Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Easter -- Part 2 : Elder Bruce C. Hafen & Sister Marie K. Hafen
Episode Date: April 10, 2022Elder Hafen and Sister Hafen return. Easter, Part II.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram:... https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers/SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Transcripts/Language Team/French TranscriptsAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast.
Again Moses gives us some perspective in chapter 5.
When Eve does answer those questions, well, as described as she heard all these things
and was glad, saying, we're not for that transgression, we're not for our transgression,
we never should have had seed, and never should have had seed and never should
have known good and evil and the joy of our redemption. But when did she start to understand
this? That took an angel coming to them at the altar and they'd had children before this,
right? With Cain and Abel. And these questions, the angel taught them when the angel asked Adam, of course, why does foul
offer sacrifice? What does he say? I don't know, but God commanded, so I'm going to do it.
And the angel said, this thing is a similitude of the sacrifice of the only begotten.
So the angel teaches them the plan of redemption.
Everything we've kind of been talking about.
I love that the explanation came after the obedience for Adam.
I love that idea.
Okay, as soon as I understand everything perfectly, then I'll go with it.
We're never going to go with anything.
We're never going to move forward, but I'll do it, and then the explanation came.
I love do it. And then the explanation came. I love that sequence.
Yes.
And Eve here did have to act initially in the garden.
More from maybe, would you call it,
a woman's intuition connected to God?
Whereas often, and not always,
but a man thinks kind of front to back logically.
And like you said, he'll fulfill those commandments.
You just tell me what they are. And I'll do it. Sometimes a woman has to act without knowing exactly
how things are going to turn out with the faith that we've talked about, but the faith in Christ,
as we've also talked about, the faith in Christ and his mission. I can't help but share something from Elder Maxwell about this kind of experience. Give
me experience because we know that it's only through experience, through learning, from experience,
growing through experience that we can become like and we can grow. So Elder Maxwell once said a
little satirically, how can you and I really expect to glide naively through life, as if to say,
Lord, give me experience, but not grief, not sorrow, not pain, not opposition, not betrayal,
and certainly not to be forsaken? Keep from me, Lord, all those experiences which made the what-thou art.
Keep from me, Lord, all those experiences which made thee what thou art. Then let me come and dwell with thee and fully share thy joy.
What was he saying?
Of course he was saying we can't do that.
We can't do that.
So, what does the Atonement have to do with this part of Eve's power growing with this
part of her experience?
Is the angels visit, and I think that painting by Walter Rein may be up now.
The painting of the angel with Adam and Eve at their altar
of sacrifice.
And what do you see here in the faces of each of them?
And I realize our audience who's listening can't see their faces,
but maybe they can access a picture of this painting on your website.
You see in the angel's face, he's not scolding them.
He loves them. You can see it in his attitude.
In the way his head is tipped a little bit to the side.
He's teaching them. He wants them to understand.
And we see that in Adam's face.
And we see in Eve's position her support of Adam.
But we also see that she's getting answers
also for herself, that these answers are coming to her.
So their attitude is one of learning, of reaching, of stretching.
We want to understand, we want to live more.
And I also liked what Eve said in Moses 5 and 11, that they wouldn't have known the joy of their redemption,
and the eternal life, God's life, which God give us unto all the obedient. He doesn't say,
as you've said, John, the obedience is so important, and the hard lessons help us to learn. He's giving it to all the obedient, not to all the perfect,
because we're not complete.
I like to think of perfect being complete.
Again, not to all the perfect or complete,
but to all those who are obedient, who are becoming, we're moving from T right to T right toing aspects of the Atonement. We can see the strengthening blessings that
the angel was giving to Adam and Eve so that they could go on living their
life, having that core within them, that even within the really hard
experiences, they had the assurance, they had that core testimony that God is with us, Christ is with us.
They will help us.
Alma 7, 10 and 11.
And he will take upon him the pains and the sicknesses and the infirmities of his people.
That has become a very communicating verse to all of us.
Why?
That Christ may know how to sucker his people.
Not that he's going to take our experiences, even the most difficult ones away,
but he knows how to sucker his people according to their infirmities.
Eve learned this. We have a friend now who's learning this, who is beginning chemotherapy for cancer today.
And even though in her cancer it's an abdominal cancer, there is extreme pain and suffering.
She always has had the core there that Christ is there, God is there. Yes, I have questions. Why is this lasting so long?
And why is it so painful? But I know he is there. I know that he knows where I am. And he will
answer my prayers. She has great faith that the chemo that she's in will reduce tumors so that then she can go into surgery and work through the cancer.
And if it means I'll serve on the other side, okay?
Okay.
But if it means I'll be here, I want to serve.
I don't want to be on the sidelines.
I want to serve.
So she is an example of receiving the atonement in her life.
And she's a temple goer's an avid temple goer.
