Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Galatians Part 2 • Dr. Jared Ludlow • Sept 25 - Oct 1
Episode Date: September 20, 2023We discuss the fruits of the Spirit in our discussion with Dr. Jared Ludlow as he examines how the Saints in Galatia were commanded to become "a new creature in Christ."Show Notes (English, ...French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-31-40/YouTube: https://youtu.be/UQirPPzNM7sFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BY00:00 Part II–Dr. Jared Ludlow00:08 Paul’s challenges04:19 Blending Jews and Gentiles06:45 One version of the conflict between Paul and Peter07:58 The Bible Project’s take on Galatians10:35 Isaac as the law of the gospel and Ishmael as the law of Moses17:29 A practical application20:23 Stephen Robinson story about trust23:36 Why revert to the law of Moses?28:23 Accountability and commitment to the Lord29:42 Fruits of the Spirit33:16 Meekness vs envy36:28 Evaluate how fully you walk in the Spirit40:00 New Creatures in Christ43:53 CS Lewis and God as a builder and architect46:16 Dr. Ludlow shares a story about an incarcerated man50:26 Eustace from The Voyage of the Dawn Treader by CS Lewis55:02 Paul’s conclusion58:35 The Law of the Harvest1:06:12 End of Part II–Dr. Jared LudlowThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Join us for part two with Dr. Jared Ludlow on Galatians chapter 1 through 6.
What a challenge for Paul because this is all the Jews had ever known and the Gentiles
are coming into this and trying to put those all together because the guy out there
mown as long would be by the definition we're using, probably a Gentile. And we're learning all
this stuff. Those guys did in the past with the love Moses, but for Paul, when it was all
happening all at once, it helps me to see what a challenge he really had in bringing
Gentiles and Jews and Jewish Congress to Christianity all together at the same time with all of
their past practices, putting that all together.
And he can't be there. He can only write these letters.
It just sounds like his challenge was really harder than I ever imagined.
To add to that challenge is what he talks about in chapter 2 with a kind of confrontation with Peter.
Oh, man.
Paul goes back to an experience that he had earlier, so this is not when he's in
Glacier with them, but he was in Antioch, which is in modern-day Syria, and Antioch became an early
important center of Christianity. In fact, in the book of Acts, it mentions that that's the first
place that they are called Christians, these
believers in the Messiah.
But he's up there in Antioch, so chapter 2, verse 11, and Peter came up and kind of as an
introduction Paul says, I withstood him to the face because he was to be blamed.
So in other words, I called him out.
And then he gives the background. Why did he call him out?
Well, before that, certain people came from James, and by James here, it's talking about Jesus' brother,
the leader of the church in Jerusalem, and they seem to represent Jerusalem, kind of represented the core of this
introduced some kind of represented the core of this Jewish practice
continuation because that's how they were raised and they come from this party of James or whatever and
Before they came Peter was eating with the Gentiles and
As you know, there's some challenges when you mix Jews and Gentiles together eating because Gentiles do not follow the same kosher diet.
It's not so much that they absolutely can't be eating together, but you won't be eating
the same foods.
I participate in a lot of interfaith work with juice and graduate school.
I had a lot of Jewish professors and fellow students.
And whenever we have eating opportunities together,
it's a bit of a challenge.
The easiest route is just usually just go vegetarian,
and it cuts out a lot of the questions and so forth.
But Peter didn't seem to have a problem
meeting with the Gentiles there in Antioch
until this group comes up from Jerusalem.
And then when they were come, he withdrew and separated himself.
And this is Paul's perspective.
Right.
We need to keep that in mind.
Right.
We don't know what Peter, what's going on in his mind.
I don't know if he's thinking, oh, well, we just have these guests that just arrived from
Jerusalem. Let me make sure they feel comfortable. But he's separating himself
fearing them, Paul says, which were of the circumcision. In other words, they were of this idea that
we keep doing these actions. And the others, and the other Jews dissembled likewise or acted
likewise with him in so much that Barnabas
also was carried away with their dissimulation or hypocrisy is what the Greek really gets
at there.
But when I, Paul says, when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of
the gospel, I said unto Peter, before them all,
if thou being a Jew lived as after the manner of the Gentiles,
in other words, you were just eating with the Gentiles,
and not as do the Jews, why compel us thou the Gentiles
to live as do the Jews?
And so this is kind of a case study of this whole issue
that I'm sure you've dealt with before in Acts chapter 15
with the Jerusalem Council of trying to decide what do we require the Gentiles to do when they come
into the church and so forth in the July, Leahona issue. I was asked to write about that Jerusalem
Council in Acts chapter 15 and that's the whole issue is trying to figure out
what do we do with Gentiles coming into the church?
How do we mix together?
Because food is an important part of fellowship.
I mean, think of even in our own wards and stakes
and all we have, you know, these events
where we eat together.
Well, why?
Because we want to fellowship one with another,
get to know each other better.
Well, what happens when you come from different
eating backgrounds and requirements?
Now we have gluten free or other things, you know,
that can create some issues,
but, you know, usually can find some way of accommodating that.
But what if you have two major blocks of people that are different?
I kind of liken it to, if suddenly in the church,
we, the next journal conference heard that any incoming member of the church
no longer has to observe the word of wisdom.
A, our baptism numbers might go way up. But B, imagine then
what happens at the next word party with all these new converts. Do you have different
punch bowls for different types of beverages that each are drinking? Do you have a smoking
area in the chapel? It would totally turn things upside down.
And in some ways, that's how these Jewish believers in Jesus were feeling about all these
Gentiles coming in, is how do we mix with them?
What do we do about them when they aren't doing the things that we have been accustomed to
doing all of our lives?
And which Jesus seemed to have done during his life.
It's a tough thing that they're trying to navigate.
That was an excellent example
that really helped me understand.
I like that what you said though,
we don't have a chance to hear from Peter about,
well, this is why I went to the other table
in the other way I left.
Yeah, I wanted to read out of the contemporary English version, just so everybody caught that
story between Paul and Peter.
