Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Genesis 6-11, Moses 8 -- Part 2 : Dr. Krystal Pierce
Episode Date: January 30, 2022Dr. Krystal Pierce returns, and we discuss the wickedness in Noah's day helps us prepare for the Second Coming, the importance of covenants, and how tokens of covenants allow us to remember the A...tonement and 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 Producers/SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
So another great thing about the arc in verse 15, we do get some numbers here about size
here and dimensions.
So it talks about qubits, which is not really a measurement we use today.
A qubit, even though it kind of changed over time, was typically equal to a forearm.
So from like the tip of your finger to your elbow,
that was a qubit.
And so it's usually around 18 inches.
You can actually kind of figure out how big the arc was,
by kind of just working out how much a qubit is.
And so the numbers we get are,
it was about 450 feet long, it's huge, 75 feet wide, 46 feet deep.
And we're looking at actually like the entire sort
of volume or span is one and a half football fields.
So this was enormous.
And you think about NOAA building this.
Like once again, it wasn't easy.
We don't realize how it would have been for NOAA
and his family to keep going and to keep trying to do this and to keep building even with being surrounded by wickedness and how the flood even for them would have been very scary.
But always having that knowledge that the Lord was going to protect them and prepare them and help them. And some days you'd go have to wonder is it really going to flood? I can just see
so many parallels to our own life of why am I taking all this time and effort to do this
when the sun is shining. Exactly. It's it's hard. Sometimes we don't see the end or we don't
keep the end in sight. Oh, I wonder if that very conversation was going on when people were
watching him build. As we've kind of seen depicted in
movies and stuff, they're all thinking he's foolish building this thing because it was maybe fair
weather. Yeah, I can imagine they were trying to kill him. Just trying to do this. Just trying to
build this thing and things get so awful, so bad that sort of the last chance.
Now, something another really interesting thing in verse 16,
it says that he was told to make a window in the arc.
And the word here used as window is the Hebrew word so har,
so har.
And this word actually means something like light.
People sort of translate it as, okay,
so he put a window in, so they would have light.
But there's actually a really interesting...
Oh, this is like my favorite footnote ever.
I love this one too.
And I had never even realized that they had put this in as a footnote here and connected it.
I always share this with my students.
So there's this sort of Jewish rabbinical tradition that when God created Adam, one of the
things he did was he put his light, God's light, in a stone so that Adam would always have
the light of God with him.
And Adam passed this stone down.
He passed it down until it got to Noah, and the tradition goes that Noah used it to
light the ark.
And so the so har was actually this lighted stone that Noah had.
And then the tradition continues.
He passed it down.
It eventually went to Moses who used it to light the tabernacle.
And so that there was always this light of God with the prophets and being passed down.
And of course what's incredible about this is when we think of lighted stones, what do
we think?
Ether.
Brother of Jared, yeah.
And when we read about the story of the brother of Jared, and he goes to the Lord and he
says, are we supposed to travel in darkness?
These boats are airtight like the ark.
How are babbles immediately after this?
And his boats are compared to the ark, and brother of Jared even mentions the flood is
mentioned, and so they're very well aware of what happened before.
And you know, it's possible,
we don't know for sure, of course,
that this is kind of where he got this idea
of this lighted stone and the light of God.
And you said this is a Jewish tradition?
Yeah, the rabbi's kind of came up with this idea
of this is what the so
hard is because it doesn't it doesn't mean window. There's another word for
window and a window in the arc is mentioned later, but it's a different word. It's
interesting here. It's almost like take this, put this in the arc. It's going to
give you light. But I always love that story that maybe that's what he did. He
he wondered what Noah did and he did a search for the scriptures, perhaps,
to find an answer of how he could have light in the barges.
I think it's such a fun connection there.
So I'm glad you brought that footnote up.
It's one of my faves.
It's incredible.
And of course, the brother of Jared
goes up with these stones for the Lord to touch them.
And then he comes back down,
and he has two extra, right,
as the Jerman thumb him with them.
And so there's this whole idea of God giving us stones
or different objects to help us in whatever way we need help.
Especially in the Old Testament and the Book of Mormon,
they have all these objects that represent things,
like the Leahona and the Yerman Thumam,
and even the sort of Laban represents things.
And it appears and it comes out,
we seem to be less physically, tangibly oriented,
although we do have some things.
And we'll talk about this, tokens and symbols of the covenant that we have as well. So Noah builds
and loads the ark, and kind of I think the big takeaway with this, and we've already kind of
talked about this, that Noah had to put in some work to prepare for the flood. And the Lord gave him all of the information, everything he needed to be ready when the
flood came.
And I like that there's, it wasn't just spiritual work.
Noah had put in the spiritual work.
He was listening to the Lord.
He was doing what he was told, but there was also temporal physical work to prepare for
the flood that's coming.
But you can liken this to our own work to prepare for the flood that's coming. But you can liken this to our own work to prepare for floods
in what way has the Lord or the prophet prepared us
for upcoming trials in our own life.
How do we prepare both physically and spiritually
so that when the flood comes, we make it through
and we're Noah on the other side.
Kind of the greatest
part about this is Jesus actually comments on Noah preparing for the flood and those
who didn't prepare. So if we turn to Luke 17 verses 26 and 27, Jesus actually talks about
that when the flood came during Noah's time, the people were not
prepared and they were destroyed because of that. He compares this with kind of
the end of the world situation, the end of mortality, the judgment, his return
when he's going to come back. And I love that he compares this to mortality. Now
is the time to prepare for when he's going to come back. And I love that he compares this to mortality. Now is the time to prepare
for when he's going to come back. Now is the time to prepare for when your mortality is going to
end. We see this theme all through Noah. We already talked about the life span reduction and
the search for immortality. And even the savior brings us out that this is a message of the flood.
Even the Savior brings us out that this is a message of the flood. Be ready, be prepared, because the floods are coming, whether it's right now,
or it's when he comes back again, we need to be prepared.
In the very first paragraph of the Come Follow Me manual, it says,
generations of Bible readers have been inspired by the story of Noah and the flood,
but we who live in the latter days have special reason to pay attention to it.
When Jesus Christ taught how we should watch for his second coming,
he said, as it was in the days of Noah,
so it shall be also at the coming of the Son of Man.
That's Joseph Smith Matthew.
That's exactly what you're saying, though.
Yeah, and it's not only preparing,
but I think it's also a reference to the widespread wickedness
that was in place around Noah. And once again, this idea of like, how do you make it through that
when you're surrounded by this? How do you still prepare? How do you still build an arc
when people are trying to kill you and stop you and hurt you? How do you keep going? How do you survive
and prepare? How do you build a prepare? How do you build a home?
How do you build a life prepared for the second coming
in a world that doesn't love, yeah, actions like that.
That's kind of part of what we're supposed to take
from these stories.
And even though maybe we don't feel like the world
is at that point yet, we're told it will be
and it's getting there.
And I also think sometimes people from the past might look at our world today and think we're told it will be and it's getting there. And I also think sometimes people from
the past might look at our world today and think we're there when they see what's happening.
But because we grew up in this world and we're used to it, we don't see it as well as maybe they
do. How widespread wickednesses and the problems that we have today. So kind of give some perspective,
I think. I wanted to mention, it says that he pitched it
within and without.
Is that mean he like, he sealed it?
Yeah.
So this pitch is referring to like,
bitchamin or like, tar, he made it waterproof
is basically what it's saying.
Tight like into a dish.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And I love how the Jaredite boats are compared to the arc.
That's interesting to me just when I think about my own home.
I'm going to give my children the tools they need.
I'm going to pitch it within, teaching my kids, and then pitch it without.
I'm going to create some distance between my home and this world.
I'm going to protect it, right?
