Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Genesis 5, Moses 6 -- Part 1 : Dr. Jenet Erickson
Episode Date: January 14, 2022Is repentance about healing our relationship with God and ourselves? Dr. Jenet Ericson instructs that God teaches that parenting is a relationship instead of a role. Additionally, we discuss intenti...onality in family life, the power of ritual, and the strength that comes from brokenness and healing with the Savior.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. 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 EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way, we love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn
and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host and I am here with my patriarch like co-host, John, by the way.
John, we're talking about the patriarchs today, Adam and Noah and Enic.
And I thought, that's John.
You would fit right in with those awesome patriarchs.
Oh, thank you, I think.
Yes, no, you would.
No, I'm not saying you're old, because you're not old.
Oh, no, I didn't.
I did come across like that at all.
You're very patriarchal like.
Now, John, when I looked at the Come Follow Me manual
and saw that this lesson is very
focused on teaching these things to your children.
I was thinking, hey, I know an expert in parenting and teaching children.
Who's with us today?
Yes, and she's back.
Janet Erickson, or really glad to have her back.
She talked about when we had the proclamation to the world on the family,
isn't that right, Hank, and was a wonderful, wonderful time. So we're glad to have her back.
Genet is an associate professor in the Department of Church History and Doctrine.
In B.Y. Religious Education, she teaches the eternal family course as well as introduction to
family process for the school of family life and
Her research is focused on material and child well-being in the context of working family life as well as the distinct contributions of
mothers and fathers in children's development you chose well today Hank for this
This these particular
chapters
She's a research fellow of both a Wheatley institution and the Institute for Family Studies has been a columnist on
family issues for the Deseret News since 2013. I've seen a lot of those
articles and I'm just excited to have her back. You know, because I always feel
like, Hank, these are really practical things. All of us are trying to figure out
how to be the kind of family the Lord wants us to be.
And so I'm so glad we have Janet back with us today because get your notes ready
because we can maybe get some things that can help us be better moms and dads and children
and aunts and uncles and grandparents and patriarchs even.
Hey, welcome, Janet.
We're excited to have you here.
So good to be here.
Thank you, John.
Thank you, Hank.
We it's it's just a treat to be here. Thank you, John. Thank you, Hank. It's just a treat to have you. And I feel like if anyone listening hasn't gone and listened to our episode with Janet,
go back. Just hit pause on this episode. Go back and listen to the two we did with her
on the proclamation on the family. Go back and listen to those, because this will give us probably a really good setup
for what we're gonna do today.
I'm guessing that a lot of that could help
set you up in a good way to maybe understand
these episodes better.
So, Janet, we're in Genesis and Moses today.
Genesis five, Moses six. It's so interesting, Genesis 5, Moses 6.
It's so interesting that Genesis 5, I think what it illustrates for us is we needed the Prophet Joseph to receive more,
to help us know the true history of that great prophet, Enic, in terms of patterns of families.
So I'm going to just focus on my intent, I'm going to focus on Moses 6, and we can start right at the beginning of Moses 6
with recognizing that Genesis 5 provides historical genealogy
for us to follow, but Moses 6 really gives us the story,
the history.
I was noticing that as well, that you look at Genesis 5,
and you're like, oh, okay, I get the ancestry,
and then I go to Moses 6, and I get an explosion of information insight
to these that I didn't have before.
The title for Come Follow Me, Hank,
as you noted already, is teach these things
freely unto your children.
And I think just having that title tells us
how significant this chapter is.
What is it?
The Lord is telling us to teach something to our children,
to create a home that is centered around certain things and what are those things.
And if you picked one chapter out of all of scripture, this is the chapter that delineates the core truths that parents would care to teach to their children. And it starts with verse one,
and Adam harkened unto the voice of God
and called upon his sons to repent.
And I just had to stop there
because that word repent is such a challenging word.
And yet it's what Adam is told by the Lord to do.
What does it mean to call upon children to repent?
And I think repentance is so difficult
because of all the things Satan would want to distort,
it would be sin and repentance and atonement and salvation.
All those things bound together,
that is what he would care most deeply about distorting.
And so repentance is so often something we fear. We avoid
our ideas to avoid repentance. Do everything you can to avoid needing to repent and prove your
righteousness by not needing to repent and fear and shame around that word. And then we have
President Nelson kind of break open that distortion and help us understand what repentance says and when we understand it then we
can see why is it the Lord would say, call upon your children to repent. What does that mean?
It's interesting. I've loved the Givens. They're all things new, Fiona and Terrell Givens book.
And one of the things that they do is kind of tackle the historical understanding of repentance,
And one of the things that they do is kind of tackle the historical understanding of repentance,
especially from the Reformation, and that it is different than what the original Greek truths about repentance were. So for example, we have this feudalistic period where
to sin is to offend God, to offend his honor. That's how we come to understand sin. And then you go to legalism
a little later, where the idea is God demands a payment for violation of the law.
So you have Calvin saying, Jesus by his sacrifice appeased divine anger. And Luther saying, God
hath laid upon our sins not upon us, but upon his son Christ. Tindale saying, we need Christ
to save us from the vengeance of the law, his blood, his
death appease the wrath of God.
And so we developed this idea of repentance that is, that is, that is, right, that punishment
and meeting out a punishment and that it's the penalty paid to obtain pardon.
So as a child, I remember when we lived in Mexico City, seeing people on their hands and
knees kind of crawling into the cathedral and trying to understand what was happening.
And my dad explaining to us, they're paying penance for their sins.
It's the way that they feel they will become free of sin.
And their understanding of Christ and repentance and sin and salvation was all locked up in
this penance idea.
But of course, we know the Greek word for repentance is metanoel,
President Nelson recently taught us that. And what it means is this change of mind,
knowledge, spirit, and heart, even breath. Thomas McConkey will say, it means coming out of my small mind.
And so when Jesus asks us to repent,
it is all about growth,
a change of mind and heart and becoming.
Not penalty, right?
It isn't about paying penance.
It's about coming out of growing beyond, learning,
developing, even healing. Hank, you've talked about what he teaches us, how he breaks out of
these falsehoods that we have. You'll teach your students, but you just think of the woman caught
an adultery, and here she's brought before the Savior. And the accusers are intent on retributive justice, right? This is their
idea. And he's going to punish her for her sins. So you have Adam Miller explaining so well,
what the problem of human experience is how we relate to the law. And we see in the Pharisees
this distortion in how they relate to the law. Do we use the law to treat the law as a guide in the work
of love or do we use it as a means for judging ourselves, what we do or don't deserve or
judging what other people do or don't deserve. That whole idea is trapped in this false notion
of what repentance really means. And so you'll see, even as human beings, how we'll say, look,
they're the people that don't keep the law, they're the losers.
They're the people that do keep the law, right?
And I want to be one of those who does keep the laws because that makes me a winner, that
we spend time evaluating and measuring personal righteousness.
That's all a distortion of what repentance means.