It says, when Peter came to Antioch, I told him face to face that he was wrong.
He used to eat with Gentile followers of the Lord until James sent some Jewish followers.
Peter was afraid of the Jews and soon stopped eating with the Gentiles.
He and
the others hid their true feelings so well that even Barnabas was fooled. But when I saw
that they were not really obeying the truth that is in the good news, I corrected Peter
in front of everyone and said, Peter, you are a Jew, but you live like a Gentile. So
how can you force Gentiles to live like the Jews? That would have been an interesting
moment to witness.
I mean, I don't know, but I hear sometimes our modern day apostles have spirited discussions about
certain things until they can come to a unified unanimous decision, usually with the help of the
spirit, bringing them together, but they each have their opinions and their personalities and things.
And here we get a flavor of Paul's personality that he's not afraid to go after the chief
apostle and say, you're acting like a hypocrite. Again, we don't know what Peter was thinking on the
other side. John Jared, one of the websites I like to use sometimes in my Bible study is the
Bible project. They have a summary of the book of Galatians and I want to see what both of you thought about it.
They write this, Paul's letter confronts the Galatians for relying on the laws of Torah,
law of Moses, especially circumcision, to ensure they belonged as members of God's family.
He calls this a different gospel because since the beginning, the real good news
has never been about earning an entrance into God's family.
To prove this, Paul points back to Abraham
as a prime example, reminding readers that Abraham
never earned his right relationship with God.
Instead, he believed and trusted God's promise
that one day all nations would find God's blessings
through him and his descendants.
God's plan has always been to have a family of people who relate to Him on the basis of
trust, not the law.
The law, as good as it is, does not provide the power to change.
What the law cannot do, Jesus fully accomplishes.
Paul says that what really matters is God's new creation, the family of people who trust
in Jesus and learn to love God and others through the power of the Spirit. What do you guys think?
I think that is one of the purposes of Galatians is to bring this multi-ethnic, I guess you could say, family together.
I think it used the word trust in there
throughout in the King James Version, it uses faith.
But I think some like to use the concept of trust
or confidence in Christ or in God
is kind of capturing more of the sense
that it will impell us to action because we trust or have confidence
that it will really work, that if I come into Christ, he really can save me.
Where sometimes when we think of the word faith, we can just use it in more of an abstract,
you know, I have faith in something out there, but if we have real trust and confidence in Christ,
then yeah, he can do what he claimed that he could do and that he did.
So I can if I'm not careful, trust the commandments more than I trust Jesus.
Yeah.
Or even myself, my own works. And we're never justified by the works of the law,
but by that confidence or trust in Jesus Christ.
That's how we become right.
I was just thinking a question that some might have.
Okay, then how was Abraham saved?
And I think the answer we would say is
the same way all of us are by the gospel of Jesus Christ by the good news is that's how we would answer that right even though
Christ hadn't come at the time, but Abraham knew the gospel he applied the same first principles that we have to is that fair statement?
Yes, he had that faith through that trust and confidence in God.
And in the promise of the future seed that would come through his line, usually when we see seed of Abraham, we think of a corporate sense of a group. But sometimes in the scriptures, it's
talking about capital S seed, if you will, one person, Jesus Christ, who comes from that line of Abraham,
and he trusted and had faith that that seed would come to bring the redemption that is needed.
Paul also, in Galatians, goes back to Abraham with an allegory. In chapter 4, he talks about this kind of concept of Abraham and the promise. He sets two things
on two sides. We could maybe talk a little bit about this allegory in chapter 4, starting in verse
22, and he's responding to those who want to be under the law, and he's trying to explain why
you don't want to be under the law. And so
verse 22, it is written that Abraham had two sons. And we know he had Ishmael and he had Isaac.
The one by Abad-Made, Hegar, the other by a free woman, Sarah. So he's contrasting these two.
It's kind of an interesting interpretation of scripture here, but again, it's an allegory. So he's contrasting these two. It's a kind of an interesting interpretation of scripture here
He's just but again, it's an allegory. So he's seeing these as symbolic of other things
Which things are an allegory for these are two covenants?
The one from Mount Sinai that's Hagar or Ishmael, which gendereth to bondage
There's that concept that the law will bring bondage and then then he point blanks says which is a gar or a hay gar and more the Greek form there. For
this hay gar is Mount Sinai in Arabia and answer us to Jerusalem. And here he's
talking about the city of Jerusalem itself, which now is and is in bondage with
her children. So again, they're still under the law, they're still in bondage
to the law, which is kind of ironic because the covenant line actually goes through Isaac, but he's
tracing it through Heghar here, not saying he's tracing the covenant line, but the allegory is
that that's the bond made. So that's the bondage and Jerusalem represents that bondage.
made. So that's the bondage and Jerusalem represents that bondage. But now he talks to the other side Jerusalem which is above is free. So he's talking about a
heavenly Jerusalem which is the mother of us all. And then he quotes from Isaiah
for it is written rejoice thou baron the bearest not break forth and cry thou
that travailless not for the desolate had many more children
than she which hath and husband. So Isaiah 54, one is kind of a blessing of those who
may be bearing at the time, but they will have children many more than those which have
and husband. And then verse 20, he says, we, brethren, as Isaac was, are the children of promise.
If you remember, Isaac comes because of a promise
by these visitors who say,
you're gonna have a child.
And at first, they're like,
we're kind of old for this.
How can we have a child?
Kind of laugh.
And that's kind of the root of Isaac, the name itself.
But as then, he that was born after the flesh, Ishmael persecuted him that was
born after the spirit, even so it is now. So it goes back to Genesis again, remember that at one
point Ishmael is mocking or some see it in Hebrew is literally isaking because again the route has this laughing or mocking to it. Somehow Ishmael is
mocking or persecuting or Isaac King Isaac. Sarah sees and tells Abraham to cast out the Bond woman
and her son. For the son of the Bond woman shall not be air with the son of the free woman.
