Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Easter : Dr. John Hilton III Part II
Episode Date: March 28, 2021We continue to discuss Holy Week and unpack all four Gospels and their accounts. Dr. Hilton shares why Holy Saturday has applications to uplift and enrich our lives, especially in times of trial. Disc...over why the story of the Road to Emmaus teaches us about expectations, doubt, and faith.Shownotes: www.followhim.coInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcast/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
Let's move forward now, Dr. Hilton.
I've heard you say this before that we often jump from Friday,
crucifixion to Sunday, resurrection.
And we skip Saturday, but you like to talk about Saturday.
Why?
I love Saturday because it's in the middle, right?
So you've got yesterday's tragedy and tomorrow's triumph, but now it's in the middle, right? So you've got yesterday's tragedy
and tomorrow's triumph, but now we're in the middle. And I feel like so much of our lives metaphorically
speaking is Saturday, right? Something bad has happened. Maybe it's going to be resolved. We hope
it's going to be resolved, but it hasn't been resolved yet. So I love lingering for a moment
resolved yet. So I love lingering for a moment with the women at the tomb. This is huge. This is not a little thing because so often when people are going through tragedy, we talk
about the future. It's going to be okay because such and such. I know we mean well, but
for me personally who has seen a lot of difficulty over the last six months, I'm not overly concerned about the future.
Like, I believe too. I'm with you. I believe that the future is going to be great.
My concern and my pain as long and long with I know many others is not that we don't believe it's in the right now.
The right now is hard and if we don't right now. The right now is hard.
If we don't stop and say the right now is hard, I think we can be too quick to just tell people,
it's going to be okay.
It's going to be okay.
Is that what I'm hearing?
Yeah, exactly.
So I mean, think about moments that we almost gloss over entirely,
like taking Christ's body down from the cross.
What did that look like?
What did that feel like? Mary Magdalens there, Mary, the mother of Jesus is there. What's in their
hearts? They go to the tomb. He's buried. What's running through their minds? And I think a key is
that they don't leave town. They stay near the tomb and they come back Sunday morning.
So is it okay if we move to Sunday now, John?
I was hoping we could just have five minutes of silence on the podcast and just let us
all kind of let it just marinate.
No.
So as we go to Sunday, I don't know exactly how everyone wants to approach this, but I do
want to kind of throw out a resource that's changed the way I view the resurrection. And it's doing a side-by-side study of what Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John teach about what
happens at the garden and beyond, the garden tomb and beyond.
And I know that you both have studied this quite a bit, and it's interesting that although
the core message is the same in all the accounts, right?
The tomb is empty, women are the first witnesses, Jesus is alive.
There's subtle differences that maybe when you start to notice them,
bring out these great insights and spiritual nuggets that at least I had never noticed before.
So again, in the show notes, I'll give you a side-by-side handout that you can use.
I think this would be a great family home evening or a good Sunday afternoon study time to just kind of carefully read what are the little subtle differences
and similarities in these accounts and what do I learn from them because there's so much I know
we'll spend some time unpacking it right now but even if we had three hours devoted to this segment
we couldn't really unpack all there is to offer in Matthew, Mark, Luke,
and John's teaching, so the resurrection.
In fact, let's start unpacking, because one of my favorite things to show my students is that
in the gospel of Mark, in the original gospel of Mark, you never see a resurrected Lord.
If you go to the end of the Gospel of Mark and you see the women
are there at the tomb, now I've heard something John and you can tell me if this is incorrect
or not, but in Jesus' day, women could not be legal witnesses.
Yeah, so there are there are restrictions on women in terms of their ability to testify
in public court settings. And here the Savior, I think, does it on purpose, maybe,
to show, listen, here are gonna be my first witnesses.
I think Elder Townmidge said that Jesus Christ
is the greatest, a defender of women to ever live, right?
And this is one indication that he doesn't care
about the legality of a woman's witness, he is going to,
those are going to be his first witness, is a group of women. But when you get all the
way down to 16-8, it says this, and they went out quickly and fled from the sepulcher
for they trembled and were amazed. Neither said they anything to any man, for they were afraid.
You can look right there, that is the original ending
of the Gospel of Mark.
It just ends, right there.
Talk about a bad ending.
And it might be a good ending for some,
I've heard a lot of New Testament scholars say,
no, this is good because of, but for me personally,
I like a nice tie the bow ending.
And this is a leave you hanging ending or you're going what
happens? What happens, right? And almost as if Mark, if you if you were red
Mark or heard Mark read to you, you might say, I got to know what happens, right? It
was almost left as a cliffhanger. It's almost I've always thought what if we did
this as missionaries? We did a kind of a gospel of Mark approach and said, Joseph prayed and in the light he saw
to find out more.
Please go to, you know,
next week in Sharia's.
Yeah.
Cause like, what did he see?
What did he see?
So it's almost as if Mark is kind of leaving him,
leaving him hanging there.
Anything on the gospel of Mark John that you want to talk about?
So I, one thing that I think really is interesting
and I don't know if this is intentional or not,
but throughout the Gospel of Mark,
there are several times where Jesus does a miracle,
and then he'll say, don't tell anybody about it.
And now here at the end, the young man at the tomb
tells the women, go tell people about Jesus,
and they don't tell.
It's a reversal, and I wonder if it's meant
to be sort of a literary irony, right?
And now it comes to you and me, you and I, the reader, we are left in the tomb.
That's where we end in Mark. We're there. And it's kind of like, okay, well, if the women don't go tell,
who's going to tell, who's going to share the message? Who's been along for the ride the whole time?
Me. So am I going to now keep the secret? Or am I going to go spread the good news of Jesus?
So I love that short ending.
Yeah. It does seem to not be a, I would say, John, I don't think this is a mark condemning
these women. He's using a literary device here, right? Because I'm sure these women
eventually told a lot of people Matthew's gonna highlight that for us
Yeah, so sure every every every gospel is gonna give us slightly different portrait
But I think especially in mark and I like how you said that it was probably heard
Mark was most likely a performance, right people are hearing mark not reading it
And so now that dramatic note I think actually is a powerful
Witnessing moment for me as a disciple to say okay. What am I gonna do?