Good idea.
Coming in.
I'm not just going to protect you from the outside influences.
I'm going to arm you inside, within and without.
We're going to keep our source of light inside our, our so hard to gather around the so
hard everybody.
Yeah.
Yeah, I like that.
I think it definitely works.
I mean, the arc can take on so many different meanings.
And also, I think the arc in a way
shut out the outside influence. And no matter what people were saying on the outside,
no one was focused on his family and saving his family and what's on the inside. It's the same
with our houses. Whatever is happening on the outside, if we can keep the inside in our house,
place of worship, like a temple, the spirit's there, then it won't matter what's happening on the outside.
Crystal, I was also thinking of like building a massive structure
is kind of like a testimony.
It's a very public thing that you're doing
and people are, what are you doing?
Driving on I-15 lately,
we've watched the Oram temple kind of grow out of the ground there.
And to me, it's almost like, look at that massive structure that is just bearing testimony to a second coming. The king is going
to come. I feel like as I've watched that, as I've driven by watching the Oram temple
go up, that it feels almost like a similar Genesis type moment, where wow, look at that.
That they're really serious about this whole life after death thing, aren't they? Right? And
Noah's really serious about this flood coming. He's not joking around. He really believes it.
I love that you brought that up. We live not too far from the temples, that temple. So I drive by it
every day on the way to BYU. Like you, every time I drive by, I almost kind of stop and pull over
just to see what they've added or what's coming or there's this anticipation of it's going to be done and then that that will be my temple.
I don't know if you guys feel this way that this sort of my temple type of thing and they're building it and they're building it for me and for other people too, but the arc, I think it's a good parallel. It was built to save people. It was built to save the righteous people.
That's the same with temples.
Writers people, whether they're still here
or they're they've passed on.
So I like that.
These big structures.
When it comes to the second coming
or when it comes to families being together forever,
we definitely put our money where our mouth is.
It's, we believe.
We believe we're willing to invest heavily into this belief.
I think it was one of the things that was a blessing during the pandemic when people
were a little uncertain about what was next to have President Nelson keep announcing new
temples just like, Oh, okay. Yeah. New art.
New art. New art's just going concern. Yeah
Yeah, even when the temples closed we were still building new temples. So there was a hope
It's almost like this knock-home thing, right?
Sad that those temples are closed and we can't go but we have hope because we see they're building more temples And that must mean we will return to the temple someday the same thing I think
return to the temple someday. The same thing, I think. And we can kind of turn to chapter seven now and talk about the flood. It rained for 40 days and 49th. We read as we go through
this chapter, the water covered the mountains. In verse 23, every living substance was destroyed.
It mentions humans, but we also have animals creeping things. So this is sometimes a reference to insects,
birds, plants, everything. When you think about that, it's sort of devastating. And like
I said, it's difficult sometimes to see the mercy in the flood. Maybe it's easy to see
Noah and the mercy given to Noah, which we can talk about here, but we'll also get to
the mercy for all of these other things that were destroyed in the flood.
So in verse 24, the waters have prevailed for 150 days. So it rained for 40 days. They've been in
the ark just for 150 days, you know, floating on the waters. So it's been almost six months now.
And it did think of like how difficult it would have been for Noah and his family, taking care of
these animals and everything that
they're doing. When we turn to chapter 8, we get the middle of the flood narrative. So we have
chapter 6, 7, 8, and 9, and the end of 7, the beginning of 8 is the middle of the flood narrative.
It's been six months, we know they're in the ark for about a year, they're half way there,
for about a year, we're halfway there. And what's great is we're also in the middle
of a kiasmus at this point.
And so chapter six through nine are actually,
there's a literary device here used that's called a kiasmus.
And I'm sure you guys know about this.
And because it appears in scripture all over the place,
but let me talk about it a little bit.
For our listeners, let's figure no one knows.
So a kiasmus is something it's a literary device and it's basically inverted parallelism,
which probably doesn't help describe it very much. But basically, it's named after the
letter key or chi in the Greek alphabet, which is, it's basically an x. We can talk about it as an x. In a story,
it's at the beginning of the story, and the end of the story match up with each other. They have
a similar theme. And if we're talking about scriptural verses, it means the first verse,
and the last verse are very similar. And then the second verse, and the penultimate verse, or the
second to last verse, is very similar. And you work your way inside to the center of the kiasmus or the center of the key, the
X. And this is a literary device that it shows up in Hebrew and Greek and Latin texts
all over the place.
We even used it today.
Martin Luther King Jr. used it.
Abraham Lincoln used it.
And the whole point of this device is it's a mechanism
the author uses to show you the focal, central, important point of the story. It's
to point that this is the moral of the story. This is what you're supposed to
take out of the story. And we get this here. We have a chiasmus from 6 to 9 and part of this. And we get to this point. And the first verse in chapter 8 says,
God remembered Noah. And this is what we're supposed to focus on. God remembered Noah, and not
only Noah, but every living thing. What he ends up doing is sending a wind to pass over the earth
so that the waters subside and the waters start to go away.
And, you know, this is the culmination.
And I love that this isn't the end, right?
They still are in there for another six months.
And I love that this happens in the middle of the flood, in the middle of the trial,
in the middle of this devastating time.
It says, God remembers Noah and he sends the trial. In the middle of this devastating time, it says, God remembers Noah and he sends
the wind, the wind to make the earth start to rise again out of the waters.
So the author wanted us to focus on this point. God's mercy.
For us too, when we're in the middle of our floods and trials, God remembers us.
He doesn't just give us a trial and say, okay, good luck. We'll see you on the other side if you make it through.
He's there the whole time, and he remembers Noah. And one of my favorite parts is if we do turn back to Moses
and look at chapter 7, I love the way Enic describes this in, if we go down to verse 43 in Moses chapter 7.
Enic says he saw Noah build the ark and then he says the Lord smiled upon it and held
it in his own hand.
And I love this idea that this huge structure, several football fields long, is still being
held by the Lord.
Noah and his family and the animals in the ark are still being cared for, watched over,
remembered. I think sometimes when we're in the middle of a flood or a trial,
we might not feel this way. We might not see the Lord's hand or feel the Lord's hand helping us.
And I think this is supposed to be the major point that he's still there. He still cares about Noah.
He still cares about us.
And he'll never abandon us ever, ever, no matter what's happening or what's going on.
You know, oftentimes when we look at death and destruction, we have a different view of
it than God does.
When these people animals and all these things die, they don't die to him.
They're simply moved to a different location, maybe even a better classroom or a different classroom where they can learn and be taught.
So the floods came and swallowed up the wicked.
That's most of 743, but it's not the idea of God's done with them.
And our doctrine God is just moving them to a different classroom.
It's easy to see the mercy with Noah. Well, he survives the flood and he gets to come out.
It's harder to see the mercy for those who don't survive the flood. That's what something we have to
talk about. Because like I said, the flood narrative is about mercy. But with Noah sending out
the dove and the dove bringing back this olive leaf. And the symbolism there is huge,
right? What the dove symbolizes, peace and can also symbolize the Holy Ghost, do you
think, at the baptism of Jesus. And then the olive tree, and what that symbolizes, the
dove brings back a leaf from the olive tree. And the olive tree is symbolic of new life,
renewal, starting over again.
And you know, this is because olive trees are honestly really hard to kill and cut down.
And even if you cut off all the branches or all the branches are destroyed, the roots always survive.
And new shoots can grow up out of the roots.
And this is seen as a symbol of new life, a restart, a refresh,
almost a recreation, and then of course we know that they can be grafted as well,
and if a tree is dying, a new branch can be grafted in and saved the tree as well.
