Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Isaiah 58-66 Part 1 • Dr. Ross D. Baron • Oct. 3 - 9
Episode Date: September 28, 2022What do the names for Jesus Christ in Isaiah teach about the Savior? Dr. Ross Baron explores how Isaiah brings hope and relates the blessings of fasting and the reality of the Savior's life and r...edemption.Please rate 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.comBaron, Ross. 2022. Amazon.Com. https://www.amazon.com/Social-Ethics-Church-Christ-Latter-day/dp/3639048253.Baron, Ross. 2022. "Ross Baron". Ensign College Main Site. https://www.ensign.edu/devotionals/ross-baron.Baron, Ross. 2022. "Ross Baron - FAIR". FAIR: "Authorized Messengers And The Gift Of The Holy Ghost". https://www.fairlatterdaysaints.org/testimonies/scholars/ross-baron.Baron, Ross. 2022. "Ross Baron - "Lessons Learned Living In Israel"". BYU-Idaho. https://video.byui.edu/media/Ross+Baron+-+%22Lessons+Learned+Living+in+Israel%22/0_kqewjuzi/11602882.Baron, Ross. 2022. "Ross Baron: "Old Testament Lessons About The Priesthood"". BYU-Idaho. https://video.byui.edu/media/Ross+BaronA+%22Old+Testament+Lessons+About+the+Priesthood%22/0_u66eezvm.Causse, Gerald. 2022. "Caring For The Poor And Needy In The Growing International Church | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/lengthening-our-stride/caring-poor-needy-growing-international-church.Cordon, Bonnie H. 2022. "That They May See". Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2020/04/42cordon?lang=eng.Eyring, Henry B. 2022. "October 3–9. Isaiah 58–66: “The Redeemer Shall Come To Zion”". Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/come-follow-me-for-individuals-and-families-old-testament-2022/41?lang=eng.Hilton III, John. 2022. "The Isaiah Map: An Approach To Teaching Isaiah | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/vol-21-no-1-2020/isaiah-map-approach-teaching-isaiah.Hopkin, Shon D., and Ann N. Madsen. 2022. Amazon.Com. https://www.amazon.com/Opening-Isaiah-Madsen-Shon-Hopkin/dp/1944394303/ref=sr_1_2?crid=1EV7LKAGOM7UU&keywords=shon+hopkin&qid=1663705347&s=books&sprefix=shon+hopkin%2Cstripbooks%2C115&sr=1-2.Hoskisson, Paul Y. 2022. "A Latter-Day Saint Reading Of Isaiah | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/sperry-symposium-classics-old-testament/latter-day-saint-reading-isaiah.Muhlestein, Kerry. 2022. "Isaiah Resources – Out Of The Dust". Outofthedust.Org. https://www.outofthedust.org/isaiah-resources/.Nelson, Russell M. 2022. "October 3–9. Isaiah 58–66: “The Redeemer Shall Come To Zion”". Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/manual/come-follow-me-for-individuals-and-families-
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John, by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh.
We want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I am your host, and I am here with my co-host whom I shall describe
it like this.
For since the beginning of the world, men have not heard, nor perceived by the ear, neither
have the eye seen a co-host, like under John, by the way.
John, when I read that verse in Isaiah 64, I immediately thought of you.
Never since the beginning of world
have men heard or perceived, or the I seen,
someone like John, by the way.
So, was it the Greeks who invented co-hosts?
Yeah.
I was gonna make a joke about neither half the I seen,
because you love to say, your favorite phrase is is I have a face that's perfect for audio.
Let's watch this on audio only.
Yes. What a beautiful verse. Isaiah 64 verse 4. Sadly, it's not about you, John. It's about the things that God has prepared for those who wait for him. We have been studying Isaiah now for the last what? John hasn't been four weeks.
We've been studying Isaiah. We're on our fifth and final lessons. We needed somebody who could
bring us home. Give us a good finish to our Isaiah lessons this year. So who's here with us?
I'm so excited to read this bio because it's so interesting. We have Dr. Ross Barron with us today.
He was born and raised in Southern California, joined the church. When he was
18 and served a mission, it sounds like not much later. In Argentina, Buenos Aires, south,
which was divided and then finished in Argentina, Bahaya Blanca. When he returned, he came home met
and fell in love with Kathleen Ann Bolton, and they were sealed in the Los Angeles Temple. He has nine children, five boys and four
girls, received a bachelor's degree from BYU Provo and Finance, a master's degree in a PhD
from USC in religion and social ethics, and was involved in business and entrepreneurship before
he went to work full-time as an institute director and CES coordinator in Southern California at the Glendora and Claremont
institutes. And after 12 years as an institute director and coordinator came to teach at BYU Idoho
in the summer of 2005. From 2018 to 2019 he was a visiting professor at BYU Jerusalem where the
whole family lived for a year. He said, I love to learn teach and learn from either. There's nothing so exciting as being in a classroom with students who are anxious
bright and ready to learn by study and by faith. And Hank, he listed some unique things
that he has done. This is going to be fun to read. Swam across the San Francisco Bay
for the escape from Alcatraz Triathlon. He went on the prices right and
won a stove, a mop, and a barrel sauna. He went on the history channel to
represent the church. And some of these we've got to ask him about,
participated in a radio show in Southern California where callers could ask
any questions about the church. He played the drums with a group of institute students at the Hard Rock Cafe in Los Angeles
played the drums at
Guitar's unplugged in the fall of 2005 in the winter of 2006 and
Their group made it to the best of in both semesters. He played chess in the US Open Tournament in
1991 in Los Angeles. Oh my goodness. He's at, oh, I'm not done, hey.
He's spoken at Christian colleges and universities
on the church.
He has led six community firesides about the church
where thousands attended.
And this is the part that makes me want to jot this down.
He's featured on the website, fairlbs.org.
You can probably watch those firesides.
And so I'm so glad to have Dr.
Baron with us today with such a fascinating bio. Thank you for joining us today. Dr. Baron
from Rexburg right now. A little outside of Rexburg. Idaho Falls. We're a little farming community
called Riree. Riree. I've been to Riree. Welcome Dr. Baron. We're happy you're here.
Well, I'm thrilled to be with you guys. I think you're doing a great work and I love
listening to your podcast. So I'm honored to be with you today. Oh, cool. Cool. We love it when
the listener comes on because they know exactly how this works. What we're going to do is turn
this over to you. We want to be here. We want to listen, maybe throw in an insider too, but tell us
what do our listeners need to know? If you're taking students into the book of Isaiah for,
but even the first time, what do they need to know before they even to get into a chapters of Isaiah?
Great. I wanted to do some interesting, I thought, to start. I was listening to your podcast with Sean Hopkins with respect to Psalm 22 and he kept bringing up Isaiah 53
And like John in my intro talked about I am a convert. I grew up Jewish
So I grew up
100% my mom and dad are Jews my grandparents are Jews my great grandparents are Jews
I 100% have a Jewish background went to Hebrew school as a little kid
I 100% have a Jewish background went to Hebrew school as a little kid
I was born in Mitzvah when I was 13 and so when I was a senior in high school what happened was I
Don't know why 100% but I decided to read Matthew Mark Luke and John I can honestly say growing up We never had one single conversation about Jesus Christ in my home that. And so I was kind of this curious kid
and I thought, I'm gonna read the New Testament,
except I don't, we don't have one.
