Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 93 Part 2 : Dr. Casey Griffiths
Episode Date: August 22, 2021Does the Lord want His children comfortable, or does He want us to be like Him? Dr. Griffith instructs us how imitation is a form of worship and how we are to become a kingdom of Priests and Prieste...sses and inherit all that the “Father hath.” After a chastisement, Joseph is taught of our eternal nature and destiny.Shownotes: https://followhim.co/ 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 2 of this week's podcast.
What would you say to someone who says, yes, it wasn't a trial that I went through, but
maybe a trial of my own choosing and addiction.
I think the Savior's saying the same thing, right?
I experienced maybe humanity, maybe not that particular addiction, but I experienced humanity
and the people in it.
And so I get it. I understand human nature.
Yeah. Well, I think, I mean, that's one point of connection with the Savior we struggle with,
right? Like we suffer, like you said, Hank, because of our own decisions. Sometimes the Savior
never made a bad decision is what we're saying, but he's still suffered. And sometimes the savior never made a bad decision is what we're saying, but he still suffered.
And sometimes the most poignant suffering comes when you're doing the right thing,
you're doing exactly what you're supposed to be doing, but things still don't work out for you.
And if you weren't doing what you were supposed to be doing, I think the savior genuinely has the
ability to help people, to take your bad experiences and turn them into something that is healing for others.
One of the missionaries I know in my mission, one of my favorite guys, had a marijuana leaf tattooed on his shoulder.
And I found out he was a convert to the church when he was around 22 or 23 years old.
He had had a rough life, but he was able to take those experiences and really in a way that I
couldn't help people. The Savior is able to sanctify everything and everyone around
him whether it's suffering you didn't cause or whether it's suffering you did cause.
Both those things can be turned into cleansing, sanctifying and ultimately building things
that not only help you, but empower you to help others. I don't think Alma the younger
might have been able to do everything he was supposed to do if he hadn't had such a
rotten childhood, I guess. But here's a person who can speak to you. Of his own choosing, right?
Here's a person who can speak about the negative consequences of sin with real experience,
but those negative consequences had been turned into sanctifying
experiences by the Savior.
Yeah, that's a beautiful idea, Casey.
Thank you.
I don't know if this is exactly correct, but I've always thought that perhaps because
Jesus didn't sin and made the correct moral choices, but I've always wondered if't know if that's a
Theologically correct but a voice thought now he can even say that I know what it's like not to have my father's spirit with me Well, I think if you put your logic hat on that one's an easy one to see if Nephi and the Savior are both saying
He went through all things and one thing we suffer is a loss of the spirit and being cast
out of the presence of God. Yeah, it's clear that at some point the Savior experienced
it probably at that moment you described John, but I mean that moment rather than being
sad and pathetic needs to be empowering to us. That's the moment where the Savior finally
makes it over the top of the hill. That's the moment when the atonement
fully happened that yeah, he had to experience separation from God. I mean the words, the words
were so powerful that one of the gospel writers literally couldn't translate. He had to write down
Eloy, Eloy, Lama, Sabakhthani, and then translated as my God, my God, why is thou forsaken me? Because as a witness
of that, he must have felt like, I can't, I can't undersell this. You need to know the exact
words he said at that moment. It's that important. So here's, here's the language that he's used.
That's a beautiful idea. And the Savior himself in section 19 said, you don't understand what
the atonement was all about.
You've tasted a tiny, tiny portion.
Had he not experienced it in life, we're saying he experienced it at some point,
whether it was in his life or during his atonement, there was at some point, he knows all things.
He's experienced all things.
Let's keep going here, Casey, because I, I can see why you'd say
there's a lot in this section. Yes. Okay. We've gone through the first, the first third. It's dense,
right? I mean, there's, there's a lot of stuff here. So we kind of talked about what you worship,
what we learn about Jesus Christ here. Now let's go to the second thing, which is how you worship.
So I love this quote from Elder Maconkey.
Elder Maconkey says, perfect worship is emulation. We honor those whom we imitate.
The most perfect way to worship Jehovah is to be holy as he is holy. It's to be
pure as Christ's pure. It's to do the things that enable us to become like the
Father and the Course is one of obedience. So other Maconkey says, worship is imitation. And when you start to think about it that way,
what we call a worship service in the church, you go to a building, you have somebody get up and
preach a sermon, which is something Jesus did. When we, when we have the most important part of our
worship service, which all of us have thought a lot about in the last year, we have a person, a young man, get up and break bread
and bless water and then distribute it to everybody.
Those are all things that Jesus did.
Jesus was the first person to break the bread
and then administer the wine and give it to people.
So it's like literally we're asking a priest
to teach her in a decan to act like Jesus for five minutes.
And that'll help you become more like Jesus.
And we in taking the sacrament also imitate Jesus.
He took the sacrament too.
That worship is imitation.
So it's like when we go to church, the reason why the sacrament is such a big deal is because for those four or five minutes,
we're literally just setting everything down, turn off your phone, act like Jesus,
and literally imitate
actions that he did down here on earth. The idea being that that spreads to our
entire life. But when Jesus is saying, I want you to worship me, now he starts to
sort of take the lens off himself and put it back onto us. Like, look at the
patterns that he gives here. Okay, go down to verse 21. I say unto you, I was in the beginning with the Father and him the first born. And
all those who have forgotten through me are partakers of the glory of the same and the
church of the first born. Then he says, you were also in the beginning with the Father,
which is even that which is spirit or the spirit of truth. So he starts to make statements
about himself. And then throughout the rest of the section, he starts to make statements about himself and then throughout the rest of the section, he
starts to say, this is true for you too.
I was in the beginning with the Father, so were you.
And then he starts to talk about, well, if you go down a little bit further, I'm the
Spirit of Truth, you're the Spirit of Truth.
He starts to take all these statements about himself and put them on top of us.