It is I just I when I if I watch a movie with a bad ending it leaves me uncomfortable
Maybe that's the whole point to leave you a bit uncomfortable
And say you got to you better go find out more you better yeah, there's there's more to this than you realize instead of tying it all up nicely
Mark was most likely written first right John
So let's go to the Matthew account which has its basis most likely in the gospel of Mark
You know one one little subtle difference
So we were just talking about the women at the tomb if you look in verse eight Matthew 28
It says they departed quickly from the seppulcher with fear and great joy and
Did run Matthew 28, it says they departed quickly from the sepliker with fear and great joy and did run
to bring his disciples. I love that phrase. They did run. Hank, you're a runner, John. I don't know if you're a runner. I only run if I'm being chased, which is rarely. So you're a swimmer.
But think about like, I mean, if I had this kind of news to share how fast, how far could
I run?
And I can almost feel the adrenaline in these women as they're running to share the good
news of Jesus Christ.
And maybe that's something for me.
Do I metaphorically speaking, am I running to tell people about Jesus Christ?
Am I hiding my light in a bush?
And I'm like, oh, yeah, well, this weekend,
I did this on Friday, do this on Saturday,
and I don't talk about church,
because I'm not running metaphorically speaking
to tell people the good news.
Yeah, do you feel like you have good news?
Because this is good news.
This is good news.
This has changed your life news,
and I've got to tell you.
And then it seems like the author
of the gospel of Matthew is saying,
let me give you a little bit more than Mark gave you. Would you agree that he's saying, okay,
let me, let me, those of you who are reading my account of things, I'm going to give you a little
bit, a little bit more, which to be a first century reader would be really fun to get a, you know,
a second account. It says that Jesus meets these women
and tells them that they he is going to meet his brethren,
which I assume to be the apostles in Galilee,
which is a three-day journey away from the tomb.
And that's how Matthew's a little bit different
in my point of view,
in that you have him appearing,
we're gonna go ahead and look at Luke and John here
in a second, but he's in Jerusalem.
He's around that area appearing.
Here, it's go to Galilee, go back home,
and I'll see you there.
So that's, I don't know,
they're gonna go back home anyway,
but to go back home having the anticipation of,
he's gonna appear, is a beautiful idea.
Let's go home, man. Let's take the journey.
You know, as we think about the fact that they came and Jesus tells the
women directly, go tell my brethren, it's interesting that the message to the
apostles is coming from these women that Christ is commissioning. And oftentimes
we think that revelation always comes from the top down.
And it is true that we are led by a prophet and we need to follow the prophets counsel and
teaching 100%. At the same time, in the history of the church, sometimes great ideas have come
from other sources, right? Araeli-arrogers has the inspiration to start the primary program.
And she takes her ideas and shares it with the president of the church and then it becomes the primary program that eventually we know and love today.
The welfare program also started as a stake program and then it came up and came to the
whole church.
So this is this happened.
So and I just think it's okay for us to pause and reflect for a moment that Christ's
original message as a resurrected
Savior is to women, and that's important.
And he's calling them to be witnesses to his apostles.
Hmm, I think that's a beautiful idea.
And oftentimes I think we like to take latter day principles and ideas and kind of force
them on to the past when we can be comfortable that things weren't exactly the way we have them today.
The end of the gospel of Matthew, it doesn't seem to be focusing on wow he's resurrected, it seems
to be focusing on the apostles go, go teach, right? Almost as if this fact that this person came back
from the dead is just a side note to the commission to these apostles. In fact,
I think in the MTC, as it was redone a few years ago, there is now a beautiful big sign in the MTC
with the great commission of Matthew 28, go ye therefore and teach all nations. Do you think the
author of the Gospel of Matthew
has this in mind because the first century Christians
needed to get out there and spread that message?
And so he's kind of telling them that?
Yeah, that's a clear emphasis, right?
We've got to spread the good news.
And right after that, so as you called it,
the great commission there in verses 18 and 19.
And then in verse 20,
at the very end, he says, low, I am with you always, even to the end of the world.
And I think that's a powerful message to go along with the idea that when as we're
sent out to preach the gospel, Jesus is with us always.
And he's saying that even as he's bidding them for a well, he's like, all right, get out of here, go teach the gospel, but I'm always with you.
And actually, if you remember, the very beginning of Matthew and Matthew,
chapter one, when it talks about Christ being born, it, uh, Matthew refers to a prophecy from Isaiah,
saying that his name shall be Emmanuel, meaning God with us. So here now at the beginning and end of Matthew,
there's this message, Jesus is with you.
And I love that to think about us on the Great Commission,
sharing the gospel, we're not alone.
The master of the vineyard is laboring with us.
Oh, yeah, that's that great Jacob five reference, right?
And you guys both know my personality and how odd I am,
but I often
tell my students, well, when I was on my mission, people would ask, why can't you just leave
us alone? Great. Believe what you believe. I'll believe what I believe. Why do you
got to come knocking on my door? And I think as a 19 year old, I was, oh, I'm so sorry,
we're so didn't mean to disturb you. We'll go or several, but I think now as an older
as an old man, I would say something like, listen,
I don't wanna be here either,
but you take it up with him because this is,
he asked me to, Matthew 28, go ye therefore,
and teach all nations.
So if you are, have a problem with this,
I honestly wouldn't say this,
but if I, in my mind, I would be thinking,
if you have a problem with this, take it up with him
because it's his commission to his followers.
Go and teach, go and spread the gospel.
So I think as a missionary, if a missionary is maybe hearing this, they might have confidence in what they're doing,
that you are following the master's commission to go and teach. And yes, some people might be bothered, but he didn't say that.
He didn't say go and teach all nations.
