Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Exodus 14-17 -- Part 1 : Dr. Matthew Bowen
Episode Date: April 2, 2022Does the Lord ever give instructions that seem counterintuitive? Dr. Matthew Bowen demonstrates that many throughout scripture have used the story of the Exodus in times of trial. He also teaches how ...the Lord keeps his promises and how Jehovah sometimes gives counterintuitive commands but never leaves his people alone.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers/SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Transcripts/Language Team/French TranscriptsAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way, we love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to
learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I am your host and I am here with my now wait for this. I'm here with my dry
co-host
The reason he is dry today is not because he is dry as a speaker
It's because he is like
Untimosis crossing the Red Sea and dry ground.
Like, you are a pathway, you are dry ground.
Thank you so much.
This is my dry ground co-host, John, by the way.
Hi, John.
Hi.
Never had that adjective before, so thank you.
I was searching the book of Exodus thinking,
I gotta find something good here,
but dry ground is a good thing in these chapters.
My students have made the same comment,
but I don't think they meant what you did.
Well, the next time they do,
you say, thank you very much.
This is actually a very good thing to be dry
in the book of Exodus story.
Hey, we needed an Exodus expert, John, and we found one.
Who is joining us today?
We're delighted to have Dr. Matthew Elbowen with us today.
He's an associate professor of religious education
at Brigham Young University, Dash Hawaii.
Isn't it fun to say that?
He held a PhD, I love this,
in biblical studies from the Catholic University of America
in Washington, D.C., where he also earned an MA in Biblical studies.
He previously earned a BA in English with the minor in classical studies with a Greek emphasis
from Brighamian University in Provo and subsequently pursued post-Baccholariate studies in
Semitic languages, Egyptian and Latin there. In addition to having taught at BYU Hawaii,
he's previously taught at Catholic
University of America and at BYU Provo. He's the author of numerous peer-reviewed articles on
scripture and temple-related topics, as well as the recent book, Name as Keyword, collected essays
on unomastic wordplay and the temple in Mormon scripture. And with Aaron P. Shade, he's the co-author
of the newly released volume, The Book of
Moses, from the ancient of days to the latter days. I've seen that on Hank. I've got to get that. Dr.
Brong grew up in Orm, Utah, served a two-year mission to the California Roseville mission. He and his
wife, the former Suzanne Blattberg, are the parents of three children, Zachariah Nathan, and Adele,
and we are so glad to have you from across
the Pacific Ocean today.
Thank you for having me.
So honor to be here.
That shout-out not, Cove it.
That shout-out not, Cove it is going through my mind today.
Yeah.
It's cold here in Utah, and you are in La Ia,
which is just beautiful.
How is our Latter-day Saint community out in LAIA?
There's not a day that goes by where I don't feel deep gratitude for the opportunity to be here
and to do what I do. I love it. Yeah. Teaching religion and paradise, right? Sometimes your
circumstances are so fortunate you can only give thanks because you know who made it possible.
You know what it feels like to walk through the Red Sea on dry ground going, I didn't do this.
I was just going to say it came after we'd been doing graduate work in Washington, D.C. I hadn't
finished my PhD yet when I came over here but we just experienced the loss of a son in 2011.
And we needed a place where we could heal and get back on our feet.
And the opportunity to come here came as a literal godsend in that every day since.
Wow.
Well, Matt, John, we are an Exodus 14 through 17 this week.
And the manual sounds a little bit like a movie trailer.
Someone pretty dramatic wrote this one.
The Israelites were trapped.
The Red Sea was on one side, and the army of Pharaoh was advancing on the other.
Their escape from Egypt, it seemed, would be short lived.
But God had a message for the other. Their escape from Egypt it seemed would be short lived. But God had a message for the
Israelites. Then they quote Exodus 14, fear ye not the Lord shall fight for you. So with that
introduction, how do we approach the book of Exodus and get the most out of it?
Well, let's maybe talk about the title of the book. First of all, the Hebrew title of the book
is just schmout. It's what they call an
encipit. It's a title that's derived from the very first words in the book, so it's the title in Hebrew
as schmout, which means just simply names. But in Greek, they attached the much more descriptive name Exodus from X-Hodos, which means a way out.
It's the road out literally.
There will be some interesting connections that we can talk about there to some other places
in the scriptures, but the idea of the Exodus being the way is picked up by Isaiah and Isaiah 51 verses 9 through 11 where Isaiah uses poetic and really
kind of mythic language to retell the event of the Exodus and he talks about the Lord making a way
for the ransom and the Redeemer to pass over then Jacob, the brother of Nephi, the
son of Lehi, picks that up. And second Nephi 9, and he uses the imagery of the
Exodus to describe the atonement of Jesus Christ and how he prepares a way for
our escape from the monster's death, Helen, the devil. It's one of the most
powerful emotive descriptions of the most powerful,
emotive descriptions of the atonement of Jesus Christ.
And he's building it from Isaiah
and Isaiah's reworking of the Exodus story.
Yeah, that's fantastic.
I've seen that in the Book of Mormon
where you can kind of put yourself
as the children of Israel there going.
The celestial kingdoms on the other side of this massive sea that I cannot get to, right?
There's no way for me to get to heaven and I need a way. Jacob seems to use that idea of the it even further when he describes the doctrine of Christ as the way even using another line from Isaiah 30.
He says, this is the way. This isn't a line from the medallorian. It's actually originally an
isianic phrase. He says, this is the way, you know, here a voice behind you saying, this is the way
walk in it. And if I use the way to describe the way we're familiar with this from Genesis, the way
of the tree of life, the way back to the garden which brings in the temple. And Jacob also uses that
in 2nd Nephi 9 when he's talking about the keeper of the gate as the holy one of Israel and
the employee of no servant there. And the way is straight and it lies in a narrow course. You can't pull
any of this ultimately away from the Exodus because it was the defining event in terms
of Israel's salvation history. It is when all the Old Testament prophets refer back to
the foundation of Israel as a people. It's the Lord who led out of Egypt.
