Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Ephesians Part 1 • Dr. Matthew Richardson • Oct 2 - Oct 8
Episode Date: September 27, 2023How does conversion rely upon revelation and revelators? Dr. Matthew Richardson examines Paul’s letter to the Ephesians, discusses conversion, and how God reveals mysteries through revelation to His... children.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/7_SE3EZJr5oFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Dr. Matthew Richardson01:56 Introduction of Dr. Matthew Richardson03:39 The city of Ephesus05:52 Roman armor08:27 Paul’s introduction to the letter09:59 Come, Follow Me beginnings13:44 Paul and Mormon parallels14:07 Dr. Richardson shares a personal story about his dad’s letters15:47 Becoming a new creature17:14 Predestination and the fabric of conversion22:49 Magic vs mysteries24:59 Conversion and great mysteries27:25 God shares all 29:04 “Unfolding the Mysteries through Revelation”30:40 Lehi as a “visionary man”34:58 Paul is a “prisoner of Christ”38:01 God’s answers aren’t fast40:17 Dr. Richardson shares a personal story about love44:07 The dispensation of the fulness of times47:02 Administration of the gospel49:46 the last days and “knowledge of truth”51:17 Distractions52:42 Crisis vs decision54:56 Dr. Richardson shares a story about Elder Eyring57:59 Conversion and commitment58:58 Dr. Richardson shares a story about his recent mission59:42 Marriage vows and misunderstanding Paul’s words1:04:52 Children of light and reverence1:08:21 Prophets are for our benefit1:11:16 Dr. Richardson shares a personal story about President Nelson1:12:40 No more strangers in Christ and remove bias and prejudice 1:16:22 End of Part 1–Dr. Matthew RichardsonThanks to the followHIM team: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 DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill 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)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my wonderful co-host John by the way. Welcome John.
They think this is going to be a good day, John. I can feel it it was so fun to relive the story of going
into that big amphitheater there, greatest Diana of the Ephesians. So it's kind of fun to
see an axe Paul goes there and then he writes a letter to him and it's fun to kind of connect.
What did he see and then did that affect what he wrote to them later?
Yeah, I remember memorizing in seminary Ephesians 4, he gave some apostles and prophets and
evangelists and pastors.
This is one I've always remembered.
John, we have a fantastic guest with us today, brilliant, scriptorian.
His name is Dr. Matt Richardson.
Matt, I know you've written some on Ephesians.
What are we looking for today?
Ephesians is a wonderful letter, but in so many many ways it's really nice if we can read a little bit in between the lines.
So I'm hoping that today we'll see the obvious and see the things that Paul points out, the things the seminary students have memorized and be able to see that.
But I'm hoping we can also get a flavor of a grander vision or at least some of the things
threads, if you will, part of that great fabric. What Paul is weaving together and see some of the
principles, not just the practices that he mentions specifically. I'm really
thrilled about this. This is an exciting book. It's a book that is meant not just
to be read, but to be contemplated and then put into play. By the way, that we live.
It's a disciples book. I'm excited. Oh, how fantastic.
John Matt is new to our podcast.
I've been wanting him on for years.
He just hasn't been available.
I know that you and he go way back.
Can you introduce him to our audience?
Yes, Matt was a great mentor to me
and a lot of other EFI counselors back in the day
and was one of our favorite faculty back at EFY.
So I'm calling him Matt. I need to say Dr. Matthew O. Richardson.
And also help me in my master's program. So I'm really glad to see him back. And you'll
understand why I say see him back as I read this bio. As a young man, he served as mission in Denmark. He received degrees from BYU in Communications, Education, Leadership and Curriculum and
a doctorate in an Educational Leadership.
In CES, he taught on the Church Educational System from 1986 to 1993, joined the religion
faculty at BYU in 1996.
He received the Robert J. Matthews Teaching Award
from April of 2009 to 2014.
He also serves as the second counselor
to Russell T. Oscar Thorpe in the church's
General Sunday School presidency.
So that's why some of you may recognize,
hey, I think I've seen him speak in general conference.
Yeah.
Then in 2020, he was called to serve as mission leader
with his wife, Lisa, to Minneapolis, Minnesota.
So he's now back from that mission assignment
and back in religious education again.
So we're really glad to have you back.
Did I miss anything in that bio there, Matt?
He probably gave way too much.
Most people have fallen asleep by now
that you did not miss anything.
And it's a pleasure to be here.
Thank you for inviting me and I'm hoping that we can see some things today.
John, I've been waiting.
I've been waiting.
I think at the airport, there was Matt's family and then I was right behind him going,
do you want to be on follow-in?
Don't even podcast.
Yeah.
Welcome back.
Welcome back.
Let's get started.
All right.
Let me read a little bit from the manual, Matt.
And then we're going to hand it over to you and see what you want to do.
The manual has a great introduction here.
It says, when the gospel began to be spread in Ephesus, it caused no small stir.
That's from Acts 19.
Among the Ephesians, local craftsmen who produced shrines to a pagan goddess, saw Christianity
as a threat to their livelihood.
I remember talking about this, John.
And soon they were full of wrath and the whole city was filled with confusion.
Imagine being a new convert to the gospel and in such a setting.
Many Ephesians did accept and live the gospel amid this uproar and polisher them that Christ
is our peace.
These words along with his invitation to let all bitterness, wrath, anger, clamor, and evil
speaking be put away, seem
as timely and comforting now as they were then.
For the Ephesians, as for each of us, the strength to face adversity comes in the Lord and
in the power of his might.
It's a great introduction.
Matt, let's turn it over to you.
Where do you want to go with Ephesians?
John, you've been there, and so you've seen some of the geography of the area, and you
can almost capture, you have to use your
Imagination to capture what it was like because you know the amphitheater that you mentioned
It's large and you can imagine what it was like in its day very impressive
Some of the historians when they talk about a fissious and they look at that they're saying look
This was not just a city, but it was a beautiful city. I mean it's a port city
So there's a lot of trade that's going on now the reason I bring this up is because it's important to have context because Paul does not
just write a letter and send it out in mass. He's writing letters, what we like to call off in
epistles, to individual saints. And so they're flavored with what's taking place in their lives.
Hank, as you were mentioned, you're describing what it would have been like to be a convert. But this is a port city. Roman industry was prevalent. As a matter
of fact, they described a fissious one of the things I liked about description is when
they talked about the promenade, the main street in a fissious, and they said, this isn't
just nice. It's the most splendid. This is the quote, splendid street in the Roman Empire.
This is a beautiful city, temporarily speaking,
but it also becomes an oasis for those who are looking
for something of more substance beyond the temporal.
It has the Roman influence,
hence when we start to talk about it,
and I'm hoping we'll look at the armor of God.
This is where you start to see the armor of God imagery.
Paul in his visit, he knew the Roman influence,
but he also knew that everyone in Ephesius could see what the legions were like. They would
come into port. They would march to different areas. So when you start to talk about armor,
especially armor of the day, you're looking at something that the imagery would be very
vivid and ripe for the people at that time, but also Paul can use it in a masterful way
in his teaching to be able to teach
principles and points. This is an amazing city. It has a tremendous Greek influence as well.
Sometimes we think that the Roman Empire, they ruled all thought, but they were heavily influenced
by the Greek philosophy and thought as well. This is really almost a popery, it's a mixing
pottery. It makes a lot of these things that are taking place at the time from trade, industry, artisans, a lot of violence in some ways, persecution that
would take place.
I think it's important to point out that when you start to look at the saints in Ephesians,
these are mostly all converts, of course, but they're Gentiles.
For me, that flavor is when you start to look at the discussion about one of the great mysteries of the Gentiles and the Jews coming together in the family of God.
So when you see Paul and we'll get more into this one talking about strangers and foreigners, he's writing to the former strangers and foreigners, those who have left the life of the Gentiles, so to speak, and they're now part of the family.