So we get to this point where the flood, instead of representing destruction and death,
it represents a fresh start, a cleansing, a recreation even. What's great
about this is 6-9 and this talking about the flood really parallels with creation in Genesis 1-3.
We get this watery chaos at the beginning. And out of the watery chaos, through the winds,
sent from God, The dry land appears.
The water recedes, and then the people in the animals are brought forth, either through
creation or they leave the ark.
And then there's a reference to a blessing and this sort of commandment go out and multiply
and replenish the earth.
The same thing that was said to Adam and Eve was said to the people on the ark when they left the earth. The same thing that was said to Adam and Eve was said to the people on
the ark when they left the ark. So it's almost like this renewal, this fresh
start, a cleansing has happened. And that's mercy that even though we sin, we can
start over. We can become a new person every single time we repent. We are given this chance.
I love this because we look at baptism as a cleansing, a new beginning,
that we become a new person, a different person. And I love that you brought up first
Peter because it's like into baptism. And it says, the people were saved by water. And I don't
think we would ever consider the flood that people were saved by the flood,
but if you look at it as a cleansing
and becoming something new and something better,
all right, that's kind of our whole point,
is every time we repent, when we go through baptism,
it's so we can change and so we can become better
and get closer to heavenly Father
and what he wants us to be.
And then it says the like figure,
like that's how we're saved by water as well.
It's a really cool thing in first Peter there.
If I'm remembering it, right?
Yeah, and I love that.
I love that it's compared to that.
And that's mercy right there, that we get that chance.
And repentance is really victory over chaos.
It's victory over sin, victory over corruption.
And through repentance, you know, we're cleansed.
And like Jesus said, you are born again.
You have to be born again.
And again, and again, and again, and again.
Alma says, born of God.
Or King Benjamin says, become new creatures.
However you want to describe it,
every time we repent, we go through a cleansing
and we become someone new.
And this is what the flood represents.
All of these different ways that we do this.
And thank heavens, it's possible.
That's why I love what you brought up about the word repentance
is also being hope.
I think of Elder Holland saying that repentance
perhaps the most hopeful
and encouraging word in the entire Christian vocabulary. That it's not a scolding word
necessarily, it's a hope. I can repent. I think heavens, I can repent.
It's incredible. It's not easy, just like the flood wasn't easy, but what comes out on
the other side can be even better than it ever was.
Building arcs, the size of one and a half football fields is not easy.
This reminds me of Christo, you know, Richard Crookston in our computer support program at BYU.
He would just, if I told him the Earth had gone bad, he said, well, have you tried turning it off and on again? Right? That's that's kind of what the Lord did here. He's
like, I'll just turn it off and on again and see. Yeah. Did that with my laptop this morning?
Yeah. You flooded. Yeah. And I like how you, you brought up that it wasn't the end for
them. They weren't just destroyed and they're gone forever. Their time and mortality was
over. It was time to move on.
And now it's a fresh start. And I love that when no one is family leave the ark, the Lord once again
is go out and multiply and replenish the earth. We're starting over here again. There's a covenant
that's tied to this that we can talk about too. But I always love to bring up this quote from
President John Taylor. He said, he actually describes the flood. He says he destroyed them for their benefit. It was an act of love actually.
They got to move on to something else and now the earth gets to kind of restart again. Although I think sometimes when we're in the middle of the flood or have a flood,
we don't feel like it's an act of love or mercy at all. It's hard to keep that perspective.
Definitely. But if we can, the outcome can be much better.
It's funny how many times we're given chances to keep trying. And I always think, of course,
with the olive tree, the allegory of the olive tree with Jacob 5 and Zenus. And how many chances
are the olive trees given to be grafted in or moved here or done this and we need to take those chances.
We need to repent when we can.
Yeah, and you know, at one point he does say, well, we're just going to have to burn the entire
vineyard down. The helper kind of represented by the Savior says, well, let's give him one more chance.
Let's give him one more chance. And because of that, I mean, that's the mercy right there that we
are given these chances. What do we do with these chances? Do we work hard and try to overcome these things?
When we've hit rock bottom, do we turn to the savior or do we turn away? That can really
change the outcome. And I think this is part of what we're meant to take away from this
is you sinned, you repented, you have a fresh start. Move on, go out and change the world with the new person that you've become, which is what happens after the flood.
If I don't want to give any spoilers here, but it sounds like they don't do incredibly well with their choice.
With their start-over again.
Unfortunately, as it goes with these cycles, there are cycles of righteousness and wickedness.
And we'll talk about it with the tower a bit more too, but one of the first things that Noah does
when he gets off the ark, we look at chapter 8 verses 20 to 22, is he goes and he builds an altar,
and he sacrifices to the Lord. And we already kind of talked about what these sacrifices represent.
It's interesting because when you read kind of talked about what these sacrifices represent. It's interesting
because when you read kind of commentaries on this, it says, oh, it doesn't say what type of sacrifice
it was. You know, and I mentioned it could be for sin or blessings or whatever, but we actually
get a JST reference here. Genesis 9.4, he adds on to the end of it, the sacrifice was to give
thanks unto the Lord,
and he rejoiced in his heart.
And so what is the first thing Noah does?
He doesn't get off the ark and say,
oh, I'm glad I built this ark.
I'm glad I saved myself and my family and all these animals.
He says, thank you for saving us.
And he gives thanks.
I think this is a lesson too,
when we come out on the other side and we survive,
we realize we acknowledge the Lord's hand in our survival, in our becoming a new person.
So let's turn to chapter 9 and kind of talk about this covenant that marks this fresh
start that they have for the earth to kind of start over again. There are multiple promises
given here. And in Genesis, we only get one, really.
So if you look down to verse 9, he says, I'll establish my covenant with you and with your seed
after you. And then he goes on to say, you know, I will never flood the earth ever again.
I will never cut off everyone by waters of the flood or destroy the earth. And if we just think
about Genesis, then that's it.
That's the covenant.
God promises he will never do this again.
And that's it.
But what's great is we have so much more in the JST here.
And we get two more promises that come out of this.
And what's great is these promises are, and this covenant
is extended not only to Noah,
but everybody, everybody that is part
of the posterity of Noah.
So let's look at this.
So if we look at JST 915,
so we kind of got to look at the footnotes here,
he says, I will establish my covenant with you,
which I made until your father, Enic,
concerning your seed.
And then he goes on in 11 seed to talk about
the remnants of your posterity.
So this is going back to Moses 7,
but basically, it's this covenant that was given with Enic
that out of Enic's descendants
and out of Noah's descendants,
all nations would come from that.
From this blessing of going out
and multiplying, replenishing the earth,
and that was a promise given to Enic and given to Noah.
And this was part of the covenant.
He was promised this that all of these nations would come from this.
And we get one more promise.
One more promise, if we keep going in JST 921 through 23, he says,
when men should keep all my commandments, Zion should again come on the earth.
And it's crazy. I don't think we think of this covenant after the flood as
including these extra things, you know, that Noah's posterity would include all
the nations, but also this idea that we have this promise that all of Noah's
posterity, which when you think about it, is us were included in this, that this covenant
included, if we're righteous, Zion will return. And everything that Zion means, peace and
righteousness and a certain lifestyle and a way of living and treating each other and
loving each other. And this is part of this whole covenant. And I love this, that it's
so much more than just, I won't ever flood the earth again.
There are these promises that are given to us, us as well, that you can work so that Zion
will come back.
And Zion will be on the earth again.
Nice to have those JST references noted there.
I'm looking at actual pages of Scripture 13, you know, three different JST references
in the footnotes.
Yeah. Yeah, it's a lot. And I love it's more than this. I think sometimes we struggle,
we struggle finding ourselves in these Old Testament covenants. We say, well, what does this have
to do with me? This is about Noah and his posterity in the flood. But when you read this, this is for
everybody. Everybody on the earth that came, came from Noah and part of his posterity are given these
promises.
