Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Isaiah 40-49 Part 2 • Dr. Terry Ball • Sept. 19-25
Episode Date: September 14, 2022Dr. Terry Ball returns to discuss the omnipresent love of the Savior and how He never forgets nor forsakes his children. He also shares his journey as a scholar, missionary, father, and Saint.Please r...ate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-h
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Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
When Nephi quoted these chapters 48 and 49 to his brother, and again the two-fold
purpose was one that they might know more of their Redeemer, the second was that
they would know how they're going to be gathered, these people who've been
broken off. The last part of chapter 49,
I think addresses that question of how he tends to gather his people in a powerful way.
And I think, Latter-day Saints especially love this last part because it speaks much that makes sense
to us. If you talk to many of our Jewish brothers and sisters, you'll find that a lot of them are
what we call secular Jews, meaning
they're non-observant.
That's how I want estimate.
It says that in the nation of Israel, it's about 70% secular and 30% observant.
Levels of observancy vary widely from mildly observant to ultra-ultra observant.
But often when you talk to a secular Jew and ask them why they are not observant, why
they don't give us synagogue and worship, one of the things they will frequently say is that, well, God
died in the holocaust. It was such a terrible thing, and our God for Sukus, he didn't care for us,
and so he's dead unto us because of that. Here in chapter 49 it's almost as if Jehovah anticipates that mentality,
starting in verse 14. But Zion said, the Lord hath forsaken me. My Lord hath forgotten me.
Well, we could say God allowed the hol to happen. So he's forgotten me.
He died in the Holocaust.
We love the intimacy and the beauty of the way Jehovah tries
to assure them that he hasn't forgotten them.
Verse 15, kind of woman forget her sucking child.
She should not have compassion on the son of her womb.
Yay, they may forget, yet well I
not forget thee. Behold, I have engraved in thee upon the palms of my hands, by
walls or continually before me. I think when he re-gravened thee upon the palms of
my hands, one of the things we think of as are the wounds of crucifixion that he
received and manifest when he needs to testify of crucifixion that he received
and manifest when he needs to testify of who he is and what he did.
Do you ever think about what he might mean when he says thy walls are
continually before me? I was just going to ask you that because I love to teach
this when Nephi teaches it and one of the blessings we have with our modern
scriptures is we have two sets of foot notes on Isaiah
We have those in the book of Mormon and we have those here and
in the book of Mormon in 1st Nephi 21 when it says grave in the upon the palms of my hands
It takes us to section 45 of the doctrine and covenants
Where they will look upon him and say what are those wounds in your hands and in your feet?
The Zechariah is at 12, 6,
so the piercing part is there.
Thy walls, I've always thought,
is that a reference to Jerusalem, the Holy City?
I haven't forgotten Jerusalem.
The walls around the temple maybe.
Yeah, that certainly makes excellent sense.
Some people say the walls maybe are obstacles or challenges and he's aware of them.
And what I say, it might mean all of them.
Yeah, some think of the idea of covenants, nails where you take a piece of soft clay
and shape it into a spike and then you use a read stylus and write into it the terms of
agreements that you've made in business, then you fire it and you stick it in the walls of the place of business as a reminder of
the terms of the covenants or agreements you've made.
In that case, then it would be your covenants.
I remember my covenants.
However you understand it, there's no question that God hasn't forgotten them.
Where does it get especially exciting for Latter-day Saints?
It's starting in verse 18, down to verse
23, it's a little bit difficult to make sense of, you have to read it several times, but
let me share with you one way that I understand this, that's been a blessing to me and hopefully
we'll be to the listeners.
And speaking to those who thought that God had forsaken them, these covenant people who
felt like they've been cast off and God isn't doing anything for them. He says to them in verse 18,
lift up thine eyes round about and behold, all these will gather themselves
together and come to thee. As I live, say, the Lord doubts you out surely
clothe thee with them all and as with an ornament and bind them on thee as a
bride do it. So you people who
think I've forgotten you, there will come a time when there will be a whole bunch
of people who will come to you and you'll put them on like a bride putting on
your wedding outfit. It goes on to explain how many will be in this group of
people that will show up by waste and desolate places in verse 19, the land of
that destruction will even now be too narrowed by reason of these
inhabitants. They that swallowed the apple be away, and I children, the children
without shalt have, after those lost the others. She'll say nine years, this place is too straight
or narrow for me. Give place to me that I'm a dwell. In other words, this huge group of people is
going to come to you. There are going to be so many that there's not going to be room for you all.
All these people who are your children, you thought you lost them all, but here's all
these people who are recognized as your children.
And you're going to look at them in verse 21 and say, who has be gotten me these?
Seeing I lost my children and death led a cat be removed to and fro.
Who has brought up these?
Behold, I was left alone.
These, where have they been
So there's this idea that you people think that God have forsaken you the time will come and there'll be a huge group of people who will come
They will be a witness to you that God has not forsaken you. They'll be recognized as part of the covenant family
And you're gonna say whoa we didn't know about you
Where did you come from?
Which begs the question is, who are these people who are going to show up and be recognized
as part of the covenant family and be a witness that God is still working to redeem and save
his children?
Who are they?
The answer in verse 22, the say to Lord, behold, I will lift up my hand to the
Gentiles and set my standard to the people. By the way, the word translated as standard,
there's the same word as enzyme. I will raise up an enzyme amongst the Gentiles. Now,
they're Gentiles, but who comes locking to the standard, just raise it up amongst the Gentiles. Now, they're Gentiles, but who comes locking to the standard just raise it up amongst the Gentiles? They
shall bring thy sons and their arms and thy daughter shall be
carried upon their shoulders and kings and be thy nursing fathers. So
the whole question is, who are these latter-day people who then
show up, are recognized as part of the covenant people, begin to gather
scattered Israel, and are a witness that God is still working to save his children.