I've noticed that Nephi does that a lot, Matt.
Whenever he needs some spiritual energy,
he's like, if he did that for them,
then he'll do this for us.
I had a bishop in Washington, D.C.,
who made a really interesting point
that has never really left me.
He pointed out that, you know,
Nephi goes back to that story a lot
when he needs to, like you say, dry energy and strength, but also to encourage his brothers.
The problem with his brothers, Laman and Lamellan brothers and law,
the sons of Ishmael and this bishop pointed out that for them it was just a story.
Vishmah, and this bishop pointed out that for them it was just a story. For Nephi, it was reality, and it was evidence of what God could do for them. The power that he could make happen, and you
notice that Nephi uses the phrase prepare the way, maybe more than any other writer in scripture. In fact, it's a stylistic, defining characteristic of his
writing to use this phrase to prepare a way. We're all familiar with it from 1st Nephi 3.7.
I will go and do, because he'll prepare a way. And then he uses it, a fair amount of regularity throughout
the rest of his writings to the very end when he says this is the way
in 2nd Nephi 31 at the end. I heard somebody say this. I can't remember what I was listening to, but
that the Exodus is the one event that's probably mentioned more often than anything else in the
Old Testament. They're always looking back to this deliverance story and I think Moses a deliver
foreshadowing Jesus, the deliverer and and how in the Book of Mormon, they look back
to this story, and then they have their own getting out of the land of Nephi, and they're told to
remember how God delivered us from there. We're talking about Exodus, Mass Exodus. In terms of modern analogues, there are a few things that compare to the type of
Organized exodus that we see in the chapters that we're looking at today
Then what Brigham Young
Organized and pulled off
1846 1847. So sometimes he's called an American Moses. Have I ever heard that Hank?
Yeah, it's a book. There's a book called American Moses, Leonard Arlington, on Brigham Young.
Yeah. I think Matt, you just changed that primary song for me because if you
liken the way to the Atonement of Christ, here's our primary children singing. I know the Lord
provides a way. They're singing about the atonement.
There, this way through. It's a deliverance. Yeah.
I just had never connected that to the Savior's atonement before. It just in the song, I hear it
from my own kids. I've always just thought of Nephi, but then take it from Nephi to Isaiah, and Isaiah is saying,
yeah, this is a symbol of the Lord providing a way for our return back to him.
And it might be appropriate here to talk about the name Moses as both an Egyptian and Hebrew name,
because most scholars agree that it's originally an Egyptian name. The name
agree that it's originally an Egyptian name. The name Moses derives from the Egyptian verb messy, which means to bear or to be ghat, to give birth to. The name Moses would then mean begotten.
Like a deity name implied such and such is begotten. The deity name or the deity is begotten.
You know, you're familiar with Ramasis, with Tatmosis, and Ahmosin, some others.
There's no deity name mentioned with Moses' name, but in Moses 1, I mean, what's the emphasis there when we have that interview between the Lord and Moses, where he keeps emphasizing Moses Thou art my son. Moses my son. Thou art in the image of mine only begotten.
One of the things I'll mention to students is,
I'll remind them where did Moses grow up?
He didn't have the typical upbringing of a Hebrew.
Part of what's going on in Moses 1 is,
Moses's, you might call it, is educational reorientation.
And that's evident after that first vision
what the Lord he falls to the earth.
And he says, now for this cause, I know that man is nothing, which
thing I never before had supposed, you know, even during Moses' time, the
pyramids of the old kingdom were already very, very old.
They were ancient already. Yeah, and they were a testament to what human ingenuity and architecture and know how could bring to bear.
But he's left after that first vision, realizing it's nothing in the grand scheme of things.
You know, and then we're familiar with his encounter with Satan in what follows.
And he calls upon God in the name of his only begotten, and he's delivered. He
experiences a type of deliverance that he is going to then be in charge of
orchestrating or being the instrument in pulling off for all of Israel. He sees
the bitterness of hell and Satan's throwing the temper tantrum there, and he
calls upon God in the name of his son and is able to be delivered from that.
And then in Moses 1, 25, he's given the promise that he'll be made stronger than many waters.
And that leads us to the way the Hebrew or the way the Israelites interpreted his name.
They understood the name in terms of the Hebrew verb mascha in Exodus 210. You remember Pharaoh's daughter,
Yai, names of Moses because I pulled him from the water, masiti, who the name Moses as a Hebrew name
is pointed as scholars have pointed out as a pseudo-active participle, which would suggest the meaning, one who draws or pulls out.
Psalms 18, where you have, you know, he pulled me out of many waters, would seem to connect us to the idea, the way they're understanding the name Moses,
the one who's going to pull Israel out of many waters.
When she names him, there had to be angels going,
oh, you don't know.
You raise, he's like, one who pulls out of the water
and you're like, yeah, yeah, that's an understatement.
And so an ancient Israelite audience reading this,
they sort of see the queue in the text when they read it
and they say, okay, he's drawn from the water,
but we know what he's gonna do. We know what his role is going to be. He's going to be the one who pulls
or draws Israel through the red sea. In the many waters, they're connected with Yom or the sea,
a part of the ritual architecture of the temple with the bronze sea. The Bible doesn't specifically
talk about baptismal immersions in the bronze sea, but the dimensions of it as David
Calibro's pointed out would certainly accommodate it. And the temple
lovers in the outer court were clearly used for washings. And so
it suggests that the brazen sea in the temple was used in a
similar fashion or and function. Then this can help us think of baptism in a new way.
The one who baptizes representing the Lord as Moses in his
prophetic role represented the Lord. What does the baptizer do?
Pulls you out of the water. It brings in all of the
the typology and the symbolism with that, which it's just fantastic.
Being pulled from the waters, that's something that happens
at birth, you're pulled from amniotic fluid.
When at birth you're born, this is imagery
that comes in Moses 6 in the book of Moses,
with the water, blood, and spirit.
