Library houses or owns, you can read the original.
So this is another advantage over the paper copy is all of us texts have been digitized.
So if you want to have a different reading experience, read Stainson line.
We say so many times, Hank, don't we?
It has never been easier with all of these resources that are as close
as our phone to really learn this stuff. So it's a great, great time to live.
Dr. Woodworth, our lesson this week is on four sections of the doctrine covenants. A famous one,
doctrine covenant section 89, and then you have also sections 90, 91, and 92.
So it's February of 1833,
the church is coming up on its third year anniversary.
So take us back as far as you want
and set us up for the context.
What's happening that leads to section 89
and these next revelations?
Well, thank you very much.
So in December of 1832, the Lord says
in the revelation we now know is section 88
that he wants the saints in Kirtland to build a temple
and a school.
And the school begins that winter,
the temple is going to take a number of months to get going.
But Joseph Smith almost immediately
convenes a school which you can think of it
as the first missionary training center.
These are elders older than our current elders today
who are being called into the field
and they need training and instruction.
And so he assembles them together in the new OK Whitney
storehouse where many of the revelations were received.
And they meet in the back room on the main floor.
And they're basically two contexts for DNC 89.
One is a large context and one is a small context.
The large context is the problem of drunkenness
in America. This was a huge problem in the 1820s. In fact, by 1830, the per capita drinking
rate in the United States was higher than at any other time in our by three times today. So, yeah, historians have shown that the average person drank seven gallons of alcohol
per year.
Now if you know what a gallon jug is like, that's a huge amount.
And this is man, woman, and child.
And so this was a large problem in America. And part of this, part of the reason for
the problem is that the alternatives to alcohol were not very good. So impure drinking
water, bad milk, homogenization had not yet been discovered. And there was problems with
meat eating because you couldn't, there was no refrigeration, you couldn't keep meat fresh.
And so as a result of these problems, there was a dietary and temperance reform movement going on in the early 1830s.
In fact, there was a temperance society in Kirtland that the saints came into, so they didn't
found it.
It was already there when they moved to Kirtland.
So this is the large context with a lot of different swirling propositions for reform
in the air.
The small context we all know about, which is that when Joseph stood up to teach in the
school of the prophets, it's a very small room if you've been into the store.
And there are probably 20 men in the room. There was at least one woman who was there on the first day,
but all the accounts that we have say that it was men who were going on their missions.
And as soon as he started talking, teaching them, they would put tobacco
in their pipes and begin smoking. Some of them would chew tobacco and spit it on the floor.
And according to a later account from Brigham Young, who was not in the room, by the way,
but he learned this from participants, Emma complained to Joseph that she could not clean the floor.
Now, I'll tell you just a sidelight on this.
So my colleague, Ligine Karuth,
she is one of the few people in the world
who know Pittman Shorthand,
which is no longer taught in American colleges or high schools.
So it's really a 19th century shorthand
that no one knows much about.
Well, we have the sermon
where Brigham Young talked about Emma complaining.
And in the published version
in the Journal of Discourses,
it just makes it sound like Emma is upset
that she has to clean this mess.
But Ligine Karuth read the shorthand of the sermon,
the unpublished shorthand, and found that in the shorthand,
it actually says that Emma was upset
that she could not get the floor clean,
that she tried with some hired girls to clean the floor
and that she wasn't able to get it clean.
So in the shorthand, it makes Emma look more like a perfectionist
and less like a complainer.
And so I found that detail interesting
about the context.
So basically we have this problem where you have the Lord's prophet
who's trying to teach profound spiritual truths
in like a Gandalf cloud of,
you know, smoke circles. And this is a contradiction, right? I mean, I think today we can see that,
that it's, it's, it muddles the message. So as a result of that, Joseph Preyz and receives this revelation, there are several
who are with him at the time he received it. It was received in the evening. And that's pretty much
the context of a local and a global context. I'm intrigued by what you said about alcohol. Maybe it
was safer than the water back then. And when I served my mission in the Philippines, and it was almost a mission rule to go buy
a soft drink, so to stay hydrated, because it was so hot, and not to drink the water.
But if you're out and you're really hot, go buy a bottle of pop on a Sunday, even, because
you've got to stay hydrated and the water, if you
just get water from somebody off the street, this is before bottled water was so prevalent,
but that was interesting that you said the alcohol, there weren't a lot of other alternatives,
is that how you put it?
Well, the alternatives were not safe.
It was a huge problem and people could see it. They could see families being disrupted,
marriages being broken up, and a number of reformers really rooted in Boston, formed the
American Temperance Society in 1826. And that society was committed to T-todalling, namely
total abstinence of alcohol. And so part of the society was to go around and
get pledges from people of who would be willing to totally give up alcohol. So this was a
plank that was floating around. But I'd like to talk more later about the competition of
these planks. And I think one of the things that This revelation does is it helps people to arbitrate between
Competing claims. Yeah, I was gonna say if you're into the temperance movement what options are you offering?
if you're
Okay, well, I promised to not drink alcohol, right what are my options now?