And as Latter-day Saints, we think, that's us. The doctrine covenant identifies
those speaking of Latter-day Saint, members of the Church, as those who are
identified with the Gentiles.
We're called Gentiles because we're not Jews,
but we're certainly part of the House of Israel.
Now, if you go back to verse 18,
think of the imagery there again now.
You people who think I've forgotten you,
lift up your eyes, here comes this whole group of people,
and you're going to put them on like a bride
does when she's putting on her wedding outfit. So when does a bride usually put on her wedding outfit?
The day of the wedding, yeah, before the marriage. When the bride groom is coming
and consistently throughout the writings of Isaiah, the bride groom is
Joe then and the wife is Israel.
And so this idea is that when these people show up and you accept them as part of the covenant
family, you're getting ready for the coming of the bridegroom.
And so as we read this, I think we get the idea that this is a prophecy in answer to the
Nephys point that I want to show my brother and how they're going to be gathered.
God has a plan. Then the last days he's going to raise up a covenant people out of the Gentiles
who will gather this gathered covenant people. Witness that God is still working to save his children.
They will be stewards of the covenant and prepare the world for the coming of Christ.
The image of them picking up people and carrying them is a beautiful idea. These missionaries out there,
I will pick you up and carry you because you feel forgotten. You feel forsaken and forgotten. I think
chapter 49, Terry, to me, this could be a micro level as well, someone who feels like the Lord has
forgotten them. To go through Isaiah 49 and line by line and realize it might not happen the way you think it's going to happen
It may look like it a failure, but it's really going to be a glorious victory
He has not forgotten you any more than a mother could forget a newborn
I think that's probably the greatest example of someone who cannot forget something else
Is a mother forgetting a. It does not happen.
And yet they may forget, but I have not forgotten you. Your situation is in front of me. I understand
you. I'm ready. And I have people prepared to help you. I am preparing people to help you. Do
it? Do you feel like that's a message of chapter 49 maybe on an individual level?
That's a beautiful way to look at it. Yes indeed. And certainly chapter 49 fulfills that two-fold
purpose that Nephi had in quoting it. It teaches them about the Redeemer. It will come in
conqueror's in and death. It teaches them about how he's going to gather, he's broken off and
scattered people in the last days through these latter-day Gentiles who will, among whom he will raise the restored gospel.
This is one of my favorite verses in all of scripture is that verse 16. And when I
teach it, I love to ask my students, do you know the sign language for Jesus? And
for those of you watching on video, it's touching the palms of the hands like this,
one and then the other. That's the sign language. Yes, and I like to quote this and then touch my
hands like that. I have grave indeed upon the palms of my hands, and then it's always a fascinating
discussion to throw it out to the group. When Jesus came to the righteous in the New World, he wanted
them to come and witness the marks in his hands and in his feet. But I thought when we're
resurrected, all of that is healed again. It's always a fun discussion. Why would he want
those wounds to remain? It's always a fun discussion to say, well, he wanted them to know who he was.
He wanted them to know he was the fulfillment of this prophecy.
And Elder Holland talks about the fact that it's the wounded Christ who comes to save
us.
I think it's Elder Holland as well as Joseph Filving Smith that said they believe those wounds
would ultimately be cleansed.
But he carries this reminder of us in his hands.
It's kind of a beautiful way to think of it.
And I thought it might be good to talk to our listeners about kind of a definition of
Gentiles because I love this idea.
I know that you too have also been to the Western wall and there's this part of me that one
time when I went it was the beginning of the Sabbath and I felt this anxiousness to just
go, I'm part of the House of Israel too.
I wanted to tell them that I'm one of those Gentiles,
but I got my patriarchal blessing
and it told me that I'm part of the House of Israel too.
And that you have more with you than you can imagine.
And I guess that's one way to look at these Isaiah
verses that you're breaking forth on the right
and on the left.
Where did these come from?
Well, these are these Gentiles who have now
discovered through their patriarchs that they are also house of Israel and we are with you or part of you.
Gentiles, my understanding is and help me brother-ball is it just means the nations and
we kind of in the book of Mormon use Gentiles a lot to mean kind of the European nations that will come over to the New World, once the Nephites
and the Lamanites are gone.
Am I right on that?
Yeah, the word is goyem.
Sometimes the KJB translators translated this nations, and sometimes they translated this
Gentiles.
The identity of the Gentiles is a moving thing.
Anciently, you were either of the 12 tribes of Israel
or you were Goyin, you were of the nations,
or the Gentiles.
After the northern tribes of Israel
were carried away and scattered in 721 BC,
in the minds of the Jews, they were the last of the Israelites.
So there's a paradigm shift.
It's no longer are you Israel or Gentile, but are you Jew or Gentile?
A dichotomy.
Yeah, the others are lost. And the problem with that is that means that a lot of people who
have the blood of Israel in them are called Gentiles because they're not Jews.
I'm more over what it means to be a Jew starts to be a moving target as well. It can be a
genealogical, biological distinction, but also if you're living in a political kingdom of
Judah, you're called a Jew. If you've converted Judaism, you're called a Jew. Lehigh calls
himself a Jew, but what is he genealogically? He's from a NASA, from Joseph.
So when you read prophecies about the Gentiles, you're always helpful to say, well, how's the
term being defined in the day of the prophecies fulfillment?
So are we Gentiles?
Well, from the Jew Gentile perspective, yes.
But are we Israel?
And from a genealogical prospect
and from a conversion and theological way, where is Israel?
Depends on who you ask.
Yeah.
And because of the scattering of Israel,
the blood of Israel has been scattered
throughout much of the world, all through the world.
When one receives their patriarchal blessing, in most cases, it is not assigning lineage,
it's declaring lineage.
