Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Jacob 1-4 Part 1 • Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner • Apr 1 to Apr 7 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: March 27, 2024What secrets of spiritual resilience and repentance can we learn from the prophet Jacob? Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner discusses the responsibility of teaching and leading others toward Christ, sharing p...ersonal experiences of relying on the Savior, and highlighting the significance of recording personal spiritual experiences and testimonies for future generations.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPThttps://tinyurl.com/podcastBM14ENDR. BARBARA MORGAN GARDNERInstagram: https://tinyurl.com/GroundedPodcastYouTube: https://tinyurl.com/GroundedPodcastYouTubePodcast: https://tinyurl.com/GroundedPodcastAudioYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/-GJKpK6J_A8ALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterApple Podcasts: https://tinyurl.com/followHIMappleInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcast00:00 Part 1–Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner00:22 What to expect in this episode02:03 Introduction of Dr. Gardner04:33 2 Nephi 2 - Jacob’s blessing from Lehi07:13 President Holland on Jacob’s shaping through trial and the Spirit10:11 Elder Cook and Sister Dennis discuss their struggles11:49 Wealth or pride13:02 Jacob 1:2-6 - Why Jacob writes15:00 Elder Perry: The scriptures are to bring us to Christ16:59 President Eyring - The Book of Mormon is to prove us true18:43 President Holland - Children are matches to be lit19:22 Jacob’s trials20:42 Hank shares about Marlene Savage and the testimony of family22:52 2 Nephi 2:3 - Jacob’s responsibility, Elder Scott and recording spiritual experiences 26:23 Family and teacher influence on testimony31:00 Criticism of leaders33:40 Jacob 1:17 - Recognizing the Spirit36:09 An analogy about leadership and a crosswalk38:56 President Oaks and advice followed41:09 War chapter of the Book of Mormon comparison42:50 Jacob 1 and 2 - Magnifying our offices44:17 Jacob 2:15-17 - Pride and sexual sin47:08 President Ezra Taft Benson on pride50:13 President Hinckley and The Family: A Proclamation to the World56:01 Mother Teresa as a pencil in the hand of God57:56 Jacob 2:9 - the Nephites have done greater iniquities than the Lamanites1:00:31 Jacob 2:12-14 Pride not just wealth1:06:28 Brigham Young’s fear for the Saints1:08:27 Ezekiel 16:49 - Sodom1:09:29 Jacob 2:18 - Seeking the Kingdom of God1:16:27 End of Part 1 - Dr. Barbara Morgan GardnerThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm
your host. I'm here with my humble in heart co-host John, by the way, and our guest this
week, Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner. John, I know you know the book of Jacob. We're switching
from first second Nephi to now Jacob. What are we looking forward to today?
When I think in terms of the storyline, we've got traveling through this empty corridor,
Nephi breaks his bow, they're starving probably.
Jacob is taking over the leadership of the church and now he has to address prosperity
and searching gold and silver and having stuff, which is very interesting just to watch how
are you going to handle that and how do we handle that today. That's a great comment, John. They've swung the pendulum from poverty almost now to riches.
Like I said, we have Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner with us. What are we looking forward to today?
Jacob one through four. Oh, there's so much good in here, Hank, and thank you for having me on the
show. I love that Jacob is the younger half of the family. We don't know for sure if Sam has passed away and Laman and Lemuel,
but we know that Nephi is going to pass away during this time.
We know that he's lost his parents.
He's the younger half. He wasn't living in Jerusalem.
He wasn't experienced with the richness and the ways of Jerusalem,
but he has drawn close to the Lord.
He's received these blessings, and now he's being called to be in a very strong and important leadership position.
And he's taking the role of the prophet.
And you're just seeing this growth of this young boy that was born in the
wilderness, and now he's the prophet of God trying to bring his people to Christ.
Just like he saw his brother do and his father do.
In a way, it's very much our world today as a prophet becomes a prophet,
president Nelson, and all of a sudden he steps up to the plate.
The mantle is on him and Jacob has this mantle.
We're going to see what he's going to teach and what the Lord, the errand that the Lord gives
him. It's Jacob's errand. Barb, I noticed in my study there's a definite shift from Nephi to Jacob.
These are two different voices. Yeah. John, Barb is not new to you and I. We've known her for a
long time, but she might be new to some of our audience. Can you give us a brief bio? Yeah.
Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner,
we're so glad to have her back. She is an associate professor of church history and doctrine at BYU,
but what I love in her background is Institute Director in Boston that covered like a hundred
different universities, including MIT and Harvard. And she was acting as a chaplain at Harvard and
MIT. We're really glad to have her back.
I just love that kind of broad experience
that you bring with you,
and I'm excited because of our past episode.
Barbara, I know that you also have a podcast,
and can you tell our listeners about that?
Thanks, thanks, Sean.
Yeah, one of the things that I see as a woman
and maybe as a professor,
is sometimes it's hard to know what applies to me or what doesn't apply to me in the scriptures. One of the things that I have as a woman and maybe as a professor, sometimes it's hard to know what applies to
me or what doesn't apply to me in the scriptures. One of the things that I have decided to do
is to go through the scriptures with a framework of women's voices and women's eyes. So we
have just started a podcast where we have women, many of whom have been past general
church leaders, some scholars. We go through these scriptures following the Come Follow
Me calendar. We would love to have those of you who would like to join us on this new podcast called Grounded.
Sounds awesome. Can I listen too?
You bring up a good point, John. We need the support and we need the unity of men and women together.
We can help others understand the perspective of women as we look at the doctrines and principles of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
Anything that helps you look at the scriptures with new eyes in a new way,
scriptures you've read before is a wonderful thing. So yeah, that sounds great.
Thank you, John.
Barb, you're special to John and I. We love you. We love Dustin and your daughters.
All right, let me read a little bit from the Come Follow Me manual.
Barb, let's see where we go here. This is the opening paragraph.
The Nephites considered Nephi their great protector.
He had also protected them against spiritual dangers, warning them against sin and urging
them to come unto Christ.
Now that task fell to Jacob, whom Nephi had consecrated to be a priest and a teacher.
Jacob felt a responsibility to boldly warn those who were beginning to labor in sin,
while also comforting the wounded soul of those who had been hurt by the sins of others.
How would he do both? He would point them to Jesus Christ,
because both groups needed the Savior's healing.
Like the message of Nephi before him, Jacob's testimony was a call to be reconciled unto God
through the atonement of Christ. Like you said, Barb, this is Jacob's testimony was a call to be reconciled unto God through the atonement of Christ."
Like you said, Barb, this is Jacob's errand. How do you want to start? Where do we want to go?
Do you just want to jump right in?
Listening to you read that and looking at Jacob's errand, you reminded me of bringing us back to
2 Nephi chapter 2. It's the patriarchal blessing in a sense that Lehi as a father gives to Jacob.
And what you're saying there, it occurred to me that as Jacob is teaching his family, the blessing that he receives
from his father in 2 Nephi chapter 2 is pretty powerful in this. And it just says, and now Jacob,
I speak unto you. This is Lehi. Thou art my firstborn in the days of my tribulation in the
wilderness. And behold, in thy childhood thou hast suffered afflictions and much sorrow because of
the rudeness of thy brethren."
Think about what kind of life he had.
He was raised in seeing his brothers fighting.
He was raised in seeing his mother sorrowing.
He was raised in seeing some serious contention.
And it was very painful to him.
We even see that later that Jacob sorrows over the rudeness of his brothers to his mother.