So this is an amazing letter. I think that it's worth noting here that you see a lot of Paul,
obviously, in the way that he's styling and writing this. He's sensitive to those that he's writing
to. He's also sensitive to the needs. And so he's not afraid to give some straight out great bold advice.
David Barr, who is a New Testament scholar,
he wrote a line once in one of his books
taught when he was talking about the Pauline epistles
or the letters of Paul.
And he said, I'm gonna quote this
because I just like his wording on this.
He said quote,
Paul's letters are always vigorous expressions
of his person, close quote.
Now, I know we're doing Ephesians,
but when you start to think of that one,
what David Bar was saying is,
boy, when you start to read the letters of Paul,
if you think about Paul writing these letters
or those that are attributed to Paul,
you start to say, I like that line,
you see a vigorous expression of the person
though we call Paul.
I mean, it's really a fascinating thought.
So Paul does this in all of his letters.
He'll do an introduction of himself
and he used different descriptors of himself
like he calls himself the stalk of Israel
from the tribe of Benjamin, the untimely born
when he's riding to the Corinthians.
And then he gets vigorous into this.
And what he means by that is my birth
is not the normal type and my path is not the normal type.
He's not just talking about his heritage birth,
but of course his conversion birth being born again.
He says, I'm an apostle to the glaciers.
He says, I'm the one to bring obedience to the saints.
I'm the bond servant in Ephesians will see
that he talks about being a prisoner of Christ. And some people
they get hung up on that descriptor right off the bat and they'll say, oh, he's, he's wishing
to escape or he thinks that it's a burden to be part of Christ. And that's not Paul at all.
This is a vigorous expression of him as a person. He's saying, look, when I joined, when I became
born into this, and I had the rebirth of experience, my
passion and vigor was still there as it was in my pre-conversion, then he says, but I'm
not going anywhere.
I locked my heart into this, throw away the key.
When he uses the word prisoner, it's not a bad thing he's talking about.
It's a self-chosen place that he's going to be and he will never leave
as if a prisoner cannot leave.
This is a beautiful way to start to look at, I think, is Paul's letters and saying, don't
forget the man who is writing it, the apostle, the servant who is writing it and the way that
he's doing it.
And that's why I like David Barr's description.
It's a vigorous expression of who he is.
And you can tell he loves the Lord because in every one of his
letters and Ephesians is no exception as a matter of fact, you see it almost effusive throughout this
book, which is roughly 155 verses, but yet it just oozes of his vigor and love of his discipleship
for Jesus Christ. One last side note on this one is John mentioned
that I served in the General Sunday School of Presidency.
It was during the time where Come Follow Me
was actually being developed.
I thought I would just throw that out there
because the way that this started to come about
was we would meet with prophets, seers, and revelators.
Honestly, it's a time that I will never forget
where they were impassioned. Do you want to talk about vigorous expressions of individuals? Is
they were impassioned about their concern for the well-being of the saints of
the Church of Jesus Christ, the Letters and all those who would love to come and
follow the Savior Jesus Christ? The discussion when it started to the whole
process of how come
follow me was developed was we need to get conversion deep into the hearts of the saints.
It wasn't we need them to know more, we need them to know about the Savior more and we forgot
to tell them this or that. We need to tell them more of the standards, the practices and the
principles of the gospel. It was how do we help individuals receive the gospel
into their lives and where it goes?
This is a phrase that President Nelson
who was directing some of this
and then Robert D. Hells, Elder Hells,
they use this phrase all the time.
Get it deep in the hearts of the saints.
I remember during that time,
we would get assignments
and so we'd be together
with all the general officers of the church, a general relief
society, general young women's general primary general young men in the Sunday school.
And elder hells would say, we need to talk about conversions.
So I want you to go home and read your scriptures about conversion.
And I want you to send me what you find.
It needs to be about six pages long.
I don't want less than six. Does that mean you didn't think very much six pages long. I don't want less than six,
because that means you didn't think very much about it, but I don't want more than six,
because I don't have time to read them. And I remember at the time, Julie Beck was a general
Relief Society president. We were sitting next to each other, and we looked at each other,
and we said, we're getting homework from an apostle. We're getting a homework.
There was part of me that I wanted to raise my hand. Is this double space? What's the font size? Exactly. It was a great challenge
because we went back into the scriptures and each of us went and had the experience
to look for conversion. And what was taking place in the scriptural experiences, the admissions, the historical context and say, what was happening
with conversion because everything was focused on getting the
gospel deep in the hearts of the saints. So when you think
about that, at least I do, this is kind of way my brain works,
that's the way that this started unfold is helping individuals
see what they're doing, helping them exercise their own
agency. Paul is a pretty good come follow me apostle. And he does this in Ephesians.
And you'll see that is it's almost like here's the come follow me lesson for the Ephesians
for the time. And he gives great admonitions, but it was never the intent to say you need
to know the following things in these 155 verses.
The intent was let me give you some things that is intended for you to personally say,
now what will I do with those and let them go deep into my heart through my understanding,
through my living and through my practice. And that's why I kind of like this thought of look
at what's happening in this wonderful, wonderful book. Yeah, when you mentioned, we get to know Paul through his writing. I thought of the book Mormon
and with Mormon. Initially, we don't know anything about him when he starts writing. And so we have
to get to know him through how he writes, until we eventually get to the book of Mormon in the book
Mormon, then we can start learning about him. But beforehand, you only get to know him through
the way he writes, and you really can get to know someone through the way and organize their thoughts.
It's a super good point.
As a matter of fact, you know, this is a little bit on the opposite side from the academic side for those who look at the veracity of Paul's letters.
And they'll say, what's the authorship of this?
Pink to your point is the way they do that is through their voice of the way that they write so many times.
So can you get to know someone through the writings?
Yes.
I remember one time I was going through my mom and dad's attic
trying to get things out and stuff
and help clean up, find my old junk and things.
I found this old tattered box and I pulled it out
and opened up and it was filled with letters.
And there were letters that my father had written
to my mother when they were courting. He was from Texas, she was from Utah, they
met right after World War II, while he was debriefing from the war, etc. They met and then he wrote
these letters. Oh my gosh, I thought I knew my father, but then I started reading these letters and
I saw a different side of my father where I started to see a tenderness and a love and a gooeyness and a
Who is this person?
But I remember sitting up there and times I was very emotional reading these letters about I could feel
Through what he was writing how he was writing in the context I came to know him
And I think that this is the beauty of scriptures is when we allow ourselves, we come to know prophets, seers, and revelators.
We know these apostles and those who are writing by the way that they talk about, they
Paul was a passion, vigorous man, and he was not afraid to be able to share.
That doesn't mean that he was bold to the point where he pushed people away.
He was passionate.
For me, he was a believer.
And I knew he was a believer the first time
I read anything that he wrote.
Yeah, I love this.
Thank you for talking about the idea of conversion.
I feel like the idea of becoming instead of just knowing
and doing, but becoming something different
is something we're talking about more and more,
I think, in the church.
I love that Paul, he uses his phrase
and he already used it in some of the previous things we studied, but think, in the church. I love that Paul, he uses his phrase and he already
used it in some of the previous things we studied, but it's becoming a new creature. It's not
just, I'm a better person than I was. I'm a new creature. I'm a new creation. And conversion
is changing from one thing to another. And when we think about Paul and his road to Damascus,
wow, he, he, that was a huge change for him. So I love this idea of him writing this, Paul, who had such an experience and had to
become a whole different creature.
And isn't it interesting that when you talk about this new creature transition, this
deep conversion changing of who we are, not just our location, but who we are, our thought
process, our desires, etc.
In Ephesians, he uses an interesting concept here where on several times he uses the term
where we look at it, for example, in chapter 1 and verse 5, he says, having predestined us to the
adoption of children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of Christ will.
