Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Exodus 7-13 -- Part 2 : Dr. Andrew C. Skinner
Episode Date: March 27, 2022Dr. Skinner returns to discuss the plagues that afflict Egypt, their purposes and symbolic nature, and how they remind the Israelites about God’s love for his children.Show Notes (English, French, S...panish, 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast.
It's the power of pride, right?
The power of, I will not back down.
Even if I know I'm wrong, even if I've been shown I'm wrong.
I don't even want to see that I'm wrong.
I will not back down off of this.
And so Pharaoh chooses these plagues.
It's not the Lord.
That's what I think the point that we're trying to make
is that it's not the Lord.
The Lord always gives Pharaoh a choice.
And it's Pharaoh who chooses that which brings about
the Lord's promise.
His signs and wonders that if he doesn't let the Israelites go,
then he and his people will suffer the consequences.
And even in the Passover celebration among the Jewish people, there's this sense that Jehovah is sorrowed
over the fact that lives are being lost because of the hardness or the heaviness of Pharaoh's heart. He doesn't wish any of his children to have
to suffer these kinds of things, but they've been warned. As you pointed out, it's God remembering
his covenant, and he would prefer to have all people join the covenant, but because of Pharaoh's
hardened heart or heavy heart, that won't happen. So I just wanted to kind of make
a general comment about the nature of the plagues. So the first nine plagues that are
recounted in this section of Exodus can be divided into three groups of three plagues each. Chapter seven, verse 15, through chapter eight, verse 19, that's the first
set of three plagues. Chapter eight, verse 20, through chapter nine, verse 12, that's the second
grouping of three plagues. And then chapter nine, verse 13, through chapter 10, verse 29.
verse 13 through chapter 10 verse 29. What's interesting about this grouping of plagues is that we see Moses going to Pharaoh to deliver the warning as Pharaoh is
going out to the River Nile in the morning to participate in his daily devotions, daily
ablutions, his washings, in his daily worshiping, the chief gods of the Egyptian
pantheon. And so three times, the Lord says to Moses, you go out at the time of
Pharaoh's early morning personal devot devotionals if you were personal worship sessions and you remind
him that this is going to be his lot if he doesn't accede to Jehovah's wishes. So with that in mind,
maybe we can just take a moment or two and look at the first nine plagues. And the idea of the plagues, yes, again, it is to cause
Pharaoh to capitulate and to let Israel go so that they can go into the wilderness and they
can offer sacrifices to Jehovah and worship him in their own way. The Lord wants them to
worship him, the true and living God, and break away from the
false gods of the Egyptian pantheon. So that's the purpose of the plagues, but the audience
that Jehovah has in mind is Israel. And the first plague, which we read about in chapter 7,
centers on the Nile. And we're all familiar with this plague.
Pharaoh went to the Nile each morning to worship
the supreme deity, and that supreme deity was the River Nile.
Historians will remember that it was Herodotus,
fifth century BC Greek historian who said,
Egypt is the gift of the Nile.
So the most important of the deities and Pharaoh confirms this every morning is the River Nile.
And what happens?
The River Nile then ceases to be a source of life.
It's changed from living water, if you will, from pure water into blood.
And scholars have debated whether or not this is literal, or whether or not it was figurative for the red color that the Nile begins to exhibit.
Some people say, well, the Nile River was changed because the red silt from Ethiopia was washed down on the banks of the Nile,
and it caused the whole river to be changed. Others say, well, no, it looks more like an algae bloom,
red algae, and this would cause the fish to die, and the river to stink. I'm not sure it makes any
difference to me. What does make a difference is that this is the Lord's doing and that the Lord is behind the miracle.
The Lord says, by the corruption of the Nile, I have power over your supreme deity.
And by extension, I have power over life and death.
I hear you saying that the idea is that yes, Pharaoh is going to suffer all of this, but the Israelites need to know because they've been in Egypt for so long they've been indoctrinated, they need to know that the God that they're about to learn about is much more powerful than the Gods they've been culturally a part of for the last few centuries.
That's precisely the point. Thank you for that clarification, because that's exactly what the Lord is trying to do here.
Even when they get out of Egypt, they're going to say, we should have gone back, we should go back.
We had leaks and melons, we had tasty treats on our table, and now all we've got is this mana.
And we don't even know what it is. In fact, the Hebrew that's translated as the word manam, Munhu literally translates as what is it?
Yeah.
They want to go back because things weren't so bad.
Nile treated us pretty well.
Yeah, so these nine presentations are hopefully going to
remind them.
And that's the point, is that in every instance,
it's Jehovah who controls life and death,
it's Jehovah who controls life and death. It's Jehovah who controls the forces of
nature. It's Jehovah who's the true and living God and can extend that power into the lives of every
Israelite covenant member if they will allow him to. And they're getting lessen after lessen after
lessen to make the point. And yet in a way they also are hardening their
hearts. They're just not getting it. And ultimately what will happen, this is skipping ahead,
but ultimately what will happen is that the great event of apostasy involving the Golden
Calf, which again is one of the Egyptian deities, is the thing that causes Israel to lose the higher priesthood,
the higher law, including what we would refer to as temple ordinances. And in their place, we have
the lesser law and the lesser priesthood. That's not what God originally intended. He wanted, if you read chapter 19, God wants to make the delivered Israelites
a kingdom of priests and a holy nation. And he's not talking about aronic priesthood priest.