And it says, Nevertheless, Jacob, my firstbornborn the wilderness, thou knowest the greatness of God, and he shall consecrate then afflictions
for thy gain. Then verse three, wherefore thy soul shall be blessed and thou shalt dwell
safely with thy brother Nephi, and thy day shall be spent in the service of thy God.
Wherefore I know that thou art redeemed because the righteousness of thy Redeemer, for thou
hast beheld that in the fullness of time he cometh to bring salvation unto me."
And then he basically tells him, you've been instructed, Jacob, regarding Jesus Christ,
you've been instructed regarding his law.
In verse 8, Lehi tells him, wherefore, how great the importance to make these things
known into the inhabitants of the earth, that they may know that there is no flesh that
can dwell in the presence of God,
save it be through the merits and mercy
and grace of the Holy Messiah,
who layeth down his life according to the flesh
and take that again by the power of the Spirit."
So Jacob's already at this early stage.
He's being told by Lehi,
Jacob, you are going to be going with your brother.
I'm sure Jacob doesn't know what it means at this point
that he's actually going to be with his brother and he's going to separate himself from the
others. But he's also being given a mandate from the Lord through his father that he needs
to teach of Jesus. He needs to teach of the atonement of Jesus Christ. He needs to teach
about laws and mercy and grace. In a sense, he's already been told what he needs to teach
when this kind of thing happens to him in his own life as he gets older.
I think almost in a sense, we jump back and just remind ourselves, Jacob's already been given what he needs to teach.
Jacob's already been guided by the Lord.
He's already gone through misery, and he's also being taught about family.
He's being taught that men, they might have joy.
He's been taught by his father about agency and being free to act. Now we're to the point where Jacob is going to become the next prophet. And he's
already learned the doctrine of Christ and he knows what his mission is even before it
happens.
Barb, let me read you something from Elder Holland. He wrote,
It seems unfortunate that one so young would be deprived of so many physical comforts and
at the same time suffer such wrenching emotional and spiritual
conflicts within his family. But painful as it was, this was all part of the making of a prophet.
Jacob the unshaken, Jacob the unshakable, Jacob born in affliction, refined in service, triumphant
in Christ. This was part of his shaping. Hank, I was just thinking, as you said that,
we think about our living prophets and apostles. President Nelson being raised by inactive parents.
President Oaks, who lost his father at a very young age. President Holland, just recently,
he was posting about how his father, he wasn't necessarily active and strong. He had a very
strong mother, but his father wasn't coming from such a strong background. I think about even my own father who came from a situation where his mother
committed suicide and his father was very anti-Mormon. All of these men and all of these
women as well, where you recognize they know what they have received. They have had a hard
life, but they can also testify as Nephi did, I know in whom I have trusted. I think that's
what happens here with Jacob. He sees the struggle,
but he also more importantly has literally seen the Savior.
So he's going to move forward and the Lord's going to use this suffering
to help him be the kind of prophet that he needs to be to help his people come unto the Savior.
Yeah, I'm grateful you talked about that.
Sometimes we think if everything isn't going perfectly, then somebody's not doing their job.
When in fact even prophets have difficult, difficult lives. And just you saying that. I mean, what did Lehi say that you just
read? In the days of my affliction, Lehi was having a hard time when Jacob was born. Nephi
had a hard time. Jacob never saw Jerusalem. He saw his brothers fighting. Part of life
is everything's not going to go perfectly. Then what you said, Barbara, thank you, but I know
in whom I have trusted getting us to that point is what we need when things are hard. John, as you're
talking about this, I remember back when the pandemic hit and I thought who better to be leading
the church than a doctor. I know. Prepared for this time. And we started doing Home Come Follow Me in,
it was at October 2018.
I mean, it was like, thankfully we were practicing teaching at home
before that pandemic hit.
Back to that and the choice that Jacob has,
this comes from the blessing that his father gave to him where he says,
to Jacob, wherefore men are free according to the flesh
and all things are given them which are expedient to man. We know the scripture but then it continues and they are free to choose liberty
and eternal life through the great mediator of all men or to choose captivity and death according
to that captivity and the power of the devil for he seeketh that all men might be miserable like
him to himself. And then he says, I would that you should look to the great mediator and hearken
unto his great commandments and be faithful unto his words and choose eternal life according to the will of the Holy Spirit." And I think that that's what
we're seeing with Jacob. Jacob is this young boy. He could have chosen to follow Laman and Lemuel,
or he could have chosen to follow Nephi and Sam. The choice was his. And in this wilderness of
his affliction and this really difficult time, it's like all of us have, we all have this choice.
You see, it's not that he hasn't been through struggles. And we've heard that recently. I loved Elder Cook in General Conference of October
2023, where he just talked about, I've lost my own nephew. We've all had these struggles. And I
appreciate that the leaders of the church have been authentic. Sister Davis talked about her struggle
with cancer at General Conference. It's not that Jacob has had this perfect life. I mean, he clearly
has not, but he has made a choice. And his choice is to follow the Savior. I just love that Jacob is told at a very
young age, use your agency, do the right thing, know that the Savior is the answer for you, but
you're going to be tempted and the devil is going to want you and he's going to want you to be
miserable like unto himself. But the choice is yours. And I think that that's very President
Nelson. The choice is yours. Choose eternity. Focus that's very President Nelson, the choice is yours.
Choose eternity. Focus on the things that are celestial. But you make the choice. President
Nelson is so good at helping us understand, and President Oaks as well, that the choice is ours,
and we have our agency to choose between the good and the evil. Jacob's going to continue to do that.
That doesn't mean that they aren't concerned for the welfare of the souls of the people,
but it does mean that they understand the doctrine of Jesus Christ and the importance of agency within that framework.
Wonderful.
Barb, I think you're right.
We can see in 2 Nephi, Jacob being shaped for this time,
where the Nephites have now changed, at least from what we were reading with Nephi back in 2 Nephi 5.
We lived after the manner of happiness. We have a temple.
We're a temple.
We're industrious. And now Jacob meets different challenges with these people.
We're going to see that the first part of chapter one is critical where he's told what
to write and what to focus on in his life. Since you're taking us to that next part with
those two areas and really what it boils down to is pride and wealth and money. The problem isn't wealth, the problem is
pride. And then the second one is almost a form of another kind of pride, which is
the pride of lust, pride of thinking that you can have whatever you want. And in
this case, it's the sexual immorality that they're dealing with that he's so
concerned about, not falling from virtue. He is seeing that they are a wealthy
people. Jacob has come from nothing. He had to be on the boat that
Nephi built. He didn't have all of this in his life, but now he is concerned about what's happening.
He makes it very clear it's not the money that he's dealing with, it's the pride of the people and
how they're treating each other. That's his concern. So he's going to teach us about two things,
pride, in this case in the context of money, and then also the unchastity of lust.
in the context of money and then also the unchastity of lust. So Barb, you mentioned this first part of chapter one where Jacob talks about what I'm
supposed to write.
He's deferring to Nephi and his instruction.
I find this so important that the Book of Mormon, we can study so much of the history
and we can study so much of other material associated with this.
But I think that there is a very clear message that we find right in chapter one that Nephi has told
to Jacob, and now Jacob's telling us. So starting in verse two, he says, he gave me Jacob, referring
to Nephi, Nephi gave me Jacob a commandment that I should write upon these plates a few
of the things which I considered to be most precious, that I should not touch them more lightly concerning the history of this people which are called the people of Nephi. For
he said that the history of this people should be engraven upon his other plates and that
I should preserve these plates and hand them down unto my seed from generation to generation."
