Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Easter Part 2 • Sister Reyna I. Aburto • Mar 25 - Mar 31 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: March 20, 2024Sister Reyna Aburto testifies that Jesus Christ is the Savior of the world and offers peace, joy, and salvation unto those who come to Him.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM1...3ENFrench: coming soonSpanish: coming soonPortuguese: coming soonYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/1lZwqKfg5HoALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast00:00 Part II–Sister. Reyna Aburto00:06 President Nelson on seeing reunions on the other side00:49 John shares a story about the BYU Testing Center05:07 Sister Aburto shares her experience working with special witnesses of Christ06:27 Sister Aburto shares the importance of sharing insight in councils09:07 Letting go of pride11:18 Elder Anderson shares revelation is scattered among us12:45 Speaking at the right moment14:14 Seeking the will of the Lord15:07 President Menlo Smith, “Bring a recommendation”16:27 Giving our lives in service of Jesus Christ17:42 Bringing our best selves to serve and don’t complicate things20:21 Serving with humility21:15 Holy Week and Sister Sheri Dew22:33 Elder Stevenson “The Greatest Easter Story Ever Told:25:06 Sister Aburto shares her testimony about the Resurrection and Atonement of Jesus Christ32:56 End of Part II– Sister Reyna AburtoThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with sister Reyna, I, Alberto on Easter.
I was thinking about that the other day when my mom passed away that I thought, oh, I would
like to have her back.
And then I thought, I don't think she'd like to be back because what President Nelson said
once something to the effect of if you could see the reunions on the other side,
it would mitigate the way you feel.
Like I would love for my mom to be back,
but I think she'd say, what are you doing?
I was talking to my mother and my grandmother
and seeing these wonderful people from her history
and just history in general.
I thought President Nelson's right.
I wouldn't want to take her
from those experiences. Yes. Speaking of mortality and what we go through, I remember as a student
at BYU, and Hank, this is when you were probably in elementary school, but they have this building,
they still have it called the Testing Center, and it's the Heber J. Grant building. And in my day,
you went there, you took your number two pencil.
We've actually taken tests with this.
We take your number two pencil, you bubble and everything and you go there to take
tests. And some things occurred to me once.
I've never seen anybody in the testing center about to burst with joy
cause you're taking tests. It's not fun. And somebody that always had a really
bad cold and nasal congestion always seemed to find a seat right next to me when I was
taking a test. Somehow they knew. I remember once I took a statistics 222 test in there.
I got there at 7 a.m. I left at noon. By the time I left, I didn't care what I got. But the funny part about the testing center was,
for me, is when you leave,
there's usually a group of students there,
you're handing in your answer sheet,
and they're feeding it through a computer.
Now Hank, does the word dot matrix printer
mean anything to you?
I think I saw it in a museum once.
Right, right? So it makes a loud noise.
Petrified.
Petrified, right?
Yeah. Yeah. There's somebody, Indiana Jones discovers one in Egypt, I think.
Yeah.
But when it prints, you hear it. A laser printer sounds the same no matter what it's printing, but a dot matrix is like,
eee, eee, eee, eee, eee, and you hear the paper feed.
So there's usually seven or eight people standing there
giving in their answer sheets,
and there's three or four student employees there
that start feeding them into different machines,
and you don't know whose results are printing out.
What you do know is that if you ace the test,
all it will print is your name,
your student number, and your score.
But if you missed one, it'll print, okay, number two,
your answer B, correct answer D.
Number four, your answer A, correct answer C.
Number 16, your answer B.
When they start printing,
everybody's just holding their breath,
and you'd hear one, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, tch, t, oh, oh, oh, stop, oh, make it stop.
Don't let that be mine. Don't let that be mine.
Right. Then they rip it off and say, and then they call your name in front of everybody.
This way, John, that's mine. Many times I remember grabbing it and walking out because everybody just heard
that. Maybe you've heard what Boyd K Packer said about testing because at
first you're thinking I am glad that wasn't my test. Now think with your
spiritual leaders. Have you ever said that? I have. I see people and think how are
they doing that? President Boyd K Packer said once there's more equality in the
testing than sometimes we suspect, which is a remarkable statement that I'm still chewing on.
Once you get out of the testing center, there's the fullness of joy, but usually in the testing
center it's not there. But you have an expectation that someday you'll be done with these tests and
with dot matrix printers in
general.