I always tell my students, find yourself in these covenants, find yourself in the unit
covenant, find yourself in the Noah covenant, and then of course we have a big one coming
up as well in the rest of Genesis.
I also like that not only this covenant marked the fresh start, and I think this happens a lot with us too.
The baptismal covenant is a fresh start.
Repentance covenants are a fresh start.
Part of this is he says, I'm going to actually give you a token or a symbol of this covenant, so you don't forget it.
Because we know a major problem is
forgetting the Lord, forgetting the covenants, all through the Book of Mormon.
We need to remember, remember, it's so important.
And he says, this is the token I'm gonna give you,
and he says, I'm gonna set the bow in the cloud.
And I love how he says, my bow.
And the word here for bow is actually the same word
for like the weapon, a bow.
And it's almost like God saying, I am laying up my weapon. I'm putting my weapon down.
Of course, we liken this to the rainbow, of course. And this is the symbol of that covenant.
And so when you see the rainbow, it's not just, okay, so it rained, but to remind us that the flood will never come again.
And the rains will always stop. But it's also when you look at that, you should remember I'm of the
posterity of Noah and I can help Zion return. And I love the way it said in the JST when
you look up and you see that rainbow, it should help you to remember that someday you'll
look up and you'll see Zion returning to earth again. And this promise of when the Savior
comes back and the millennium and the
peace and prosperity and everything that will happen with that should give us hope.
So that word bow like a bow and arrow, that's a bow, that's cool.
Yeah, so there's kind of like this, this idea of God said, I'm putting down my
bow or this destructive rain that came, what was more of a cleansing rain. When you see the rainbow, think
about these things. You have no as posterity and some days Zion will come again as well.
Yeah, and part of building Zion is laying down your own weapons.
Exactly, because we know Zion was peace. It was peace, and people treated each other with
love and kindness and charity, and that's how Zion was built and
kept and it's something to look forward to
getting back to that time Zion coming back and I love this token thing
We have so many tokens and symbols to kind of talked before about how in the Old Testament they have so many physical objects
and so for us of course
in the Old Testament, they have so many physical objects. And so for us of course, baptism is very symbolic of going down in the water and being cleansed and
coming out to a new person and the token and sort of symbols there also are
tied up in the sacrament. When we take the sacrament, we remember our baptismal
covenant. We remember the broken body and the blood. We remember the atonement
in the crucifixion.
It should be the same with our repentance, covenants.
I think sometimes why we struggle with sinning again
is because sometimes we don't have these tokens.
And so I always tell my students,
when you go through repentance and you make a covenant
with God, I'm never gonna do this again.
You know, come up with a token or a symbol of that, something that will remind you, whether
it's a physical object you put out so you can see, or it's a note you leave to yourself
so that you remember, and you know, a great example of this, or the anti-Nefi Liheis
in the Book of Mormon, right?
So they go through this repentance of being murderers and being bloodthirsty and fighting and all these things and they say, you know, as a token, a symbol of this covenant, we're actually going to take all of our weapons and bury them.
And so we can't even see them. We can't even reach them. these symbols, whether it's a rainbow or bearing your weapons or whatever you do can really help us,
really help us keep these covenants, remember them and keep going.
Have something a constant reminder. Not a reminder of the sin, but a reminder of that you've
become a new person and you don't do that anymore. It's got to be one of the major purposes of garments.
Right? Yes, absolutely.
Garments are a part of this.
Yeah.
And so there are things we do.
I think a King Benjamin's phrase to have them always before their eyes, having
the commandments always before their eyes.
So there's a physical reminder there, like light garments, I guess.
When we think of the temple or baptism we do have tokens and
covenants and so it can help us to remember and so we should be doing this with all the covenants
that we do that we are under and and that can help us to remember. I love that this is kind of how
the flood narrative ends. There's this covenant they enter into and they have this rainbow and this idea of even though you may undergo
trials and floods, if you can first of all be prepared, it will make it easier. But then also,
when you come out, thank God for what He did for you and get this fresh start.
And also look forward, right, to the day of Zion, of God coming to be with you.
I hope that we can see the flood narrative as a lot of mercy. There's justice there, but there's a lot of
mercy and love and giving us another chance and there's a really good message there that's not
just about corruption and destruction and things like this. So what do they do with this new startover? They end up
developing some problems among their society. Does this sound like human beings? Oh, it's so wonderful,
it's so great. Let's start over. Can't we just roll the credits now and be done? You messed it up again.
I know it would be nice just to kind of say, well, it ends with this covenant and this fresh start
and they take the fresh start and they run with it and everything's perfect.
And they lived right justly ever after.
Yeah, that end.
Yeah, they have some problems.
I've noticed crystal, the Old Testament is very human.
Yeah.
Where it's like, oh, good.
God is so good and they messed it up again.
And that sounds like my life.
Oh, God is so good and you messed it up again.
Well, and that's what, you know,
and that's part of why we need these tokens and reminders is,
because we forget, we forget.
We have these miraculous spiritual experiences
and then a year later, we don't remember anymore.
It's part of kind of our problem, I think, is remembering. One good thing is when we do get to
chapter 10, this is what we call the table of nations and it just it talks about the posterity of
Noah and all of the nations that came from Noah. And we got
everybody in here. We have Egypt appears in here. So not only peoples but groups of peoples
and places. And what's great about chapter 10 is this is the partial fulfillment of the covenant.
Noah was promised that all nations would come from his posterity and then boom, chapter 10
here are all the nations that came from Noah's posterity.
All there known nations, right, in the ancient Near East.
And so another great thing about chapter 10 in verse 8, it mentions this man named Nimrod.
Nimrod actually shows up in the book of Mormon 2 among the Jaredites.
They go to this valley of Nimrod.
And that's one of the places where God actually speaks to the brother of Jared.
So I love that we have these connections as well.
But that's pretty much that's the most that can really be said about chapter 10.
It's this real purpose is to show the fulfillment of this covenant.
It's kind of like a genealogy, but in reality, it's not just talking about people.
Sometimes it is talking about groups of people or places or regions.
It's really just to show that every known place and people that they knew in the ancient
Near East, which of course was limited, came from Noah.
All of it came out of this blessing to multiply and replenish the earth.
He fulfilled that role and everybody came from this.
Everyone came from this blessing.
And although some of these nations, of course, turn a different direction.
Yeah, so the author here is sending us a message.
God keeps his promises.
Yeah.
And it's supposed to show this continuation of the covenant, too.
So we have this partial fulfillment, but the covenant continues.
And it will continue on and on and on and on
until Zion comes back, you know,
and then it will be fulfilled.
Almost looks like a chiasmus too, the first verse of 10.
These are the generations of the sons of Noah
after the flood in the last verse.
These are the families of the sons of Noah
divided in the earth after the floods.
Maybe they're just bookends saying,
here's what I'm gonna give you, here it is,
now here's what I just gave you.
Yeah, it's kind of like, here's the point,
they all came from Noah and then it ends with,
and that was the point.
That was the point.
That was the point.
No one.
And they do that, interestingly,
it happens in the book of ether as well,
where you get this big list,
you get this big list in what ether 1 or 2,
and then it goes traces it back out for the rest of the book. Yeah. And it kind of fast forwards
through some generations and slows down for the first one and the last one. In fact, most of chapter
11 is more about how we get from the Tower of Babel and in NOAA to Abram, to Abraham,
this incredible covenant that comes with Abraham.
This is all setting us up that, hey, people need covenants.
People need to remember their covenants.