And it's Elba Ben Bar who talks so much
about how the ordinances teach us about the
covenants. And so when we think about what baptism is, it's teaching us about what the covenant
is that we're making. That should send our minds to the waters of Mormon in Moses 18 and all of the
divine rebirth and what kind of life we are entering into.
It's laid out right there,
and those verses eight through 10.
What kind of life are we going to live from this time forward?
In terms of mourning with those that mourn,
comforting those that stand in need of comfort,
standing as witnesses of God at all times,
and entering his fold, taking his name on us,
being called as people and serving him.
Matt, I'm not only gonna see the atonement in these chapters,
I'm gonna now see the covenant of baptism,
rebirth coming through the water.
You hear the Lord, this is, yeah.
In fact, when we get to the end of 14,
it's the start of the doctrine of Christ, this is verse 31.
There's we'll saw the great hand,
which the Lord wielded upon the Egyptians and the people feared the Lord
and believed the Lord and His servant Moses. That's the start of the doctrine of Christ, faith in
the Lord Jesus Christ. And so we're on the covenant path. By the way, if you can find all the places
that the word hand is used in chapter 14, it's one of those key terms that helps you see what the story is. You're
familiar with the Egyptian iconography that shows Pharaoh's raised hand, always raised
to strike, you know, his strong arm. Verse 8, for example, the Lord hardened the heart
of Pharaoh or Joseph Smith translation and Pharaoh hardened his heart. And he pursued
after the children of Israel and the children of Israel went out with a
high hand. It's the Lord's hand because everybody in the ancient Near East saw these types of
illustrations of Egyptian iconographies used everywhere. Moab and all through the Levant
where the Egyptians had a huge influence. And so this idea that the Lord is the one with the strong arm and the high hand
is meant to help Israelites understand where the power really is.
Not in Pharaoh. It's in God's Pharaoh. Yeah. It's in his high hand
with his strong hand, he'll lead us out type of thing.
In Nephai says, Kershid is he that puteth his trust in the arm of the flesh.
That is exactly it.
And that comes also from the Egyptian iconography, or as a sort of a reaction against it.
And Isaiah talks about this in other places about the Egyptians being flesh.
Jeremiah, I think, was the prophet.
Nephi was quoting specifically, but that's where Jeremiah is getting the language too, is the idea of the arm of the flesh, Pharaoh's strong arm.
It's Pharaoh's horses are flesh. The Lord is much more than that.
Easy application there for us is there's all sorts of high hands, arm of flesh around us. The Lord is trying to tell us. He is the power.
It's his high hand, or his strong hand, strong arm. And we're familiar with the right hand
as being the covenant hand. This is actually a Hebrew word. Most people know that they don't
know. It's in the name Benjamin, Ben Yamin, which means Son of the right hand. And the right hand frequently shows up as
a symbol of the Lord's power, not only as power to do what he says he's going to do,
but to fulfill the promises that he covenants, that he's going to do.
So when we read about first visions standing at the right hand of God is that a symbol to or the stoning of Stephen Jesus at the right hand of God.
It's the favored place. He's my right hand man type of a thing. Exactly. In the ancient world,
the right hand had connotations of favor, the left hand, and in fact the Latin word for left hand is sinister. That is the word in Latin for,
I don't wanna any of our self-loved friends.
I've had listeners to feel bad about it.
The ancients just had, you know,
that this is the way they thought.
You remember in King Benjamin's sermon at the end,
he tells the people that he's very happy
with the covenant that they've
made and he says, because of the covenant you've made, that's actually related back to Moses,
because Moses told the same thing. Because of the covenant that you've made, you're the sons
and daughters of Christ. For this day, he have spiritually begotten you. They become the Bonim
and the Bonote of Christ through the covenant.
He'd become his sons and daughters and then just a couple verses later. I think verse 9 of
chapter 5, he says, you'll be found on the right hand of God. And so he's, you know, they're hearing those echoes of being sons and daughters at the right hand.
They're at the, maybe the most important moment
in the speech, connecting them as sons and daughters
of Christ.
Yeah, and Jesus himself uses it, right?
In the parable, the sheep and the goats,
is he's gonna separate and the sheep
he will put on his right.
So, yeah, sorry to all of our left-hand listeners out there,
they're just going to feel bad today, but don't worry.
The Lord loves you almost as much as us right-handers.
Don't...
Yeah, but this is great. This is something they would have understood.
Right? The idea of being on the right hand of God is in the favored place.
This is awesome.
First, I'm going to go to Joseph Smith translation for chapter 14 verse 4,
and Pharaoh will harden his heart, and he shall follow after them, and I will be honored upon
Pharaoh at all and upon his hosts. The Egyptians may know that I am the Lord. Of course, we see the
the Egyptians sort of regrettingting even after all of the
plagues, after the devils of the first born in the country, even then they do
on a ballot face and then they come hard after the children of Israel. In fact, I
made a list, pick it up in verse 11 and here's one of the first examples of
murmuring in the wilderness and they
said in the Moses, because there were no graves in Egypt, thou hast taken us away
to die in the wilderness. Wherefore hast thou dealt with us to carry us forth out
of Egypt. After mine students all the time, they do experience a lot of discouragement
and anxiety and depression. You remind them that the Lord didn't bring them this far just to
leave them in the desert, just to drop them and not have his purposes fulfilled in them. It's
really easy to sometimes feel like the Lord's led you to a point and that then He just dropped you
off. We have to remember that that isn't a case. I didn't bring you this far just to have you die out here.
That's it. He always has more than one thing in mind anyway,
for any given transaction, anything he does with us.
There's multiple things he wants to happen.
And we have to remember that that we see within the narrow confines of
mortal thought and vision, we think very
linearly. And when we're in greats, when we're in distress, it's very difficult for us to see beyond
that, that when we are in the between a rock and a hard place like this. I like that in verse 12.
Didn't we tell you back there? Just leave us alone. Let us stay there.
It's better for us to live in Egypt than die in the wilderness. This is so human. I'm quick to judge
them like, oh, come on, you guys like have a little faith, but I can see that this is a human thing to do.