He's talking about the kind of priests and kings that we go to the temple in our day
to understand and to receive ordinances that help us become that kind of a priest in King.
These are Melchizedek priests, kings and queens, priests of Jesus. That's what God wants to do at the
base of Mount Sinai, but they won't allow that. They can't let go of the old gods.
No, and again, this is jumping ahead, but you think about the way that this is presented
to the Israelites through Moses, the Lord's system Moses,
I want to make of them a kingdom of priests
and a holy nation.
I want to make them kings and queens, priests and priestesses.
Moses tells that to the Israelites
and what are they saying, oh yeah, yeah, yeah,
this sounds great, we will do all of this that you command us.
And then when God starts requiring something of them,
namely what we refer to as the 10 commandments,
what do they do?
They retreat like many of us.
They say, well, yeah, well,
we didn't really realize that we're gonna have to do something
to receive these great blessings.
And so I think that mindset is alive and well
in these chapters 7 through 13.
The second plague in chapter 8 verses 6 through 8 centers on the frog or the goddess Hecate.
The frog was sacred and ancient to Egypt. It was a symbol of life springing forth. It was
associated with the concept of resurrection. In fact, it was a symbol
of resurrection. And it was an animal considered sacred by all Egyptians that is now being manipulated
by Israel's God. And the plague of frogs also shows that miracles and signs don't produce lasting conversion in most people.
And we see that with Pharaoh.
Yeah, well, yeah, I'm gonna let them go,
but please get rid of this plague of the frogs.
And what does Moses say?
Well, I give you the honor of telling me
what when you want this to happen.
And Pharaoh says, how about the next day?
Well, he retreats. He goes back on his
promise to let the Israelites go. So signs and wonders, miracles don't produce lasting conversion
in many people. They do in some, but some other things are going on.
That's Exodus 8.15. When Pharaoh saw that there was a respite,
That's Exodus 815. When Pharaoh saw that there was a respite, it wasn't that long that he turns around and
like, okay, we're fine now.
Now what's interesting about the first two plagues is that the magicians of Pharaoh's
court are able to duplicate these signs and wonders just like they were able to duplicate
the staff becoming serpent. It ends after this.
They will no longer be able to duplicate this. And so as the signs and wonders intensify,
and they strike at the very heart of who the Egyptians are, the magicians are not able to do
what the Lord God is able to do. And this is seen beginning in the third plague, Exodus chapter eight, verses 16 through 19,
referred to in the text as Lice,
but it's actually stinging gnats
that issue from the soil.
And remember, the soil is also worshiped by the Egyptians.
So now Jehovah has caused the soil,
which was once beneficent to the ancient Egyptians
to turn on them.
In the biblical text, the phrase, the dust will become nats is probably symbolic of the
enormous numbers of these stinging creatures.
We don't know exactly, I think, the nature of these stinging creatures, but we know, for example, how painful it is to be bitten by a horse fly,
or how uncomfortable it is to be bitten by a whole bunch of mosquitoes, or how
uncomfortable it is to receive any kind of a bite from an insect of this sort. And so there's a passage in the biblical text which said that people become covered with these
with these
lice or stinging gnats and
G. Wiz that cannot have been pleasant and
Farrell cannot have been ignorant of the fact that his recalcitrance is
Causing his own people those who worship him as a living God on earth to suffer.
Fourth plague, actually we like to say flies,
but if you'll notice the text, it is 824, 824,
and the Lord says, so there are grievous swarms,
but notice the word of flies is in italics.
Those words don't appear in the original text, so there are grievous swarms.
And these grievous swarms are none other than the Dung beetle, the scarab.
Egyptologists and students of ancient history will recognize that the scarab is an emblem
of the sun god Ra or or ray, one of the greatest
and most enduring symbols in ancient Egypt.
And so what we have is we have these swarms of scarab beetles that are supposed to represent
these beneficent and kind gods, but now have turned against the people
and it's the Lord's power that's behind that.
So I think that that's an important distinction to make.
I'm seeing the plagues are dismantling Egyptian theology
right in front of the Israelites.
That is a very good point.
That's exactly what's happening.
Is that the belief system of the ancient Egyptians
is now in significant peril,
and it will get worse from this point on. And that's the point of the plagues, is that
they intensify, and they begin to strike at the very culture and life support system of
the Egyptians.
In Exodus 6, those wonderful verses, 6, 7, 8, I I will redeem you I will bring you out from the
Egyptians primarily as you said you wanted the house of Israel to know who he was Exodus 6.7 you
shall know I am the Lord your God but then in Exodus 7.5 the Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord
and I love that Jehovah is always a teacher. But what Hank just said,
look at Exodus 12, 12 against all the gods of Egypt. I will execute judgment. The Nile is not
God. I am God. Let my people go. Frogs are not God. I am God. Let my people go. Right. Swarms are not
God. I am God. Let my people go. And he's discrediting those Egyptian gods one at a time.
I love that he could have, with one plague, got the people out because he's God.
But first, he wanted to show that each of the Egyptian gods were not God, and then,
okay, now we're leaving.
That's how I liked it to look at it.
It's almost last God standing, right?
Because he's knocking him off one by one.
These are God's children too, and he loves them, and he doesn't wish the full force of
the benevolence of these signs and wonders to attack them or to do them harm.