But don't apologize when you bother.
He was, this is a straightforward message.
I love where this is going.
Now I'm excited to see when I saw and they did run it.
I don't know.
It just reminded me of of in the book Mormon when
Jesus was with them and then he said I'm coming back tomorrow
It says there were people who are up all that night
To gather others to be in the place where Jesus said he would appear on the moral and I think if you knew
He's gonna be here tomorrow and you didn't have a phone or telegraph
All you had was your cural alms and coomoms or your horse
How hard would you know the coomoms kid? Let's go
We gotta go tell everybody. I love just the idea of how hard would you work to make sure your family was there?
So I like that. Yeah, that John that is such a good idea. It reminds me of Luke two right and the shepherds made haste. Yeah, right.
Let's go. Let's go tell everybody.
Okay, let's turn our sights on the third account. Let's go to the Gospel of Luke.
Where Luke adds a story, he says something very similar to both Matthew and Mark. If you read in Luke 24,
he talks about the angels, the tomb, the women. He adds a little piece of information
that we don't get in Matthew and Mark.
And that's in verse 12 about Peter himself
going to the sepulchre.
But then we get a whole new story
that we haven't heard before.
Before we go to the new story,
if I can just highlight one little question in verse five
that's also unique to Luke,
is the phrase,
why seek ye the living among the dead? Is the question that the angels ask the women?
And I know that you both have been to Jerusalem several times and we all enjoy going there.
When I was living in Jerusalem, I would love to go to the traditional place of Christ,
death, and resurrection.
And I remember the last day I was so sad, I was like, how am I going to keep coming closer
to Christ when I'm back in America, you know, and it's not the same as living in Jerusalem.
And this was the line that came to my mind.
Why seek ye the living among the dead?
Jesus is risen.
I mean, I hope that we all get to go to Jerusalem.
Like it's a fantastic experience, but we don't have to walk where he walked to walk closer
to him now.
And just that idea that he's risen, and we don't need to seek him in Jerusalem, per se.
I mean, great if you get the chance, but we can seek him now in our lives.
I think that's a little powerful question that the angels bring out here in Luke.
Oh, John, you've really touched my heart there.
One regret, my father passed away this last month, and one regret I have is I never got to take him to Jerusalem.
We'd always talked about it, and he was a caretaker for my mother.
So you just healed my heart a little bit there that we don't need to see Jerusalem.
It is a beautiful experience, but we don't need to see Jerusalem. It reminds me also of a woman
who said that she was sitting at her young daughter's grave side. And she felt the Holy Ghost speak in the words in the voice of her daughter to her,
I am not here. Don't seek me here. If you want to be closer to me, go to the temple. Go to the
temple. That is where I am. And so I like that. I like that. This idea of that Christ is very much alive and very active in our lives and in the church.
So Luke tells us this story that we don't get anywhere else. It's one of my absolute favorites in Scripture. I say that a lot about Scripture.
But it really is. It really is one of my absolute favorites. And that's the road to Emmaus. What do you want to talk to us about? You both of you.
This is an important one to me personally
because we have this one of the biggest pieces of art
in our house was Jesus on the road to Emmaus.
And my dad loved to show us what the artist did
and then tell us the story, how he drew near
to these two men walking.
And their eyes were holdin' it says. They didn't know who he was.
And they were, have you stranger around here? Have you not heard what's been going on?
And then Jesus opens up the scriptures and tells them everything.
And when he leaves, he is like, well, come and eat with us.
I can't remember exactly what they said, but they say, abide with us.
And I've always thought, does the him abide with me
come from that verse?
Bide with us is even tied.
And so we sing that, but Jesus leaves.
And then they say, did not our hearts burn within us
as he walked and talked with us by the way?
And we love that in our family.
Yeah.
For that reason alone, but I
love when that recognition comes, hey, wait a minute, who was that? And our hearts burned,
we felt something while he talked with us. And I don't know if we even know who those two
disciples were. Is there another gospel that speaks of these two and gives them names?
No, there's only one named here.
His name is Cleopus, and then the other one,
some New Testament scholars have said,
it's gotta be Luke.
I don't see any evidence for that,
but I have heard that.
Yeah.
That the other one might be Luke.
What's he, John Hilton?
Yeah, same.
Same with you, so we don't know who the second person is.
Some people have maybe speculated
that it's a female disciple as well.
We just don't know for sure.
I love this story.
As John said, they are walking, and it's a long walk, right?
We're talking, you know, if you have your footnotes
with you, it used to be in kilometers,
but then someone said, why don't they just speak American?
And I think it says what now?
Seven miles, is that what it says?
Seven like that? six or seven miles.
That's a long walk.
I don't know about you guys, but that's in steps.
I guess we're now talking in steps.
We're talking, you know, this is gonna be 20,000 steps.
So it's gonna take a couple of hours.
And I, you know, Jesus is there with him.
They don't know that it's Jesus.
I love that.
I hope it's a standard feature in all resurrected bodies.
The ability to have other people's eyes hold in.
I've joked with my students.
I hope this just isn't a Jesus upgrade
because that would be,
I would spend the first half of the millennium
just scaring my friends, right?
You too. So what did you think of your friend Hank?
Right.
And then they say, well, he wasn't my favorite.
See, it was me the all time I told you.
But my favorite is that they say, he says, why are you, why are you both so sad?
And they say, do you live under a rock, right?
Jesus of Nazareth. That's the Greek, right? The Greek is the, yeah, the, yeah, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the Right? Jesus of Nazareth? That's the Greek, right?
The Greek is the...
Yeah, yeah.
It's a new translation from the Greek.
I've read the papyri and, yeah, it is...
Do you live under a petroce?
Yeah.
John.
So there are some jokes that only we will get.
But they said, and this tells me that everybody's talking about Jesus, right?
They're saying, there's not a person here.
Are you the only stranger? There doesn't know about this?