We're out here in kind of miserable. And you remember, Laman Lemuel, Nephi, you know, he's very aware
when their words start to align with those of the Israelites in the wilderness.
In fact, he's his depiction of the family's journey.
He's very conscious of the parallels and the similarities between his family's journey through the wilderness, through the Arabian peninsula to Bountiful when layman and Lemuel say it had been better for our wives to have
Die than to suffer these great afflictions. He's remembering these
same words from the Israelites here. Yeah
I find remember that's first Nephi
17 17. Yeah, Our father is foolish.
He's let us out of the land of Jerusalem.
We've wandered in the wilderness.
It would have been better, almost the exact same phrase.
It would have been better that they had died
before they came out of Jerusalem
than to have suffered these afflictions.
So yeah, I never noticed that Matt.
Nephi is paralleling them.
We shouldn't be like looking at the Israelites
and saying, oh, the dumb Israelites, don't
they ever get the lesson?
We should be saying to ourselves, how am I like this?
Yeah, yeah.
Again and again, you start to relate to the Israelites a little bit better.
When you realize we're a lot more like them now, and we don't take the, you know, sort
of the looking down from the Ramyumpum
approach to viewing them. But we say, you know, this is relatable. I've been like this.
And it didn't make sense to them. Let's go camp next to the water. Oh, that's a great
military strategy. So that we have no escape. Gee, what a great idea, Moses. And the Pharaoh
knew it too. I mean, it sounds like they knew it. In verse three, they are entangled in the land. The wilderness has shut them in. They just went up against a wall called
the water. Well, God knows what he's going to do with the water, but they didn't see the way out,
right? That's it. Oh, that's so applicable, John. The idea of, I'm in a bad situation. I kind of
look to heaven and say, why did you do this to me? Why did you do this to me?
It'd been better than I'd never been moved.
And it can seem self counterintuitive.
The moves sometimes the Lord guides us to make.
We feel like it's an inspired decision at the time.
And then when we go forward and act on it, suddenly we find ourselves and it seems like
things are not working out.
The things aren't going
the way that they really should go. That's what we need to remember that the Lord, he has the
strategy. So it might be counterintuitive or almost idiotic from a human perspective, but he really
does see it from God's eye view of it. That's the best view you can have. The God's eye view,
oh, that's a great phrase.
That's any eternal perspective we might say.
Well, they don't even see what the Lord has in mind
when they're camped against the water.
Where is that John in the doctrine of governance
for the Lord says you cannot be holed with your natural eyes?
Section 58, for the present time,
the things which God has prepared for them hereafter and the present you don't see it the design of your God it says
For that which will come here after which I've got a design here. I know what I'm doing
It's a great word. It used the word design. It's planned. It's prepared
There's architecture to a there's a way Some really bright people learn to play chess really well.
The Gary Cosper Oves of the world, they get really good at chess.
Really good chess players can think a number of moves.
Many moves ahead, yeah.
But the Lord is the master chess player and he's thinking,
there's nothing our agency can do that his accounting count account for and adjust to.
That's great.
And you might look at one of his moves and go, that was a bad move.
He's already 14 steps ahead.
He's like, no, this wasn't a bad move.
I'm reading chapter 14 verse 13, the confidence of Moses.
They feel like, well, we tried and it's not working. And the angel
comes and says, stop hitting your brother. And Moses said unto the people, fear ye not, stand still,
and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will show to you today. For the Egyptians whom ye have
seen today, ye shall see them again no more forever. The Lord shall fight for
you, and ye shall hold your peace. Before you do, 1st Nephi 4, this reminded me, you remember
Liberty Jail. Yeah, 1-23, this stands still, I was just thinking that.
Dr. and Covenant's 1-23-17, where Joseph Smith is telling the saints, therefore, dearly beloved, let us
cheerfully do all things that lie in our power, and then we may stand still with the utmost
assurance to see the salvation of God and for his arm to be revealed. That's using the language
right out of this verse and out of Isaiah 52, verse 10,
all nations shall see the salvation of God.
Chapter 14, verse 30,
thus the Lord saved Israel that day
out of the hand of the Egyptians.
And so that story had power for Nephi.
You're mentioning that there was no way forward
with the plates.
When Nephi can talk about it,
I will go and do the things of the Lord commands
for I know he give us no commandment under the children of men. See he shall prepare a way. That's
the design. He says to his brothers, first Nephi four two, therefore, let us go up. Let us be
strong like unto Moses. He is really channeling this story to give him courage to move forward.
I like that you said to him,
it's not just a story. It's reality and the Lord will do it for him too. God can command Moses,
he can command me to build a ship. This is the same thing in the shipbuilding thing. Doesn't
it go back to Moses there too? In chapter 17, seems that if Nephi has two heroes, it's Isaiah and
Moses. Yeah. And in 17, I mean, the obstacle there literally was the sea as well.
The means of getting through the sea or getting over it was different, but it was the same
thing.
I think Jacob was aware of that.
Second, if I tell you when he talked about, he's made the sea our path.
He's thinking Exodus again, and this might have been a longer trip through the sea
But it was the same God who was delivering them
Matt I think you're bringing up a great point here and that is our listeners
I would say a lot of us love the book of Mormon. We'd probably
Preferred or read the book of Mormon over and over and over but I've noticed this year the more we understand the Old Testament
The book of Mormon becomes more powerful. I, but I've noticed this year, the more we understand the Old Testament, the book of Mormon becomes more powerful.
I agree, and there isn't a better reader of the Old Testament of Isaiah and of the Pentateuch,
including Exodus, than Nephi was. Nephi was a very good reader of Scripture. As an ancient
Israelite, he sees things that can really help guide our reading
from the seventh and sixth century perspective. Wow. That's great stuff. Yeah. Because I want to
be a better book of Mormon reader as well as Old Testament, so they kind of, they help each other.
They do. This is a part of the growing together of the two records that Nephi himself mentioned.
That's a metaphor he uses.
At the writings of the Jews and the writings that him and his descendants would carry out
that all of that would grow together.