Starting with, I received grace for grace, you have to
receive grace for grace. I was in the beginning with the Father. You're in the beginning with the
Father. So he's laid out the table to basically say, who's, here's what I am. And then he's basically
taking all these statements and saying, and it's the same thing as you. This is where a lot of the
statements that sometimes other religions struggle with when they come to understand
the Church of Jesus Christ of Letters, they say, and struggle, because the Savior's basically here saying,
what I did, you can do it, what I am, you actually are. What I have become, you can also become too.
And in teaching us this about Himself, He's saying, the way that you worship me is to become like me.
I'm not holding you to a lower standard. You're not going to do everything that I did. You're not
going to atone for everyone's sins, but to follow a course of obedience and to demonstrate your
fidelity to the Father and to the Son and then become like us is something that's possible
just based on the very nature of what you are.
So this is where section I-3 gets really interesting
because the Savior has now explained what He is
and He's trying to explain to us what we are
and what our potential really is.
So you look at a couple statements
like I was in the beginning with the Father,
is Jesus saying, he's as old as God?
And then when he says, you were in the beginning
with the Father, is he saying, you're as old as God. And then when he says, you were in the beginning of the Father,
is he saying, you're as old as God?
And you start to go, well, how can God be my Father
if I've always existed, if I've been around as long as him?
And we start to break down these barriers
where we think deeply about who and what we really are.
I mean, in a philosophical sense.
Yeah.
In our very first episode, Tony Sweat, Dr. Sweat said, this farm boy is creating theology that the best theologians of the world would be shocked and just would be, it was just
standing in awe that he is churning out all this theology.
Joseph Smith takes all these philosophical problems
about the nature of man and the nature of God,
as Jesus fully human or fully divine,
and Section 93 just basically solves all of them.
For instance, can I walk you through
one of those philosophical problems?
Yes, all right, jump over to verse 29, okay? And this is where he comes
back to the idea of where we come from, who and what we are. Man was also in the
beginning with God, intelligence or the light of truth was not created or made,
neither indeed can be. So he teaches something about men and women that we've always
existed, that we can't be created or made, we just always existed.
In that sense, we're as old as God.
Now, has God our Father?
Yes.
And the exact same sense that you and I
and everybody else that becomes a father is,
I don't believe that my children were created
out of nothing and came to me.
I believe that they existed before they came here. The Savior is
saying, we existed as something called intelligence and then God took that and blessed it and doubted
it with a spirit, moved it down the path towards exaltation and eternal life, but there's a part of
every single person that's always existed, that's always been there. Intelligence.
Then he goes on to say this, verse 30, all truth is independent in that sphere in which God is
placed it, to act for itself, as all intelligence also, otherwise there's no existence. Here's the
agency of man, and here's the condemnation of man, because that which was from the beginning is
plainly manifest of them, and they received not the light.
So there's all kinds of speculation in the church over what intelligence means, but
here he basically just says there's two things about intelligence that we know for sure.
One, it's always existed.
It can't be created or made.
Two, it has agency.
It's always had the power to make its own decisions.
Now we sometimes in the church say,
didn't God give us the gift of agency he did?
He gave you greater agency by giving you a spirit body
and arranging for you to receive a physical body,
which gives you more and more power to do things.
But you've always had the power to make certain decisions
and to kind of determine for yourself.
Now, if we're taking this on a philosophical level,
one of the questions that sometimes confronts us
is why if God is all powerful, do bad things happen.
And if person of faith will often answer and say
because people make bad decisions
and a person confronting them might say,
well why didn't God just make us to be the sort of beings that never make bad decisions?
Section 93 gives the answer that there's a part of you that is unmade, that's primal with the universe, and that part's always had agency.
So you can't basically blame God for every bad decision you make because Section 93 is saying,
you've always had intelligence, you've always is saying, you've always had intelligence,
you've always existed, and you've always had the power to make decisions.
When you think about it in this way, it's kind of freeing because another thing that they
were talking about in those councils and that philosophers have always wrestled with is
the question of predetermination.
Like are we just robots that are running a program that God placed inside of us?
Section 93 is saying, no, you're not a robot.
You've always existed, and you've always had the agency
to make your own choices.
What Heavenly Father did was come along and nurture you
the best he possibly could, and allow you to make those decisions.
And sometimes you make good decisions, and that's great.
And sometimes you make bad decisions, but it's your power to choose.
It's not something that just exists within you.
Now when it comes to our own children, a lot of times our kids will make bad decisions and we
sit there and beat ourselves up and say, am I a terrible parent or something like that. Section
93 is saying you have to respect these children that come into your home as beings that have
what was existed and beings that can make their own decisions.
And sometimes they'll make bad decisions and sometimes they'll make good decisions.
You're doing what God has done with you, which is point out the right way and then hope
that you go in it.
This is good stuff.
I've got that statement from Truman Madsen, which is so good. This is from Stephen Harper's
book called Making Sense of the Doctrine of Covenants. He says,
every sentence, every word is frated with meaning, meaning in section 93, in
one of Phil's swoop that cuts many gordian knots. For example, how can something
come from nothing? Answer. The universe was not created from nothing. The elements
are eternal. How can Christ do both absolutely answer? The universe was not created from nothing, the elements are eternal.
How can Christ do them to both absolutely human and absolutely divine at the same time?
Answer!
He was not both at the same time.
Christ received not the fullness at first, but continued until he received the fullness.
If man is totally the creation of God, how can he be anything or do anything that he was
not divinely pre-caused to do?
Answer!
Man is not totally the creation of God.
Intelligence was not created or made, either indeed can be.
Behold, here is the agency of man.
Another question.
How can man be a divine creation and yet be totally depraved?
Answer.
Man is not totally depraved.
Every spirit of man was innocent in the beginning, and God having redeemed man from
the fall, men became again in their infant state innocent before God.
What is the relationship of being and beings?
The one and the many answer.