We have the flood, we have the tower, we have covenants, and then we get the huge one,
the big one, the know the Abrahamic covenant
And it's all setting us up for that the tower especially
Yeah, so if I'm an ancient Israelite and I'm reading this crystal aren't I
This is why our family exists. This is why we have the covenants we do this whole story is leading up to
The family of Israel. Yeah, exactly like I said, this covenant with Enic and Noah, we're still under.
Of course, the Abrahamic covenant was renewed with Joseph Smith and his integral essential
to the restoration and the gathering of Israel.
And this is the lead-up.
Chapter 11, I laughed to him.
I heard it described, and humans had new technology.
The brick. Right. The brick. And with their new
technology, they were going to, they were going to become like the world. They're conquer the world.
With the Tower of Babel, we only have nine verses in the Book of Genesis. And because we only
have these nine verses, we kind of have to take a deep dive into the text
and look at what it's saying.
What is this meant to teach us?
What does the tower symbolize?
How do people like the Jaredites,
who we know were present at the tower,
are able to escape the tower and keep their faith
and move on?
And so we're gonna use some other records
to help us out here.
First of all, of course, in the footnotes,
we have some references to the JST.
They're gonna give us some extra information, as well as the Book of Mormon. So the tower
is actually mentioned in several places in the Book of Mormon, the Book of Omni, Mosiah,
Helaman, Ether, many times. And so we can use those interpretations as well to help us out.
And really look at why the Jaredites
survived this in the same way that Noah and his family survived and what it
meant for them. So without Joseph Smith, we don't know much about the tower, but
with Joseph Smith, yeah, exactly.
Book of Mormon and his JST, we know a lot more.
Can you give us the meaning of the word? There are a lot of clever play on words in the scriptures and a word. The word Babel is meant to mean more than one thing
So I love that you guys are pulling out multiple interpretations here
in Hebrew
Babel is just the word for Babel on and
So it's a reference here and that's another great thing about the tower is we get a tie it to a place, a time, a
People, archaeology, we really get a tie this down and it's and that's that's amazing that enhances
I think our understanding quite a bit so it comes from the Akkadian word
Bob E. Lou which means gate of the gods
Gate of the gods or gate to the gods
I wanted to keep that in mind as we talk about what the tower represents and what the tower was used for because it is related, it is related to that.
And of course the word babble in English means to kind of speak gibberish baby language and it works perfectly with the confounding of languages. They weren't able to communicate and understand each other. And it probably sounded like babbling in gibberish once the languages were confounded. So
there's so many, just in this one word, babble, we get so much information. We do find out in
verse 1 it says, the whole earth was of one language and one speech. And of course the word used
here for earth in Hebrew is eras. And this can refer to global earth.
It can also refer to a region, a land, a country.
You look this up in the KJV.
It is used to cover everything, even soil.
Even a soil floor in a house is the earth.
We use it in a similar way.
But we do know there's a group of people.
And they all speak the same language
and they're all traveling together. And when we get to verse two, they end up in a place and it says
very specifically, they dwell in the land of Shainar. And what's great about Shainar is we're
fairly confident that this is equated with a place we call Sumer. Sumer is located in southern Mesopotamia, and so Mesopotamia
is about equal to modern day or rec. So the Tigris and the Euphrates, and we have the
south and we have the north. And so this is great because we can put them in a place that
we know of today, that we have remains in archaeology and texts about, and so we can
tie this all together. And these outside texts really give us a lot of information
that matches and enhances the biblical text.
And so we can tie them with this, also Babylon,
with this the same place Babylon is located.
And we kind of talked about the bricks here.
This seems a strange thing to include
when you only have nine verses.
What are we going to build the tower
out of? Let's give an entire verse dedicated to bricks and slime. Because the author chose to
leave the Sennon at this, it must serve a point. The way they talk about making bricks is that they
burnt them. And this is a really important characteristic because in Egypt and
Israel they didn't burn their bricks. They had access to stone. And so for
really important buildings like a tower or a temple or a tomb or a pyramid,
they're going to use stone. And for everything else, more domestic things or
residential, they use something they call mud bricks. And it's basically mixing
mud and clay and straw. You put it in a mold and you leave it they call mud bricks. And it's basically mixing mud and clay and straw.
You put it in a mold and you leave it out in the sun
and it bakes by the sun and you can build out of that.
It's not going to be waterproof.
It's not going to be strong, but it gets the job done.
And then if it breaks down, you rebuild it.
But in Mesopotamia, especially in the southern part,
they didn't have a lot of access to stone.
So when you needed to build an important building, like a tower, or a temple, or something like that,
you had to do something else and you couldn't just use mud brick. So they developed this technology
in the third and fourth millennium. So we're talking about, you know, like 3,500 BC here,
to take the bricks and actually bake them in an oven. Put them in a
kiln like we would do with pottery and harden them so that they almost become
like stone as close to stone as they could use. And then they mentioned using
the slime for mortar and this is another reference to this pitch or bicham in
this tar and this was their way of making it waterproof, just like the arc was made waterproof.
Because stone, if you build an important structure, you're going to want it to be waterproof and not be able to be destroyed by this, because they're still clay bricks.
And so this is important because it's telling us they're not in Egypt, they're not in Israel, and that whatever they're building, they're putting in, it's a labor-intensive
process to put this together to make these bricks and the stones. And so it kind of shows how important
this tower was for them, and gives us more information about the location and the time period.
These verses, even though they seem like not important, they're meant to kind of teach us something
and connect us. Verse 4 is one of the most important ones here because it tells us
why they built the tower. They said, okay, we're going to build this city in this tower and these
are the reasons. They kind of give three reasons so that the top can reach into heaven. So it may reach
unto heaven and then second reason. So we can make a name for ourselves. We build this massive
structure. People are gonna know us.
They're gonna remember us and then you know the third one is so that we don't so that we're not scattered
So we can stay together. So there's already this idea that they were afraid of being scattered of being separated
Let's talk about the tower for a minute here. We know we're in Mesopotamia
We know that the construction materials, we kind of know the time
period. Do we know of towers that reach into heaven in Mesopotamia this time? And we do. We actually
have about 25 examples of enormous towers in Mesopotamia and these are called ziggarots. And so we do
believe, you know, most biblical scholars believe that the Tower of Babel
was a ziggarot.
And so let me talk a little bit about what these are.
They were made out of these burnt bricks.
And so, you know, of course, that's a good connection.
They're basically these towers of narrowing platforms.
And so as a Negemetologist, I think of,
if you've seen a step pyramid pyramid it's kind of that idea.
So a big platform on the bottom and it gets narrower to another platform and another one and another
one all the way up to the top. And these things could be huge. So as big as 300 feet on one side
and as tall as 200 feet up in the air. And what's great is we have, like I said, we have about 25 examples
of these on the ground that we can look at in Mesopotamia. And we have texts that tell us,
you know, what they were used for, what they were called. It's great to be able to look at that
and say, you know, does this inform or enhance our understanding of the tower in Genesis?
And that's one of the things that archaeology
and ancient texts can do.
They really can give us more information
because we wanna know, why was the tower a problem?
What was the problem with the tower
so that their languages had to be confounded
and they had to be scattered?
Because you think of building a tower for God,
hey, that's a good thing, right?
But these texts enhance our understanding.
And the Ziggarots match up just perfectly with, with some of these things that they say.
So the names of these Ziggarots are described as having the head in the heavens,
high as a mountain, their head touching heaven.
And so there's definitely this idea of this connection between heaven and earth.
That was the Ziggarot. and that's one of the main purposes.
Okay, so let's talk a little bit about what we know about the purpose of Ziggurats,
and then maybe we can try and match it up or see how it connects with their purpose
for building the Tower of Babel.