And it's awesome because he's got the perspective of being able to look as an ancient Israelite
at Israel, ancient Israel's past, but he's also got prophetic vision where he's looking at the future
of his descendants, the descendants of his brothers and even to our own day.
And then he can tell us what we need to hear.
The lens through which he sees everything he's's remembering Moses, his backstory to what he's
going through. And there was something else. When John brought up, therefore, let us go up, let us
be strong like kind of Moses. I want to look at the next phrase that he says, he says, for he truly
spake unto the waters of the Red Sea, and they divided it, thither and dither, and our fathers came through
out of captivity on dry ground, and the armies of Pharaoh did follow and were drowned in the
waters of the Red Sea. He speaks at the waters. Remember how he'd received the promise that he
would be made stronger than many waters? His father has the dream of the tree of life, and then Nephi sees the
things which his father saw. He saw that the rod of iron was the word of God. Now he speaks
out the waters. How did Moses divide the waters in chapter 14? He's told something very specific
in a couple verses when he divides. I think it's verse 16. Lift up thou, thy
rod, stretch out thine hand over the sea and divide it. He always told the divided with
the rod, elsewhere in Exodus it's called the Mataeha Elohim. The rod of God. What's interesting
is that in Egyptian a language that Nephi tells us at the very beginning of his record
that he knew
when he's proud of it because it's a second language and not everybody had that kind of an education.
He grew up speaking Hebrew in the area of Jerusalem, as all ancient Judahites and those of Israelite
ancestors who were there learned, but his father taught him and in Egyptian the word for rod and word and
the verb to speak are the same thing. The Egyptian word medu, which means a rod or
a staff, it's also the verb for to speak and in fact when it's written in
Egyptian, not only middle Egyptian, but later in the Egyptian of Lehigh's time, they're still writing it with a rod hieroglyph as a part of the writing.
You really see this in chapter 17, going back there. First Nephi, chapter 17, verse 26.
And now you know that Moses was commanded of the Lord to do that great work, And you know that by his word, the waters of the
Red Sea were divided. Heather and Heather. Wow. Yeah. This will get even better for a discussion of
chapter 17 with the getting the water out of the rock. If you look down at verse 29, and you know
that by his word, according to the power of God, which was in him, he smote the rock, and there came forth water.
How did he get the water out of the rock?
With the rod.
With the rod.
So to Nephi word and rod, because he knows Egyptian.
Yeah.
In fact, some scholars think that the word that's used in Hebrew for Moses' rod,
Maté, some scholars think that that's actually
an Egyptian loan word, that it's the word rod
out of Egyptian.
If that's true, that would strengthen the connection there.
But it, Nephi clearly thinks of rod and the word
in identical terms.
And then later more, this is Exodus language too.
He will men three.
In fact, this is, I think one of the most important
uses of both the imagery of Lehigh's dream
and the Exodus.
So he will men three, 29 and 30.
Yeah, we see that whosoever will
may lay hold upon the word of God.
You can't lay hold upon a word per se,
but you can if it's a rod, yeah. Which is quick
and powerful, which will divide us under all the cunning and the snares and the wiles of the devil
and lead the man of Christ in a straight and narrow course. There's our way, imagery, a straight
and narrow course across the everlasting Gulf of Mez misery, which is prepared to engulf the wicked, like the Egyptians.
And my word, what a connection.
It's really interesting, isn't it? And so where they headed, they're headed to the promised land.
And land their souls, yay, they're immortal souls at the right hand of God. We've been talking about that too. Goodness.
In the kingdom of heaven to sit down
with Abraham and Isaac and with Jacob
with all our Holy Fathers to go no more out.
I mean, this is incredible.
That little connection right there has almost everything
we've talked about, he-Lemon 329 and 30.
And so you see Mormon, he's very familiar with the small plates
and Nephi, the imagery that Nephi uses
But he's bringing it all together the Exodus
We highs dream the idea of the way the rod of iron. It's all there and
Moses is sometimes called the man of God and so as you know
We step into that role as men and women of Christ when we take the rod.
I have Jack Welch and I have been,
he's over here as a missionary right here
and we've had conversations about this.
Sometimes we think of the rod of iron in Lehigh's dream
as a kind of railing with little posts going down
into the ground like the railings
that we see outside of buildings,
but it's never really described as that.
It's just described as
extending along and it can be grasped. I've sort of wanted to whether the
idea is that Christ is holding the rod and he's extending it to us and then we
choose to grasp it to lay hold on it. My goodness, that heel him and that was worth the price of admission right there.
That yeah, I mean, to see Mormon channeling all that, dividing and leading the man of Christ
across the Gulf, I had never seen that before. John, did you see that before? Were you holding out
on me? No, and I love it. It's like, oh yeah, like Joseph Smith made this up.
Like you said, Matt, this is Mormon having all of that in his backstory there and puts
it all together. Because you're right, you don't lay hold upon the word unless you're
talking about the word like the rod of iron.
You look at all the richness, the complexity, the subtleties that are in the text of the
book of Mormon, and the different
styles, and like Nephi's style versus those of later writers, the way he writes versus Mormon
and Moroni, you just will never convince me that that was all Joseph Smith. They just are
totally different. You can read it just between Nephi and Jacob even. Yep. You can see it. But Nephi and Mormon especially.
One person would not be able to pull that off.
Yeah.
So Matt, let's say Moses hears the author of this story and he's telling it,
this is the moment in their history, right? So if I'm a contemporary of Moses and I'm reading this,
this is my scripture, right?
This is the moment of scripture,
maybe a third Nephi 11 type moment.
This is what the story's been building to.
It's this day.
We have to appreciate the biblical text
that we're working with is,
you know, we can think of the form that we have it in
is something that's been edited
in the way that Mormon edited his work.
There's actually a conscious
system or scheme that the author has in putting the narrative together, laying it out the way that he has.