And then he continues in verse four, and if there were preaching which was sacred or revelation
which was great or prophesying that I should engrave in the heads of them upon these plates and touch upon them as much as it were possible
for Christ's sake and for the sake of our people. And then for what reason? For because
of faith and great anxiety, it truly had been made manifest unto us concerning our people
what things should happen unto them." The answer to the struggles of his people and
the answer to what they are going to need is not all the historical context.
I think that's why we don't see a lot about the kings.
We know that we have a new king that's going to reign after Nephi. They love this person.
That's not going to be His focus here. His focus is on the spiritual.
His focus is on bringing people to Christ. His focus is on helping people have faith.
And you see that in verse 6. We also have had many revelations and the spirit
of much prophecy, wherefore we knew of Christ and his kingdom which should come, wherefore
we labor diligently among our people that we might persuade them to come unto Christ.
We've heard this phraseology before, and partake of the goodness of God. They could really
focus on the history, and those are going to take place in another set of plates. But
the Book of Mormon is not that. The secondary reason may be the history, but the primary reason for the Book of Mormon
is to bring people to Christ, to help them and their children and posterity, and especially
our day to understand what it is that God wants us to know for the salvation of our
children, our grandchildren, and all of our posterity forever. For me, that's an extremely
important part that we understand that there's a reason why this book was written,
there's a reason why Jacob is writing. He was told that by Nephi,
focus on the spiritual and sacred things, focus on those things that change hearts and brings people to Christ.
There's a quote by Elder Perry where he says,
How often we read the record primarily as the history of a fallen people,
failing to remember that it was compiled by inspired prophets for the purpose of helping us come into Christ. The major writers of the Book of Mormon did not
intend it to be a history book at all. In fact, Jacob said that his brother Nephi
commanded him that he should not touch, say but word lightly, concerning the
history of his people. Then he continues, each time we read the Book of Mormon we
should probably ask ourselves why did these writers choose these particular
stories or events to include in their record? What value are they for us today? I love that
the focus really is on that. Sometimes I think even myself can become sidetracked
from what is most important and clearly what is most important to Jacob and to
Nephi is bringing people to Christ through the sacred and through these
revelations and through these things that will build faith and help people
come into Christ and partake of His goodness. Nephi says that he's going to show us the tender
mercies and the Book of Mormon then will do that if the prophets do what Nephi asked them to do
throughout this book. Yeah, thank you for mentioning that. I actually ask my students,
is the Book of Mormon a history? Well, right here it says I'm just going to touch lightly on the
history. The emphasis, he's not trying to tell you everything that happened to everybody.
That at least early in the book of Mormon was a large plates thing.
I like in verse four, preaching, prophesying those things that are great.
I'm going to put that for Christ's sake and for the sake of our people.
I noticed in those verses next, John and Barb, that he's not alone in this.
He says verse six, we had many revelations,
we knew of Christ, we labor diligently
that we might persuade them to come unto Christ.
I wonder if he's talking about Joseph here.
We would to God that we could persuade all men
not to rebel against God.
Yeah, there's a great statement by President Eyring
where he's talking to teachers, to parents,
to anybody who's teaching the book, but it's specifically to seminary institute teachers and BYU religion
faculty. He says, you want your students to see that their challenge is not to prove that
the Book of Mormon is true, but to prove to God that they, the students, are true. When
they do this, they will know that the book is true. When they prove that they will do
what the book says, God will tell them more. The Book of Mormon is about people proving their belief to God little
by little, and then He confirms their belief and then gives them more.
That's what I'm trying to do as a parent with my own two little girls. I can get into the
history and try to figure out maps and everything else, which is important, although frankly
I lose them most of the time. But I realize with my two little daughters, I want them
so desperately to come unto Christ. I want them so desperately to come unto Christ.
I want them so desperately to know that their prayers are going to be answered.
I want them so desperately to know that they are going to sin and they are going to have
struggles and they are going to have a lot of people trying to influence in them in a
number of ways, just like Jacob knows.
And I know hands down for my own life, the answer is turning them to Jesus because that is the only
thing that had worked for me. I can go with them to all of their struggles and everything else,
but really when it comes down to it, I have to help them know that the answer, as President
Nelson says, really is Jesus. He is the answer to their problems. He is the only way to have peace
in this world. He's the only source of hope. Other things are interesting and significant to a certain level, but nothing compares to
the priority of helping them come unto Christ as we study the Book of Mormon together.
I feel that way about my students as well, or a gospel doctrine, or any of the callings
I've ever had.
We just have to make sure that we don't put anything in the way of the primary and the
priority, which is helping them come unto Christ.
Barb, I love that. I recently read a quote from
Elder Holland that really adjusted my teaching. I've been doing this a while and I thought,
wow, I need to make an adjustment. He said, students, we'd say our children, are not containers
to be filled. They are matches to be lit. I thought, I sometimes see my students and my children as containers to be filled.
Let me give you information. Let me give you information. When, what if we saw them as matches
to be lit? Do that. Fire them up. Like you said, I want so desperately for my children to believe in
Christ. Not necessarily know the history of the Book of Mormon. The reality is, and this is back
to Jacob, Jacob has just lost his father
He's lost his mother. He's about ready to lose his brother
I know you two are in this boat those of us who have lost parents and
Especially when you've lost both parents. This is me having lost my parents somewhat recently
There is a reality that you need to be self-reliant
I'm older than I would like to be having these children. If I pass away, the time my
parents passed away from me, I need to make sure that my children are so grounded in the Gospel of
Jesus Christ because they have to stand firm on their own and the world is becoming more and more
crazy. It's too risky not to do this. I don't have time to waste on much else. That almost sounds
prudish, but the TV shows that we're watching, the books that we're reading,
the scriptures that we focus on, what we focus on, the scriptures, our vacations that we go on,
there's a purpose in everything. There is a purpose. And it's fun and we laugh a lot,
we enjoy things. But boy, as a mother, while I have them in my home, as a teacher, as I have
people in my classroom, there's very careful, intentional training going on.
I have no time to waste.
And I see mortality is very short,
and I want them as prepared as I possibly can.
And I think that's what Jacob's experiencing here.
He knows what's ahead of these people,
and he's not playing a game.
There is good, there is evil.
He knows that the Lord has told him he's going forward.
It reminds me of my wonderful mother-in-law,
Marlene Savage.
Died too young, 65. I used to think that was old.
She was just starting her grandparenting, but yet the fire she struck
in her children and grandchildren is still burning.
Because she was like you, Barb. She's like, I don't have time to waste on this.
And wow, are we glad she did.
Yeah. Dustin and I lost all of our parents in our 40s. Yeah, Dustin and I have lost all of our parents in our 40s.
We're too young to have lost all of our parents
at this stage, but I think for those of us
who have lost those we love at a young age,
you become orphans, but at the same time,
you also know I have to rely on the Savior.
You don't have parents to call.
You have mentors in your life which we appreciate,
but the reality is you know that now it's you and the Lord.
If you're going to plead for help, it's going to be the Lord you're pleading to.
And if you're going to get guidance and counsel, it's going to be from the Lord through His prophet,
but mostly it's going to be through personal revelation.
And you have to build that relationship with Him.
Our Heavenly Father and our Savior are those people.
I just feel like that's where He's coming from.
I felt it myself.
You can call horizontally and reach horizontally as much as we want, and we do want to help each other. If we're not grounded in the
gospel of Jesus Christ, we are going to struggle. He loves His people too much to let that happen.
He'll pay whatever price, and I think that's part of the anxiety that we see from Jacob.