Meaning that somewhere in your genealogy, there's some of that israel lineage, and maybe
many of the tribes, but the blessings and responsibilities are yours by virtue of heritage, is that
which is declared by the patriarch and
your patriarchal blessing. That's why you can have people from different tribes in the
same family. And that happens on occasion. So yeah, I remember the statement from Bruce
Armaconchi and talking about Joseph Smith, he said, Joseph Smith, the literal descendant of Judah and Joseph, was the Gentile through whom the gospel was restored.
And anyone who knew Elder McConkey know that was a great imitation.
And that's pretty good.
Yeah, so are we Gentiles?
Are we Israel?
It's most certainly.
The book of Mormon says that Gentiles accept the gospel are numbered among the house of Israel.
That's the phrase it likes to use. I like to say they are recognized as part of the covenant family.
And that seems to be what's happening in 49.
I would love our listeners to take time in chapter 49, especially those of you who feel
lost and forgotten. It's chapter 49 verse 14, but Zion said, that's you. The Lord has forsaken me.
My Lord has forgotten me. There's a great talk way back in 2012. It's a long time ago you guys.
I don't know if you can dust off the 2012 shelf. This comes from Linda Reeves. Linda S. Reeves,
who is a second counselor in the Relief Society General Presidency at the time.
She talked about her and her husband. Recently on a trip, they were in a museum, and we found that
they had a guide, and her name was Molly, a lovely woman in her seventies. No children never married.
She was an only child, and her parents had been deceased for many years. Her closest relatives are
two cousins who live on another continent.
When you think of someone who could feel forgotten, this Molly, the tour guide, could feel that way.
Then Sister Reeves says this, suddenly, I was overwhelmed with the spirit testifying to me,
almost as if Heavenly Father were speaking. Molly is not alone.
Molly is my daughter.
I am her father.
She is a very important daughter in my family,
and she is never alone.
Sister Reeves goes on at the end of the talk,
and she says, just as the Lord had testified to me
that he has not forgotten his precious daughter Molly,
I testify that he has not forgotten his precious daughter Molly. I testify that
he has not forgotten you. Whatever sin or weakness or pain or struggle or trial you
are going through, he knows and understands those very moments. He loves you. He will carry
you through those moments. He has paid the price that he might know how to sucker you.
Cast your burdens upon him. Tell your Heavenly Father how you feel.
Tell him about your pain and afflictions and then give them to him.
Search the scriptures daily, there you will find great solace and help.
And then she quotes the Savior here from Isaiah.
Our Savior asked, for can a woman forget her sucking child that she should not have compassion on the
son of her womb?
Yeah, they may forget, yet will I not forget the, I have graven the upon the palms of my
hands.
I have commanded none of you should go away, but rather have commanded that you should
come into me that you might feel and see, even so shall ye do unto the world." And then she says,
this is our charge. We must feel and see for ourselves and then help all of Heavenly
Father's children to feel and see and know that our Savior has taken upon Himself not
only our sins, but also our pains and sufferings and afflictions so that he can know what we feel
and how to comfort us.
I mean, just a powerful statement.
You have not been forgotten,
even though it may feel like it.
Isn't that the essence of chapter 49, Terry,
even though it may feel like it's not a victory?
It really is.
It's not coming in the way you thought it was,
going to come, but the victory is coming and the victory is much bigger than you thought.
I love that assurance. It gives you to know. It's always nice to know that you're going to be a winner in the end.
Yeah. You know, I love BYU sports, but I can't stand to watch the Cougars lose.
So if I think there's a chance they'll lose, I don't watch it live. I have to record it and watch it afterwards so I don't get too upset. Then I don't feel so bad if there's a bad call or a miss scoring
opportunity. I think it's okay we're going to win in the end. I want to know the end.
49 kind of let you know yeah we're going to win in the end. You know these some struggles along
the way. I've always thought of Nephi and sharing this with his people because I just feel like
and sharing this with his people because I just feel like and help me with this Terry that when they lost their real estate they lost part of their
identity and they are suddenly on the other side of the planet considering
themselves on an aisle of the sea and I thought what a wonderful thing to
read Isaiah and say hey we are still house of Israel. We have that obligation as well as that blessing
and we have not been forgotten. And I just wonder if that was in Nephi's mind to say, this is still us.
We're in a different area of code, but the covenant still counts. And we still got a B who we're supposed to be.
That's a beautiful way to summarize it. Yeah, I think that's a big part of the reason why Nephi loved this chapter so much.
Delighted in it.
Yeah, it's just a hope.
Because I can see how easily the temptation it would feel like I would just been tossed
aside a couple of thousand miles.
Do the commandments count on the other side of the international date line?
Yeah.
No, no, no, no, no.
This is still who we are.
And we were scattered not because we're wicked,
but to preserve us.
And we have got to keep our covenants as covenant Israel.
I mean, I think that's what Nephi's doing.
And John, I would add verse 22, the rescue is coming.
The rescue party is coming.
I will lift up mine into the Gentiles.
They will carry you home.
And boy,
Nephi saw that he wants to see Lehigh's dream and he gets a lot
more than he bargained for. Then we has dream when he sees
verse Nephi 13 and 14 verse 23 there in 49, by the way, when
it talks about kings being nursing fathers and nursing mothers,
that sounds like a wonderful thing. It might be helpful for
readers as you go on in that verse, it makes a statement that they'll bow down their face towards you,
like feet and lick the dust up by feet.
That doesn't sound like a real fun activity to me.
Yeah.
When Jacob quotes this and talks about it in second Nephi,
he makes a distinction about two groups of Latter-day Gentiles,
those who accept the gospel and share it,
and gather scattered Israel, those are accept the gospel and share it, the gathers scattered Israel, those
are the nursing fathers and nursing mothers. And then there's another group who fight against
the church at the Lamb of God and against the covenant people. This is the second Nephi
6 and he says, those are the dust lickers. And I find some comfort in that. I'd rather
be a nurse than a dust licker. Yeah that sounds like eating ashes, but not much better.