It's that idea of, I've got to keep right the black marks
I wipe them off right and
That's what the whole purpose of repentance is and I want to be as free of as many black marks as I can
When in fact God is saying come to me
Come to me and grow and there's this distance to grow to become holy as they are
This is difficult because I know that parenting is one of the most intimate parts of our lives,
right, or is the way we parent.
And so we don't want anybody to come away from this going,
I'm a bad parent or I'm a bad person, right?
But it does seem to me that if you get this wrong,
if you get a distorted view, if you pass
on a distorted view to your children, in my experience, you end up with resentment instead
of repentance.
Yeah, it's interesting, Hank, that I love how you're saying that I think, so our parenting
begins with our own experience of God, our own relationship with ourselves.
And we inherit distortions around repentance. And I think that's why this is so beautiful that
this chapter starts with teaching us the truth about what repentance means. So that we as parents
begin by healing our own relationship with that word, and which is healing our relationship with ourselves
and healing our relationship with God.
Because don't you think we as parents, you said it right,
it is the most vulnerable thing in the world to be a parent.
It is the place where we are most vulnerable
to feeling judged, right?
Like a good parent, and this is the product,
and a bad parent, and you keeping the law, here we are again, right? If you're keeping the law, this is the product and a bad parent and you keeping the law.
Here we are again, right?
If you're keeping the law, this is what it will look like.
And if you're not keeping the law, this is what it will look like.
And I think this whole truth about repentance turns that totally upside down.
It's what is my relationship with the beautiful truths of repentance for me personally and
how do I live that with my children?
What's so interesting is when we are in that mode
of understanding God and our parenting and all of that,
it's why we can be saddled with pain and shame
and self-doubt and unworthiness and fear and judgment
and the Lord is not that God.
And so the Lord Jesus Christ turns that distortion on his head. And so you see the woman coming
to him. They're looking for him to give retribute, right, this justice, this penalty, right? And he says,
neither do I condemn me, go and sin no more. And we see that he is all about change and conversion and healing. He is not about discipline.
He's the God who in third Nephi says, oh, all ye, will ye not now return unto me and repent of your
sins and be converted that I may heal you? His entire ministry is one of healing. And
any interchangeably uses healing
with forgiveness of sins.
They're used interchangeably.
They're coming and saying,
we ask you to heal this person sick of the polity
and you've said forgiveness of sins,
that's what you have offered.
And teaching us, that is what this is
and how much we as parents need that deep assurance
of the Lord's walking beside us in this journey of
parenting, healing us, covering us, because the whole thing is about growth,
development, becoming whole that whole telios, right? Perfection is completion.
It's why it's so much more than paying a debt. The Bible dictionary entry on repentance sounds so different than what you might expect.
It calls it a fresh view about God, about oneself, and about the world.
That sounds so different than what you were talking about, Janet, some of those traditional definitions of a kind of a scolding tone
or mindset or punishment, retribution, you called it.
I mean, I feel like sometimes in the New Testament,
the apostles, hey, who did sin?
This man or his parents that he was born blind.
There's got to be a reason that this guy had this affliction
to show us the cause and effect. And, and that was just a mindset back then.
So I'm glad you said the president Nelson say it again met me. I remember that talk met a nail
Metanowel metanowel and he talks about that. He it's like he's quote in the Bible dictionary and new view
Yeah, a fresh view and new mind even a new way way of breathing. And that is what repentance really is.
A new way of breathing, right?
A new way of breathing, right?
Take it in.
When you get it.
Yes, yes.
So I think when Brad Wilcox, you know, he talks about, we believe in being not saved by grace
alone, but changed by grace. This is not being saved in our sins
that saved from our sins by having been changed
by his love and grace so that that sin is no longer part of us
and what a glorious path.
So the truth is we had to leave our Heavenly Parents
and I think this is what this chapter is about.
We had to leave the presence of our Heavenly Parents so that we could experience oppositional
choices so we could taste the bitter to learn to prize the sweetness of what is
good and pure. That is sin. That bitterness is sin or weakness or transgression. And we taste it so that we can know the sweetness that is
Christ. And so repentance is the process by which we grow. We return into that healing light.
We work with Christ and He in us, changing our mind and our hearts and way of being.
I think I'm hearing you say, as Adam was able to teach this so well because of his relationship
with God. Yes, right. Yes. Adam knew God really well. They were good friends. And so he was able to
teach repentance effectively. So as a parent, if I want to teach repentance effectively, I need to
have my own relationship with repentance and with God. Yes.
Yes.
In fact, the most transformative thing, I think, in parenting understanding is we have
moved from an understanding of parenting as a role to a relationship.
And so you have this powerful parenting pyramid.
It's the Arbanger Institute creates this parenting pyramid that I think captures so much.
And if you'll just picture it, here's this pyramid. At the base of it, the largest section
is the relationship I have with myself, with God, my way of being, my at one in a sense
with myself and with God. And the next layer up is relationship with spouse. The next
lay shirt layer up is relationship with child. Then it's teaching
and the very top is discipline. And as parents, we tend to
spend where do we spend most of our time?
At the top discipline. Correction, right? Like, don't you? And I
know this from myself.
It's so natural to be like, what are you doing? And correcting. And, and here that pyramid is saying,
the foundation is my understanding of my relationship with God, with myself, that healed relationship,
that relationship that then impacts how I relate to my spouse, that then impacts how I relate to my spouse,
that then impacts how I relate to this child, and then how I'm teaching them,
and then the correction is so small, a portion, because that foundation is built upon relationship,
and it begins with that relationship with myself.
And I think when we see Christ as our advocate, and I mean in our parenting,
in our personal life, in our personal way, not an advocate in that he takes the beating
for us. But the advocate in our growth, who literally, that word in Luke, when he in
agony, it's this word that captures the meaning of contest, right? It was this contest against the powers of evil
and bondage in our behalf. And so he literally works in us today at this moment overcoming,
that overcoming the shame, overcoming the fear, overcoming the weakness, overcoming the predisposition
that would harm us, the predisposition to sin. And he heals that beautiful relationship as our advocate.
And we bring that relationship into our relationship with our children.
I know that there are people listening right now
who are towards the end of their parenting
or even, you know, they have only adult children
who are listening and feeling a sense of, oh no, I did it all wrong.
What would you say to someone?
I would say right now, don't turn this off.
Don't, don't run and hide here.
It's okay, it's okay, right?
That it's okay, just keep listening.
You've said before, we're in this process as well.
You weren't supposed to know it all in the beginning.
What was I, 20 something when I became a parent?
Yeah, right.
So the Lord, I think, knew I wasn't going to do it perfectly.
So what would you say to someone who feels a little bit, you know, they're here at the end
going, oh, I taught repentance all wrong.
Great.
Oh, so I just think, here I am, right, 11 years into being mother.
I don't know.
I can't even count the number of nights that I have awakened and thought, why am I like this as a mother? Why do I treat them this way? Why am I in this
relationship? And I, whether it's my mom, who's way down the road with great grandchildren now,
every single one of us depend on that beautiful assurance that Christ is our advocate right now,
us depend on that beautiful assurance that Christ is our advocate right now, wherever that is, and His healing is retroactive. I know that whenever I heal in my relationship with Him and with
myself, it blesses my children. It doesn't matter when that happens, that healing power is felt.