And that's why it's a repetitive request. Please let my
people go. No, I'm not. Well, okay. Based on my promise to remember the covenant, then
you're going to have to suffer the full force of these signs and wonders. So I think that
you've hit on some wonderful insights. So far it hasn't
been too bad. I mean, it's awful with the river turning to below. First plagues are just
inconvenient, right? Yeah, there's lots of, it's kind of very uncomfortable. Life has become
very uncomfortable. Yeah, and with the swarms, I mean, with the stinging gnats or whatever they are,
And with the swarms, I mean, with the stinging gnats or whatever they are, it's starting to become painful.
But still you're right.
We can manage this.
Things are not as bad as they could get.
Unfortunately they're going to get as bad as they can get.
And the fifth plague then centers, starts to really bear down on the most important of the deities,
because the fifth plague centers on livestock, both the sacred bull,
which is known in Egyptian parlance as the apis bull, apis.
And also one of the most beloved of the cow goddesses,
Hathor, or Hathor.
And you remember that the apis bull is a sacred animal
and represents Pharaoh himself.
And every year, not every year,
but every generation, a new apis bull was chosen and he was treated well,
and he becomes a symbol of the greatness of Pharaoh, and when he dies there's great morning throughout the land,
and they have to choose another one, but they start treating him like a god.
I'm even more impressed with the fact that Hawthor is demolished
theologically then with the Apes Bull because Hawthor was one of the most popular goddesses
in all of Egypt.
She was worshiped widely across the empire.
She was the goddess of mothers, the goddess of women, the goddess of women's physical and
psychological well-being, but also the goddess of dance, the goddess of women's physical and psychological well-being, but also the goddess
of dance, beauty, and music.
She's the personification of joy, of goodness, of celebration, of love.
And so when she's attacked, then a really significant part of Egyptian culture is being destroyed, at least in the minds of the
Egyptians who know what's going on. I'm looking at a picture of Hawthor, the cow headed goddess of
the desert, and it's interesting when you see their pictures because she is represented as a human
form, but a cow's head in the picture I've got. And you mentioned earlier Hecket, the God of Resurrection, that was she has the head of a frog
and a human body.
And the deity don't think of him as purely humanoid.
Some of them had the heads of kind of what the plague represented.
Like Hathor was cow-headed, Hecket was frog-headed.
Well, and we shouldn't be too upset in this modern world in which we live, the scientific
world, that in the Pantheon's parts as parts, and so they're interchangeable.
You know, you can have the head of a ram and the body of a lion, for example, that bring
together different aspects of eternal life.
Every Egyptian noble desired to have eternal life. Every Egyptian noble desired to have eternal life. And there were wonderful
aspects of eternal life that we don't need to talk about because we can imagine them.
Joy and life and living like the gods and having family around. I mean the idea of family
is alive and well in all three periods of Egyptian history, the old kingdom, the middle kingdom, the new kingdom, and you have the gods, male and female god producing
children. Well, the idea that family was going to be part of what you would
enjoy as you enjoy eternal life was inculcated into every young
Egyptian. Now what's happening is all of the different aspects of
eternal life are being dismantled, they're being destroyed and who's doing it?
Jehovah. And not because he's malevolent, not because he wants his children to
suffer, but because he needs the Israelites to be able to reach their full
potential, because they're keepers of the covenant. They are the ones that
are responsible for allowing the covenant to go forth to the rest of the world. A sixth plague of
boils shows Jehovah's power over personal health. This is chapter 9 verses 8 through 11.
There's a difference between religion of Jehovah and Egyptian religion. Egyptian religion promoted no one to one relationship with God.
It was, you know, a group kind of effort. And we see Jehovah saying, no, this is a very personal thing between me.
And you, seventh plague of hell also demonstrates Jehovah's power over the God of hail, gods of hail and fire.
The lightning God, men, was one of Jehovah's targets,
men is also associated with fertility.
So you can see that each of these gods
has several portfolios, if you will.
They're associated with and responsible
for different aspects of life and eternal life.
The God, men also gave its name to one
of the governmental districts. There were 42 districts that made up ancient Egypt and they're called
gnomes and these are not little furry people that are running around. The word gnom comes from the
Greek gnomos which means law. So 42 centers of law and government,
and one of these was dedicated a holy to the God-min, and it was a sacred area
from which agriculture was regulated. So now we're we're saying even the ability
to grow crops is going to be affected by all of this. Eighth plague of locusts or
grasshoppers, and these are brought in by the East Wind.
We all know about the devastating effects of the East Wind. It's even mentioned in the Book of Mormon.
Good Mormon.
Yeah. Will you talk about that? Because a West Wind would bring moisture from the Mediterranean, right?
Yeah. And so why was the East Wind? Why did that become an old-world symbol for destruction?
This intense and dense cloud of dust came with the East Wind and it raised the temperature
by many many degrees and it made life
unbearable, but even more than that it destroyed the crops. It was not a pleasant thing. And it's called the, in Arabic it's called the Khamsin that has referenced to a specific
time of the year, 50 days after a certain period and you could expect the Hamsin.
And it really is a very unpleasant situation.
So the Hamsin brings these hordes of migratory locusts to devour the crops.
It's getting worse and worse.
The ninth plague is darkness.
And here where we see Jehovah hitting the Egyptian pantheon very, very hard, because
when the darkness is brought to pass, the target is raw, the great sun god, the chief of the Egyptian pantheon from very, very early times.