Yes.
That also reminds me that everyone goes through hard things, John, and sometimes we kind of
take turns.
And that's why we need to always keep that hope in our heart and also to try to help
the people around us.
Because like one of the apostles once said also, there is a big chance that people around
you, everyone is
carrying a burden, a big burden at the time.
We need to be willing to help each other, to minister to each other, and to bring each
other to Christ so we can all receive his healing.
I like that image that you painted.
Even with the sound effects. That was so funny because everybody was thinking the same thing when you heard it print. You're
like, oh my goodness, please. And then it goes to the second page and you're like, oh.
If they called my name, I'd be like, I don't know who that is.
I just look around. I wonder who they're looking for.
I will come back later when there's no one here.
Raina, we've been talking here about witnesses of the resurrection.
And I think our listeners would be interested because you spent five years in the Relief Society general presidency where you were around special witnesses.
The apostles are special witnesses
of Christ. Would you mind telling us a little bit about that experience?
It's actually very humbling to be sitting in the same tables with those special witnesses of Christ.
We had regular meetings with them. We belonged to different councils and committees that were chaired
by different apostles. And every time I was present in one of them, I couldn't believe
that I was actually there. I was always pinching myself. But I think that one of the things
that I really enjoyed the most was to actually get to know them in a personal level and to
see how different they are. They all have different personalities. Some of
them are more quiet or more shy, and some of them are very funny. And it's beautiful
to actually see that they are regular people in a way, but they have a special calling
and they have a special mantle. And they have all this experience that they have gained
through serving the Lord with all their might and strength. And you
can feel that power. I had the opportunity, like I said, to belong to different councils.
And one of them was the Temple and Family History Executive Council, they call it. It's
usually chaired by an apostle. For many years when I belonged to that council, it was Elder
Bednar who chaired that council. And then we also had Elder Stevenson and Elder
Reland in there. What we will do in there is to look at the things that will come to
the First Presidency for them to approve, because everything that has to do with temples
has to be taken directly to the First Presidency. I had an experience that shows how wise they
are. This was towards the beginning of me attending that council.
I remember that we received a long document. It was probably 20 pages that we had to read
before coming to the meeting. And they asked us to actually bring feedback if we thought
that there were things that could be improved or changed a little bit or things that could
be added to it so it would be more clear. And because I'm a translator, that's my profession, I have read and reviewed a lot of text in
my life.
So for me, it's very natural to read text and to find things that I think that could
be improved.
In that document, I probably had 25 changes that I wanted to suggest.
Some of them were really minor, like editorial changes, but maybe four or five, six of them were a little bit more about the actual content. When it was my turn to
actually share my comments with the council, I apologized from the beginning. I said, okay,
I have about maybe 20, but I'm just going to talk about five because I don't want to
take a lot of time because some of them are just editorial and I can send them later. Started mentioning one and
then there was some discussion around the table about what I said. And then I mentioned
another one and I was feeling a little bit nervous because I was like, I think I'm taking
too long, too much time off it. And I was like apologizing in a way. And it was like,
okay, two more. I won't take that long.
And then, and the Benner look at me and he said,
sister Aburto, please stop apologizing.
We want to hear what you have to say.
Don't apologize, please.
I mean, he said it in such a sweet way.
But then he made me feel part of that council.
In a way he was telling me, your voice is important here.
And I saw that over and over in so many settings that I was in, which we were counseling together,
trying to find the Lord's will in a collective way, trying to give our best offering to the
Lord. It was a great lesson for me that I didn't need to apologize, that I needed to
follow the spirit and say what I thought I could say. And something that I didn't need to apologize, that I needed to follow the Spirit and say what I
thought I could say. And something that I learned also during those years is that when
I say something in a council, I put that on the table and I let it go. It doesn't belong
to me anymore because really it was the Spirit bringing thoughts to my mind and letting me
be part of the conversation and giving something to that table and then let it go and don't take it personal.
If for whatever reason the council thinks that it's something that doesn't need to happen right now or that it can wait for later,
I learned that sometimes we think that things need to happen in a way that we think they need to happen.
We shouldn't have an agenda when we come to those councils.
I think you've hit a weakness of mine here, Reyna, which might be to attach a bit of my
own emotions to an idea I bring.