Christ to Himself according to the good pleasure of Christ will. So this predestined term comes up.
You see that again a little bit later in chapter 2 in verse 10, it talks to odd, half before
or date.
Now some people think that predestined is what we use it by today's standards.
As predestination, it's predetermined.
We have no agency.
It's already determined.
But the way Paul talks about this, because when you start to look
at it in the Greek, it's predefined, is what it means.
It's not pre-determined.
It's predefined.
Or in other words, it's pre-ordained.
So here's kind of a crazy wild thought.
And I'm glad you brought this up, John.
So we talk about conversion of becoming new creatures in Jesus Christ.
And the way Paul says it here is according to the adoption by Jesus Christ.
So it's not that we make ourselves new creatures.
It's we make ourselves available to he who changes all things.
And we become new in him. It's kind of like in the book of Mormon, where we become perfected
in Jesus Christ. Not because we did something special and we're all of that. And's kind of like in the book of Mormon where we become perfected in Jesus Christ.
Not because we did something special and we're all of that. And too many of us, myself included,
we're constantly on the treadmill of perfection and grinding and saying, I'm not good enough.
And I like every once in a while throughout the writings of the New Testament is like James
will say is, we'll come to know Jesus Christ and you'll be surprised he's a lot like us and you're a lot like him probably closer to being like him than you
think you are because we're so busy about this concept of perfection but yet here Paul
is writing this because he's experienced it and he uses this for ordination pre ordained to become new to us, but maybe old to the vision of our father
in heaven who knew what we could become in the very beginning.
And you think of patriarchal blessings and you think of all the blessings that we receive
at the hand of the power of our father in heaven.
And it's almost like he's rekindling who he used to become and giving
us visions of times forgotten. And he's saying, come home, come home and be who you were
for or daint, not predetermined who you had become, but who you choose to become through
this wonderful glorious plan of salvation process. And you will be new. But to me, you'll
be the person that I knew you could always become.
It's really a beautiful concept, and this is conversion,
and it has to be personal.
Conversion is personal.
It always drives me crazy when I hear missionaries talk about,
quote, the mission.
When I served the mission, when I was on the mission,
I'm like, whoa, what mission is that?
It's kind of like sometimes when I hear spouses talk
about each other, let me go talk to the wife.
What is the wife?
I mean, are there several of the, or is this the wife
above other ones?
What do you talk the wife?
That sounds so impersonal.
And I tell our missionaries, I hope that you'll never refer to this as the mission.
This needs to be your mission.
It needs to be my mission.
It is our mission because everything
about the gospel of Jesus Christ is personal.
And conversion is a deeply personal experience
and it changes as we change.
And it deepens as we pay the
price. And so this is beautiful. When you start to look at Paul writing about conversion,
he's telling a story inviting in certain terms, everyone to say, your path may be a little
bit different. And I'm going to give you a broad range. Here he's with the Ephesians
and he's saying, look, here we go. You ready for this? This is going to be personal. Now, as mentioned, this has written to converts,
converts who are Gentiles.
And how are they doing in the sea of mess
with philosophies, with trade from Roman,
the emphasis on temporal goods,
power in their face all the time,
maybe oppression, suppression from their peers
as well as from politicians, group leaders, power mongers.
How are they doing?
Apparently, they're doing pretty well.
You know, as a matter of fact, look in chapter one,
by the time you start to go through,
and you look at verse 11,
it says, we have obtained an inheritance,
being predestined, predefined, pre ordained,
according to the purpose of him who work
of all things after the council
of his own will, that we should be to the praise of Christ, glory, and trusted in God. Then he says,
this, the end of line, verse 13, is he says, the gospel of your salvation in whom after ye believed
ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise. That's not like saying, hey, you guys are doing okay.
It seems that we have a range here of those who are coming into the fold, learning how
to be saints, learning to grow into it. And then you have individuals here, at least according
to Paul's words, who have been sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise. I'm like to call
that the calling and election. Make'm like to call that the calling
in the election. Make sure Peter talks about this. These are individuals that aren't
iffy and maybe they'll be here tomorrow. These are people who have become converted, not
just converts, meaning they join the church. So right off the bat, in my opinion, Paul is writing
to converts and he's saying, joining is not enough.
That's the beginning.
Welcome aboard your part of the household of faith.
So when you start to read through things
like no more strangers, you're like, oh my gosh,
he's really giving this beautiful sermon
and all of these verses actually are the threads
that weave together and they make this beautiful convert
not as in membership,
but conversion fabric. Ephesians was also a place where there were a lot of magicians.
I know this is just sound weird, but it was a theatrical place and there was this concept of magic
and mystery surrounding that one. Oh, how did you do that? Well, it's magic. So when Paul arrives
in the book of Acts, there's some individuals who've considered him to be yet another of
the many magicians. Is he's talking about magical things or mysterious things? And so with
that in mind, it should be no surprise for those who know a little bit about this hodgepodge
of a gathering with all these influences. If this is a home of the David Copperfields of the time,
and if you want to go see a good magic show,
go to the amphitheater there in Typhoon.
And you're going to see some great entertainment.
You see this magic, but Paul shows up
in what it's not magic necessarily.
It's miraculous.
And he talks about the miracles of Jesus Christ.
But here's the part of it is what surrounds magic,
and I don't know a whole lot about this,
but it's light of hand.
It's keeping things on a mysterious things
where we don't tell you our secrets.
We're not gonna show you how we did that trick
because then you lose the magic of it all
and it becomes easily explained.
But I like the concept here,
what Paul does is he talks about
mysteries. When you look at the book of Ephesians and you start to jump in there, this is an important
concept, mysteries, and what that would mean to these people. We're not talking about magic,
we're talking about mysteries. And mysteries is a little bit of a difficult thing to understand,
because sometimes we say, this is mysterious, I don't understand it,
but then we start to read in things like we cannot understand it.
And so one of the great mysteries Paul will talk about is the relationship, the intimate relationships.
When I say intimate, I'm talking about emotional, all aspects of it, of married life, specifically,
the relationship between a husband and wife who are converts, working
towards conversion, conversion to the gospel of Jesus Christ, but also conversion to one
another.
I hope that makes sense.
It's not a competing element, but learning to be converted to your spouse.
This is one of the things I love about the gospel of Jesus Christ is this was not intended
to be a Sunday experience.
It teaches us, and once again, John, thanks for bringing this up, to become new creatures
where we see things differently.
It's not our membership.
We see people differently.
We see ourselves differently.
We see life differently.
And part of that extends into this great mystery, Paul brings up about marriage, is seeing a spouse
differently becoming converted or changed in that way. And he gives tremendous advice.
But some people say, I can't figure this whole marriage thing out. It is a mystery.
You know, women, they're mysterious to me. Men, they are the grand mystery. And really
in that frustration, what we're saying is, I don't understand it. I
can't understand it. And it's mysterious. So therefore, it cannot be known. So when Paul starts to
talk about mysteries, he talks about the relationships of Gentiles and Jew or the household of faith.
He talks about marriage between a husband and a wife in the household of that faith. And then he starts to
talk about other elements of the mystery of what happens in a fullness, the dispensation of the
fullness of times. And how is that supposed to work in the world that we live where there's a
constant tension between the world where we're living in the world, the Christ would like us to live
in? It's mysterious. And most of us we throw our hands up in the air and we're like,
oh, and I've tried this. Don't tell me to pray. I remember I prayed once when I was 16 and it didn't work.
So it's, I guess it's not knowable is. I know how this goes. I work on this every day in my life as well.
But we're all in this. Exper experiences, the life of a disciple or becoming
converted is how do you stay in the game and don't give up when you're seeking to find answers.