Being is only the collective name of beings of whom God is one.
Truth is knowledge of things, plural, and not as Plato would have it, of thinghood.
Truth is knowledge of things as they are,
and as they were, and as they are to come.
How can spirit relate to gross matter answer?
The elements are the tabernacle of God.
How why should man be embodied?
Answer, spirit and element inseparably connected, receive a fullness of joy.
If we begin susceptible to light and truth,
how is it that people air and abuse the light?
Answer, people are free.
They can be persuaded only if they choose to be, they cannot be compelled.
The secratic thesis that knowledge is virtue, in other words, if you really know the good,
you will seek it and do it, is mistaken.
It is through disobedience and because of the traditions of the fathers, that light is
taken away from mankind.
So one last paragraph, during a presentation at the Yale Divinity School,
Brother Truman Madsen told of a conversation with some Catholic priests,
Learned Jesuits who expressed their inability to conceive of God as an intimate father
in Tenton raising mankind to share in his glory and status.
Brother Madsen offered to them
how hard it is for Latter-day Saints
to conceive of God as anything other
than a concerned father whose work and glory
is to glorify and exalt all of his willing children
in the ways outlined in section 93.
Now another thing Truman Madsen points out
is that in the spring of 1833,
Joseph Smith was 27 years old. I know
It had a sixth grade education and he gives this revelation that's 53 versus long that just basically
Solves almost every problem that everybody has been wrestling with from Socrates to play Dota Aristotle that is
Amazing like if I didn't have the book of Mormon, I'd still think
Joseph Smith was a prophet because I don't know where the Hex section 93 came from. But going
back to just one of those questions that you read, John, I'm going to read it again. Truman
Madson said, question, if man is totally the creation of God, can he be anything or do anything
that he was not divinely pre-cause to to do. The basic philosophical argument being here anything that happens
God caused it because he created everything from scratch. Heavenly Father created everything from nothing and because he created everything from nothing
he's responsible for everything that happens. Section 93 is saying the answer man is not totally the creation of God. Intelligence was not created or made
neither indeed can be, and here's the agency of man. The simple fact this section 93 says
that you've always existed, and you've always had some power to make your own decisions
means that in essence you're your own man or woman. You've always had the right to
make your own decisions and heavenly
father respects that right. Heavenly father is a good parent in the sense that he's not
just doing the best to make you the best that you can be. He's a good parent in the sense
that sometimes he lets you make the wrong decision. He's not interested in micromanaging
our lives. He respects our agency that's always been there
from the beginning and sometimes allows us
to make the wrong choice.
In that sense, we really are free.
We really are the masters of our own destiny.
If you look at it any other way,
if, for instance, Hank, you've brought up
the Christian councils a lot in our discussion here,
one Christian belief is that God created
everything ex nihilo out of nothing. There was nothing then God brought it into existence.
Section 93 is saying God didn't create something out of nothing. He nurtured what was already there.
He took the matter that existed and turned it into beautiful breathtaking landscapes,
planets, stars, the whole cosmos that we can see.
And he took these intelligences which are primal and have always existed along with the universe
and nurtured them into sons and daughters of God.
That we have the best possible parent be there by our side and help us make our decisions,
but ultimately parenting isn't about making a decision for someone else. It's
about teaching them correct principles and then allowing them to make their own decisions.
That is, I mean, these are the few verses where basically we go from being, God is this
mysterious being, to we really know why He's so invested in us. He's so invested in us
because His relationship with us is the same that we have with
our children. You just love them from the moment that you see them and you want the best for them,
but it's sometimes so crippling to think that you can't do everything for them. Heavenly
Father is in the same position where he gives us every possible advantage that he can, but sometimes
in the same position where he gives us every possible advantage that he can. But sometimes he's got to just let us be what we are and make our own choices and decisions.
In the case of Jesus Christ, you have a child that makes every right decision, and Jesus
is saying, this is what you have the potential to be like.
In the case of a child like Lucifer, you have somebody that makes all the wrong decisions,
and the scriptures also exist in part to show us what our potential
is in that direction. Here's how good you can be. And here's how bad you can be all wrapped up in
the principle of your eternal existence and your agency, which has been present from the beginning.
The Come Follow Me manual has a great quote from Joseph Smith right at the very beginning. He says, when you climb up a ladder, you must begin at the bottom and ascend step by step until you arrive
at the top. And so it is. So it is with the principles of the gospel. You must begin with the first
and go on until you learn all the principles of exaltation. And then this is added after the quote.
Sometimes that ladder of exaltation seems impossibly high, but we were born to climb
to the top. Whatever limitations we may see in ourselves, Heavenly Father and His Son see
something glorious in us, something God-like. That is kind of a beautiful summary of what we've
read so far. Well, let me read another quote from the
manual too. The prophet Joseph Smith taught, if men do not comprehend the character of God,
they do not comprehend themselves. It's like being a latter-day saint means that you look at every
single person and say, what's their potential? And section 93 is saying, their potential is that
they could become like Jesus and Jesus became like God.
And Section 93 is basically saying, you've got to take everybody around you that seriously.
You can't just dismiss them as a guy in the corner. You've got to see them for what they really are.
If you don't comprehend God, you don't comprehend yourself and you don't comprehend the people around you
and what their potential is. And that is a really
powerful thought. That's a thought that's worth fighting for. That's a thought that's worth
dying for. I'm reading, as I read section 93, I'm seeing a lot of two words,
light and truth. And he talks about them together as though they go together, but they're different.
What do you usually teach about light and truth
with section 93?
Yeah.
Well, there's so much to deal with here, right?
We skipped over light and truth
because we had to, you know,
but go back to verse 24.
And when you think about it,
this is the most useful definition of truth
that you can find in any writing.
Verse 24 says,
truth is a knowledge of things as they are,
and as they were, and as they are to come.
And whatsoever is more or less than this,
is the Spirit of the wicked one,
who was a liar from the beginning.