I don't have access.
I've never laid eyes on one.
So I went to my high school library
and I went and asked if I could read the New Testament.
And she gave me, you know,
the Phillips modern English version of the New Testament.
I didn't know there were different versions.
It was, hey man, come follow me, yo, dude, the version.
I thought, Jesus is awesome.
This is way easier than the Hebrew Bible.
I read Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
I had an experience that using Latter-day Saints' speak, I felt the Holy Ghost.
Back then, I knew I was feeling something powerful, but it was
testifying to me that it was true. So I didn't know quite what to do with that.
I had a friend in high school who was a Latter-day Saint. There was only four, I
think, Latter-day Saints in my high school, four or five. And we were going into
a class about five minutes before class. I said, hey, Craig, what do you guys
believe? This 17 and a half year old gives me like the plan of salvation perfectly. I was blown
away. It was so amazing how he laid it out to me. Wow. I said, hey, you know, can I go maybe
come over to your house? Just one little backstory here. A couple days before this born again Christian
guy had invited me to the Maranatha Club, which was a high school club for Christians.
I went to it and it was very nice.
I didn't feel anything particularly well, but they were really nice people.
Afterwards, one of the young men came to me and said, so Ross, what do you think?
I said, oh, thanks for inviting me and all this kind of stuff.
Then he said something that literally changed my life.
He said, whatever you do, don't read the Book of Mormon,
it's the devil's book.
Like that came out of nowhere.
That guy has no idea how many baptisms
he's responsible for, but in the end,
that's why that next day I was talking to that young man.
So I said, hey, is there a way I can get a copy
of the Book of Mormon?
Like how do I get one?
Can I buy one?
He goes, no, no, come over to my house after school.
We've got a basket full of them.
I thought that would be great.
But anyway, that's weird.
We drove to his house after school.
And his dad was there.
He was a fireman.
So he had that day off.
And we ended up talking for hours.
And he goes, listen, I said, can I get a copy of the Book of Mormon?
Can you imagine like if somebody can,
hey, can you please get me a copy of the Book of Mormon? So I don't know. I can get you a copy of the book. So it gives me the Book of Mormon. And he said, well, I said, can I get a copy of the book of Mormon? Can you imagine like if somebody can, hey, can you please give me a copy of the book?
I don't know.
Yeah, I can get you a copy of the book.
So it gives me the book of Mormon.
And he said, well, you like to read.
I said, I love to read.
So it gave me Jesus the Christ.
He gave me Articles of Faith by James the Talmud.
And he gave me a marvelous work in a wonder by the Grand Richard.
Oh, not my word.
And so I left his house and I was like, hey, thanks so much.
And in about three weeks, I read the book of Mormon,
Jesus Christ, Articles of Faith, and marvelous work in wonder. Oh, my word. Now, I'm not saying, I read the Book of Mormon, Jesus Christ, Article Faith, and
Marvel's working a wonder.
Oh, my word.
Now, I'm not saying I want to be clear, anybody who's read Jesus of the Christ, I'm not saying
I understood all of it.
Right.
It's a big deal.
But I felt the power of it.
And it was while reading the Book of Mormon, I had another experience similar to what
I'd had while reading Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.
Like, I'd had this experience. And so I went, that three and a half weeks later,
knocked on their door and basically said,
how do I join your church?
What do I do?
Now, I tell you all that because when Dr. Hopkins
was talking about Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53,
and you gotta remember, I was raised with the Hebrew Bible.
And so what happened was I had kind of immersed myself,
Book of Mormon, right?
All this kind of great stuff.
I read Matthew, Mark, and Luke, and John.
I was having missionary discussions,
but then all of a sudden I kind of had to step back.
Like, wait, is Jesus real?
And you know what the two chapters were
that put me over the edge?
Psalm 22, I say, 53.
Oh my word.
When I read Psalm 22 through the lens of having read the book of Mormon,
Jesus Christ, Article VIII, the Marvelous Word of Wonder, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
and then when I read Isaiah 53, it was the capstone for me, and I cannot overemphasize the power,
and the way my, again, my eyes were open, and I was able to see that this truly was talking about the master.
I was talking about Jesus Christ.
So, when you say, well, what do people need to know? What would someone need to know about Isaiah?
I think what they need to know, and if we could, if you don't mind, if we could go to 1st Nephi 1923 to start.
To me, this is what we would have to start with.
So 1st Nephi 1923, and a lot of times,
what people will do is they'll focus on the idea of likening.
Yeah.
But if I could just read this, this is Nephi speaking,
I did read many things unto them, his brethren,
which were written in the books of Moses,
but this line, that I might more fully persuade them
to believe in the Lord,
their Redeemer. I did read unto them that was written by the prophet Isaiah. So if somebody came
to me and said, Hey, Ross, do I need to know, look, I can tell you the time about Isaiah,
Road, and I can tell you some background about the kings that he was over in the area he was in,
but I would say the single most important thing is that when you read Isaiah,
you're going to learn more about Jesus Christ. You're going to learn more about the Lord,
your Redeemer, than anywhere else. And if we could also go to 2 Nephi 11, verse 8, and this is
when Nephi is about to introduce all of the kind of Isaiah In verse 8, excuse me, verse 2, we're going to
read verse 8 later. And now I need if I write more of the words of Isaiah for my soul delighteth in
his words, for I will liken his words into my people, and I will send them forth unto all my children
and then this line, for he verily saw my redeemer even as I have seen him. So in answering that question, I would say, there is no question that this is a Christ-centered book
and that this is, we can learn about Jesus,
about his nature, his character, his attributes, his
perfection, we can learn about the plan.
Isaiah, I like to do a subject index with my students,
but I'll talk about that a little later too,
but you can learn about pre-mortality, mortality,
post-mortality, about, post-mortality,
about Jesus in Isaiah.
That was a long answer to your question, but yeah.
That's great.
So what's kind of fun about that is that clearly,
Nephi saw Christ in those Isaiah chapters.
And I suppose having them on the brass plates wanted to share that with everybody, but I love that
to more fully persuade them to believe in their Redeemer. And so clearly he sees Jesus in those
chapters. That's right. That's exactly right. I want to go back to your conversion story. How did
this sit with your family and everything? Was that difficult? Yeah, so I think that's a great question, and I would say this, that my mom and dad,
I pay tribute to them, they were amazing parents,
super loving my grandparents.
Again, very Jewish, it's hard to,
if you haven't come from that background,
I mean, it was a very Jewish background,
and of course they were freaking out
when I joined the church.
It was at a time, this was pre-1978, so the blacks hadn't got the priesthood yet.
BYU is known kind of as a racist university. There was always kind of things going on. So it was hard.
