Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Exodus 18-20 -- Part 2 : Dr. Daniel L. Belnap
Episode Date: April 17, 2022Dr. Belnap returns to discuss what it means to be “bold in the Atonement” as well as the law of Moses being a preparatory law, and the Ten Commandments.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portug...uese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers/SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Transcripts/Language Team/French TranscriptsAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
Why do you think Dan 19 says the Lord refused them?
20 says the people refused the Lord.
What happened there?
This is probably my opinion more than anything others.
It's funny when you read commentary on this passage, number of biblical scholars say it's
clearly confusing but seeing God, that's not real.
So that can't have been what it's talking about.
Even if I were a non-believer, I guess I would say this, I'd say, okay, whether or not
I believe it doesn't matter.
The text suggests that it can happen.
Complete conjecture.
So you have to take it for what it's worth.
But I happen to think that one of those groups later understood that it is this
role's fault for not meaning God and don't like that story.
So they, if they put in this part of the Lord, it didn't let them.
Yeah, it's the same way in the flood story, you have two different versions there.
All the animals go on the ark, two by two male and female, including
Fala, the air, two by two, that's Genesis five.
And then Genesis six opens, says,
all the animals went on the art two by two male
and female except for clean animals.
They went on seven by seven.
Oh, and birds, they also went on seven by seven.
So you're like, so which one is it?
And in that case, you can make a bit of a guess
as to which one's older,
clean and unclean animals didn't exist
in the days of Noah.
So you've got someone writing from them,
from the viewpoint of the love Moses,
they are writing.
Exactly.
So they're trying to validate the love Moses
and make it older than it seems
and throws it back then onto the Noah story.
I would like to flush out this idea of what do you do
when you fall short, because I can hear many people going that's me
God says let's do this and I'm saying let's do this and then
I back off and I don't come through when you say provoke the Lord can we say I don't know
I don't want a listener going God God is mad at me, right?
But this idea of, oh, what you could have had if you just believed, right?
You could have these suburnal experiences.
Maybe the word is refused, dude, that you refused the Lord.
You know, I couldn't do that.
Well, I think section 84 helps in that regard.
They harden their hearts and could not enter into his presence.
I'm always struck by that. The could not means that they have no ability to enter into the presence of God,
but it is fronted by it and they harden their hearts. It's a choice. They chose not to. And choices
have consequences, right? We've quoted a fair amount of elder Bédinard. He's not the only one
to have done it. He's just the latest one that I remember. He's given a kind of a folks say. When you pick up one end of the stick, you've picked up the other. So what I'm
finally treating about that in terms of understanding agency is that there's a responsibility on
agency, not just in terms of being able to choose, but ultimately to choose the consequence.
You have to be aware of the consequences of the behavior. And in fact, when you look at
the narratives in the Bible, more often not, the Lord often tells you the consequences to a set of behavior and lets you choose.
Whether it's a story of Canaanable, whether it's a story of Adam and Eve, whether it's
the story in the case of Israel, right? There are consequences that are laid out that
are explained, and if you decide not to heed his what will, those consequences play out. Now, having said that, what I do think is intriguing here
about the provocation of Israel,
because I do think this is the provocation.
This is the event when they provoke the Lord ultimately.
Are they gonna provoke a more?
Yeah, yeah, you would wish they weren't,
but they're going to.
So they cannot enter into the presence of God
or have this experience at this time.
But when you look at those, it doesn't mean that they will never enter his rest.
They're just not gonna enter into his rest for a period of time.
They're going to have to work through the consequences of this behavior.
And what's intriguing is that the events of this day
follow through to the end of Exodus of where he gives them a tabernacle.
And when you look at the
tabernacle and its function as a temple, this place where God's presence is going to be, there's a
sense of, okay, so you weren't ready for the experience then. I'm actually going to give you a
series of things to help prepare you for it. We talk about the mosaic law as if it's a punishment,
and there's no question that a le way Exodus is set up is that the Mosaic Law as if it's a punishment. And there's no question that
a Louis Exodus is set up is that the Mosaic Law comes as a result of this behavior. They're
non-shooting. They aren't able to enter the presence of God. They don't become a kingdom
of priests. The priest it is given to a particular family. And so we call it a lesser law, but
I think one of the ways that we can frame you best understand it is it's a preparatory
law. They weren't ready. For whatever reasons they weren't ready,
their minds weren't in the right place, they weren't thinking about the long
picture, they weren't seeing the long view. So God gave them a law. When you read
the law of Moses, the law is great because there's a set of moral and ethical
teachings that are simply true regardless of the dispensation. And I don't mean
just the 10 commandments, but the moral and ethics that lie behind the 10 commandments, those hold true regardless.
That's not a lesser law, that's just the law. So when it comes to the moral and ethical teachings
to Israel, those don't change any. When Christ gets in there and they ask Him, what are the two great
commandments? Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, my name is strength, and the
seconds like unto it, love thy neighbor. Those are straight out of the Lovmosis.
This isn't a lesser law in that regard.
Governing behaviors of daily interaction or daily activity, I think when you
look at those, one of the primary purposes was to help the people view and see
things in a manner that allowed for this greater cosmological perspective.
Animal sacrifice, that's certainly not unique to the law of Moses either, is being done
before them.
So that's not unique to it, but the manner in which you engaged in the different types
of sacrifice, yeah, this helped you structure and think on a larger level or lead to a greater
perspective of things.
Some of the designations that arise
help you be able to distinguish and differentiate and recognize your responsibility to be sacred,
to be holy, which is ultimately what both Deuteronomy and Leviticus are going to talk about.
So I don't think this is a sense of having never done this, never ending in his rest, does that
mean I'm never going to let you enter into my rest?
In the meantime, we've got to teach you how to see differently.
So I'm going to give you a couple of things.
I'm going to give you a law, which is going to teach you how
to think differently, how to think of people differently.
I want you to, in fact, see people the way I see them.
And I'm going to give you a tabernacle, which hopefully
will teach you how to see yourself as I see you.
For the same reasons that we
talked about before, with the ordinances and the rituals that become associated with the Tavanacl.
What'd it be fair to say, the Lord almost knew they were going to fail this first time,
but He wanted them to see that they failed in order, so they'll take what's coming next a little
more seriously, because you don't want to fail down the line in the future?
I don't want you to fail so I
Kind of set you up this leads to a question that people have which is old at least students will end up invariably to this point
Which is so how do I have agency if God knows what I'm doing God knew that they were gonna fail fall
Why did even have him do it in the first place right? That's exactly right
So so we're here confronted with the omniscience of God
up against the ignorance of mankind.
I don't have a good answer, except to say
when I tell my students, so an example that I give them,
I say, if I stood up at the beginning of the semester
and said, I know what grade all of you were getting,
that would demonstrate my omniscience.