Part part time I promised to not drink alcohol. Right. What are my options now? Part time, temperate.
Right.
I mean, most alarming for us today is that children were
drinking.
Children would drink all day.
Sometimes this would be their apple juice or their
whatever, ice water.
And to see kids, and of course,
addiction was not well understood there in this time period
but it could be seen that you just keep going back to the barrel.
You become dependent.
I love that the backstory always makes things so interesting and to know that backdrop
for section 89 is wonderful.
Let's jump into the actual verses here.
What would you like us to see here?
What can we talk about?
I'm wondering if we should talk about principles.
The first one that stands out to me is something
that I think is easily overlooked,
which is that we should expect revelation
to rebuke our bad behavior from time to time.
So the doctrine of covenants, as we know, is a compilation of revelation,
and each revelation has its own history, it has its own genesis, what brings us about.
And I think we tend to imagine that many of these questions that generate the revelations
are intellectual questions.
Think for example of Joseph and Sidney pondering
John V and that results in
doctrine and covenant 76 or Joseph asking
what happened to John the beloved and you get DNC seven
or Joseph, once again, Joseph and Oliver pondering
third Nephi 11 and the meaning of priesthood and out of that comes the NC 13 and the words from John the Baptist and so on.
But there is another kind of revelation and this one is one of those and that is the
saints are doing something that is harmful and they don't recognize the harm and they
need the Lord's voice to correct them.
And so in this revelation,
this is much like DNC 50,
where there's an excess of spiritual gifts,
and the saints are not practicing soundly
in this area of spiritual gifts.
So we shouldn't be surprised if the profit calls out our behavior today.
This is a point that really stands out to me. The profit is there to help realist back in
against our worst instincts. We shouldn't assume we're doing everything correctly.
That's right. Now I would add though, another point that stands out to me in this section is that we
can rebuke without rebuking.
We can rebuke without rebuking.
And here's what I mean by this.
The individuals who are offending here are not called out.
The revelation doesn't condemn chewing and spitting.
It doesn't talk about the people who are smoking pipes. It doesn't
rebuke Emma for complaining. What it does simply is it says tobacco is not good or alcohol is not
for the use of man. And so that is a gentle rebuke without condemning the specifics of the behavior. It's like saying anger's not good
when really what we're trying to say is,
don't pull your sister's hair.
The Lord doesn't have to say,
don't pull your sister's hair to make the point.
And so the level of generalization here,
I think is instructive for us.
We can teach correct principles
without directly condemning
offending behavior. And Zebedee Kultren, who was one of the participants in the school, said that
when Joseph read the revelation to the men, many of them immediately broke their pipes and
threw them into the fire. So they recognized the behavior that was being condemned, even though it wasn't directly spoken of.
There's no mention of pipes in the revelation, but they were able to discern,
this is what needs to come. This change in behavior needs to come out of the implications of the
revelation. That's fantastic. Yeah, that's like an application of a principle, right?
Here's the general principle, and they're applying it.
And it teaches me about being, it teaches me how to be a better parent.
Yeah, they're rebuking without rebuking.
Let's glorify the principle instead of, that was a bad behavior.
Right.
Let's not harp on the behavior.
Let's teach these principles.
And the Lord is very, I've noticed the Lord doesn't get really emotional when people do
things wrong, right?
Like I do as a parent.
Sometimes I parent out of emotion.
But the Lord seems very calm and collected here.
Let me give you some advice.
Let me give you some counsel.
Right.
Well, I think we learned something from that Hank. Revelation requires trust. Let me give you some advice. Let me give you some counsel. Right.
Well, I think we learned something from that Hank.
Revelation requires trust.
It doesn't necessarily require scaring.
And this is true of parenting as well.
When I looked into the temperance literature
in the 1820s and 30s, what I found was a lot of scary stories.
There were a lot of four stories where the object of the writer
is to scare people into changing, to terrify them, that this could happen to them. Like,
if you are an addict, dot, dot, dot, you know, you're going to turn into a wife-beater,
or your home will be destroyed. But all of that is absent in DNC 89.
There's no attempt to scare the reader into changing his behavior or her behavior.
The document is incredibly confident and self-assured.
It just says, this is not good.
And I love that about it.
I love the simplicity of it.
And the lack of larding down with, here are all the reasons why you should do what I'm saying.
I have a question about just the phrase. It's become so much of our jargon now. We don't think
about it, but word of wisdom is is that like it because it he says not by way of
commandments. So is it kind of like, well, here's a word to the wise,
because now that's become a,
it's become its own noun, the word of wisdom.
But was that a common phrase back then?
Or is that what it meant kind of a word to the wise?
Right.
Well, it's a good question.
I think it would require us to search for that phrase. I admire about
the revelation. I call it the Spandex Principle. So Spandex adjusts for the size and shape
of the moment. Constricts or expands, right? We all know this from our experience. It
fills the space. Okay, I've got the funny men laughing. That's a good sign.
I love the spandex principle. Keep going. Okay. So the spandex principle has to do with these phrases
we've been talking about that it's something's not good or it's not for the body. Now note that the Lord here does not use a more rigid language, thou shalt not.