It was a very difficult thing. What changed it for them, honestly, kind of funny. I was working for my father. My dad had a big medical distribution company,
and I'd cut my hair and I'd done my dental work and I'd paid off my car and my dad knew all that
and I had received a mission call he didn't know what that was and he didn't know I'd received a mission call
No kidding, you know I was working down in the warehouse and I got this like
Ross Baron come up to the front desk please which meant my dad wanted to talk to me
So I went upstairs to the executive offices and my dad says hey hey, I just want to just say, I'm so impressed.
You know, you've cut your hair and you paid off your truck.
You're done.
I was like, thanks, dad.
And then he was talking to him later that evening,
he and my mom were talking to my sister
and my sister, who's three years older than me, said,
oh, you guys don't know what that means.
And I'm like, what?
He's going on a mission.
And so the next day, I got Ross Barron,
come up to the front desk, please.
And so I went up to the front desk please. And so I went
up to the and my dad says, I do you just need to be honest with me, are you going on a mission? And I
said, I am. He said, where you going? I said, I'm going to Argentina. What can we visit? You know,
and you know, all the kind of thing. But it was the mission when I got back from the mission and they
saw the fruits of the mission. Again, another Isaiah passage,
you know, that the show of their countenance, death, witness against them. I think Isaiah wouldn't
be upset if we said the show of their countenance, death, witness for them. And I think they saw
that I had become a new creature in Christ. I'd become a new being. And to this day, my parents,
they defend the church. They're in circles that none of us
could ever get in like in Southern California and Los Angeles. And if somebody says anything about
the church, man, they're there. They defend. They support. So initially rocky and then grew to become
amazing. How beautiful. Wow. Hank, this has been a great podcast already. All we did was the introduction.
This is fantastic. What a great story. Oh, yeah. When you got to Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John
and the King James version, did you still like it then? I did. In fact, it felt more. That's funny.
I felt more at home. I mean, I like the Phillips modern, you're 17 and a half,
you're reading that. But again, I was used to the Hebrew Bible. I was used to Hebrew. When I got
the King James and it was a little more poetic, but beautifully written, it was a powerful experience
for me. So yeah. Forgive my ignorance, but so you weren't orthodox, Jewish, but you were practicing. You were reading the Hebrew.
You could read Hebrew.
Yeah, so in my family, we have a blend
of orthodox conservative reform.
So we get all of them together.
We had, of course, Passover and all the Holy Days
and we did all of that.
I'll tell you a fasting, fast forward,
when I was at USC getting my PhD,
I took classes at Hebrew Union.
They had a reciprocal relationship with USC.
And I was essentially in rabbinic.
I was with these rabbis, the rabbinic students.
And I would come from institute.
I would come with my white shirt and tie and my suit on.
And I was with like these other guys and the guy that taught this particular class was David
Ellenson, who was the president of Hebrew Union.
Wonderful man.
Now they did not know that I was a Jewish convert, but I would say like Hebrew things, and I would even speak some Yiddish, and Yiddish is kind of the way Jews speak on the street,
because Hebrew is like the language of God. So if you're Orthodox, you don't speak Hebrew
kind of with other people, you speak Yiddish.
So my grandparents spoke Yiddish, my great-grandparents spoke Yiddish, my parents spoke Yiddish,
but anyway, so I knew enough.
Anyway, I would say like the Hebrew word of the Yiddish word and they'd be like, man,
laterally saints are amazing.
How could you possibly know that?
I feel like, you know, it's like unbelievable.
It was incredible. We learned this stuff in primary. Yeah.
I mean, you know, exactly.
Remedying stuff, man. Preach that meeting.
Wow. That's correct.
What a great story. Thank you for that.
How do you want to approach these chapters?
Ross, we want our listeners to love these chapters like you.
Yes. And they should love these chapters.
Like, it's incredible.
I'm so excited.
So I teach writings of Isaiah at BYU Idaho.
And this is how I kind of do my writings of Isaiah class.
So my students come first day and they always ask, Hey, we read your syllabus and you don't,
what book are we supposed to get?
And I go, you're going to get the book book of Isaiah and they're like, who wrote that?
Like, you know, get their pencils out.
We're just gonna read the book of Isaiah in the scriptures. No, no, no, we get that brother Baron.
We want to know what book though we should get, what commentary. And I say, we're gonna go the hard way.
We're gonna go and we're gonna read the text. And at first, that surprises them. But one of my things that I'd like to do, one of the
purposes I'd love to do with you guys today, is have John, by the way, Hank Smith, Ross
Barron, kind of model how we would look at a text or how we would look at the scriptures.
And one of the things I do when I frame this is I say, you can take a chapter or say,
of Isaiah. The first thing I want you guys to do,
these would be my students. I just want you to go through say the verses and just circle or write down
every name that Isaiah gave for God. Anytime there's a name for God, write it down. And here's the deal,
and I think you guys know this, but the Hebrew word for name is
Shem, and it means more than kind of, I call John John or I call Hank, Hank, it actually had
significance in terms of status. So we know about name changes, Saul becomes Paul, Avram becomes Abraham,
Sarai becomes Sarah, and these things have significance. New names
mean something's happened in terms of your status. And we even know that, for
example, in our world. If you get a PhD, people now call you doctor. So there's
been a change in the status of the name. So I just say, we're just going to take
a chapter. Go through, find all the names for God. Okay. Now, one of the most
amazing things about Isaiah, if you want to have a great experience,
start in chapter one, go to chapter 66 and just create a name list. Isaiah is the most prolific
name giver for God anywhere in scripture. No one has more names, and each name is a prism, is a window into who God is.
So it's not just an academic exercise.
It's literally to have you say,
wow, I'm gonna be more fully persuaded to believe in Jesus
because Isaiah's gonna teach me
about all his character attributes and perfections
and I'm gonna learn about these names.
So for example, I just in Isaiah 58 through 66
Here's some of the names for and these are through all these chapters God Lord
Redeemer now by the way
Redeemer as a noun
Isaiah is the most prolific user of the word redeemer of any prophet
Okay, Lord thy God here's's another one, the Holy One of Israel.
That's one you normally would think, oh yeah, Holy One of Israel.
Guess who started it? Isaiah.
Now the first mention of Holy One of Israel, second king's 19,
but second king's 19 is Hezekiah as the king, Isaiah as the prophet.
Now the psalmist uses Holy One of Israel as well,
but we don't always know the dating of the psalmist uses Holy One of Israel as well, but we don't always know the dating
of the psalms. Are they post Isaiah? Pri Isaiah? Don't totally know. But in any way, Holy One of Israel,
Savior is also mentioned in Isaiah 58 through 66. Here's a powerful one, the mighty one of Jacob.
Wow, the mighty one of Jacob. Lord God, here's another one.
It's a noun phrase,
I that speak in righteousness.
That's his name.
I that speak in righteousness.
That's Isaiah 63 verse one.
Also it might interest people.
And Isaiah 58 through 66,
our father, our father has mentioned twice,
our potter.
He's the potter, we're're the clay and God of truth.