We see that in verse 3, but we see it throughout the time with Jacob. He just says,
But this day I am weighed down with much more desire and anxiety for the welfare of your souls
than I have hitherto been.
Well, yeah, because now Nephi has passed away and he has full responsibility, as parents
do for their children.
But it's his.
I remember being in a stake conference.
President Monson used to be in one of the stakes I lived in in Salt Lake.
And I remember him one day just saying, no one prays for Gordon like Tommy.
No one.
And I think that's what this is.
It's just this very heavy burden to have
the souls of humankind on our shoulders. We see that here too, the blood on our garments
they're trying to avoid. They're not trying to avoid it because they don't want to be
condemned, I don't think. They want to avoid it because they love people so desperately.
They'll do anything to save those they love, just like the Savior did. The closer we become
to Christ, the more we care about the suffering of individuals.
And the more we come into Christ, the more we want them to experience the joy, as Lehi did, as he's partaking of the fruit. You use the word way down and that's in Jacob chapter 2 verse 3,
as he prepares to address them. I'm way down with much more desire and anxiety for the welfare of
your souls. He wasn't thinking about himself. That is that feeling of
leadership. Oh my goodness, I'm responsible. I have got to teach these people now. I'm taking
over for Nephi and you see that in verse 19 of the chapter previous, taking upon ourselves
or answering the sins of the people upon our own heads if we did not teach them the word of God with all diligence." Wow. That is a weight. I like that he describes it as a weight and that he
feels that weight. I got to point them to Christ. Excellent. Absolutely. I want to share one more
thing about writing, if I may, because he talks about the scriptures. He's going to talk about
this a little bit later in chapter three as well. There's a great talk by Elder Scott. It's called To Learn and Teach More Effectively.
He talks like Jacob does here about having smaller plates and writing things. I have loved this and
appreciated this and I have learned that as I have done this in my life, the Lord has guided me in
what I write, especially personally in my own journals and what I'm hoping to give to my
future posterity. I wasn't planning to talk so much about death and what I'm hoping to give to my future posterity.
I wasn't planning to talk so much about death and what happens, but I have two daughters that have
never met their grandparents. It's the weirdest thing to know. It's not 10 generations down,
it's one. But this prophesying and seeing things in the future when we know we're not going to be
there, and all of us know that there is a time that comes. But I love what Elder Scott, the
pragmatics of what he does, that for me has been very beneficial. He says this, have you learned the enduring value of keeping a journal of the very important
spiritual experiences or sacred impressions that the Lord has communicated to you? And then he
continues, I do not keep a detailed journal of all the events each day, but I do try to keep a record
of some of the very important matters. The spiritual ones are in a sacred password protected journal
that no one else
can access. When I feel authorized by the Holy Ghost, I take some of those truths learned
and put them in my family journal or share them in a public message. This is consistent
with the principle that the Scriptures confirm is true. Some personal matters are for our
guidance and edification to help us grow and improve our character, our devotion, and our
testimony. Things things are not intended for other individuals.
Then he continues, much like a patriarchal blessing
is tailored for the person whom it is given,
such matters should be kept reverently protected
because of their inherent sacred nature.
Any sacred matter that the Lord wants others to know,
he can communicate to them directly through the spirit
if they are worthy and in tune.
I just share from personal experience,
I appreciate this instruction.
There are some things that I write down that will never see the light of day for anyone.
They're just simply sacred. And I believe that the Lord can trust Jacob because he can
trust that Jacob is a confidential person and understands sacred things. There are some
things though that I also recognize that the Lord will teach us that we need to share with
other people, especially our family and children. and when then guided by the Spirit to share with other people.
And I hope that we can be sensitive to the Spirit and make those things known and write
them. The writings that I have from my parents are some of the most precious writings, almost
every piece of paper, but especially my mom had a little red notebook that she kept and
she had other little things that she had, little journals, my parents, and when they focus and I write those testimonies, that's what I want to read today. I want to know
what my parents knew regarding Jesus. The information is interesting, but boy, when I'm
trying to raise my own family and I'm trying to teach the gospel, I want to see and I want to use
the writings of my parents regarding how to come down to Christ. That's really all I care about.
I spoke earlier of my mother-in-law.
I remember when my daughter, Madeline, was baptized.
And you have that little break, that little 10 minute break
during a baptismal service.
And everyone had a chance to write down their testimonies.
You fill it out.
And my mother-in-law took that seriously.
And she wrote down her testimony.
My daughter still has that by her bedside. It was 10 minutes, but wow, you know
what she felt, what she believed. My parents had 13 children. We received no physical money,
but we did receive testimonies. That's what the family cares most about because of their training.
It wasn't that they're rich or poor, but it does matter where you're focused.
Barbara, that reminds me, four of my children have absolutely no memory of their grandpa.
He joined the church at age 24, and I'm so grateful we have his journal because they
get to read those things.
Recently, my daughter uploaded for Christmas all of our little camcorder tapes.
Remember the ancient camcorders before we all had one in our pocket?
I have an interview with my dad from the 90s and it's so fun because it was before his Parkinson's
disease telling us all this stuff and my kids are watching their grandpa. It's
just a plug for grandpas and grandmas out there to write things down, make a
little video so that you can share your testimony in perpetuity in the future.
I said that my parents all passed away.
I was wrong.
And after we adopted children, he lived two more months.
Those are two of the most sacred months.
He attended the ceiling.
He had a goal that he would be able to be sealed
to all of his children and grandchildren in mortality,
which was big for him coming from a broken family as a child.
So that was something that mattered a lot to him. As we adopted those children, it was during COVID. which was big for him coming from a broken family as a child.
So that was something that mattered a lot to him.
As we adopted those children, it was during COVID.
And so he would say,
have they told you when you could be sealed
to your children yet?
The temples were closed, so he was waiting.
We were honestly concerned that he wouldn't make it.
The temples were closed and we don't know
if we can be sealed, but we were sealed in August
and he passed away in November and he was there
and he just hugged him and that's what mattered. Again, back to Jacob, that's just what matters to Jacob.
He cares about these people, they're his posterity, but he cares about these
people coming unto Christ and at the end of your life I think that that's what we
are all going to be caring about if we're focusing on the right things. It's
what matters, what sticks. How wonderful. Barb, John, I have to tell you, speaking of
people who have really blessed my younger years,
in Jacob 1 verse 12, it says,
It came to pass that Nephi died. It's a simple verse.
My seminary teacher, way back in the 1900s, Larry Gardner, down at Snow Canyon High School,
we had a funeral for Nephi.
I still remember it because he asked me to speak at Nephi's funeral.
And here I am, a junior in high school with a lot of unearned confidence.
He said, will you speak? I still remember that. I took that seriously.
I wrote a talk. My friend, Tanisha Hunt at the time, Tanisha Williams now,
she wrote me a note after and said, that really touched my heart what you said.
That was an impactful day. And it was just something that Larry Gardner did.
I don't know if Brother Gardner can listen to our podcast or not,
but Brother Gardner, if you're out there,
that was just one of those moments where your trajectory shifts a little bit.
That reminds me, my mom loved the song,
Save Your Redeemer of My Soul.
You know that song, save your redeemer.
It's a very sensitive song to me and mainly
because my mom was a musician. I always tried to harmonize and then she would say to me,
why are you trying to ruin the song? But she didn't understand because I really wasn't trying
but I think everybody else in my family must have had perfect pitch because I would try to harmonize.
Those are the other memories of mom. At the end of her life, one of my nephews, she would have him come and sing Savior Redeemer
of my soul. He would sing it and sing it and sing it. Finally, there was one day we were
in the front room shortly before my mom passed away and my nephew had had somebody else playing
the piano and after he had sung the song, it was so good. And she just turned to him
and said, now you can sing it at my funeral.