The sun itself became a god, and it's a prominent figure in ancient Egypt, because you rarely see
rain, or maybe occasionally in the winter months, and even then when the rain falls, it brings the dust out of the air
and looks like big black drops of gunk there falling down to the ground. And so this is really,
really serious because it's the Creator God. In fact, in some accounts written on Papyrus,
humans were created from raw's tears and sweat.
And so the Egyptian people would call themselves
the cattle of raw.
And it spelled capital R-A or capital R-E.
But the point is that now we have struck
at the very core of external
things that the Egyptian had placed so
much faith in, so much stock in. It's not the most
serious plague. That's of course reserved for the last plague. And the last plague is the
death of the firstborn. And I do want to read chapter 11 verses one through seven. It is so, I think it is so powerful. It's so resting. Sobring is the
exactly the right word. So this is chapter 11 where the Lord after repeated attempts to get
Pharaoh to let the Israelites go, the Lord says to Moses, yet will I bring one plague more upon Pharaoh and upon Egypt. Afterwards, he will
let you go hence. When he shall let you go, he shall surely thrust you out hence altogether.
He will be done with you. He will not want to have anything more to do with you. Speak
now in the ears of the people and let every man borrow of his neighbor
and every woman of her neighbor, jewels of silver, jewels of gold. So basically the Lord is saying,
you're not going to go out of Egypt without some wealth. They'll be glad to give you
the resources that they have just to get you out of
out of their midst. So it's the idea is I'm gonna go to my Egyptian neighbors and
say I'm gonna take your silver and gold and they'll say if that'll get you
out of here, sure. I look at the word borrow in verse two with some amusement,
you know, because what the Lord really says is, you go ask, it's even stronger
than ask, I think, the context you tell your Egyptian neighbors that you want this and
this and this. And so, borrow is kind of a euphemism there, because they certainly aren't
going to return anything. Verse 3, the Lord gave the people favor in the sight of the Egyptians moreover, the man
Moses was very great in the land of Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh's servants, and in the
sight of the people.
So the signs and wonders has worked its miracle.
Even Moses is now regarded with respect and honored among the Egyptian people themselves.
Verse 4, Moses said, thus, sayeth the Lord, about midnight, will I go out into the midst
of Egypt. And notice that when it comes to the death of the firstborn, it's God Himself who's acting.
He may employ an agent such as a devourer or a destroyer, but it's God Himself who takes
this upon Himself because we are His children.
And He does not want to leave that, the taking of life, to Moses or to any of his other servants.
And so, he's the one that's behind this.
Verse 5, and all the firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die
from the firstborn of Pharaoh that siteth upon this throne,
even unto the firstborn of the maid servant that is behind the mill
and all the first born of the beasts.
So this ultimate disaster includes everybody from the high born to the low, the first born
of every class of people is affected by this last and great plague.
And here we begin to see the symbolism of another firstborn who would die some 1300 years later,
or 1250 years later, in the person of Jesus Christ. Verse 6, there shall be great cry throughout
all the land of Egypt, such as there was none like it, nor shall be like it anymore.
But against any of the children of Israel shall not a dog move his
tongue against man or beast that you may know that the Lord doth put a difference between the
Egyptians and Israel. And I think that difference is because of the covenant. We come to this very
sobering chapter and this is to be read with great sadness as a child
I I delighted in the triumph of a good over evil
But the older I get the more I realized that this was a sad occurrence
not just to the Egyptians, but to the Lord himself and
Because he loves all of his children
But he will not go back on his promises.
I wonder, remind everybody of something, Jennifer Lane, Dr. Lane taught us about the flood.
She said, you know, mankind chose to put sin everywhere over, and so God had the flood.
The remedy matched the amount of sin, right?
So the flood had to cover the earth because sin was everywhere. And I look at this and I'm reminded of
when Pharaoh tried to kill all of the Israelite boys and it's almost like he chose so long ago, he chose this last plague, that the answer is
fitting for how far they were willing to go to stop Jova. Yeah, so looking at it visually,
you could say that the chapter one and chapter 12 of Exodus represent bookends of a process that began
hundreds of years before with the death of Israelite to children and the death of
now the Egyptian firstborn
from a literary standpoint. It's absolutely genius, but more than that
it's it's true and it happened. I don't look at this with delight.
I look at it as God's sorrowing over that way.
They brought upon themselves through the wickedness of one man.
What's the old saying when the wicked rule, the righteous mourn, and that's what we see
here?
The symbolism behind the Passover elements, all in one way or another,
point us to Jesus Christ. And there are many ways to read and to go through chapter 12, but for me,
the most important is the symbolism that we derive from the elements of the first Passover that point us to the Great and last sacrifice. It's out of this
Passover, the establishment of the Passover, that we see the creation of the sacrament,
the transformation of the Passover, a satir meal into the sacrament of the Lord's Supper,
and then the idea of the first born, the only one who could make
an atonement, the birthright son, if you will, as we understand the obligations and responsibilities
of the first born to have, the leadership of the family.
At least I see that in chapter 12 here.