It's mysterious and yet natural man and all of us, there's tendency to give up. So what should we
do in times where we feel we don't have the strength? Read Ephesians. Try Ephesians on first size because this is a whole
whole spectrum of saints who are on the road to conversion and some are doing so great
that it says that you know it comes down. They're sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise and
others who had just joined and they're getting their house burned down by their neighbors who are
upset or threatened as was pointed out early. And this is a great little book.
When we talk about mysteries, Paul uses that term, at least on four occasions
throughout this, a short little book of scriptures right here, or the short letter.
And he talks about mysteries, but keep in mind that in Greek, when we look at that,
when we talk about things that are mysteries, the Greek word for that,
when you start to look at a Mysterionion is a secret. It's a secret. And some people say, yeah, it's a secret God will share.
That's contrary to everything that Paul has taught, everything that profits, seers, and revelators from
every time period, dispensation of time comes down to a taut. That's not the case. Sure, there are
things that are not revealed openly at first, but God.
I don't know if he's a good businessman. He shares all the company secrets, and he'll tell you the secret formula for Ephesians, how does God reveal his mysteries?
How does he reveal his secrets? And this is one of the reasons for me personally that I love the book
of Ephesians, is he talks about the economy or the administration, the way that he reveals his great
the way that he reveals his great mysteries
or the great miracles. And that, of course, is gonna be done through
profits, seers, revelators, pastors, evangelists,
and individuals that are not telling people what to do,
but they're the great revealers, revealers.
Matt, this is gonna be a little bit odd,
but I'm going to quote you back to you.
This is an article that you wrote for the RSC
that's the Religious Study Center.
We're, John, we talk about the RSC all the time.
We hope our listeners will go to the RSC.
It's just rsc.biu.edu.
And there's this article by Matt Richardson
called Ephesians unfolding the mysteries
through Revelation. And this paragraph, as I read this before the interview, this jumped
out at me and then you started talking about it. So I'm going to quote you back to you.
You wrote, thus at least textually, we know that a mystery can be known. But Paul's letter
to the Ephesians did more than teach that God knows the answers,
even though he may not be revealing what they are. Paul taught the Ephesians that Christ had
made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure, which he has
purposed in himself. More than just knowing all things, Paul taught, as other Nile Maxwell said,
Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ are actually giving away the secrets
of the universe. And then just one more paragraph, Paul later teaches that it was by revelation,
that the mysteries were made known unto him. President Harold B. Lee also connected revelation to
mysteries. He said, Mystery cannot be known except by revelation. With this connection in mind,
no wonder Jacob warned us that we must
not despise the revelations of God for no man, no one of his ways, save it, be revealed unto him.
I'm guessing that's going to be probably a little bit of what we talk about today is
those mysteries can be known by revelation.
But how do you beat Elder Maxwell or the scriptures scriptures that talk about this as a matter of fact, if there's one common thread
through all scriptures, it's that very essence is,
look, I understand and I'm here and I wanna tell you,
I wanna help you.
It's fascinating, you go to the book of Mormon
and you look at Lehigh's family.
So here, Father is a prophet.
In other words, he's a revealer, so to speak,
a revelator.
And it's not like he's necessarily just talking about new unknown concepts.
He's revealing things that have been known in the ages.
He's sharing God's secrets and it God's sharing those through his prophet.
He comes home and tells the family and isn't interesting.
Laman and Lemuel's reaction to their dad is they call him a visionary man.
But the way they say it is, you've vision, dad's a visionary man.
An insult.
But Nephi's over there going, my dad's a visionary man. Same concept. Different places
for these individuals. One's looking at it as, you are telling me what to do. This doesn't
jive with my world, layman and Lemuel. You have Nephi and Sam who are over there going, you are sharing God's secrets and telling us how we can have greater joy in our lives.
It's not jiving with my world, so what do I need to do to be able to come to this mysterious outcome?
And we do this today. I mean, we read the book of Mormon and poor layman and Lemuel get a bad rap. And it's like, I was like layman and Lemuel yesterday.
Is we despise the prophets.
If you look at the purpose of general conference, when I was younger,
I thought general conference was a great time because you get to go to church in your pajamas
and you don't have to leave the couch and you can get treats.
You know, and then do you remember Elder Richard G. Scott?
He would, he was so intent when he speak at conference,
he'd look into the camera and you knew he was looking at your soul.
You never went to get a drink of water when Elder Scott was speaking,
because there's a chance he might say, Hey, hey, you get back.
Sit back down.
Exactly.
But why do we go to the effort and the tremendous,
it's a tremendous effort and the cost to provide an opportunity every six months for a general conference is so that we can have a chance to to hear statistics. Well, that's interesting.
But I think that it's the revelators. It's the days of revelation where inefficious the mysteries are being revealed through the designated profit even appalls time when it comes down through prophets,
series, and revelators. So for example, looking chapter one, it comes in a says here in verse nine,
having made known unto us the mystery of his will, according to his good pleasure in which he
have purposed in himself. So it's not like he says, maybe I'll tell you some in his good pleasure in which he have purposed in himself. So it's not like he says maybe I'll tell you some in his good pleasure.
I think it's similar to scriptures that I've talked about in his due time and in his way.
But bottom line, core to this is mysteries are being revealed and he has made no nut to us,
the mysteries. For me and a lot of my experiences,
when I get into trouble in the process,
here's the process I'm telling you,
how mysteries are revealed.
In my own due time,
in according to my good pleasure, for your good,
I'm not gonna give you,
in other times Paul talks about,
I'm not gonna give you meat before your milk.
I'm gonna make it so that you can come.
Book Mormon talks about it,
line upon line,
precept upon precept, and then this is kind of funny after that orderly mention, then it says, oh yeah, and here a little, and there a little, according to my good pleasure, but his pleasure,
think of his pleasure. You go to the Pearl of Grey Price. My work, my glory, my pleasure
My work, my glory, my pleasure is bringing to pass immortality and eternal life of Father's creations.
That's my work and that's my pleasure.
So as pleasure is never to withhold, but it's to reveal in ways that it will be able
to go deep into the heart.
And sometimes we need to do a lot of milk.
And sometimes we need to do a little bit milk. And sometimes we need to do a little
bit of milk toast and a little bit of meat, et cetera. But the theme here I love is he has made
known verse 9, the mysteries. I'm going to tell you about that. And so in chapter 3, here comes down
and he says, for this cause, all the introduction I gave in chapter one, I love these little statements
in scripture. And I think it's important. So whenever you see the word, therefore, where for
starting in a verse, I think it's important to pause and say, what are you talking about?
Yeah. That is usually because of this that I've already talked to you. I just said that.
So sometimes it's good to reread and say, oh, so since he talked about the mysteries revealed the promises and
etc. Because of all these things, he says, I am a prisoner of Christ. And now this is the Joseph Smith
translation. It says, prisoner of Jesus Christ among you Gentiles. The regular King James version says,
Christ for you Gentiles. I like this translation here. He's saying,
I'm one of you. I've been to Ephesians. I've visited. And by the way, I am on my conversion
path also. I love that change that Joseph Smith offered is, I am the prisoner of Jesus Christ.
I'm not going anywhere. I'm here to the end. I'm not trying to get out and I'm among
you Gentiles. And then in verse 2 it says, if you have heard of the dispensation of the grace of
God, Joseph Smith translation says, verse 2 starts as, for the dispensation of the grace of God,
which is given me to you word. Verse 3, I'm still reading the Joseph Smith translation, okay?
As you have heard that by revelation, he made known unto me the
mystery of Christ, as I wrote before in a few words, whereby
when ye read, ye may understand my knowledge, my experience, that's my wording,
my knowledge in the mystery of Christ, which in other ages was not made known under the
sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy apostles and the prophets by the spirits.