But if I don't tell you what
that grade is, then your agency is still intact. You know that I know what the grade is going
to be, but you have no idea whatsoever what your grade is going to be. And so by virtue
of that, if I then say something effective, I know what grade you're going to get. And
what I'd like you to do is work on the following things and do your best.
Then that holds out the hope that you're going to get an A in the class, right?
I can set up, even as I tell you, that I know what grade you're going to get.
I still won't tell you the grade, and yet I can give you all the instruction to get an A.
And since you don't know what you're going to get, you'll work as if you can get an A.
Now I limit your agency if I say something effective.
I know what grade you're going to get in the class and Hank, you're not getting higher than a C-minus.
It's not going to happen. At that point, now I've limited your agency.
And I've crossed the line. But as long as I don't tell you what the grade is, then it's up to you.
And so if I keep playing with this analogy further and I say, all right, I know what grade you're going to get.
And this is what you need to do to get an A
and you turn it an assignment and it's not a worthy.
And I say, tell you what I'm gonna do.
I'm going to give you my feedback
and let you revise month that assignment.
Notice that you still have all the agency.
You still don't know what grade you're getting,
but I'm giving the opportunity to revise it.
Whether or not you do is completely totally up to you.
And so I think sometimes even though the Lord is omniscient, He tells you that He knows
what grade you're going to get, but that doesn't affect what grade you're going to get.
That's up to you.
And He puts everything in place for you to be able to do it.
And I think He does give us revisions all the time. He
gives us feedback all the time and gives us through the Atonement the ability to revise.
And so as I go back to Israel's experience, to some degree it is this very kind of tragic
story. This is what they could have had happen, but it didn't. And yet the rest of the narrative
is basically Lord giving revisions
and saying, all right, here's your chance to redo. You can redo this.
It's a redemption story, but it starts out just kind of tragic kind of sad. You could have
had this. You didn't, okay, let's get you ready. And it's very possible moving forward
that individuals did. We simply don't know. That's a, I just, I laugh when I hear you explain 19 and 20. The Lord was in, they were
in, and then they were out. And I'm like, that's, that's my life right there. That's,
that's got to be so typical of everyone's experience. The Lord was in, I was in, and
I fell short. I got scared. I drew back.
It kind of reminds me of Stephen Robinson's book,
Believing Christ.
Well, you believe in him, but a lot of us just don't believe him.
That was the way he wrote it.
Just believe him, believe that he can do what he said he can do.
It's back to that confidant.
Jacob talks about this in Jacob chapter four.
In verse 11, he says,
Wherefore beloved brethren be reconciled unto him,
God, through the Atomative Christ,
his only begotten Son, and you may obtain a resurrection,
according to the power of the resurrection,
which is in Christ,
and be presented as the first fruits of Christ unto God.
Having faith and obtained a good hope of glory in him
before he manifests himself in the flesh.
He's not talking about resurrection.
He's talking about a particular resurrection
that thanks to Christ
it's possible for you not only to be resurrected, but to obtain a resurrection and a good hope,
which in the Book of Mormon is associated with a promise, a promise of glory, a hope of glory,
in him before he ever manifests himself in the flesh. He's talking about receiving exaltation. And then, verse 12, now, beloved, marvel not that I tell you these things.
For why not speak of the Atomative Christ and attain to a perfect knowledge of him as
it to attain to the knowledge of a resurrection in the world to come?
For Jacob is thinking is, the Atomative Christ makes a resurrection possible, but it also
makes it possible for
exaltation.
He says, why not talk about it to the highest common denominator?
The resurrection is cool, but this is cooler.
Why not talk about it?
What's the worst that happens?
What's the worst that happens?
It sounds kind of a roundabout answer to your question, Hank, if, oh, I don't feel I'm worthy or I've
failed and I do these things.
And I'm kind of like, yeah, so why not think about it?
Why get caught up in the things that can pull us down, the things that keep us from not
being ready in three days?
Why not think about it?
And if it happens, it happens.
I don't
know if I can describe it better than that. The commandment to be perfect, that we're always
trying to qualify and that we always try to talk about, right? Well, he can't mean this
in terms of perfection. And, yeah, I can't mean that. And I understand all of that. And
I know what the Greek word means. And having said that, how much faith should that instill
in an individual to know that God thinks you can pull it off?
Why would he give you the commandment if he didn't actually
think you could pull it off? So I think when God says,
be a perfect, I'm kind of like, so it's achievable. It's doable.
And however you wanted to find it, ultimately, even if it is a process,
so we become perfect in this and then we come perfect in this and we come perfect in this,
don't be dismayed by the promise itself.
God wouldn't give it if he didn't think he could pull it off.
Just the fact that he tells you it should give you a lot of confidence in yourself.
And he gives you plenty of material later that says,
Oh, you know, whether in this life or in in the next life you'll enter to the end.
I'm not particularly concerned the when, but just know that you can be.
It's that confidence.
Do you think you can pull this off?
Do you think you can engage with these people?
Do you think you can have this experience?
Whether or not it happens right now isn't the point.
But do you see it?
Can you see it?
Do you imagine it?
And why not speak to a perfect knowledge of Christ?
Why not?
What's the worst that happens?
This is just so great.
19 and 20, I see totally differently.
Wash your clothes, three days, come to me.
Okay, here we go.
And then they just can't do it.
They just either don't believe whatever you said.
They're too scared. They're just like Moses, you go. You go. We can't do it. They just either don't believe whatever you said. They're too scared.
They're just like Moses, you go.
You go.
We can't go.
Why in between then of this,
do we get these 10 commandments?
I mean, it's just dropped, right?
The middle.
I think part of it again is you're dealing with
an amalgam of these different versions,
different purposes, different accounts.
One of them could be simply the fact
that the 10ments are universal.
These are not part of the law of Moses.
These are not a punishment given to Israel.
This is just simply the law.
We find granted in the Book of Mormon
they're quoting the Ten Commandments.
But you get a version of this in the doctrine of Covenant, right?
You get Christ reiterating the centrality
of these commandments in the New Testament.
And when you look at the commandments themselves, you can see kind of how they divide out.
They deal with your own personal relationship with God and then they deal with your personal
relationship with other beings, other people.
I describe it in terms of spiritual development that we have two primary sets of relationships
that we're developing.
There's this vertical relationship that we have with God that is very personal, very private, right? Nobody
else really has that relationship. It's just you and God. And that's got to grow and get stronger
and bigger and taller. But at the same time that's happening, this has got to be expanding outward
as to who my brother is, who my neighbor is. And if these two things aren't happening at the same
time, then one's not really experiencing
spiritual growth.
So when you look at the Ten Commandments, they really do govern both sets of relationships.
The relationship you have with God, the relationship you have with the larger community of humankind.
Your neighbors, your family.
Yeah, so is that the first five?
Does Shabbn their gods before me?
Does shop not make it to the any graven image, not take the name of the Lord that I got
in vain.
Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.
What did I miss?
I got I'd for there.
And maybe it's four and then six.