Yeah.
You know, there's some interesting imagery in 48.
We haven't talked much about it yet.
Could we go there for a minute?
Please do, Terry.
Yeah.
The first part of 48 reads a lot like it would have come out of the first part of
35, the first 35 chapters, I should say, because there's a lot of rebuke and warning
here.
He starts off like really yelling at the covenant people who had come forth out of the waters
of Judah, or as Joseph Smith explains, the waters of baptism, but are not there being hypocrites.
And he says, I'm going to give you prophecy because you're stubborn.
You're neck is nine, sinew in your brow is brass and so forth.
And they're committing all kinds of apostasy and worshiping idols and all that
kind of stuff that that sounds like something out of the first 35 chapters. But he returns
to the last 27 chapters theme with starting in verse 18. I'm wondering what you make
of this imagery. You feel the pleading here. Oh, the Tao has harkened to my commandments, that's 48, 18. Then had thy peace
been as a river, and thy righteousness as a ways of the sea, and thy sea had been as the sand,
and the offspring of thy boughs like the gravel thereof. Your name should not have been cut off nor destroyed from before me. Oh, if you're just talking to my commandments, then had thy peace been as a river and
I write justness of the ways of the sea, what do you suppose you could mean by that imagery?
I had really looked at that and I was intrigued that in my closet, do you guys remember ancient compact discs CDs? I do remember CDs. I had
relaxation CDs that were waves of the sea or white noise like a river. Interesting. And that
this was actually to help you to feel calm. Your piece could have been like a river, that beautiful
sound of a babbling broker of white noise,
or that constancy of the waves of the sea.
I remember once I got to stay overnight in Hawaii and have that sound of the waves all night.
The constancy of that.
That's why I love that idea.
That we actually have CDs that give those sounds to help us relax.
Peace like a river and waves at constant like the waves of the sea.
That's what I thought about you Hank.
I read this and I go, oh man, the commandments are the way to go.
Wickedness never was happiness, but righteousness can be a lot of happiness.
I thought the same thing as you John is that your righteousness can be just constant,
just unstoppable.
Like the ways is just one after another,
all night long, right?
You know, there's a certain confidence
that comes from keeping the commandments
and a certain peace that can't be found in any other way,
even when things are going wrong.
And I remember when I was a young man in high school, I was six foot two and weighed 120 pounds, and I was, I was
homely and unincorneated as I was tall and skinny.
I had two brothers who were great athletes, and I was just so different than them.
I had a terrible inferiority complex.
Then I got over it.
I realized it wasn't a complex at all.
I was over it. I realized it wasn't a complex at all. I was genuinely inferior. It was just so many things I wished I could do that I would never be able to do.
But I realized that although I had no control over being handsome, a coordinated or anything
of that sort, I could choose to be righteous. That's something I could do.
That was such a great strength to me.
They'd say, you're ugly, and your mom dresses you funny.
And I'd say, yeah, but I'm righteous.
I'm OK.
That's one kind of peace.
The word peace, it's from the Hebrew root that we sometimes
say it in Shalom, it's the same root.
It means an absence of violence.
But you might know that it also means wholeness and completeness.
This idea of likening this peace and perfection to moving water, it's not unique to this passage,
is it? You think about when Christ met the woman at the well outside Samaria, remember?
He asked her to give him water to drink, and she says, I perceive you are a Jew, and you're
asking me a Samaritan to give him water to drink and she says, I perceive you are a Jew and you're asking me a Samaritan to give you water. What's going on here? He decides to seize upon the teaching
moment and says, well, if you knew who you were talking about and who you would ask me
to give you water and I give you living water. And she thinks he's talking about water,
but really he's talking about water. And I picture him pointing to the well and says,
who's whoever drinketh of this water? She'll well and says, who's whoever drinketh of this water?
She'll thirst again, but who's whoever drinketh
of the water that I give them?
She'll never thirst again.
And then remember the second part of that?
It'll become a fountain of springing up.
Well, in you.
Yeah, so the idea is that you've taken the water
that I give you, not only is your thirst satiated, but you become a source of water as well. I'm the fount of living water
You've taken what I have to give you and you become a source of living water
This water that's ever flowing and moving
Living water was water that was important. It's water that's used for purification and sanctification.
You would carry living water in Old Testament times and a two-part compartment vessel that had connections between it, so the water could be moving.
There's an association between moving living water and being like our Heavenly Father.
I think we see it in a hundred and twenty-first section to Dr. Covenant. You remember it says, if we let our bowlet be full of charity towards all men
and let virtue garnish our thoughts unceasingly and then shall what your confidence will
whack strong in the presence of God. The Holy Ghost will be your constant companion, the
doctrine to the priesthood. It will still upon nice soul like the deuce from heaven. Your septal will become an unchanging sceptor of righteousness and truth.
And thy dominion shall be and everlasting dominion.
And without compulsive air he means it shall flow on to thee forever and ever.
There's something associated with moving, living water that's associated
with being like our Father, the Fount of every blessing. And I think that's hinted at the
next verse here. When it says, remember going back to that, O that thou harker, not commandment,
then had thy peace been as a river, and thy righteousness like the ways of the sea,
thy seed also had been as the sand and
the offspring of the eyeballs as the gravel thereof. When you think about having sea, there's
numerous of the sands of the sea. Where does your mind go? Abraham. Yeah, this promise that you will
have eternal posterity, eternal increase. Some people think that that's
hyperbole when Abraham's told he would have seed as numerous as the sands of the sea, but if you
have eternal increase, that's not hyperbole. That's understatement. In the 131st section of the doctrine of covenants, when it talks about becoming like God and the attributes of God, not 131, 132,
the end of verse 19, speaking of those who have entered the new and everlasting covenant of marriage and kept their covenant,
it said, they shall pass by the angels and the gods, which are set there to their exaltation and glory and all things as have been sealed upon their heads which glory shall be a fulfillment and a
continuation of the seeds forever and ever then shall they be gods because they
have no end. One of the most distinguishing features of coming like our father
in heaven is that we have eternal seed or eternal increase. So I wonder if this is one place from the scriptures that we
can teach this idea about man's potential to become like God. If we harken under his
commandments, then we become like him into our perfection, our righteousness, our wholeness,
our completeness is continuous,
forever.
