Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 89-92 Part 2 : Dr. Jed Woodworth
Episode Date: August 15, 2021Dr. Woodworth returns to discuss Joseph's desire for forgiveness, how the Lord magnifies each member's gifts, how the Saints are instructed to study revelations, and out of "good books&...quot; to serve one another better.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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
It looks like it's maybe a week later where section 90 is revealed.
Can you give us some of the backdrop for that one?
Yeah, the backdrop for this revelation really goes back to the previous winter a year before
where Joseph is hard and feathered in
Ohio.
He almost loses his life as does Sidney Rigden.
Rigden was dragged on the hard ground.
Some people believe that he sustained injuries to his head that were permanent.
There was great danger that was injected
into the restoration in that moment.
And this caused Joseph, I believe,
we don't have a document saying this,
but I think that he began to ponder at that point
that his life could be taken at any time.
You know, he couldn't be sure of it,
the mob wouldn't come back to get him again and that
this time they would be successful.
And so when that happened, when that episode happened, he then starts to begin thinking
and pondering and praying, I believe, about the institution that he will leave after
he goes.
So what does the prophet put in place as a permanent structure?
And the interesting thing about this question, and one reason why I find this revelation to be so
profound, is it really taps into an institutional problem that is found in all religions where there's
a charismatic figure. And by charisma, I don't mean simply someone who's magnetic who has a great personality.
I mean someone who speaks for God,
who receives revelations.
And there are many such figures,
not, I'm not talking about profits who have presid keys
as in our church.
I'm talking about prophetic figures
across the world in communities small and large.
People that found religions, for example.
And the sociologist Max Weber, a German sociologist from the 19th, early 20th century,
he had a structure where he had these figures profit and priest. And the profit is the charismatic figure who's receiving
revelations. And the profit is great at coming up with original ideas and new new ideas,
but not so great at institutionalizing them. That really is someone who comes after him,
namely the priest. And the priest is someone who's he's not the charismatic figure, he's the one who routinizes charisma or creates a way for it to be perpetuated.
Well, Joseph is already thinking about this because the previous year in 1832, he found
the first presidency.
So at that point, it's no longer just the lone prophet who's speaking.
It's he has two counselors who guide the church and help him and assist him.
And they're not considered a voice for God in the same way he is, like found in DNC 21,
where a prophet shall be kept, shall be among you and he shall be speaking in my name and so on.
But nonetheless, they are now working with him
so that if anything happens to him,
they can carry on the work.
Now DNC 90 takes it a step further.
In this way, there's this language in verse 2.
Let me read it.
Therefore, our bless speaking to Joseph from henceforth that bear the keys of the kingdom
given unto you, which kingdom is coming forth for the last time.
So the Lord is saying, Joseph, you have the keys of the kingdom. Now based on what I just said, if the charismatic figure, the prophet, dies with the keys of
the kingdom, what's going to happen to the church?
Will the keys be removed?
Well, let's look at the next verse.
Verily I say unto you, the keys of this kingdom shall never be taken from you, while thou art in the world,
neither in the world to come." So that suggests that no matter what the mob does to Joseph,
he always will hold the keys of the kingdom, even if he's not here on earth. That still doesn't
answer the question, well, what happens to the church? Don't they need keys to? Well, let's go
over to verse 6. And again, verily, I say into the brethren, Sidney Rigden and Frederick G Williams,
their sins are forgiven them also. And they are accounted as equal with the in holding the keys of this last kingdom.
Now, the significance of that phrase at the end of verse six
that they are also holding the keys of this last kingdom
is, should anything happen to Joseph,
the keys will still remain with the church.
They will be vested in the first presidency.
Now, the quorum of the Twelve Apostles has not been
founded yet. It will be founded in 1835. And at that point, the structure will change to the
keys being distributed among the Twelve, which is sort of where we are today, right? That there are
15 Prophet Sears and Revolators who hold keys, not three. But this revelation establishes
and revelators who hold keys not three. But this revelation establishes for the first time that three hold the keys.
Joseph is not alone.
And this is just a hugely important moment in the history of the Church to realize that
priesthood keys can remain on the Church in perpet, even after the leading founder and charismatic figure is gone.
Reminds me of the moment when the three witnesses moment and the eight witnesses moment where
Joseph said, Oh, I feel that great burden lifted that someone else is now carrying this
with me. Very much so, yes.
Yeah, he didn't, he tell Emma, you don't have no idea how happy I am, they now have to bear their witness.
I'm no longer alone in the world, I think is the phrase I remember.
Lucy is who he tells his mother.
Lucy fell on the bed and said, I'm no longer alone in the world.
So this feels like maybe another one of those moments that you're not carrying this on
your own anymore.
Right.
And see if a religion does not establish this, it leads to fragmentation and confusion and
even violence.
You know, we saw this when Muhammad died.
His legacy was then divided really among what came to be the Sunnis and the Shiites.
And they were really fighting over, okay, who has the authority to take what Muhammad
gave us going forward?
And those divisions are still found.
Now we have a division in our church.
Well, it's not in, but among the restoration branches that started
with Joseph Smith the third in the 1850s,
but that is relatively small compared to the divisions
that might have happened if Joseph had not put
in place this apparatus.
And when I say Joseph, it's the Lord,
but the Lord is working through Joseph here.
But if there had not been this very smooth apparatus of priesthood keys being disseminated
more widely than just the founding figure, we would have been in great trouble.
So it's really wonderful to think that here in 1833, more than a decade before he passes
away, he's already working on the institutional apparatus.
Yeah, anticipating when he won't be there or the Lord is.
Right.