So then brethren, we are not children
of the bond woman, but of the free. Now it's kind of a complicated allegory here, but
basically again, it's just two sides. And what Abraham is trying to point out, or I mean
what Paul is trying to point out with Abraham here, is that he was given this promise. He
had to have faith that they could still have children at this old age. Ishmael came through normal
physical means. He was given this woman, had relations with her, Ishmael was born. There's
nothing necessary miraculous about that. Whereas with Isaac, it took this miracle to bring this child. And that's the heavenly truce, and that's the freedom from bondage.
That's everything that represents the liberty without the law. So while the symbols might be
kind of different than what we normally think of, that's what he uses to, as another example,
of, do you really want to be under the law?
Do you really want to be in this kind of bondage?
Where would you like to be free? Would you like to be children of the promise?
Would you like to demonstrate that confidence and trust in God and receive all these blessings as
happened with
Abraham and Isaac
presumably Jacob and on down the line. What a fascinating way to use that story.
Yeah.
It uses real people and a real story, then compares people to the law of Moses or the law of
the gospel.
Is he saying that Ishmael represents the law of Moses? Isaac represents
the law of Christ. Just like Sarah cast Ishmael away, the law of Christ has cast the law of
Moses away. Yeah, I mean, we would probably say fulfilled or okay, I don't know if superseded
that might be a strong term, but definitely that it's fulfilled
the love Moses.
Now it's the love of Christ.
What Christ has asked us to do is what we need to focus on and follow.
Wow.
I would like to study the scriptures with Paul.
He saw that in there.
Yeah.
In verse 24, which things are in allegory for?
These are the two
covenants. Yeah. That's interesting. John, Jared, let me offer maybe what I see as a practical
application of what we've been talking about and get you both to comment on it. In second,
Nephi four, Nephi talks about himself in relationship to the commandments, the laws. He says, and you'll both recognize
this, O wretched man that I am. My heart's sorroweth because of my flesh. My soul grieves
because of mine inequities. I am encompassed about because of temptation and sin, which
easily beset me. When I desire to rejoice, my heart groans because of my sins. So there's Nephai's relationship with the law.
As much as he loves the law, he can't do it all.
But then he turns and he points to Christ.
He said, nevertheless, I know in whom I have trusted.
My God has been my support.
He has led me through my afflictions.
He has filled me with his love.
He has heard my cries.
And then he says, if he's done this much for me, if he's visited me in so much mercy,
why should my heart weep in my soul linger in the valley of sorrow? And he says,
I don't want to yield to sin anymore. Would you both say that that's Nephi's way of experiencing what Paul's talking about?
I think it's a similar analogy to it. Yeah, that he realizes that there is a way out of that
feeling of entrapment or wretchedness or whatever, always falling short. I think all of us feel
that at times in our lives. We're constantly falling short, that we aren't as good as we want to be,
as good as what we think God wants us to be. And yet, Christ is always there to lift us
and to support us and strengthen us out of that, as long as we keep trying to turn to him and
lift ourselves. And I think that's what Nephi is sensing there that I think you use word trust. I know who I can trust.
And it's not the commandments.
John, what do you think about that?
Yeah, I think the law forces us to confront our own sinfulness that we can't keep it. And I would love to be as wretched as Nephi.
That's the definition of wretchedness.
But that he gets to that point where he realizes that.
And I think it was one of Nephi's best days.
I think if we always feel good about ourselves,
that's a problem.
So it was one of Nephi's best moments.
And notice what he did.
And we've been talking about faith in Christ
but I know in whom I have trusted and he doesn't go on about, I'm great, I'm special I'm awesome.
He goes, he has done this for me, he has done this for me, he's protected me on the sea and
protected me and all this and it's such a great, I can't wait for Book of Mormon to talk about that
more. I want to read an analogy made by Stephen Robinson.
John, this is a talk that we've quoted from before,
believing Christ, he wrote a book with the same name.
When our twin daughters were small,
we decided to take them to the public pool
and teach them how to swim.
I remember starting with Rebecca,
as I went down into the water with Rebecca,
I thought, I'm gonna teach her how to swim. But as we went down into the water with Rebecca. I thought I'm going to teach her how to swim
But as we went down into the water in her mind was the thought my dad is gonna drown me. I'm going to die
The water was only three and a half feet deep, but Becky was only three feet deep
She was so petrified that she began to scream and cry and kick and scratch and was unteachable
Finally, I just had to grab her I threw my arms around her and I just held her and I said,
Becky, I've got you. I'm your dad. I love you. I'm not going to let anything bad happen to you now relax.
Bless her heart. She trusted me. She relaxed and I put my arms under her and said, okay, now kick with your
legs. And we begin to learn how to swim. Spiritually, there are some of us who are similarly petrified
by the questions, am I celestial?
Am I going to make it?
Was I good enough today?
We're so terrified of whether we're going to live or die
or whether we've made it into the kingdom or not
that we cannot make any progress.
It's at those times when the Savior grabs us,
throws his arms around us and says,
I've got you, I love you, I'm not going to let you die.
Now relax and trust me.
If we can relax and trust him and believe him, as well as believe in him, then together we can
begin to learn to live the gospel. Then he puts his arms under us and says, okay, now pay
tithing. Very good. Now pay a full tithing. And so we begin to make progress. Brothers and sisters,
do we believe in being saved?
If I ask my classes that question
with just the right twang in my voice,
do we believe in being saved?
I generally get about a third of my students
to shake their heads and say, no, no.
Those other guys believe in that.
What a tragedy.
Brothers and sisters, we believe in being saved.
That's why Jesus is called the Savior.
What good is it to have a Savior if no one is saved?
It's like having a lifeguard that won't get out of the chair.
There goes another one.
Try the backstroke.
Oh, too bad.
He didn't make it.
We have a Savior who can save us from ourselves,
from what we lack, from our imperfections,
from the carnal individuals within us.
I like that analogy.
Yeah, I think we're going back to this isn't another gospel.
This is the gospel of Jesus Christ is the Savior.