You don't know about this. This is a big deal. And then they make this statement. And maybe you guys
stop me if I skip something you want to look at, but they lost their faith.
In verse 21, we trusted that it had been He, which should have redeemed Israel.
And to me, this just speaks volumes.
And I'll ask my students, what's wrong?
Why did they lose their faith in Jesus?
And usually the students will say something like,
he didn't do what they assumed he would do.
The political deliverer thing.
Right, they had some made, they had made some assumptions
or had some expectations of him that he did not meet
and when he did not meet them,
instead of challenging
their expectations, they doubted him. And I see this happens so often with friends,
students and others who lose their faith because they set up an expectation for God or for
even Joseph Smith, or they have an expectation.
And who knows where they got it?
These men probably got this from tradition.
They were probably taught this at some point.
They probably maybe even had read the scriptures and had made this assumption from reading
scripture.
I don't know, but it was a bad assumption.
And my favorite part about this is that the Savior takes, he says at the beginning at
Moses, I assume they mean Genesis,
he takes what we would call the Old Testament
and opens it up to him,
and he corrects their assumptions using Scripture.
And I have asked my students,
if you ever feel so inclined, and I have done this,
I'll say something in my own prayers, Lord, if I
have an assumption or an expectation that is just false, it's just, will you help me correct
it as I study the scriptures?
And I'll tell you both that it's happened.
There have been times where my own personal expectations for things.
I remember one student said,
I just don't know if I believe in God anymore because I'm not married. And I said,
where, where did you get that ex? He said, don't you think if God loved me, I'd be married by now.
And I said, no, like where does that say in the scriptures, when they'll reach us the age of 20
and six, if thou art beloved, thou shall be wed. Right? It does not say in the scriptures, when thou reachest the age of 20 and 6, if thou art
beloved, thou shalt be wed?
It does not say that anywhere.
And I said, where did you get that expectation?
And he was really great about it.
He said, you know, I don't know.
I just, I guess I just made it up.
Well, I think John has already talked to us about it.
There is the law of retribution and the Old Testament, the law of the harvest in the
new, and we talk about those all the time, but there's a Saturday in between.
And concerning the marriage thing, just talked to me about it.
I was way into menace to society territory before I got married. But I'm thinking about the
Beatitudes were so interesting because it was blessed are the present reality
for they shall be. And there was a future possibility. And he sent them all home
in the middle of their Saturdays because and so I liked that idea and I think
that we all have that idea of law the hardest, but
there's some patience required in the middle and
that expectation, I know that our friend Sherry Dew said once that if all that were required
for getting a husband were fasting and printing and going to the temple, I would have Nephi's lined up at my door, she said.
And so there again is an
expectation. So I like that idea of we're in the Saturday. I'm going to remember that for a long
time. And I think just like a helpful, like quick expectation reset is to go through our
scriptural heroes, right? So Abenedai, super faithful, burned at the stake. Mormon works his whole life to protect
his people. He's murdered. Moroni lives the vast majority of his life completely alone. So there
should be no expectation that if I'm righteous, everything's going to work out. Jesus himself,
yeah, right. Jesus himself, um, look at his life. There should be no expectation of I live the gospel
and I get everything I want. Right?
So speaking of Jesus though,
this is one of the things I think is so cool
about that verse you pointed out in verse 21.
We had hoped he was the one, but I guess he wasn't.
And they're losing hope in the very moment Jesus is with them.
Yeah.
And how often maybe is that true for us, right?
Like I'm like I'm giving up,
like I don't feel connected to God.
I'm right here, I'm right here right now.
Yeah.
And so if any of our listeners are feeling that we had hoped,
maybe not, I testify, Jesus is walking with you now.
He's there.
Maybe we can't feel him, maybe heaven feels distant sometimes,
but that does not mean he's not there.
Yeah.
So many times, and I don't wanna say this isn't all the time thing,
but whenever I have talked to a friend,
a student who is struggling has doubts often,
I'll say often, not all, but often it is based
on some sort of expectation they have.
They'll say something like, I just found out
that the Book of Mormon has had changes in it.
And I said, yeah, I knew that too. That's awesome, right? And
They had an expectation that somehow if the Book of Mormon had changes, it wasn't true
A woman said to me once and it really was a soccer mom
We're at a soccer game and she was a mom and she came up to me and she said
She said brother Smith. Don't you think if the church were true, it would be bigger? And I said, what do you mean?
And she kind of thought it through and explained to me.
And she said, don't you think it'd be bigger?
And I said, well, that's not what I see in the scriptures.
And I talked about Nephi saying, I saw many are called few are chosen.
I saw the saints of God and they were few.
Just so often, we are basing our faith on bad expectations
and I think when present oak dwarf said doubt your doubts. I don't want to put words in his mouth,
but to me I hear analyze your expectations. Right? Analyze those first before you doubt your faith.
And it's it's been something that's worked worked for me. And I think I am so typical of these guys.
When it all gets worked out, they say,
we knew it the whole time, right?
Did our hearts not burn within us?
Of course.
I never doubted for a second, right?
I had it with me the whole time.
By the way, Jesus vanishes.
Again, I hope that is standard resurrection body ability.
Don't you guys think?
If I can change my appearance and vanish,
I will have a wonderful, a wonderful after life.
I just, I will spend the first few millennia
just doing those things.
I wanna highlight it in chapter 24 verse 36. So as the disciples
are now eating, as you mentioned earlier Hank in Jerusalem, Jesus himself stood in the
midst of them and said, peace be unto you. And you can look at these next few verses as
far as a proof of Jesus having a physical body in the resurrection. And that's a powerful
point. I also just love that at least in English we see the first word Jesus says is peace. And when the
angels announce Christ birth to the shepherds they say peace on earth. So from
the beginning his birth here in the resurrection everywhere in between Jesus
wants us to be at peace. And I love that message. Why is John so different than the other three gospels?
Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
And then you have this, well, here's all brand new stuff.
Yeah.