And that's important because this is a culture that really is not prepared for thou shalt not.
For the reasons we've already articulated, they don't have many options.
And if you say thou shalt not, you're really condemning people to sickness.
And probably early death. So, and yet, the flexibility in this language allows the saints to understand
the word of wisdom in moderate terms. We know in the 19th century that the saints condemned
drunkenness, so excess use of alcohol, but a moderate use,
if you had a glass of wine or a glass of beer,
on occasion was not condemned.
And you were not prohibited from, say,
serving in the church or going to the temple
if you were a moderate drinker.
But when science caught up,
the science was not
up on how to purify water or milk or how to refrigerate when science caught up then the language became more strict and
this is not good for you became
more of a thou shalt not command and And that's where we are today, essentially,
where because we have many options available to us,
we have refrigerators where we can keep
different kinds of beverages,
we grape juice doesn't have to turn into alcohol
because we can keep it refrigerated.
We now have a more strict standard.
And so I love this about the revelation. I love the fact that the
language allows for a 19th century more modern interpretation, but it also allows for a more strict
interpretation. And that couldn't be the case if the language was strict from the beginning.
That's a beautiful idea. It reminds me of the parables. We mentioned this earlier before
we started, but the parables of Jesus are timeless because they're so flexible in the principles
they teach. And I love that section 89 lines right up with that same idea that this is going
to, this is not just a revelation for 1833, but it's going to be useful in 20, 21 as well, because of the way it's going to be worded.
Right. And you know, there's another principle I think that comes out of this,
Hank, based on what you just observed. And that is, revelation can be anticipatory. So,
it's not just the case that revelation is responding to the immediate context.
So when you ask at the beginning, what is the context of this revelation?
The assumption here is, tell me about the past.
What is the immediate past?
And that thinking is that the past informs the revelation.
Well, but the future context can also inform why a revelation comes.
And we see this in the phrase right at the beginning in consequence of evils and designs,
which do and will exist in the hearts of conspiring men in the last days.
A wonderful phrase, I am confident that the saints had no idea who the conspiring men were in 1833.
But by the late 20th century, it had become clear that tobacco companies
knew that smoking caused cancer long before the US Surgeon General proclaimed
such in I think 1963. And we knew from we learned from class action lawsuits
that were given or carried out against these tobacco companies, it was
revealed that they had known that smoking was harmful.
And yet they held it down.
And so we sometimes limit a revelation to answering the immediate problem.
But sometimes the immediate problem is 100 years away.
It may be 150 years away.
The main point I wanted to make is that the relevance
of this idea of revelation as anticipatory
is found in current advertising.
So the Mara Borough man, which was a thing when we were young,
we know that iconic image of the cool hip cowboy
who's smoking Mara Boroughs,
that was designed to make smoking look
like something everyone wanted to do.
And so it minimized the risks by saying, well, if you want to be like this guy,
then you should smoke. But today, we still see that in alcohol advertising. I can't watch an NBA game
without having to instruct my children. Now, look what they're doing here. They're divorcing the consequence from
the behavior. They want alcohol to look totally carefree. You can go on the beach and have
a party and you can be forever young and your body we see, we see that this revelation is perpetually relevant.
It's not an 1833 document that is just confined to say a temperance problem in early America.
It's still with us. The problem is still with us. And so therefore we should heed the
document. Oh, I love what you said. It's a, it's a you call it an anticipatory. You look at two phrases in verse four
which do and will exist. That's future. So I've warned you and for warned you again for the future. I marked both of those two saying look this is
this is what you call it anticipatory revelation. Yes. Yeah. The Lord loves
What'd you call it, anticipatory revelation? Yes.
Yeah.
The Lord loves alliteration.
And for your editors who always want to cut your most beautiful alliterative phrases,
you can just tell them, God is a lover of alliteration.
He likes alliteration.
Yeah.
Point to that, right?
For us, you're the truth.
Yeah.
The amount of damage alcohol has caused in this world is is innumerable. It is is is vast.
I think I think I've mentioned before on here that the guy in my ward that say addiction
recovery missionary and he's taken me out to the prison a few times and the first time
I went and sat in a gym with a bunch of these inmates, you know, before I gave my talk,
I said, Steve, why are they all here? And his answer was
95% of them are here for drug addiction, alcohol addiction, maybe prescription drug addiction, and
crimes committed while under the influence. And I just remember going, oh, you know,
right so much happens when you're under the influence.
You're not in your best mind. And so the abuse of some of these things is, and now all these guys,
I mean, the reason I asked him the question, I'm looking out on some of these,
these prisoners, there's these inmates, and they look like guys in your ward. And it was just,
it was like, Steve, why are it was just it was like Steve,
why are they here? It was very interesting. I did a fireside of youth conference out in
South Bend once and Indiana and I was talking there was a man there who was a lawyer for the state
And he said that nine out of ten of every crimes he has to, you know, in this college town, nine out of ten of every crime he has to prosecute has something to do with alcohol, a fight,
a burglary, what it had something to do with substance abuse and
someone committing a crime while under the influence or wanting to
you know get money to
Become under the influence. So I just I when the Lord says in consequence of evil designs
Which do and will exist in the hearts of conspiring men. And I just think this is a landmark revelation that if
followed would probably rid the world of a third or more of its problems.