So let me just suggest a couple of things as we go through. We notice, first of all, in verses 1 and 2
that the Lord says that this month in which the Passover is established shall be at the beginning of months and
actually in the Jewish calendar it is late March
early April, it becomes the religious new year and that, I look at the Messiah, the Savior,
and Jesus Christ's gospel presents, if you will, a restoration of old truths, but it also signifies
a new beginning. And particularly, the ordinances associated with the gospel. We're baptized. We become new creatures
in Jesus Christ. So the redemption that is provided that will occur here parallels the redemption
that's provided by Jesus through his gospel in the ordinances. Chapter 12, verses 3 and 5,
verse 12 verses 3 and 5 to fulfill the Passover, each of the families must choose a lamb. And this lamb has to be without blemish or spot as it's described in verse 5.
Your lamb shall be without blemish a male of the first year you shall take it from the sheep or the goats doesn't make any difference.
And this will be sacrificed and then eaten by every family or groupings of individuals
as the text seems to imply.
And of course, we recognize that this is a pretty unveiled reflection of Jesus who is described as the Lamb without
blemish or spot.
First Peter, chapter 1, verses 18 and 19.
Seems to me that the Lord has now taken down Egyptian theology thoroughly, and he's
going to rebuild his new theology, well, it wouldn't be new, but new to these people,
and it's all going to center around the Lamb of God.
That's a great observation, an important observation.
Yeah, he's taken down the Egyptian pantheon
and he's taken down the religious concepts associated with them,
and admittedly, they pointed to good things,
eternal life,
but they did it in the wrong way.
All of the ordinances and blessings associated with the Melchizedic priesthood from the time
of Adam on, which is referred to as the patriarchal priesthood, and gave internal blessings to
its followers, tries to be imitated by Pharaoh in his day.
And that's why when you sail up and down the Nile
or you go to all of these tombs and temples
in ancient Egypt, you find representations
of gods giving to human beings eternal life.
And some of them are pretty stark. There's a panel of images on the south side of the Holy of Holies in the Temple at Karnak, and it shows the different
stages through which a person had to go in order to become like one of the gods, anointed, clothed with a special clothing, a special hat on
their head, and then finally being ushered into the presence of Osiris, who was the resurrection
God. The ultimate goal was not wrong, but the worship of false gods was, and so all of that is done
away with, as you point out out and now we have this new order
not so much for the Egyptians
but for the Israelites and that's again the intended audience. So I think you're exactly right.
And the first mention the first thing they're gonna do is gonna center on this firstborn lamb
this male
lamb without bluenish
That's the core of this new religious system
that Jehovah is revealing to them through the Prophet Moses.
We look at verses 6 and 7, where it's required
of the Israelites to put blood on the doorposts
as a sign of their commitment to the covenant, and also a signal
that the destroyer will pass by them
and that their first born children will not be affected. And so we ask a couple of questions,
why this action? And I think we've answered that to identify the participant as a follower of
the true and living God. Why the blood? Well, because as we learn later on in Leviticus chapter 17,
blood is the symbol of redemption. Leviticus 17 verse 11, for the life of the
flesh is in the blood, and I have given it to you upon the altar to make an
atonement for your souls, for it is the
blood that makeeth an atonement for the soul.
And so by putting blood on the two side posts in the lintel, the crossbar of the entrance,
we are signifying that we are fully engaged in the idea of redemption
by the shedding of blood.
For the next 1300 years, the shedding of the blood
will be by animals that represent or point to the ultimate
and great and last sacrifice, namely the Lamb of God.
And so I think that we see that in a broad perspective,
understanding the atonement from not just
the Bible or the New Testament, but from the four standard works.
I remember just trying to study the prayers on the sacrament prayers that we offer, and
just that little phrase which was shed for them.
It led me to Hebrews 9.22, which sounds like
Leviticus 17.11 a little bit, without shedding a blood, there is no remission.
That's right. That's exactly right. I love that the Israelites here are saved by the blood of the
Lamb. Yeah, the verses that just precede verse 22 in Hebrews chapter 9, talk about the blood of the Lamb
as a substitute for the blood of the individuals, right?
The blood of the people.
And we could talk about the way that ancient sacrifices were conducted in the temple, but
that would take us too far afield.
The point here is that the atonement comes from the shedding of blood. It did anciently.
And then the very person for whom all of these elements of the Passover are pointing to
comes and he makes the great and last sacrifice.
And no longer then is the shedding of blood required, but something even harder for us.
And that's a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
Interestingly enough, by the Lord asking us to offer a broken heart
and a contrite spirit, he is asking us to offer the very things
that Jesus himself offered.
In Gethsemane. His spirit was crushed.
That's the meaning of the word contrite, right?
It's crushed.
So that happens in Gethsemane to the Savior.
How does he die on the cross?
Well, if you read Elder Townmages' book, Jesus the Christ,
Elder Townmages, as he died of a broken heart,
he died of a ruptured heart.
However, medically, you want to describe that.
So the very things that Jesus himself offered
as part of his atonement are the very things that now we must offer after the shedding of his blood.
We must offer the broken heart and the contrite spirit. We must in a sense relive Gethsemane and Golgotha in our own lives. Interesting that before Jesus shows himself
to the righteous in the New World in 3rd Nephi 11, the importance or urgency of it, I don't
know, in 3rd Nephi 9 when they just hear a voice, that's when he says, no more animal sacrifice.
And what you will bring is a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
You become the sacrifice.
Andy, it seems to be all centered on the blood of the Lamb.
And then he also mentions the leaven.
He wants unleavened bread, that's verse 8, verse 15,
seven days, shall ye unleavened bread?