So those are some names. So again, if we were in a class right now, we'd take a chapter,
we're just gonna go through, find the names and then we're gonna have a discussion.
What do we learn from the names? How does each name teach us something different?
Tell me what you guys think. When you hear the word
Redeemer, when you hear the one holy one of Israel,
I that speak in righteousness,
all these beautiful phrases.
So I'd have them do that.
The second thing I'd have them do
is I'd have them go through
and write all the place names.
Like every time in place is mentioned,
I'd say write it down.
So you've got Jerusalem, Zion,
Adam, Bosra,
Tarshish.
I'd have them write all the names down and we live in an amazing time.
And I would have them go to Bible atlas.org.
And I would have them find out where those places are.
Where are those places?
Where are those places?
Where is Javan and two ball?
Where is Lebanon?
What are the fields of Sharon?
Where all these play? Why is fields of Sharon? Where are all these
play? Why is Isaiah using them? And I think he's using them for a reason. They're all there
for a particular reason. So that's the second thing I would have them do. So they're going
to go through, find all the names of God. They're going to also go through and find all of
the place names. And the third thing I have them do is I want to find weird phrases or words they literally, they just don't know,
right? Like just strange words. So for example, and I say, if 58 through 66, you've got bullrush.
That's a word that comes up, a bullrush. The high places of the earth,
cockatrice's eggs, gross darkness, abundance of the sea, the forces of the Gentiles, sons of strangers.
Here's an interesting one, exactors. Exactors. A daughter of Zion. So I would just say, okay,
you go through and then you're going to look up what those words mean. We're going to find out
what those words mean. So we found names of God, place names, strange words or phrases that we're going to define. And then my fourth and final thing I have
him do is they've got to do a subject index for the chapter. So a lot of times when we read a
narrative, we have a beginning, a middle, and an end. Whereas Isaiah, of course, doesn't always do
that. He much like John the Revelator, kind of unconcerned with a linear chronology and is willing
to kind of go back even within a couple of verses and then jump forward and, right?
And so I basically have created a subject index.
So and they're like, brother Baron, this chapter talks about the millennium, the first coming
of Christ, the second coming of Christ,
and the restoration.
I'm like, awesome, that's amazing.
This chapter's talking about the temples.
That's correct, good.
So we create a subject index.
And then I want to give them tools.
So in 2nd Nephi, chapter 25 verse 8,
do we mind, can we read that together?
Yeah, let's do it.
Hank, would you be okay reading that for us?
I am a good second Nephi reader. 25 verse 8.
Wherefore they, these are the words of Isaiah, are of worth under the children of men,
and he that suppose this, that they are not, unto them, will I speak particularly.
So you who don't think you who doesn't like Isaiah. I'm talking to you.
And can find the words into my own people. For I know that they shall be a great worth unto them
in the last days. For in that day shall they understand them. Yeah. So in that day they shall understand
them. So I want to suggest that we live in a particularly interesting time where, so for example, if you
are in my class, you're a 22-year-old, and boom, you go through the names of Isaiah, then
you go with place names and weird phrases, and now we do a subject index.
And I say, you can understand this.
Now, you do have to pay a price.
Right.
There's some work involved.
It's not going to be had on the cheap, the nuggets, the treasures. And by the way, I would even say the peace and the power of the
spirit that if you would take that time, you could tap into what President Nelson talks about
about, hear him, that it is literally a conduit through which you could hear
him. And what I want to say is, we have the gift of the Holy Ghost, number one, we have
prophets and apostles, number two, we have Latter-day scripture, the Book of Mormon doctrine
comes, Prologue of Price, the Old New Testaments, all of these, the plan of salvation can frame.
You've got footnotes, you've got the Joseph Smith translation,
and then you might be surprised, I don't think you are, but we have technology today
that 20 years ago you couldn't have got. For example, I know you guys know the scripture citation
index that was put out by Stephen Little and Richard Galbreath, right? It's a free app. I think
it's the greatest app since the fall. I honestly do. I think it's the greatest app since the fall. I honestly do
I think there's no greater app since the fall you can so for those of your of your listeners who don't know
Scriptures dot BYU dot I think it's dot edu
Yeah, it's and you can download it on your phone. It's free. It's a work of love
So you can look at any scripture
Tap on any scripture and now know what from
Joseph Smith to Russell M. Nelson, what they've said about it.
Yeah. What? Unbelievable. Yeah. Like what? Every six months, it's updated again after
general conference. And it also has one of the best search engines we have. Like, let's
say you wanted to say, holy one of Israel, you could hit search, scriptures,
you could just say, I wanna see in the Old Testament,
you can narrow it down, the Holy One of Israel,
it'll tell you every single place that shows up.
So in addition, not only does it give you
every single, whatever profaner possible
is said about a particular verse,
it has an amazing search engine.
Number two, the blueletterbible.org.
I have no financial interest in it.
It is a free site.
Anybody here can go to blueletterbible.org.
Now, the beauty of blueletterbible.org
is if I'm listening to this podcast,
and I'm thinking, yeah, but Ross went to Hebrew school
as a kid and he has an advantage I don't have.
And maybe in some ways that's true,
but I wanna say, we're at a time
before the second coming of Christ in the latter days
where we have access to things,
people have not had access to.
So you can click on a verse in blueletterbybull.org,
and it'll literally go word by word,
what the English word is, what the Hebrew word is,
and what all the latitude of definitions are
on that Hebrew word.
You can have a PhD in Hebrew, and that's incredible, good for you.
But if we're talking about somebody who's living anywhere in the world
who's listening to this and they really want to do the work on their own,
they can look at a chapter, break it down this way,
and have this incredible experience with this technology.
I talked about the Bible Atlas, there's online dictionaries.
And in other words, I'm saying 2nd Nephi 25-8
is in process of being fulfilled
in a particularly unique way for us right now.
Yeah.
The only thing needed is our work.
Exactly.
That's the missing ingredient.
He's given us this frame and is basically saying, I've done literally, there's everything
is out there for you.
And you don't have to have somebody who's got a PhD in Near Eastern studies or in Hebrew.
God knew that, okay, so he translates the book of Mormon by the gift and power of God through
the Prophet Joseph Smith and it's in English.
And he knew that 99.9% of the members of the church wouldn't
know Hebrew, but they're still going to benefit from it. And I think it's an amazing thing. So again,
that was a long answer to con Aside intro there. No, I love it. It's empowering to people.
Doesn't have to go well. It's Isaiah. I guess I just won't get it. I can skip this part. Right.
Right. Say no. There's tools it. I can skip this part. Right. Right.
No, there's tools available.
Let's do this.
When has it ever been easier?
Was it President Kimball that said, I believe the Lord is anxious to put into our hands inventions
of which the layman has hardly had a glimpse.
And I think of what we're carrying in our hands, the citation index, the scriptures are
all there.
Come follow me manuals.
All of this is there.
It's exciting what you said Ross is just like,
if you want it, it's for most of us.
It's right there in your hand.