The Spirit of Truth is of God.
I am the Spirit of Truth,
and John bore record of me saying,
he received a fullness of truth.
Now, that seems pretty simple on the surface,
but if you really understood things
as they were and as they are and as they are to come, you're the most, I mean, you're
powerful, right? But just imagine what it would be like to really know things as they are,
to know what is actually happening around us and know what it actually means could be really powerful.
The Savior's saying, I'm trying to give you truth.
Truth is to know what actually happened,
what's going to happen and what's happening right now.
And maybe what's happening right now
is the most difficult one for us to grasp,
for us to lay hold on.
I'm gonna tell you a little bit of a story where,
I, you know, God speaks to man in his own language right.
And so one time I think the Lord spoke to me through professional basketball because
that is the Utah Jazz or my language.
And it was years and years ago when Tivo had first come out.
I don't know if you guys remember watching commercials and you had no choice but to
just watch commercials.
Do you remember this? Oh and some had no choice but to just watch commercials.
Do you remember this?
Oh, and some kids, their kids are like,
what is this?
What is this there?
My kids.
For the first time in their life,
they're not on Netflix or something and they're,
well, there's something's wrong with the TV.
Who James the Channel, right?
Why are they talking about laundry detergent?
So Tivo had just come out. My friends are close friends.
Lynn and Haley had invited us over to watch a jazz game, but they said, Hey, we have this
new thing called Tivo. And we'll, we can start it a little bit later and fast forward through
all the commercials. And I remember seeing them fast forward to the commercials for the
first time. It was like the millennium had come. I just was. Beautiful experience. It was emotional. Well, at one point during this conversation,
during this whole experience, Lynn had left the room and his wife Hayley went to fast forward
through the commercials, but she pressed the wrong button and she went to the live,
she hit live TV or whatever, caught it all up
to it.
And the game had just ended and it showed the final score.
And I saw the final score and the jazz had won and she said, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, and
she comes back and she said, she said, you didn't see that, right?
And I said, yes, I did.
Like I know how it ends.
And she said, well, don't tell Lynn, he doesn't know.
And then by that time, Haley and my wife had left, because they knew the end.
So they're like, well, no point in watching it.
And so I'm sitting there.
And Lynn comes back into the room.
And he said, where did the girls go?
And I said, oh, I think they left.
And he said, oh, they think it's over, huh?
Yeah, something like that.
And the whole game, I'm watching it, knowing how it ends,
knowing how it ends.
And I'm watching him go, oh, oh, I don't think they're,
he returned to me, he says, do you think they're gonna win?
And I said, I have faith, right?
I believe it.
Because I knew the end.
And you're right, Casey, when you know the future, I think God spoke to me
and said, this is how I view life, right?
Like this is, I see the end.
That's why I don't get very stressed.
I've never prayed to God and said,
I don't know how this is gonna work.
And he's saying, we don't either, right?
We're stressing up here as well as you down there.
But when I knew the end, yes, I mean,
I felt bad sometimes because my friend Lynn was like,
he was doubting and struggling and wondering,
but I knew the end and I knew he'd be okay in the end.
And so it made it, I know it's kind of an odd story,
but it made it so I was able to be kind of calm
and collected and help him through it.
And then he was really mad at the end when I told him I already knew.
So when Casey, when you say truth is knowledge as things as they are, and as they are to
come, there is great power in God.
When you start to think about all he knows.
I do this little exercise.
I keep a journal.
I'm not great.
I just, I do the best I can.
But when I'm really stressed, I will pull out my journal and I'll look at what I was stressed
out about a year ago.
And most of the time, what I was really stressed out about was no big deal.
You know, it, it resolved itself.
It came through.
It was just the anxiety of being in the moment.
And I think in the Savior and revealing this truth to us is saying, hey, I know what's going to happen.
And it's going to be okay. Sometimes you need to step out of the complexity that swirls around you at all times.
And the truth is, like John said, you look down the road and say, this is all going to work out. We believe in who God is and we know what He is and we know how He cares about us and
that allows us to have the faith to know that it's going to be okay.
That even in your darkest moment, you know that eventually things are going to be all right,
whether it's just the situation we resolve itself or, hey, someday I'm going to be resurrected
and this stuff will be over.
There's a way out of our problems and our complexity.
Yeah, there's a verse in Revelation where it says, God will wipe away every tear from
their eyes, kind of telling us a little bit of the future and giving us that power that
he has.
Any more about light and truth, Kasey, it just keeps going.
Well, let's do this. Jump down to verse 41, okay? And this is where section 93 seems a little
weird, right? He's teaching all these phenomenal cosmic truths. And then all of a sudden, it switches
to the mundane. It's like, like, he's just barely said, every spirit of man was innocent from the
beginning, God having your demon. This goes back to that statement, every spirit of man was innocent from the beginning, God
having your demon.
This goes back to that statement, John, is mankind depraved?
God says, no, they're innocent.
They start from the beginning.
But in verse 41, it seems like he really does a U-turn.
And instead of talking about all these cosmic truths, starts talking to the people that are
receiving this revelation, I say unto you, my servant, Frederick, you will.
You've continued under this condemnation, verse 42,
why is he condemned?
You have not taught your children light and truth.
According to the commandments,
and the wicked one have powers yet over you,
this is the cause of your affliction.
And I command and I give unto you,
which shall be delivered, you should set in order
your own house, for there are many things
that are not right in your house.
So light truth, knowledge,
cosmology, the basis of what a human is. The savior basically says, the reason why I'm telling you
this is so you can teach it to your children. He's saying your biggest responsibility here is to
set your own house in order and you haven't been teaching this to your children. So I'm not saying
you can sit down with your kids and go through Truman Madsen's Q&A about what philosophically is answered in this section, but can you sit
your kid down and say, look, there's something really special about you. And what's special
about you is that you've always existed. And Heavenly Father gave you to us to be your
caretaker for the next little while. We're going to mess up and we're going to make mistakes,
and we're going to have problems, and there's going to be ups and downs.