So Ziggurats, we know we're dedicated to a deity, usually the patron deity of a city,
and the purpose of the Ziggarot, though, was not a temple. It wasn't a temple where some,
you know, people went to worship this deity, and we know this because, first of all, there was a
temple always next to the Ziggarot, where people would go in worship. And that was the temple.
And Ziggurats are never associated with rituals or worship or anything like that. So then it's like,
why are they building this? And the craziest thing about these Ziggurats is they were solid inside,
except for the very top platform. They were completely filled with rubble and dirt and sand and things like that. And they had
this ramp or stairs going up to the top. So we find out in the text that the
reason why they're building these is first of all to make it so that God could
come down to earth. So if they build it up into heaven and they reach heaven, it
makes it possible for God to be able to use the ramp in the staircase and come down and visit earth and go to the temple and be worshiped.
Which already it's kind of like a misunderstanding of kind of how God works and what he is, we can already see this. The other purpose was to make it so that God would stay on earth, that he wouldn't go back to heaven. And so on the very top of these
ziggarots, there was a bedroom, an empty room that they built for God. And inside the room
was a bed and a table. And the priests would go up and they'd make the bed all nice and
they'd set the table with food and drink and there was a chair.
So their hope was that God would come down, he would live in this tower.
So they would reach into heaven, be able to access God, bring him down.
They would make a name for themselves because if God's living in your city on your ziggurat,
then you're going to be famous.
You know, this kind of idea, if we can get God to live in our tower on this, you know, in the Ziggurat,
then we won't be scattered.
We can convince Him, this is where we need to stay.
It's almost like a way of thinking of manipulating God.
If we give Him this, He owes us not to scatter us.
He owes us to favor us and bless us.
And so we can see there are a lot of issues with misunderstanding
the nature of God. And when we hear things like this, controlling God, manipulating God,
forcing him to live in a bedroom on a tower, that sounds insane to us. And so we think,
what are we supposed to get from this? Almost like this, this more pagan view of this sort of anthropomorphic humanized view of God.
The truth is that when you actually start to look at it and think about it, we do these things
just in different ways. We do these things sometimes. We misunderstand, I think, sometimes how God works.
And I mean, we're really getting into theology here. It's difficult. I think
sometimes we take for granted our viewer our understanding of God and we just kind of
push it aside. And I think this part of the story of the Tower of Babel is we're meant
to go back and think about who he is, what he is, and our relationship with him and how
he treats us and in a way how we treat him as well. And how does the Lord respond?
So like I said, they build the temple and he does end up coming down in verse 5 to see the city
and the tower. And his response is not good. He is not happy with the tower and he says the people
are one, they have one language and they're beginning to do this.
What else can they do?
It's interesting because he says they're all together,
they're all doing this.
What will they do next?
If they think they can control God
and manipulate him or force him or do these things,
what are they gonna do next?
I mean, we're getting beyond, you know, with the flood, it was about how people treated
each other and the violence and corruption and sin and wickedness.
Now we're getting to completely a corruption of the idea of God and his role and our role
and all of these things.
And the solution was to split the people up.
You know, just how like we had kind of talked about
with the flood narrative, be careful
because you know, wickedness spreads.
And it's, I always think of this as,
it's like we're gonna change their language
so they can't really communicate with each other.
And then we're gonna scatter them.
And it's this idea I always think of like a mob mentality, right?
When you're in this group and it's a mob,
sometimes people behave differently than if they were on their own
as an individual.
And so it's this idea that we will scatter the people
and try and stop this corrupt view.
Yeah, for their own good, exactly this corrupt view. Yeah, for their own good. Exactly, this corrupt view,
because this path, misunderstanding, you know, God,
that path leads to theological destruction.
It's such a thing we take for granted
that I don't even think we think about very much.
It can lead to some major problems.
Major problems.
And he had promised Noah, I'm not going to
flood the earth again. So he's got to stop. This has got to stop before they end up in
that exact same position they were in before. So I'm going to, we're going to scatter
them. We won't flood them. We'll scatter them this time.
And we'll talk about some of these views they had that were incorrect. And when we get
to Jared and the brother of Jared, and
we realize that they do escape the tower. You know, their language doesn't get confounded,
but they are scattered. They definitely are part of the scattering, but their scattering,
of course, leads to a promised land. And their view of God and the things they say
are incredibly different from what the tower represents. Some of the things the way they interact
because they have these problems, right?
There's no air in their boats, there's no light,
even having the language confounded, being scattering
and how they respond to those problems
is so different from the people here.
So what I wanna kind of try and do is
go through this verse four and really talk about
what were the problems with the tower? Why did it lead to such a huge event to scatter everyone and change their language?
And how did the brother of Jared and his family get through this?
So one of the first things they try to do, they say, we want to reach heaven.
And a lot of times I know we interpret this as us trying to get into heaven
through the improper means. And that's a perfect interpretation. I
Think the idea of the Ziggurat and what the Ziggurat was for adds to it as well
This idea that we can control God or manipulate him into doing what we want and like I said this sounds crazy
You would never say oh, yeah, I'm attempting to control God or force him to do what I want.
But I think there are many times in our life
where we think we know what's best for ourselves.
We think we know in a way more than God.
We know that this job is the perfect job for me.
And because it's the perfect job for me, God will make sure I get this job is the perfect job for me. And because it's the perfect job for me,
God will make sure I get this job.
He will make sure it happens.
And in reality, that's not quite how it works.
That's not trust, that's not faith.
Exactly.
When things don't match up, we think,
well, what happened?
I knew this was the right thing.
And so I kind of have a story about this sort of a personal story.
When I was applying to school for college, I
knew exactly where and it wasn't even I wanted to go. I needed to go. I was meant to go.
And you know, I knew I wanted to do age of topology. I wanted to stay not too far from home.
I wanted to be in a place I was comfortable and for me that was UCLA.
And that's where I knew I was meant to go. It was my path and God was on the same page.
And he would make sure I got into that school. And we made this decision together.
We planned out my path together and it's funny because I actually ended up not getting into UCLA.
And it was devastating. But times I was angry and frustrated with God.
This was our plan.
This is what's best for me.
This is what I meant to do as opposed to listening to him and having trust and faith in him
that he sees the big picture.
He's got the perspective.
It's not about, I'm going to build the tower so I don't get scattered. It's what's best for me
You tell me what's best for me because you know in hindsight now
I did end up going to UCLA for grad school and while I was there I met my husband and
Started a family. I met the people that would eventually sort of lead me to BYU and my position there
If I had gone there as an undergrad, those people
wouldn't have been there at that time. And I think God was saying, yeah, you're meant
to go there just not right now. So sometimes I think we get frustrated when we think we
know exactly what we need and we think we know more than he does.
Or when we need it. Yeah, or exactly the timing.
The seed. Yeah.
I feel like sometimes this happens too, especially when we feel like we've been really, really righteous.
I've been being really righteous, so I deserve this.
And it's hard because they said, we will build this tower for you.
We're doing this great and wonderful thing. And it's hard because they said, we will build this tower for you.
We're doing this great and wonderful thing
so that you won't scatter us.
You owe us not to scatter us.
And I think we do things like this too.
Well, I've been going to church every Sunday.
I've been reading my scriptures.
I've been praying.
Where are my blessings?
Where is my prosperity?
Where is this thing that I want?
And sometimes it can hurt our faith
when we don't get those things. I think this is one of the things the tower is meant to teach us
that blessings and prosperity aren't necessarily always tied
to righteousness and the things that we actually do. And that sometimes these are merciful things
and the things that we actually do, and that sometimes these are merciful things
that are given to us.
And so I think, you know, the question is,
what are our towers of Babel?
Everybody's got different towers.