So I think 93% of the gospel of John is unique to John.
And so you're right, there is a difference.
And early Christian fathers were talking about this
and suggesting that John
was aware of the earlier details being recorded. And so John wanted to write a spiritual gospel,
kind of having a different focus. In the gospel of John, we see Jesus portrayed a little bit
differently. He's more divine. He always knows what's going on. For example, in the Garden of Gesemini, if we are watching
a video of it, we almost always see Judas betraying Jesus with a kiss. And that happens in Matthew and
Mark. But in John, Jesus takes control of the situation. And as the guards approach, he says,
who are you looking for? And we see a Jesus who's in complete command. And I think John wants to maybe
highlight some of the divinity
of Jesus Christ that maybe isn't as fully fleshed out
in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
Yeah, I've also noticed that you get a lot of
up close in personal accounts of Jesus
in the Gospel of John, where you get a lot of sermons
in both Matthew and Luke, you get Jesus in one-on-one
conversation with Nicodemus, the woman at the well,
with his own mother, with Pilate, here in the resurrection, a lot of one-on-one conversations. Let's jump
into the resurrection, then, as it told by John. And since we have two John's here, now we're on a
third John. This is overwhelming for me. But what do you both see in the resurrection account as given in the Gospel of John?
In Luke chapter 8, we see that Mary Magdalene has seven devils inside of her, and Jesus
casts them out.
And I don't know exactly what it means to have seven devils inside you, but it's clearly
not good, right?
And I'm definitely not saying it's Mary's fault, right?
And it could be something spiritual, emotional, it could be a physical ailment. Who knows? But the point is it's not good. I like that. I like this. Having seven
devils in you is not good. Not good. A message from the Church of Jesus. Right. Like that.
So I think we're safe. I think we're safe on that one. We're safe on that one. Safe side on that one.
So then jumping ahead to John chapter 20, as Jesus appears first to Mary Magdalene,
and it's John chapter 20 verse 16,
she's remained at the tomb after Peter
and the other disciple of left,
and Jesus say,
I think to her, Mary, and she realizes it's Jesus.
And so to me, that is a great message of hope.
So if here's Mary with seven devils
in a low, difficult state,
now she's the first human witness of Jesus Christ.
And it's hard to think of a higher spiritual state
or calling or opportunity than to be the first human witness
of the resurrected Jesus.
That's amazing.
And so I love that story to see Mary Madeline go from a dark place
to a beautiful place. And that's a message of hope for those of us who are feeling like we're
in a dark place right now. Oh, that is really nice. You know, John teach us about verse 17. So Jesus
says, Mary, she turns, she knows who he is.
Her whole life changes in one word and it's her name.
I've always had, I shouldn't say I've always had,
when I was in primary, I just really hated the fact
that Jesus could not, or that Mary could not touch.
Don't touch me, don't touch me.
In fact, I really, I remember pressing
my primary teachers on this.
Why?
Why can't she touch him?
We don't know, Hank.
Just don't ask anymore.
I'm like, no, this is a problem.
What is he like a cake that if he's touching me,
might collapse like, what's the problem?
Why can't she touch him?
We don't know, Hank.
We just know that she can't.
John, teach us, become my primary teacher from long ago
and tell me about verse 17.
Well, I mean, we can first look at footnote 17 A. The Joseph Smith translation changes it from touch me not to hold me not,
which has a really different connotation.
And it would be interesting to be a filmmaker.
I love the chosen series.
I can't wait till we get to this part in the chosen.
I wonder how they'll choose to film it.
For all we know, they've embraced for some time.
And now Jesus is saying like, okay, don't hold on to me.
I've got to go it.
And actually, I think we can tie this back to what you said of expectations.
Mary has maybe some type of expectation in her mind.
Jesus, you're back.
You're going to stay with me now.
Jesus says, well, don't hold on to me.
In fact, if you think about it in John, this is the first post resurrection teaching
that Jesus gives.
Don't hold on to me.
And maybe we can see in that,
I've got a different vision.
Don't put me in your box, right?
I've got a bigger plan.
I've got some ideas.
And it's gonna be amazing.
Yeah.
Have you ever, I asked my students this,
have you ever been in a hug where you're hugging someone
and they say, they say, hey, I got to go now and you say,
okay, and then you just keep hugging them, right?
You know, you're going off on a mission
or going away to college or something
and your mom is just hugging you and you're saying,
okay, I got to go.
Okay.
Right, and they don't let go.
And we don't know for sure the images,
but we don't know for sure with the images,
but what you just said,
hang that resonates with me.
I feel like that's more what we're seeing
rather than a, can't touch this, kind of.
Yeah, yeah.
Hey, Mary, you gotta let me go.
I know you don't want to, but you gotta.
Okay, let's keep going.
John gives us a lot on the resurrection.
Tell me more what you see in this last chapter and a half.
One of the things about John 20, I feel like we've had so much fun in this podcast talking
about, hey, can we be a little bit easier on Martin Harris?
Can we be a little bit easier on Signarigdon?
Can we be a little bit easier on Thomas? Yeahdon? Can we be a little bit easier on Thomas?
I just, it's almost like this is too good.
I really want this to be true, but until I see him, I mean, that's how I'm kind of feeling like,
maybe the poor guy, it's doubting Thomas for the rest of eternity.
I mean, for rude, that's not the JST, we call him doubting Thomas now.
And we don't talk about denying Peter, you know, it's just somehow poor Thomas.
In John 11, Thomas says, we're going to, he's going to go to Jerusalem, he's going to
die, let's go die with him.
How can we don't call him die with him, Thomas?
Brave Thomas, courageous Thomas. Courageous Thomas, yeah.
Maybe we identify with the doubting side
instead of the, I will go and do side, I don't know.
But I wonder with people, if we remember them
for their highest moments or their lowest.
And what would we like to be remembered for?
You know, and so if we're gonna do unto on to others, let's remember on to others as we would like them
to remember on to us to massacre an old phrase.