Get all the leaven out of your houses.
So can I see maybe repentance in this that yeast
represents sin? And I'm seeing the first principles of the gospel here, faith in the Lord Jesus Christ,
faith in the Lamb of God, and repentance with the unleavened bread.
Here's the grand secret. It really hasn't changed from the time of Adam.
Just a couple of more points. And then I want to say something about chapter 13.
We notice that Hissip is to be used in the establishment of the Passover.
You'll take a bunch of Hissip and dip it in blood.
It's in the basement, strike the linole, and the sideposts.
Interestingly enough, this Hissip, I I think foreshadows the crucifixion
and we could read John chapter 19 verse 29 which talks about the use of Hissip in the
crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Again, part of this act of atonement and shedding of his blood.
I'm going to skip a little bit just for the sake of time here, but look at verse 43.
The Lord says to Moses and to Aaron, this ordinance of the Passover shall only be eaten by those who
are not strangers. There shall be those that are not members of the covenant community shall not
eat of the Passover. And it causes me to think about those verses in 3rd Nephi chapter 18,
where we're told that no stranger is to partake of the sacrament. It's a covenant requiring a
commitment and full participation. This is an act that requires us to use the phrase that's all
the rage these days. It requires us to be all in nothing lacking, nothing lacking.
So there are some significant parallels to that. Verse 46, no broken bone of the Paschal Lamb,
and of course we know that to no bone of Jesus Christ was broken on the cross. John chapter 19 verse 36. These are some of the main elements that we
associate with the establishment of the Passover commemoration, and they are what recapitulated,
I guess we could say, in the Great and Last Sacrifice, that we commemorate not with a Passover meal, but with the sacrament of the Lord's
sub-per. Elder Jeffrey Arholand gave this talk in October 1995, General Conference,
called this do in remembrance of me. Yes. And he gave this great list of all the things that we
could remember, but in that talk, he said, do we see the sacrament as our Passover? Rememberance
of our safety and deliverance and redemption. And loved how he connected Passover with
sacrament. The sacrament is our Passover, he said.
Yeah. And again, to just reiterate what Paul says, more pointedly, Jesus Christ is our Passover, is the way he put it.
Now he very well may have meant Jesus Christ is our Paschal Lamb, our Passover Lamb, but
I love the openness of the statement.
Jesus is our Passover. Well, at the end of chapter 12, we see that the Lord then fulfills completely his promise.
He brings the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt by their armies. And this then leads us to
talk about the results of the Exodus and the results of the Passover. And these are described largely
in chapter 13 of Exodus. Number one, Israel is delivered from death and delivered from Egyptians,
the abondage of the Egyptian leaders, largely because of the last plague, Pharaoh's sacrifice, if you will,
of the first born males. And again, we're delivered from all different kinds of bondage as a result
of our Heavenly Father's sacrifice of his first born. I could not help but think of Section 69
of the doctrine comes out. I wasn't going to mention this,
but section 69 has a verse that ponds me because I wonder have I really done what I'm supposed to do.
The context of section 69 is that it goes back to section 47 where John Whitmer is called to be the church historian in March of 1831, and then here in section 69 of the
doctrine of covenants his assignment is spelled out in more detail in November of 1839, but these are the two verses that
haunt me, starting with verse, verses 7 and 8. Nevertheless, let my servant John Whitmer travel many times from place to place and from
church to church that he may, the more easily, obtain knowledge, preaching and expounding,
writing, copying, selecting, and obtaining all things which shall be for the good of the
church and for the rising generations that shall grow up on the land of Zion.
It seems like what the Lord is saying, everything that you do, all of your actions,
are to be funneled to this purpose, and that is to teach the rising generations
that shall grow up on the land of Zion.
And that's the didactic aspect to the teaching aspect
Passover that these things are to be taught generation after generation after generation
so that again this idea all of us consider ourselves as though we were part of the original
Israelites who came out of Egyptian bondage because of the Lord's strong arm and outstretched hand.
There's an interesting point in that wonderful cartoon, The Prince of Egypt, where Pharaoh
Sun says, I will not be the weak link.
And that's kind of what the Lord is saying here is, pass this down, pass this story down
to your children.
We have an obligation to tell our children, grandchildren, even great grandchildren.
If we see them, what the Lord has done for us.
So much it seems of some of the things we do in the gospel is to remember.
And we hear that word in the sacrament prayer twice that Passover, not this is so that
you will remember this, the feast of tab now this is so that you will remember this,
the Feast of Tabernacles is so that you will remember
that we dwell intense when we left.
And all these things about remembering
because as we read the scriptures, we tend to forget.
And President Campbell's old saying,
the most important word in our theological vocabulary
is remember and remember for a purpose,
not only to remember
that we have responsibilities to others because of the Lord's goodness, but to just remember
how good Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ are to their children.
Jesus Christ is the THE greatest manifestation of Heavenly Father's love for us.
And that then takes us to maybe the central characteristic of God the Father and His
Son Jesus Christ.
First John 4, God is love.
Everything that God does is influenced and shaped and mediated by His perfect love.
That's the essence of His personality.
And if we want to put a further point on it to Elder Holland's book
Christ and the New Covenant has this section on charity, you know the pure love of Christ and he says
Pure charity has only been manifested once in the history of the world and that's the atonement of Jesus Christ.