They build themselves that sometimes are based
on a misunderstanding of just kind of how life works.
And maybe a tower, I know for me,
one of my towers is control, wanting to control
my life and what happens. And when it doesn't turn out the way I want it, it's a struggle.
And like you said, it's more about faith and trust, putting myself in his hands and not
thinking, I know everything or can control everything. That's a much better outcome. I think
then, then what the tower stands for.
I see Genesis 11 for, let us make a name.
Almost this idea of whose kingdom are you trying to build?
Right.
Yeah.
You're trying to build.
It smells like selfish motive.
Yeah, you're trying to build Zion,
or you're trying to build yourself.
Exactly.
Or whose light are you holding up, right?
Like Jesus says, you know,
I'm the light that you're supposed to hold up,
not necessarily your own.
Sometimes we feel like we might be able to control God or we're afraid. We're afraid to just say, I'm in your hands.
You take over and I trust you that you know what's best for me. Things will work out having that hope. Definitely.
I've also seen this as like, I can be above the flood. I won't have consequences.
The problem was last time wasn't our wickedness.
It's that we had consequences.
So let's avoid these consequences by building a tower.
God can't flood this tower.
Repentance is a last resort.
Let's not do that.
Let's figure out another way.
I think it's a great point because it's kind of like if we build this tower,
then God owes not to punish us because we've done this great thing.
And I think we do this too.
Like, I've been being so righteous.
Where's all my wealth?
I built this amazing tower for you, God.
Like, where, what am I getting out of this?
And we know that's not how it works.
And I think when we realize that, then we won't be as disappointed when these things don't happen or don't come along
It's it just seems like there's a lot of pride and a lot of I'm gonna control the situation versus
Trust faith faith in the covenant. I love that we see with the brother of Jared that he's all about faith
Right, this is that's his thing and we see with the brother of Jared that he's all about faith, right? This is that's his thing. And we see his response.
So they find out that they're going to be scattered and their,
their language is going to be confounded.
And so it's kind of like, how do they respond to this,
this situation that they have in ether, they turn to the,
the Lord and they say, please don't confound our language.
And that's it.
Straight forward request.
There's no manipulation.
We're going to build the tower. We're going to add to it or we're going to do this or that.
Or there's no like we've been righteous. So you owe us not to confound our language. Just please don't do it. Please let us stay together so we can communicate with each other.
And the Lord says, okay, says he had mercy on them and he did this. Then they find out they're going to be scattered. And the response to the scattering is incredible because they say they don't go to the Lord and say please don't scatter
us. They say are we going to be scattered and if so will you lead us somewhere better?
Yeah, I love that. Maybe it'll be a land of promise. Maybe it'll be awesome.
Yeah, and so it shows they have this understanding of God, right? He's in control.
He decides if their language should be confounded and if it's good for them or not.
He decides if they should be scattered and if it's going to be good for them or not.
And the scattering that's seen as typically a very negative bad thing in ether 138.
They say maybe the Lord will carry us forth into a land which is choice above all the earth.
So they also trust him. They say, even though this might be a bad thing, we are headed
possibly to a better place. And of course, they do end up in promised land eventually.
Well, that's so applicable to our lives, isn't it crystal, even though this major difficulty hits,
I trust, I trust that maybe this will work out better than what I had planned.
Yeah, and so that's one of the ways of surviving, surviving the flood. Noah trusted God that he
would help him and his family survive. He listened to him and he prepared, and it's the same with the
Gerardites. They trusted that even though they would be scattered and they would have to leave the
tower, that there was something better coming,
something even better than before.
Faith, I think we say,
well, it's just such a basic thing,
and we think of it as passive, right?
I have faith, and that's it.
Joseph Smith said, faith is action.
It's the principle of action.
Faith should cause you to do things to show your faith.
And I think we see that with Noah
and we see that with the brother of Jared as well.
Crystal, doesn't Babylon take this symbolic meaning
as like the antithesis design, the enemy of God?
Is that kind of where this begins?
Yeah, I think so.
I think it's all based on starting right now,
this misunderstanding of how God works,
how he views us and treats us.
It was said here, the problem was this will make them, theologically, destitute.
If you can't even have a correct understanding of God, where do you go from there?
That changes everything.
Everything you believe and do, and so they tried to correct this, but you're right.
I mean, eventually Babylon becomes like this symbol,
whether we're actually talking about Babylon,
the place or Babylon as a symbol of something,
the idea of something and the tower.
What does the tower represent?
It represents people trying to control things,
not trusting in God, not having faith
and Hank like you brought up, it's pride too.
And it's always interesting to me
in Scripture. The time when people start to fall is when they're prosperous and blessed. That's the
time they start to forget God. That's the time that the pride starts creeping in and causes so many
problems. Pride is sort of the root of all sin. Every, I think. If you're an ancient Israelite and you read this, don't you hear now the world was going
bad again?
And so the answer was this family, Abraham and Sarah, that was God's answer for the tower.
Exactly.
And this new covenant and the story of the ancestors, the patriarchs, the matriarchs are the answer to all of these problems that came beforehand.
And I love that this is kind of the build up. I love in
President Benson's famous talk on pride where he says, you know, pride is basically competition with God.
You are trying to compete with God. I know more, I'm better, I'm stronger, I'm more powerful, which we would never think we could compete with God.
We would never say that, but that's what they're kind of saying with building the tower.
Or when we say, I bought this house all by myself with my hard work, or I gained this education, or raised to this family.
And we don't acknowledge that his hand is in everything everywhere.
That's the tower, that's the tower right there.
This kind of this idea of, we'll build the tower so God will love us,
so God will favor us, so God will bless us,
because we're not good enough,
because there are so many people out there in the world
that he's not paying attention to us,
unless we make this massive display.
And I think we've all felt this way.
Sometimes does God care about me, individually,
billions of people, billions of prayers?
Does he hear my prayer?
And I think this is another tower.
Maybe your tower is pride, maybe it's not,
maybe it's the opposite, maybe it's self-doubt
in feeling alone and lost.
The adversary would say that.
You've got to do something bigger than everybody else in order for God to care about you.
Yeah.
And it's kind of a misunderstanding of God's nature, too, isn't it?
To think, I've got to win his favor somehow.
He won't love me otherwise.
This is a huge struggle.
This idea that, well, I can't build a tower.
I'm not going to become the prophet someday.
So why would God care about me or love me?
And like I said, that can be just as destructive as pride, even more, even more so, I think.
And the adversaries constantly trying to make us feel like we're nothing, we're worthless.
So what's the solution then?
Of course, the solution to this tower of
babble that's pride is acknowledging God, thanking God, Noah gets off the boat
and he sacrifices. But what about the self-doubt side? What's the solution to
this? It's realizing that God loves us. He loves everyone. It's being okay that he
loves everyone, but he also loves you individually for who you are
and who you are now. Even if you feel like you're a sinner and you're wicked, he loves you. You
don't have to earn his love through building a tower or any of these other things. He loves you
as you are, he knows you individually and he cares about you. I love this thing that Elder Uchtorf said, this is the paradox. Compared to
God, we're nothing yet. We are everything to God, everything to him. And if we can realize this,
we can knock down some of these towers, these towers that we've built for ourselves.
Yeah, it does feel like E3 chapter one becomes the answer to Genesis 11 where the brother of Jared cries unto the Lord
and the Lord has compassion. That happens in Chapter 1, what? Four or five times. He cries to the Lord
and the Lord has compassion. He cries to the Lord and the Lord has compassion. That seems to be
the answer. Don't build a tower, cry to the Lord. Go to the Lord. I love it because you know the tower really
represents people trying to pull God down to them, to their level. But in
reality, right, God is always trying to pull us up. He's always trying to pull
us up up to his level and sometimes we fight against it. And if we could just
let him pull us up to his level to understand him and who he is and how much he loves us
and why he sent his son and all of these things,
then we can be like Noah or the brother of Jared
and make it through and have our faith intact
after all of these things that happen
in our lives, floods and scatterings and things like that.