And this goes, I think, for me personally, it goes with people in the past that we love,
often times we love to judge the people in the past for their lowest moments.
They're not even here to defend themselves, right? They can't even make a case for themselves. And we can choose to say, you know what, I'm going to
remember you for your high, your high moments. I'm going to at least try to be charitable in that way.
And one other quick thing, if we were to go back to Luke, chapter 24 11, when the women come back and
say, hey, you know, Jesus is risen, it says for all the disciples are saying their word seemed to them as idle
tales and they believe them not.
So Thomas isn't really unique, right?
And say like, oh, I'm not going to believe.
I mean, everyone else was also it's kind of like what you said with the people
that are made. So like, oh, yeah, our hearts were with us.
We knew the whole time, right?
But, but here we're seeing in John this kind of highlight that that
Thomas doesn't know.
So he's singled out in a way.
Yeah, when Jesus says, you know,
Thomas blessed are you because blessed are they
that have not seen and yet believed.
Jesus probably isn't talking about the rest
of the apostles there, right?
Because they're like, oh, that was me, that was me,
the whole time, and he's going, no, none of you, right?
They all, you all thought it was idol tales.
Thanks for bringing that up, John.
Yeah.
You know, one little thought before we go on to 21 is,
so Jesus says, Thomas, blessed are they
who have not seen and yet believed.
And then the narrator says, the things that I've written,
these things are written that you might believe Jesus
is the Christ, the Son of God,
and that by believing you might have
life through his name. I think a lot of us have heard Elder Maconkey's last testimony where he says,
I won't know any better than in a coming day when I kiss the Lord's feet than I know now of who
Jesus is. And maybe we thought like, wow, that's Elder Maconkey, that's an incredible level. I could
never get there
Recently President Emmer Russell Ballard said that every member of the church can have an apostolic
Like witness of Jesus Christ
And the in dr. N. Covenant section 46 will be there in a couple of weeks
The very first spiritual gift listed is to know through the Holy Ghost that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and that he was crucified for the sins of the world. So I hope that as we read John 20 and hear these experiences that we
don't just think, oh yeah, that's for them or that's for the super high level people.
President Baloch said we can all strive for an apostolic like testimony of Jesus Christ.
And I hope that that's, I mean, the author of John is telling us that,
right? These things are written so that you'll see and believe. That is just absolutely beautiful, John.
I love John's admission. I think it is in back in chapter 20 where he admits, we did not know.
We'll get chapter 20 verse 9 for as yet, they knew not the scripture
that he must rise again from the dead.
What seems so obvious to us was not so obvious to them.
And even probably even in writing it after the fact
they make it even more obvious in their writing,
then it probably was.
I find in my New Testament class,
I have a frequent guest speaker
by the name of Elder
Jeffrey R. Holland and he joins us via video of General Conference.
He tells this wonderful story of kind of adding some backstory to this maybe and of Peter
saying, I don't, it's been great, but I go a fishing and they say, okay, we'll go with you.
And if you haven't seen that, go find Elder Holland talking about that he says there,
I think he said at the beginning, there's not a group I identify more with than these
apostles that I feel more sympathy for trying to figure out how to, what are we supposed
to do now?
I don't know.
That was amazing. I go a fishing. Okay, we'll go with you
And then he says and they caught nothing. He says something no fisherman ever wants to admit
They caught nothing and then he calls them children in verse 5
and
Kind of repeats an event that had happened when he first met Peter
So I love that find find the talk so we can share the reference
because the first great commandment,
I wanna say October of 2012.
And one other little paraphrase that he does in there
is he basically says Peter,
why are we having this conversation again, right?
Like I've already called you one time.
And sort of the message is if you've had an encounter with the risen Lord, your life is never going to be the same. And I think
that that's true for us on other levels, right? Like if I'm doing church right, or if
I have a powerful spiritual experience, I can't just go back to how things were. My life
has to be different. Jesus is calling us to do something new.
I can't tell you often I've shared this with my students who've returned for missions.
And sometimes just kind of go back to old habits and old ways and old music and back to the boats.
And I think the Lord would stand at the edge of the sea going,
what are we doing? What are we doing?
And I think it's Elder Holland in the same talk
who says, listen, you're gonna leave these nets
a second time and go change history.
Don't act as if that didn't happen
or if it's, oh well, it's over now.
These, what does he say?
These 11 fishermen go on to change the world
in which we now live and they do. They are the
messengers from here on out. What do you think about this conversation between Jesus and Peter?
That he asks him three times about, do you love me? What do you think, John? Well, one of the things
that we often will focus on is the three times Peter denies Jesus
and now these three times, he's kind of affirming his faith in Jesus.
And I mean, I love that idea.
It's also kind of amazing for us to just step back and say, this is so cool that they're
even having this conversation.
Back in Mark chapter 16, where we began, one of the things that the young
man specifically says to the women is, go tell Peter. And we're just thinking, of course, Peter's
going to be the chief apostle, like of course you got to tell Peter, but imagine that you're hearing
this story for the first time. The last time we heard about Peter before the resurrection is when
he denies Jesus through times, and then he's out of the storyline. So you and me as the original readers, if we've never heard the whole story, we're probably
thinking like, wow, too late for Peter. He's kicked off the Lord's team, right? You know,
you deny him like you're gone. But how amazing that Jesus is saying to Peter, I think, in essence,
with these three questions, you're still on my team. And I love that for me because I'm Peter,
right? I'm a disciple who's trying. and I'm nowhere near as good Peter is,
but I'm still failing all the time.
And Jesus is still saying, hey, don't worry, you're on my team.
I need you.
Come feed my sheep.
Come work with me.
I love this.
I love this because there are people who feel like a major,
major mistake disqualifies them forever.
And Peter's mistake, sometimes people say, oh, it's a commandment.
Oh, it's a mistake.
We don't need to go there.
We can do that at some other time.