But Heavenly Father wanted us to nurture you because you have the potential to
be something really, really wonderful and really, really great. That you're an
eternal being and you're special. And the thematic tie between everything comes after verse 41 and everything that comes before sometimes seems weak.
But when you look at Heavenly Father saying, I'm teaching you the most profound and important things you need to know about being a human.
And then he turns to Frederick and then if you jump down, he does the same thing with Sidney Rigdon.
And then with Joseph Smith himself, verse 45, and Nulke Whitney in verse 50, he's basically saying,
this is stuff that every child needs to know.
How much of a difference would it make
if every single person on earth
really believed the statement,
I am a child of God, and he has sent me here.
There's so many people that just struggle
through their lives wondering what the purpose is is and what they're supposed to do. And we sing those little phrases
in one of our primary hymns and don't realize how transformative it is. Absolutely, because we
really believe it. It's not a child of God like George Washington is the father of our country.
It's not a metaphor where he's the father of our spirits. And that
is just theological dynamite that our kids are in their singing in the other room. That
means you can pray to him. He's your father. He loves you and it just changes everything.
Well, and not just that. I mean, it also turns our experience down here on Earth, especially
if you're a parent,
even if you're not a parent,
to help us understand what God is like.
Like, I remember my daughter came home from school once,
and she was just like sitting in the corner crying
and it was because she got sent to thinking time.
She got in trouble in class
and got sent to thinking time.
And she started crying and she was like,
I was like, honey, what's the
matter? I'm trying to come for her. She goes, well, I thought that if you thought I was
a bad kid, you wouldn't love me anymore. And I remember like sitting down and having
one of those farther moments where I was like, look, as long as you continue existing,
we are going to love you. If you're a serial killer, we'll love you. Okay, you can
be as bad as you want to be and we'll love you. Don't worry about our love. That's intrinsic. I mean,
the moment that I knew you were coming to earth before you came out of your mom's belly, I loved
you and I'll always love you. To take that idea and to apply it to God really is transformative too, right?
Because there are people like God hates me or or God doesn't know me.
And section 93 is saying God is fatherhood like the type of love that you feel for a child down here on earth that your own child is the type of love that God feels for you.
It's not arbitrary. He's not tossing you around like some statue that he sculpted
and he's ready to throw out into the trash.
You're literally his flesh and blood.
And that creates this kind of bond between you
and Heavenly Father that really is powerful.
And really does change your relationship
when you think about it.
But when you make a mistake, you think,
yeah, Heavenly Father wants me to do better,
but He still loves me.
I haven't lost God's love because I did this.
But sometimes when you get chastised a little bit
like these people were, like Joseph Smith was,
you also don't look at it as something that God is doing
because he's mean or tyrannical.
A parent chastises a good parent
and God's the greatest parent,
a parent chastises because they're and God's the greatest parent, a parent chastises
because they're trying to correct something that might hurt you.
They're trying to stop you from doing something that could hurt you down the road.
And this is the first presidency and the bishop, right?
Yeah, these are good people, right?
But the Lord is saying, hey, I've given you such an important responsibility.
Don't let it overwhelm your most important responsibility, which is your family's. Make sure they're okay.
Joseph, the next time you take off to Missouri, make sure Emma has a good place to stay and that she's
okay and that your children are safe. It's so easy for us in a church where we're so involved
to spend, you know, another half hour or a few more minutes on our lesson and neglect the
child that's sitting right next to us that needs somebody to love them. And I think the gospel
is engineered to try and help us be good parents. I've noticed he says in verse 37, verse 36,
the glory of God is intelligence, light and truth.
I want you to become like me.
So you have to, verse 37, as you become more like me,
you will forsake sin.
You will forsake the evil one.
And I've often told my students that, you know,
keeping away from sin is wonderful.
Like it's a great thing to say,
I want to do that, but I'm not going to do that.
I have self control.
It's an even better place to get to
when you say, I don't want to sin, right?
What is it?
Mosiah chapter five, we have,
the spirit has a lot of mighty change in us
and we have lost the disposition to do evil. And that seems
to me what the Lord is saying here that as you become more like me, you will sin will become
less and less attractive to you. There's a great article of a brother named Dennis Gaunt wrote in
the new era, I think back in about 2013, and he talked about that he said that mockers tend to focus
on the word can't. Why can't you do that?
Why can't you do this on Sunday? Why can't you do this before you're married?" And he said,
we're much better off if we focus on the word won't. I thought about it. I could say that I won't
do that. I choose not to. And I like what you're saying there, Hank, because I think as we grow,
I think it's evidence of kind of becoming as the process
of being born again is that light and truth, what is that?
Six, seven words, light and truth for sake, that evil one.
And we start to just think differently.
I know I have the option to do that, but I don't really want to.
And it's not I can't do it.
The whole concept of light, tying back to truth, truth is knowing things as they were as they are,
and if you're in a room and all the lights are turned off, you have no truth, basically,
is what we're saying. Light allows you to actually see things as they are. And to tie to verse 37,
the reason why you forsake the evil one is because you actually see what he is.
Not as someone that's attractive, but as someone that's pretty pathetic when it comes down
to it.
Someone that's petty, someone that's insular, someone that is self-centered instead of
being centered on making other people better.
And sometimes, I mean, all you need to do is create an environment of light and people
will naturally see what exists around them.
Hey, you and I have both that well, all of us have done EFY.
And we've seen the effect that happens after a person spent a week studying the scriptures
and going to classes.
It's like they needed to be taken out of their environment sometimes to know how dark it
was.
You put them in this environment where there's light and truth. So Randy bought, you probably know this story, told this story, someone came up to him and asked
how you'd change somebody that's involved in bad things. He told the story where he was playing
football outside with his friends. And as he's playing football, it's getting darker and darker.