So I'd like to make a comment on that, which is the church is less than three years old
at this time. And yet from a from a large kind of macro level view, the ambition of
this revelation is to announce that the church is a world religion. And let me explain
what I mean by that. The revelation exposes a weakness in Christianity. Namely, there is no health code. There is no prohibition against alcohol.
I mean, the Puritans loved alcohol. They called it the good creature of God. And they didn't love
drunkenness. But alcohol was permitted, even among the Puritans. Now Catholics, of course,
allowed alcohol. They had, you could give it away for lent or they had other reasons to not have it periodically,
but it wasn't prohibited. And so the reform movement going on in America at this time was really
coming into a vacuum that the Christian ministers and Christian doctrine was not filling. And so by
announcing that alcohol is not good or strong drink is not good, our restored
Christianity then, I will call it Mormonism, it becomes closer to other world religions
that have a prohibition against alcohol, namely Islam.
And Judaism has a health code. There are other Eastern religions, Sikhism, Hinduism,
Prohibit, alcohol to some degree, and meat eating.
So these other world religions have some kind of
all-encompassing code.
That is, it's not just about the spiritual,
it's the physical and the spiritual merge together.
But Christianity, as it came to Joseph Smith and the other early converts, it did not have this.
It had been reduced to something like a sermon on Sunday and good behavior during the week,
but it wasn't all encompassing. So there's a great ambition in the revelation that I admire,
and that Marxus is coming on to a world stage.
I really like that. It reminds me of section 20,
where the Lord gives all these instructions to a whole house full of members,
as if it's going to get bigger, right?
Because he's saying, I want you to visit the house
of every member and they're saying, well,
there's six of us.
It's not that hard.
We just, yeah, you know, we visit each other.
But the Lord has something much bigger in mind.
And so Section 89 does seem to be ambitious in that way.
So I like that.
We've got an anticipatory revelation,
now an ambitious revelation.
And let me accent the ambitiousness of it
by pointing out something in the very beginning
in the first verse, you look at who is this revelation
addressed to.
It says, for the benefit of the council of high priests,
now that should not surprise us.
Many revelations are addressed to the elders of my church
or the High Priest.
But then it goes in a direction that is not often seen
in the revelations.
And the church, meaning the saints in Kirtland,
and the church would include everyone, right?
I mean, men, women, and children,
even those who are not on the Council of
High Priest, in other words, and the saints in Zion, meaning in Missouri. So you've got
an attempt here to be all-encompassing. Then you go over to verse three and what do you find? That it's adapted to the weak, which is fascinating.
You can ask yourself, who are the weak?
Well, the weak would be children.
The weak would be aged people, sick people.
The Lord is saying, this law can be lived by everyone.
This is such an important point.
No one is immune from this. No one can say, I can't live this.
And so that's part of the ambition, not just that, oh,
the restored gospel is now going to have a health code to it
that Christianity didn't have, but rather we want
everyone to be living this, the Lord is saying.
Yeah.
Um, Judd, I think it might surprise some of our listeners to find out that this was not
a commandment in verse two in 1833, and yet it becomes what you would say as a
commandment later on. What do we know about that process? And I think you alluded to
it when you said, listen, if the Lord throws this as a commandment, they are not
prepared for that. So it shows us how merciful the Lord is that he understands
by where to throw
this out as a commandment, most of you would be condemned because you just couldn't do it.
So do we know how it eventually becomes what we know today?
We do know the basic outlines. And so I'll highlight some of those features. We know that if someone wanted to live
the word of wisdom as it is currently live, that is with exactness, that they would be welcome
to do so, and they would not be shunned. No one would say, oh, you're being so austere.
But that at the same time, if someone wanted to, this is, is when I say someone I'm talking about in Kurtlin Missouri the novu period.
If someone wanted to live in a moderate way wouldn't have stood out to the austere people oh well you're not living it the way it should be lived lived in other words there was a lack of judgment.
for probably a generation. However, those who in our current language broke the word of wisdom,
there was a sense that they could be doing better.
So on the trail, West,
coffee was had in the morning,
but there are some indications that
not everyone wanted to drink coffee and that this was something that a person could feel bad about drinking coffee.
But it was not prohibited. See, in a voluntary organization, there are limits on what you can do.
If someone is not keeping the commandments as taught by the leaders of a church, what can you do? What are the options? Well, you can say you're not going to be able to hold a calling or a high church calling. We're not going to put you in a position of leadership.
And most tellingly, it would be we're not going to allow you to attend the temple. So you have to pass a worthiness interview.
Now, there were worthiness interviews
in the 19th century, but they weren't strict.
And not until the Heber J. Grant administration,
about 1920 and 1921 did the loop close
to a point where if you could not affirm
that you were keeping the word of wisdom exactly,
then you were kept from the temple.