And to absolutely know every state, the process, there's no other way for
us to learn this, right? This then to live it and make mistakes. That's what the whole
thing is all about. We taste the bitterness of how we relate and we prize the sweetness
of Christ. That was the whole reason we came. We have this idea of perfectionism somehow.
I want to do the right thing for my child. I
want to make the right decisions. I want to do it right. I want to have it so that they won't have
to suffer. And you know, all the questions, am I expecting too much? Am I expecting too little?
Do I do too many rules? Too not enough rules that I teach them all wrong about repentance?
Did I teach them all wrong about covenants? Right? What was I doing? And perfectionism, that whole
focus on behaviorism and perfectionism,
I love how Jennifer Finlayson 5 just totally teaches us so powerfully, but it interferes with intimacy.
That interferes with our relationships, with ourselves and our children. And we, the moment,
we can be honest about our fallibility because that is the absolute truth.
Instead of hiding behind a false
idea that there is some perfect
way that we either should have been
or should be, then we have blocked
intimacy.
And it's that intimacy that is the
core of parenting.
And our children trust us.
They, they can track our
fallibility better than anybody.
They see our hypocrisy better than anybody, right?
Like we are unmasked to them.
And the moment we are unafraid
because we know Christ is our advocate
to be fallible to them, honest about that with them.
They can trust us.
And we have given them the greatest gift, which is to
be confident in their own fallibility with Christ as their advocate. So it's just that
is the journey. And the moment we can turn and say, I have failed you because I am a fallible
person. And he is my redeemer. And he is yours. Then we've entered into a space of that level of intimacy, right?
That is the healing part of parenting.
I remember thinking this about my dad before he died.
He would be so great with my kids, so fun with them,
and they just adored him, and I'm like, that's not my dad.
That is not the same guy that raised me.
And I remember saying that to him,
you're super nice to them.
And I don't know how nice you were to us.
And he said, yeah, I probably was too harsh.
I probably was too harsh.
And he would say, I'm sorry about that.
And that wasn't the point.
I was just saying, you just seem like you've really softened up.
Yes, grown grown right. Growing that security of the assurance of Christ's work.
That's why being a grandparent sounds so fun. You've learned so much now. Now you can,
yeah, now you can be the parent you wanted to be. It takes so much compassion with ourselves,
right? Like, and the thing is compassion with ourselves and compassion with ourselves, right? And the thing is compassion with ourselves and
compassion with our children is where the power lies. It's that compassion in our own
failings, compassion with ourselves about that, right? And compassion with them. I love
this statement from William Cots in the book Winters Grace. He says, to avoid shame, and
I think this happens so much in parenting.
You better believe there's going to be all kinds of anxiety and shame around parenting.
We feel responsible for their salvation, but what they do and what they are reflects on
us.
If I'm righteous, you're going to look and act a certain way.
And if I do this right and I control this outcome, and I think when we totally throw
that out, when this is about us developing
an intimate relationship together,
this parent with child knowing you, loving you,
truly loving you, my anxiety's not infecting
that relationship, but out of that relationship, right?
And working towards that, then we come to the purpose
of parenting, that with repentance at the heart,
it's this love of repentance, right?
It's this gratitude for change.
This, it's, that's what parenting means so much, right?
And acceptance of that fallibility for you and for me and, and a gratitude for that
beautiful process of the promise of change.
Anyways, he just says, to avoid shame, one must feign perfection, even though the entire enterprise is a joke.
That is the truth about parenting, right?
Authentic intimacy requires a different way of living.
The masks come off, and the walls fall down whenever honesty is followed by tenderness and mercy.
Without such a love, we are all broken beyond repair, parents and children.
We tear that mask off.
I need Christ, you need Christ.
I am fallible, you are fallible, you are loved,
I am loved, and his work is to help us grow and become.
And that's what Adam starts with right here.
And you have articulated it today, but I feel like modeling repentance for our kids.
Those have been some tender moments for me when I can sit and as we approach family prayer,
whatever and say you guys, I lost it today and I'm sorry that I need help. You know, just those are tender moments when they can see,
I haven't got this figured out either.
And more than once with my kids, I hope this is true.
I've said, you guys, this isn't you against me
or those who make messes against those who clean up the mess.
This is all of us against the adversary. John, I loved how you brought up this is against those who clean up the mess. This, this is all of us against the adversary.
John, I, I loved how you brought up this is against the adversary. I, I've been thinking
there's some beautiful insights. I think Michael Wilcox talks about this, but just being
in the temple, you see Satan, the very first thing he wants to do is to shame us in our mortality.
Shame us in our weakness. Shame us our our emotions, and our hormones, and our traditions, and our
genetic predispositions that are part of our mortality.
And so he says, hide, and they make a covering, right?
They make a covering, Adam and Eve do.
And it's pathetic.
And the Savior says, let me offer you a covering.
That's what the whole garment represents, right? Is this covering?
And it's not a covering because he's ashamed of our mortality. I think that word covering
so beautifully is to fill the holes, to make strong again, to heal it, to make it whole.
And it's not, he's not ashamed of our mortality. He says, bring it to me.
I will fill it. I will cover it. I will I will make it whole. I will peer. And when we can be
that way with our children, it's the only honest and true way to live. Right? And it allows them
to have confidence in us, trust in us, and trust in Christ. If my parents can rely on him,
us and trust in Christ. If my parents can rely on him, I can rely on him. If we can do that together, unafraid of the adversaries efforts to shame us as a family, then we are on the path
to the Lord's healing power. Well, it's like you said, they're the experts on our... My kids...
Stins and weaknesses, right? Yeah, my kids come to hear me do a fireside.
They're listening with completely different ears than every other teenager in the room.
They're like, yeah, right, dad, you know, because they know.
And that's always humbling to have my kids.
Yeah, here would I say don't watch me too close.
I think I heard Stephen Covey say once.
Yeah, I'm teaching you some true things, say don't watch me too close. I think I heard Stephen Covey say once. Yeah, I'm teaching you some true things, but don't watch me too close. I'm still trying to
live up to what I believe as well. And I'm still I'm still drawing. So I like what you said.
They're there. What did you, how did you put it? They are the experts on our,ibles, our fallibility. Yeah, they're the experts on it.
And so you can't fake it with them.
You can't fake it.
And we're not supposed to.
I think we, that is where the distortion
around repentance comes, right?
It's a hiding, it's a hiding to one another
as other parents.
It's hiding to our children.
It's hiding, right?
And the Lord is saying, take the covering off.
Let me cover you.
Do not be ashamed of this. That's what the whole thing is about. In fact covering off, let me cover you. Do not be ashamed of this.
That's what the whole thing is about.
In fact, Janet, I'm glad you said that
because this idea of garments and caffer and the covering,
one of the things I find fascinating is that
a Liberty jail when we undertake to cover our sins
instead of having the Savior cover them.