And if it's not taken by the council and they don't run with it and love it, if it falls
to the side, I might get my feelings hurt.
I might be a little offended.
That's why I think it helps to have that mindset from the beginning. You are trying to receive
the revelation beforehand if you already know what the agenda is, but you should not bring this
mindset that, okay, they're going to do what I say because I'm right. I don't think that's what the Lord wants. He wants you to
come there in that setting in which we receive revelation with a humble heart and just a
desire to contribute the best way you can without having to impose your ideas. They
should not be your ideas. They should be just feelings, thoughts, promptings that the Spirit
is giving you to help with whatever you are discussing. I think that we need to have a different mindset that it helps a lot
when we look at things differently.
Reina, I think you've taught us a profound lesson here, because here's Elder Bednar in
your example, a special witness of Christ, yet in a council. So you wouldn't think, oh,
here's the person that knows everything. So I'll
sit and listen and do what he says. Like in our old ward councils, we look at the bishop
and go, well, you're the guy with the keys. So we'll do what you say where here's elder
Bednar, a special witness and yet counseling.
Yes. And I saw that so many times that he would first ask everyone what we think about
something. And then
at the end, he will probably say how he felt about it. But it was not like we are going
to do what I think. It was a collective contribution. Everybody contributed. Elder Anderson said
once, revelation is scattered among us. When we each bring that little offering that we
had because of the promptings or the experiences
that we have had in our life or because of things that we have seen as we traveled around
the world, literally, we each brought something to it and then something better comes out
of that.
We had a few occasions, maybe two or three times during those years in which we actually
didn't have an agenda.
And he told us, come prepared to council
together and then he will ask a question related to temples and to the things that were happening
at that moment. If you think about COVID, all the temples had to be closed for months
and that never happened before to start opening them little by little and having these protocols that every temple needed to meet in order to open again.
It was amazing how revelation came from heaven.
We received that heavenly help to be able to talk about things.
And those were very sacred.
They were so sacred because you could actually feel the spirit just testifying that it was
a gift from heaven.
Since we have you here, Reina, on a side note, let's say we have a young woman's president listening and she has an idea at ward council, but she won't interrupt. How do you do that?
I think that if we try to be in tune with the Spirit, and I had to actually practice that many
times, not only with apostles, but even in world councils and different councils
and even at home, because we counsel together at home. We need to make sure that we wait
for the right moment. If someone is speaking, they are sharing an idea or expressing something
from their heart. You wait for the right moment, you raise your hand. Or if you see that they're
moving into a different subject, you say things like, could I say
something related to that?
You make sure that you're seeing and that they know that you have something to say.
And I think that also, it's very important how we present our ideas.
Instead of saying, well, this is what I think, we could say, could we consider maybe doing
this?
Have you thought of maybe that or an option could be, or maybe we could think about this?
There are ways of saying it so it doesn't sound like you are imposing your ideas, like
I said.
I think that there is an art and we can actually put it into practice and try to learn it. So we don't sound like
we are trying to rule that council. And that also helps us so we don't take it personal
if like you said, they don't run with the idea.
I think this ties into Easter and the resurrection actually quite well, because you said earlier,
this council is seeking the will of the Lord.
If you truly believe there is a resurrected Lord, you're going to come to that council
with that in mind.
Yes.
The idea that we are trying to help build the kingdom of God on the earth and that we
are trying to prepare the earth for His second coming.
And that's what should be in our heart.
It's not that, oh, I think that having that activity is the best idea in the world,
and we need to have it because I think so.
This is what we need to eat and the activity
because of this or that.
You know what I'm saying?
Sometimes we argue about things like that
that don't really matter.
Have you had those experiences in the past?
Here's what needs to happen.
Yeah, it's a different spirit when
we come with that attitude.
My beloved mission president, Menlo Smith,
is probably close to the same age as President Nelson, really.
He was wonderful this way.
He put such an expectation on us.
It's kind of like that Brother of Jared story,
what will you that I should do for you.
President Smith, if you came to a meeting,
he would say, never come to your boss with a problem. Always come with a recommendation.
And he would want us to wrestle with it because that's where the growth comes. I always loved
that approach that you have a calling, you've been set apart, you've been giving priesthood authority, whether you're a young woman in a class presidency
or a young man in a quorum. Have you prayed about it? Have you wrestled with it? Or are
you just coming to the bishop and say, tell us what to do, bishop? And that's what I appreciate
about what my mission president taught me was, let people lead. And then we can discuss
that the way you talked about. Feeling that power with those special men that have been called by God is something
very almost tangible. And you can see that they are trying to bring people to Christ.