Then we get this, what's called the song of the sea, the song that Moses sings, and then there's a
song that Miriam sings, that the author chooses to pause on and really reflect by bringing
all of these things together, not only the event of the Exodus in 14, but then the poetry that
commemorates it in chapter 15. It's a moment with the kids saying, now it's a vibe. It's a vibe.
of Ibe. It's a vibe. He really wants us to pause and reflect on what just happened. Wow. So 15 is not necessarily, let's go on with the story. 15 is the narrator saying,
okay, everyone stop and just take that in. What just happened? Which is maybe another
reason one, the five loves it so much,
if he had something like this in his history,
I know that the five books could have changed
from the time Nephi had him to where we get him,
but still, it's gotta be something like this.
Well, before we get to 15,
we should probably talk about verse 17,
Joseph Smith translation here again,
and I say unto thee,
the hearts of the Egyptians shall be hardened.
They shall follow them,
and I will
get me honor upon Pharaoh and upon his host and upon his chariots and upon his horsemen.
And the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord. When I have gotten me honor upon Pharaoh and upon
his horses and upon his chariots and upon his horsemen. And then we get something I think is particularly interesting here. And the angel of God, which went before the camp of Israel, so this angel, and there's a whole ton of
discussion on the identity of who this is. Sometimes it is not clear that the angel of the Lord
isn't the Lord himself. But anyway, the angel that's been out in front now swings around to the other side,
and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face and stood behind them. When it came
between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel, and it was a cloud and a darkness to them.
But it gave light by night to these, so the one came not near the other all the night.
We sing in the hymn, a Redeemer of Israel, a shadow by day, and a pillar by night.
This is a language that Isaiah picks up on in Isaiah 4 when he talks about that the Lord would provide similar protection to Zion, to his people, to their homes
and dwelling places.
There in the end of Isaiah chapter 4, there's a lot of temple imagery there too.
I think the point here is that the Lord is now going to act as divine warrior to fight
the battle for Israel, and he is going to make sure that they have all the
protection that they need to pull it off. Verse 21 and Moses stretched out his
hand over the sea and the Lord caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind
all that night. So we got the image of the hand there again and made the sea
dry land and the waters were divided and the children of Israel went into the
midst of the sea upon dry ground and the waters were a wall onto them on their right hand and on
their left. But it would take an active faith even with everything going on then to step forward
to walk through that. In the movie The Walls are pretty high, the walls of water.
So the Israelites go in and eventually the Egyptians are going to follow through. It came to verse 23
and the Egyptians pursued and went in after them to the midst of the sea, even all of Pharaoh's
horses, his chariots and his horsemen. And it came to pass that in the morning the Lord looked
under the host of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire of the cloud and troubled the host of the Egyptians and took off their
chariot wheels that they draved them heavily. So the Egyptians said, let us flee from the face of the Lord for the Lord fighteth for them against the Egyptians. At this point, it's now too late. They've gone in, they're mired in it, and then the Lord's going to give the instruction with his hand again.
Sometimes hand even gets translated as power in other Old Testament passages.
It's a clarification of where the power is. It was to ancient Israel and it is to us now.
I know in my students' minds are going to come, oh man, I don't like the Lord killing the
Egyptians, right? It just doesn't sit well with me to have the Lord just being like, okay,
that's it for them. Do you deal with that at all in your classes?
I deal with that with the flood and Genesis. One of the scriptures that I come back to frequently
with this and with other issues is 2nd Nephi 2624. Again, it's a big picture type of perspective.
So 2nd Nephi 2624, he do with not anything say that be for the benefit of the world,
for he love the world, even that he layeth down his own life,
that he may draw all men unto him.
Wherefore, he commandeth none that they shall not
partake of his salvation.
If it wasn't for the ultimate benefit of humankind
and the human family, the Lord wouldn't do it,
because he does it out of love,
and in fact, he laid his own life down.
Yes, there are others who lose their lives
as in consequence of divine justice overtaking them.
When we sometimes, when we persist in doing certain things, certain actions that have not only
life altering, but life taking consequences, doesn't mean the Lord doesn't love us,
but we can always be confident that when the Lord does anything when it's him doing it
He's doing it for the benefit of the world for the benefit of the human family and a lot more because he loves
He loves other creatures
I've often thought that the Lord with us physical death is such a permanent ending
But for the Lord it's probably just a movement from one classroom to the other, right?
It is. Sometimes the same thing as the flood. You remember in the Genesis in the book of Moses,
there were a lot of people ushered to the... to the world.
A short amount of time. I don't want to make light of that, but for the Lord really does see things on a continuum. We see things, we see death as kind of a great finale in a one act play sometimes when
really there's a three act play going on.
And the first and the third acts are of much greater length
than any of us imagine.
The third one is, it has no end.
This one is but a small moment to Joseph Smith, right?
This act two is but a small moment.
So the first one had no beginning
and the third one will have no end.
And yet this second act is so determinative.
Right, so short. And the trajectory of where the second act is so determinative. Right. So short.
And yeah, in the trajectory of where the third act goes.
And it's so temporary.
It's it's I like how the book Mormon refers to it in more than one place as the day of this life.
So thought that that the Lord is keeping his covenant here with Abraham, right?
The Egyptians are not going to stop.
They're going to keep coming after the Israelites,
and God has made a promise to Abraham, and he's going to keep it.
And that means the end of the Egyptians,
if God's going to keep his promise,
but I want God to keep his promises.
I'm relying on that.
And that's an important framework in which we need to see a lot of things.
The Lord is going to fulfill His covenant seal.
fulfill the covenant that He made to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
But He'll also fulfill His covenant to us.
That's something that I think Jacob refers to elsewhere.