Well yeah, and by the second week
of the writings of Isaiah class,
the class is electric, it's on fire
because these students come back into class
having done the assignments, pre-class assignments
and they wanna share.
This is what's going on. They've paid the price,
they've had this experience. And I think in 3523, of course, when the Savior admonishes us,
in fact, let's go there, if you don't mind, 3523, verse 1. And 3523, verse 1, of course the Savior is among the Nephites, and he makes specific mention of
course of Isaiah, verse 1. John, do you want to read that for us?
Yeah, and now behold, I say unto you that ye ought to search these things, ye a
commandment I give unto you, that ye search these things diligently for great are the words
of Isaiah.
And my comment would be, he never asks us to read Isaiah.
He says, it tells us to search Isaiah. And that's a fun discussion about what's the difference between
read, study, search. And he doesn't just say search, he says search diligently.
And great are the words of Isaiah. I mean, that's the Lord's stamp of approval on Isaiah.
It's incredible.
So he's inviting us to come to know him through Isaiah.
And Isaiah, I think most of your listeners understand
is that Isaiah, it's like the doctrine and covenants.
Because if you say, well, where's Isaiah on the page?
He's almost off the page.
It's first person.
God is speaking first person through Isaiah.
It's thus, say it the Lord, Isaiah is the mouthpiece.
Just like if you read section one of the doctrine
covenants and said, well, where's Joseph Smith?
He's not on the page.
He's speaking through Joseph.
He's speaking through Isaiah.
So I think Jesus is saying, I'm going to invite you to come to know me.
I'm going to invite you to hear my voice. I'm going to invite you to search this diligently
for the treasures, the nuggets that are there. But yeah, there's a price to be paid.
And there's a quote from elder Neil Anderson back in 2014. He gave it a general authority,
even with a general authority call, and this is the quote, is from Neil Anderson.
Spiritually, the classroom of faith becomes less like a lecture hall
and more like a fitness center, cool analogy.
Students do not get stronger by watching someone else do the exercises.
They learn and then participate.
As their spiritual strength increases, they gain confidence and apply themselves all the
more.
That's again February 28, 2014 entitled A Classroom of Faith, Hope and Charity by Neil L. Anderson
at the core of the 12th.
I read that and I'm inspired, absolutely inspired.
So, okay.
Again, this is a pretty long intro, but I think it's worth it.
So do I, and it gets you excited. One big thing that John and I love is that our listeners
getting excited to say, I'm going to go give this a try. I would say, don't bite off more than
you can chew. It's okay to do a little at a time. Sometimes you look at all 66 chapters,
and I don't even know where to start. Well, you know, start somewhere where you're familiar with,
maybe Isaiah 53 or Isaiah 54,
or some of those Book of Mormon, Isaiah chapters,
and you'll get it over time.
I imagine you, Ross and you, John, didn't get this
the moment you started to put forth effort.
It takes a while, but you'll get a little more every time.
It does.
Here's the subject index that I created
from Isaiah 58 through 66.
Now, again, I'm a gospel nerd. I love this stuff. Not like I love.
This is what we do for fun. It's a little bit weird. This is what I do for fun. So proper fasting,
blessings of fasting, Sabbath day, first coming of Christ, second coming of Christ,
millennium, Christ's character attributes and perfection, Zion, the redemption of Zion, the ultimate triumph of Christ, second coming of Christ, Millennium, Christ's character attributes and perfections, Zion, the redemption of Zion, the ultimate triumph of Israel, the apostasy,
the restoration, everlasting covenants, gathering of Israel, watchmen on the tower, our identity,
Gentiles, justice and temples.
That's an Isaiah 58 through 66.
Well that's pretty cool.
Yeah.
If you have other, you want to jump in, but I thought we could maybe start an Isaiah 58.
Yeah, let's take out some pieces of this and kind of walk through it, show how it's done.
And then hope that our listeners are going to not look at it and go, oh, I hope I get
stronger by listening.
No, you get stronger by going in and trying some yourself.
So it just does a side note, ins note, in Isaiah 58, it is the single
is scriptural, longest scriptural instruction and passage about fasting. So you got Matthew 4,
the Savior, fast, right? Elijah, fast Moses, fasted. We know about fasting. There's some super
interesting great comments. But if somebody said, well, help me understand
what I need to do to improve my fast,
or what warning signs should I be looking for
to not fast up a ticket away?
Isaiah 58 is the answer.
Like, there's nowhere else in scripture
that has this thing.
I would also say from my experience
with young people over the last 30 years,
fasting is the most underutilized tool that we have to grow
closer to God and to connect with Him and to receive that peace that comes only from the Spirit.
Most underutilized tool. He starts us off and I actually break it down into this question that Isaiah 58, the people seem to be
addressing that he's going to kind of rhetorically use is we're fasting, but you're not taking
notice. We're afflicting our souls, but you don't hear us. And then so I would create three
columns, column number one would say improper fast or fasting behavior, proper fasting behavior, and then blessings
from a proper fast.
And then these incredible verses.
So, verses three and four.
Wherefore have we fasted, say they and they'll see us not?
That's kind of the key question.
Wherefore have we afflicted our soul
and they'll take us known knowledge.
And then the answer, behold, in the day of your fast,
you find pleasure and then this interesting phrase, and exact all your labors.
Now, the word for exact here is to drive people to work. And it comes from the word negash
in Hebrew, which is the same word used in Exodus when Moses is concerned about the people who are being the taskmasters who are
over them are exacting them. So the people are fasting, they're finding pleasure, they're
exacting all their labors, you fast first, first, first, strife, and debate, the smite with the
fist of wickedness. You shall not fast as you do this day to make your voice to be heard on high.
There's a reason this fast is not working.
Yeah.
This is not going to work.
And then he goes through these absolutely beautiful verses in five through seven, five.
He also has some critical stuff.
Is it such a fast that I have chosen a day for Amanda to flick this soul?
Is it to bow down his head as a bull rush and to spread a sack cloth and ashes under him?
Will thou call this fast and acceptable day to the Lord?
Now, I would say that some people might say,
well, aren't we supposed to kind of afflict ourselves
in that way?
But I think this goes back to the Savior in Matthew chapter six.
His criticism to them was that they were doing it
for outward reasons, not really to connect with God.
So I think that's what's going on in that particular verse.
It's a time to be humble, exactly.
He says, if you want to fast,
annoyance your head, Matthew chapter six.
Jesus teaches us our countenance should be upright,
cheerful, not down, we're showing everybody
how humble we are.
But then he goes in verses six and seven
and these phenomenal verses. Here's the fast I've chosen, essentially, verse six, to lose
the bands of wickedness, to undo heavy burdens, to let the oppress go free, that you break every
yoke, deal your bread to the hungry in verse seven, bring the poor that are cast out to
thy house, when thou seeest the naked, cover them, that thou cast out to the house when I'll see as the naked
coverum that the hide not thyself from my own flesh. I mean, wow. So we're
talking about repentance, we're talking about, I actually think we're talking
to a certain degree about the mission of the church to proclaim the gospel,
to take care of the needy, to live the gospel and
and to redeem to unite families. I mean, isn't that what's going on here?