I've said this before, but I just love how after the first vision, so many of Joseph Smith's visions were shared visions,
and that also makes sense to me that,
hey, Sidney was there and others have to bear witness
of this and Oliver was there so forth.
Well, and to that point, John,
and notice in verse one, Joseph seeks forgiveness,
and the Lord says, I grant the requests that you've
given me, and I forgive you of your sins.
But in the verse I just read in verse 6, he also extends the forgiveness to the two counselors
in the first presidency.
So there's really no blessing that the Lord is going to just reserve for the Prophet.
The blessings that are given to the Prophet can be extended to others, even all the saints.
And we see this in the Arctrin and Covenant's one where it mentions that in the latter days,
the goal is that every man or woman can speak in the name of God.
Just it's so fun to go through these sections and see what if,
how forgiving the Lord is. How many of these sections start out this way?
I remember mentioning that with 60 and 61 and 62 and I think 63.
And here again, the Lord is forgiving and here again, he is, he is forgiving.
Hope people are seeing that.
Yes. And that's actually the first point that I wrote down that I wanted to make in the podcast,
namely that here Joseph is 10 years, I mentioned 10 years until he dies, but if you go back
10 years, when he first asked for forgiveness, here he is.
Think of all the wonderful things he's done for the kingdom and he's carried out what the Lord has asked
him to do in translating the book of Mormon and getting it published. You know, people wouldn't
believe how difficult it was. It's not just translating that book, but in getting it published and
finding the funds to do it. And now you're starting to bring in converts and you've found it the
church and you've found a Zion and you're going to build two temples. And Joseph has done everything
the Lord is asking. But he still feels like he needs forgiveness and he wants craves the
Lord's affirmation of that. And that to me is so powerful. We live with a profit now who's asked us to ask for forgiveness
every day, to repent every day. And I think I don't want this to sound critical, but I think we have
lost a sense that we're sinners and that we really need forgiveness,
and not just once every little while,
but all the time.
And it's not just when we take a sacrament.
We should be asking for forgiveness
and letting the Lord, the Lord's love
and His forgiveness wash over us
as we see in this first verse.
Yeah.
That's a beautiful idea that the repentance is not just, you know, oh, I need to change.
I need to be better, but I also want to let the Lord's love wash over me.
So I'm going to repent today because I want to feel that.
I want that renewal that comes.
And I like the point this out, John, he's just quick to forgive.
Anything else in section 90 that you see here,
Jen? Yes, there are a number of key ideas that I'd like to just highlight. Going back to verse
two, which I read earlier, I'd like to point out that the word keys is plural. So we're talking about multiple powers. Now one thing that's fascinating to me is the Lord
has not revealed to Joseph or this first presidency. What keys they actually have, nor would they for
for three years. So not until the appearance in the Kirtland Temple of Moses and Elijah and Elias.
So he's telling them they've got keys and they've got keys in the plural, but he doesn't tell them
what will happen with these keys, nor what they're even
going to do with them for a few years.
And so I think there's a valuable lesson there in Revelation coming line upon line,
precept upon precept and not getting hung up on the Lord not telling us the full story.
I'd also like to draw out a different lesson from this, which is that sometimes we have an
expectation that this church is going to get really, really big, and it's going to fill the earth.
We quote that line of Joseph that the gospel is going to go to all the world,
and surely it will be found in every nation.
But that doesn't necessarily mean that the role of this church is to dominate,
sort of, to stamp out the competition as though it's a big competition.
Preset keys are the key as it were to understanding what our mission is.
We have a very select saving mission as inheritors of a covenant coming
through Joseph and Ephraim, we do have this mission,
but it doesn't necessarily mean that we have to become large or vast.
In the same way that something like salt or yeast is very small, but has a large effect.
So the keys are with Joseph and with this church.
Other churches don't have the priesthood keys,
but that doesn't mean that they're not doing good in their realm.
It simply means they don't have the same mission that we do.
And so I would think of just urge your listeners to think of keys
as being something small, but extremely powerful, even like a key that unlocks a door or a
key that starts a car without which you could not drive or open the door. I think it's
helpful to think of our mission in that way and to think it helps us to understand our
relationship with the larger religious world and to recognize that other
churches have good things going on, they just don't have the keys of this kingdom to carry
out saving ordinances.
I'd like to point out in verse 5, there's an interesting word that is mentioned oracles.
It actually is used in verse 4 first. Speaking to
Joseph still, nevertheless, through you shall the oracles be given to another,
yay, even unto the church. So the oracles are the revelations, the commandments,
the sains, the teachings. I think 19th century saints understood oracles probably different than we do today.
We don't use that word very often, but it was more of a living, breathing understanding
for oracles, speaking.
And so this is the prophetic voice, right?
Coming through Joseph.
Now, that word is not applied to his two counselors.
It doesn't mean that they couldn't grow into that role, but they are equals in
holding the priesthood keys, but they're not his equal, I think, in this
revelation in terms of the oracular function of giving and speaking divine
truth. But the oracles are given to the church. So you have Joseph's teachings that are given to
the church and the prophetic head that role. We have President Nelson's oracles given to the church
in the same way. But notice how in verse five, now this is getting to the point I wanted to make.
It says, let them be where those who receive the oracles or the teachings.
How they hold them
less they are accounted as a light thing and
a brought under condemnation
thereby and stumble and fall when the storms descend in the winds blow and the drains descend and beat upon the house. Now
Significance of that is,
I think, with dead prophets, it's much more easy to respect the words of dead prophets. Why that is,
is probably a different discussion, but it's very easy, I think, to dismiss the living oracles, the living teachings, and to hold up the
dead prophets as some kind of standard by which the living have to have to measure up.
And the Lord is really cautioning us here that we should be careful to not treat the living
oracles lightly.