It flows like a river in the ways of the sea, and we have eternal increase.
See, there's numerous of the sands of the sea.
Anyway, I love the imagery in the passage, and that's one way to understand that makes
good sense to me.
Beautiful.
John, as people come up to me, I don't know how
to what they say to you, but they just say I'm so grateful for podcasts, the different guests that
you bring on. It gives me so much hope. I feel good. As we've been going through this with Terry,
I'm seeing these, the very opening verse, comfort ye, comfort ye my people. And then as we
just keep going, he says says I will renew your strength
This is Isaiah 40 31, but they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength
They shall mount up as with wings as eagles
41 again verse one I will renew their strength the Lord will not fail
Nor be discouraged 41 10 we've already read, fear thou not.
I am with thee.
Be not dismayed.
I am thy God.
I think this section could be something that people could go through and just what do
you call those sermons in a sentence where they could just go through and mark these
beautiful phrases.
I will not forsake you.
The Lord says I have not forgotten you And especially the one we spent time on,
can a woman forget a child? I mean, this is the most extreme example. No. And I have not forgotten you. I've engraved in you on the palms of my hands.
They shall not hunger nor thirst. So
what do you say, and this is my question, what do we say to those who are listening today, Terry, who are
struggling to know that God knows them and loves them?
I think that's God of e. What of our major messages today, don't you think? If there's one thing we want to get across today,
it's the Lord loves you. He knows you and hasn't forgotten you.
And that he has the power and the knowledge and the presence and the love
to save and redeem you. We can have that faith and in fact that is his whole work and glory.
That's God's work to bring to pass our immortality, eternal life. When you have that perspective
in that hope,
you should deal with the challenges of life
from a different perspective.
There's a different purpose to life.
You have a goal, you know how to get there.
You know why you're here.
It can give you such hope.
Then I suspect that for most of the listeners,
and certainly for all of us,
there's been times when that hope
has really come to our rescue.
Yep.
What a blessing.
I love what Terry has pointed out to us.
How these chapters begin and how beginning in about chapter 40 takes this different
tone because I think the Lord is kind of focusing on these.
Could I say it like this?
Some promised outcomes, some promised results. And when we
are in the middle of a trial, I try to remember Hank, Emily Freeman talks about the middle.
What do you do in the middle? And sometimes when you're in the middle of the trial, these
kind of verses about outcomes can be comforting that the Lord's going to do what he does.
This is what he does. He's a healer
and hang on to those promised outcomes
because they're coming.
And the terms that Terry has given us,
he's omnipresent, he's omniscient,
and he's omneloveing, and hang on.
Those outcomes will come. But right now I'm looking at Isaiah 4810,
I have refined thee, but not with silver. I have chosen thee in the furnace of affliction. I wrote
my margin, could you choose me to be somewhere else? It doesn't sound very comfortable to be in a furnace, but what's he doing? I'm from my own sake.
I'm going to refine you, and the refining is uncomfortable.
But maybe we read this, and hopefully we get a testimony of the outcome the Lord has
in mind for us.
Our friend John Hilton said, there's the devastation of the Friday the Lord dies.
There's the magnificence of the Sunday that he's resurrected
But what do you do about Saturday?
The Saturdays is the hard part.
What was elderworth? One who talked about that, going through the Saturdays of life.
Well, he just said Sunday will come.
Focused on that promised outcome. Yeah.
There are rare people who appreciate the refining. God's so good at making sure we have the experiences that are necessary to refine us. I remember I love what it says in the 101st section of doctrine,
Covenants when Joseph is trying to comfort the saints who've been driven from Jackson County and they have to be chasing them tried even as was Abraham.
to be chastened and tried even as was Abraham. Here we are, DNC 101. This is verse 2, I've suffered the fliction to come upon them wherewith they have been afflicted,
consequent to their transgressions. Yet I will own them. I love that imagery. God's going to
own us. They shall be mine and the day when I shall come to make up my jewels. I love that imagery
that we can be part of Christ's treasure chest.
That's an isianic phrase, by the way, too.
They make up my jewels.
Therefore, they must need to be chastened and tried even as Abraham, who was commanded
to offer up his only son, for all those who will not endure chastening, but the nigh
may be sanctified.
But sanctifying is part of the Saturdays, it is so hard.
Sometimes, we can go through our Abrahamic tests and it is not painful.
If we just make the right choices early on, I think of King David that we have just been
studying recently and come follow me.
You think about what King David's Abrahamic test was.
It had to be Bashiba.
If he had never thought of her again, he probably would have passed his Abrahamic test,
and the refining wouldn't have been nearly as difficult.
But he, or some reason, thought repentance wasn't worth it, and so he compounded his sin,
and created all the trouble.
And like you said, John, if he'd just turned and never walked away, he would have passed
this test.
We would always thought that his big test was Goliath. Goliath was
nothing compared to Bashiba.
Yeah. And dealing with his own lost. Oh, man. I remember as a teenager when what that's
the same David. Oh, it just feeling kind of a gut punch that that later in life, you
went through that.
Hank, could I share something from Elder Scott?
Please.
This has blessed me so much and I've used a lot about Elder Scott in October of 1995,
gave a talk called Trust in the Lord.
He said, when you face adversity, you can be led to ask many questions.