Well, it's interesting.
The Sabbath one, I think is a tricky one or not tricky, but I think that's kind of a
pivot one simply because the Sabbath one I think is a tricky one, not tricky, but I think that's kind of a pivot one simply because the Sabbath is both. It's both a communal day and a day to develop your
personal relationship with the Lord. So you've got the Sabbath, but then there's the
our life father and their mother. This has to do with the family. Don't kill, don't commit
adultery, don't steal, don't bear false witness, don't covet. These have to do with your relationship
with your fellow beings. We don't have any instruction as to ultimately why it's separated from the rest of the law
that is going to be given in about chapter 20 starting in verse 22, but we do have the separation,
and it suggests that the Ten Commandments can be distinguished from the other elements of the law.
This isn't the Mosaic law. These are the 10 commandments they govern the behavior. And they are guidelines and commandments to be used
regardless of what dispensation. So it's very possible that people looked at the
went, well, this isn't part of the quote unquote law of Moses. It's the law, but it was given
at the same time, like it's given to give in every dismal. We'll just gnaw all gulp everything
together. Do you want to just walk us through these and just kinda say, look,
this is different aspect of your relationship with God
that this offers, this one is your different aspect
of your relationship with other people
that this offers, would there be a benefit
of just kind of walking through them?
Do you do that with your students?
You certainly can.
If you go through the laws, it's not like they're,
they're not a step-by-step process per se.
But they do lead to some interesting conclusions, particularly when you put them in the context
of other set of scripture.
Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
Interestingly, he's been prefaced by verse two.
He says, I'm the Lord thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt.
So we've got a definition here of Godhood for lack of better term, a function of Godhood.
A God is one who is going to deliver, to bring out, to some degree there's an element here
of kinship that is being suggested between God, Jehovah, and Israel, namely that he brought
them out of bondage.
He's acted as a redeemer in that regard to follow the Old Testament understanding of redeemer.
By virtue of that, I have been your God.
This is what God's do, and I've been your God.
So I don't want any of their God before me.
We have a relationship.
We've established a relationship.
We've got a history of a relationship.
So I will be your God.
But the other elements of this, thou shalt not make unto the any grave image or any likeness
of anything that is in heaven above or that is the earth beneath or that is in the water
under the earth.
Thou shalt not bow down thou self to them, nor serve them, fry the Lord, thy God, and
my jealous God.
But my meaning that he's not jealous in the sense that again, that he's got some fragile
self-esteem, but I take my responsibilities very seriously as a God.
This relationship is a real relationship that you and I have ratified.
We have entered into an oath.
We're bound.
And so I'm going to take it seriously.
I expect you to do so as well.
Do you think he's trying to also correct some of that Egyptian culture that they picked
up over the centuries?
Was this
something that the Egyptians did? We know they did, but so does ancient
Mesopotamia, so does the Hittites, so does the Canaanites. This is just what
everybody's doing in the ancient Near East. The idea of a monotheistic or a
henotheistic approach is kind of unique, but then again, it's not like the
Egyptians have the same type of story that
these relates just had. If there is a relationship with God and delivering a people and moving them out,
we don't see that described in the ancient Near East like this at all. This is unique narrative
of a group of people who have this relationship with deity and it's a covenant relationship.
It's not just, I'm all powerful, it's a covenant relationship.
There's expectations.
This is built into our doctrine.
We have a covenant relationship with God.
I, the Lord, am bound when you do what I say.
When you not do what I say, I'm not bound.
It's this covenant.
If you follow your end of the bargain,
I'll follow my end of the bargain.
That's how it works.
And by the way, it's that that allows us to have trusted Him,
isn't it?
Ultimately, because He takes this so seriously because it defines who he is in his relationship,
we trust in that. That's why in some ways faith
carries within even an economic understanding, right? I can trust in that merchant because I know he doesn't cheat.
And so we go back to that merchant. Now I hate
saying that because our relationship with God is one that we often described in terms of familial
terminology. The truth is families are bound by covenant too. The genetics are less important
in the concept of a family, certainly in the case in the Old Testament and in the New.
The genetics aren't important. It's the covenant relationship that exists between the members of that.
It's the covenant relationship that exists between a father and mother that ultimately
defines them as father and mother.
Abraham chapter 1 verse 2 talks about how Abraham wants the blessings of the father and
the right to administer the same.
What's intriguing to me about that is if the blessings are the blessings of the fathers,
and the fathers have those blessings, and Abraham wants them and the right to administer them,
then that's what makes him a father. The right to administer these blessings. It's not the genetics.
So when we talk about the posterity of Abraham, we sometimes do it in disservice if we focus
in on just the, am I the literal offspring of Abraham?
That doesn't matter.
Ultimately, it's the covenant relationship.
Isaac didn't get the covenant because his dad was Abraham.
He got it because he was a righteous worthy individual who came to the Lord.
And this is the argument that Christ is making in the New Testament, just because you're
the descendant of Abraham.
It doesn't mean the covenant's yours. And so ultimately it's this covenant relationship that is
that is stressed. It's the covenant relationships that exist between us and God. We may be the offspring
of God, but what makes them our father is his ability to bless us. And what makes us sons and daughters
is our choosing to receive. Son and daughter is conditional. We may be the offspring, but we're not necessarily the sons and daughters of God.
And when you read about the phrase or read that sons of God or sons and daughters of God in the scriptures, it's always conditional.
Yeah, you'll have the power to become the sons of God.
Why does he tie this to graven images? I'm not a statue.
Yeah, I'm not a statue. I'm a living being. There's an element that lies behind
that. And I haven't fully fleshed out all aspects of that. But it isn't intriguing to me, for instance,
that. But in 3 Nephite chapter 11, they have an experience. And it's in fact very similar to the
experience that they probably should have been having an Exodus 19. In this case, Christ comes down,
and they have the opportunity to meet with Christ. Now he is resurrected.
And so what do they do? They feel the prints of the nails in his hand and they thrust their hands into
a side. These are intrusive. But beyond that, what's intriguing is he says, and you will do these
things so that you might know that I am the God of Israel and the God of the whole earth. What strikes
me about that is that somehow this experience
must lead you to understanding something about the nature of divinity. There's an element of what
it means to be a divine being that will be demonstrated by you touching deity. If that's the case,
then certainly one of the things that you might take away from it is that gods are living things.
They have bodies, they move. I don't know how far you would thrust your hand into the side,
but you're feeling flesh and you're feeling warmth. It's not a corpse. So you're coming away with an understanding that God
has a body and
it's a living body. It's a life. It's possible that what you're seeing here in element of this is I want you to understand
fully completely that I am a living being
embodied even and that's the idea and that's the expectation. I don't want you building a graven image.
One you might get it wrong, carve me the wrong way, but the other element of it is I'm not that.
I'm not a stone. I'm not wood. I'm living. And this concept of a living deity, I think,
plays such a fundamental role in an understanding of God and by virtue of that, this relationship. You have a relationship with a living being.