That's really all that they're trying to do, every one of them. And they are actually giving
their life literally until their last breath into
this work.
I think Elder Holland was asked once, maybe this is just an internet story, would you
give your life to the church? And he said, I think that's what I'm doing.
Yes, literally. That's what they're doing. They are such a great example to us of what
the law of consecration is.
They are really consecrating their lives, and we can do the same thing in our own sphere. Sometimes we think that consecration is just the time that we spend in our calling or reading the
scriptures or praying, but really it's how we live our life. It's 24 hours a day, even the eight
hours that we sleep. That's kind of part of that consecration because we need to take care of our bodies so we can keep serving
the Lord. It's the 24-hour thing. The apostles, they are in their ministry until they die,
but we are also in our own ministry until we die.
What does Lehi say to Jacob? You will spend your days in service to your God. I'm excited to know that's what I signed up for.
So there you were, Reina, and excuse me if I keep asking questions, but there you were.
You're probably eating lunch occasionally with these special witnesses. You're probably having
conversations with these special witnesses. What did you learn there?
It was wonderful to see the different personalities.. I always tell people, you will never guess
who I think. Of course, this is my personal opinion. Who I think is the funniest of all
of them. I honestly believe that it's President Oaks. When you are in a relaxed setting, like
in a dinner table, he makes everybody laugh over and over.
And even Sister Ox has to say, like I do to my husband, okay, I think that's enough.
But I think that is cute because they are human beings.
They are like all of us.
They all have different personalities, and each of them is amazing.
That reminds me also of another story.
This happened when that announcement was about to be
made about the adjustment from home teaching and visiting teaching to ministering. I believe it was
in April 2018 that they announced that the week before general conference, usually the general
leaders have a few days of meetings all day with leaders that come from all over the world. We have general authority, 70s and some
even area 70s that come and they are trained. They explain to them all the things that are happening
and even the announcements that they are going to make in general conference. President Ballard stood
in front of us and he told us about the announcement that was going to be made on Saturday.
But he told us, and I
will never forget this because you know he was very calm, he spoke slowly, he was so
wise and then he told us, okay we're going to make this announcement but let me tell
you I'm very worried.
He members, we complicate everything and I'm afraid we are going to complicate this ministering. He asked us to
help the members understand that it's not complicated at all, that it's all based on
the two great commandments, which are to love God with all our heart, mind and strength
and to love our neighbor like the Savior loves us. And that if we base it on love, then we
will not complicate it. It was such a beautiful teaching from him that we need to simplify it.
I'm sad to say that I think he was right in many cases.
We have complicated it, but we shouldn't.
I hope that everybody would have heard him asking us to help everyone.
Focus on what is important, which is to try to serve each other, to account for the
Savior's sheep, to watch for each other, and to bring people to Christ. That's the bottom line
of everything. We are trying to bring people to Christ, and that's what ministering is,
is to help people feel the love of God through us. Fantastic. Marina, thanks for that. We have
listeners all over the world, many who maybe have seen an apostle in person once
in their lives or maybe never, to hear you talk about this interaction you had up close
and personal with these special witnesses of the Lord.
It's faith-affirming for those of us who aren't there.
Did you ever think that was going to be you?
Never.
Never.
I will wake up every morning thinking,
okay, I'm going to Salt Lake,
I'm going to meet with this brother and this apostle,
and I could not believe it, yes.
But at the same time, it is simple.
The way that things are done in church headquarters
are simple.
The basic elements of looking for revelation, praying,
doing everything in the name of Christ,
bringing people to Him. That was the basic goal that we all had, how to bring people to Christ.
Which, transitioning back to Easter, is what it's all about. I listened to a talk from
Sister Sherry Dew, John, this is your friend. I claim Sherry's my friend, but I think she tolerates me.
She really likes John though.
Sherry said, this is in the 2016 BYU Easter Conference.
She was with an evangelical friend in some sort of meeting.