Trust him, have faith in him, repent, and he is good at what he does.
There's definitely the power that comes through Christ that Paul, again, there's no flinching in his testimony of the power
of the risen Lord, and he is so passionate about wanting others to understand this.
He won't let people from Jerusalem stand in his way, he won't let Peter stand in his way if he feels like Peter's off base a little bit because he just wants them to know the
source of salvation and power that can come to them. It seems that he's constantly
facing this battle of people pulling back to the law of Moses. It's almost like
they want to, Jared. Why do they want to go back to the law of Moses so badly? I think a lot of it is just the tradition of it, how they were raised,
again, getting back to maybe what did Jesus do? Well, he did some of these things. And so not
fully understanding the purpose for these things that were to point towards Christ, rather than
the things themselves. I think in our church, when we've had some changes,
some members of the church struggle with it. Well, I don't know how many struggled with going to
two-hour church. Maybe that was more universally accepted. I do know of some who said, I really liked
the three hours of church. But maybe related to that missing, you know, that we don't have
Sunday school every week or, you know, these kind of things, you know, sometimes the changes
are hard with what we've been raised with and what we've felt like has brought us a lot of satisfaction and joy.
And suddenly we're struggling in this new situation.
It's out of our comfort zone.
We're bringing in a lot of people that don't have the same background as we do.
And again, that takes some adjustment.
And sometimes we don't want to adjust.
We want to just keep things
as they are.
I think maybe a good example might be home teaching and ministering with home teaching.
I had a box I could check.
I visited my family and I read that article in the end sign for home teachers, you know,
which they had already read and talked to someone else, but it had a checklist feel to it.
And I don't want to sound like I'm disparaging that.
I had great people who visited us in my childhood
and everything that came and they were faithful to that.
And ministering leaves us a little bit like,
whoa, what do I do?
And maybe that's a, I think it kind of requires
more work on our part.
What do I need to do?
What should I do?
Are my families, do I know them?
Are they doing okay?
I think it requires more of us,
but it has less of a checklist feel to it, do you think?
Definitely.
Yeah, John, I think that's a fantastic example
because doesn't Paul say Jared that just because
of many things of the law, Moses are no longer practiced,
doesn't mean to do nothing.
And that maybe was the feel of some people
and might be condemning myself here
that because we're no longer home teaching,
you can do nothing.
And Paul is saying, no, no, no, that's not what this is. Because we're no longer home teaching, you can do nothing.
And Paul is saying, no, no, no, that's not what this is.
This is a call for you to step up even higher.
John, I think you had a great analogy there.
Jared, what do you think?
Yeah.
No, I agree that there's less prescription of what exactly you need to do, which we can
find comfort in because then we know, like John mentioned,
that we're checking the boxes. Now we have to figure out through the spirit, how do I minister,
what are the needs, what constitutes good ministering, these kinds of things. It's not, well, I did it
every month this year, so I can check those boxes. Now it's not, well, I did it every month this year, you know, so I can check
those boxes. Now it's figuring it out. Yeah, some were more comfortable with merit badges and
rank advancements and what we've been asked to do now with children and youth is rather than going
to what this booklet says I should be working on that was written by someone else is to get on our knees and ask God and our
PayTarclad blessing what we should be working on and
Scouts was wonderful and it had it's place and it blessed a lot of people and I love the principle of be prepared always will
But we're being asked to do something might even say it's harder. It's more
Hear him and then let God prevail, type based with our, the
new program that we have now. Maybe that one works.
It kind of goes back to where we're talking about where we're given these principles, and
then we have to figure out how to implement them, rather than given all the performances
and ordinances and try to learn some principles from them.
Yeah, I think it makes us feel more accountable, not less.
Isn't that true?
Hank, don't you feel like I got to do better, I got to figure out exactly how I can be a
good ministering brother to these families in the best way for them, not just in a way
that is general for everybody by checking a box.
John, don't you think something similar happened
with the new strength of youth pamphlet?
That the old pamphlet served us well.
There was a lot of do's and don'ts and checklists.
Someone might see the new strength of youth pamphlet
as a, oh, look what I can do now,
versus step up to, I need to figure out my commitment to the Lord.
Yeah, just what President Nelson has said, learned to hear him and then let God prevail.
So if some are reading it, but not actually getting on their knees and trying to get inspiration,
they may say, it doesn't say I can't do this.
Well, the F.S.Y. guide is not minimums of behavior. It's doctrines of discipleship. I've heard
someone say, and that's a step up. The whole thing is next level. In other words, look up. Don't look
to a book. What can I do? What I can't do? Look up and ask God. Am I dressing in a way that honors
my body that God has given me? Am I acting in a way that honors what God has given me?
And don't miss that step. Well, it doesn't say I can't do this. Okay, then get on your knees and
figure out with your patriarch blessing, with the scriptures, with learning to hear him. What kind
of pressure should I be? How should I behave? And that's also next level. Yeah. And I think Paul would
say, but you're not doing this alone, particularly
you have the Holy Spirit to help guide and to lead you along the way. And I think if
there's one section that most members of the church are familiar with in Galatians,
it's those fruits of the spirit. Perfect place to go right now. Yeah. We sometimes look at these fruits as the outgrowth of having the spirit,
and that's certainly true, but also think of them as helps along the way. When we have to make
these decisions and decide practices and things that we should be doing and whether we should be
doing this or not, it's great to have that peace and that
faith from the Spirit that can help strengthen us.
So I love his discussion of these fruits of the Spirit, and I don't know if there's particular
fruit of the Spirit that stands out to you more than any others, and maybe there's certain times when some are
really more needed.
But to me, I think peace is always a great blessing.
And it's not anything necessarily dramatic, but just a nice feeling and just a confidence
that I'm on the right path, that I'm doing okay, I'm not perfect,
but I'm striving and the trajectories
in the right direction, that peace can really help.
On the flip side, I tend to notice when I'm impatient,
often it's missing the spirit.