Then it comes down, look at this transition. I love transitions in
the scriptures. And I'm not saying this is right. This just helps me to order them is verse
six starts with the word that. Sometimes it helps me to go through and it says, well, we're
talking. And when a verse starts with that, sometimes for me, it's helpful to say, so,
so he teaches all this. And then it comes down verse 6, so that's, here's the reason why I'm telling you this, so that the Gentiles would be fellow heirs and of the same body and
partakers of his promise in Christ by the gospel. Wherefore, I was made a minister, a minister,
according to the gift of the grace of God, given unto me by the effectual working of his power.
And then he goes on. Isn't this lovely?
So here he's talking about something's really important. He says, look, mysteries have been revealed to me.
And I'm going to help you to understand what I've come to know, the mysteries that I've come to know,
so that you can come to know them too. But they will be revealed. And it's going to come in his
pleasure, verse five. It hasn't been done in other ages, but now it's done
because the timing is right for it to be received. Surely both of you and all of those who are listening
who are working through their conversion, if I'd experiences where they have wrestled with coming
to a knowledge, coming to an understanding, coming to an answer, where they're praying, and then it
comes at a later time. And for most of us,
it's like, you could have told me 10 months ago what was the wait for? It was his pleasure not
to show that he's in charge necessarily or to torture, but I look back at my life as usually when
I was complaining that it didn't come fast enough. I look back and I understand that when it came,
it came at the right time. I had
to be a little more humble, open to receive, or I didn't have sufficient knowledge, perhaps,
to understand what he was telling me, or the experience. Does that make sense? Any thoughts
on that?
My students, and I think me too, were so used to quick answers now. It used to be, when
I was a kid, you at least had to go to the library and get an encyclopedia if you wanted to find out about something. But now I just typed Ephesians into a
Google search and it says it found me 50,600,000 results in 0.42 seconds. I need all 50 million of
those because I'm going to go through each one. And you're telling me here that the things of God
often come slowly and line upon line, here, their little, these two worlds of quick answers versus God's answers.
Those are going to butt up against each other more and more as time goes on.
I like to tell my students, I see.
My worry about Gen Z is you want Google speed answers to golden questions.
And every testimony begins with a test and every
question begins with a quest. And sometimes God doesn't answer that quickly. I
love what you're saying about mysteries here because I think one definition of
a mystery is kind of a throw up your hands. It's a mystery. But I was thinking as
you were talking about a mystery novel, there's a solution, but you've got to go through it.
And you'll figure it out. You'll figure it out at the end.
And I'm going back to Paul and I don't know, I just this really touched me when Paul was in Athens and was,
let me declare the unknown God unto you.
And there's one verse where he says,
He is not far from us.
And the JST kind of says,
and if we feel after him, he wants to be close.
It's like he wants to be found.
He's not one of these great gods that you're used to.
The unknown god wants to be found
and wants to reveal himself to you.
It might not be with Google speed, like you're saying.
And is that interesting, John?
You bring up the mystery novels, et cetera.
How many people read the first chapter and they can't take it,
so they read the last and figure out how it's done.
Who did I end?
Yeah.
And the sad part is they miss the whole developing part of the story.
You know, we skip it, but that's the generation, or maybe this has been the history of man
of all natural men is.
We want the fruit, but we don't want to pay the price.
Here it comes through and it says, be patient on this one.
This will be an odd analogy, but just pop in my mind so it's dangerous.
But I remember when I was engaged and had fallen in love, we were engaged.
We went to an engagement party with my wife's side of the family.
I didn't know these people.
And this kind of old, I thought he was super old, he's probably younger than I thought
I was going to be.
Now, this old guy comes up to me and I felt he was a little confrontive and he says, so you
think you're in love.
That's how he started the conversation.
I quote, can I, I'm, I'm, I'm never saying, oh, I have embarrassed to say this and I said,
no, no, I don't think I'm in love.
I am in love.
I know I'm in love.
And then he says, you don't know what love is.
And I go, yes,
I do. And he goes, no, you really don't. You're too young, you're too in experience. You don't
really know what that's all about. And I was a little offended by it. And I said to this man,
I said, I have had the chance to drink from the well of love. And I drink, I drink from it a
lot. I know I'm in love. And he says, well, you'll see. Now, I was bugged by this guy. And I drink, I drink from it a lot. I know I'm in love." And he says, well, you'll see.
Now, I was bugged by this guy and I went to my wife's head. Who's that guy over there? Man,
is he related to you seriously? But now, you know, we just celebrated our 40th year anniversary.
Well, I didn't like his approach and his method. There's something about that is, yeah, I drink
from the well of love, but I had no idea how deep that well was and the
breath of that well.
So many of us, we want to be able to have that love for Christ, the love of Christ, which
is deep and it is broad.
And no wonder Paul talks about this with the mystery, the mysterious relationship between
husband and wife, the relationship of family.
We want that.
And I think that we yearn for it.
But here's a sad part.
We want to skip to the end of the book and find out what the solution is.
We want to take a quick sip from the surface waters.
But yet it's swimming in those waters and sometimes it's popping in those waters,
and treading in those waters and exploring the waters and drinking deeply to the point
where we can't drink more, where all of a sudden we become try to true and things work upon us. It's called
conversion. So yeah, we need to be patient, but then Heavenly Father in His
wonderful wisdom. And I think this is the point again is not to try our patience
necessary because there are times and I'm sure both of you and many people have
felt this is where He gives you an instant answer. And you're like, what was that? And there's a funny part.
We doubt it. Yeah. Is that me speaking? Or is that the spirit speaking? Is it because I want this
too much? And he's like, you don't know my voice. Yeah. You're not knowing me. And if you're really
worried, if it's right or wrong, corroborate it with what Paul wrote to the Ephesians, the mysteries will be made known.
And he Paul has done it.
And it says, they have been made known in verse 5, revealed unto his holy apostles and
prophets by the Spirit.
Cooperate your promptings.
Not necessarily they're going to be identical, but cooperate your promptings with prophets,
seers and revelators, and they will hold true.
So you see this as a foundation,
and then when it talks about this dispensation,
it's very easy, in my opinion, in verse six,
that we start to talk about a dispensation
of the fullness of times,
but notice really in verse two,
it says, for the dispensation of the grace of God,
which is given to me, you word, for you. It's almost like we have to say dispensation of the grace of God, which is given to me, you word for you.
It's almost like we have to say dispensation of the fullness of time.
It's a rule that we say that in one setting.
I don't know if that's necessarily true.
And Paul, here's just a thought to consider.
Paul has split that apart.
So yes, there is a time where it's the fullness of times.
Well, all things will be coming together.
And this is pretty exciting stuff. You've heard Prophets and revelators saying, this is, this will be an amazing time
where all things are full. The fullness of the gospel come together in that dispensation, that time.
But Paul's talking about a different kind of a thought here, where he talks about dispensation,
not dispensation of the fullness of time, but the dispensation, and then he starts to talk about fullness of time.
It's interesting in the Greek, the dispensation is translated where it's the same root word
for what we translate as economy.
It starts to talk about the economy of the dispensation of time or other dispensations.
It's the economy, and you might translate this in Greek into the
administration of. So sometimes we jump to and say there will be a time period and we get there,
it's going to be sweet and everything's going to be super great and all our problems will be over,
which by the way seems reminiscent of the saints going to Zion.
Yeah, Missouri. We're going to plant a couple trees and Jesus probably come. Yeah.
Yeah, Missouri. We're going to plant a couple of trees and Jesus probably come.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And when we get there, we'll love everyone.
And could you imagine that ride from Kirtland to Missouri?
Hey, look, there's Zick Johnson over there in his covered wagon.
Where's he going?
He must be going to Zyke.
That guy is an idiot.
He didn't help me with my farm and stuff like that.
I can't stand Zick.
I don't know if I want to go to Zyke's going.
But then you expect us when you cross the border in design,
Brother Zick, come give me a hug. I love you. I'm my brother, a eternal friend.