They were rescheduling their next meeting
and he looked at his calendar and said,
well, next week is Holy Week, so we can't meet then. We'll have to look past that. And Sherry said she made the mistake of saying,
wait, you don't work at all next week? He looked at her like she was some sort of infidel,
like are you even Christian? She said, I quickly changed the subject to, well, what do you
have planned? Right? Like what do you have planned? Right? Like, what do you have planned for Holy Week? John, he had a full week of church activities and family activities to celebrate Easter.
So with that in mind, John, Reina, how can we do that as Latter-day Saints? We love and revere the
Lord. And at Christmas time, I think we do a great job of showing that to our families and our
friends, our neighbors, our ward.
And I think it's happening more and more.
Don't both of you that Easter is becoming more emphasized?
That reminds me of a recent talk from Elder Stevenson that is called the greatest Easter
story ever told when he talked about this family.
They are really trying to celebrate Easter in a more Christ-centered
way and to do it more purposely. I love that message because it shows that we are all trying
to do better. Sometimes we think, oh, he's an apostle, he has it all figured out. But
he actually told us that he's trying to do this and he invited us to also try to do it.
I think that we could all be more deliberate.
We can be more purposeful
in trying to remember Christ more during that week
and trying to probably read the scriptures
just like we do during Christmas.
He actually mentioned that we could go and read
the scriptures of things that happened during that week.
So we are ready to celebrate Easter Sunday
when we actually remembered the day that the Lord
was resurrected and that amazing gift that he gave us through that.
I'm really glad we're talking about this because Elder Stephenson, it wasn't the first talk
someone else gave a talk about this. Without Easter there is no Christmas at all. I'm excited
to really try to do that. I think one way, Hank,
is to take that holy week apart, what happened each day, and be able to talk about that and remember,
try to make that a bigger deal. What is it that President Howard W. Hunter said without the
resurrection, the life of Jesus is a litany of wise sayings and some unexplainable miracles.
This is a litany of wise sayings and some unexplainable miracles. But no ultimate triumph.
This is everything.
I've been thinking this whole time we're talking about Job's question, if a man die, shall
he live again?
And Easter is the answer to that.
Not just that Jesus would live again, but all of us will live again. That's an Easter question,
not a Christmas question. I'm just glad we're talking about it. I don't have the answer, but I'm going to do better this Easter.
I think that we can all pray to know what we can do better in our own families.
Easter, some days when we celebrate the Lord's resurrection, but why to stop there? Why couldn't we, after that day,
actually go and read about the resurrected Christ and all the appearances that he made,
these followers, and then go to the Book of Mormon and talk about what he said to the Nephites?
And you continue with that, and probably then we could hit Christmas at that time,
and then we can start all over, right? Yeah.
Yeah. Reina, before we let you go, we have listeners all over the world. And by the way, wherever
you are, come onto YouTube and tell us where you are. It's a treat, isn't it, John, to
read those YouTube comments and to find out where you all are. It's pretty incredible
to us. It takes our breath away really to hear from you. These listeners, many of them, like we said earlier, are suffering
because mortal life has all sorts of challenges. Why don't we just glean from you and your
wisdom with these thoughts about Easter and the resurrected Lord? What might we say to
bless the lives of those who are listening?
I would like to testify that even in those darkest moments,
the Lord Jesus Christ is by our side and he is trying to reach out to us to help us.
We need to turn to him and reach out for his help because his hand is always extended towards us.
And there are times in our lives when it seems like everything is dark and all these heavy
clouds are on top of us and we cannot see the end of that darkness.
But I testify to you that just by thinking about Jesus Christ, about all the gifts that
He gave us and turning to the scriptures, because that's the place where we can actually
get to know Him better.
When we read about His life, his mission, the miracles
that he performed, that can actually give us the hope that we probably need. But I would
also like to tell people that there are times in which that sadness is more than we can
bear and many times it's because we may be suffering from something that needs special care, and that we should not be afraid or ashamed to ask for help.
We should look for a safe person.
Of course, we talk to our Heavenly Father.
He's the first safe person that we have in hand,
and we express to him our feelings,
and we tell him how we feel, and we ask him questions,
and we plead for his help.
But we also look around us and
try to find someone who listen to us and that we know that they're not going to judge us
and just express our feelings. And sometimes by expressing our feelings, we may feel better.