Now it will bring people to Christ. That song has a special place in my heart. But again,
it was she wanted Savior Redeemer of my soul song so that people would come into Christ at her funeral.
That's what you're saying, Hank, these opportunities to prepare for what's most
important. They really do stick in our hearts and minds. These people are mentors and Jacob's now going to be a mentor.
Nephi was a mentor to Jacob.
They're asking him probably the right questions.
I don't know what was being said to Jacob as Nephi was passing, but
I would imagine there was a lot of training and mentoring happening
there and Jacob was learning very carefully how to be the leader
as he's going forward.
Barb, can I ask you one more thing about chapter one?
And that is, John mentioned this, the weight of being a spiritual leader, a church leader,
a teacher.
And as I read this, I think how easy is it to criticize a church leader without thinking
about the heavy weight that is on them?
You'll hear people today, why did the prophet say this?
Why did he say it that way?
Why did President Oaks say it this way? Why did president oak say it this way? Why did elder Holland say it that way and we I don't know almost flippantly criticized
Not realizing the weight that is on those individuals
They feel it. It's a constant thing to feel it. So both of you maybe you could help me with this
How can we help our listeners?
Notice the even the bishop,
the stake president, the Relief Society president,
the young women's president, there's a heavy weight there.
And they could use our sustaining vote
rather than our criticism.
When I became a bishop, I became aware of things
about good folks that no one else probably knew.
I had to make decisions working around things.
I heard, why didn't you ask this person this, this, and I knew why, but no one else did.
There's a wait there.
And I remember consciously going, I will never question this sort of thing.
Again, of leaders, I remember consciously going, okay, I see this. Another
thought I had, Hank, was when Joseph Smith, Liberty Jail, and Jesus says, thy friends
do stand by thee. When I thought about who else was standing by Joseph, it was Peter,
James, John, John the Baptist. It was Jesus. And I thought if I'm not standing by Joseph, I'm
not standing by them either. That was a profound thought to me of am I going to stand by him
or not? So I appreciate you just bringing that up. Sometimes I hear the verbiage, if
you will sustain this person, please sustain them by raising your hand." And I'm like, no, actually we are signifying
that we will sustain them through the duration of their calling with our love and our heart and
everything. We just signify it by this is not sustaining somebody. This is saying that you will
sustain them, but sustaining them will be for the duration. That means a lot when you see those hands
go up when you're the one that is aware of your own faults and you're watching your congregations
say, we'll get behind this. You know, brought up a lot of things with your question there.
That's awesome, John. I love that sustaining thought.
John, that was so helpful. And Hank, I love that question on how do we sustain. It brings
me back to these verses here at the end of chapter 1, verse 17, where Jacob says,
Wherefore I, Jacob, gave unto them these words, as I taught them in the temple,
having first obtained mine Aaron from the Lord. I think we're seeing Jacob, as I said,
he's becoming a leader. And there is one question that we get from youth and young adults all the
time, and even people our own age and older, is how do I know what the Spirit is saying to me?
Jacob had to pay a very heavy price to receive his errand from the Lord. It's not like all the
sudden you become a prophet and the Lord just tells you everything. You have to pay the price.
So number one, I think, is we have to respect the amount of work that these leaders have done
throughout their lives to be in a position where they really have obtained their errand from the one, I think, is we have to respect the amount of work that these leaders have done throughout
their lives to be in a position where they really have obtained their errand from the
Lord. And we have to respect that this comes from a lot of sweat and tears. I remember
my parents praying for my brothers and sisters that were serving missions, and we fasted
for them so that they would know the errand of the Lord. I remember being in financial
difficulties and them just fasting and praying.
And I think there is a very heavy price
that President Nelson, President Oaks,
women of the church and leaders are paying.
I asked Sister Dalton just recently,
when you were going up to speak to all the women,
the young women of the church, how was that?
And she just kind of laughed at first, oh, it was easy.
And then she got really serious and just said,
it was a heavy burden.
It caused anxiety for me and
them knowing how much they had going forward. And she was so real and I appreciated the
realness. All of us having spoken maybe in a smaller setting and things, but we also
have to pay a heavy burden and heavy price to know the errand of the Lord. Sister Julie
Beck recently in a conversation with her, she just said, Barb, one of the hardest parts
about speaking publicly, speaking at all, but especially publicly is,
you pay attention to the Spirit until you say,
in the name of Jesus Christ, amen,
when you're speaking to people.
That's a heavy price.
You are constantly trying to be pure.
You're constantly trying to be clean.
You're constantly trying to receive the errand
of the Lord for those people.
And it takes a lot of work.
I know for me personally, when I'm
asked to speak at firesides and different things, I cringe at saying yes sometimes, although I love
serving, I love speaking, and I love helping anyway. But I know what that is going to require of me and
my personal life as I am trying to focus on one stake after another or one classroom after another.
This is a longer answer than you wanted, but first of all, recognize that they have paid
a heavy price, as Jacob has, to receive their errand from the Lord.
And I think a second thing in here is where they're talking about magnifying their office
unto the Lord, taking upon us the responsibility in answering the sins of the people upon our
own heads.
That is such a heavy responsibility.
I'm just going to give this an analogy.
One day I was walking up a hill towards a school and I saw three little kids about
ready to cross the crosswalk to go to the elementary school where they were.
I watched the first two little boys on their bikes.
They crossed the street and as they were crossing the street, it was a crosswalk.
And so this car pulled ahead and just stopped.
But as they were crossing, the third little child was a little girl went right in front
of them and just fell right off her scooter.
Long story short, the person in the front just kept waiting. But as that person was waiting, more cars kept coming behind. The second car came and the second car got there, the car was going nowhere. The boys had obviously gone across the street, they had no idea that there was a little girl on the ground. And they just started honking the horn, just honk, honk, honk, trying
to get the first one. It was like, get off your cell phone, pay attention. You could
just see it. And I was watching from far enough away that I could see exactly what was going
on. The person honking had no idea. Then the third car came up and started honking at the
second one. They're both yelling and they're both honking. This girl eventually stands
up and walks across the street. And the sight of the second car and the third car
and the looks on their faces when they saw that
if what the car had done was in accordance with what they had wanted,
a little girl would have been killed that morning.
And they were completely embarrassed and shocked.
The driver in the front gently pulled forward and kept going.
There was no fight on his part.
And to me, I guess, an answer to that question, it is, as President Eyring says,
sometimes we're in a different chair and where we sit makes all the difference.
Of course, as leaders,
we want to make sure that we are being wise and conscientious and following and
receiving our errand from the Lord.
But for those of us in the second and third and fourth cars back and the 10th
car back or the 100th car back,
I think there's a level of respect that we need to give to that front car.
Just remember that there are some things we just simply cannot see no matter how smart
we think we are and how experienced we are in the world.
In a sense where he says that their blood may not come upon my garments.
In that moment, if that first car would have gone forward, the blood of that child would
have been on him.
And that's a scary position to be in. So I'm so grateful he stood his ground
and did not listen to anybody.
Barb, what a great way to teach that.
One of those things I get a little frustrated
and I won't show my frustration here is
you hear a talk in general conference
and you automatically,
he shouldn't have said it this way,
she shouldn't have said it that way.
They could have said this so differently.
I kind of bristle going, well, don't shoot the messenger.
That may be, that likely is what the Lord would say.
Hank, I'll give you one more example.
Back in, I think it was 2000,
President Oaks gave a talk about hanging out.