And he runs to catch the football and doesn't see this tree branch and hits into it, just gets laid out flat
and has to go in the house and get a band-aid or something.
He comes out and he notices that it is pitch black.
And he calls to his friends and says,
hey, somebody's gonna get hurt.
Why don't you guys come in and all of them say,
no, it's fine.
And he realized it had gotten dark so gradually
that they had adjusted to it.
And he couldn't convince them to come in because they couldn't see how dark it was.
So he came with an author of a strategy and said, let's take a time out, everybody come
in and get a drink.
Everybody came in and got some water.
And then when they ran back out to play again, they saw how dark it was.
He said all I needed to do was to bring them into an environment where there was light.
And they realized on their own what darkness was. So sometimes rather than going up to
somebody and saying, Hey, what you're doing is wrong and you're going to get hurt.
Sometimes if you bring them into an environment of light, they'll see what's
going on in their life and they'll change. You can get a person to come to church
or go on a youth activity or maybe you just invite them into a really good home
Or send them to you know youth conference where they get out of their regular environment a lot of times
They'll naturally sort of recognize and see and forsake
The things in their life that are hurting them
Light exposes us to what we really are existing in,
and sometimes just bringing light into a person's life
is enough to change them.
Yeah, Casey, you pretty much quoted this section,
verse 39, wicked one, cometh,
and take it the way light and truth.
So, I like how you quoted Duran Di there,
you'll probably do it gradually through disobedience,
through gradual disobedience.
I'm going to slowly take away your light and truth,
and you might not even notice, right?
What is that?
Second Nephi, John, you'd know this.
Second Nephi.
28.
He'd lead it carefully.
Carefully.
Verse 21.
And it's poison by degrees in the Amalakaya LaHontai story, too.
I'm a 47.
It's subtle.
I like how Elder Bednar has talked about that most of the time, the light that we receive
is gradual like dawn.
We know the sun is coming in the same way. And the exceptional stories of the one with huge bright intelligence all at once,
but I like that.
I did in there, verse 39, of taking away the light subtly, and then you don't see as well.
And then verse 40, but I've commanded you to bring up your children in light and truth.
Create an environment in your home where there's plenty of light and plenty of truth.
And that as much as anything helps a kid turn out okay.
Oh man, say that again, create an environment.
Yeah, of light and truth.
I remember.
I remember.
I have light and plenty of truth.
Having a mom tell me that sometimes there'd be a big event in the news or something and they would say,
okay, why did this happen? What choice did this person make? What consequences came from that?
And instead of just saying, oh, the world's so terrible, let's look at this and look how they,
what choices brought this and I thought, that's a good way to kind of help young people make sense of how
what a what brilliant it is it the gospel is not only easiest and not the
the gospel is not only the right way to live but in a way it's the easiest way to live because you
avoid so many bad bad consequences and kind of pointing that out and putting it in the light.
This is why you will avoid some really bad consequences by staying in the light.
Yeah, haven't we all had that experience too when we walked into someone's house and
you've kind of like felt the light?
I remember when my wife and I were first married going over to this, the home of this guy that trained me as a seminary teacher,
and just the feeling when I walked into his home,
and recognizing that's the kind of home that I want to create.
It's a place of light and truth.
And if there's this home base where your,
where your own family can come and kind of see things
as they really were are and will be,
it makes a big difference in helping them kind of
navigate when they get out into the complexities and dark shadows that sometimes surround the world
around us. There's such a great idea between what we are and what Heavenly Father wants us to do,
which is nurture other people. I recently spent some time with the family of our executive producers, Steve and Shannon
Sorinson, and that's the perfect way to describe it.
As I spent time with them and their children and their grandchildren, there is a lot of
light and truth just radiating.
And it comes from even grandparents, the grandma and grandpa, Sorenson and others who continued
to teach light and truth.
And then I do my part as a parent.
And then the children do their part as a parent.
And it creates generations of light and truth that are powerful.
Being around this group was a powerful testimony to the
how glorious the commandments are. It was a little taste of heaven almost.
Hank, you use the word taste. Is it an Alma?
Alma 3233, you have tasted this light. It actually says that you can taste
light. And because here in Alma 32 is using the idea of your your this fruit the plant plant Christ in your heart
It grows this but then he actually says you can taste the light
Can taste that tastes good that light. Yes exactly
Casey from our knowledge do the there's a first presidency and Bishop Whitney, do they go home to their
families and decide they're going to do better there?
Well, thematically, the next section is section 94, section 94 and 95, talk about the
Curlin Temple.
And so, you do get the sense that they do kind of get their house in order and then the next thing
the Savior says is, I want you to build a house
where everybody can kind of come together.
That if Section 93 is about creating the ideal home,
well, what's the most ideal of homes?
It's a temple, a house where these truths and ideas
can be taught and shared with everybody.
But I mean, again, that idea of, these truths and ideas can be taught and shared with everybody.
But I mean, again, that idea of, I talked to my students,
but I put up a picture of the celestial room in the temple.
And I told my students,
pretend for just a moment that you didn't grow up in the church
and you've never been to the temple
and you're just seeing this picture for the first time.
What would it look like?
And the answer that almost everybody gave was,
it looks like a family
room, you know, it looks like you could set down a game board on top of one of those tables and start
playing a board game together as a group or you're sitting in a circle having a conversation.
It's interesting that based on our beliefs, Latter-day Saints conceptualize the temple, which
represents the presence of God as this really homey room. I mean, there's not
soaring arches and stained glass windows. It's very homey and very comfortable and very safe in
that sense. And gosh, I, like I said, love the idea that the Savior is basically saying, in
essence, I'm like you, and heavenly
Father is like you as well. He's a Father that's concerned and cares about you. There's this quote
by President Oaks that I share sometimes with this. He says, our theology begins with heavenly
parents. Our highest aspiration is to be like them. Under the merciful plan of the Father, all this
is possible through the atonement of the only begotten of the Father, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. And as earthly parents,
we participated in the gospel plan by providing mortal bodies for the Spirit children of God,
the fullness of eternal salvation is a family matter.