That's the problem where we think we can cover, as, no, we can't do that, we need the Savior to cover.
And then I think it's Alma 34 without that we are exposed
to use the phrase.
Yes, Jacob too, right, says,
we will stand before God in our nakedness.
In a sense, that's how we are in front of our children, right?
Yeah, they know our fallibility.
So I love that you brought that up.
They tried to cover themselves.
No, I've got something so much better.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Jenna, as you were talking about being open and honest, I read verse two and it seems that
Adam could have a lot of shame or Adam and Eve about what happened
with Cain and Abel, but he seems quite, he glorified the name of God and he said, God appointed
me another seed, he's talking about Seth instead of Abel, whom Cain slew. He's very open and honest
about what happened. It's not like, oh, we don't talk about that. We don't talk about that moment in our family. Yeah. So true, Hank, right there for the entire world. Right. Yeah.
He's like, this, this happened. This happened in our family. And he's saying, right?
Agency is real. Cain made choices. Agency is a real thing not to hide from. And it means
that there's possibility of change is what it means. It's a glorious truth. But and that
all families have real challenges, significant challenges every family,
because that was the whole point of it to learn and grow. It's interesting that we'll talk about
in family life structure and heart, meaning when I asked my students, so what are your goals for
your future family? I just read this beautiful paper and he said, I want, the most important thing
for me is to have my children develop faith in the Lord Jesus Christ
and they were asked how they're going to do that. What do you think a student's going to
say? Scripture study every day. Family home evening, right? Family prayer. And those are
the structural pieces and they matter. They're important. They're why we're taught to do
them. They're the rituals that enable connection.
They're what Bill Dordy, my professor at University
of Minnesota, a powerful therapist, he would say
that the intentional family, and we need
intentionality in family life, that's kind of a buzzword,
to be intentional about where you're going,
and what you're doing.
The intentional family is a ritualizing family.
And the gospel Jesus Christ gives us all
these beautiful rituals. That's the word we would use in social science, right? It gives us
family scripture study and family prayer and family home evening and going to church together
and doing all the family councils and family vacations and write all of these beautiful rituals.
Those are structural pieces. But as we all know, it's the heart that has to come
through in the structure. You could do the structure and not have the heart and impede the heart,
right? And so there's that just that really important focus, I think, when we get the core right,
this repentance and vulnerability and honesty
and the Savior's redeeming power and He is our advocate and there is no shame in our mortality.
When we get that you are fallible, I am fallible, you are loved, I am loved.
Then when we do the structure, then that heart will come through.
And that's not to say, we'll talk about that.
It's not to say it's going to be
any different than Elder Benderer says when they're sitting down for family devotional and the kids
are like, you're quite breathing my air right here. And the conflict and the contention, it's
why Elder Wilford Anderson writes when he talks about learning the music. We learn the dance steps,
but we need to hear the music of the gospel. And he'll say, right, that is something we practice over and over again.
We're practicing getting the heart there.
This Christ-centered dependence on the Lord, every single one of us together.
So I love that you brought up. There's Adam, unafraid to say,
these are the hard things in our family, right?
And so when I'm talking about repentance,
that's what I'm talking about.
It's that, like if we have that core, right,
we're not, we get rid of the fear and shame
to one another and to our children.
Like we see this as a beautiful experience of growth.
And it's not to be a hidden, right?
But I think we struggle in our culture a lot with that.
And parents can feel so much hidden, right? But I think we struggle in our culture a lot with that. And parents can feel so much shame, right?
About just mortality. And which is what the adversary would want us to feel.
We have, I just, when I think of how the Book of Mormon starts and that family and how many problems that family had,
I thought, are people noticing this? Please notice this was not a perfect family and
let and let's kill dad. No, let's kill Nephi. Oh, I'm sorry, Ishmael died. Let's kill dad and Nephi.
A boy like Nephi comes from the same family that a boy like Layman and Lemieux. I hope we're
saying, look, everybody has an interesting past.
And if your kids all turn out great, great.
Can you take all the credit?
Probably not.
Can you take all the blame?
Probably not, you know.
Right.
Right.
Nor can you measure the good that comes from some of those intense struggles, right, that
seems so shameful, but that can often put us on a trajectory for growth that we would
never trade what happens because of that, right?
How we come to know the Savior, how we come to really, really know Him and feel experience
brokenness in His healing.
What were we taught by this horrible event we went through?
Yes.
Yes.
Would we trade what we were taught now?
Yes.
Yes.
It pushed us into the Savior in a way we might not have. And then
social media doesn't help when you're portraying this, this perfect family. That's a very
natural thing to do for all of us to kind of high, to kind of pretend. Here's President
Nelson. Nothing is more liberating, more nobling, or more crucial to our individual progression than
is a regular daily focus on repentance.
And he's talking about our personal lives and in our family lives.
Repentance is not an event.
It is a process.
It is the key to happiness and peace of mind.
The gospel of Jesus Christ is a gospel of repentance.
That is not a self-logging punishment kind of orientation, right?
He's saying the gospel provides an invitation to keep growing,
changing, becoming more pure.
It is a gospel of hope, of healing, and of progress.
Thus, the gospel is a message of joy.
And when we can see repentance, like to take seriously, repentance is the message of joy. And when we can see repentance, like to take seriously, repentance
is the message of joy. When we can, we can just take that so seriously, then we, I think,
are protected the heart of parenting. This is about change, growth, not hiding. Here's
verse three. And we see, I'm just going to put verse three and verse four together where
it talks about, right, Seth, this son of Adam and Eve, and then it says, and then began these men to call upon the name of the Lord and the Lord bless them.
So we're gonna learn in this chapter all about how the Lord
teaches repentance to his children, like what that looks like. And the very first thing he says,
first of all, is he's teaching us repentance is good. This is the gospel of joy. But then call upon the name of the
Lord. So Elder Christ offers and says, this divine love most recently, this
divine love should give us abundant comfort and confidence as we pray to the
Father in the name of Christ. We need not hesitate to call upon God even when we
feel unworthy. We can rely on the mercy and
merits of Jesus Christ to be heard. As we abide in God's love, we depend less and less on the
approval of others to guide us. So when we're talking about shame, right, that's this need to be
approved of by others, like to be affirmed, right? To feel like other people
think we're okay and I'm okay. And and here Elder Christ offers and is saying, this beautiful
instruction about calling upon the Lord means we can depend less and less on the approval to other
of others to guide us and depend on the absolute assurance of his love abiding in his love.
on the absolute assurance of his love, abiding in his love.
There's that first key to teaching repentance. We can call upon God right now in our sins
with our weaknesses and be heard.
And he becomes the source of our approval, in a sense.
I think that one of the things
that the adversary would want to do is tell us,
you, I love the way you were just saying that.
You can call upon God in the midst of your problems.
Not, well, as soon as I solve this,
then maybe I can approach God about it,
or I can't talk to God right now, I messed up so badly,
which is exactly the best time to talk to him. And so I think about the sequence of come unto Christ and be perfected in him.