He's going to do certain things that he's
promised while we're in the flesh. And some of those things will require resurrection for
them to all them will be done to us and for us. But that's one of the great things about the,
that's what I think that's one of the reasons why it was a part of when Jacob's describing the Atonement of Jesus Christ as the way in terms
of the Exodus, that our redemption from death and hell and the resurrection of our bodies will
ensure that God keeps every promise to us in time and eternity. So if there's anything we feel like,
in time and eternity. So if there's anything we feel like, you know, the Lord has promised that we've been deprived of in mortality, it's going to be done to us. And that's a part
of the Abrahamic covenant too. You know, a lot of the promises made to Abraham, Abraham
didn't see in mortality. A lot of them pertain to a time frame long after his mortal life. For example, I had a friend
years ago whose brother died as a missionary in a tragic car accident and his patriarchal blessing
had all of these amazing promises that would seem to be unfulfilled, but they aren't.
that would seem to be unfulfilled, but they aren't.
If we keep the perspective that the board can perform these promises, not only here, but here after
in the resurrection, the resurrection will restore
to us every good thing.
I tell students that I'm looking forward to that
because not only because of not a hair of their heads
she'll be lost according to Amulac and Alma,
but you know, I have a
sun that I'm looking forward to raising with my wife, you know, who died very young, but that's
one of the promises that we live for. It helps us. It helps us keep us in the way, keeps us on the
the covenant path, because we want to be worthy to
receive those promises.
The youth theme for this year is the Proverbs 3, the trust in the Lord with all their heart,
lean not to the unknown understanding, and you can see how often with the murmurings they're
leaning to their own understanding. And the Lord saying, well, you just hold your peace first 14. I'll fight for you.
Just be quiet. As Sheriff had chances to talk to some youth groups about that trust in the Lord
theme. And I've used that second E526. He doesn't do anything except it's for our benefit. Do you
trust that? Do you trust that he loves you? And that if you don't even see the reasons why he's not doing anything
Accept it's for our benefit and a lot of times we talk about justice and mercy and we if we had to pick a favor
It we might pick mercy, but a God that is just will
Recompense us for things that happen through no fault of our own all the the young fairness. All the unfairness, a god of justice will fix that somehow.
And I love that I become more a fan of the god of justice
when I hear about things that are tragic and unfair
through no one's fault.
I appreciate that.
I think it's really important to help students, young people see that
justice and mercy aren't at the end of two
long arms, but they're really part of two sides of the same coin. They're really almost the same thing. If you consider
God's character, who he is, God is just and
merciful. Everything that he does is both. And you can trust him because he's not doing anything except it's for our benefit.
This whole story is a good illustration of that because they keep murmuring.
Even after John, even after this huge miracle, they're upset.
What have you done for us lately, you know, like we've all said, those silly Israelites are those silly layman, the Lemuel, because we've got to look at us and say, have I done this?
Yes.
I looked up, this is the way section 104.
The Lord says, it is my purpose to provide for my saints, right?
I want to give you these things for all things are mine.
He says, but this is 10416, it must needs be done in
my own way. And behold, this is the way my kids love the Mandalorian. So they're going to love this
particular episode. And then I noticed Exodus 14 verse 15, where the Lord says, move forward.
14 verse 15, where the Lord says, move forward. Right. Go forward. So the idea is move forward. Don't look back to Egypt. Don't this idea of it was better for us back there. And the Lord says,
no, no, no, move forward. I will fight for you. Like what you said, John, can you just be quiet a second?
I'm going to provide for you move forward. And to me And to me, there's a lot of meaning there.
Don't you think?
And in the idea of move forward, I know that it's been hard, but I will provide for you.
And that seems to me what Matt, what you said you and your wife are doing is we're going
to move forward in faith.
Trusting.
When we came to Hawaii, we came on a visiting professorship and there was no guarantee that
we would be here
beyond the year.
And then one year turned into two years
and then two years turned into a third.
And then at the end of the third year,
a way was provided for us to be here permanently
and then to raise our family here.
We had in 2013, our oldest son, Zach,
was born in DC in 2008 and then Nathan in 2011
Which I told you about and then Adele our daughter was born in 2013 and the way was provided for us to be here and
To raise our family here. I'm almost speechless with with gratitude for just you know how
Good the Lord's been to our our family through it all
You know, I know it's not the end of our our challenges and trials and we you know, how good the Lord's been to our family through it all. You know, I know it's not the end of our challenges and trials.
And we, you know, we've had a lot of those even since then,
but you just have those experiences in life where you know that the blessings
could have come to you in no other way than through the Lord's providing them
in the way that Hank was just talking about.
Yeah, so move forward, right? Move forward. Tell the children of Israel to move forward. What do you want to tell us about the song of the sea? Let's talk about that because I have read
some commentaries call it song of the sea. I've heard Matt and the synopsis right here
call it the song of Moses. So I guess
there's a couple of different ways to look at it. Yeah, there's song of Moses or song of the C.
And then you know sometimes Deuteronomy, you got 32 and 33 that sometimes get that name to
song of Moses. And when Isaiah writes his songs, doesn't he write something very similar? Yeah, in fact, Isaiah 12 is deeply dependent on the song of the sea here.
There is a strong intertextual relationship between those two.
And Nephite puts that in the Book of Mormon, right?
Yeah, and we could talk about the, there's a lot of divine warrior language at the beginning.
The Lord is a man of war, verse three, the Lord is his name, overthrowing Pharaoh's chariots and so forth. But look in verse six where
you've got the right hand again again. By right hand, O Lord is become glorious in power,
by right hand, O Lord hath dashed in pieces the enemy. There's some temple language here
too. In fact, I want to make sure we don't miss it.
I think Jennifer Lane teaches it this way and maybe Gays Strathern too, but the idea of
the song of Moses and the song of Miriam as being songs of redeeming love.
Remember when Alma talks about that, have you ever felt the sing the song of redeeming
love? Oh, wow. If so, have you ever felt the sing the song of redeeming love?
Can you?
If so, can you feel so now?
These are songs of redeeming love.
Oh, my word, Matt, you're killing me.
I felt like I knew the Book of Mormon,
and now phrases in the Book of Mormon
means more when you understand the Old Testament.
And I feel like sometimes alone in this,
because I feel like we kind of do it backwards sometimes.