It may be a different situation today,
but in that moment, I was with, I don't know, 20 young adults. We were all a little bit older.
The women had all just cooked dinner for all the young men. I mean, we did exactly
what he told us not to do. We were just hanging out watching this fireside, not
knowing that he was about ready to call us on the carpet, right? And at the end
of the talk, I remember him talking about Peter Pan and not having taken upon ourselves responsibility and everything else. And then he
says, women stop doing that. And at the end of this 20 plus of us sitting there together in this
room in Salt Lake City, the men quietly got up and left and didn't say a word and also didn't help,
just like he said, but that's okay, they're just church is still true but in that moment all of us as women said we're not going to do this anymore president oaks has
just spoken and we are going to follow him but i loved at the end of his talk where he said look
i'm a general authority and some of you may be tempted to write me a letter and tell me about
your personal circumstances and things don't worry about it i am giving a general talk i love that
he said that but i will say we could have all said, what an old man who has no idea what
we're going through. And in our day, we do need to hang out and we're all single
and woe is us and everything else. But instead, I was so grateful for my friends
in that moment who all said, we're not doing this anymore. We're going to follow
the counsel of President Oaks and we're going to stop hanging out. And in that
next, I would say five years, probably 75% of us either married each other or married somebody that was a friend of
somebody in that group. Again, as Jacob talks about earlier, it's all about agency, but it would have
been, and in so many cases, it is so easy to just say, they don't understand me. They're just speaking
to everybody else, but not me. And we could have all been very offended and we could have all said,
he doesn't understand that if we don't hang out,
we're not going to be happy people. I was grateful for my friends who were strong enough to say,
you know what, let's put it to the test. Let's follow the prophet and see what happens. And sure
enough, he was right. Surprise, surprise. But to your point, I am with you completely. It is
hard to see that people who literally give their lives to the Lord are sometimes run under the bus of the worldly.
Yes, so quickly.
Yep.
Just yesterday, I was attempting to teach some applications of the war chapters and
they make heaps of earth and then they make a work of timbers and then they make a frame
of pickets and then they make a tower and then they put people in the towers.
What can the people in the towers do that nobody else can?
Well, they can see, right.
So imagine a watchman in the tower going,
behold, danger approacheth, two o'clock.
And imagine us going, I don't see any danger.
That is exactly right.
Yeah, you're on frame of picket maintenance.
I can see it.
I'm looking at it right here.
And I love that idea of just like the person in the car, they could see something no one else
could see. I love that they got to see when this little girl walked across. Oh, and if
we can have that kind of humility right now and say, maybe they see something I don't
see. Hank, I've heard you talk about the Matthew 26 22 thing, Lord is it I? When
you hear a talk like that and Barbara, you and your friends, wow, it's pretty cool that
you did that after hearing that talk.
So good.
And frankly, John, I'll be honest, it was hard. I mean, when you're in your early thirties,
we didn't see a lot of hope around the horizon of getting married. We were in a point where
we thought we were all going to be single. And if we don't hang out with our friends,
that's a level of loneliness that is very real that sets in for those of
us who are getting a little bit older. And so we say, we're going to trust the Lord on
this. And the reality is most of the time we don't ever have the chance to see the little
girl get up and walk across the street. We know we have to trust. Yeah. Yep. But eventually
he will make himself known. He will always prove himself to us.
Sometimes it takes a little bit longer.
Yeah, can I throw out one more thing
that I think is important in this chapter,
in chapter, the end of chapter one
and going into chapter two
is that idea of magnifying your office.
I throw this out as a woman and I throw this out
because sometimes when we think about magnifying our office,
we think we're speaking to men in priesthood offices,
which is true.
But perhaps a reminder to all of us
that when women are set apart, called to an office,
we are responsible and are given priesthood power
and authority to magnify that office.
And that our responsibility, just as it is for men,
is to save the souls of the children of God.
All men and women, women and men,
have the mandate to magnify our office
and that we all have this
responsibility to bring souls unto Christ. And it does make sense that we do have some anxiety,
I would say the holy anxiety in a sense almost, to care so much for the welfare of their souls,
because we have been given these responsibilities and this is our day and age. As it says in section
84 of the Doctrine and Covenants, if we do fulfill and magnify our
callings in our offices, that we will have all that the Father has. It's a reminder,
although He has anxiety, but at the same time, with this anxiety comes the possibility of
incredible blessings. And becoming heirs to all that God has as women and men is perhaps
seemingly selfish, but not really selfish when we're talking about receiving all that God has
means we are going to have eternal families.
And that's what we want. It's a shout out, I guess, for women and men to understand when we're magnifying offices,
we're fulfilling callings, we're using God's power and authority in our lives to bless the souls of our brothers and sisters.
Wonderful. We've made it through one chapter. So should we move into chapter two?
Let's do it.
What do you see here?
You know, chapter two? Let's do it. What do you see here? You know, chapter two, it's almost chapter one is setting the stage for us and helping us to see
a little bit at who Jacob is and his calling and what he's been told to do and setting the stage.
It's almost like Nephi is now dying. He's giving us some background of his charge. He's received
this errand from the Lord. This is a sign of an incredible leader. In 17, his errand is of the
Lord and he doesn't tell us quite yet what it is, but right before that in verses 15 and 16, he tells us
that he is going to be dealing with David and the wickedness of those who are doing what David and
Solomon once did, and he is also going to be talking about lifting up your heart into pride.
17, he is now telling us, the errand of the Lord that I have been given
is going to be now shared with you in chapter 2. I want to make it clear as he's going into chapter
2 that he has received this errand from the Lord. If he is going to do the will of the Lord, he
doesn't really have much of a choice. So he's going to these people as it says in verse 7, he says,
"...it grieveth me that I must use so much boldness of speech concerning you before your wives and your children,
many of whose feelings are exceedingly tender and chaste
and delicate before God, which thing is pleasing unto God.
And then, and it supposes me that they have come up hither
to hear the pleasing word of God,
yea, the word which healeth the wounded soul.
Wherefore, in verse nine, it burdeneth my soul
that I should be constrained
because of the strict commandments
which I have received from God to admonish you according to your crimes,
to enlarge the wounds of those who have already wounded instead of consoling and healing their wounds.
And those who have not been wounded instead of feasting upon the pleasing words of God have daggers placed to pierce their souls and
wound their delicate minds. This is not a talk he wants to give.
That's so clear, but it is the talk, according to verse 17 and verse chapter one, that the Lord has given to him.
And that is a sign of a true leader. This is not my will versus thy will. It is thy will be done.
Jacob has clearly no interest in having this discussion. He clearly doesn't want to bring
them down. He doesn't want to have this hardness
for these wonderful people.
But at the same time, he has received his Aaron from the Lord.
There are serious problems going on.
He is now the prophet, and he is going to have to wound
some delicate souls per se in order to follow through
with what the Lord would have him do.
So that's what we're seeing now in chapter two
is a prophet who is being called of the Lord
to do the Lord's will. And his the Lord to do the Lord's will.
And his desire is to do the Lord's will, but that doesn't mean that he necessarily wants
to be the messenger, but he'll do it because he's the prophet and because he's a leader.
He's a disciple of Christ.
Pride over wealth and sexual sin.
It's almost as if this book was written for our day.
Imagine that.
I'm sure God, we don't struggle with that anywhere in this world.
Yeah, clearly.
Barbara, I'm really glad you said what you did about Jacob.
He doesn't want to give this talk.
It's not a fun talk to give.
And it reminds me of a few instances in April 1989, President Ezra Taft Benson just gave
that classic talk, Beware of Pride.