And he says in verse 6, I am merciful. I'm living merciful, showing mercy unto them that love me and keep my commandments.
A statue can't do that.
A statue can't show mercy.
The element of that, if we go with a living body idea, this, there's an immediacy to it.
I mean, you'd pray to maybe an idle Ford mercy, but in this case, you're going to see
your showing mercy.
This is something that you'll be able to experience.
There's a tangibility to this mercy and a immediacy're showing mercy. This is something that you'll be able to experience. There's a tangibility to this mercy
and a immediacy to this mercy.
What are the other reasons maybe
why you're not to build an engraving image
is to some degree, mankind is that image.
So back in Genesis, you have the idea here
that humankind is made in the image and form of God.
Do you don't need to build anything else.
You yourselves are the tangible symbol of me.
So connect that to Genesis one God made man in his own image.
Don't make anything new.
Just look around you.
That's exactly right.
Would you see the rest of the law of Moses?
There's no question that God expects you to treat your fellow beings with the same respect and understanding that God Himself treats
them.
That's a fun insight.
I'd never even thought about that.
When God says thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain, when I grew up,
it was, you just don't say the name of God.
Casually, over the years, the idea of covenant,
don't take on this covenant without meaning it,
taking the covenant in vain.
I'm willing to take upon myself the name of thy son.
Don't take that in vain.
So it's added a little more nuance through the years,
but I'd love to hear what you think.
I think it's the same way that you just mentioned.
At least that's the way Christ seems to understand it.
So when you get in the sermon on the mount in the New Testament, he'll expand on this and say,
don't just take the Lord's name, Advate. Don't swear on anything. The idea I think that lies behind
this is oaths mean things. If you're going to enter into an oath, I expect you to take that seriously.
So don't enter into an oath. Don't promise something that you're not willing to do. There's an element of honor and shame. These two aspects play a particular
role in ancient Near Eastern society. Your honor means things. And it does today too, but we
we play a little more fast and loose with our concept of honor. But back then, that's not
the case. If you're going to say you're going to do something, there's an expectation that you're
going to do it. You see that in the book of Mormon as early as chapter two. The brothers are just
absolutely ticked and yet still feel bound to it. That's what I find intriguing by that, right? It's
like, ah, Nephi, we have no choice. Because we promised. Right. Oaths mean things. And so if we take
it by that, you can really see it as a reflection,
or at least the the other side of maybe what we're talking about in verses five and six. The Lord's
going to take this relationship seriously. He takes his end of the oath seriously. I expect you to
do the same. Don't enter into oaths that you're not taking seriously. Don't promise to do things.
You have no intention of doing it.
It's possible if you're taking the Lord's name in vain in that sense, you lose the
sacrality of the Lord's name. It just becomes common use. You don't mean it. So
he's saying, your word means things. I'm not saying that I think that the Lord is
saying that you always have to be sober and somber, certainly. But he is saying,
you need to think real hard
about who you are and what you're doing
and what you've agreed to, because I do.
I talk about this sometimes with the students is,
I know we sometimes like to describe
our relationship with God as he's an adult
or a parent and we're little children.
And I get that in terms of the time frame, kind
of, because we're all eternal beings. But what always strikes me about whenever I'm talking
about the law, whether it's a lot of Moses or the law in any dispensation, is how much
he ends up treating us like adults in this sense, like equals. There are things that maybe
we'd let our little children get away with. He's like, that's not an option.
We're equals on this one. Maybe we like the parent-child relationship because it gets me out of a lot of,
oh, he gets me, he understands me, he knows I'm just young, so. I fully get why we do,
but the Lord doesn't treat us that way. And part of that might be again, back to this concept
of vision of scale. I don't have a great way to describe it, because I'm bound by space and time in a way that God is not.
But, scale makes a difference of things. For instance, the separation between us and God seems vast.
From my perspective, but if you were to look at it from an eternal perspective, the distance between me and God,
it's gone. From an eternal perspective, and
that's his view. It's not mine. It's not my view, but it is his view. I don't think he sees
as much space between us as we like to think that there is. It's a perspective, and he's
got an eternal one, I do not. And so by virtue of that, as I look at these laws, they're
not for children, they're for adults.
If I'm going to take this seriously,
I expect you to take it seriously.
Yeah, and a child, as much as I love my children,
you need to be more mature in order to take things seriously.
Just the fact that he's saying,
I want you to take this seriously,
says I'm talking to people who can take things
Seriously, that's exactly right. I was just saying and because of the the placement of this and because it Just kind of comes out of nowhere and it doesn't really have the same setup
Who knows when this was given this might have been given
Earlier to Israel and said these are your expectations moving forward. So when I come in three days
Here we go. Let's do this. These are just a set of principles that hold true
Regardless, this isn't a lower law. This is the law.
I love the pivot one you told us about.
Like the Sabbath day can be a mix between my relationship with God and my relationship with the community.
Because from here on out, it's going to be community commandments.
The Sabbath is going to be the transition. Never thought about that before.
You see verse 8, you can see a connection between that and the Lord's original offering to Israel
to be a kingdom and priests, a holy nation. So now I'm going to give you the Sabbath and I want
that to be kept holy too. And if we're looking at holy is that sense of not just separation,
but of completion or wholeness, then it suggests that the one of the purposes of the Sabbath is to
completion or wholeness, then it suggests that one of the purposes of the Sabbath is to help us become whole,
to help us become complete. When you look at the creation of the Sabbath, it's an interesting place in the creation narrative.
Talking about different sources there, it seems to be two sources, Genesis 1 and then Genesis 2, which have
come at the creation from two different perspectives, right?
What's the bridge between those two is this institution of the Sabbath.
And I've looked at the Sabbath before as akin to a dedication. You can think of it as a dedication of a temple that becomes useful. Is the dedication of the
temple an end of a process or is it the beginning of a process? Yeah, it's both. It's a liminal
state. And if any of my students end up hearing this, they'll go, oh, liminal, yeah, I roll right
there.
But the concept of liminality is that you've got these in between states that allow for
transformation to happen.
Liminality comes from the Latin term limin meaning threshold or doorway.
So if you stand in the doorway, are you in or out of the room?
Neither, but its function is to facilitate movement from one to the other. And without it, you couldn't
move from one state to another. Well, if you can think of it that way, believe it or not,
ordinances are liminal in nature. These are in between states that allow us to move from one state
to another. Does that make sense? Or you can think of the temple as a liminal space.
It's, you're not meant to stay in there forever,
but does it lead to a transformation
from one state to another?
Yes, a student's asking sometimes
is the mortality state a liminal?