And so that long suffering is gone,
maybe a little bit more short with people,
and unfortunately, particularly with my wife, I'm with her more than probably anybody else in my life.
These fruits of the spirits can be great, strength to us along the way, as well as indications,
as Paul is pointing out here, that Christ's way is the right way, and it can help us walk in the spirit.
I love that that's so positive. To go from everything we've been talking about to talk about.
Here's the fruits, here's the results, here's the outcomes of what we've been talking about.
Love and joy and peace. I see I emphasize peace when I marked it too because I think when I was
younger, it was all about fun and happiness, maybe,
however you define those. But as you get older, if you're like me, it's more what you long
for is just peace of mind. Am I okay or my children going to be okay? Are my loved ones
going to be okay? And not so much just having fun all the time, but are we going to be okay? Is that more of the way I would describe
peace and their fruits, their results of trusting in Christ? Am I getting that right?
Yes. I'm just reminded of section 19, it expands the meaning of it so much to know it was given
to Martin Harris, that I kind of relate to more than some others. But to learn of me, listen to my words,
walk in the meat-ness of my spirit. And think of all the people in Martin Harris' ears.
And what's Jesus saying? And think of the worries. Do I mortgage my farm? Can I show the
160 pages? Or can I take the characters to Charles Anthony, whatever? And what's the
Lord's egg? Martin, learn of me, and listen to my words, and walk in the meekness of my spirit and you will have peace in
popular opinion, no, power, no, wealth, no, you'll have peace in me. That's the fruit of this spirit
Martin that you want. So John you just mentioned you know meekness is part of all of that and I think
Paul that's one of the things he's trying to emphasize in the Sapisl right after listing all of those things of verse 26, he says,
let us not be desires of vain glory, provoking one another,
envying one another.
And I think the first verse of the next one is of chapter six is again,
that we might lift ourselves above another.
And again, think of Paul's situation here,
where he's trying to merge these different peoples together from different backgrounds.
And it's very easy for us to feel like we are better than the other, whoever the other is,
we're better. But the fruits of the spirit help us to reach that meekness, to realize they're just as much
loved by Heavenly Father, they're a children of God, and a seat of Abraham just as much as
I am.
And therefore I need to not provoke them and not lift myself up and not to envy them,
either.
The pride that President Benson talked about from below to those above
It can be just as real as thinking we're better than others and looking down on them
Boy and the idea of others just would be so tough when you've got
converts who came from Judaism and converts who were Gentiles and how different their
numbers who were Gentiles and how different their backgrounds would be and we're trying to be unified in the same branch of the church in this time.
Feel that challenge.
What Paul is saying here about the fruits of the spirit and how they're affected by how
you interact with others reminds me of a statement made from Elder Renland.
I bet both of you remember this.
He says, the influence of the Holy Ghost can be obscured by strong emotions, such as anger, hate, or fear.
That's like trying to savor the delicate flavor of a grape while eating a jalapeno pepper.
One completely overpowers the other. So, is that what Paul's after here, Jared, is you can have
all of these wonderful outcomes in your life. Love, joy, peace, long suffering's after here, Jared, is you can have all of these wonderful outcomes in your life.
Love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, maintenance, self-control.
You can have all of these things, and don't ruin them or lose them in your fault-finding
or hatred of each other.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, again, if you're trying to build a community, there needs to be that mutual respect and love.
And it goes back to again, he says, loving your neighbors yourself is where the law is fulfilled and how we can continue that law today. I certainly see throughout recent general conference addresses that emphasis on the two great commandments,
loving God and loving others repeatedly.
And because that's really what it comes down to,
to help them as we also are trying to progress
rather than holding them back because we are thinking
we're better and we don't need them and those
kinds of things.
There's some great questions in the Come Follow Me manual about this section, the end
of chapter 5 in the beginning of chapter 6.
It says, studying these verses can help you evaluate how fully you are walking in the
Spirit.
That right there is quite a task, evaluating how fully you are walking in the Spirit. That right there is quite a task, evaluating how fully you are walking in the Spirit.
Are you experiencing the fruit of the Spirit mentioned in verses 22 and 23? What other fruit or
results of spiritual living have you noticed? Galatians 2.20. Paul is talking about the law and Christ as we've been talking about, and he says this,
I am crucified with Christ.
Nevertheless, I live, yet not I, but Christ liveeth in me, and the life which I now live in
the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.
It's a beautiful verse, but I want to make sure I understand it.
So Jared, John, help me understand what he means by I am crucified with Christ.
Here we see kind of the intimate relationship that Paul feels with Christ. I mean,
it doesn't get much more than that, but I think part of it is when he says I'm crucified with Christ,
I think part of it is when he says I'm crucified with Christ, maybe two senses. One, I'm getting rid of those flesh
things and maybe the reliance on the law so much. But also, you can imagine Paul's situation where
he initially starts off as a persecutor of those who believed in Jesus. And then suddenly he's 180
degrees different, proclaiming that Jesus is actually the Messiah, and how much persecution would be
heaped upon him from those who used to be his colleagues and things. And so in some sense, his previous life is crucified with Christ. I am now as
persecuted and unwanted as Christ was by my fellow colleagues. But nevertheless, I live, but now
it's Christ's living in me. And it gets back to that trust and confidence
in the Son of God, that faith.
In Romans, he talks about it with baptism
that you die and you become raised again, a new life.
And I think he's kind of giving that same concept here
that now I'm living in Christ,
or more probably Christ, it lives in me.
He's just a messenger of Christ. He's just the
refraction of light to share the light of the world with others.
Thank you, Jared. I'm glad you brought up Romans because we talk all the time about being born
again. But to be born again kind of implies you're going to die and then be born
again. But Paul does say that. And like you said in Romans 64, we're buried with him by baptism
unto death. We think of baptisms being born again, but the first part going down under the water
is like dying. And then we walk in newness of life. And that's why when I saw Christopher
Frideweth Christ, I saw, oh, yeah, we're buried.