But if it is a mistake, it is a big one.
And you might think that's it, right?
And I remember President Hinckley talking about this.
He said, those of you who have fallen by the wayside
or made a bad decision or done something
you never thought you would do,
I hope you'll take comfort from Peter
who rose above this and became a mighty witness
of the risen Lord.
So I think another message from this is,
you cannot be disqualified from the Lord's work.
If you want to be come back in, how forgiving and wonderful is he to welcome you back in
and let you move forward?
So the very last verse in the book of John, many other things which Jesus did, that which
if they should be written everyone, I suppose that even
the world itself could not contain the books that should be written.
And so in that, I try, can you, can you make room for another testament of Jesus Christ
to be, that's what I want to say?
Could it be possible to make room for another one, but I also know that we have what's critical and essential,
and we have enough to exercise our faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
So I like that, and I wish we had more at the same time.
I have a question for both of you, just about Easter.
We've been just diving into the scriptures here for the last few hours and I have loved it.
But I love to just sit back for a minute and talk to me about what, you know, in the
in the come follow me manual, the principle, the very first principle they list is just three words long.
Jesus Christ lives, talks about the witnesses, the many, many witnesses of his resurrection that we've had, including Joseph Smith's in
Doctrine Covenant section 76.
What in your lives has the knowledge, the witness of the risen Jesus done for you?
I like to tell my students, this is a big deal. A belief in the resurrection is a game-changing
belief. It's not a, well, I believe, I believe, you know, pineapple belongs on pizza. That's not a
game-changing belief, but a belief in a resurrection of Jesus Christ, this, you know, Jesus of Nazareth,
this man from history. That is a life-changing belief. And it's a big one. This isn't a little belief.
I heard you teach a class on the resurrection one time and you pointed everyone to the Bible
dictionary and tree under miracles where it basically says, if you believe in the resurrection,
then every other miracle ceases to be improbable. You know, if someone who believes in Jesus said to me,
we really think God flooded the earth. You really think, you know,
Jonah spent three days in a while.
I'm not sure whether those are symbolic or not.
But the idea that they would say,
well, that's kind of outside the realm of,
of, you know, scientific explanation.
I'm going, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Do you believe in Jesus?
Yeah.
Do you believe Jesus was resurrected?
Yeah. Okay. Once you believe in Jesus? Yeah, do you believe Jesus was resurrected? Yeah, okay.
Once you believe in the resurrection of Jesus,
a 14 year old boy having a vision, receiving gold plates,
that's nothing, right?
That's actually right in line with that belief, right?
The guy walks on water.
I think it was Dr. Mike McKay,
who gave me this great statement.
He said, if you look at all the scriptures
You should never look for Jesus in the likely
You should look for him in the unlikely because everything he does is unlikely
and
The story of Joseph Smith and the other things we've talked about this year are all in the realm of unlikely
But not out not for him.
Tell me what the belief in the resurrection is done for you both.
So for me, the first thing that comes to my mind is my grandfather, John Hilton, the
first, who passed away about a month before I was married.
And I was close to him.
He lived in Provo.
I was going to school at BYU. He met my
then girlfriend, now wife Lonnie before my parents did. We were just close and tears were shed and
their sadness at the passing of a loved one. At the same time, I realized that I did know
that the resurrection is a true principle. I did know that I was gonna hug my grandfather, John, again.
And for me, a deep-seated knowledge of the resurrection
is one of the best things in our lives to bring peace.
That we know at the out front, Jesus wins.
We don't have to worry about everything
that's gonna happen between here and the end of the game
because ultimately Jesus wins and it is going to work out.
And for me, that just brings so much peace. John, I know your mother passed away recently,
just in January, right? Talk about the resurrection and Easter for a minute, if you would.
Yeah, sure. I was saying, mm-hmm, to she passed away, it was in December.
Yeah, sure. I was saying, mm-hmm, to she passed away, it was in December. So it was just another aspect of 2020
that in my personal history that I'll think of along with earthquakes and everything else. But yeah, she,
it was one of those times when, do I have a testimony or don't I? And coming from deep inside me was, I do,
cause I'll have my mom again,
and she was one of the most saintly people ever,
and I'll have my dad again.
And so we would not be here.
We wouldn't be talking about any of this
if it weren't for that event.
What would we, if Jesus had remained in the tomb,
would we be here having a podcast?
What would we even, it would just be another person
in history that maybe said some interesting things like other philosophers,
but look what happened. He actually appeared again for the first time ever and take all
the philosophers and great thinkers of the world. But did any of them ever come back and
have many people see them? And then you see, you start reading the book of Acts. What
happened to these apostles? Because they are like, I don't know, to me it's like
they are different people. They are fired up. They are they are fearless after
this. And you see what happened? Well, what happened was the savior was resurrected. And I thought if we could
reset the holidays, I think Easter would be bigger than Christmas. And that's not up to me. But
Easter should be a lot bigger. Christmas is oh boy, it's coming. But Easter is, look, he did it.
He did everything he said he was going to do. And so, yeah, I do have a testimony that that tomb was empty
and because of that, I'll have my mom again,
I'll have my dad again, we will all have our loved ones again
because Jesus rose from the dead.
John, that is, I don't think you can overemphasize
the what you said about the apostles.
I remember listening to a New Testament scholar, he was a believing New Testament scholar that what you said about the apostles.
I remember listening to a New Testament scholar,
he was a believing New Testament scholar,
and as you all know, not all New Testament scholars
are believers.
Are believers.
And but they're very brilliant people
who we love to learn from.
But this believing New Testament scholar
said, give me another explanation
for the lives of these apostles.
Right?
If Jesus hadn't been resurrected, why in the world did they go back to Jerusalem, the very
place where everyone would know he wasn't, to teach, go to Galilee, go to India, go somewhere
else if you want to go and profess this know, and profess this fake event.
Don't go to the very place where he died,
where people could actually produce a body,
where they could, you know, they could produce witnesses.