There's some magical transformation happening. And we know that that's not the case.
So when we start to look at what's happening with this wonderful conversion,
it's becoming more than simply knowing, more than doing,
although we must learn what we must learn so that we can do what we must do
So we can become what we must be and that's called conversion and so here we come down and it's not like
This is what worries me. Oh someday we'll be in the dispensation of the fullness of dynes and everything's gonna be great
We don't have to do anything because everything's handed to us and all all is well and desired. Let's see who my are, or at least come, come, he says, but yeah,
read, come, come, he says, and should we die before this journey's
through? Happy day.
All is well with me because I am on the road to conversion.
And it'll all come to pass at some point.
It's, this is an interesting element.
So I like to sometimes just entertain the thought
when I'm reading through, especially chapter three
of the great mystery of the dispensation
for or of the fullness of times
that maybe he's talking about the dispensation
in the literal translation word is the economy,
the administration that will bring about the fullness of times.
And what is that administration? What is that economy? The way that these things will bring about the fullness of times. And what is that administration?
What is that economy? The way that these things will come about? That's chapter four. And
he gave some apostles and he gave some prophets and some evangelists and some pastors and
teachers. Why? I'm in chapter four and I'm looking down in verse, that was verse 11. Why? I'm in chapter 4 and I'm looking down in verse that was verse 11. Why?
Verse 12, oh
for the perfecting of the saints
for the work of the ministry
Oh, and don't forget for the edifying of the body of Christ. Well, how long are we gonna be doing that in this
Dispensation? Well, it's not necessarily the time. It's the economy. It's the way that we're gonna be doing that in this dispensation? Well, it's not necessarily the time. It's the economy.
It's the way that we're going to be doing that. Verse 13. Well, we're going to do that till we
now Joseph Smith translation flips this a little bit. He says until we end the unity of faith, we need
to develop our unity of faith all come to the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure and stature of the fullness of Christ.
Why?
Verse 14.
So I added that one, that's my, my foible.
So that we henceforth will be no more children,
being tossed to and fro and carried about
with every wind of doctrine by the
sleight of men, the cunning craftiness, whereby they lie and wait to deceive. Verse 15,
but speaking the truth in love that they may grow up into him. Isn't that interesting wording? That they may grow up into him in all things,
which is the head, even Jesus Christ, from whom the whole body fitly, fitly joined together
and compacted by that which every joint supply of, according to the effectual working,
in the measure of every part,
makeeth increase in the body
unto the edifying of itself in love.
I don't know if you have the same experience,
but for me when I read things like that,
boy, I can hear the echoes of Paul writing to the Corinthians
where he's talking about gifts of the spirit,
parts of the bodies, but we're all one body. You can hear the echoes of him talking to Bishop Tim. I like to call him
Bishop Tim Timothy, that young Bishop, and teaching him. And he's saying, watch out Timothy,
because in the last days, and you all know this, as it says, perilous times, she'll come.
And then he talks about how perilous you're thinking, oh, it's going to be horrible
hurricanes. It's going to be led into streets. And he talks about truce breakers. He talks about
lovers of self. And then he says towards the end of that little segment, he says, and in those
last days, they will be ever learning never never able to come to the knowledge, not knowledge,
it says knowledge of truth.
In these last days, it's like you've already said
and what we've been talking about here,
go to the internet, there's not a dearth of stuff out there
and it's not the people aren't smart.
Boy, we have smart people on this earth
and they are ever learning.
But we're not learning the things that are the
knowledge coming to the knowledge of truth and how do we get help for this one?
It's mysterious. How do we figure out truth? I mean, what is truth and how do we
apply it? Oh man, this is a mystery. Oh, no, no. It's something that can be known.
How do we know it? That's chapter four. You know it through
verse 11. He gave some apostles and he gave some prophets. He gave evangelists or patriarchs and he gave some bishops and he gave some teachers for what purpose so that we will not be blown
to and fro with every wind, every possible conception, every new program that's out there
that will be founded on the chief cornerstone, which by the way, as you know, is usually in
the least in ancient times, it was the first part that was laid. It was the first stone,
because all stones were measured by that, cut by that. It was laying the foundation that
would bear the weight.
The cornerstone, which is Jesus Christ,
do not get deviated in this crazy world we lived.
I remember watching a popular cartoon movie once.
There were dogs that they had these transmitters
that could talk, and also they were saying,
we have this evil pet squirrel.
Oh yeah, what were we talking about? We get squirrels so often
in our world today. It's it's constant. You know, we get squirrels in our marriages. We
get squirrels in the fullness of knowledge. We get squirrels in treating other people and
bringing them into it's a squirrel. We can't have a conversation squirrel. We should love
one at squirrel. I wonder what I'm going to eat tonight. And yet, what does Paul talk
about here is how do we stay on target? Oh, well, here's the anti squirrel juice, profits,
sears, revelators. They will bring us back to this chief cornerstone from where we should
be measuring. Oh, I forgot squirrel. Oh, this is more important. That's a weird analogy,
but that's the world we're living in.
And I think that when we say, yeah, prophets are good.
Understatement of the millennia.
Understatement of the millennia.
They are a voice that helps us here,
at least in a minimum, a different voice, an alternative,
and a calling from days gone by,
from a loving father in heaven saying,
look, I want you to stay here,
please be close.
And we talk a lot about crises of faith today, and they are very real, where individuals
say, well, I had a crisis of faith.
And I thought about that, and what that means, and try to be empathetic, or at least sympathetic,
and I know, I remember what I'm reading through and you know the word crisis actually
from the Latin means decision. Usually we think of a crisis, it's over, my hair's on fire
and I can't breathe through it, it's the crisis moment as I'm drowning and I'm going down
for the last breath and I'm not saying that we're describing this incorrectly but maybe
we should step back on the power of the words is a crisis as a time of decision. So don't panic, don't jump out of the boat, don't just give up,
don't abandon everything that you've believed in, whether it's your love and a marriage,
like Paul would be addressing here, make a decision, don't panic, take some time,
it's your bearings, what can you do to get some bearings? Maybe you ought to try some
prophetic words. Maybe ought to try profiteers and revelators. You go see a bishop because he holds
the power of God. We call them keys of the priesthood to administer the mysteries. Not because he is
versed, not because your relief society knows all things, but because they've been
called by the power of God and God gave some relief society presidents.
And he gave some ministers for families and he gave some bishops and especially prophets
to help us, help us what?
Through our crises, through our moments of decision to have faith. You know what this is like. We know it personally or through friends and family to decide
I'll have faith for one more day
Okay, I mean have faith and that brings me to a thought I was hired at BYU my first experience
They had a little
Seminar for all the new people that were hired. They're about 35 of us and
Elder Irene came to speak he was with elder Perry He had a little seminar for all the new people that were hired. They're about 35 of us.
And Elder Iring came to speak.
He was with Elder Perry.
They both came and Elder Iring stood up
and he was talking to this small group.
And, oh man, Elder Iring, he talks fast, kind of like I do,
when he's not on the pulpit.
And he gets excited.
It was really fun to see him, like, holy cow.
And he was just teaching, and it was, I'm like,
oh, this is the best thing I've ever.
And then, Halsey, he stops abruptly.
And sometimes he goes like this.
And he crosses his arms.
He can't see it ever.
But he'll tap his lips.
And he's thinking.
And he stopped talking.
And he's like, for a little bit, he's talking.
And he goes, you know, I do not know what faith is.
And my first thought was, this is one
of the smartest people I've ever met. And he doesn't know what faith is. And my first thought was, this is one of the smartest people I've ever met.
If he doesn't know what faith is, I am in his struggle.
And this is so horrible.
My next thought was, maybe I should raise my hand.
Say, Elder Irene, Hebrews 11 has some really good things on faith.
Alma 32 is good.
Try Bible dictionary.
You might enjoy that.