When we're baptism, the old man of sin is left behind, I think is the phrase. And then we're born again. So that's what I connected that to. I'm glad you brought that up about
how we're crucified with him. Well, we die and are born again because of him.
Daniel Judd, former dean of the Religion Department of BYU, gave a talk at an Easter conference
called New Creatures in Christ. He talks about Paul and he shares an interesting story that I want
both of you to hear. This is Dr. Judd. Paul is using the literal death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ as symbolic representations to invite the reader to put to death the natural man within each of us.
Through faith in Christ, repentance and baptism, that we may come forth as new creatures in Christ
to sin no more. British pastor and theologian Charles Spurgeon gave the following illustration of
what it means to repent and be baptized unto Christ's death and become a new creature in Christ.
While the original source for this story cannot be identified,
Spurgeon believed the story is from the life of Saint Augustine,
the 4th century bishop in North Africa.
Augustine had indulged in great sins in his younger days. After his conversion,
he met with a woman who had been the shareer of his wicked follies. She approached him winningly and said to him,
Augustine, it is I, mentioning her by name.
But Augustine then turned round and said,
but it is not I.
The old Augustine is dead, and I am a new creature in Christ Jesus.
Isn't that a great story? Yeah, and that gets to again, a verse, I mean Paul uses that
new creature phrase also in chapter 6 verse 15 and Christ Jesus, neither circumcision,
availeth anything, norance, circumcision, but a new creature. And that's what Paul is trying to help anyone to accomplish, to change and to become that new creature,
whether they were Jewish background, Gentile background, it didn't seem to matter to him. You just
wanted them to change. Sometimes we say the gospel makes, or has the potential to make bad men good
and good men better, but I think
it's so much more than that that I'd like this phrase, a new creature or in other words,
a new creation. Like, I won't even resemble or like Augustine was saying, it's me, but
it's not me. And in the Come Follow Me manual for individuals and families, there's a beautiful
illustration of a caterpillar and a butterfly.
I mean, no resemblance.
You know, that he can make us a completely new creation.
And so I like that he didn't just say, it'll make me better, but no, he'll be a completely
new creature.
It's interesting that Paul also mentions that imagery of being crucified in chapter 6, verse 14.
Here he's again responding to those who want to have his Gentile converts be circumcised,
but he says, but God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.
And then notice this phrase, by whom the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world,
so that trying to change and rise above the Babylon or the natural world around us, it's
through Christ, that we can accomplish that. It's through Christ that
the world changes, you know, I think of some of the Book of Mormon stories where they had no more
desire to do sin. And sometimes I wonder why, don't I get that blessing more often, but you know,
it's truly through Christ that that world is crucified and that I also am crucified to the world. I don't want to
participate in those things and be a part of that when I am truly a changed person.
Yeah, the great and spacious building loses its appeal. This might be a good place to
insert a quote that I'm sure both of you know from CS Lewis. He says, imagine yourself as a living
house. God comes in to rebuild
that house. At first, perhaps, you can understand what he is doing. He is getting the drains right
and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on. You knew that those jobs needed doing, and so you're
not surprised. But presently, he starts knocking the house about in a way that hurts abominably
and does not seem to make sense. What on earth is he up to? The explanation
is that he is building quite a different house from the one you thought of, throwing out a new wing
here, putting on an extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You thought you were
going to be made into a decent little cottage, but he is building a palace. He intends to come and live in it himself. Paul said,
I'm crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ live it in me.
A new creation, a totally new creation. And don't beat yourself up if you're not there.
Like remodeling a house, it could take a while.
Yeah, and it can be very discouraging and encouraging at times.
You know, one of the bedrock stones of my personal testimony is watching the fruits of the
gospel because I had a live an example in my house.
My dad came out of the Navy in World War II, joined the church at age 24, because of my mom and strived in his whole life
to do better and to be better.
And we would find notes he left to himself
about trying to do better and to be better.
And the dad I had at eight years old
was not the one I had at 18 or 28.
And eventually, you know, he was in a bishop rick and on a high council and we just watched
the gospel change him and mellow him and to me it's I you can't take that from me I saw the gospel
make him a new creature and sadly I think he never felt like he was making enough progress, but we all saw it. And, you know, I honor my father
and the Savior for what I watched the gospel do for him because I experienced it. And my siblings
would say the same thing. I have a story maybe that is in process, I guess you could say,
you know, I'm currently the publication director at the BYU Religious Study Center.
And shortly after taking that position, I got a letter just sent to the Religious Study Center
from an inmate in prison. And he had started watching BYU TV in prison and particularly started watching the scripture roundtable discussions
from religion faculty that were broadcast on the TV. The only address that came up or contact
information was the Religious Study Center and so reached out and and it's begun this correspondence back
and forth now for almost two years and even phone calls, you know, he'll call me at least once
or twice a week. And one of the things that he's noted was how these people, as they talked about the scriptures, just, they seem different
and they, and he felt different when he would watch them and listen to them. And he wasn't
a very learned person as far as, you know, a lot of education, he, I think, got involved
in drugs early on and that just led his life in a different direction. And yet he started to realize,
I deserve to be where I am. I've done some things that justice demands this of me.
But he also was reaching out for, I want to change. I want to be a different person.
And I need Christ. And so I was very pleased,
and I think this was not just a coincidence.
One one day, he, this was a few months ago,
he said he saw a couple of people come into the prison
and he didn't know who they were.
He wasn't sure if they were prison officials or something,
but they dressed obviously not as inmates.
And, but he just felt as prompting to go ask who they
were.
And he's like, I don't know why I did that, but I know why he did that.
But anyway, he goes and asks them, and they were members of the church.
And they were there looking for any members of the church.
Things during COVID really shut down any services and these kinds of things.
And so they were trying to
start things back up. And he explained, well, I'm not a member of the church, but I love studying it.
And I've started reading all these things. And you know, I have Book of Mormon and other things. And
and so now he participates in weekly meetings with members of the church from the local area
that come in. And as well as a few other inmates.
And he says sometimes we get up to nine or ten people that are coming.