One of the things that we learn in chapter 13 is that special articles of
clothing are to be worn by Israelite men, verses 9 and 16. Special clothing that are markers
or symbols of the covenant and markers or symbols of the great and mighty acts of God in not only the lives of the Israelites,
but then, but Israelites later on. And thus, by extension, the great things that God has done for us in our lives.
There are actually three words that are used to describe the same thing in verses 9 and 16.
The Hebrew word is Tota Foto, the Aramaic word is Tefalin,
and the Greek word is Falktries.
And these are small boxes that have leather straps attached
to them, and they're fastened to the forehead,
and to the left arm, the arm that's closer to the heart.
And what's in these little boxes are very carefully, precisely written passages of scripture.
They have to be written very small because the boxes are only about an inch or an inch
and a half square.
And what are the passages that are contained in these
phylactories? Exodus 13, 1 through 10. So where we're at right now? Deuteronomy
chapter 6 verses 4 through 9, the Shema, Shema Yisrael al-Adonai al-Hainu al-Ana'ihad,
hero Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is one. Deuteronomy chapter 11, so two passages from Exodus. Exodus 13, 1 through 10,
Exodus 13, 11 through 16, they're broken, they're separated into two separate passages. So four
passages are Scripture in these little Philacteries or in these voxas and they all have to do with
the mighty acts of God, the greatness of God, and how we must remember and teach that to our children pretty significant.
A special route for the Exodus is outlined in chapter 13. Notice that the Lord does not take the Israelites to the land of promise by way of the Philistines, the coastal highway, because it's too dangerous. He has them go by way of the red sea or what's in Hebrew called the Yom Suf, the Reed Sea.
Even though it's easier to go the other way, the Lord wants to protect his people. And there's got to be a life's lesson in that. God guides us away from things that we may not be able to handle.
And if we listen to him, then we can enjoy his blessings.
If we don't listen to him, then we have no promise.
I'm weak enough that I don't need to not heed the Lord and step into places or circumstances
where I frankly don't have the ability to
resist.
I think we see that as an underlying theme here.
I have a real appreciation for the Exodus story.
It increases, I think, our appreciation for Moses as well as for Jesus Christ.
I made a couple of notes here and I wanted to see just what both of
you thought about this. If I'm a listener at home and I'm thinking, how am I going to relate this
to my family or my teenagers or my seminary class? How do I do this? I think one thing has to be that
I'm seeing a message that the Lamb of God, the Savior, can save you from false gods, can save you from bondage, any sort of addiction you may have. Egypt can
be seen as an addiction and that you want to get out of that addiction and the Lamb of God can
save you from that. The Lamb of God is going to save you from the sting of death that you're going
to live again. Andy, I think you've helped us focus here that the entire Exodus story is based on this
Lamb of God.
And the blood of the Lamb is what saves from all of these different trials and problems
and difficulties.
When you read verse 17 of Exodus 13, I hear the Lord saying, don't go back to Egypt.
And I almost hear that in my mind as we sometimes want to go back to our sins,
we have a tendency to go back to the pains of the past,
go back to the old gods.
He says, don't return to Egypt, all right?
I don't want you to go back.
I like that, don't reverse course.
And don't take the easy path in life.
Take the path that will get you to your destination safely and securely.
That's become a life lesson for me. There are easy paths to take. Don't always follow the easy path.
And be open to suggestions from heavenly influences, from the Holy Ghost, that wants you to arrive at your destination.
I think of a new member of the church who has to break down their old theology, right?
The old theology is done away with. This new theology comes in. Keep going. Keep going. The Lord's
going to help you cross the Red Sea, right? He's going to, he's going to get you to where you want to be, right? He'll guide you. Let that old theology go, let this
new theology take root, and the Lord will guide you. John, what do you think?
I love what it points out in our, come follow me manual. The Savior, one of these relates
to always remember that he had delivered them. Even after their captivity became a distant memory.
This is why he commanded them to observe the Passover feast each year.
What similarities do you see between the purposes of the feast of the Passover and the Sacrament?
I love that every single week we can focus on the Sacrament table.
We focus on the Savior's sacrifice
that we are saved by the blood of the Lamb.
It's not wheeled in at Christmas and Easter.
Let's put the sacrament table in a storage room.
It's every week to help us remember
and to make that the focal point.
It's not to hear talks, that's great too,
but we go to take the sacrament again and renew our covenant
and I love that today we're seeing, I don't want to say I'll start it back then because it started
with Adam, but this has always been the focus of the Lamb of God and the blood of the Lamb is how
we're saved. I see a switch for teenagers as well that let's say Egypt is like this worldliness.
And the sacrament is this new theology.
And there's this idea of, let's dismantle the worldliness out of our life.
And even if it's a little painful, let's dismantle this, and let's focus on, like you said, John,
this sacrament experience where we connect with the real God.
I think of entertainment and phones,
and all these can be like Egyptian gods
that need to be dismantled, taken down,
and let's focus in on the Savior as our God.
What are President Nelson say recently
that if most of the information you get
comes from social media,
your ability to feel the Spirit will be diminished,
and then look at the sacrament table.
You can always have His spirit to be with you.
Yeah.
Absolutely.
I guess I'm in the stage of life where I'm looking at it
from a parental and grand parental point of view.
I'm always drawn to the words in Deuteronomy 6,
which have a lot to do with what we've been talking about
today.