So I just think this is the lives of the apostles to me
as someone who loves to just think logically at times,
at times, is the lives of the apostles is to me a massive evidence of the
resurrection that you, there is no other explanation for, right? You might say, well, they did it for fame.
They, they all died. They all were martyr. They all left their families to teach, right?
There's no fame in this. As John said before, would you want to stay in Jerusalem where the chief priests have people
killed that believe like you do? Right. And the government said, you want to go back there,
and they were fearless. And as we see there in John, Peter got a hint of the kind of death that
he would have. And yet he's a fireball after this and he is the rock. Jesus called him the rock
long before all of this happened. But boy, he lived up to that, didn't he?
You know, this has to me. This ties so well. And you guys can help me with this. This ties
so well to the story of the Book of Mormon. My friend, Cory Andrews and I, we were on a church history tour once, and we started just talking about the comparison between the savior coming out of the tomb and the Book of Mormon coming out of the stone box.
And there, you know, there are so many comparisons that you can make. But just like the savior coming out of the tomb and the Book of Mormon coming out of the stone box
You know both have eleven witnesses. We have the eight in the three and we have the elisted eleven apostles We have a woman named Mary who sees Jesus. We have Mary Whitmer who tells her story
Right, there's just so many you know just fun parallels that you can make with that story
But both are a game-changing belief
Believe in the resurrection changes your life.
The next one is a belief in the Book of Mormon
and the Restoration changes everything.
They're both really game-changers.
And I think we can tie this together beautifully.
That they are both, yeah, unlikely, but they're both true. And to me, it's absolutely not just wow,
but it's also, it touches my heart as someone who's been, like you said, John, just losing
someone, you know, before losing someone I love to the other side, Easter to me was candy.
And it was springtime, which I love, the weather gets warm. But now, Easter to me has taken on a new
a new, just an all new meaning. It's not a holiday, it's now a holy day because of what it represents that will happen for all of us. The Christian doesn't just say Christ lives, he says, I shall live.
Right? And to me, just to me,
that it, it, what did,
what did, I think it was Stephen Harper or Tony Sweat,
who told this with just a couple of swipes,
Joseph Smith cut through theological,
Gordian knots, right?
And to me, this is one of those that, that one of the questions through all the ages of time is
You know Job's question. Yeah, if a man die
will he live again?
And then Job
awesomely says
What what did he say though this worms destroy this body in the flesh? You know, I will see God
He had a testimony of resurrection before it happened
We've had a long discussion today and
It has been
just so uplifting
I am I am grateful that that those who had not heard of the name John Hilton the third before, now know it, because I've known it and had that friendship and just that strength of character and testimony in my
life for a long time.
And now a lot of people do.
John, as a scholar, you know, only write to Latter-day Saints, but you write to what is
called the Academy.
And you do, and you're prolific at both.
Everyone at BYU knows that John Hilton can produce scholarship and devotional work
unlike anybody else, really, unlike anybody else.
Someone is as brilliant as you and you believe, I just want to know more about that.
For me, I think it really goes back and is
deeply rooted to the Book of Mormon. My grandfather that we've talked about a little bit, John
Hilton I, he did word print studies after he retired. He became a statistician at Rigaming
University. Some of you may have heard of word prints. It's basically statistical analyses that
show that the Book of Mormon was not authored by Joseph Smith.
I definitely would not base my testimony of the church on word prints, right?
But like I grew up hearing about word prints and chiasmus for my grandfather.
And it was all really interesting.
And I actually found that there's a lot of intellectual basis for a testimony, right?
The Lord will speak to us in our minds and in our hearts.
testimony, right? The Lord will speak to us in our minds and in our hearts. But much more than word prints and chasmus and other little, you know, kind of intellectual proofs of the
Book of Mormon. I remember when I was 18 years old, my, what were then called home teachers
came to my house and they shared a quote from President Benson where he said, if you
seriously study the Book of Mormon, a power will flow into your life.
And so I decided to take that invitation up
and to seriously study the Book of Mormon.
And my life did change.
I felt the power from God flow into my life.
And so the intellectual proofs are nice,
but ultimately it's a testimony of the Book of Mormon
as the word of God that is fueled it.
And really been it, it's kind of a cliche,
but it's really been the key stone of my testimony.
Because if the Book of Mormon is true, then you know Joseph's best of profit,
because why would you have a false profit translated true book?
That just doesn't make sense.
And if Joseph Smith is a prophet, then the church he started is true.
Because why would a true prophet start a false church?
And if the church he started is true, then it's led by a living prophet today. And so for me, everything then is centered on the Book of Mormon. And because it's
the Word of God, I can have confidence in everything else that cascades from that.
John, by the way, another episode of Come Follow Me is in the books. Tell me how I just like to know
how you feel at the end. You always make me feel good.
Oh, feel, feel great. I was thinking we have some pretty tender feelings close to the surface.
All of us surrounding recent deaths and things and when I was in the Holy Land, I just did a really fine, I believe Protestant gentleman said something
so interesting outside the garden tomb.
He said, you can go in there.
You won't find Jesus in there, he said.
But if you come out, bring him out with you
and introduce him to some of your friends.
He said, a lot of people wanna leave him in the tomb.
And I just remember thinking
that is what a lot of the world has done.
That, oh, the whole resurrection thing, that was a myth.
He was a great moral teacher, but he's probably still in some tomb somewhere.
And I like the way that he said, and that's, I mean, it reminds me of something similar.
A lot of people want to leave the baby Jesus in the manger and leave him the baby Jesus.
Instead of the one who grew up and started to teach and then
someone to leave him in the tomb.
And I don't know, I just, it's been a fun couple of hours to talk about.
As you said, this game changer that he's not still in the tomb.
He's risen as he said.
I just love it.
My friends, thank you for joining us on this episode. Thank you to Dr. John Hilton III. I just love it. help. We hope you come back next week and join us on another episode of Follow Him. you