We really push the book of Mormon and the New Testament when, and that's good, we should,
but we should also help Watterday Saints and help our students understand the how both of those
books of scripture presuppose a really thorough knowledge of the Old Testament. I mean, there are certain things
that Nephi just assumes you have a basic grasping. And in some places he'll slow
down and he'll really kind of unpack it for us, but in a lot of times he just
has to move forward and assume you know. And that's why I love that because I'm
having these experiences all the time too,
these epiphanies where I just,
like I never saw that before.
I never saw that before.
And that's why we never get to a point
as students of the scriptures.
We never get to the point where we will have exhausted our capacity
to learn more or to understand them with a greater depth or to be drawn
closer to Christ because of what we're reading. If we get to the point where he
say, you know, I'm good. I know this. That's the attitude to what it doesn't like.
He talks about that. A minute we say we have enough. He's gonna take away and we're
gonna lose what we have. Yeah. So, I couldn't feel the singing of our Deeming love.
That's Alma 526.
John, did you see that before too?
Are you been holding out on me on that one?
Just yesterday was talking about the Alma 526.
I like that Alma is talking to people who are already today, we would say members of
the church, but he says there was a time when the
gospel made you want to sing. Do you still feel that way? Are you going forward? Are you
digressing? You know, and it's such a great question, but I hadn't connected it to this.
He added it to a redeeming love, a deliverance song, a redeeming song. that's kind of cool too, especially thinking of the trouble therein
in Moses' situation here. The Lord's going to redeem them and deliver them.
As they come out of the water, is this kind of a harkening back to the creation story
and Noah, the floods receding, and here we are again, coming out of the water. It's all of it. Coming forth in newness of life, its resurrection, its rebirth,
its the new creation, its the new life. Yeah, it's all of it. Talking about the baptismal
typology, remember Paul's the one who he also says, you know, I think that's first Corinthians
10 where he talks about that they were all baptized in the sea and in the cloud to Moses
He actually mentions Moses and baptism which I think is interesting because we don't get the word baptism in the Old Testament
And that word, you know, they're they're Hebrew words like
Tavall that describe essentially the same thing you take
baptism back far enough in Greek, the idea of
Bato, how to do with the immersing of ships in water, the idea of being immersed in water
and ritual immersion. It may not mention baptism in the Old Testament by that name, but
they're clear antecedents for it. There are no where.
Yeah, when you read about baptism in the Bible dictionary,
it's like Adam was baptized.
It's always been a thing,
but it's a little harder to find in the Old Testament.
And if baptism's a Greek word,
you probably won't find it in the Old Testament,
at least not in that word.
What was the word you said?
Or a top of all, yeah, to dip.
You read about washing and so forth.
And the Micah Bath today, I suppose.
Let me make a modern day application
and see what you guys think.
If I read Exodus 15 as me,
and the Egyptians are the adversary or my sins,
and now I'm singing praises to God
who has destroyed my sins. Look at verse 9,
the enemy I will pursue, I will overtake that the lust may be satisfied upon them. I will
draw my sword. And we feel that way sometimes that our sins or even our trials are going to overtake
us. And here the Lord has provided a way out. I like that modern day application. I can see myself in Exodus 15, verse 6,
taking the sacrament with my right hand saying, Lord, is become glorious in power. He's dashed
to pieces the sins. The things keeping me from heaven, my sins and my trials. He's dashed them to
pieces. I don't know. Dude, you feel like we could make a modern day application
like that?
Absolutely.
I mean, the right hand,
as we mentioned, is the covenant hand.
I wanted to mention too that that word lust in verse nine,
the Hebrew word there's nafshi,
which means my soul, my desire.
Lust when the King James translators translated it,
it didn't have quite the same baggage that it has now.
Footnote 9B gives us the Hebrew soul i.e. desire. So that's really nice to have those little
study helps there that kind of clarify what lust means there. So yeah, here comes the adversary who who wants to overtake us, destroy our lives, and he was sunk.
If you look at verse 10,
by Sinc in the mighty waters,
it's kind of like this idea of baptism,
the God provided away for me to sink my sins
and difficulties away in the water.
They sink as lead.
They just sink.
They drop like a rock.
Yeah. So this kind of a song, it reminds me of, yeah,
Nefais song and second Nephi four of Mary's Magnificat in Luke. Could it be that one? Just this kind of
song of praise. Look at all the things the Lord has done for me. And I think in the manual, it
talks about read the song and as a family search for things that God did for
the Israelites and think of things that He could do for you, which says in the official manual,
which is a nice way to apply this chapter. Another one had a her song in first Samuel 2,
as another really good one. At least a couple verses I wanted to focus on here, verses 16 through 17. If you're in dredge, you'll fall upon them. The greatness of
dine arm, there's that imagery again. They shall be as still as a stone,
till thy people pass over. O Lord, till thy people pass over which thou hast purchased.
The word their purchased can mean recovered is the same one that Isaiah uses when he says that the Lord will set his hand the second time to recover his people.
It can mean to buy, it can mean to create, it can mean to get or gain.
Now, shall bring them in and plant them in the mountain of thine inheritance in the place, O Lord, which thou hast made for thee to dwell in, in the sanctuary.
This is all temple language. O Lord, which thy hands have established. You remember,
when back in Exodus 3 Moses was telling Pharaoh that the Lord wanted him to bring Israel out so
that they could serve him upon his mountain. It was a Latter-day Saint
Scholar John Lundquist who said that the Jerusalem temple is the architectural embodiment and
ritual enlargement of Israel's experience at Mount Sinai. So with everything with the the Brazen Sea, symbolizing the Red Sea,
the Alder there in the the Court even before that, and then the Holy Place and then the Holy of
Holies, the Archemplars today still fit that basic pattern with a celestial area that
with a celestial area that and terrestrial, which mostly pertained to the Melchizedic priesthood ordinances, and then the outer core, the outer area, which is celestial. So you have that sort of
what Joseph Smith described as the three principal rounds of Jacob's ladder, still present in the
architecture and the ritual design of our temples.
Verse 17 is a clear reference to the temple.
Sanctuary, capital S sanctuary.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you