Our theology begins and ends with heavenly parents. That's how we think of God. That's
how we conceptualize God. The temple is God's house. And if we're talking about like we were a few moments ago, entering into a home and just feeling light and truth
there, that's also what we feel we go in the temple, right? But the temple is our father's
home. It's where we should feel most comfortable because ultimately that's what it's like.
Beautiful. Let me point out one last thing.
Verse 53, can you take a look at that?
He says,
very I say unto you,
it's my will that you should hasten to translate my scriptures
and obtain a knowledge of history, of countries, of kingdoms,
of laws of God and man
and all this for the salvation of Zion.
In other words,
this is going to sound strange too, but when you're sitting there helping your child with their homework,
you're also teaching light and truth.
That going back to that old Brigham Young statement that the gospel embraces all truth. Everything that's true,
we're good with. So it's not just that you're doing the Lord's work when you're reading scriptures or praying with your kids.
When you're sitting there doing homework with your kids, you're worshiping, in a sense.
And when you take your kids to a good movie that uplifts and instructs them, that is spreading light and truth.
That's all stuff that's helpful.
If you don't have any kids, but you're serving diligently in a calling, I have a wonderful
sister-in-law who teaches elementary school kids.
She doesn't have any kids of her own, but she spends all of her days all of her time teaching
light and truth to third and fourth graders.
That is a form of worship as far as I'm concerned, because I think when Heavenly Father thinks
of his titles,
it goes Father and then teacher, probably number two.
And when we try to think of what Jesus did in this life,
I mean, we like to talk about how he was a carpenter,
but he was really a teacher.
A person that teaches and teaches light and truth
is also doing God's work and worshiping God.
This kind of brings us full circle with your studies in education.
Education has always been a part of the restoration, hasn't it?
Yeah.
I mean, one of the titles for the Kirtland Temple was a house of learning.
And they thought of it first and foremost as a school.
They just didn't quite know what school was going to be like until they got there and
Heavenly Father endowed them with power, gave them the knowledge that
they needed. But going back to the school, the prophets, which takes place right before
this, I mean learning is worship. Teaching is worship. If worship is emulation and God
is the ultimate teacher, then that's what it means to be like. God is that you're always teaching improving and helping someone else.
Joseph Smith had a vision for a university in Nauvoo, right?
And a university in Zion and, and I'm sure Brigham Young continued that out in, out west.
Yeah. I mean, the first building built in every Latter-day St.
settlement was a schoolhouse.
We got around to building temples
because they're grand and majestic a little bit later, but the first thing was we had to make
sure that our children were learning light and truth. That's a theme you can follow all the way
through the doctrine and evidence. I remember President Nelson giving a talk at BYU and I was there
and he said the main difference between hoping to make a difference in the world
and actually making a difference in the world is in education. Is that Ring of Bell?
That idea to keep learning and I love that what you said about a friggin' young statement
about if it's true, it belongs to Mormonism. I thought as the way I heard it, but we're not afraid of science. Science
had stopped changing because I had a biology textbook that cost me a hundred bucks and
when I gave it back to the BYU bookstore, they gave me five for it. Why? Because it changed.
Right? And it wasn't true anymore, but I set my scriptures on the shelf and they're still
true. And so I tell my students,
I we're not afraid of anything that we discover in science because we embrace all truth.
Yeah. President Dufz said to Latter-day Saints, education's not just a good idea, it's a commandment.
And this is one of those sections where you get that, that we're not afraid of a person knowing
too much. We're afraid of them knowing too little. But again, it's light and truth.
As long as you're learning things that are true,
it's always going to be edifying to you.
The danger lies sometimes in learning things that aren't true.
Joseph Merrill was a physicist and he was basically saying,
I've studied physics and I can't figure out how all this all this came together
without some sort of divine mind behind it. The more you
study science, true science, real science, it'll increase your faith. It'll make you look at the
wonder and beauty and complexity of the universe and just say, there's no way that this happened by
accident. This is a beautiful creation of a master artist. And so that's another great tradition.
I think you could trace back to section 93,
but a whole bunch of revelations in the doctrine
and covenants where the Lord said,
get out there, learn stuff, explore the world around you,
and embrace it, it's beautiful, I made it for you.
Learning how the world works is learning another part of Godhood.
One of my favorite gospel books was either about or written by Henry Eiring Senior.
Yeah.
I think it's reflections of a scientist or the faith of a scientist.
Both of those were written either about him or by him.
And he says that same thing.
I just want to learn more.
And he said, you know, here he is a prize, probably should have been a Nobel prize-winning chemist
and he talks about how God must think it's so darling,
him and his chemistry set, right?
And how he's trying so hard,
that it's got to be so fun to have him.
He said, what is it up?
See if I can get the quote right.
Our knowledge must look like wide-eyed awe of a child to him. He said, what is it up? See if I can get the quote right. Our knowledge must look
like wide-eyed awe of a child for him. Oh look honey, the kids landed on the moon, isn't that
wonderful, but someday they'll master it or sell or travel just like we have. I love that idea
that a biology class can be as edifying as a theology class can be. If you just look at it through the right lens
and take the truth from it, do you need to take?
Oh, I was thinking about the story that President Nelson,
President Russell M. Nelson likes to tell about
having kind of revelation in the middle of heart surgery
about how to repair this heart.
And it wasn't the Lord saying, oh, just have faith.
The Lord taught him truth,
and taught him a way to do that.
And that's such a cool story,
because that was pure intelligence.
And it was science-type intelligence.
It was medicine.
It was anatomy-type intelligence, right?
In that moment, that's a cool story.