And yeah, in the sense that it is a probationary state,
a preparatory state, no, it's not permanent,
but it transforms us from one state of eternity preparatory state. No, it's not permanent, but it transforms us from
one state of eternity to another state of eternity. The Sabbath then is a time period that is given
to us that carries with it a sense of liminality. It's this in between. Does it end a week? Does it
start the week? Or does it do both? Is it like a dedicated period in which we can dedicate or end a particular period of time and start
a particular period of time in a new way than we did before.
So the Samath has a function, and that function is to bring about change and transformation.
You can look at the creation story and see that the even is we're looking at maybe two
different versions.
That Genesis 1, which really tells you about the physical creation of the earth.
And then you get Genesis 2,
which talks about the social creation moving forward,
the creation of society, the creation of a community,
with the institution of marriage,
with the institution of naming things, right?
The animals are already created,
but the naming of them gives them an identity
and a function within society.
And so you have the creation of a social organization
in Genesis 2. What is the bridge between these two? Sabbath. And so we can look at the Sabbath
the same way. Elder Bednar's talked about the Sabbath as a similarity to the temple.
The Sabbath is a sacred time and the temple is a sacred place, but they have the same function
to help us recognize holiness
and perhaps become more holy. Tell me that word again, liminal. Liminal. What is the origin of the
word Sabbath and what's the Hebrew of it? It's Shabbat. We're not sure exactly because it shows up
in Genesis 2, the institution of the Sabbath.
Many believe that it is related to the Hebrew word Shavah, meaning seven, so seventh day. But whether or not that is an ideology, meaning it's just being associated with it in the narrative,
it's unclear. So you've got rest, an illusion with it, related to the seven.
Ultimately, it's just the term that's being used to describe this.
Now, for Israel, interestingly, you have a number of things
that can be referred to as Sabbath sort,
that can carry with it a sense of Sabbath day,
a transformation.
In fact, elsewhere, I've looked at, again, third Nephi,
and the events of Christ's coming of that first day,
particularly, really, all the way through the end of it,
as a Sabbath. Not in the sense that it happened on Sunday all the way through the end of it as a Sabbath.
Not in the sense that it happened on Sunday,
the way we would recognize it,
but it has all the characteristics of a Sabbath,
certainly of a dedication,
that same kind of in between,
starting a new, but also completing and finishing.
If you look at the Sabbath in Genesis 2,
there's a couple of activities that are actually associated.
So when we talk about it as a day of rest, it's an intriguing rest.
A fair amount of biblical scholars don't believe it means that God just went to sleep,
but it means it's a change of pattern of behavior.
And so if you look at verse three, God blessed the seventh, they and sanctify it.
Both of those would have happened on the Sabbath, suggesting that the acts of blessing and sanctifying,
becoming holy are Sabbath day activities, blessing and sanctifying, becoming holy, are Sabbath day activities,
blessing and sanctifying.
And then, as you can see there, in verse 1, there is an implication that groups for meeting.
So there's a sense of communal meeting, blessing and sanctifying that happens on a Sabbath.
These are three activities that can take place on the Sabbath.
That's from Genesis 2,, uh, verse 3.
Genesis 2, 1 through 3.
Blessing, sanctifying, communal, meeting.
That sounds like my Sabbath.
Assembly. Yeah.
I call it assembly.
Quite an explanation on the Sabbath day.
Yeah, including adversity.
So when I say that it's this playing dual purposes, both with your
relationship with God and with the community, you can see that in verse 10,
when it says, this is to be a day of rest then.
This new type of day for everybody.
And I think one of the intriguing ones
is, even including the stranger that's in your gate.
If you have a visitor who isn't even Israelite,
but they're there with you in your household,
they should be able to experience the blessings
of the Sabbath of rejoicing and of blessing
and of sanctification.
And, and assembly, the Sabbath is not meant to of blessing and of sanctification and assembly.
The Sabbath is not meant to be a day of just somberness.
There's some inclusion there too.
There's huge inclusion.
This is a day that is set apart for you to recognize and the divine community for lack
of a better term.
Or something that Joseph Smith calls the economy of God, the understanding of the relationships of the divine community,
which includes everyone, including the stranger. In modern Judaism today, the Sabbath is
there's a set-up part day, and of course you could use a number of examples, but I'll use
fiddle on the roof, which I think is a great, great musical. They have the Sabbath. And in the Sabbath, Tevian is wife, both bless the family, don't they?
They open up with the light, the candles.
It's kind of like, we're recreating everything.
It's dark, and then they light the candles.
It's a reminder of the creation.
And then you have both mother and father blessing those that are gathered together.
And so, and it is a gathering,
everyone's gathered together, including the stranger, the one that came out of the blue out of
nowhere. You've got this concept that the Sabbath is a communal thing to be shared in which blessing
and sanctifying can take place. And it's everybody, whether you're Israelite or not.
You and President Monson, both love Fiddler on the roof. He would he would quote that all the time
But it does carry with it a sense that in some ways you're reenacting the creation story that was done by the Lord himself
I remember they like the candles and they sing the song and they do this
Right right and the musical but I didn't know that was remembering the creation
I'm gonna remember that and that again reinforces some of the things that we've talked about before with the other laws.
The creation narrative is not a separate narrative
from the history of Israel.
In fact, when you get into Isaiah and elsewhere,
the creation narrative, in for instance,
the splitting of the Red Sea are going to be treated
as the same events.
They're on a continuum of the same type of thing.
The creation story and the
Exodus story are ultimately the same basic storyline to ancient Israel.
Come out of the water, right? They both come out of the water.
Coming out of the water, older creation narratives, where God is a warrior that fights the monsters,
that's going to show up as a description of the Exodus story. So you just have this idea that we're repeating the creation story. And by virtue of that, then you become similar to God. And if that's the case,
then yeah, you're doing divine things on the Sabbath, just like God did.
It's a chance to be like him gives us so often anyway.
If we're going to go back to something even earlier, it's possible that we could look at the Sabbath
as a day where these experiences that you could have interacted with different members of the divine community. He set one apart. Now, how many of us take
advantage of that? I don't know, but it could be. We have one day a week in which the Lord says,
I don't want you to worry about anything. Just concentrate on these things. We don't. I don't.
I don't do it enough, but I always wonder what would happen if I could. I mean, according to the book of Revelation, John receives Revelation on the Sabbath.
The Lord's Day, right?
What would happen if I actually took seriously the Sabbath and used it for the way that
it could be used?
Could the blessings of Dr. and Covenant's 107 actually happen?
It's no longer a burden, it's a blessing.
It's a blessing, not. It's a blessing. It's a blessing.
Wait, it's a place where the community can engage with God. Now, the next one is my
personal favorite, which I quote to my children all the time, honor the other and my mother,
so they don't kill you. So your days will be long up on the land. He moves into family. From Sabbath day, this is kind of like creation.
Adam and Eve. Husband and wife.
And covenant. Because again, if family relationships are covenantally bound, this is the element of it.
So this is you were to honor the father and the mother. These are individuals that are covenantally bound to you.
And again, I can't say that Abraham chapter 1, verse 2,
is informing this verse.