It's not be perfected, and then you'll be able to come unto Christ.
The other day, we had a difficult experience in my own with my children and my husband,
and something painful that happened.
And we had these two children, and I could hear in their voices, this is shameful, right?
That this question, do we have to be the kind of family
that has these kinds of things, right?
And they're young, they have yet experienced to get
with how, right, pervasive, these and ordinary,
these challenges are.
But it was so beautiful that my husband say,
we can pray right now for healing from the Lord. And we don't have to be ashamed about this or
afraid of it. He is, he beckons us to come right this minute. So I love how these verses start
with that. Thank you, John, for that beautiful insight. There's a, there's a little saying I heard
when I was probably a teenager that I've always loved and that is Satan trembles when he sees the weakest saint upon her knees or upon his
knees. That's exactly what he does not want you to do is get on your knees. But
the Lord does want and you're not gonna surprise him. You're not gonna say I
did this. You did what? Yeah. He knows. When my relationship with the Lord is right, I'm
no longer maybe hungering and thirsting, thirsting after that acceptance, right, from other
people. And I remember specifically a childhood memory. I remember once the police were called
to our house. I was maybe three or four years old. There was a domestic issue going on.
And they sent, they sent us the younger kids out to sit on the curb. I remember the officer said,
you guys go sit out here on the curb and I'm going to go talk to, you know, the adults inside. And
I remember sitting there and watching all the neighbors come out and they open their front door
to see what's going on over, you know, over there at the Smiths house. And I remember that feeling
of being seen, like totally exposed to this, our problems were now very public.
And I remember that feeling.
I couldn't have been more than three years old,
but I remember that shame of this is now open to everyone.
And what you're saying, I think in verse four,
is if you can somehow stop worrying what anybody else,
the neighbors, the ward, what anybody else thinks,
and go to the Lord in all honesty, when you have that connection with him, these problems become,
they're not fun by any means, but they're not shameful. It's just being human. And Hank, that to give a child that is such a gift, right? To know you do not need to be
afraid of this mortal life experiences with Christ as your advocate, always and forever, and they don't
have to hide, right? They can develop confidence in the reality of this fallible mortal experience. We
can accept it together. We don't want to, like, right,
is a three-year-old even, I think it's so natural
to resist, right?
The realities of the fallibility and mortality
and it feel ashamed about it.
But what a gift to give them.
And Janet, just one more plug for the word you're using.
I, it's my favorite nickname of the Savior is Advocate.
He's not on the side of the law.
He's on our side.
Our Advocate for what we're going through is if we get that mindset, it changes everything
that our Advocate is by our side.
Our Advocate. everything that our advocate is by our side, our advocate. So keep using that word.
I'm so glad we stopped with that word because the Greek word, and I just learned this from a wonderful
woman. Peric, peric, clay toast or something. Yes, yes, and it means consolar as well as
advocate. So you get this. And then if we think think about and we'll talk about this a little bit later
But the Holy Ghost is the the comforter, right?
The consolar and he is also the teacher of truth
So here Hank in this moment as a child you're being exposed to the truth and
Comforted at the same time, right? That's what this advocate does. It's not to hide it from the truth,
but this consoler with us advocating for our growth and testifying of the truth. It's just so
powerful that word advocate. So thank you, stopping us there. Okay, here's verse 5,
and a book of remembrance was kept. And we're going to read this book of remembrance repeatedly. We're going to read the word repentance eight times. We're going to read book of remembrance four or
five times and in which was recorded in the language of Adam, for it was given unto as many as
called upon God to write by the spirit of inspiration. At a really powerful experience as a young
single adult, I wasn't young enough. I yearned for children and I had a really powerful experience as a young single adult, I wasn't young enough.
I yearned for children and I had a very sacred experience listening to President Iring tell
a story.
I was in graduate school yearning to be married and have children.
I'm listening to his talk in my car and he tells a story about how he taught when he was
president of Ricks College, he taught religion and he taught the doctrine of covenants. And he would tell the students that one of the requirements was to write.
And he describes this girl in the class who kind of said, why do I need to work on these,
you know, he could hear her questioning. Why is it so important that I refine my writing skills?
And she said something like, the only thing I'm going to write are letters to my children,
probably. She didn't see herself, you see herself as an academic or something like that.
So why do I need this?
And he kind of said, I was kind of, you know, I don't know how to answer this exactly.
And this young man stood up in the back of the room and he said, he said, this young man
had said very little during the class, I'm not sure he'd ever spoken before.
He was older than the other students in shy. He asked if he could speak. He told in a quiet voice of having been a soldier in
Vietnam. One day, in what he thought would be a loll, he had left his rifle and walked
across his compound to mail call to pick up the mail. Just as he got a letter in his hand,
he heard a bugle blowing and shouts and mortar and rifle fire
coming ahead of the swarming enemy.
He fought his way back to his rifle, using his hands as weapons.
With the men who survived, he drove the enemy out, the wounded were evacuated, then he sat
down among the living and some of the dead and opened his letter.
It was from his mother. She wrote
that she had had a spiritual experience that assured her he would live to come home if he were
righteous. In my class, the boy said quietly, this phrase I cherish, that letter was scripture to me.
I kept it.
Now, when the Lord is asking us to write and telling us,
here's this example of this mother writing,
revelation given to her that is scripture for her children.
When I think of the most precious things I have for my parents,
it's moments just a month
ago, Mom had a spiritual experience in a very difficult situation.
Had an answer to prayer come to her, she sent an email to us the next morning, I will
ever keep that.
It was an answer to her prayers that came from the Lord.
Nothing is more scripture than that.
And here the Lord is teaching us this beautiful pattern.
Parents write your stories of repentance, right?
Write your stories of repentance of the Lord
hearing your cry and answering your prayers
and helping you and giving you strength
and began there with Adam and Eve writing scripture.
strength and began there with Adam and Eve writing scripture. When I was younger, I wrote more because I struggled more.
If you read my journals, you'd think I was just constantly struggling.
That's what I would write is when I was struggling.
But I've never thought about, you know, sharing that writing with my children, but maybe, you know, maybe it's time to go back, look at that writing and say, here's something that may will bless my teenagers.
And that'd be very vulnerable, though. I'll be honest. That would be a very vulnerable move.
Yes.
The fact that what was going on?
You don't want to know. Yeah, President Eiring kind of changed my life
about writing in a journal because,
you know, I'd figure journals,
oh, I went on this trip, oh, I won this prize.
Your daily activities, whatever.
And here's the price of gasoline.
Or, you know, and President Iring,
I don't, I won't remember the exact phrase,
but it was kind of document the hand of God in your life.
That's why you're writing a journal.
And that's what will bless your children
and just what you're saying, Janet, repentance,
spiritual experiences, scripture, impressions,
document the hand of God in your life.
And I've, you've heard me talk about this
before, but my dad on a yellow pad, I think, wrote what is now about 90 pages. My sister-in-law
typed it up, an autobiography, his World War II experiences, his conversion, a treasure.