I really like this because when it comes down to it, no, uh, the brother of Jared, this is
about trusting God's way instead of trying to force God to do it your way.
Absolutely.
Listening to him and his prophets to his speakers on earth, what are they trying to warn us
about?
Prepare us for and what could we learn from that?
Well my brother and my father passed away within 90 days of each other and I remember kind of looking up at heaven going
I
Don't like your way, right?
And I and for a split second I thought I
Know better. I know better than that. I could have done this better. But then I thought, wait, you know, trust, faith, trust, try to believe your way is better than my way. I'll do it
your way, right? And those that tension between your way sounds hard. Your way is difficult.
My way is easy. Let's do it my way. And there's that you're right. There's this. He's pulling me
towards him. I'm trying to pull him down to me.
Why don't I just let him? I'll just trust you. Right. I'll just trust him.
It's not easy.
The heart of that is understanding God's nature that he's a loving personal God.
And then that works. If he weren't an impersonal, I don, in different God, boy, we'd be in trouble.
We'd be trying to build towers all over, but if we really think, oh, he actually does
love us and care for us. Wow, that, that's your changes, everything, doesn't it?
I tell my students, faith is a skill. Something you have to work on. You have to actually work
on it to become good at it. It's not just something that you're born with and you have it
or you don't. You do have to work on it and if you don't continue to grow it and develop
it, it can start to recede and go away. And so it's like Noah preparing for the flood. It takes
it takes a lot of work to build up that faith. We're trying to get to the point where our faith
grows and is so perfect that we get a return home or we get to see the savior face to face.
That's what it's all about. We talk about scatterings and gatherings. Our whole life is a
scattering, I feel. Scattered from heaven, from the Garden of Eden, and we're all trying to get home
to the promised land. And how do we do that? How do we get to that point? The reason why we have these narratives here at this point in Genesis is to prepare us for what's coming next to show us that we need covenants that we need to formalize these agreements with God and have these tokens because you know we had the flood narrative and this renewal and this new covenant with Noah.
And now we get this.
And of course the Jaredites, once they reach their promise land,
they enter into a promise land covenant about serving God
and keeping their freedom and keeping the land.
But then, of course, after chapter 11 comes the covenant,
right, this great overarching covenant and the flood
and the tower and all these things are meant to prepare us for Abraham and his family and the patriarchs and the matriarchs and this covenant and to show us that this covenant is integral to everything.
You know, like I said, this Abrahamic Covenant is renewed with Joseph Smith and it is key to the restoration and to the gathering of Israel.
renewed with Joseph Smith and it is key to the restoration and to the gathering of Israel. And hopefully, at this point, going through all of this, we're prepared and we're ready
to read about that and understand why we need it and how it works.
So an ancient reader is getting this from a different perspective. It's, it's, well, we've already
said it. It's, why am I here? Why do I exist? Why am I in the family? I'm in oh
You're part of a chosen family to bless the earth, right?
And I love it
I heard somebody describe a covenant as a as ways that God reveals himself to us
Reveals who he is and so I love that the sort of the answer to what happens at the tower and the misunderstanding of the nature of God is covenants. This is the way he reveals
himself to us and in the Old Testament and in the New Testament and the Book of
Mormon. And so that can help us, you know, help us understand him a lot more.
Crystal, this has been fantastic. I feel like I see the flood and the tower just in a new light.
Thank you so much for this. I think our listeners would be
interested in your journey. Here's a Bible scholar and a faithful believing Latter-day Saint.
When I first started studying Egyptology, I knew I wanted to do Egyptology since 5th grade.
I took a class, the summer school class,
and I fell in love with it. This idea of this culture and they were so unique and I wanted to know why,
you know, and what was so special about these people that they created this civilization. And so
I knew I wanted to study Egyptology. And when I went to Berkeley and I started going into classes and also at UCLA for grad school,
I was given some advice that knowing that I'm a person of faith and beliefs to separate out my academic studies from my faith and my beliefs,
this was the advice I was given, keep them separate.
And so I thought, okay, I'm going to try this.
Some people liken it to kind of wearing different hats, you know.
So when you step into a classroom, and you're going to learn about the ancient Near East,
you take off your beliefs, your faith hat, and you put on your Egyptologist hat, and I
tried to do this.
I tried, and I could not do it.
I could not separate these parts of my identity. One of the things I study is
are people's identity, who they are, who they think they are. It's the idea of saying,
trying to separate parts of myself that I couldn't. I can't take off my beliefs hat. My beliefs
are my life. They inform everything I do, whether I'm studying or at church or whatever I'm doing, my beliefs are my life.
And so once I started realizing that it's pretty much impossible.
Now for other people, this works and it works for them.
And I never would want to say everyone should do this.
So let me just say that.
But once I realized that I can be a believer and study egyptology and that's just fine.
And I can be a need to be a geotechnologist and be a believer and study Egyptology and that's just fine. And I can be a
need to be a need to be a believer. I felt a freedom I had never felt before. I felt fine
reading about Egyptian temples and finding similarities with the temple I had gone to
last week. I felt fine with reading about Egyptian thoughts of the afterlife and connecting
them with my own ideas or ideas
from the restoration about the afterlife.
And I started to realize that everything that comes from God is typifying of Christ,
of God, of good things.
And I started to realize that that's fine, that I see God everywhere.
I let my beliefs inform my studies.
I let my studies, on the other hand, inform my beliefs too.
And my study of the ancient Near East and in Egyptology,
and I think we've just kind of seen this with talking about these narratives.
They have given me an enhanced understanding.
Part of this, too, I think, is you have to be okay with not knowing things.
The more I study, whether it's theology or religion or Egyptology, is the more I realize
I don't know very much.
And you kind of have to be okay with it.
And you kind of have to be okay with sometimes things don't match up perfectly.
Sometimes things don't make sense.
And you have to say,
that's all right because my faith is intact, my faith is sound and no matter what's thrown at me,
that's what matters. Sometimes when I might be struggling with something I heard or something I read,
I always remind myself to not get lost in what Joseph Smith calls the appendages of our religion or other things or Jacob would say looking beyond the mark.
I go back to my relationship, what I know for sure about my Savior and Heavenly Father and how much He loves me and He sent His Son and that Jesus is the Christ, that He went through the Atonement and the crucifixion, and that's what matters.
That's what matters.
If I can go back to that and I can build on that,
then I'll never get lost.
I never get lost in that way.
And I think that's kind of how,
that's how I do things.
I love that I use my studies in the classroom
to talk about God, to talk about Egypt.
I love that I can talk about archaeology
and faith in the exact same sentence. These are things that I love and I know these things come from God and that kind of keeps me grounded, I think. And being okay with who I am, that I have all these
different parts of my identity, including being a professor, being a mom, being a spouse,
trying to balance these things and make sense out of them.
Perfect.
Ah, Crystal, thank you.
John, by the way, what a great day. She has flooded us with good information.
I'm still right back to the beginning. I'm going to beat Kaya'smas.
There was the fall of Adam and Eve and then a comeback. I love that.
There was the fall of a family came in able and then a comeback. There was a fall of a society and
then a flood and a guy this is
Great stuff. Thank you for showing us that pattern crystal and there's always hope at the end of the pattern. Thankfully
We want to thank Dr.
Crystal Pierce for being here today. We want to thank all of you for listening. We want to thank Dr. Crystal Pierce for being here today.
We want to thank all of you for listening.
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Steven Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors,
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