And the important thing also is that we need to also try to be a safe person. You know,
each of us can be a safe person for someone who probably needs to reach out and get out of their chest, all those burdens that they are carrying. In some cases, we
may even need professional help in dealing with maybe a depression or anxiety or things
that we are going through. And there is nothing wrong with that because if we have a pain
in certain part of our body, we go to the doctor and we ask them to fix it.
President Nelson has talked about this and the whole and to there is nothing wrong in admitting
and realizing that we may need help from someone who can help us with our emotional and mental
health. Of course, the Lord is the ultimate source of healing and hope and peace, but it has also allowed us to develop
that science and all that knowledge that allows us to help each other when we are in need
of help.
Absolutely.
I'd go back to that beautiful verse from Isaiah 60 that Reina read to us and that Jesus read
when he introduced himself, when he went back to Nazareth,
that he's here to heal the brokenhearted, to preach deliverance to the captives.
I love that that is what he would focus on himself and we can take him seriously
when he says that's what he's here to do. When I think of Easter and I think of all the greatest victories, imagine conquering death and sin, but for everyone.
When Jesus first came, many thought he was a different kind of Messiah, that he was more going to deliver them from the Romans.
He's like, we've got bigger problems than the Romans. Death and sin, like mortality, for him to conquer that for everybody.
Let me read from my favorite Easter hymn.
I'll just read the first verse.
He is risen, he is risen, tell it out with joyful voice.
He has burst his three days prison, let the whole wide earth rejoice.
Death is conquered, Man is free. Christ has won the victory."
Is there another victory that even compares with that? I can't think of one. It's amazing.
That's beautiful, John. I would like to share this passage of scripture that we find in
Jacob 4, in which he's actually extending an invitation
to us.
I love these words because they fill me with hope in the resurrection.
And he says, wherefore, beloved brethren, and I will add sisters too, be reconciled
unto him through the atonement of Christ, his only begotten Son, and ye may obtain a
resurrection according to the power of the resurrection
which is in Christ, and be presented as the firstfruits of Christ unto God, having faith,
and obtained a good hope of glory in him before he manifested himself in the flesh.
And now, beloved, marvel not that I tell tell you these things for why not speak of the
Atonement of Christ and attain to a perfect knowledge of Him and to attain to the knowledge
of a resurrection and the world to come."
Isn't that beautiful?
He's inviting us to speak of the Atonement of Christ and to have hope in His resurrection.
He resurrected so He
could help all of us to be resurrected. So the purpose of God can actually be fulfilled
and His work and His glory can actually be performed. It's just an invitation to keep
speaking about Him, to keep testifying of Him and to keep being witnesses of Him, of
His resurrection, of His power, of his love
and of his light. I think that this is something that we should all be doing in a regular way
every day of our life to testify of him and to bring other people to him so they can also
feel that joy.
Beautiful. Abinadi facing his own death. I don't know who he's speaking to, if he's speaking to himself or speaking to Noah.
He said, there is a resurrection.
The grave hath no victory.
The sting of death is swallowed up in Christ.
He is the light and the life of the world, a light that is endless, that can never be
darkened, a life that is endless.
There can be no more death.
Reyna, it has just been a treat to have you with us. I think our listeners are thinking
how wonderful you are.
Oh, it's a privilege for me to be with you. I've been following you for years and I have
learned so much from you and your guests. So thank you for inviting me. This is truly a privilege to be with both of you.
I admire you and I know that you're trying
to bring people to the Lord.
That's exactly right.
To all of our listeners, happy Easter.
We hope you have a wonderful season
and fill the spirit of the Lord with you.
With that, we want to thank Sister Reyna Alberto
for being with us today. It has been
fantastic. I don't want it to end. We want to thank our producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors,
David and Verla Sorensen, and we always remember our founder, and we're sure he's with us right now,
Steve Sorensen. We hope you'll join us next week. We're going to continue our Book of Mormon studies on Follow Him.
Before you skip to the next episode, I have some important information.
This episode's transcript and show notes are available on our website, followhim.co.
On our website, you'll also find our two books, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament
and Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament and Finding Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
Both books are full of short and powerful quotes and insights from all our episodes from the Old and New Testaments. The digital copies of these books are absolutely free. You can watch the
podcast on YouTube. Also, our Facebook and Instagram accounts have videos and extras you
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Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew. David Perry,
Lisa Spice, Jamie Nilsen, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra, and Annabel Sorensen.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings Annabel Sorensen.