Treasure, absolutely priceless.
Treasure because he wrote it down and the parts that are treasure
are documenting that God was watching over my life
and helped me and my family
and difficult through the depression
through World War II, everything.
So I love that they're being told,
I mean, I just underline in verse six,
taught to read
and write. And I'm thinking about, first Nephi chapter one, verse one, therefore I was
taught in the learning of my father. And others in the book of Mormon start out. Yeah, my
father and my parents taught me to write. How important.
Right by their scriptures, their written testimonies, right? That's how they were taught to read
and write. It's interesting too, right, that it says having a language which was pure and
undefiled. And I think as we were talking about in the beginning, it was so illustrative
to me to study that history of how we understand the word repentance and the defiling of its
meaning, right? And that these
words that we pass around that we use, right, and assume, right, where we can
pass distortion right along with them, we need that pure and undefiled truth.
And I think that when the Lord teaches us through our hearts by the power of the
Holy Ghost, it is pure and undefiled.
What we learn is pure and undefiled truth.
And when we write that,
then it is language that is pure and undefiled.
On to verse seven,
now this same priesthood, okay,
so we've learned this pattern of starting with repentance,
calling upon the name of the Lord,
that this is scripture,
and that this book of remembrance,
that is the hand of God in our lives.
And then we get this reminder, now this same priesthood which was in the beginning shall be in the
end of the world also. And you had Barb Gardner on here talking about the truth about priesthood
and here we're brought again to this familial patriarchal order of the priesthood,
which we all enter into as we receive the ordinances of the temple.
Before we're even married, we're initiated in that initiatory ordinance
into this familial order of the priesthood, culminating in parents being
sealed in an altar together and doubt both of them with priesthood power.
So it's, he's saying, this is this familial order
of the priesthood by which this book of remembrance,
the stories of repentance, the truth about Christ is kept.
I, I loved the clarification of elder Renland
about what priesthood is.
For me, it was so powerful.
Would you remember him talking about the rocket and the payload?
And you have the rocket.
Its whole purpose is to deliver the payload.
And so he described the rocket as priesthood,
the payload being the atonement of Jesus Christ.
And so here, the purpose of the priesthood
is to launch, here's his words, to launch and deliver
the opportunity to benefit from Christ's atoning power.
If you think of being endowed with priesthood power as parents, it's so touching to me to
think what I am endowed with is the power to launch the blessings of the atonement of Jesus Christ to my children's lives.
I can't make them receive that. That's the beautiful gift of agency, but I can create a space
where they experience the truth of it in my life. His covenant, a toning power in my life
and come to see it, its fruits in my life.
And so here that being endowed with priesthood power, being endowed with the opportunity
to launch, right, to carry that toning power into the lives of our families, to facilitate
the delivery of the atonement into our children's lives.
And if we understand repentance, if we try to,
if we're unafraid, if we seek that vulnerability, if we seek to be exposed in honesty and receive
his power, that's what we're doing. We're accessing priesthood power to help them experience the
atonement in their lives. I love Elder Runlon's clarification. Anytime, anytime we are using the priesthood,
it is with that purpose in mind,
deliver the atoning power of Jesus Christ
into the lives of other people.
John, I remember you telling me
that your mom would often tell you guys
not to judge your dad, right?
Because he would maybe not be the most,
I don't know how you describe him,
maybe not use the best words, he's Navy
words sometimes.
Yeah, and they, I'm going to face my dad again, so I got to be careful because they were
mild, but he joined the church at age 24 and my mom was great because she would say,
look, you be careful, you don't know where he came from.
And it was kind of these are my words. Now he had a different starting line, you know,
and you don't know where he came from. You be careful. Now you can't use that word.
Yeah, you don't get to use that word. Yeah, but I think Janet, that's another instance of all of us are in this together.
And my mom is saying, look, dad's in this together with us.
And he's working on it too.
And be careful because he's trying so hard.
And we saw that to this day, I'll find an old book of my dad's and find a note inside to himself
encouraging himself to try harder and to be better and
uh
It was never I've arrived
You know, yeah, it was we're all we're all in this together. Sorry. So yeah, so beautiful thanks Hank for bringing that up
So beautiful. Oh, it just seems like that. That was your mom trying to show you the access to the
atonement that everybody in this family has. Yeah. And you know, mom's mispying air stock probably
walked personally with a handcart, but never mentioned it. I mean, that's that's my mom and,
and she's saying, look, he came from a different place, so be careful, he's trying so hard,
and he was, and it made me love both of them
in moments like that.
I love the Savior to say, he's working with all of us.
Yes, he's working out our salvation, all of us.
And as an interesting as parents,
you'll think, I'm gonna work out their salvation. And about four years in, you're all the same, you're like, wait a minute, they're working out my salvation. This was all about me learning, right?
This brother, that's what's going on here. So beautiful. Well, verse eight is the other core truth. So we've had this repentance theme, this recording that, recording repentance in our lives for
our children.
And then you get to verse 8.
And the Lord is going to do that most magnificent thing of establishing his relationship with
us, of saying, telling us who we are, who's we are, our identity, our purpose.
So here's verse 8, right?
A genealogy was kept of the children of God.
These are not just children of this parent and this parent. These are the children of God.
And the book of generations tying us back. That's why genealogy is so beautiful.
It takes us right back to God, the father, God, the mother, as our parents. Then in verse 9, in the image of his own body,
male and female, which tells us heavenly parents created he, them and blessed them.
And called their name Adam. Here they are, these direct, this direct lineage of God. Do you remember
when President Nelson, there's another general authority who spoke
about being in a training session with then elder Nelson, President of the quorum of
the 12th. And the question was asked, how do we help these individuals struggling with
pornography? It was recognized that this is a ubiquitous challenge. What do we do? And
his profound answer, it was simple. It came right away, teach them their identity
and their purpose. You think about this powerful who you are telling telling this person.
And because this is who you are, there's that beautiful statement of of President Packer,
you are a child of God. He is the Father of your Spirit. Spiritually
you are of noble birth, the offspring of the King of Heaven. Fix that truth in your mind
and hold to it. However many generations in your mortal ancestry, no matter what race
or people you represent, the pedigree of your spirit can be written on a single
line, you are a child of God.
And here the restoration, when Joseph sees them, Joseph my son, it just turns all the
blackness of the apostasy upside down, right?
That whole idea that this is a God with no feeling, with no body parts or passions.
He can't be affected by our human suffering.
You were created out of nothing and there's such a distance between you and God that it's
unsurpassable. Right, you can't know him and here your nature is so totally corrupted.
All you can hope for is a rescue. This is what Christians believed.
And then to be told, you are my child. Literally, this distance
is not only surpassable, it's the whole intent of the whole plan is for you to come and
become as I am. And how that just knowing parental love, right? How do we feel when children,
you know, disobey, youbey? It's not an anger.
It's an anger for the hurt that they suffer because of it.
It's not an anger because of retribution of dishonoring of us.