And I appreciate that. I think, you know, I think of general conference
and how easily people dismiss what comes out in general conference. And that's unfortunate.
So I think we should, we should be aware and take this caution for what it is.
I love that. That reminds me of the Hank helped me out here. The New Testament, a couple of the parables of the
Marriage of the King's son. Yeah, they treated it lightly. It says, right? Yeah, or they treat it
He sends out the invitation. Yeah, they treated them lightly. It even says
And these could be compared to you know prophets saying come to the feast and they're treated lightly like that
Look at how Jesus himself was treated lightly by the religious establishment.
So this is not unique to our church or prophets and our relationship to prophets,
but it's something that we should be aware of that we can have greatness in our midst,
again going back to Jesus and the way he was treated by the Pharisees and the Sadducees,
just think of how they dismissed him and how they belittled him, not knowing who he was.
And to me, that also suggests that the greatness or the inspiration of a prophet may not be
dressed up in such a way that everyone can just ascend to it.
You know, you're not going to necessarily bow down to it and say,
this is the most eloquent thing I've ever heard.
Not even Jesus could do that.
Not even Jesus.
He's the Son of God, and he was not able to command an audience
such that they all rolled over to him.
And so why should we expect that from our current prophets?
They're not just providing window dressing. They are providing truth and and it's up to us to
come to that truth and and take it for what it is not to somehow say if it's not packaged in a way that is
palatable to me or is so beautiful and wonderful then that's the only form I'm going to accept it.
Yeah, the parable is Matthew 22. They made light of it. They give this invitation.
They made light of it. They went their way, one to his farm, another to his merchandise, meaning, well, they didn't have time for it. They didn't, right, they assumed it a light thing.
I'm going to be a little more careful with
general conference now because of what you've shown me here in verse 5. The idea of accounting it
as a light thing also reminds me of a president, Ezra Taft Benson's statement that he said when I
persists, participated in the Mexico City Temple dedication, I received the distinct impression that
God is not pleased with our neglect of the Book of Mormon.
And it talks about things that we've treated lightly, even the new covenant, it says
earlier in the doctrine of covenant, so the Book of Mormon.
So treating the prophets and the fruits of that, the whole Book of Mormon, taking it lightly,
maybe it comes under that heading too.
Let me make a more historical point about 1833 in regards to this treating lightly. So
one of the things that this revelation does is it announces to the church that there's a new
first presidency, namely Sidney Rigden, who was already in the presidency going back a number of
months. But the one of the counselors, Jesse Gaws, just basically disappeared. He wandered away.
Yeah, he wandered away from the church. And this was a problem in the early church
where converts could not be counted on. And as soon as you found someone who seemed like they
had some leadership as Jesse Gaws did in his prior religious affiliation,
you, Joseph would have to rely on them, but then maybe they couldn't be counted on.
And so, John C. Bennett was another one like this.
But so Frederick Williams now was invited to join the first presidency.
And this is the announcement that he is a member of the presidency.
Now, Sydney, we know, was a preacher by profession. He had had a large
congregation of of Campbellites when he joined the church. He was by all accounts
the most eloquent of the preachers of the church in this time. But who was
Frederick G Williams? He was a businessman. He was someone who didn't have any experience
that we know of with preaching. And I think that the juxtaposition of this caution in verse
five and the announcement of Williams as a counselor in the first presidency that they
should be read in tandem, namely to say, you should not expect,
you know, marvelous things out of Frederick G. Williams' preaching.
He is not like Sydney, and yet he's called of me.
He has the keys.
He has the office, but he's probably going to have to grow.
Now I'm reading between the lines, of course.
He's going to have to grow into this office as a preacher.
And I think this is also a lesson to us.
He's brother in that we listen to and sisters as well in the general offices of the church.
They're not trained in preaching or electrocution or oratory. In many ways, they're just like you and I.
And yet they were called for reasons that, you know, only, only
the Lord knows. And they're doing the best they can. And, and so
we should expect that the Onus is really on us. It's, it, our style of preaching, the fact that we don't have formally trained ministers,
it demands more of the audience to come prepared.
You know, it's not like we're going to sit listening to Truman Madsen where we can just
zone off and think, man, if I could only be so eloquent.
Our preaching normally isn't like that.
And so we then have the burden of preparing our hearts
and being patient with people,
long suffering and so on,
recognizing that they have the mantle given to them,
but they may be growing into the role
that they've been given to preach to us.
That's really great.
I remember after I took a constitutional law class, I was much better able to receive
elder oak's talks.
Once I took a law class, because I was like, Oh, he, that's, he, it, it sounds to
me like one of the, you know, the case studies I would read in the, in the, in the law
class.
And once I was more prepared, I was able to kind
of see it for what he wanted it to be seen as.
Absolutely. And see, I'm glad you mentioned that, Hank, because Frederick E. Williams is
like Dallin Oaks in the sense that he has this other career and the career, the law is definitely helpful and
can be consecrated to the use of a kingdom just like Frederick G Williams business is helpful
for building a temple. I mean, they did recognize a lot of yield from his properties in helping
to build the kingdom in Kirtland. But the point is that you don't have to have a
background in preaching to be useful. And all of us should
take heart that wherever we're coming from, whatever we've
studied, or our life experience being so varied, that it all
can be useful, even in an office like the first presidency,
where you can can you can get
someone who's in one of the highest offices in the church and even if they
don't have a background in in what what you might suppose to be useful it can
still be something used to to grow the church.
Jed what do you want to do next?
Well I wanted to point out the idea that the prophetic head is the one who receives the
oracles.
So Joseph is unique in this respect and his counselors hold the keys with him.