The Lord says, these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart, and thou
shall teach them diligently unto thy children, and shall talk of them when thou sittest in thine
house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when
thou lieest down and when thou risest up. Those are words to live by for parents
and for grandparents that we can significantly influence our children's lives
by talking always about these things. I have the privilege of serving at the
Provo Missionary Training Center and every Tuesday night we get a devotional presented to us by either a
general authority or a general officer of the church and two weeks ago we had the privilege of
having Elder Christopherson talk to us and And of course, his message was the doctrine of Christ.
But he said something that I think will always stick with me.
He said to the missionaries,
never tire of speaking of Jesus Christ.
Never tire when you lie down, when you wake up,
your daily walk and conversation, never tire
of speaking of Jesus Christ.
And I think that with that concept in mind, our study of the Old Testament becomes so much
more rich.
The Old Testament is really the human family's first testament of Jesus Christ.
We have many testaments.
We have the New Testament. we have the New Testament,
we have the other Testament, the Book of Mormon.
But the human family's first testament of Jesus Christ
is the Old Testament.
And you remember Jesus is encounter in Jerusalem
with groups of people that lean towards Him
and those that were opposed to Him.
And He gives them a
surefire way to know that he is the Son of God, the Savior of the world. He says,
in John 539, search the Scriptures. For in them you think he
have eternal life, but there they which testify of me. And by that I think what
he meant to say is that,
don't follow the ferrisseic view
that simply studying the scriptures
brings you eternal life,
which was a principle that the rabbis taught in his day,
but rather search the scriptures
that you can know about me and know me.
And that will bring you eternal life.
The words on a printed page will never
bring anybody eternal life, but feelings that they cause, and the actions that they impel you
to perform, that will bring you eternal life. Andy, I think our listeners would be interested in your,
you know, here's your decades of being a religious educator, knowing so much about the scriptures. Having taught, I think, a class probably on
every standard work. What's that journey been like for you? And also the journey of
life from being a father to now a grandfather. Walk our listeners through your
journey a little bit. Well, that's a really interesting question. I wish that I could say that I lived
a wayward life and I had a road to Damascus experience in my life, but to be quite honest
with you, I was raised by good parents. They were converts to the church, not too many years before I was born. And the truth of the matter is,
I cannot remember a time when I didn't know that these things were true. I wish that I could say,
oh, I had this dramatic conversion experience, but I'm one of those that didn't detractors
those that didn't detractors to the gospel come and go,
but the longer I'm at this, the more evidence I find
for the truthfulness, not just in the old and new testaments,
but in the restoration of the gospel through living prophets. This has been an amazing journey for me precisely because it has strength and so deeply those things that I have always known to be true.
And like everybody else, I've had sacred experiences that have been aha moments, but I can never remember a time when I didn't know that these things were true.
One of the, I guess, the key elements in my own faith trajectory, if you want to call it that,
has been a deeper appreciation of the centrality of Jesus Christ in everything that we do.
And also, the interest that our Heavenly Father has
in each one of us.
I don't pretend to know how our Heavenly Father
and his Son can know each of us so intimately and so well.
I just know that they do.
And that's been a source of strength.
It's gotten us through some hard times. We had real sadness a year
and a half ago and one of our sons-in-law just collapsed and died on a Friday night. We'd
just spoken to him 45 minutes before that. We miss him a lot. But if there's one thing I can say about him, 36
years old, I don't think I know of a person who was more ready to meet his
maker than he was. Just a pure-hearted, good-sold person. And it caused a bit of a
crisis in faith for me.
You know, how could Heavenly Father let somebody,
this good die,
take him away from a family that needed him
and from my wife and I who enjoyed his company.
This caused a lot of suffering.
It's okay if I call it a revelation.
The interesting moments have always been, well, now you can appreciate
even deeper the experiences of the Savior who faced all injustice, who experienced greater
contradictions than any person in any of the worlds that he created has ever faced.
Now you begin to understand what he felt in the garden and on the cross.
And that's been a significant period of growth for me,
even this late in my life, having known that these things,
always having known that these things are true, but there have been some amazing
moments of
personal revelation that have come from that. So
That's been kind of my journey. I started out not I didn't even go to Brigham Young University as an undergraduate
my wife did
so I'm hoping that
salvational come to me flinging to her co-tails, but when I first joined the BYU
faculty, I think that there are one or two of the old timers who looked with
suspicion on me because I had not come up the, followed a typical path. I've been grateful for that because I have seen and
heard and experienced things that are undeniable. So that's been a cool part of the experience.
Andy, we had a great lesson and then you just gave us a just a
Perfect ending really John by the way what a great day so fun to hear the familiar voice of
Andy Skinner for all this time because we haven't talked for a long time
But it just felt so good to sit down with a couple of friends and talk about these wonderful
Stories and I took a lot of notes today. Thank you. You're very kind.
What a beautiful day. Well, we want to thank you. Well, thanks for the privilege.
Thanks for the privilege. We were very fortunate. Very blessed to have you. Thank you, Dr. Andrew Skinner.
For being here, we want to thank all of our listeners. Thank you for supporting us and thank you for your time with us.
We know that your time is precious and the fact that you spend a little bit with us is just
wonderful.
Thank you.
We want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Sornson and our sponsors, David
and Verla Sornson.
And we hope all of you will join us next week on another episode of Follow Him.
[♪ Music playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing in the background, playing you