Sometimes we have to work out of some of those feelings, right?
But this divine love that is grounded in parenthood, in literal parent, you are me.
You are the other of me.
And hear the Lord just establishing right at the beginning. I want you to know who you are
as we talk about repentance and this plan of salvation.
So Jenna, what I'm hearing versus 8 and 9 is
if I have a child who's struggling with something,
don't shame them for that problem
and noble them by teaching them who they are and their
purpose.
Yes.
Yes.
Lift them out instead of, you know, kind of the natural thing might be to say, that's evil
stuff, that's, you know, you're involved in something terrible.
Yes.
Which hank because when they are, we feel shame.
Isn't that the whole irony, right?
It's like we're so caught up in how they are a reflection of us.
So when we, you know, working on the isopronography, if a parent learns that their child's struggling
with pornography, the shame that comes with that, right?
So the shame for the child and the shame for what kind of a parent has a child who's
struggling with this, right? And all the shame around shaming our mortality
and shaming our mortal experience,
and instead of what you're saying, which is,
if I cannot infect this dynamic
with my own insecurity as a parent, right?
If this isn't about me and what's reflected on me,
but it's about you and my love for you
and my desire to help you grow and my care
not because you're not because in your choice not to serve a mission, it's about me or you're
struggle with this, it's about me, but it's because of what it means for you. How can I help you?
Then we're in a place of power to really see and help them, right? Because it's not infecting
it. As Jennifer Finlayson
Fife's words, I get, I infect my relationship all the time with my own insecurities about how
their behaviors or their choices reflect on me. And that has so much to do with, right, my own,
my own relationship with God. That's why it comes back to that foundational part of the pyramid is
me at peace with my relationship with God and his advocacy for me.
And then I relate to my children from that place. And I'm going to go back again and again to healing that as I'm relating to them in their journey with the bitterness of sin and weakness so that I can truly be a help and a guide to them. That's a lot of weight to put on a child
if they not only have to live their life,
they're trying to live yours now,
as well because you're reflecting me
to the rest of the world, so there's a lot of pressure.
I think every single parent is experiencing you are
a reflection of me.
And so working on overcoming that so that we can really truly see them
and help them sort out the path of truth for their life. That's the foundation.
Them sorting out, not choosing it because of pleasing me, not choosing it out of defiance against me.
Like I'm going to set my own path, but choosing out of truth to the best that is in them.
I think there's
quite a bit of family data that would say there's power in an identity, right? Like I belong
to this family and I live up to that. So you'll hear parents, right? Remember who you are
when you leave the house. Remember you're this, right? And I think at some point every single one of us
know that identity is not enough, right? It is an identity bound in God. I, a child of God, as the
mother, you, a child of God, as the child, and that identity is the only, absolutely secure and
true identity, right? And so that's what the Lord, He does that right here. So beautiful.
We say, remember who you are, and don't let that get you down. That's what we say.
Thank God. I love it. My wife tells a story about one of her friends I guess growing up because
they always heard their parents say to the other siblings remember who you are when they left and
they didn't but they didn't know the meaning. What they didn't know what their parents meant by that.
So one time when my wife's friends siblings were leaving the other younger kids yell, don't forget your name.
Because that's what they thought.
What mom and dad mean is don't forget your name.
Kids are always going out there forgetting their names. So remember who you are. Don't forget your name. Now we're gonna get in these next verses in verse 10 11 12 13. We're getting this beautiful genealogy
And then we get at the end of 13 another phrase we're going to get repeatedly so it's not unlike this book of remembrance
It's not under not unlike this identity grounded in God. Here's this next one
Taught his son Enis in the ways of God.
That what that means to be taught.
That's going to come up a couple more times, right?
Yes, it's going to happen repeatedly.
What does it mean to be taught in the ways of God?
And I think that gets back to that whole idea of structure and heart.
And it is really powerful, the research on family life and the power of what we would call routines and rituals.
So routines are the things you do to keep family functioning well.
You know, you eat dinner and you brush your teeth and you kids get their homework done and you wake up and you,
and for some families that's making your bed and keeping a house of order, those kinds of things are important, those structural pieces.
If my kids are listening, can we repeat that list one more time?
Remember all these things. Do your homework. Make your bed.
Yes. Book up your course.
Rush your teeth.
Rush your teeth.
You heard it from an expert, guys.
This is important.
And those routines are very important, but then the other side is what we call rituals.
And rituals are very fascinating.
Rituals are those things that are,
so I'll say to students,
how do you say goodbye
when you tell your parents goodbye on the phone?
And many of them have phrases that they repeat, right?
They say, are there any birthday traditions
that are just your families?
And the goofy things that families do, right?
Or movie quote patterns, or dancing it around, you know,
doing dishes together, or all the things,
these rituals that establish identity that are so important in a healthy emotional climate.
So you need these what we call rituals of connection. And I think when we talk about family prayer,
that's a ritual of connection. It can be routine, right? We know the difference, or it can serve that purpose
of being a ritual of connection, family prayer
and family devotional and family home evening.
And they, even sitting down and having dinner,
dinner is one of those that comes up
just ubiquitously in research as having a powerful benefit
to children.
I could go on for four hours about the research on family
dinner. There's something powerful about sitting together you're kind of in a
place of commonality because everyone has to eat and so there's like a
reduction of hierarchy that way. There's different kinds of conversations, even
linguistically it's very powerful because you'll have narrative talk where
children are telling a story about what happened and dad and mom are bringing in news or talking about
professional and they're bringing in a different kind of vocabulary.
You have that in the CASA research of the Center for Addiction and Substance Abuse, there
is one predictor that comes up every single year when they collect that data as the thing
that predicts less likelihood of substance abuse for adolescence.
And it's the number of family meals in a week.
So it's the number of times they have eaten dinner in that week as a family.
You're sitting down together.
Even if, even if it is, your brain can open the bags of Wendy's who got the single, who
got that, but, but you're sitting down together.
I'm fascinated by that.
The family sacrament is what one researcher will call it.
And so it's a sitting down looking at one another,
hearing one another, talking to one another.
And we all know it's not always a fun occasion, right?
Like, I think my mom with five little children,
like peas all over the place, people throwing things,
right, you spilled 95 times at that meal,
but there is so much power in the
consistency of that ritual. And it has ritual elements where you sit. What many of my students have
a ritual where they shared their high, their low, you know, their, their ring cloud, their son, right,
at the, at the meal, who they served or what they learned, or, and these are all ritual elements
that if they don't
happen, it's like when you try to put that young child to bed and you don't tell them the story
that night, and they cannot go to bed, because that ritual has been so court to their emotional
well-being, you can't mix it up. If you don't, if you leave out the birthday tradition, right,
this one year, that child feels like, I'm alienated, I don't belong. These rituals are
very powerful. And so when we talk about this whole idea of in the ways of God, rituals that
orient us to God are so important in family life. And again, can the structure get in the way of
the heart? Yes, it's why that focus on what is the heart, but God and Christ and this centerpiece of our lives,
they redeem us. You know, that retaining that, even as you're like,
get in here for family parents, sit down and please be quiet and quit interrupting.