Interesting to me that he's connecting our fasting with taking care of the poor. As a kid
I always mom always said, well, we fast and then we give what we would have spent in our fast offerings.
Was there some sort of a system or understanding in place back then that you're going to fast and help the poor? I
mean, I see footnote 7a sends alms giving. Yeah, it's not clear to me exactly the
procedure by how that would have occurred, but I believe there was some form or
some system. Clearly, for example, in Mark chapter 12, when the widow puts her
might into the temple
treasury, clearly they talked about taking care of the poor. It's not clear to me the mechanism
by which all that was carried out, like it is today in the church.
It's just interesting that the poor connected with fasting right here. I just thought, oh,
wow, look at that in verse seven.
Yeah. And by the way, this is 740 to 700 BC. We're talking seven centuries before the master, right?
And they're talking about taking care of the poor
and connecting that to fasting.
I actually think it's brilliant.
It's one of the most incredible things
to be part of that and to see how award and award fast
offering can truly be central to fulfilling our role
as disciples of Christ, which essentially is the Abrahamic covenant.
And that's what's going on here. We're connecting back the mission of the church, Abrahamic covenant, Isaiah is talking about fasting and taking care of the poor.
Yeah, so if I pick this up, the people are saying, we are fasting and we're not seeing all these benefits from God. And God is saying, no, you're going hungry.
You're not fasting the way you should be fasting. Here is the fast I'm after.
And if you want the blessings, you got to do it my way.
I love that. And I think it's interesting if you look in the handbook of instructions that
the church handbook, it says this, quote, a fast day typically includes praying, going without food and drink for a 24 hour period
if physically able,
and giving a generous fast offering, unquote,
38.8.15.
And I like to tell my students and my family
that there is a law that's decreden
to have them before the foundation of the world
upon which all blessings are predicated.
If I want the full blessing, I've got to be fully obedient.
My students, so yeah, I had my Cheerios this morning
on the way to church,
but then I didn't need during church.
And that's my fast.
And I'm like, good for you, good start.
But if we want Isaiah 58 blessings,
we've got to do Isaiah 58 obedience.
Look at the promises now. Like these promises are literally
stand all amazed. Verse 8, your light is going to break forth as the morning, your health is going
to spring forth speedily, your righteousness shall go before you. The glory of the Lord is going to be,
here it says, rearward, the footnote, rearguard. We're going to get revelation, because verse 9, you're
going to call the Lord is going to answer, you're going to cry. He's going to say, here I am, but you got
to take away the yoke. You can't be point your finger at other people. Quit speaking vanity.
If your soul is drawn out to the hungry, I'm in verse 10. You have the flicked soul. Then
shall I light rise and obscurity thy darkness be as the noon day. The Lord's going to guide
you continually, verse 11, satisfy thy soul and drought, make fat thy bones, and I love this image. Thou shalt be like a
watered garden and like a spring of water whose waters fail not. Wow. I don't know what image
you brethren get, but that is incredible. A watered garden. And then, verse 12, they that shall be
of thee, shall build up the old waste places.
You're going to raise up the foundation of many generations. You're going to be called the repair
of the breach, the restore of past of dwellin. So we have how not to fast, how to fast, and the
blessings from fasting. All laid out in beautiful, I actually think relatively clear language
about how I can change and be better to fast and
receive these blessings, but those blessings are phenomenal. Fantastic, Ross. I've been using this
tool that I use. I go to BibleHub.com, totally free. Yeah, beautiful Bible Hub, great. And you can
just click verse by verse and you can see, oh, that's what that means. Oh, that's what that means Just a little bit of a different translation can help out quite a bit
I love I say at 58 verse 11 if you fast the way the Lord is asking you to fast he'll satisfy your soul
Not yont your body he'll satisfy your soul and and that ties directly to me to enus my soul
Hunger my body hunger a little bit, but my soul was hungry.
I needed my soul satisfied more than I needed my stomach.
Well, you think about the depression and anxiety,
and I'm not minimizing or trivializing anybody going
through those kinds of things.
But to me, like I said, to frame Isaiah 58,
it's an underutilized tool.
Verse 11,
satisfy your soul and drought.
If you talk to somebody who's involved
feeling depressed or anxious,
they feel like it's a drought.
They literally feel like, I'm famished, I'm in a drought.
Here's a tool, here's a way that we can tap in,
and I can just testify that it's true true that it is an incredible way to connect.
And like we talked about earlier does it take some effort? Yeah. And are you going to get some
hunger pains? The answer is yes. Yeah, you are. Yeah. You are guaranteed. And that's okay. That's okay.
There's a talk linked to in the
Come Follow Me manual. It's from Henry Reiring
April
2015 General Conference called is not this the fast that I have chosen be a great thing to listen to this week is
Restarting these sections. He quotes all of Isaiah 58 and now we have here an extra tool
We talked about Ross all the tools we have here. we have a prophet here and revelator, he says, so, the Lord has given us a simple commandment with
a marvelous promise.
In the church today, we are offered the opportunity to fast once a month and give a generous fast
offering through our Bishop or Branch President for the benefit of the poor and the needy.
Some of what you give will be used to help those around you perhaps someone in your own family. The Lord's servants will pray and fast for
the revelation to know whom to help and what help to give. That which is not
needed to help the people in your local church unit will become available to
bless other church members across the world who are in need. And then he quotes
Spencer W. Kimball, who wrote, Rich promises are made by the Lord to those who fast and assist the needy.
Notice how those are connected again, John, fasting and blessing the needy.
Inspiration and spiritual guidance will come with righteousness and closeness to our Heavenly Father.
To omit to do this righteous act of fasting would deprive us of these blessings.
And it's a hard thing, especially maybe for a teenager or a young person listening.
It's a difficult thing.
But give it a try.
Give it a try.
Move forward.
I know with my kids, sometimes they don't make it their full 24 hours or whatever they
set out for.
But I tell them the Lord loves effort.
Keep going.
The Lord loves when we're trying our best.
And then to offer something to the poor as a teenager, to put a little money in the envelope and
hand that over and say, this offering is for the poor. There's something cleansing about that act
to me that the Lord is offering here. It blesses the giver as much as it does the receiver.
Hank, let's talk about that for a second.
Let's say you're a mom and dad with small children.
I'd love to hear what you do and what you both have done.
How do you try to explain fasting
to a young mind and a small stomach?
A young mind and a small stomach.
I love that.
John, I think you and I did a follow him favorites
on this before.
And I remember sitting down and talking with my teenagers I love that. John, I think you and I did a follow him favorites on this before.
And I remember sitting down and talking with my teenagers at least about what it feels
like to be hungry and that being in the blessed situation we're in, we just don't have
that feeling very often.
Just it's not something that you and I struggle with, but people all over this planet, hunger,
millions of people, hunger.