She understands Eve's experience and how if we follow Eve and follow him looking at
Eve as an example that we receive that experience, Marie. Because that experience illustrates what we've been,
what we discovered in the St. George Temple,
what we're trying to capture and reflect,
just just what we saw.
So we just want to share it.
We know many people have seen it.
And after we, one of the first times when we put some of these ideas together,
and we didn't think they made much sense, but they made sense to us.
So we practiced them on some of our children and not too long ago.
And can you guys understand this?
And it was it was precious to us that after that rehearsal session, one of our kids who has an MBA said,
hey, when you make a chart like that,
you don't start at the bottom
where it says baptism and you go up to ceiling,
you've got that backward.
Let's start with the important stuff and go down.
I'm glad that the Lord didn't have any help
from an MBA and deciding where should we start after that session.
One of our kids who had the most puzzles, I think,
about the temple, she said to us afterwards kind of quietly.
She said, I think I see a pattern here.
It's the one that Marie just talked about. As you go through,
step by step, the ascent, you know, the covenant path, it's up and you gain strength along the way.
Knowing that process, she said it just helped. It's things kind of make sense about the temple now.
And that's really what it has been for us.
I understand now and I didn't before. Yeah. And that's how it has been for us.
Well, just one last step. We're Adam and Eve sealed in the temple. What do you think? Yes.
It was probably an outdoor temple. But there's some good evidence. The marriage between Adam and Eve is sort of a textbook answer
about what a marriage is.
And isn't it interesting?
It's just one more example of how the story of Adam and Eve
is the story of receiving the atonement,
including the blessings of eternal marriage
and sealing which the atonement makes possible.
Experience that comes to mind.
I, Marie and I had been talking kind of constantly
about things like this.
I suddenly realized when my secretary said,
hey, you're supposed to go do a ceiling.
I went up to the ceiling room,
could have been the one where you were married, hang.
I looked for your fingerprints.
Yeah. It was the one right off the
celestial room there. Up the stairs, again, symbolically. As I walked in with all these ideas on my
mind, I saw this beautiful bride and groom, and after we had chatted a little bit, I invited them to
come to the altar. And as they came to that altar,
suddenly it clicked for me. I learned in the temple what an altar is for. It's for prayer. It's for
covenants. It's for ordinances. And they all enter at the sacrifice. Yeah. And the one they were going to sample that day.
It suddenly just came to me. What? Oh, I see what's going on. So I
I just continued with my thinking by what I said to them as they as they came to the altar and we
kind of began to talk a little bit about it. I just firm myself saying to them that an altar was
the place in the Old Testament where the Lord's people were told to offer the first links of the flock. That picture that we had just a few minutes ago shows Adam and Eve kneeling by an altar,
and there's some evidence of an animal on that altar.
So I mentioned that, and I said, but that's not what you're doing today.
You're doing what Christ asked the people to do after he had been resurrected.
The Savior said to the Nephites in 3 Nephite 9,
he no more wanted sacrifice. He had completed his sacrifice, but that didn't mean that the law,
the principle of sacrifice was done. He said, now I want to have from you the sacrifice of a broken
heart and a contrite spirit. And the thought has hit me that the sacrifice of an animal
And the thought has hit me that the sacrifice of an animal was really a symbol of the Lord's offering his son as a sacrifice on that altar. But after the Savior's sacrifice was completed, he asked for a different kind of sacrifice.
And it struck me that when he said, I want a broken heart on a contrite spirit, I think that's Christ. He is the symbol. He's offering himself, James
E. Townmage said in Jesus the Christ, he died of a broken heart. Literally, he's the sacrifice.
So when he asked that of us, we're the sacrifice. And so I found myself saying to this couple,
you're going to sacrifice yourselves by making a covenant today to do that.
You're sacrificing in two directions, one to the Lord and the other to each other. That's really
what this marriage is about. It's kind of like a triangle. You've got the bride and the groom
in the two corners, and you're both going to offer everything to the Lord, but in you're also looking for ways to sacrifice yourself to each other and look at the triangle.
As you ascend to God's presence, the closer you come to Him, the closer you another of what Adam and Eve's pattern was. For all of us, we come to the
ceiling and what do we have to do to get there to live the covenant? We do what Marona said,
we have to do to receive the blessings of perfection. This is Christ's perfecting blessings that he
can give us because of the atonement and our obedience.
Deny yourselves of all ungodliness," He said in chapter 10 of Moroni,
love God with all your mind and strength.
Then are you sanctified, perfected in Christ?
We become like Him by emulating Him.
That happened to Adam and Eve. It happens to anybody who follows Christ
this far. If you notice the painting, there's kind of a vertical line that goes from the lower left
to the upper right. On the left side of that is the angel and this brilliant light like the trees
are being consumed. It's the light that he brings, what he's going to teach them.