It helped me.
Thank goodness I didn't say a word. But I watched him stand for the longest time after making
that I do not know what faith is. Tapping like this and he was looking up in the back of the room.
Long enough that I almost looked back there to say, what's going on?
But then he paused and he said this.
He says, but I do know what faith looks like.
And then he paused for a moment and he said,
faith looks like those who give their all to God
without knowing what all is.
Now, I didn't need to write it down.
I did. I wrote it in my journal,
but that one was imprinted upon
my soul. And I have thought about and continue to think about that often. Now, think about that in
relation to the Ephesians and the great mysteries. Hey, come join our church and have faith in Christ.
This is a true concept. And Paul does a great job throughout the Ephesians going through and talking about these great mysteries,
but he talks about the reason why Christ is worth it. It's in every chapter, it's verse after verse or every
other verse, etc. He can't help himself. Hey, come and join us. You want to come join us? What does he do? He
invites them to do that experience. And then he says, have some faith in this Jesus Christ, it will change you.
It will, as John pointed out, Paul wrote earlier,
it'll make you a new creature.
You will become converted to it and you'll see everything differently.
Yeah, faith? Sure.
And they enter in with enthusiasm, like Converse do.
That's one of the favorite parts about serving a mission,
because Converse, they want to try so hard. It's just so wonderful and so pure.
It's like children.
And they come in as far as that goes and they say, I'm gonna be the best member ever.
I will never miss going to church.
Now I will read every manual.
Yes.
Yeah.
Oh, it's just a beautiful concept. They have no idea what's coming down the pipe, but yet they entered into it with faith.
So no wonder for me, at least this resonates so well, is these converts in ephesias.
They have come with a household of faith.
And they say, okay, here we go.
And they're Gentiles, by the way.
And they're working through their marriages.
These great, and they say, yeah, I'm committed. I'll do everything the Christ tells me. I'll do it through the
Prophet's Sears and Revelators. I've committed. And they have no idea what's going to happen.
I don't know what all is. They don't know what all is. Yeah. And yet people jump in,
missioners, yeah, I'm going to go to mission. I'm going to be the best missionary. I'll do
everything I've told. And they get out there and they say, I know I'm going to go to mission and I'm going to be the best missionary. I'll do everything I've told. And they get out there and they say, I know I was going to have a
companion, but I didn't know I was going to have this companion,
this person's from Mars.
They had no idea. But then it comes back and say, so what are
you going to do about it? And what's the answer? Have faith.
No. This was part of the plan.
I'm going to keep giving all.
That's exactly right. We started our mission at the opening
of the pandemic. We had COVID, we had the riots and
Minneapolis. It was an adventure. So often our missionaries would say, President,
this is not what I expected. This is not what I signed up for.
When I remember thinking as they were talking, I'm like, I never said it, but I'm thinking,
I know what you feel like. You think this is what I expected? You think I can put my job for this?
You know, kind of a thing. But that's not the point at all. And all of a sudden I could hear
elder Irene in my ear, you know, coming back and saying, I don't know what faith is, but I know
what it looks like. It looks like those who give their all to God without knowing what all is.
Think about marriage. So what does this have to do with Ephesians? When you start to get to chapter 5. And sadly for me, this is just my opinion,
but sadly we get hung up in chapter 5 and we miss the whole point because of translations and words.
So we start to freak out and I understand where we're coming from and we need to be sensitive
and we need to be understanding, we need to be disciples to understand this, but we get hung up on words like submit.
Wives submit yourselves.
This is wrong.
Yeah, that's wording that doesn't fit very well in where we're at in our development
and understanding, but also we probably should be reading Greek, which is helpful to use
the words that Paul was probably using.
But more importantly is to find the concept. Does it require faith to enter into a marriage?
More for my wife than for me, right?
Even in civil ceremonies, they go through and they say that we for better,
for worse, for sickness, for health and things like that. In other words,
I think I know what I'm getting into and I commit to be this type of person.
Isn't it interesting in a temple ceiling, you kneel humbly at an altar with a spouse?
And the wording there just briefly is, is you don't take this person to be your lawfully
wedded wife or lawfully wedded husband.
That's the traditional element.
In the temple, you say, do you receive this person to be your spouse?
There is a voluntary giving and there is a receiving and you do it on bended knee where
you're humble and all of a sudden that person, that woman or that man becomes actually your
greatest gift or should be your greatest gift.
You're receiving them.
It's a gift and you cannot take them
and you cannot wield power against them.
If you wanna go down that path,
read Dr. and Covenant section 121,
it's section 122, that this is not yours to wield.
And all of a sudden you start to get back into this great mystery
well, how's it supposed to work?
It's on humility.
And just like priesthood power, we receive it for the benefit of others.
You can't give yourself a priesthood blessing.
You can't call yourself to a call.
It's a gift for you.
And we learned that in D&C Section 84 for the benefit of others.
Of some God's vision has started to change us in Ephesians.
It comes in, it starts to talk about what Paul will call, you know, in verse 32, he says this
referring to the preceding verses in chapter 5. This is a great mystery, but I
speak concerning Christ in the church. Nevertheless, let every one of you in
particular so love his wife, even as himself and the wife see that
she reverence her husband.
Reference is, once again, in our vernacular and our worry about this is it's like, oh, see,
I'm putting myself below my husband.
No, you look, read all of your scriptures.
What do we do with God?
We love him with our heart, my mind, and strength.
We revere Him.
We have reverence, which is not just quietness. And some people say, see, wives are supposed to be quite.
That's not what this is saying. To revere is to love with almost a deity-esque experience where it's,
I'll call it charity. It's God-like love. And so here's what we're saying is we're in this together.
And we are each other's great gift. And that's what Paul is talking about. So,
Awt men love their wives. That they never become better. Their pleasure, their flesh never becomes
greater than the need of their gift, their spouse. Paul was probably right there on the sidelines.
When DNC Section 132 is revealed talking about how this is going to work when you enter
into a covenant husband and wife and with God, this wonderful triad experience, you're
not going to be saved without that spouse. So you better start working on having faith
God who's asking you to do something that's more than you thought it was all. You to give you're all not knowing what all is and then all of a sudden in that marriage
You have children and that changes the night
And then you work through oh, I'll be the best dad ever
I'm gonna be the best mom on the planet when my children get older
They'll want to double date with us because we're so fun
And we have these imagination what's gonna be like and then you forget about the sleepless nights and then they'll worry
even when they are grown and they are married in the concept of godliness continues. It's
really a beautiful thing. And sadly, sometimes what happens is this wonderful section in five,
which he calls a mystery is really coming down and saying, look, you are, well, look at chapter 5 verse 8,
for you are sometimes darkness, but now you are light and the Lord. Then I love
His abonition. Walk then as children in light. Stop embracing doubt. Stop walking
the darkness. You have the light. Have faith. You're going to be okay. Watch
Prophet Sears and revelators. Paul calls this a great mystery, but it's a mystery
that's known. That's what faith looks like. Walk as children of light. Well said,
John. Well, what does Jesus say earlier? How do you know people? How do you know the children of God?
How do you know if they're children by their fruits? You shall know them. Oh, well, I have to be
perfect all the time. No, no, you need to be the children of light. And what do children of light do? They do their best
to stay in the light. I look at covenants and covenants have so much to do with this. And in the Hebrew,
you look at one of the forms of covenants when they talk about covenants comes from Berrito. And
it's the same word for to fetatter. So a covenant fatter.
That's the same word that we use as hobbling. Are you familiar with like hobbling horses?
You know if you hobble a horse, you tie the back leg with the front leg so they can still move
around and graze and get around, but they can't run and sprint off. Can they? It keeps them close.
Think about that in kind of an away with covenants. What do covenants do? It's not that they
restrict us and they hold us back. But what they do is they hubble us. They fetter us in a way.