I don't think necessarily the writers
are thinking of Abraham one when they're doing that.
But we can look at that.
And if a father is one who has the right
to receive the blessings and administer the same,
to some degree, that's a principle of what a father is
that is understood by a fair amount of women in the church.
Meaning if you've listened to women's conferences in the past,
they were often taught that you can be a mother without having offspring.
And so what that seems to reflect more than anything else is this
covenantal nature to these two
designations. A father and mother isn't just about one's genetic relationship.
These are terms that are ultimately associated
with covenantal responsibilities.
I'll embarrass my boys a little bit here.
When they all were in fifth grade
and received that maturation lesson that we all got, right?
Well, that meant they got to come to dinner with dad
and sit down and explain the facts of life.
And I'm a professor and I can do that pretty dryly.
And, right?
So, there we go.
There we go.
Thanks, Dad.
My oldest boy, Jack, he was good.
My younger son, Sam, he had more questions,
and I decided to bring Jack along with that,
and Jack's like, I'm so embarrassed, Dad.
I'm like, it's fine.
We can answer these questions.
What I would tell them, ultimately was, and granted this,, I'm so embarrassed, dad. I'm like, it's fine. We can answer these questions. What I would tell them ultimately was,
and granted this, mortising to the me trying to express
their priesthood responsibilities,
but I said, here's the deal.
In the end, anybody can be a dad,
but the Lord wants fathers.
And that's a different ballgame.
He wants someone who has the blessings of the fathers
and the right and the authority
to minister the saint.
Anybody can be a dad, but he's looking for fathers.
Not genetics, it's covenants.
If we look at it from that perspective, which granted maybe he's reading a little bit more
into the text than perhaps what was intended, but honor thy father and thy mother would
carry with it those covenantal responsibilities that you have for those family obligations
that you have.
And by the way, you can see that definition of fatherhood in the New Testament with the
parable of the prodigal son.
In that story, it's a fascinating parable because that youngest son, Waste's inheritance,
and then when he realizes or comes to himself, it says he came back to himself and he
realizes he needs help.
So he says, I'm going to go to my father and then says,
and I will be his servant for I'm no longer worthy of being his son.
That right there is an indication of an understanding that just because
you're the offspring doesn't guarantee that you're a son.
That sonship is earned and he's lost the rights to that.
Now, that's the beautiful part of the rest of the parable.
And that could be talked about on another day about how the father, without saying a word, accepts his offspring back as
a son, and why the oldest brother has a problem with that, but that's a whole other story.
The point is simply this, is that honoring my father and mother probably ties back to
some degree of covenant relationship again.
And for a funny version of this is Jeremiah. In the book of Jeremiah,
he's going to explain how he doesn't like having to do what he does. He doesn't like being
a prophet. He doesn't have a particularly happy message to deliver to Israel. It's not
his calling. He mentions, I cursed the day that the midwife brought me forth. Like, curse the man that ran to my father and said, you have a son.
So he curses everybody except his mom and dad involved with his birth.
Because he does what he's not going to break the commandment.
I'm not going to break. I can't curse mom and dad, but I'll curse everybody else involved
with my brother. That midwife. That shall not kill.
That shall not commit adultery.
That shall not steal.
The Lord starts raddling off commandments at this point where the other ones got longer explanations.
These ones come fairly quickly.
There's somewhat self-evident, I think.
That shall not kill.
That just holds true with any law code in any place.
That's not necessarily unique to Israel's law code.
Now they will qualify this, obviously, as you get into, in fact, in chapter 21, they're
going to give a bit of a qualification to this.
And so to some degree, you can look at later elements of the law as further explanations
or case studies based on some of these principles.
But chapter 21 versus 12 and 13, 14, and even
15 for that matter, it continues on into this idea, suggested there's such thing as man
slaughter and involuntary man slaughter and voluntary man slaughter. And I mean, if you look
at verse 12, he that smite of the man so as you die, shall be surely put to death. That's
the law. But then he goes on to say, and if a man lie not in weight, but God deliver him into his hand, then I want to point the place with her he
shall flee. So there is one exception to this, or at least in terms of man's slaughter,
two elements of this, one, if you weren't lying in weight, and lying in weight suggests
premeditation. If a man lie not in weight, and God deliver him into your hand, then I
will point the place with her that he should flee. If God delivers him into your hand, then I will appoint
the place whether that you should flee.
If God delivers him into your hand and it wasn't premeditated, then we have two conditions
by which the death penalty is avoided.
What is intriguing is those two are explicitly mentioned in 1st Nephi chapter 4.
So, I was going to say it sounds just like Nephi.
I went beforehand,
not knowing the things which I should do. I will deliver him into that hand.
Yeah, and so and that brings up some implications on the purpose of first Nephi chapter 4.
In other words, if the whole purpose of the chapter 4 was to simply let you know that the
plates were received, then you never needed to tell the story about
killing labor. So the story has some meaning. By virtue of the fact that these two are so explicit
in that narrative suggests that there were individuals later that might have been accusing
Nephi of murder. And so he gives you the full story. Now there's more to it and part of it is
a legal explanation as to what really happened. It's almost as if Nephi has the expectation that I've read Exodus.
Right. That's the assumption that you know the law and know it well enough to recognize.
I'm going to tell this story in words that will answer your objections
right as I tell it, right? If you know Exodus as well. And then you have verse 14 that says,
but if a man comes presumptuously upon his neighbor
to slay him with Gile, in this case,
it suggests that you weren't waiting for him premeditatively
or it seemed as if this was a spontaneous running into someone.
But the Lord's like,
ah, but you really did plan it.
Well, then that's still going to count as a murder.
Interesting.
So he's given these basic principles in 20
and then clarifying some things.
Yeah, clarifying elements of this
because the Lord recognizes that there are different situations.
And that's one of the great things I think about the law of Moses
too often, it has been generalized.
Oh, right, I for an eye for tooth for tooth.
Well, yeah, but read that passage and see the immediate context. And you realize that that is not the law for everything,
right? The Lord knows that mistakes happen. The Lord understands that things happen that
were out of people's control or that that was not the plan. And so he's got those covered
too. It doesn't mean there aren't consequences, but we got ways to help you out in those regards. Does he do the same thing with adultery? He gives the principle in
20 and then do some explaining later or is that not as, there's this more self explicit
don't? Well, that one's pretty straightforward, but you will have later, not developments,
but expansions on this like, this is who you're not going to sleep with. This is who you're
not going to sleep with. This is who you're not going to sleep with. This is who you're not going to sleep with. This is who you're not going to sleep with. When I say don't commit adultery, let's carry this all the way through.
When you look at one of the more famous ones, the code of homerabi. So homerabi was a a
Mesopotamian king from Babylon. I want to say the middle Babylonian period though. It's possibly the old Babylonian period, but in
AKC has a lockout and in their adultery is mentioned in there along with these are other people that you shouldn't engage with. And a lot of these,
particularly these last five, these are just basic understandings to maintaining a social institution.