And prior to that time, when President Joseph Smith, who was President Grants predecessor,
was asked, he was asked this question once, if a little old man comes to the doors of the temple who has been faithful all of his adult life,
has been a regular temple goer, but smells of tobacco.
Do we let him in?"
And he answered the question, yes, you let him in.
But by the 1920s, that case had closed.
So now, if the man was not keeping the word of wisdom
exactly, he would be turned away from the temple doors. So again, this is something that
makes sense how over time, when the options multiply it for healthy drinking, by healthy
drinking, I mean non-alcoholic beverages.
Then you now have the ability to say,
look, you really don't have to drink.
But there's another point I'd like to make about this,
and which is that I used the word austere earlier.
The fact that in the modern time, in the 20th century
and now the 21st century, Latter-day Saints
have been identified with the word of wisdom.
It creates a little distance between us and our fellows.
But the point is that now the word of wisdom is a marker of division or of special covenant,
separation.
And it wasn't in the 19th century,
but it is today,
it's taken the place of plural marriage in that regard.
Plural marriage in the 19th century
was the way that saints were identified as being separate.
When plural marriage receded,
the word of wisdom arose to fill that space
of boundary maintenance.
So I happen to think that it's totally inspired that I don't think anyone plotted out, oh,
we need a new marker of boundary maintenance, what is that going to be?
Let's make it the word of wisdom.
It didn't work that way.
But in actual fact, that has what has materialized is the word of wisdom
has become the primary marker of separation,
of covenantal separation of the latter day saints
from the rest of the world.
The idea of Exodus, I think, a peculiar people,
right, a separated people.
Right.
And in that respect, though, it speaks to the failure
of temperance reform.
Temperance reform acted as a burst,
really burst, the burst was 10 years.
And if you had made a pledge in the 1820s or 30s,
you might have kept it into the 1850s.
But the reality was that prohibition failed.
I mean, in the 20th century, there was a period of about 15 years where alcohol was prohibited, but that failed.
And now, of course, we see alcohol is everywhere.
It's on college campuses to an alarming degree.
And we are back to an alcoholic nation in a lot of respects.
But because we have our dietary code and the alcohol prohibition rooted in revelation,
that allows us to be grounded in something that is not just transitory. It's not just a reform that comes and goes
with
people who are aggressive in their reform impulse
because we just have it in the text and it's going to remain as a part of the fabric of who we are
Yeah, this this has been great
talking about alcohol and I wonder, could we talk about
some of the other things in here like hot drinks? Like what if you heat up your doctor,
Pepper? No, but can we talk about about that? And I would love to hear some of the backdrop for
that as well back in this time. Yeah, sure. So, one of the concerns at this time among Americans generally, mainly educated people,
was there was a concern that if you drank something that is hot, that it might lead you to
be more susceptible to disease.
So at this time, cholera, which today is, you know, we don't hear
much about cholera, but it was a huge epidemic. And there were cholera outbreaks in Europe
and around the world. And in 1831 and 32, there's a cholera epidemic in the United States.
We know the Zion's camp ended with cholera basically breaking up the camp.
So it did affect the saints in that way. But cholera was a scourge that reformers were
trying to get rid of. And they argued that if you changed your diet and you ate wealth
and part of the plank was no meat and no hot drinks, that all would be well with you.
So this was something that the saints
would have been thinking about,
but there was also a problem here,
and that was that many reformers were putting forward coffee
and tea as a substitute for alcohol.
Many people don't realize that coffee drinking
had a beginning in this country.
And it really took off in the 1830s as a substitute for alcohol. Now, tea drinking was out of
favor because it was considered British. And the British were persona non grata in the
1830s mainly because they had started to wars with us.
And so tea wasn't as popular, but coffee being a hot drink was a foul of, well, if I don't
drink alcohol, what am I going to drink instead?
Well, let's drink coffee.
Well here, the Lord basically rejects both.
Now notice that hot drinks are not specified, so there's no mention of coffee
or tea, and this, I think, leads to another principle about revelation, which is that revelation
demands more revelation. Revelation demands clarification, interpretation. So by Navu, Hironsmith defined hot drinks as tea and coffee, and it's basically remained
that to the current day.
So we should not be surprised back to the idea of the revelation being flexible.
If there are going to be additions to it, we know harmful drugs has been added to it in the 20th century.
There is some talk about other elements like energy drinks being added.
I mean, not added, but disgust as being prohibited by the word of wisdom.
Chad, there's an interesting set of verses, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 that talks about meat and meat eating.
What did that mean to the saints in the 1830s?
What do you think it means for us today?
Well, as I mentioned earlier, there was a problem with bad meat, meat spoiling in this era.
And it's unclear to me whether people understood, you know, how long meat lasted.