And so I find this significant because going back to Weber's profit priest distinction,
Joseph has a role that's different from the others,
just as President Nelson has a role that's different
from his counselors, but the counselors,
by holding the keys, they're still officiating
in the priestly role.
So they are the priests, Joseph is the prophet,
slightly different terminology than the way we'd think of it today.
But in other words, they're sort of down from him, but not at the same time.
Okay.
I remember watching President Monson's very first talk as President of the Church,
and he seemed different to me than the President
Monson we were also used to.
It's almost as if he took on a new role from that,
you know, he held the keys as part of the first presidency,
but when President Hinckley passed away,
his role changed, and he went from supporter to the leader. And I don't know. For me personally,
I remember vividly watching going, wow, he is, he feels sounds and seems different, not better,
but just a different role. This is the revelation where the relationship between the president of the church and his counselors is established, namely the oracles come through the head, but the counselors
are still going to speak, but not with the same authority.
And yet they hold keys.
So I don't know how to explain that in a clear way. But see, it's found at the end of six, equal.
So they're equal with him in holding the keys,
but they're not equal with him in receiving the oracles.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
Because oracles has never applied to them.
They're not the ones who are receiving revelations.
The keys then becomes associated with an administrative function of making sure priesthood
power is on the earth. So the the counselors hold that administrative function, but they don't have the religious
kind of the religious role that the president does. I like this because it works that way in
you know almost any presidency
in almost any presidency, in that we are equal in a bishopric in a relief society presidency and an elders corn presidency, but the revelation, the teachings, if you will, the direction
for the corn or class or word is going to come through the individual, the president head. Yeah, the head.
You know, I'm looking at at verse 11 and I think of, uh, you ever seen a picture of the MTC and all
those flags in front and all of the language training that's going on. It always reminds me of that.
Do you want to talk about that one, Jed?
I do.
Do you want to talk about that one, Jed? I do.
So, we mentioned when we talked about DNC 89, the ambitiousness of this revelation and
how it really announces that the church is a world religion by having a health code.
And this also strikes me as a most ambitious line of from the revelation, because at this time,
the church was not found out of the Northeast
in the United States.
There was no language training, there were no flags,
there was no MTC.
Well, I mentioned that the MTC just started,
but they had trouble with blowing smoke rings.
So it was quite limited in its scope.
And yet here of a Lord who sees the end from the beginning is able to say,
it shall come to pass.
You can have confidence when you hear that language.
In that day, that every man shall hear the fullness of a gospel in his own tongue
and in his own language.
And I just find it amazing that, you know, three years from,
from this revelation, we will enter Canada.
Canada becomes the first, quote unquote, foreign country that we go to.
But the brother and her speaking English in Canada, they convert John Taylor,
who's a British immigrant.
This is partly B. Brad, who works
with brother Taylor. And then in Joseph's lifetime, they go to French Polynesia, but not beyond that.
So really, in Joseph's lifetime, here he's giving a revelation that won't be fulfilled. And I would
argue, is still in the process of being fulfilled. We have not gone into every
language, every tongue. But look at what we've done. I mean, we mentioned at the outset that saints
will be found in 14 languages or that the magazines are found in 100. What did you say, John? 140?
I think 48, they translating into 48 languages and
And we know that the book of Mormon is found in you know several hundred languages, so
But the Lord seems to be suggesting that there is an importance connected with hearing in your own tongue
And I'm not sure what to make of this I find it fascinating
That the Lord is not satisfied with translation. He's not saying, hey, the end goal here is just to translate these revelations into English rather to make them available.
The Lord is not saying, let's make these revelations available in English across the world. He is recognizing that there is a diversity of tongues
and that diversity ought to be dignified
and that we as a church need to make an effort
to let people hear the saving truths in their own native tongue.
I find it a beautiful thing.
It's like a thousand flowers bloom, right?
That you better to have the diversity of languages
than to shoehorn everything into one language.
Yeah.
Any thoughts on that?
Well, I like for, yeah, I like for missionaries in the MTC
just to hear this and to know that to feel like the Lord has a promise to keep here
He's going to help you learn the language and you may not know it until the moment you need it
But he's going to help you learn the language because he made this
He made this kind of prophecy and promise and he'll help you out and it's fun that you said French Polynesia
That's where my daughter's in Tucson right now waiting to go there eventually to the Tahiti mission.
So I'm glad you mentioned that.
That's fun.
Maybe the point I should make, again,
they were speaking English there too,
that it would not be until 1849-50
when we went to the Sandwich Islands,
which became Hawaii, that we actually started
preaching in someone's own tongue.
So here, that's what, 17, 18 years from now, from this revelation, before we actually
start doing this, where we're demanding now that missionaries start learning the tongue.
So they didn't go there and start teaching English
and saying to the natives in the sandwich islands,
look, you have to learn English or else.
No, George Cucan and started translating
the Book of Mormon to Hawaiian.
And that's a step we forget about that.
That's actually a conscious step we had to make
that we will come to you in your language,
we'll make an effort, even if we butcher your language, we're going to try and reach you in your
own tongue. There's a moment in Acts chapter two when these Galilean apostles start speaking all
these different languages. And there's the people that are hearing it in their own language are amazed and marveled,
saying, aren't these Galileans?
I've asked my students at BYU,
how many of them have had that similar experience
when they go to Japan or they go to the Philippines
or they go somewhere and all of a sudden
they start speaking the language.
And people are amazed and marveled,
saying, is this not an American? Right? How is it possible that you're speaking my language?
It's a sign of love. John, you would know more about this than I would. It's a sign of, wow,
you know the language. Oh, yeah. It creates a different space in between you when you're trying to speak and to go to go to someone.