And isn't it cool to have a, you know, a medical doctor be the head of the
church? In most churches, the heads are guys like you and me, you know, that teach
theology and and and be ourselves in that. It's just great to have a church to be
part of a religion where, you know, being smart as recognized as a really,
really great thing that education's great and get out there and educate people
and educate yourself and it'll be a blessing to everybody around you. The glory of God
is intelligence or light and truth. So get as much light and truth as you can from every
possible source that you can. The church helps a ton when it comes to religious light
and truth, but there's other places to go where you can learn light and truth about how
the world works. And you can thirst after it.
We're not just talking about degrees here,
like college degrees, we're talking about
all anywhere, other sources as well.
One thing I've noticed going through the doctrine
of covenants, this cycle is how often the Savior
says that to them.
He says it in section 88, he says it at the end of section 90,
and there's a dozen other places where he says get out there and learn stuff.
And Joseph Smith and the first generation of the church had one thing common. They were all intellectually curious about the world around them.
I mean, it's funny that a couple months after this is given Joseph Smith.
When you get to section 111, not a couple months, a couple years, but Joseph Smith goes to Salem.
And we don't talk about the fact that while he's in Salem, he's running from museum to museum. He's learning as much as he can, because he
hasn't been there before. He was just an intellectually curious person. And that's a great attribute. That's
something that all of us should seek to cultivate in ourselves. Excellent. Let's ask our last question, I think.
Excellent. Let's ask our last question, I think. So Casey, you've been studying the history of the church, the sections, the history of church education for over two decades now.
I know that because we started just about the same time. So share with us maybe just your
personal thoughts about Joseph Smith, his contemporaries,
and the history of the church.
Oh boy, that is a big, a big topic to try and capture.
I will say this, I just got back from Kerland. You know it's been a year since anybody's able to travel. And my first major trip was to go to Kirkland.
And part of the reason why I went there was to visit this guy named Carl Rick Anderson,
who lives in Kirkland and is a tour guide there, probably the best tour guide in the world
when it comes to Kirkland.
And to think, Carl's been a state president, a regional representative in his now a patriarch in the church, but not many people know who he is.
And I would say one of the beauties of the gospel is that for every Joseph Smith and Sydney Rigdon and Nulke Whitney, there are tens of thousands of people out there
that are doing everything they can to live the gospel
and strive to make a difference,
that really do make a difference,
but might not wind up in the pages
of the doctrine and covenants.
On Memorial Day, I took my kids to this town
where my parents grew up
and there's a grave there marked John R. Murdock,
who's the guy that section 99 was received on behalf of it's a really short section
But if you go back and study his life he made so many contributions and did so many profound and amazing things
And we sometimes overlook those men and women that don't make the front pages of
the Scriptures sometimes
I would say to every single person out there,
you're making a difference. And even if there's not a big recognition for what
you're doing, you're making a profound difference. I talked at the first of
this about the first seminary teacher. Nobody knows his name. He made a huge
difference. Change the lives of millions of people.
Everybody out there is important.
And that as much as anything is freeing in the gospel
is the ability to look at people around you
and see the best that exists.
It's so easy for us to become cynical
and just think people are the worst
and why is everybody so terrible.
But we need to recognize how good everybody is around us and how much potential they have
and how wonderful they are. We need to see goodness where it's at and recognize that truth
and light is not just a knowledge of things as they are and as they were and as they will be, but it's genuine goodness.
That being like God isn't just knowing everything, fact-wise, it's knowing perfect empathy and sympathy and kindness.
That that's what we should aspire to be.
There's people out there that don't have PhDs, but boy, do they have a high quotient of emotional indulgence
and know how to help them love people? And there's some people out there that might not ever have the means or the way to attend a university
that understand more about this universe and how it works in a profound way than you really can't get in a classroom.
So I would say in embracing learning, we not only embrace that kind of comes from a book type of learning,
but the early members of the gospel also embraced the idea of experiencing and loving
and fully living life in a way that you engage
with other people and learn from them as well.
I learned so much from the people around me
and I'm so grateful for them.
And I hope everybody gets their moment with Heavenly Father
where he gets to say,
well done, now good and faithful servant,
whether that person's a Joseph Smith, whether that person was just a really great teacher that
stated their post and taught light and truth for their entire life. In the end, both will have made
a really critical contribution to the kingdom and both deserve the same reward. And that's my spiel. So that's excellent. That's absolutely excellent. I've loved section 93 now.
I knew a little bit about it before coming in, but nothing like you've shown us. So
John, any closing parting thoughts? No, I thought that was a great way to summarize, especially
for your average, that was great.
Grandmas and Grandpas out there that maybe don't have all the, or like the John R. Murrocks,
made such a contribution. And to them, it was their family. And that's what this section says to
take care of your families. Teach them the truth, but take care of him, and that's what's important.
I have a quote here from President Spencer W. Kimball. He says, that is the answer, family
life, home life, home evenings, dedicated, selfless parents. That is the way the Lord ordained
our lives to be.
And can I add in just one thing real quick?
At the last conference, I was really moved when Elder Gong talked about changes in the church
and he said that over half the church is single.
We have the adults in the church are single.
I just want to impress on everybody the idea that family is more than just mom and dad,
son and daughter. That your family
ultimately is everybody around you and the people that you love and make connections
with. So if you're not married and you don't have kids, you're still part of a family.
And you have an obligation to help where you can help the lift where you can lift and
to spread light and truth to all people that you connected with whatever your family looks like
Well said well said we want to thank Dr. Casey Griffis for being with us today
We want to thank all of you for listening and staying with us. We're grateful
To our executive producers Steve and Shannon Sorenson and we have a great production crew
We mentioned them every week because
they are doing so much. Their names are David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Kyle Nelson,
Will Staten, and Maria Hilton. Thank you to our incredible team, and we hope that you will
join us on our next episode of Follow Him. you