And we have Adam and Eve in the mud of the earth, of this mortal world.
And it's such a wonderful symbol of what the angel is bringing them, that they can become,
they can rise through the mud. And because of the mud, they can rise to that light that the angel is bringing
and become like the Savior, like the angel. So this doctrine took pull ourselves out of the mud
with his help, with the strengthening power. We draw closer, we become at one with him.
This doctrine encourages us in our contin continuous driving to strengthen our own marriages.
We all need to keep working on that. It's okay as part of the process. It's related to the example of the Savior's perfecting power.
As I read about charity in Maroni, 7, I love being told that this is the gift He gives to all of the true followers of Christ.
It's part of what happens when we follow him to the end of that part of our journey.
We become like him enough that we receive the gift of charity.
He is the most charitable of all.
He tells us what charity is the pure love of Christ.
And when we are possessed of it,
as Marona teaches us in chapter 7, we are like him. Well, that's a tangible receiving of the atonement.
I mean, it's bestowed. Yes, it's so, right, which he has to be stowed upon all those who are true
followers. What does it look like? Well, the love which he has to be stowed upon all who are true followers. What does it look like? Well, the love which he has to be
stowed upon all, who are true followers of his Son, that when he shall appear, we shall
be like him. I think that might mean we will recognize him. And you have to be like him
to recognize him. We shall see him, that we may be purified even as he is pure. And then
see him that we may be purified even as he is pure. And then Adam and Eve's journey is complete. They've ascended through all these steps. And the temple is what helped them get there.
Step by step, increasing their understanding, giving them strength, giving them the keys that
are locked up further doors, those ordinances, the covenants. So thank you for giving us the opportunity to talk about these things
that they make for a happy Easter for us. What a blessing to be in the temple and to have that
constantly on your mind and have these things line upon line have come to you. It's so beautiful.
I was thinking as you are talking about obedience and sacrifice, how those aren't very popular
words in culture today.
But the thing that will, oh, I can't wait to share this with others.
That idea of, here's me, here's my spouse, here's God.
And what did you say, Elder Haven, as we get closer to each other?
Lord gets closer to us.
As we get closer to God, we get closer to each other.
Yeah, it's like this equilateral triangle.
We get closer to God, we're simultaneously getting closer to each other and vice versa.
And he is part of the covenant.
I think your book, Covenant Hearts, the marriage book that I, was it you, Elder Haifin,
that talked about the difference between a contract marriage where each party gives
a hundred percent and a covenant marriage where each party gives 100% and a covenant
marriage where God is part of the covenant. And boy, that triangle, that's just beautiful.
I will never forget that. Thank you. I didn't realize it at the time being young, you know,
and in love. What a privilege it is to begin a marriage at an altar. This relationship is beginning on sacrifice, not just sacrifice of my wife and I
to each other and to God, but the ultimate sacrifice. We're starting this marriage on the
Atonement of Jesus Christ. That's going to be our foundation from here on out. To me, I didn't
realize it at the time, of course, because I was dreamy and just thought it was the greatest day ever and thought I'd won the lottery. But now looking back, I think, that's how we
began it all. That's where our strength comes from, as a couple is from the grand sacrifice
on that altar.
As Amulek said, the great and last sacrifice, right, that all of the previous animal sacrifices
were pointing to.
Can I make one little more comment about Adam and Eve in that regard?
Because I think when Adam and Eve needed to explain to the Lord why they had
partaken of the fruit, what did Adam say? The woman that gave us me and
commanded that I should stay with her. And then you just see them growing.
You see their relationship growing just exactly the way you just said.
Through understanding more of the atonement, they grew together.
They understood each other.
Their experiences brought them together in a way that they couldn't have been brought
together in the garden until you have Adam saying, Eve, my wife.
I mean, it's a very different attitude that he shows later.
And you can just see them both growing
because of the atonement, because of the attitudes,
because of their understanding and their agency
and what their agency would produce.
Elder Haven, in 1979, I was one year old and you gave a talk at BYU called Love Is Not Blind.
That talk, it was given to me, I remember, by my friend Lizzy Jolly, she was my TA at the time.
She said, have you ever read this talk and I said,
no, I don't think I ever have.
And I picked it up and it changed my life.
Now I'm assuming that Sister Haifin had a lot to do
with that talk.
So I'm gonna ask this of both of you,
even though you're the one who voiced the talk.
I'm sure she informed quite a bit of that.
The talk, I don't even know if you remember it,
but the idea was as a
Latter-day Saint, we have to have our eyes open. We have to see
reality. We have to see the difficulties that we've talked
about today. And at the same time, we have to have our hearts open.
We can't close our eyes. We can't close our heart. We have to
have our heart open to God. And even though we'd see the
realities of this life,
the difficulties of this life that we all are facing in different ways,
how do I keep my heart open?