I had someone that's never happened before or since someone complimented my nose in Filipino when I was sitting on a jeep knee.
And I heard what they were saying and I turned and I in Filipino. I said, you know, I said,
Salam al-Salam al-Po, I said, thank you. Oh, you know, they thought it was, they were shocked
that I knew what they were saying, but immediately we were friends because I had learned their
language.
Well, part of it is that it can note so much hard work. Yeah. And it's anyone who works that hard to learn a language.
That precedes whatever comes out of their mouth. So the message is, I really cared enough about
your culture to spend hours and hours and hours, hundreds of hours learning this.
And there's something admirable in that.
I think that conveys respect.
And it helps convey attention.
Well, after the initial section about the priesthood keys
and organizing the first presidency,
the revelation then turns back to Joseph
and what he's going to be doing.
And the reason why there appears to be a kind of summing up and then a new frontier being launched
is that Joseph has been doing translating of the Bible for the last three years. That's his
his daytime project where he and Sydney primarily have been going through the scriptures and making inspired revisions and
Corrections to the text and they're finishing this work and so now the question is for Joseph
What will he be doing from date today? Is he just going to be speaking in the name of the Lord day after day?
and
What's fascinating is not only what is said, but what isn't said.
So I said tongue and cheek.
Is he going to be speaking in the name of the Lord from day to day?
The answer is no.
Which is to say the doctrine and covenants revelations that we have, the Lord, even in
an ideal setting where he can instruct Joseph, he's not asking Joseph to receive
revelation day after day after day in thus saith the Lord, form and ways.
That is, he's expecting the saints to use what they've been given from time to time,
periodically every few months, whatever it is, and to study those messages,
and to not be enamored with the new,
or the, you know, what is breaking new ground all the time.
Sometimes we anticipate the general conference
always has to have some new program, you know.
Especially lately.
Yeah. And talking about addiction, I mean, that can be kind of an addiction where you, you, you're disappointed, you're let down, you have a, uh,
deflated mood if, if there isn't some big announcement. And so what we get
in verses 13, 14, 15 and so on, is we have Joseph's new life after he finishes the Bible translation.
And his new life is sort of like ours in some ways.
He sets in order of a church, or things we would recognize. Let's say that, verse 15.
The Lord says, he's to set in order the churches and study and learn and become acquainted with all good book.
I find that verse verse 15, the reason I read it is I find it very profound that A. Joseph is asked to spend his discretionary time learning.
Look at the ways it's mentioned.
Study, learn, become acquainted with, and then a series of direct objects, good books,
languages, tongues, people.
It suggests that study of ascriptors as much as we would like to sit
around all afternoon, talking about
the scriptures. It's not sufficient.
The Lord is not telling Joseph, hey, I
want you to just study the revelations.
No, all good books, and that if you study all good books, that this can be useful in building the kingdom.
We go back to Frederick Williams in his business experience that this can be an asset.
It doesn't have to be a deficit.
Dalano studies the law.
It can be an asset to building the kingdom.
And so whatever we read, what we study, becoming acquainted with
cultures and people, that that can be all be acquisition to the use of building the church.
Now we could have a different discussion about how that actually happens. How is that useful
if you study all these things? Even if you don't go on a mission, let's say,
I mean, if you study a certain tongue
and then you get called to that mission,
of course, that's useful.
How is it useful to study the classics?
How does that broaden your perspective?
How does that help you to become a better young women leader
or a better minister?
So we get to sit and ponder of this first, what are the implications of it? But I find
again, the fact that the Lord's prophet is asked to do this, it should not be beneath us to do it.
You know, I'm reminded of something that I heard Henry Irin say at the time that President
Henkley was alive, which was he said, I just got out of a meeting with
president Henkley. And if you could only see him, do you know he read seven
newspapers this morning? Seven Henry Irene said, the profit starts his day
every morning by reading seven newspapers. Now, we don't want to
keep a guilt complex on the rest of us if we don't
read one newspaper. That's not what I'm trying to do here. I'm just trying to say, if the
profit is asked and does, in the case of President Hinckley, consume information and become
acquainted with good books and good writings, Then what about the rest of us?
I think if the prophet can do it, the rest of us needs to do it, at least as much.
Yep.
And it's a never-ending supply when the Lord says,
I'm acquainted with good books, languages, tongues, and people.
You've got a lifetime right there in that one verse, a lifetime of study, which is why I think he says in 18,
set in order your houses, keep slothfulness far from you. I've given you a
lifetime job here of study, good books, languages, tongues and people. In my house,
we like to watch documentaries about nature, because it's so fascinating and fun to watch and I find
that my kids love it even more so than some of the entertaining things that are on. They love
learning about you know the the the think that the earth nature and wildlife and and it's fun to watch. It really is.
I'm reminded of, is it, ah, is it Mark Twain who said he who does not read good books
has no advantage over he who can't read at all
or something like that.
I like that it doesn't just say read books,
but read good books.
And then in section eight, we have out of the best books
and there's so much out there and Hank,
if we can help our kids and other people
be excited about learning something new.
John and I trade good books all the time.
Did you, have you read this?
Have you, oh, you love it, right?
Because it really does, I don't know, it changes you.
And this isn't the first time we've heard that council.
It's about, it's about countries.
I like the one countries in kingdoms and wars
and the perplexities of nations.
I think that's a great admonition too.
Right, and I think the difference here, right,
this has echoes of DNC 88, but the difference is
there in DNC 88, the council seemed to be general
to the students. This is for Joseph, right?
And I think that's worth pondering if again, the highest of all should be doing this. And what about
the lesser? You know, we tend to think of God tutoring Joseph and telling him all these things
that the rest of us don't know. But here, the Lord is saying, well, on top of what I'm going to tell you because you're the prophet, you still need to put in the work.