He was so sick, he didn't even give it.
I think President Hinckley read it. But he said, I know the Lord wants this talk given now,
in the beginning of it. Elder Lawrence Corbridge gave this talk at BYU, maybe 2019,
called Stand Forever. The beginning of that talk, he said, I actually wrote two or three others.
And then one more,, Dallin H.
Oaks.
So this is April 2005.
He began by saying this, my fellow holders of the Melchizedek Priesthood and also our young men, I wish to speak to you today about pornography.
I know that many of you are exposed to this and that many of you are being stained by it.
In concentrating my talk on this subject, I feel like the prophet Jacob, who told the men of
his day that it grieved him to speak so boldly in front of their sensitive wives and children.
But notwithstanding the difficulty of the task, he said he had to speak to the men about
the subject because God had commanded him.
I do so for the same reason."
Wow!
That's a burden, and that's a weight to do that.
Hank and Barbara, I know you guys give talks and people ask me, do you get nervous?
And I usually say, I don't get this kind of nervous, but it's always am I in
tune, am I prepared?
I don't want the Lord to say, well, you made him laugh, but you didn't
teach him anything.
Someday. He gives us this spectrum, Jacob does.
You probably came here to hear the pleasing word of God, which healeth the wounded soul.
I've heard talks like that and I love them.
But instead, I have to speak and enlarge the wounds of those who are already wounded.
and enlarge the wounds of those who are already wounded. Sometimes those talks, we need those,
and other times we need our souls to be healed. And the pleasing word of God, thank heavens we have inspired church leaders, men and women, who are inspired to get up and say, I'm going to tell
you what I'm going to tell you because the Lord asked me to. To both of you, that also reminds me of 1995, the family proclamation with President Hinckley. I've been doing a number of interviews
with Sister Elaine Jack. She's been incredible to interview. And we've talked recently about the
background of President Hinckley giving that talk. And one of the things that has really stood out
to me is she and her presidency were really kind of doing a research
about the needs of the women throughout the world. And they had gone and spoken personally and tried
to gather the needs and they were preparing a general conference, their women's conference for
that evening in September of 1995. And Elaine said that she could not be settled on what she should
be sharing. And she had said that they had a video that they had prepared that she decided that she didn't think that that video should be shared. She was being very cautious because she was trying to be careful with her counselors and things, but she said she felt sick about it and didn't know what to do. But it was in that timeframe that President Hinckley, who was just called as the prophet, President Hunter had just passed away shortly before that. The members of the First Presidency and Quorum of the Twelve had been working on that sacred document,
and he contacted Sister Jack and her counselors and asked if they could meet with him. And they did. They were so excited. And
he said to them, I've been thinking about the possibility of sharing this document on the family. And I'm wondering, what do
you think? Is it possible? How would you feel about me actually giving this talk? They hadn't read it yet, but Elaine said that she was so grateful, first of all,
that he asked them their thoughts about it.
But also he sensed that there was just such a heavy
responsibility that he was feeling as the prophet.
But if you remember, before he gave that talk,
he started it with this paragraph,
before he gave the final proclamation,
he starts with this paragraph.
He says, with so much of sophistry that has passed off as truth, with so much of deception concerning
standards and values, with so much of allurement and enticements to take on the slow stain
of the world, we have felt to warn and forewarn.
In furtherance of this, we of the First Presidency and Council of the Twelve Apostles now issue
a proclamation to the Church and to the world as a declaration and the reaffirmation of standards, doctrines, and practices relative to the family, which the
prophets, seers, and revelators of this church have repeatedly stated throughout this history."
And then he says, I now take this opportunity to read this to you. Right before he does
that, he shares a letter that he receives from a woman who was really struggling with
the relationship with her husband and some abusive situations that were happening. And he says, this is going to be the answer
for so many of you. And again, to your point, I believe that this was a difficult document.
I believe that there are prophets, heres and revelators, and they saw into the future how
on many occasions this document may be undermined or people wishing that the prophets hadn't
have shared it or that it wasn't a proclamation and things of that nature. But in this case, President Hinckley, speaking as the prophet,
says this is going to be one of these answers. And I wanted to share this letter because it
fits so well with Jacob too and what's going on. He says, I received this letter on Monday. So,
this is the Monday right before conference. He says the woman writing the letter writes 20 years ago last June
I was expecting a new baby and had five other little children nine years and under
My husband chose to leave our family and walk another path
I wish I could say I was a noble pioneer
But rather I was naive frightened insecure young mother who did not know what to do and who daily made foolish mistakes
Nevertheless, I sought counsel from my leaders
and obeyed, even when I knew their advice would make my life more complicated. I decided
it was not for me to question, and if some advice caused temporary pain for me, it must
be something I should experience." She continues,
I remember reading President Kimball's monthly message in the end sign, where he promised
that if we would read the scriptures daily, that every problem we faced during the day
would be answered with those holy pages.
I thought, okay, President Kimball, you're on.
I have lots of problems that they sure do need answers.
I gathered my children around me and we studied daily.
We prayed, we fasted for our daddy and ourselves.
We held family home evening and attended our meetings.
We forgave our daddy and I literally gave my agency back to my heavenly father.
I told him if I was not to have my husband for eternity,
as I'd originally thought,
I would be pleased if he would change the love I had for him
as a wife into a Christ-like love,
because I would rather die than go on another minute
hating or resenting the father of my children.
I did not want to teach anger, hate, or bitterness to them.
I knew my husband was basically a good man,
full of potential and talent.
He had made a terrible mistake, and I knew he would reap basically a good man, full of potential and talent. He had made a
terrible mistake and I knew he would reap his own heartaches and he has. But my personal task at
hand was to care for those soon to be six children and to teach them in such a way that they could
not misunderstand the gospel of Jesus Christ. President Hinckley, this is a miracle if ever
there was a miracle. The Lord protected and nurtured those children. He answered their prayers.
He continues on, then the president Hinckley says this, I do not share our story with you.
She writes, to brag of myself, but I certainly can boast in the Lord. The atonement is very real for
us. Wounded hearts have been healed. Confidence has been restored. Peace has been tasted in the
most delicious way. Indeed, as you have said, every principle God has revealed carries its own
conviction of truth. I think of my first husband husband if he could only realize he has already paid the price for his mistakes.
He missed the joy of seeing his talented children grow up in the Lord. He missed their school
and their church achievements, their mission farewells and their reports. All that makes
life sweet. How thankful I am that I was privileged to be by their sides. And then finally, I
know this is long. I know there are many single parents in the world today.
How I wish I could help them see that they must never waste time reliving their own tender injuries.
I have found if you cast your burden to the Savior's feet, He will carry it for you and
replace anguish with love. May the Lord bless you and your family always with deepest love and
appreciation." And then she signed the letter. I share this letter with you because I'm seeing
this in what's happening here in Jacob 2. And there's so many letters that are just like that.
And that is the letter and that is the expression and that is the struggle that leads to the
family proclamation.
That's how President Hinckley leads it in.
This is how Jacob leads it in.
He starts by saying, there are so many people that are sorrowing and I need to talk to you.
And he's speaking to men in this case.
And he's saying that I have women and men here.
And I also want to make it very clear that there are women and men who both struggle and that it is not just one gender or the other that is causing,
and there's not one or the other that is needing to repent and is not one or the other who is abusive or being abused.