And for just a moment moment we get to put ourselves
in that position and know what that feels like, and when you know what it feels like, you long
to help someone who feels in that position. So for me one of those teaching moments is the
Lord is giving us an opportunity to be like him, to feel the pains and sufferings of other people,
and that like him automatically makes us want to reach out to help.
I've tried and I think I like yours better, Hank, but just to say that part of the challenge of
life is to kind of get our spirits to be in charge of our bodies instead of the other way around.
Like Jesus says that the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. And this is one of those times when we are seeing
if our spirit can be in charge and disciplined
of when we're gonna satisfy our hunger.
Practicing self-control, right?
Give us a chance to practice.
And see if our spirit can be strong here.
I was curious how you explain that to kids
because that can be hard.
I'm so proud of them when they try so hard,
but boy, do they get hungry towards Sunday afternoon.
And I think another thing that helps us is,
and maybe we'll be talking about this, Ross,
is when there's someone that you know in need
in the ward or an extended family member
that's having a trial or a health problem
or something that we try to focus on them
when we start to focus on our own hunger,
we say, no, I'm trying to ask the Lord to help this other person over here. Maybe you guys have
some thoughts on that. Well, one of the things I would add would be having nine children and going
through this is they have to see you and your spouse doing it and doing it with joy. In fact, I like this in a classroom.
I like in a classroom where kind of application questions organically come up because of
how you've set the stage. And I think when me and my wife are fasting and joyful about
it and we get to talk about John, what you just talked about. Sister, so and so sick and we're so grateful now that we can fast.
And they're like, well, can we fast?
Yeah.
Wow.
The way you talk about it, yeah.
Let's go without breakfast today.
Let's try that.
It's going to be a little hard.
I think number one, you have to model not only in that you do it, but like,
you remember that talk I'm trying to remember Elder Holland talked about.
It can't just be the obligatory kind of drudgery. I'm going without two meals. I think you have
to be able to say, man, we're going to read Isaiah 58. I need to talk to you guys about some of these
blessings. And I'm so excited to fast. And I'm like, what? You're a weirdo. No, this is great. And you guys remember this talk,
this is an old one, 1928, Melvin J. Ballard.
And he gave this talk, I think at the assembly hall.
Only John was alive for that one.
John, do you?
Well, no, Brigham Young signed my mission call.
So I think I'm older than John.
Okay, both of you.
I wasn't there for this one.
I would think I was outside. But
Melvin J. Ballard talked about you and it. And he said, you is your spirit and it is your body.
And when you fast, you get to tell it what's going on. And that's one of the things I explain.
I go, what a great opportunity. So when you get that hunger pain, that's awesome.
They're like, what? I said, no, you then tell it. What's up? And I go, by the way, every
single time you plan on fasting, something will come up. You're going to get a headache or
there's going to be a wedding reception that night. There's going to be that great cake.
There's going to always be something that comes up. but this is where you, your real person, your
spirit, tells it what's happening.
And I love that idea.
I love that concept.
And that again, I got that idea from Melvin J. Ballard, but I love that.
1928.
I think it's 1928.
Yeah.
There's something about fasting, spiritual, it's physical, it's social.
We go to a fast and testimony meeting.
I mean, ideally, if everyone came to that meeting,
fasting, like John said, we're fasting for the Smith family,
or we're fasting for so and so.
Man, there's just something.
Do nighting.
It ties you that binds you in this covenant relationship
with God and with others that create these promises that come to pass.
And so it's true. I mean, what Isaiah is telling us is true about this fasting.
Beautiful. So that's my fasting piece of Isaiah 58. And I challenge my students to kind
of go out and practice and then to follow up. And it's incredible. The witnesses, the
testimonies. And for a lot of these people, and I know you guys teach the same age, I do 18 to say 30
year olds.
Yeah.
For some of them, it's the first time they've ever fasted, really fasted.
Like it's for some of them, if you'll invite them and kind of talk about this and they
do it, they're always amazed at the connection they felt.
And there's this kind of feeling of accomplishment. I went 24 hours without fruit or drink. That's cool. And I
connected with God in a different way. And I had some hunger pains. It wasn't
easy. It's okay. That's good. Good for you. It's okay. You're gonna eat again. I
promise. You're gonna we eat everything you'll like it's our last. That's all right.
So you know that first 10 there there it is again connecting it to the poor if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry
I'm fasting I'm the hungry one no this is talking about something about fasting helps the hungry and
satisfy the afflicted soul and
Then I can't stop reading this one. Then shall thy light rise in
obscurity and thy darkness be as the noon day, a little parallelism there, but I love how Jesus
not only said, I am the light of the world, but he said ye are the light of the world and our light
can arise. Like you said, Ross about counting stuff, witness
for them or against them.
It's interesting, your light, you become lighter somehow.
That's right, I think it's an interesting thing.
You remember in Alma 32-3, when the people are criticized
and they say, you're gonna be like, dross.
Remember that, Alma 32-3, you're gonna be like, dross. And then, Alma 323. You're going to be like dross.
And then in kind of John, this is exactly to your point. He then says in Alma 34, so Amulic is talking,
he says, and now behold, I'm in verse 28, my beloved brethren, I say, and you do not suppose that this is all. For after you have done all these things, if you turn away the needy and the naked
and visit not the sick and afflicted and impart of your substance, if you have to those who
stand in need, I sand you if you do not any of these things.
Now notice what he connects it to.
Behold your prayer is vain and availeth you nothing and you are as hypocrites who deny
the faith.
So your connection with God is directly related to how we take care of the needy.
And then the next verse verse 29, therefore if you do not remember to be charitable,
you are as draws. So I love how the book end. You're draws because you guys are poor,
and then Amulet turns it on its head and says, no, actually, let me give you really what draws is.
You don't take care of the poor and the needy, you're draws.
I think that's the only two times the
word dross appears in the book of Mormon. It's like, we're dross, look at the courseness of our apparel
or they were esteemed as dross. I think not dross because you're poor, you're dross when you neglect
the poor, right? Exactly right. And it is the only two times. Alma 32, verse three, and Alma 34, 29.
It's the only time the word dross is used. That's the Rami Emptem Group. So again, a little story, if it's okay.
I got my degree in finance at BYU.
My first job was in Houston, Texas.
Worked in a big office building.
And I got an assignment to go see an executive
at Phillips Petroleum.
It was a big oil company back in the day.
And I was super nervous.
I mean, I was, again again fresh out of BYU,
probably three weeks, you know, in my job. You had to have a key to get on this particular floor.
It was super high security and this guy had this huge office overlooking Houston gorgeous view.
And I walked in there and he could kind of tell I was trembling like Sebastian before King Dryden. And thanks for laughing at that John. Anyway, the guy says to me,
he's the senior, he says, where'd you go to school? And I said, BYU. And he goes,
do you know Dalin Oaks? I said, well, I know who Elder Oaks is, but I personally don't know,
well, he goes, Dalin Oaks,aks, the greatest man I've ever met.
And I said, what was your interaction with Elder Oaks?
So he proceeds to tell me he was on some horseback ride.
I don't remember all the details.
So I leave his meeting and the guy,
we didn't even talk about much except Dallin H Oaks.