And even the adjective changes, John, in DNC 88, it was the best books. And now it's good books.
I hope you can see why I said that DNC 90 is a gem, even though it's often overlooked.
I find it to be a very profound section.
It is. It has implications for us today, multiple implications for how the first presidency works,
how presidency's work, and then also what we should be doing with our time.
So something happens in verse 28
that doesn't often happen here in the doctrine of covenants
and that is a woman is named, her full name.
Verily I say into you, it is my will that my hand made
Vienna Jakes, I would say Jocs, right John?
Jocs of you.
Jocs of you.
Vienna Jakes. Yeah, should receive money to
bear expenses and go up to the land of Zion. And if you go to the Come Follow Me manual, uh, they have
a little biography of her. We spoke of biographies earlier. Um, and it just says she meets the missionaries
in 1831. Um, she is, uh, it sounds like she's very wealthy. She continues with the church,
Kirtland and eventually goes to the Salt Lake Valley
where she lives until she is 96.
I don't know.
I don't know why the Lord names her by name,
but I like that he does.
And I like her example of enduring to the end, not, not a lot of people see 96,
especially in the, yeah, in this time period.
All right.
Let's move to section 91.
It's short.
It's on something that I'm sure most listeners have heard of called the apocrypha,
but I think that we would benefit from knowing what the apocrypha is and why
it shows up in the doctrine of covenants.
So I mentioned earlier that Joseph was just finishing up his task for the last three
years of translating the Bible.
And the Bible, as most Protestants understood it at that time, had additional books in it that are not found in the KJV, not found in
our LDS edition. There's about 12 or 14 books that were between the Old Testament and the New
Testament that were found in every Catholic Bible,
Protestant Bibles, sometimes they were in there,
sometimes they weren't.
In Joseph's Bible that he was using for his translation,
we actually know the edition of Cooperstown, New York,
is where it was produced.
It happened to have these books.
And the question is, they're not part of the Old Testament,
they're not part of a new,
what do we do with them? Should I translate them? Should I correct them? Should I have these inspired
revisions? And so the Lord is now answering this question. So this is one of those revelations that based on an intellectual question, not a behavioral correction like we had in DNC 89.
And the answer is that there are many things true in the apocrypha, but there are many
things that are not true.
And you have no need of translating.
So the practical answer is just, okay, Joseph, you're done with the translation,
you're good to go. But there are a few truths here that I think are worth mentioning. One is
that revelation, this is back to the nature of revelation, which we talked about with 89.
The revelation is an ongoing conversation. It's not something where you just receive a revelation, period, and a story.
We know that the Lord commanded Joseph to translate, and then he proceeds to do it. But at the time that the command was given, the Lord is not saying, but when you get to the apocrypha at the end, you don't need to worry about that.
And Lord is the question appear in Joseph's mind when he starts the translation in 1830.
It comes three years later. And so what is his teaches? Well, it teaches us that we can have a
conversation with the Lord that has a period of time where, you know, we don't have the question at the time,
but then the question emerges later on,
and that's okay.
The Lord, it's interesting, he says,
the apocrypha is still for the benefit.
You look at verse five,
you can obtain benefit from reading the apocrypha.
And yet he's just said earlier in the revelation it has some falsehood.
So by implication, it means that you can receive benefit from reading a book that has some falsehoods.
On what condition?
There are two conditions.
One is the book has to have truth in it.
Otherwise, why would you read it?
You don't want to read something
that's just filled with falsehoods.
But the important point is that something John just mentioned,
you have to have the spirit to enlighten your understanding.
And if you have the spirit with you,
you can discern what is true from what is false.
Now, I think this is a principle that can be applied to all forms of media, not just books.
No, we don't read the apocrypha today. Most of us don't read it.
I agree with the Lord here that it appears to be some things that are uninspired in the apocrypha. But you can apply the same principle to media consumption,
to movies, social media.
And that, in other words, let's apply it to politics.
I know I'm venturing on to dangerous ground here,
but let's say you're reading a Facebook post
from someone who is a friend, let's say their
award member, and you don't agree with the post.
The question is, can you find truth?
Is it all false because you just disagree or of a different party?
Or can you find something lovely of good reporter praiseworthy in what they say?
It tells me that you can, someone can be speaking something that is not true, not something
you like, but you can still find something deckerous, that those two are not exclusive
categories.
It's not oil and water.
They can be in the same post.
They can see it being the same book. They can be in the same text, whatever it is.
So back maybe back to your point, Hank, about positivity. The Lord is very positive at the end of revelations.
Could we be more positive in the way we approach truth and falsity in the messages that we receive?
And I really like what you said there. You point out that the Lord says, yeah, there's a lot of
things in there that aren't true. But yeah, if you read it, you'll obtain some benefit from it.
And if we take that same principle into our media consumption, not just politics, but all, you know, looking
for the praiseworthy, looking for the truth. He says the spirit will manifest the truth,
right? In verse four, you can trust that. Now, let me go a step further, Hank, with
what you're saying, we quote Galatians, what is the spirit, right? The spirit is love, peace, long
suffering, patience, right? And so that gives us a clue to, you know, if the spirit is going
to help us to gain benefit from something, we should couch our responses in the fruits of a spirit.
So it's not just looking for the positive, it's finding, well, it's, what am I trying to say here?
It's approaching that thing that could be offensive to us, that, let's say it's a post and saying, I'm going to apply the fruit of the Spirit to my reading of that.
Love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, so on,
meekness.
If we did that, it would transform the way we talk,
even as saints.