Some serve a useful purpose, others do not.
To ask, why does this have to happen to me?
Why do I have to suffer this now?
What have I done to cause this?
Will lead you into blind alleys?
It really does know good to ask questions
that reflect opposition to the will of God.
Rather ask and listen how different these questions are.
What am I to do?
What am I to learn from this experience?
What am I to change?
Who am I to help?
How can I remember my many blessings in times of trial?
Willing sacrifices of deeply held personal desires in favor of the will of God is very hard to do.
Yet when you pray with real conviction, please let me know that I will and may that will be done.
You are in the strongest position to receive maximum help from your loving Father.
People in my own ward right now that are dealing with health challenges I can't even imagine
and relate to with themselves with loved ones. Having those questions change. Okay, what do I need to learn?
What would you like me to do with this Lord?
Who can I help in the middle of this? What do I need to change is?
Like Elder Scott said very hard to do, but the focus change is a little bit when we rely on God for these good outcomes that Isaiah is talking about in these chapters. You know, I think that's true not only for the hardships and trials that come from health
issues or employment issues or the loss of a loved one.
I think that same paradigm can be applied when we have these challenges that come in the
form of crises of faith, something from church history or something culturally or politically
or socially that raises difficult issues that could
challenge our faith, there are a lot of hard questions out there that can challenge your
faith. If you follow Elder Scott's example, you let your faith inform the question and
you come up with answers that feel right and are right. But if you let the question inform
your faith, you end up in the wrong place. I've
watched so many who struggle with their faith lately and it seems like they're those who just
naturally let their faith inform the question and they end up right. There's others who let the
question inform your faith and they start to question their faith and we've heard a lot about this
lately but a lot of ways faith really is a choice. If you choose to believe, you can find so much
that informs and affirms your faith. If you choose not to believe, there's lots of people give you
reasons not to believe. Sister Sherry, do you book Worth a Ressel. It started as a talk up at
BYU Idaho, but I love this idea that I have known people and so have you who have confronted
a difficult question, wrestle with it and came back stronger. That's why I love the
word wrestle, because wrestling is an incredibly strenuous event, but you come back stronger
if you, how did you say it, brother, I love that. Let your faith feed the question. There's an answer.
I'm going to go find it.
I'm going to wrestle with this and let the Lord help you
with that wrestle.
And I'm trying to remember the name of the sister.
I was at an event with a sister.
She was a single sister.
People had said to her, how can you continue to serve
in your calling?
I think she was on one of the boards of the church.
When you're single and at such a family church
and she said, well, I can be just as childless
and just as single outside the church,
or I can be in the church where I find so much peace
and happiness, and I can be single and childless
in the church where I find this much peace and happiness.
I thought, what a great answer. I could be outside the church and still be single and childless,
but I have found God here. And so I'm staying. And I'll deal with my challenges with God's help.
Anyway, I love that answer. Yeah. Thanks to both of you. We want our listeners to walk away
uplifted and healed. And I think these chapters of Isaiah,
you probably won't understand every verse.
And that's okay.
You'll come back to it again.
This is why we do this every four years.
In fact, we get it every two years,
with at least those chapters in the Book of Mormon,
come back over and over.
And eventually, you'll get it.
Terry, I'm sure it took you a long time
to pick up on everything Isaiah was saying.
I haven't done that yet. I'm still learning.
Yeah, still going. Terry, I think our listeners would be interested in hearing a little bit
of your story. So here you are, very educated,
Latter-day Saint, multiple degrees in Archaeo Botany. I mean,
that's the coolest degree I've ever heard of. Archaeobotany. That's so fun.
Terry, one of the things that I have on one of my PowerPoint slides, which I just thought was so
interesting with your knowledge of Hebrew and also a botany, was in Isaiah chapter, is that
Isaiah chapter five or second, he five fifteen, where he speaks of my beloved hathavinured in a very
fruitful hill. And I've heard it as Isaiah is only parable. Some people have said that, but he says, I did everything. I took the stones there out. I built a
hedge. I built a tower. I planted it with the choices vine and I looked that it should bring forth
grapes and it brought forth wild grapes. Would you please share with us what Isaiah really said there
instead of wild grapes because I get a kick out of it?
We know the annual grape harvest and time of Israel was a time of great celebration because grape for so critical for their sustenance and their economy and grapes grow wonderfully there
With just a little bit of irrigation and cultivation they produced just wonderful wonderful grapes and
cultivation, they produced just wonderful, wonderful grapes. And apparently they would sing great harvest songs
when they would harvest the grapes.
And Isaiah chapter five, Isaiah seems to take
what was a common great harvest song.
And he twists the words of it just a bit
to teach a lesson to the ancient covenant people.
It certainly applies to the modern covenant people.
He's kind of like being an Old Testament weird alianca
bitch.
You know who that is? And so as he does this, he talks about how the well-beloved who we
understand is Jehovah makes this you so well summarized, John, this wonderful,
wonderful vineyard. And he plants it with the choicest vine, the Hebrew
there's the word Sodech, which refers to the very best of the grapes. It has all
these things for it to bring forth this wonderful crop, and instead of
bringing forth this wonderful crop, it brings forth what the King James people translate as wild grapes.
Graves will grow wild in the Holy Land, but wild grapes are not like cultivated grapes. They're
smaller, drier, a little more sour, not the same as Soda, I guess, really good grapes.
He's going to be really disappointed that
brought forth wild grapes.
The word translated as wild grapes is the Hebrew word
bechim.
If you look up the word bechim in the brown drivers
and Briggs, Hebrew lexicon, it tells you that the
root of that word literally means worthless
stinking thing.
So it's not that they brought forth an inferior quality of grapes, it brought forth something
totally unexpected.
Totally worthless.
Yeah, and you can feel the frustration of the master when he says, what market have I done
in my vineyard that I've not done it?