We leave the meeting, I go back to my office,
I think, you know, I should tell El-Rox that.
So I call the church office building with a dial-up phone.
And I get ahold of the secretary and I said, who I was and could I talk to El-Rox?
She's like, El-Rox is in a meeting and I said, well, let me tell you what just happened.
So I explained the secretary.
She go, oh, El-Rox will want to know about that.
Let me get your information.
So I don't hear anything.
But two days later, I get a package from the office of the quorum of the 12th. No way. And in it is a book of Mormon.
And on the inside, he wrote a little note from Elder Oaks, Dear Brother Baron,
please deliver this book on my behalf to this man. And on the inside cover was Elder Oaks' testimony,
which I promptly made a copy of and is in my file right now.
Elder Oaks probably doesn't know that, but I did that.
So anyway, I went and delivered the book to this man and he cried.
And I think verse 10 and the other Isaiah verse about the countenance, like Elder Oaks's reflected light because he was a disciple
of Jesus Christ. He reflected that light, that man knew it. And he felt that power. And I was able
to give him a copy of the book of Mormon and have that experience. So again, going back to this idea
of countenance and light that we get from connecting with the Lord. Powerful. That is beautiful.
For anyone still on the fence about fasting,
because I know this is one of the more difficult ones,
especially for young people.
You remember 2 Nephi 26 verse 24,
the Lord do with not anything.
Save it be for the benefit of the world,
for he love it the world.
So remember, he loves you,
he would not ask you to do this if it wasn't for your benefit.
So trust him, trust the words we've been looking at here in Isaiah 58, and maybe for the first time, like Ross said,
maybe for the first time, offer up a fast to the Lord. Try him out. What did Savior say?
If any man will do his will, he'll know. He was pretty confident in his doctrine. Amen.
If you don't mind, if we could just look at these two verses on the Sabbath, I know that Hank, I know you've been to the Holy Land many times and I know John you've been, right?
Yes, and who is the brother Kristen Stendall who talked about holy envy meaning we look at another
religious group or maybe even another organization and we have
appropriate envy
towards some particular practice they have. And I'd love to take anybody to the
Western wall at Jerusalem on a Friday afternoon slash evening to have them watch
bring in the Sabbath as they bring in the Sabbath and literally and I think
Latter-day Saints and others who are listening non-latter day Saints might not fully understand they truly call the Sabbath a delight
In other words their attitude their heart their focus their
singleness is this is the greatest day of the week without question.
And they come in their best outfits
and they come dancing and singing.
And there's a light in their eyes.
Because it's the Sabbath.
This is the Sabbath.
And I think sometimes later these things are like,
ooh, tomorrow's the Sabbath.
We gotta get to Walmart to get our five gallons of ice cream.
And to watch, to have that holy envy.
And now I realize also that there are some downsides
to some of the way the Sabbath has kept
and some of the strictness.
But I think the attitude, that's what I wanna focus on
because Isaiah here is talking about in verse 13,
call the Sabbath a delight, the holy of the Lord honorable,
honor him. So this again, I think God is giving us tools, tools to overcome the world, tools,
you know, to overcome the kind of the influence this flood, the tsunami of information overload, of social
network and comparison, connect with me, get vertical.
You got to go vertical.
And the way we get vertical, we're fasting and we're calling the Sabbath a delight.
We're going to honor him.
And then he gets promises, the promises in verse 14 that President Nelson, as the president
of the quorum of the twelve, talked about.
Number one, you're going to delight yourself in the Lord.
Number two, you're going to ride upon the high places of the earth.
And number three, you will be fed with the heritage of Jacob.
Oh, my word.
So from the Sabbath day, so I honor the Sabbath, God honors me.
I delight myself in him. The high places of the earth for me so I honor the Sabbath, God honors me, I delight myself in him.
The high places of the earth for me, that's the temple.
That's the temple.
We're going to ride upon the high places of the earth.
And what's the heritage of Jacob?
Well, those are the promises of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
These are all the promises.
That's the heritage of Jacob.
I get priesthood, I get the gospel, I get celestial marriage,
I get the redemption, the ministry, I privilege now of serving.
This is what I want in my life, it's what I want for my family.
And again, we have these two small and simple things,
Alma 37, 6 and 7, DNC 64, 33, out of small things,
preceded that which is great. We're going fast. We're gonna call the Sabbath the delight
Wow the multitude of promises. It's just overwhelming. It's so fascinating to me that to the natural man
These are probably two of the most difficult things to do. That's right. That's right. Great insight. Yep
Take away a full day that I could be using to do my things or to take away food that I
could be eating.
This is where you tame the natural man in these two commandments and others, of course.
But in these two commandments, you can really, like you said, John, have your spirit be in
control of your body.
Love that.
And I love the idea of it 100% in this time, maybe not so much 60,
75 years ago, but it separates us from the world. Yeah. And it separates us. It's good.
Right. We want to be in but not of. And somebody might ask you, well, how am I in but not of?
And one of my responses is fasting and Sabbath day observance. That's how am I in but not of? And one of my responses is fasting
and Sabbath day observance. That's how you're in and not of. That's one way. That's correct.
That's true. It makes you different. And then, and I love this idea. And I love how President
Nelson said, I got rid of the lists. Remember this, of all the do's and don'ts. Because it's a sign.
It's a sign between me and God of
how I'm going to keep that covenant. And he goes, that guided then all my decisions. What
sign do I want to show God that this day is different? I love that. That becomes principal
based. And then the Hank Smith family, the John by the way family, the Ross Barron family,
we're going to have to organize ourselves and determine how that's gonna work for us,
and I'm not gonna judge you, I'm just gonna have to say, am I calling this abat that delight
in how am I doing this? And I want those blessings. I want to ride upon the high places of the earth,
I want the heritage of Jacob, and I want to delight myself in the Lord.
Do I trust? Do I believe? I want those things. Exactly. Beautiful.
I have something that brother Truman G.
Matson wrote in his book called The Radiant Life. This is on page 72. First
as I've indicated, they see the Sabbath as a sanctuary in time. Now it's
true they have strict requirements and even now in Israel there are hospitals
which are so prepared, organized and planned that they keep the Sabbath. If you
care enough, it can be done.
But all that discipline, all that thou shalt not, is seen as an instrument to joy.
A discipline, joy indeed, but nevertheless, joy and celebration.
Mind, says one of the great rabbis, is established by joy.
By melancholy, it is driven into exile.
It is a sin, according to Judaism, to be sad on the Sabbath. If that startling language, I'll startle you further.
The Talmud says that we will be held personally accountable for the judgment of God. For every legitimate Sabbath pleasure, we did not enjoy. We are commanded to have joy. To miss the joy is to miss it all.
Wow, that's beautiful. So when it says in verse 13, call the Sabbath a delight.
That's what reminded me of that idea of going to be held accountable for the joy we don't feel
on the Sabbath. And maybe like fasting, it's a change of our mindset toward it.
I think that's the key.
Please join us for Part 2 of this podcast.