And it could help rejuvenate the world.
You know, I'm not pying the sky believer that we're gonna transform the internet.
But there's so much harshness, so much vitriol,
so much bitterness that could be avoided
if we applied the instruction here
to approach things that you don't agree with
by the spirit, which I take to mean
by the fruit of the spirit.
Yeah, looking for that, which is praiseworthy, looking for that, which is true of good report.
I really, I really like letting, letting the false, the things that are not true, the interpolations
by the hands of man, I mean, think of all the messages that are written by the hand of
man today on social media that we don't agree with. Well, just letting that slide off. Yeah, so not making that the focus of how we respond.
I'd like to mention something else, which goes back to verse five, the word enlightened. This is a very powerful word at this time,
really going back to the 18th century,
the enlightenment, we all know that word
and I've heard of that word.
The cornerstone of the enlightenment is an assumption
that all human beings are enlightened by reason.
That there's something reasonable about this.
Now I question this when I look at my kids,
but I think we've all...
No, but that every human being is enlightened by reason,
and that if you can somehow cultivate that by education
or tap into that by good parenting or whatever it may be,
that you are bringing out the best of human kind. But notice that
there's nothing about reason here. Here it's Huso is enlightened by the now if you are not a
latter-day saint and you didn't know that you were reading a sacred text you might fill that in with
and you didn't know that you were reading a sacred text, you might fill that in with enlightened by the voice of reason
or the spark of reason.
But here it's by the spirit.
Now, I've seen in our own era a growth
in the people who are relying on reason
to assess spiritual truths. Now, I don't want to discourage anyone who wants to use reason.
I use reason discourse every day in what I do.
And on some level, if you write about religious things,
you're writing using reason.
But all too often, I think people set aside the spirit as the arbiter of how to write or how to
reason. And I find it noteworthy again that the Lord is suggesting that if you don't have a
spirit, you're really not able to discern what is true in the apocrypha from what is false. You can apply that to church
history questions. We have a good many people in the church today that try and reason their
way in or out of certain propositions. And to the exclusion of a spirit, and the spirit
I've already defined, what kind of spirit are we talking about?
Well, look, if we're going to ascent to the Lord saying, love one another, do we apply
the same standard to the prophets? There's a lot of criticism of the prophets, dead end living prophets. Well, why can't we love the prophets by being more charitable towards them?
Right?
I mean, so this is what I'm saying.
I think the principle here, the underlying principle, can be applied in many contexts.
I mentioned media.
It can be applied to church history questions.
It can be applied to just the whole complex
of how we assess information.
Are we simply reasoning our way through?
Setting aside our religious training?
Or are we incorporating our religious training
and marrying it with wisdom or reason?
our religious training and marrying it with wisdom or reason.
Yes, I love what you did with that section because I didn't know what would, I didn't honestly didn't know what we would, where we would go with this. But I think the principle
that you found embedded in the idea of Joseph Smith asking about the apocrypha can be a wonderful benefit as the Lord says here
if you use the spirit. And even says it in verse 6, if you're not going to read it with the spirit,
there's not going to be a benefit to you.
Chad, let me ask you a last question. You are a historian. You are a trained historian who has done incredible work.
I think there's a benefit that comes to our listeners
when they hear someone who is,
who spends their life, their career in church history
which you have done,
been mentored by the best of the best.
And here you are, not just faithful,
not just educated, but incredibly faithful
and just radiate goodness.
So tell me, what are your personal thoughts
on Joseph Smith and the restoration?
What's it done for you personally
as you've made it your career?
Well, that is a great question.
And first of all, thank you for the compliment.
It's been wonderful to be with you today.
You know, it's hard for me to talk about Joseph Smith without talking about contemporary problems or ways of people consuming information
about Joseph Smith today. And so I'm going to start with the elephant in the room, which is
polygamy. I feel that Joseph Smith in the information age has been compressed into something extremely
narrow, which is simply plural marriage and how he went about practicing plural marriage.
And to me, it's unfortunate because for a number of reasons, one is that, you know, Joseph Smith's doctrinal contribution to my life and to the church's life is just immeasurable.
And there's so much that he did that is not accounted for in focusing on just one practice.
I also tell people when they have a concern about plural marriage, I say, well, things are always difficult at the beginning,
but by the Utah period, the church was able
to figure out this practice.
And for about 40 years, a generation and a half,
or maybe two generations, we built a foundation
that would have been impossible without this practice.
Say what you will about the future, and I for one,
I don't think of plural marriages
something that will be practiced in the heavens. I think of it as a useful principle to build up
the kingdom when it was small. But you look at our current first presidency today. None of them would be here. We're not for plural marriage
they are products of it and
If you don't like plural marriage as being a part of a church you would have to deal with parting with
many people who who we love
Who have been instrumental in building up this church. So
Having said that, Joseph Smith gives
me a story, a story to live my life by. You know, the standard Christian narrative is, we
don't know why we're born. We're thrust here because of the mistake of Adam and Eve, and
we are fallen creatures. And our destiny is to return to God and worship him
by praising him around his throne as the angels do.
That to me is not a satisfying narrative.
The narrative that Joseph Smith gave us
was that I came here as a child of our Father in heaven.
I lived with him before I was born
and that I accepted a plan for my growth
and development and coming down here, exercising my agency, and that this life is meaningful
because it gives me chances to grow and become like the Father that sent me here,
and that my ultimate destiny is to become as he is, not to merely worship around his throne.
And that narrative is given to us by the Prophet Joseph Smith.
So it gives my whole life meaning and understanding.
I'm also touched by the fact that the God we worship
is someone who has a heartbeat, who can understand me in my emotional
anguish, who looks like me. And to me, that is not a reductive principle. We've been accused of
that. It is rather an enobling principle that that I can worship a being of whom I am of the same order.