When I looked at it, it should bring forth grapes that brought forth bettushine.
Worthless stinking things.
Yeah. it brought forth Betoucheet. Worthless stinking things. Yeah, I remember we'd taken a group of students to a biblical garden outside Jerusalem called
Naukete-Mim and we had this sweet little Jewish girl.
We were up on a tower overlooking a vineyard they had in their biblical garden and she was
going over this chapter 5 thing and she says, and look at you bring forth grapes.
When brought forth and all my kids said, worthless stinking things.
She looked a little embarrassed.
She says, well, I know that's what the word mean,
but we prefer to think it brought forth immature grapes.
That's a euphemism.
It made you wonder if God ever looks at us
when we have access to all the cup of things
and looks at us and says, oh, oh, oh,
Hank, beu, she, meu, she, meu, she, no, not Hank,
but maybe Terry. No, man, I almost oh, Hank, Bet-Oshim, Bet-Oshim, Bet-Oshim, no, not Hank, but maybe Terry.
No, man.
It almost feels like the Lord is saying, what else did you want me to do?
I put you in Utah for crying out loud.
There's a thousand temples around you.
You got prophets and apostles an hour away.
And I get worthless stinking grapes.
One of the first papers I published was on botanical imagery in Isaiah. Isaiah has
more than 300 botanical images in this thing. When you live in the grain society, you
just naturally going to use plants a lot to teach. Yeah. Something people understand, right?
Yeah. Well, let me tell you how I became an archaeobotanist, seems how you asked. I did
my undergraduate in secondary education
and you had to have a composite degree,
so I chose botany because I've always loved plants.
And then I did the seminary pre-service
because my first choice was to be a seminary teacher.
My second choice was to be a physician.
My third choice was to teach high school science.
So I tried to cover all the paces with my undergraduate education.
Fortunately, it was hired to be a seminary teacher.
So I did my master's in ancient Near Eastern studies,
which is kind of a Hebrew archeology history kind of degree.
And I decided to combine the two into my doctorate
and do archeobotany of the ancient Near East.
Look, that was two kind of things to come together.
As I first got started, my advisors taught me about a particular plant microphosphols,
it's called a phytolith.
It's a little tiny subcellular piece of opal that takes the shape of the cells in which
it was created.
And he said, you know, people say the Book of Mormon can't be true because it speaks
of barley and wheat in the new world
Before Columbus
They also everyone knows there's no such thing as pre-Columbian wheat and barley
In the new world and get the Book of Mormon speaks of it at the time Lehigh's family left Israel
barley and wheat were important cultivars. They've been grown since theolithic times and they've become so dependent upon human intervention. They couldn't exist without human planning and sewing
and that kind of stuff. And so bringing the wheat to the new world, they would have persisted
on it, but during the warriors, they would have lost it because they weren't cultivating
it the way they can. And you'll see that shift in the book of Mormon as you read through
it. The wheat and barley start to diminish in the text, but he said,
what we need to do is get someone who can find these phytoliths,
which persist for hundreds of thousands of years in the new world that predate Columbus,
because you can date them.
They have carbon inclusions to allow you to date them.
And then we can show that there is Wheaton Barley here before Columbus.
So that was my initial PhD study was working to create a way to identify wheat and barley
phydelis. When I first started you could only tell the grass from a non-grass phydelis.
But using computer assisted imaging analysis and scanning electron microscopy and statistical
analysis I developed algorithms that allow us to identify wheat and barley phydelis right down
to the species level. With about 80% accuracy at species level,
90% at genus level.
And so I was getting ready to publish my dissertation
and then start looking for wheat and barley in the new world
when they discovered carbonized barley seeds
in New Mexico that predated Columbus.
So I got scooped.
Everyone now knows that wheat and barley predate Columbus
and nobody questions it.
But at the time it was a big question.
That's why I got into archaeobotany, working with these plant micro fossils from archaeological excavations.
I spent my scientific research in that discipline.
Terry, I have a joke that's kind of related to archaeobotany.
Sister Miles, I met her on a church history tour. She said,
when the leaves all fall off of a tree, who do you call? The elders' quorum to rake it up.
But who puts the leaves back on the tree? And she said, that is the relief society.
Relief society.
Great personal risk. I promised I would tell that joke on the podcast.
That's so bad I could tell it.
I can't explain that.
Here's one of the same genre.
If the devil were to lose his tail in Utah,
where would he have to go to get another?
I have no idea.
You'd have to go to the state liquor store.
Because in Utah, that's the only place where it's legal to retail evil spirits.
My word.
Terry, I think there's a myth out there among some Latter-day Saints that the more education
you get, the less likely you are to believe and have faith. Yet here is someone with advanced
degrees and decades of teaching. How have those two worlds combined for you? How has your faith
and your education helped one another?
You know that's not so much of a myth that the more education you get the less religious
you are. There have been studies done at BYU and outside of BYU where they've looked at the effect of higher education on religiosity,
which they define as whether or not you pray, you keep the Sabbath, you give alms, you give service,
you read scriptures, and those studies have consistently shown that for most faiths,
higher education you have the less likely you are to be religious.
The one outlier, well one of two outliers, but the main outlier is the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, and in the Church, the higher education you have, the more religious you
are likely to be, and the correlation coefficient to R-squared is very, very high. Before I retired,
that's been a number of years ago, we had one of the authors of that study come and do a faculty form for us to talk about that phenomenon.
The truth is that faith supports truth and truth supports faith.
That my studies have informed my faith and my faith has informed my studies.
They go hand in hand.
It's not surprising to me.
It's only natural that the more education you get, the more you're going to understand
and appreciate the truth that the gospel brings.
That's been my experience.
This notion that you can't be a scientist and a religious person is also silly.
There are many, many faithful scientists.