And so you see that a strong desire to change, to be in a position where I just give a sense that he, he knows he can't do it alone,
and he's all alone.
And so he reaches out to Jesus,
to just try to find something that can help him to be better,
and to try to improve on what a life,
he feels he've kind of wasted. To me, that's the good news. That's what the gospel is all about, becoming a new creature. And it's through the spirit, it's through that trust in Jesus. And I don't know
what's going to be the end result. But I do know he's on a much, much better trajectory
than he was before. And that's the blessings of the spirit and the blessings of the gospel.
What a story.
John, Jared, those are, I think those are perfect examples of what we're talking about today,
about Christ's ability to truly change people.
Not just so they act different, but they truly are different.
I'm sure many of our listeners will remember the story, C.S. Lewis, who we mentioned earlier,
wrote the story of a little boy named Eustace, who was in a land called Narnia, and he was a greedy,
selfish boy. In Narnia, his greedy selfishness turns him into a dragon, and he does not want to be
this dragon. And his friends are scared of him. He can't be with them. Lewis writes,
an appalling loneliness came over him.
He was very dreary being a dragon.
He shuddered whenever he caught sight of his own reflection
and he was ashamed to be seen by others.
If you've seen the movie, there's a moment where
Aslan, the lion, comes representing Christ
to change Eustace. But the book has
quite a bit more detail. Eustace says in the book,
I was lying awake and wondering what on earth would become of me. I looked up and I saw
a huge lion coming slowly towards me. It told me to follow it. It led me a long way into
the mountains. There was always a light around the lion wherever he went.
At last we came to the top of the mountain
and there was a garden, trees and fruit and everything.
In the middle of it, there was a very big round bath
with marble steps going down into it.
I thought if I could get in there and bathe,
it would ease the pain.
But the lion told me I must undress first. Suddenly, I
thought the dragons are sneaky sort of things and snake can cast their skin, so I started
scratching myself and my scales began coming off. I scratched a little deeper and my whole
skin started peeling off beautifully. I could see it there beside me, looking rather
nasty. It was the most lovely feeling. I scratched and tore again, and another skin
peeled off beautifully. I thought to myself, how many skins have I got to take off? I was
longing to bathe. And then this moment, then the lion said, you will have to let me."
The very first tear he made was so deep, I thought it had gone right into my heart. It hurt
worse than anything I've ever felt.
The only thing that made me able to bear it was just the pleasure of feeling that stuff peel off.
He caught hold of me and threw me into the water. It hurt, but only for a moment.
After that, I found that all the pain had gone. And then he returns back to his friends.
And I like what Lewis says after this.
It says, great was the rejoicing when the restored useless walked into the circle around
the campfire. No one, least of all, used to himself felt any desire to go back to the
dragon's cave where he got was changed. And then Lewis says this. And I like what you
said, Jared, about I don't know how this how this is going, you know, how that man's story is going to work out.
Lewis writes this, it would be nice and fairly true to say that from that time forth,
Eustace was a different boy.
To be strictly accurate, he began to be a different boy.
The cure had begun.
I think that's what we've been talking about today. Paul is offering people the cure to a painful sinful life
that the cure is Christ himself.
I just love that sometimes it don't see the word creator in creature, but it's in there.
So the creator can make a new creation, can make a new creature. I love to see it in there because I believe
that's what he can do. I love how Paul, he loves these people, he wants to help them. And
he's willing to bear whatever price it is on his body, you know, I mean, he says he bears the marks of the Lord Jesus from whippings, from stonings, from everything.
But that's not going to deter him from trying to help others come unto Christ.
And I mean, it's just an incredible example of someone who wants to help others and bring to them
the peace and love that can be a part of their life.
And if it means, again, standing up against those who he feels are leading him astray, then he will do so.
But ultimately, he just is trying to point them to Christ and the peace that can come through him.
Jared, you just quoted from chapter 6 verse 17 from henceforth,
let no man trouble me for I bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus. That's how Paul finishes
this letter. Is there anything else we need to see in his conclusion? I mean, this is more of an
interesting fact about it besides some of the doctrine he gives in this chapter. And that is
in verse 11, he says, you see how large a letter I have written
unto you with my own hand. Now, large a letter here, I don't think it's so much the length,
because as you know, the pistols of Paul are organized by length in our canon.
It's the font he used. Yeah, but it's the font. And in other words, you know, probably
a lot of this was dictated, but now he's writing himself and he's kind of proud of that. I'm writing this and but it points to what some scholars think is that Paul may have had problems with his eyes.
And so he's writing in a larger font, if you will, larger letters, but he wanted to do it with his own hand. And he alludes to this earlier in the
epistle when he talks about, this is in chapter 4, starting in verse 13, you know how through
infirmity of the flesh, I preached the gospel unto you at the first. And my temptation, or my test which was in my flesh, you despise not nor rejected, but received
me as an angel of God even as Christ Jesus. So whatever physical ailment or something
he seems to have had, he praises the people of Galatia for not holding that against him
and not using that as an excuse to reject him.
I know later in some of his epistles, he talks about a thorn in the flesh, that the Lord chose not to remove,
despite being this great leader and faithful disciple of Jesus Christ.
He wasn't healed of this.
This helped keep him humble and relying on God. And so we see a few kind of hints
at this that Paul makes about whatever this physical element is. But again, some think that because
of what he says here in verse 11, that it's some kind of an eyesight issue. And I mean, yeah,
it's amazing that all that he did with, you know, whatever it was that he
was dealing with. Now that's something I did not know. That's cool. Another thing that we see in this
chapter is this law of the harvest. We reap what we sow. And so he turns that to sowing in the
spirit so that we can reap life everlasting. In other words, if we're doing things that the spirit is prompting us to
that will bring us blessings and lead us along the path. And so I like his counsel in verse 9. Let us not be weary and well-doing
for in due season we shall reap if we faint not. And so
and we shall reap if we faint not. And so part of the enduring to the end is to not be weary
and well-doing, just continue to do these things.