It may be the case that many people lack the
education to know that what we had here was spoilage. I mean, we know that germs
were not understood until really the 1870s and 1880s. So there's a lot of stuff
that we know today that we can't take for granted for this people. And so there
is the Lord coming to the rescue in a way in these verses. I love what
the Lord says here. He uses the word sparingly about beasts and eating flesh. Now today we automatically
interpret sparingly in light of science. We say, well, red meat is bad for you because it adds
cholesterol to your bloodstream and so on and and that's great
It's part of the flexibility the spandex principle that I was that I was talking about
Early, but I'm gonna be quoting that principle for a long time
Great, I'm not gonna wear it, but I might talk about it. Yeah, so we're, sparingly means different things to different people
according to when they live.
So in this era,
sparingly would be,
you know, you can eat meat at a time when meat is safe,
namely in the winter, when there is cold.
Once again, I'm not clear on whether they understood
that meat actually preserved in the winter, but they did know that people
didn't get as sick from eating meat in the winter because they could observe that meat eaters
were tended to be healthier in the winter of and in the summer. So that's why the Lord would be saying, you eat in times of winter or cold or famine,
namely times when you need it, when you absolutely have to have meat or when it can be preserved.
Now, as I mentioned earlier about refrigeration, I think one of the reasons why we haven't
attended to this provision in the word of wisdom in the 20th century is because
we do have the ability to refrigerate meat in times of summer, in times when it otherwise
might spoil.
So there hasn't been the impulse to limit flesh eating.
But we do know that there are different kinds of meat that offer
different health benefits and deficits and so not all meat is equal and so I think we're just
allowed to understand this this passage in the revelation what we what we will
We should always be paying attention to how the brethren interpret the passage.
And I think there could have come a time when limitations on world supply of meat.
I mean, I don't know if you've been paying attention recently to cyber attacks on meat,
but meat supply is down. So it could be that this passage emerges as more of a point of discussion in the future.
I think this is a good time for me to mention Andy's article.
I just want people to be aware of it because I found it so interesting.
Let me say in verse 14, there's a right at the end, there's a phrase that the Lord says,
in the fals of heaven and all the wild animals that run or creep on the end, there's a phrase that the Lord says in the fals of heaven and all the wild animals that run or creep on the earth, these have God made for the use of man.
And he talks about only in times of famine and excess of hunger.
Well, there's an article written in 2018 by a friend of all of ours.
His name is Andrew Hedges, the title of the article is called a forbearance of restraint and then American wildlife
and the word of wisdom. It talks about basically the essence of Andy's research. Dr. Hedges'
research here is what hunting looked like from 1560 to 1833?
I mean, he did a lot of research for this article.
And he says that the idea that Joseph Smith is bringing up here
is very counter to the time.
I'll just read this quote.
Joseph Smith recorded the word of wisdom
at a significant point in the history of American wildlife.
For over 200 years, colonists, settlers, and citizens
had shot, trapped, and snared an incredible variety of wild birds
and mammals in their midst.
They had used them as regular, easily obtained sources of food,
both for themselves and their animals,
as well as sources for clothing and trade items.
Americans has also pursued them as pests, hunted them for recreation, of food, both for themselves and their animals, as well as sources for clothing and trade items.
Americans has also pursued them as pests, hunted them for recreation.
Hunting had been largely unregulated with the result that incredible numbers of some
species appear to have been regularly killed.
He talks about how in the 1500s, explorers talk about the North America and the vast amount of wildlife that's just
unbelievable in their journals.
And by the, you know, by Joseph Smith's day, at least on the eastern side of the country,
they're rarely seen, rarely around.
And the idea, Andy says, is that people said, well, when we run out here, we'll just keep
moving west. There's always more out to the run out here, we'll just keep moving west.
There's always more out to the west.
There's always more out to the west.
The article isn't anti-hunting by any means,
but he does say that Joseph Smith comes up with this idea
of almost the idea of stewardship over the earth
and the wild animals of the earth,
stewardship over the earth and the wild animals of the earth, that this is kind of a
a counter-cultural idea that God has made these for the use of man, but it's supposed to be in
in moderation, right? The Lord uses the word sparingly like you said, Jed. So again, anybody who wants to read the article,
you can find it online for free, Andrew Hege's.
He also did a Y religion podcast on it
that I would recommend called Wildlife
in the Word of Wisdom in August of 2020.
Anyway, just, I just wanted to give a shout out
to Andrew Hege's and the incredible work he did there.
And I find it really fascinating
that he's looked at something
that really hasn't been looked at before.
Well, and after thought on what you're saying there, Hank,
I think on the issue of meat,
the Dr. N. Covenant's 89 really is a moderate view.
I think you use that word.
The reform, the popular reform plank at that time was vegetarianism.
So no eating of meat and that if you ate meat at any time that would disturb your bowels and upset
your ability to withstand illness. And of course, the non-reform plank would be, you can just kill as many animals as you want
and eat meat 24, 7 and not even worry about it. We now know scientifically that's
untenable, not only for the standpoint of the health of your own body,
but the worldwide economy could not sustain that kind of a mediating. And so, so this is a moderate view
to use the word sparingly and to say that, yes,
meat is ordained for the use of humankind,
but to be done sparingly.