I'm going to mention faith is not blind because I think that is exactly the context for the book.
If you start out innocent, then you have complexities, you have the difficulties you've talked about.
They open your eyes, they give you nuance, they give you color.
If you learn from them, they're really good.
But you can't climb to level or stage three without having your heart open
because you're not willing.
You're not willing to make the climb to do the hard work that takes you to
stage three, and you also don't experience then the absolute surety that he is helping
you make that client. So level three then stage three is worth it because it's informed.
Like you said, it's proven, it's tried, it's burnished, it's beautiful.
But you don't experience that until you're willing to make the climb until both your heart
and your mind are open.
So you see that a stage three is wonderful.
It's worth, as Sherry do said, it's worth the wrestle.
So it's worth the work.
There's a story about you serving a mission as I think in Germany. Is that right?
Yes. A brand new elder who had decided he had, he had found a woman to teach and you said,
no, you haven't, I promise. Your eyes had been open to the realities of missionary work.
It's like this is much more difficult
than a brand new missionary thinks.
I was in stage two.
I had a terminal case of stage two.
Yeah, which is my eyes are open, this is real.
My shoes are worn out, yeah.
Yeah, my shoes are worn out.
And I've dealt with complexity.
I've had prayers not answered and I get it.
But you don't wanna stay there. You don't to stay in stage two. The rest of that story, which is in faith, is not blind,
because it's an unforgettable story for me. He persisted. He hadn't written down the address.
He couldn't remember the name. He'd been tracking with another new missionary, and I just rolled my
eyes. So what are we going to do? Just sort of wander around for a couple of days and call it good. He just felt for sure that the
Witness of the spirit was that we needed to find that woman and he was sorry he hadn't written down the name and the address
He started doing that after this
So you think if you were gonna teach someone you'd write down their name and their address
So you think if you were going to teach someone you'd write down their name and their address or something about them.
So after climbing up and downstairs for five floors, you remember on the top floor.
She's on the top floor and I remember that part and they have the names right by the
doorbell.
So if we can just go find her, how would that be?
You could talk to her. And you speak the language. I know,
yeah, you can tell her. After all, there's a labor. He saw the name by the door,
Wolfhardt. And this woman opened the door a little bit and he whispered to me,
that's the lady, doctor. So, about 40 years after that, Maria and I were in the Frankfurt, Germany temple in a ceiling room with that
woman. Wow. The sealer, Weser husband, all of their kids were in the room. They'd all
been married in the temple to other Europeans. And I just sat there thinking, I don't want
to just be a skeptic. I'm glad to have learned the realities of missionary work, but I can't
be so committed to skepticism. And, you know, sort of not getting in a big rush, I need my heart
to be open. At the time I wrote the talk in 1979, that really originally was a Rick's college now, BYU Idaho devotional.
I had felt in my role with the students that there were lots of them.
Why died in Edison and in stage one?
It's Adam and Eve.
That's the classic example of these three stages.
You're in the garden.
You're so innocent, naive, and then you're tossed out of the garden.
It's rough.
It's stage two.
They try to do the best they can,
and they offer a sacrifice, and they don't know why.
But I'll do it anyway.
Here comes the angel.
We've talked about that.
And then they say, oh, because now they're in stage three,
and they get it.
And it's, they understand it.
That was a long time ago, but the principles are the same.
But to come back to your original question, how do you keep your heart open? And that would be to
apply to the internet age. You have doubts, you have questions, there's people sometimes asked us,
so we're not supposed to doubt that that is that's wrong. These are from people usually who are
doubting, and as doubters, you know, I was a doubter about that missionary experience.
So Elder Maxwell wrote to one of his, I think it was to one of his grandkids, it's a
little letter, grandkids had asked him about doubt.
And he said, doubting can't either strengthen or weaken our faith, depending on our supply
of meekness.
Sounds like Elder Maxwell doesn't it? And so to have that attitude,
which is reflected in, that quote that Marie read to us, we're not meek. If we're not,
then all the other tools for dealing with questions and problems are not going to be very helpful.
That's maybe an over simplified answer, but questions and doubts can be really good.
Yeah, and one of Elder Maxwell's favorite combinations as he got to know people, we would sometimes
talk about that.
And I could tell from the examples that he used, his favorite combination in a person who
was growing and going to university life and had lots of gifts and potential, he would
say the combination is
brightness and meekness. I like that too. And I think that says, sure, to answer your
question, if you can be meek about, well, what is meekness? It's that opens a door to
a whole gospel subject. Then the more you understand, the better.
Yeah. Brightness and meekness. Wow. What? What a great day. We want to thank
Elder and Sister Haifin for being with us. What a beautiful day. Thank you both. We want to thank
all of you for listening and we want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Sornson
and our sponsors David and Verla Sorenson.
We hope all of you will join us next week as we return to the Old Testament on Follow Him.
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