We're of the same class, genus, whatever division you want to give here. And that too is given us
by Joseph Smith. If I had been born into a Protestant faith, I would be worshiping a God without body parts and passions.
And that's hard to fathom.
The new scripture that he gave us makes it impossible for me to accept the historical Jesus, someone who's merely a great moral teacher.
You know, you read the book of Mormon and the divinity of Christ is on virtually every page.
And that clearly, I mean, it's just such a powerful book with an, and a Christ-centered, centered book. And to me, it's, I understand the arguments for why the book would be a 19th century
production. But to me, they fall flat. Ultimately, I think that the Lord has created a book, he's given
us a book where the evidence for and against the book is going to be compelling on either side. This is part of the test that we've
all been given that the fruit is meant to be enticing, right? And so the the opposites to the
arguments to the opposite, the contrary argument is going to be enticing. That doesn't mean it's true.
It's going to be appealing. It's going to be reasonable. It will be enticing, but it doesn't mean it's true. It's going to be appealing, it's going to be reasonable, it will be enticing, but it doesn't mean it's true.
And so I look at the Book of Mormon in that way,
where yes, there are criticisms of the book,
but they fall short, they don't capture the power of the book
and the inspiration of the book.
I also love the miraculous in our church,
which really I look at as coming out of Joseph Smith's own personal story.
The fact that God writes on gold plates has them preserved in the ground for hundreds of years and then ask a young boy to translate them.
To me, the whole world comes alive with that narrative that that it's beautiful in its
strangeness, but it says that God can intervene in the modern
world and that at any turn in my life there can be a
miraculous happening, there can be a gold plates type
experience, something maybe that has been preserved for me to change my
life and to improve my life. I find that to be a profound part of our faith and it saddens me that
the Joseph Smith story is ridiculed. I think it's much like Jesus coming out of Nazareth, being ridiculed, what good can come
out of Nazareth.
People just don't understand who Joseph is, just like they don't understand who the Messiah
was.
I find meaning in the priesthood keys that Joseph gave us.
My life just like the narrative of my life having a story at beginning in the middle
and end.
It's built around priesthood keys and the priesthood power that binds families together.
I say that Joseph taught us that we're part of a team of super heroes.
What I mean by that is when he received priesthood keys from prophets,
long gone, who everyone thought were gone and confined to the scriptures.
And then they appear on the banks of the Susquehanna,
suggests that prophets in era, era is past are all part of the same project. And so they, in that sense, they're like super heroes who are working together on the same project and they have the same passionate goals that we're working for today. And that's meaningful to me, to realize that Christianity is not just
something in the distant past, but rather it's it's dispensational and that there are periods of
Christianity of the eternal gospel that are all joined together into one.
that are all joined together into one. There's more I could say.
I think maybe I'll end with one more idea,
which is Joseph, I think, teaches us that life is
designed for our progression.
I hinted at this at the beginning,
but that we are here to grow.
We're here fundamentally as intelligences.
We're not here as a creature.
You know, and the Protestant discourse that I have studied in the 18th and 19th century,
human beings are often called creatures.
They're no better than the beasts of the field.
But Joseph taught us that we are fundamentally intelligence, that we're made of the same
stuff that our, the being we worship is made of, and that therefore the same principle of
development for him is the same for us, namely from grace to grace and from light to light
and from truth to truth and that we can
grow over time, we can grow into, if not perfection, we can grow, we can aspire
towards becoming better, becoming more like God and that in the course of that
aspiration that we will become his children, sons and daughters, begotten sons and daughters
unto God. I find that narrative of a scent or progress to be extremely powerful and governing
of my life. It inspires me to read, to study, to ask for forgiveness, to improve my life, to try and be a better person.
I'm not only a fallen being, I am a fallen being, but I'm not just that. That's not
the core of who I am. The core of who I am is a divine son of our Father in heaven.
divine son of our Father in heaven. And I think all of that understanding is indebted to Joseph Smith. Without his
doctrine, without his faithfulness in revealing the doctrines
that the Lord gave to him, it's hard for me to imagine who I would be as a person and how I would see life, how I would walk out the front door and see the world. It's just impossible to fathom.
So for all of that, I'm deeply grateful for him. That was beautiful. I just absolutely wonderful. We've had such a great time today.
Just exactly. A narrative of a scent. I'm part of a plan. A plan where I was there. There's an
objective. There's a destiny in mind. I don't know. I hope our listeners realize
as you're talking because you've helped me,
all of our guests have felt this realize how much the restoration gives us as far as our
mission, our destiny, our purpose, and our relationship to God. And maybe sometimes
we look at problems, but imagine what we would be without all of that understanding.
And you've done a great job in summarizing that right now.
And thank you for that.
Absolutely.
I love what you said.
The profits in the past are part of the same divine project.
Oh, that's good.
Yeah.
That's great.
Super heroes working together.
What church teaches that?
Yeah.
Part of the same divine project that is
ongoing. I just I love it. Well, thank you, Dr. Jed Woodworth for being with us today. You have
been magnificent as your colleagues told us you would be the best of the best they all said.
And we were we were blessed to have you with us.
We want to thank all of you for listening. We want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Swanson. We love, we love you both. And our amazing production crew.
John, I say this every week, but it needs to be said every week that we have a team that puts
this together for you. It's not just John and I, I promise,
doing this. So we want to thank David Perry, Lisa Spice, who we talked about earlier with her
Diet Coke, Jamie Nielsen, Kyle Nelson, Will Staten, and Maria Hilton. And we hope you will join us next
week on Follow him. you