So that we still have our freedom. We can wander. We can go into places. We want to graze and stuff.
But hopefully what a covenant does is it keeps you close enough that you're never too far from the arm of the Lord.
A covenant will keep you close when family and loved ones wonder.
Hopefully if they are covenant and we keep our covenants and we exercise faith and we heed
to the economy of where fullness will come, meaning profit seers and revelators, so that
we know how to get through these mysterious, difficult times with family members that are departing spouses.
We all have a whole different set of cards that have been dealt to us, but it's how we play
our hand that becomes different.
And the covenant we should never, in my opinion, never weary in having faith in the covenant,
because if I understand it correctly, it's keeping us close enough that we can always be redeemed.
What is our role?
Keep those that you love that are under covenant close to you as well.
Don't sell the farm.
Don't give up.
Well, how do I do that?
I've tried everything.
Oh, well, how about profit seers and revelators?
If they spoke about this?
I have Joseph Filding Maconkey echoing in my mind when I was
reading Ephesians, and he just said once, we read scriptures
to fast.
And I really had to slow down to read Ephesians.
But what you're talking about in marriage here, when I read 25 and I slow down
Husbands love your wives even as Christ
Also loved the church and gave himself for it. I
That's
Beautiful and there's so much meaning in there
What you are talking about reverence. I thought boy, that's such a good point because what do we say in primary? Be reverent. What you are talking about, reverence. I thought, boy, that's such a good point,
because what do we say in primary?
Be reverent, and what do we mean?
Fold your arms, don't talk.
When you do the first two syllables, revere,
I was like, oh, that's good.
I cherish my wife.
I revere my wife.
I hope we have that for each other.
And if we slow down a little bit, and as you
said, take all of these scriptures and put them together when we're talking about what
this means, about submitting and so forth. And you'll see this much bigger, more beautiful
pictures. Oh, thank you for that.
Yeah. I was reading some of the other translations of Ephesians 4.
And I noticed this in the new living translation
and then a couple other translations of Ephesians 4 verse 11.
Listen to the new living translation.
Now these are the gifts Christ gave to the church,
the apostles, the prophets, the evangelists,
the pastors and the teachers.
And there's some other translations that refer to this as not just he gave some, he gave them as a gift.
And it reminded me of Mosiah 8, Ammon, not the missionary Ammon, but the first Ammon, is teaching the people of Limhai about prophets, Sears, and revelators.
He's talking about King Mosiah, and he says, and the king and he are going back and forth. And then this is what
Amin says. He says, by a prophet, God has provided a means that man, through faith, might work
mighty miracles. Therefore he, I think he means the prophet, the seer, the revelator,
become a great benefit to his fellow beings. And as I was thinking about President Nelson,
when he turned 99, I was thinking about him,
what a gift he is and what a great benefit he has been.
Just one paragraph from a talk six months ago called
Peace Makers Needed, President Nelson.
My dear brothers and sisters, how we treat each other really matters,
how we speak to and about others at home,
at church, at work, and online really matters.
Today I am asking us to interact with others in a higher, holier way.
Please listen carefully.
If there is anything virtuous, lovely, or of good report or praiseworthy that we can say
about another person, whether to his face or behind her back, that should
be our standard of communication.
That's just one paragraph of how many talks has President Nelson given us in the last
six years, and then even previous to that as an apostle.
He has been a gift, a great benefit.
Little phrases like, hear him and let God prevail. Oh, man, I find myself going
back to those with my, come on, the backup, let's learn to hear him and let's let God prevail.
And what a gift. What I'm feeling listening to speak is you're speaking really efficient. You're in a situation saying this is what Paul
is saying or Pauline, you know, is in a circumstance is listen to this situation of what's taking
places. I'm going to tell you the great mysteries where people are stumbling and following and
I'm going to tell you them through the economy, the dispensation, the economy that will bring
about the fullness of times. And that's going to be profit seers and revelators.
A long time ago, I had the opportunity to serve on a committee
where we were doing media at BYU, and I'd go up
and the director of this committee meeting was President Nelson.
So we would meet, we would go through the different things
for BYU broadcasting, et cetera.
And I learned an interesting lesson through that one,
is President Nelson is so sharp.
He could catch a typo on foot note three on page seven just like that and he's always so kind
but he was always about accurate. The only reason I bring that up is he is a man of great detail.
My interpretation of this one, when he uses words, I don't think he mints his words. I think he uses words on purpose and he's very precise.
So when you have a prophet, sir, and revelator, this talking like Hank, when you were reading
those things, my goodness, we should pay attention to those words.
John, what you said, maybe beneficial, read more slowly and contemplate why the choice
of those words.
And when you look at chapter three in Ephesians and
they're talking about the great mystery of Gentiles coming into the church, which by the way,
is delivered by a voice who struggled with that concept before his conversion,
sometimes we forget about this. Is this eating crow, so to speak, or not for Paul, he's doing
everything to have his voice right.
But it's interesting when you go back and say, oh, yeah, this was a pretty big concept for
Saul.
And now he is forging ahead and often refers to himself as the apostles among the Gentiles.
He truly has become a new creature.
Well said.
And does that have merit, at least to think about?
Yes, yes, I think it does is he's embracing this. He's talking to
other fellow converts who are John as you point out in the very beginning in an environment where
people are suspicious of converts. They're angry at converts. They are really their bigots. All of these things are in play.
And one of the great mysteries is here we go. Come on, is he calls them aliens in
verse 12, he says, they without Christ being aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel and strangers
from the covenants of promise. But the next thing you know, all of a sudden he's saying, hey,
look, when it comes down to it, you are no more foreigners. And you are no more strangers,
but you're one unified in the household of faith and of God.
So, how is that going to happen? Because even within the household of God, we do have prejudice,
and we do have personal bias, and we are still wrestling. So, Hank, what you're bringing up is
right. So, maybe we should do a Paul taught the Ephesians is, okay, so what do we do? It's a mystery.
How do we join together with such diversity?
And what do we do with immigrants? And what do we do with?
You name it. You name it the diverse world that we live in and building upon what you said,
Hank, then my dear brothers and sisters, this is President Ilson, how we treat each other really matters.
Now, that's not a grandpa just saying, hey, I've learned in all my years, we should be nice to each other really matters. Now that's not a grandpa just saying, Hey, I've
learned in all my years, we should be nice to each other. That's a profit of God.
That sounds a little mysterious and you're talking magic now. Yeah, we are.
We're talking miracles. And then he's going, I'm asking us to interact with others in a higher
holier way. The gospel net he goes on is the largest net in the world. God has invited
all to come into him. Black and white, bond and free, male and female. There is room for
everyone. However, there is no room for prejudice, condemnation or contention of any kind.
That's April, conference 2023. Now, does that sound like Paul
writing to the Ephesians? Of the great mystery of not just how did the Gentiles get accepted
into the household of the faith? That was one of the great mysteries. By the way, the only way that
came about was revelation. It came through revelation, and you started to see Peter working on that and it was hard
but it was also hard for all the saints to be able to say time to shift because our mysteries,
our secrets are revealed. Now what do we do about it? Uh, same old Samult. No, no. There is no room
for prejudice. They are our brothers and sisters. We must, here we go, change. And we must become new creatures
when it comes to prejudice and bias. And we must become like Christ who just revealed through
his prophets, heirs and revelators that we accept all of his children because that is what he has
done. Here we have a prophet of God just in April, and almost giving a sermon
of the great mysteries of having the household of faith where we no longer have foreigners,
and we don't have strangers. Ephesians, what was happening is we should like this book because it's
our book in a way, it's principally, it's going on. And you just go through President Nelson
alone in just his conference talks or his major addresses that are published and you look at the concepts of what he's doing and John you pointed out he's teaching some powerful principles that are easy to remember not that easy to do unless we heed profiteers and revelators.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.