And we're practicing, we're practicing over and over again that process.
But I love that family research that helps us understand what it means to be growing up
in the ways of God and the power that rituals can have in that.
Even when they're failed, even if it feels like there was 15 years of failure of this family
devotional ritual or this family meeting ritual, right?
We tried.
We were consistent.
We wanted them to know we cared about them hearing about God and that we were together in that.
Somebody described a family home evening as an argument that ends and begins with a prayer
or something.
Yes.
I don't know when it was.
There's some time along in my parenting, I think it was my wife who taught me, look,
we're not just after getting the room clean.
We're not just after getting a prayer said.
We're not just after eating a meal.
We're after building relationships.
So make sure that your goals, you know, when you go into these rituals, would you say,
you got to have the right goal in mind.
The goal is not to just get the room clean.
The goal is to build the relationship and get the room clean.
You could get the room clean and destroy the relationship.
I'm an expert at those kind of things. Actually, Hank, and I know all this data.
And it is, that's why I think it takes compassion for ourselves in this journey.
Because you, and that the purpose of life really is to taste the bitter, to prize the sweet.
So Hank, you and I, who are like trying to get that room cleaned, and I have this experience
where I'm over and over again, get picked that up, right, and ruining the relationship
in the process.
But I'm learning from that experience of bitterness.
You know what?
I'm going to change that.
And I want to do that differently.
And I might do it 400 times wrong, right?
But God is good and gives us this mortal experience to learn through bitterness,
to prize the sweet. And sometimes that the bitterness can cloud our view of God's love for us,
but all around us we see, right? Here is hope again. We're going again. We're going to work on this
being about the relationship, this about being about intimacy and connection and knowing you and loving you in a better way.
So let the milk spill.
Yes.
That's why my mom took on the motto, have a laugh.
That was our family motto when the milk spill.
Just have a laugh. Just say it right out before we get upset.
We're just going to have a laugh.
There it goes.
Here it goes.
Here we go again.
Here's 14 and 15.
And we see this shift and hear the Lord, right?
He's going to teach us about what had happened.
Here he told these children, now aren't my children, the direct descendants of heavenly parents.
And then it says, and the children of men were numerous.
And in those days Satan had great dominion and raged in their hearts and every man's right hand
was against his own brother and seeking for power. Here they'd lost their
identity they had rejected that identity of being from God and they're seeking
for power not God's power not priesthood power.
He promised that priesthood power his power but seeking another way and how deeply painful it's
why in Moses 7 right. We'll see him weeping. Why is he weeping and it's not your sins against me.
He's weeping for their sins against one another. How deeply painful that is.
They hate their own flesh.
In verse 15, Janet, this idea of,
here's the ideal and here's the poison.
The poison comes in, it's anger.
Dominion, he raged in their hearts and came wars and bloodshed.
Yes, and the seeking of power. Yeah, that's so beautiful to think this ideal and then this
what happens in real mortal life, right? And as you said, John, within one's own family, in Lehigh's case, right?
There was this raging.
And the Lord never gives up.
He doesn't say, well, goodness, right?
Like, what can I do with these people if rejected?
And now they're hating one another, and the pain that it causes me, so I just pull out.
No way.
He keeps coming back.
Repent, turn. And if it's not in this generation, in Lehigh's case, he keeps coming back repent, turn.
And if it's not in this generation, in Lehigh's case,
he's bringing them back generations later, right?
Bringing them back, fulfilling that covenant relationship,
never quitting in seeking his children to follow in his path.
It's hard enough to be a parent and then adding an adversary
who is deliberately trying to poison your family.
Oh, right.
I think the Lord gets it.
This is tough.
Yes.
I love that.
And there was, there was no other way, right?
Like we have to experience that bitterness to know the sweet, to choose as the given
say, to choose Christ with eyes wide open.
I love that. When we experience bitterness and family
life, when we experience bitterness in our own lives, and we all do, it's part of the plan,
so we can choose Christ with our eyes wide open. We know the pain and we will choose differently.
I've noticed, maybe I'm being a little too vulnerable here, but I've noticed when my relationships
with my older children get tense, it's usually an idea of power, right?
Like an honor.
And you're insulting my ego, my pride, and I'm going to... I'm going to set you in your place,
right? You can't talk to me that way. I'm your parent. That feels like verse 15, Satan rages in
the hearts of people they're seeking for power over their own family. I will never forget the first time our daughter or a list said no to me really strongly.
She kind of said no.
Just a wonderful gift to me because she is an independent personality, not a pleaser.
That's been very helpful for my growth.
But I will never forget that first time when I was like,
I can't believe you just said that, right?
That feeling has happened over and over again.
And it is.
If I'm honest with myself, it's not,
I'm not thinking about what she's communicating
about her own feelings.
I'm thinking about what that means for me.
And right, my own ego or my own insecurity
being, right, kind of infecting my understanding of her.
And I can't be. And that's why
that beautiful healing has to happen over and over again with parents, because that is absolutely natural
to feel that way. And if we're coming back to the base of that pyramid, am I being truthful about
what's really happening here? And this is really about me instead of about what she's trying to
communicate about her needs and herself and her growth.
And just how we, it's just a growing process
to not get in the way of that experience
of parenting, right, our own selves.
Do you guys remember getting hit by your own kids
for the first time when they're maybe two or three
and they're mad at you and you're holding them
and they just soften you upside the head?
And you're like, you.
Yes. Yes. Yes. And I can get those feelings, right? So if you have side to head, you're like, you.
Yes.
Yes.
And I can get those feelings, right?
As a mother who's giving a lot, right?
And trying to serve a lot, you can get into that.
You owe me something, right?
Mindset.
And I think it is a power dynamic there.
Okay. Here's 21 again.
And Jared taught Enic in all the ways of God.
There's that phrase coming up again.
What does that mean to teach the ways of God?
And it is that path of repentance.
Then 22 and 23, I love this.
And John, you actually brought this up a little bit before,
but here's that genealogy of the sons of Adam
who was the son of God. It just wants over and over again.
This is who you are. You are a child directly of God. That is so core. And then that next verse,
and they were preachers of righteousness and spake and prophesied and called upon all men everywhere. What are we going to hear?
Again, that calling upon to repent and is the opposite of that shame world.
It's come and grow with Christ. Come and be honest about yourself.
Come and speak the truth. Remove the shame. Come and be changed.
And then it says, and faith was taught unto the children of men. You can
never teach repentance, right, without the very first truth being faith. I loved hearing
Carrie Mielstein. You had him on that very first podcast of this year. And that absolute assurance, I can do my work. This is my work and my glory.
I can do my work. I can do that work in your life. I can do the work that work in your children's
lives on me. And you both just shared so powerfully that reliance on God. And so whenever we teach repentance, the foundation is faith in His belief in us, faith in our
belief in Him and what He can do in us. Please join us for part two of this podcast.
this podcast.