In fact, I've published a paper on faith and science that just reviews many great scientists
talking about their faith and the role of God in their research.
Those two disciplines aren't mutually exclusive. A lot of faithful scientists. That's beautiful.
I don't know to answer your question, but yeah, I think our listeners just need to know that,
hey, look, we have very, very educated people in our church. And they are all in. They're believers.
Maybe one last question.
What do you say to those Latter-day Saints who are still
Isaiah is Brussels sprouts?
I just don't get it. I just don't know what to do.
I'm sure you've had students say that to you before.
Here you have a great love for it.
Any parting thoughts for those who are thinking,
I want to get it, the Savior himself says,
study Isaiah, and I would say, I think of all the prophets I've studied.
Isaiah gets it probably more than almost anybody else.
So what do you say to those gladder days saying to who are struggling?
I don't know that I know the answer for all of them,
that I know for me, the answer came in following the Savior's
admonition to search these things diligently, not
reluctantly or haphazardly or quickly, but to spend the
time to carefully look at it, let the Spirit guide you. I
don't think you need to know Hebrew to come to love this
prophet. I don't think you need to be a biblical scholar. You
just have to have a heart that wants to know and love God.
And to spend the time with the text
You've experienced and we've all experienced times when you're reading scriptures and those marvelous delicious moments when you start to learn beyond the words
And that happens as you read carefully and you ponder
Yeah, I don't think there's anything
More important to serious scripture study than disciplining yourself to pondering
I define pondering is the act of asking questions
and then looking thinking about the answers.
Something wonderful happens when you read a passage and ask,
how would I say this in my own words?
What would I teach my children out of this?
What could this mean to me?
How was it fulfilled, anciently?
How does it apply to us today?
You know, when you start to ask those questions,
then you start to get feelings that enter your heart and thoughts that pop into your mind,
and it becomes this delicious discovery, a hot experience, rather than the ho-home I've got
a trudge through this. And that can happen. It's disciplining yourself to search diligently,
taking time to ponder, and the love grows. That's been my experience and I think for many
others as well. Can I ask you one more question, Terry? I just think it's fascinating that when Nephi gives
us his kind of four keys for understanding Isaiah. Like after he quotes that huge block of Isaiah
chapters, 2nd Nephi 12th to 24, the first eight verses and 2 second Nephi 25 give us these keys and I know Bruce
Armaconkey has 10 keys but Nephi's got these four and one of them he says in that day they
shall understand them and I would love to get your take on why is it in our day that Nephi
says we will understand Isaiah. What do you think about this? He saw our podcast, John, of course, that's gotta be what we're doing.
That's an interesting observation
because many of us would want to excuse ourselves
from understanding Isaiah by saying,
well, it was written by an ancient prophet,
for an ancient people,
but Nephi certainly begs to differ.
He says, in our day, we should understand them better
than in any other dispensable.
And previous generations.
I don't know all the reasons, but some of them is, first of all, we're able to study Isaiah
as a lens of the restored gospel, the fullness of the gospel.
They haven't had an ever dispensation.
We also have the teachings of living prophets, and we also have the benefit of historical
hindsight.
So we have prophetic foresight and historical hindsight.
So that's helpful to us as well.
And we have already access to Isaiah.
Most of us carry Isaiah around in our pockets. There's never been dispensation that's had more
access to scriptures than us. And we have ways to look at so many resources to supplement our
understanding, you know, Bible dictionaries and topical guides and gasele tears and the restoration scriptures. Plus we live in the time when Isaiah's
prophecies find the most complete and false fulfillment and application.
You know, there are so many academic worlds who think that it's
not correct to try and find modern day applications of a filmet for
the Old Testament or Isaiah's writings in our own life.
I hope none of our listeners buy into that. I believe it is important to understand ancient
fulfillment interpretations and applications for the prophecies, but it's equally if not more
important to find interpretations and applications that fit our day. That's why Nephi told us to liken Isaiah to ourselves.
And it's just as much as the disservice to the text to not look for applications in our day as it
is to not understand the application in the ancient world as well. They're both really important.
And it's so critical. I think Isaiah and our Heavenly Father are pleased when we read a passage and
think about how does this apply to us. Nephi models that perfectly
doesn't he? So often he'll take a passage and I know he understood exactly what it meant into Isaiah's
people and sees it applying to his own people. You see that when he quotes about the Ariel prophecy
and the voice of those that speak from the dust, you know, Isaiah sees that. He knows that that's applying to Jerusalem. He knew
what Ariel, the city, were David Dwellt, but he also sought to be fulfilled perfectly by his own
people and applies it. So it's not wrong. It's not wrong to repurpose or to apply and like
in the scriptures to ourselves and learn from it as well. What a blessing to have the spirit to
help us in that lighting to ourselves as we do that.
That's beautiful. I don't know. Was that your thoughts on that as well, John? Exactly what you said.
We will see it happening around us. We will have more help than ever before. From, as you said,
we have prophetic insights into it, the commentaries. We live where we can carry it around in our pocket.
I thought exactly those. And I was it around in our pocket. I thought
exactly those, and I was just curious what you thought, because I thought, when have we ever
been better equipped than we are right now with all the help we have? We're kind of getting to
the point where we're left without excuse, except for just taking the time and pondering, as you said.
I just wanted to have a real scholar comment on that. That was great.
Well, we want to thank Dr. Terry Ball for being here. Thank you, Terry, and for bringing your
decades of experience to help us and our listeners. I have learned a lot. I have taken a lot of notes
going through these chapters. And thanks for the encouragement to study Isaiah because we have
more episodes of Isaiah coming up on Follow Him. So you'll want to join us next week. We want to thank our executive producers, Steven Shannon
Swanson, our sponsors David and Verla Swanson and we hope you'll come back.
Like we said, more Isaiah coming up on Follow Him. Thank you.