When we talked about, I think in our second episode
with Steve Harper about Joseph Smith's leg surgery, I think we've got
this idea somehow that Joseph Smith lived the word of wisdom like we do today even before he knew
about it when he was seven years old. He refused to drink alcohol and then we find out later that Joseph Smith actually,
from what I understand, occasionally drank wine
in the Navu period, and that can really rock people's faith
because they were told that Joseph Smith lived it like we do.
So, him refusing alcohol as a child,
that didn't have anything to do with the word of wisdom.
Well, so it's helpful to make a distinction that
Latter-day Saints don't really make because we're not part of a drinking culture,
but there is a distinction that is made in this period between hard and mild.
So hard alcohol would be whiskey mainly, something that has a higher proof, much higher
proof, and a mild alcohol would be like beer or wine. And so when he refused the alcohol,
it's not just alcohol, you have to make the distinction. It was whiskey. And whiskey
was used because it had such a high proof that it would help dull the pain. If you tried beer
on that, I mean, that wouldn't work. It would have almost no effect. Some people would never drink
whiskey, but they might drink a glass of wine. So maybe in verse seven, strong drinks could be, like you said, hard liquor as opposed to
normal. Well, this is part of the spandex, because what is what is strong? See, it's noteworthy
that the word is not hard. If it were hard, that would give the saints an out clause. Oh,
it's just talking about whiskey or maybe rum. It's just talking about whiskey.
But the fact that it's strong suggests, yeah, it's really probably including anything
that has an alcoholic effect.
And so that allows flexibility in the 19th century, but then in the modern era, we understand what strong means. This is anything that produces
an alcoholic bus. Right. And I like how you said earlier, let's listen to what our modern day,
our current prophets and apostles are saying about the word ofdom. I mean, we have a medical doctor, a very,
a very, a very good medical doctor
as the head of the church right now.
And so if anybody's mind is prepared to teach us more
about the Word of Wisdom, I would say it's President Nelson.
So getting back to meet,
there is some controversy about verse 13.
Let me read it to you.
And it is pleasing unto me that they should not be used
only in times of winter or of cold or of famine.
Now, the way that reads with a comma after used,
the comma restricts the meaning to,
you should only eat meat in winter,
but winter cold or famine.
Now, let's say you take out the comma,
let me read it in a different way,
and it is pleasing unto me
that they should not be used only in times of winter
or of cold or famine.
That makes it sound like someone is saying
that you can only eat meat in these times, but I'm here to tell you you can eat meat at any time.
Now what's interesting is we read it in the restricted way with the comma, but the comma
hasn't always been there. It entered the text in 1921 when James Talmadge was ahead of a committee to revise the
doctrine and covenants. And according to Joseph Elling Smith, when he saw the comma in there, he said
who put that in there. Now this comes from T Edgar Lyon, so he Edgar Lyon was a great historian and
institute teacher at the University of Utah.
So I would take that for what you will, but if you take the comma out, it's more liberal
in its view of mediating than if the comma is inserted.
How fat.
Yeah, that's fun.
That's a fun.
The comma controversy.
We could come.
There are some barbecues where I don't want the comma.
And there's sometimes I do want to come.
Right. I think when, uh, when we go to John, by the way,
house, we'll bring the 1876 edition of the Doctrine and Covenant,
and he'll have it open to put it on the grill.
All of the verse that doesn't have the meat eating comma.
The meat eating comma. We, the meat eating comma.
We've got some great phrases today.
The spandex principle and the meat eating comma.
These are.
Who says punctuation isn't powerful?
This is a meat eating comma.
Yeah, or we can call it the meat lovers comma.
Yeah.
That's yeah, that's fantastic.
Someone might say, well, which one is it?
And then I love how you said that.
Hey, read it as you will.
This is this one's up to you.
I like, I like the Lord's emphasis here.
Not just don't do these things, but do eat these things.
Right.
So I'd like to comment about that,
which is we pay so much attention
to the prohibitions in verses 5 to 9.
But we forget about the affirmations. There's actually a lot more affirmation in the revelation than there is prohibition.
So verses 10 and 11
praise herbs, and then there's the the hedging on the meat. It's an endorsement of meat, but with some reservations in
on the meat. It's an endorsement of meat, but with some reservations in 12 and 13. And then a full five verses go back to affirmations of grain and fruit and so on. And there's a...
So I think that's telling that there's a lot more affirming here, and especially grain. There's
more set of grain in DNC 89 than any other substance. So we should attend to that.
There's a great phrase in verse 17
that oats are for the horse.
And when I read this, I think of Samuel Johnson
who wrote the first dictionary of the English language
dating to 1755, famously defining oats as a grain
which in England is generally given to horses, but
in Scotland supports the people.
And this is taken as a slide against the Scottish.
Okay.
I heard that in there.
I was like, oh, so the Lord is saying oats are for horses, which is part of the dictionary
definition.
But of course, in the modern year, we found ways of using all of these grains
for human consumption.
Let's look at the promise, the last four verses.
Because to me, the promise,
the last four verses change this from,
it's not just a health code, it's not just a temporal law.
This is a very spiritual thing.