And verse 10 kind of continues that.
We have therefore opportunity. Let us do good.
And to all men, especially into them who are the household
of faith. He does like to use a lot of that imagery
of being a family, of a household.
Again, he's trying to bring all these people together in one household of faith to receive
all the blessings that God has for them.
Love it.
John, anything on the law of the harvest?
I love all of the agricultural metaphors in the scriptures are so interesting to me, but it's such an obvious sign in nature
that is everywhere that if you plant figs, you're going to get figs. And this law of the harvest
is so good. But I like what Jared just pointed out in due season. There is a waiting period. One of
my favorite statements of President Benson was that he said one of the trials of this
life is that we do not usually receive immediately the full blessing for righteousness or the full
cursing for wickedness. That it will come at a certain, but oftentimes there is a waiting period that
occurs as was the case with Job and Joseph and that idea of a waiting period can be frustrating.
Paul calls it a, in due season, don't be wearing well-doing because it will come.
But I think with sometimes with young people that I know,
hey, I'm doing this, where's my blessing?
And it's like, well, don't ever get tired of doing well, of well-doing,
because it will come.
That's the law of the harvest, but it may not be your timing.
It may be after a season, sometimes, there are longer seasons than others, right?
So I love the council and the certainty of, if you so that, you reap this.
Takes a long time to go from seed to fruit, doesn't it?
I mean, if you plant an apple tree, you don't really see an apple for, was it, three years,
four years to actually get the fruit.
But in that meantime, you have to water it and nourish it and, you know, apply Alma 32,
33 to it.
It takes a while before you get the fruit.
David O'Macay said, since man's first advent on earth, God has been urging him to rise above the selfish,
groveling life of the purely animal existence into the higher, more spiritual realm.
After several thousand years of struggling, mankind even now, but dimly recognizes the
fact that the greatest of the world's leaders are those who most nearly approach the teachings
of the man of Galilee.
This is psychologically sound because the thoughts of man harbors determines the realm in which he serves.
Be not deceived, rights fall to the equalations, God is not mocked. For whatsoever a man soeth, that shall he also reap. For he that soeth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption.
But he that soeth to the Spirit shall of the flesh reap corruption. But he that soeth do the spirit shall of the spirit
reap life everlasting. It's so fun to see so many things that showed up in the articles of faith
sometimes when we read Paul and verse 10, as we have therefore our opportunity, let us do good unto
all men. I mean, do you hear article of faith 13 there? We believe in being honest true chase binoters and in doing good to all men. I was like, oh, well, that's where you got that. Yeah, that is cool. Jared, Dr. Luddlow,
this has been fantastic. I feel like I'm grasping the epistle to the Galatians. If I'm at home and
I've listened to these episodes with you, Jared, what are you hoping I walk away with from Galatians?
Well, I think hopefully a little bit of the context that Paul is dealing with
these people who feel like they should continue Jewish practice as part of their path to salvation,
and he's trying to put the brakes on that and say, no, the faith or trust and confidence in Christ
is what you need to focus on.
That's the path to salvation.
And so it's faith in Christ,
not works of the law of Moses that should be followed.
I think also the notion that he's trying to bring together
these disparate groups that have very different backgrounds.
And one's been raised with idols and different world and cosmic perspectives versus the Jewish background
that we're probably more comfortable with because of the Old Testament and things, but trying to blend them together. And, you know, a verse we didn't read, but which kind of summarizes a lot of this is, is chapter three, verse 28.
There's neither Jew nor Greek.
There's neither Bond nor Free.
There's neither male nor female for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
And if you are Christ, then you're Abraham seed and heirs according to the promise.
He's trying to lead them to this unity that brings them all the same promises and blessings.
They can all become Abraham seed and heirs according to the promise. Some even wonder if that
verse 28 is kind of a baptismal creed that some said it baptism because verse 27 says
for as many of you has been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ, and maybe a believer would say
there's neither Jew nor Greek, etc. and then be baptized. But it's that unity that we also should
be seeking within our own communities, whether that's a ward congregation, whether that's a neighborhood,
whether that's reaching to the other
that we normally don't associate with
because they're not part of our comfort zone,
trying to find a way to do that.
And I just love the promise of the fruits of the spirit
that can enrich our lives so much
and can help illuminate the path.
That we know that we're on the right path when we feel these fruits of the Spirit.
And what I love about that is that this is for all, old, young, male, female,
and we can all receive the benefit of these fruits of the Spirit.
And I just love Paul's desire to help others to come under Christ and to receive all these fruits of the Spirit. And I just love Paul's desire to help others to come
under Christ and to receive all these fruits of the Spirit
so that they can have a better life and learn how to walk
in the Spirit.
And that's certainly something I want to do ever better
in my own life.
Yeah.
Come under Christ, live a better life, enjoy the fruits of the Spirit.
That's what we're trying to do here, right John? Yeah. And as you said earlier,
keep the main thing, the main thing, and that's the gospel. That's the doctrine of Christ.
And don't stray to another gospel. There's no alternate plan of salvation. It is the doctrine of Christ. No, there is no other way.
Jared, thank you for being with us today.
Pleasure.
Now, we love to having you.
We want to thank Dr. Jared Ludlow for being with us today.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Swanson,
our sponsors David and Verla Swanson,
and we always remember our founder, Steve Sonson.
We hope you'll join us next week as we study the book of the Ephesians on Follow Him.
Today's transcripts, show notes, and additional references are available on our website, follow
him.co.
That's follow him.co.
You can watch the podcast on YouTube with additional videos on our Facebook and Instagram accounts.
All of this is absolutely free, and we'd love for you to share it with your family and friends.
We'd like to reach more of those who are searching for help
with their Come Follow Me study.
If you could subscribe to, rate, review, and comment
on the podcast, that will make us easier to find.
Of course, none of this could happen
without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nielsen, Will Stoked
and Crystal Roberts, Arielle Kuadra,
and Annabelle Swanson.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and
teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to Him.
Follow Him.
Faldelian.