You can't have a community if these are not in place. Right? I've just told it's true.
Regardless of whether you have people of God or people of anything, you don't kill, you
don't commit adultery, you don't steal, you don't lie, you don't covet by neighbors'
stuff, which leads to envy.
So all of these are principles by which they just govern basic social behavior, and they
have to be in place.
Otherwise you're going to have conflict.
And people are too vulnerable to live in this kind of society where there's murder, and
adultery, and stealing, and lying.
We've kind of saw that back in Sodom and Gomorrah, this idea of it's unsafe, even for strangers.
I'd add another element into this too, at least from more of a perhaps a Latter-day St.
Perspective.
The comedy one is fascinating.
The others are actual behaviors.
Don't kill, don't commit adultery, don't steal,
and don't lie.
These are all actual behaviors that you engage in.
But coveting is within.
You can covet something and no one's gonna know, right?
So you can even see further development
of the 10 commandments into,
there's the relationship
that you have with God, both external and internal.
There's the relationship you have with your fellow beings, both external and internal.
What strikes me about verse 17 is how it might hint, even though the text doesn't bring
it up here, just by virtue of being a community of God,
and this is my assumption,
and it's just my personal assumption,
that ultimately they're expected to live a Zion-like life.
Every other community of God's been expected to live a Zion.
The moral and ethical behavior of Israel
is meant to be one of a Zion-like people.
That doesn't change.
Again, the law of God is the law of God.
Right?
The moral and ethical behavior of Israel is held true regardless of what dispensation you're
in.
And if that's the case, then it would seem to be that the ultimate end, whether or not
they achieved it, is beside the point, but the ultimate end of ancient Israel, was to
bring about a Zion.
And the law would point you toward
Zion, like it does in every other dispensation and in every other community of God. And if
that's the case, then it's possible for 17 hints at Zion-like behavior.
It reminds me of the Beatitudes where you've heard it said a bold time that I'll shalt
not kill this thesis, antithesis thing. But I say this is a higher thing
and the savior kind of brought them all in here.
But as you mentioned,
thou shalt not covet is an in here type of a thing.
I'd like that.
This is a Zion community area
where we're one heart, one mind,
even have all things in common.
And to that be attitude,
this is a place where I'll deviate from
sure a number of my colleagues, but I don't look at the be attitudes and the sermon on the mount
as Christ so much instituting a new higher law. As much as restoring the significant principles
of the law of the Mosaic law.
Here's what I mean.
If you look there in Matthew, those principles, right, you've heard it said, this is verse
21, you've heard that it was said by them a bold time, they'll shout not kill.
And whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment.
I say to you that whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger
of the judgment and whosoever shall say to his brother, rock, I shall be in danger of the counsel. But whosoever shall say thou fool shall be in danger of the judgment. And who so ever shall say to his brother, raqa, shall be in danger of the council. But who so ever
shall say thou fool shall be in danger of hellfire. Now, notice the next word in verse 23.
It's therefore, and that means if we do not take into account verses 23 and 24, even
all the way down through 26, if we do not put that into context of those verses,
we're not fully grasping what Christ is saying. Does that make sense? The
therefore is a cause and effect. It's the same thing we've seen with
their force before. So having instituted this new, you shouldn't even call your
brother a fool, here's why. Therefore, if thou bring thy gift to the altar and
thou rememberst that thy brother hath ought against thee, leave thy gift and go fix it.
In other words, it's put into the context of following the Law of Moses.
If you're going to the altar and if you're going to bring a gift or a sacrifice, then
this is how you should be doing it.
I'm not so sure that's the higher law as much as it is what the law was meant to be and has been lost. It may be it'd been diluted a little bit over
the years. What's the great commandment in the law? Love God and love your neighbor. And
that seems like a higher way to restate the 10 commandments. And by the way, you can
use the Book of Mormon to understand the function of this because this same set of principles is in third Nephi
Third Nephi chapter 12 and there the language is
And you've heard it all time is verse 21 if they're Nephi 12 that you should not kill wherefore who should ever kill should be nature the judgment
I say to you that who so I was angry with his brother shall be in danger of his judgment
Who have social say to his brother rocket shall be in danger the council and who so official say that fool shall be in nature of his judgment, and whoever socials say to his brother, rockish, shall be in danger of the council, and who so, if he shall say,
now fool, shall be in danger of hellfire. Therefore, if he shall come unto me,
or should desire to come unto me, and remember us that they brother, how
thought he gets they go the way. In other words, the law of Moses may have been
fulfilled by 35, but the principle of coming to the altar and bringing a gift
is in fact to come under Christ.
That's not him instituting a new higher law. It's restoring the significance of the law.
And points to what the Law of Moses was meant to do, at least in bringing a gift to the altar. When you do that, it's meant to come under Christ, to come under him.
That's great, because we often do, I think, missy, misunderstand the love Moses,
in the way we talk about it.
If love God and love your neighbor are love Moses, and they are,
those are internal. Love is a feeling,
but it's also a behavior that manifested.
And in fact, in Leviticus, where you find the love thy neighbor,
the same commandment shows up in the same chapter to love the stranger.
So if someone were to ask Christ, what are the three great commandments they didn't?
They only asked them to.
But if they were asked the three, I think he would have said, love God, love thy neighbor,
love the stranger.
And they all tied together.
But wasn't that a dichotomy they had, their strangers and neighbors?
And that's why the good Samaritan was, oh, who's my neighbor?
And then Jesus expands it to say, oh, who's my neighbor? And then Jesus
expands it to say, well, it's everybody. It's even Samaritans.
It's very possible that when Christ is saying that by saying love thy neighbor, he's incorporating
in the love thy stranger commandment that was the earlier in Leviticus.
Yeah, because a Samaritan is a stranger by that.
Right. So this concept of stranger, it plays a role throughout the law of Moses.
You're supposed to treat the stranger and love the stranger and care for the stranger.
And God loves the stranger. He says in Deuteronomy 10. So I love the stranger. I expect you to
love the stranger and it gives a reason why because you too are a stranger. You know exactly how this
feels. You know what this is like. And therefore, you should be able to
empathize with this stranger. I wanted to throw something in on coveting. There's a gray talk
from Elder Hall and called the other prodigal. So many of the Savior's parables are about not
coveting, not getting jealous when other people get blessings. And he says in this talk,
he quotes someone else, one observer has written in a world
that constantly compares people, ranking them
as more or less intelligent, more or less attractive,
more or less successful, it is not easy to really believe
in a divine love that does not do the same.
When I hear someone praised, it's hard not to think
of myself as less praiseworthy.
When I read about the goodness and kindness of other people, it's hard not to wonder if
I myself am good and is kind as they.
He goes on a little bit later and he says, most of the thou shalt not commandments are meant
to keep us from hurting others.