What do you, tell us about the last four thing. Tell us about the last four verses.
Tell us about the promises.
Well, I have two points to make about the promises. The first is that keeping the revelation
offers real blessings in the here and now. The way people respond to what I just said
would be, well, dove course.
You gain blessings here and now for keeping commandments.
But it's actually more profound, I think, than we may realize.
Namely, in this way, Christianity typically has been a religion that reserved its blessings
for the afterlife.
If you think about the be attitudes, Jesus really suggests that being a Christian is hard.
You know, blessed are those who are persecuted for my sake, for example, or
and so the idea there is that you can be persecuted for Jesus in this life, but in the afterlife,
the Lord will make it all up to you and that all will be made right in the next life.
But DNC89 has a different ethic. The ethic is that the blessings come now. You can count on these
blessings now. I mean, look at something like run and not be weary. This is not an afterlife
promise. This is here and now in this life. Wisdom and great treasures of knowledge.
What is wisdom and great treasures of knowledge in the afterlife?
Yeah, of course, we all want that, but we can have those things here and now by keeping the word of wisdom. And so there's this worldly component instead of an other worldly component
that I really love about these promises. Hank, I want to back you up on the use of what
Elder Holland said about about the great scientific things we've made, antibiotics, drugs
that are helpful. Alma 6021, when Maroni is writing his letter to
Pohoran, and he really hates thrones. He mentions thrones a few times, but he doesn't like those.
Verse 21, Do you suppose the Lord will still deliver us while we sit upon our thrones? That's
a third time he mentioned. He mentions thrones three times in this. And let's end to this phrase,
do not make use of the means which the Lord has provided for us.
And so I used that before to talk about,
you're given somebody a blessing who's sick.
No, I don't believe in taking a pill.
Well, shouldn't we make use of the things
the Lord has provided for us?
I like that principle there.
Yeah, so do I.
And just to be very clear, I can see some, I don't want anyone to stop
listening saying they're trying to take away my diet coke. We are going to leave this in your
hands. All of you listeners, this is up to you. I've tried to take a, we have a wonderful,
a wonderful member of our team, the great Lisa Spice, who if you try to take away her diet coke she turns into golem from Lord of the
Rings, right?
Like my precious, they're trying to take it from us, right?
We are not trying to take it from you.
No, and I really think, Hank, you're right, we don't want this to become a diet podcast,
but we do want people to see these principles and then adapt as Spandex does.
Yes.
I think, I don't know how to say this delicately, but me and my sweet tooth really need to
think through section 89, because just because it's not alcohol, it's not coffee or tea, but it could definitely be an excess of sugar that I personally
take in because I've got a sweet tooth.
I think the Lord would say, are you being careful there?
But again, I don't want to steal anybody's chocolate either.
We're going to lose half our listeners here, John, if we take away from it.
Oh, I think, when President Hunter's biography came out, how are W Hunter?
And he talked about how they passed around a box of chocolates in the temple in their
core of the 12 meetings and how the higher you rose in seniority, the more selection you
had. Finally got old enough that he got the milk chocolate ones instead of just the dark
chocolate ones. I was so glad to hear they were eating chocolate in the temple, I can't even tell you.
I remember reading a Brigham Young owned taverns out here
in the West prior to 1921.
Brigham Young?
Yeah, did he own some bars or taverns?
Porter Rockwell did.
Yeah, Porter Rockwell owned a tavern in Navu.
Yeah, in fact, he operated, he served liquor in
Joseph Smith's parlor in the Navu house. Before we wrap up our discussion on section 89 in the
Word of Wisdom, I want to I want to encourage the parents out there. As you teach to this, especially
with your teenagers, open up the for the strength of youth pamphlet, there's a link to it right in the Come Follow Me manual for this lesson. It says, Modern
Prophets have also warned of harmful substances and behaviors beyond those mentioned in the
Word of Wisdom, and you can click on that, read it with your children, and then answer this
question, what are you prompted to do better, do better care for your mind and body? I think
that's an excellent supplement for our discussion today and in people teaching at home.
You know, Hank, I want to back you up on that. I think that a tendency today would be to stay
in front of a screen and maybe that's an impression. I love this idea of running,
of finding wisdom treasures. There's something just wonderful about being outside and being curious.
What did one of our other podcasts or say, one of our guests said that the cure for boredom
is curiosity. And there is no cure. No cure for curiosity. The strength of youth pamphlet discusses exercise.
It also discusses emotional health,
which is something that's not necessarily
talked about in the word of wisdom,
but that is part of it.
It says your emotional health
is may affect your spiritual and physical wellbeing.
Disappointment, occasional sadness
or part of mortal life.
However, if you have prolonged feelings
of sadness, hopelessness, anxiety or depression,
talk with your parents and your bishop and seek help.
That's another addition that is more of a 2021, maybe, topic, but it is definitely part
of the word of wisdom is taking care of your mental health.
So we hope anybody out there struggling with any sort of mental health problem to talk
to someone about these things, because that's part of the word of wisdom.
It's part of seeking the best care.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you