But I am convinced the commandment not to covet is meant to keep us from hurting ourselves.
I love that insight is that God is kind of giving,
this is the relationship with you and I.
This is a relationship with you and your community.
And this last one is your relationship with you
and not hurting yourself by constantly coveting.
It's the same talk where he says,
you have to down another court of pickle juice
anytime anything good happens.
Every time somebody else has a happy moment.
Great talk.
Great supplement.
So many of the parables, like you said, are, are many of them.
Some of them are about comparing and the same with the labors in the vineyard.
Everybody's happy with their wage until they wait, wait, they think and they look sideways.
And that's maybe another way to look at that coveting thing.
Dan, this has been a fantastic day. I am really just again, I
feel like I see these chapters brand new. John, I know you feel
the same way. It's you just got a page of notes. And I just
feel so blessed every time we do this. It's just been new insights
left and right. I think our listeners would be interested in the intersection of your education, your
biblical scholarship, and your Latter-day Saint faith and what that journey's been like
for you.
I guess I would have to say I believe that during some formative periods of my life, like
many, through high school, through my mission, into later periods of my life.
I've always loved reading. I've never struggled with reading and reading comprehension.
Now, I start there for a reason, because primarily scripture text is reading and comprehension.
So, that's not a struggle that I've ever had. I know plenty of people do struggle with it. I know that it's not always easy to grasp scripture,
the way it's written, the way it's structured,
the way it's even formatted.
As personal as it sounds in my patriarchal blessing
and I guess that's where it started,
it talked about my schooling, believe it or not,
that I would go to more than one school. And I always thought I wasn't drinking. And truth be told, when I was probably 12, 13 years old,
I found out that you could become a doctor without becoming a doctor and thought to myself,
I can pull that off. That might be something I'm interested in. So I kind of already knew about
this thing called a PhD. And I knew that I was going to end up with one eventually whatever I was going to do.
On my mission, the first area that I went to, and I just remember this, because it sounds kind of hoky, maybe a bit naive, but my mission present gave all the new missionaries of blessings in front of their zones. And mine had a blessing in which the mysteries
of the kingdom in heaven would be opened up unto me. Now, I don't know if I fully recognize what
that means. Having said that, I had the opportunity to dive into scripture study on my mission that I'd
never had before. Understanding text, understanding scripture, understanding new perspectives and
new ways of doing. So I just devoured the scriptures on my mission. I read them a lot. And by that,
I mean all of them a lot. I remember we had the opportunity to meet with a minister of another
of denomination. And he said, tell you what, I'll read the book of Mormon if you promise to read
the Bible. But I went done, done. I've done that. So here's the book. Let's go. And that love just kind of
kept developing. Now, my last interview with the mission president before he left,
he sat me down and ended up, I guess, talking to me about some things that were not his normal set of advice given outside.
So my friends would go in and they'd say, well, he told me that I should go home and find
a good woman and move on in the plan.
And right, when he sat down, he looked at me and he says, damn, here's what you're going
to have to do.
You need to go to school and you need to learn.
He says, now, when you do, you need to make sure that you
always keep in mind the balance. And he says, and the balance is there's the spirit and there's
the intellect. Now, these two work together, but you must balance them. And if you do not have them
balanced, you will have failed. And so I left there going, my instruction was, I need
to go to school and I need to keep that balance. And so that has just kind of followed through.
I always loved the scriptures. I was planning on going into international relations, but got the
opportunity to go to the Jerusalem program. Went there as a student, fell in love with the ancient
world in a way that I hadn't done before.
Came back and decided to get my advanced degrees in ancient studies.
Got married. My wife hadn't fully graduated from BYU yet. She was finishing up her last year, so I decided to stick around.
And doing that, work on a master's degree at BYU just to kind of get some writing, writing skills under my belt. And
it was while I was there that Brent Top, who I think you guys have had on already, right?
Brent Top. He had been one of the faculty at the Jerusalem Center. And he said, so what
are you doing? And I said, I'm not, I'm just working for a professor. And now I'm working
on this, this degree. He says, how would you like to teach for us? And I said, oh, that
sounds fun. Yeah, I'll give it a shot. And so I got two Book of Mormon classes that semester. I always
feel bad for those students. I didn't even have a master's degree, right? So I slid into one of
these adjunct professors that was teaching without any advanced degrees, five, six years old, or
trying to teach in the Book of Mormon. Some of the Hebrew trainings now kicking in, things just started kicking in about that time in my life
in terms of being able to understand, comprehend, collate, and begin writing down some of the observations.
And so that's kind of where it began. Did that for three years, and then it was off to Chicago for
learning a set of skills there. And I took in a program at Chicago that trained me in languages.
I'm not actually good at languages.
I'm competent in them.
That's why I needed to go to Chicago, to vain competency.
So when I would speak and write about these things, I felt confident in my competency.
And so that's what I did.
It was always able to separate between what
the theories of the academy or the scholarship was saying about these things, recognize
them for the value that they had, and yet be able to put aside that which doesn't reflect
the restoration and the principles of the restoration. Scripture, to me, at least the restoration,
opens up a set of texts that I take as seriously as the Bible.
Therefore opens up my avenues to understanding.
Comes back to something I mentioned earlier.
I really do believe in the importance of being able to see a far off, to be able to have
this cosmic perspective to reality.
I think that changes everything.
I think it has the potential to bring about that great gift that Christ promises, which
is peace.
He talks about peace in John, this peace I give into you that's not like the world, but
a divine peace.
That peace comes from that bigger perspective.
And that bigger perspective is enhanced with the more windows that you have.
If all you've got is a biblical text, and if all you've
got are academic methodologies, they limit the view you're going to have. They're limited to,
honestly, this particular time and space, and a very limited aspect of this particular time and
space. But the restored scriptures, along with the Old Testament and New Testament, expand that
horizon. They expand the context and the contours of these things.
It's through Joseph Smith that we recognize.
The experience that Israel was given in the first place is a very real experience, a very
real one that we all can have, that we all can experience.
Nephi's expansion on this with a recognition that part of the gospel of Christ is having
the Father saying unto you, you shall have eternal life is a big deal. These are real experiences from real
people that become models for behavior moving forward. That grand vision of what Joseph called
the economy of God, I think is ultimately absolutely essential to exaltation. What a fantastic day,
John. We've just been so blessed. I'm sure that there are
people out there who's going, I did not want that to end because I didn't want it to end.
So grateful for you, Dan. Thank you for coming, spending your time with us today. My pleasure.
That was fun. Yeah. This is what we do for fun, everyone. This is our idea of fun. It's chapter by chapter, verse by verse.
Yeah, so it's not a bad gig, that's for sure.
No, such a blessing.
We want to thank Dr. Dan Belknap for being with us today.
We want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon
Sornson, our sponsors, David and Verla Sornson.
And we hope all of you will join us next week
on another episode of Follow Him.