The problem that Jacob is seeing here is that there are people who are acting in pride and there are people who are acting in ways
that demeans one person over the other or under the other. And that's back to your talk on pride. That is the real issue with pride is, it's putting one person above another. Usually, it's ourselves above someone else or below
someone else. So to your point with Jacob not wanting to say these things, I do believe President Hinckley wanted to
say the truth. But I think it's coming from a place of heaviness.
It's coming from a place, as Jacob is, of trying to help people.
He's seen too many wounded hearts. He's seen too many people deal with the sadness of life, and he wants to help.
But it is a hard, hard conversation to have. But he's going to do it because he's on the errand of the Lord,
and he will speak what the Lord has put into his heart to speak.
They are disciples of Christ.
They're not on their own errand.
It's very similar to what is it Mother Teresa, she says, I'm a little pencil in God's hands.
He does the thinking, he does the writing, he does everything and sometimes it is really
hard because it is a broken pencil and he has to sharpen it a little more.
That's what Jacob is.
He's a pencil in God's hands.
He's been given his errand.
It's hard, but he also wants these people to have happiness
and he is going to serve the Lord.
He's a true leader.
He's a covenant leader of God.
So good.
When I was a young adult, just home from a mission,
I had, she was actually, and especially for youth speaker,
you know, an experienced mother and older
woman. She used the analogy of you have a blind spot, like when you're driving and you don't see.
And she could have just said, oh, I just love you. But how loving was it to hold up a blind spot?
I mean, if God really loves us, he's going to correct us.
I'm so grateful for talks like that.
That can, because I love you, I need to show you what you're doing.
And this is what Jacob had to do there.
And it weighed on him.
How grateful we are still benefiting from what Jacob said to his people.
It reminds me of 2 Nephi 1, remember Lehi, DeLayman and Lemuel,
that which you call anger is the truth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love in verse 9 where it says,
Wherefore it burneth my soul that I should be constrained because of the strict commandments which I have received from God,
to admonish you according to your crimes, to enlarge the wounds of those who are already wounded instead of consoling and healing their wounds.
And those who have not been wounded instead of feasting upon the pleasing word of God have daggers placed in their souls and wounded their
delicate minds." These are strong words and there's a temptation that even I have that says, we get it,
we get it, that people are struggling. And in some ways, I think it's extremely important that we also don't minimize this. We're going to talk about it even more as we go forward in chapter three.
But at the same time, to say, at the end of chapter two, we have Jacob. He says,
Behold, you have done greater iniquities than the Lamanites, our brethren. You have broken their
hearts with your tender wives. You have lost the confidence of your children because of your bad
examples before them. And the sobbing of their hearts has sent up to God against you.
And because of the strictness of the word of God, which cometh down against you,
many hearts died pierced with deep wounds."
This isn't... We're just going to cover this over and not worry about it.
And please don't do this anymore.
This is... We have some serious issues going on here, men and women.
And we have prophets and apostles teaching us these things today.
And this is not to be skirt under the carpet.
We have Elder Kieran recently and others who've talked about abuse and anger and calling people
to repentance.
And this is a sign that Jacob understands that there is a real need here.
And these individuals do need to repent.
And these individuals do need to watch themselves carefully.
I think it's fascinating that Jacob actually says earlier, it's not that you've already done these
things. I know that you are going to do these things. He's seeing the intents of their hearts.
He has this discernment. He says, you are going to be doing these things, which I personally think
is a very powerful part in verse five, chapter two, verse five. He says, Behold, hearken ye unto
me and know that by the help of the all-powerful Creator of
heaven and earth, I can tell you concerning your thoughts, how that you are beginning
to labor in sin, which sin appeareth very abominable unto me, yea, and abominable unto
God.
Yea, it grieveth my soul and causeth me to shrink with shame.
It's not just that they're doing it, he's actually saying, you're thinking about doing
these things, and let me warn you about what you're about to do.
Then he really gets into this discussion about how bad these things really can be.
I liked what you said. You said the wealth isn't the problem. It's pride that's the problem.
What do you think is happening here? Why is it that when we become wealthy,
that some of us, not all of us, of course, but some of us drift toward this pride,
this almost hatred of other people.
I think that the answer is really what we're seeing in verse 12 and 13.
I love that Jacob says,
Get thou up into the temple on the morrow, and declare the word, the Lord is saying this,
declare the word which I shall give unto you.
And then he says,
Now behold, my brethren, this is the word which I declare unto you, that many of you
have begun to search for gold and for silver. And then he talks about what they're doing.
And then verse 13, this is where the kicker is. He says,
And the hand of providence has smiled upon you most pleasingly, that you have obtained
many riches. And because some of you have obtained more abundantly than that of your
brethren, you are lifted up in the pride of your hearts. Now notice the words more. So
now we're saying the problem isn't the money, it's the comparison.
And then he says, and wear stiff necks and high heads because of the costliness of your
apparel and persecute your brethren because you suppose that you are better than they.
So we have more and better. And now my brethren, do you suppose that God justifies you in this
thing? Behold, I say unto you, Nay, he condemneth you.
And if he persists in these things, his judgments must speedily come unto you."
The problem isn't the money.
The problem isn't the wealth. The problem isn't the land.
The problem is not the jewelry. It has nothing to do with that.
And that may be that some people, if they get money, they tend to be that way.
But that's not his problem.
The problem is that they think that they are more and they think that they are better. That's what President Benson discusses. He discusses
the initial reason for the pride and it's the comparison of one person to another. Actually,
in his talk, he says the central feature of pride is enmity. Enmity towards God, enmity towards our
fellow man. It is this power which Satan wishes to reign over us."
And he says, another major portion of this very prevalent sin is enmity towards our fellow men. We are tempted daily to elevate ourselves above another and diminish them. And then I love this,
he quotes C.S. Lewis and he says, pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of
having more of it than the next man. It is the comparison that makes you proud,
the pleasure of being above the rest.
Once the element of competition has gone, pride has gone.
And then he continues with this, which I love.
He says, pride is a sin that can readily be seen in others,
but is rarely admitted in ourselves.
Most of us consider pride to be a sin of those on the top,
such as the rich and the learned,
looking down on the rest of us.
There is, however, a far more common element among us, and that is pride from the bottom looking up.
It doesn't matter if it's from the bottom looking up or the top looking down.
The problem is the comparison between the two and one person thinking that they are more righteous because they're so humble.
That's the irony of humility and pride is that person is so prideful. The moment we say that person is so prideful, we're being prideful. That's the ugly reality of pride is pride is a comparison and it's putting you in a position. So if you're more righteous than the other person, you're actually probably the prideful one. That's the concern with this pride, but that is what's happening. And because of the pride, they're putting their people in a very, very precarious and dangerous situation.
This pride is what leads to racism. This pride is what leads to gender inequality.
This pride is what leads to the destruction of a people.
It's the pride that President Nelson and President Oaks have warned prolifically over the last few years
regarding how we need to treat other people and see each other as God's children.
That is the issue. And then you see that in verse 18, he says,
But before you seek for riches, seek ye for the kingdom of God.
After you obtain a hope in Christ, you shall obtain riches,
if you seek them, and you will seek them for the intent to do good,
to clothe the naked, to feed the hungry, to liberate the captive,
and to administer relief to the sick and the afflicted.
And now, my brethren, I have spoken unto you concerning pride."
And this is the key, a wealthy person who is humble,
will do whatever he can to clothe the naked,
to feed the hungry and to liberate the captive.
And what we're trying to do is God's purpose
is to save the souls of the children of men.
And if you have money, you're able to do it
in a way that is different from somebody else.
The reality is we're all trying to consecrate ourselves and to become unified and become one, just as the Savior was.
So the issue is not the wealth, the issue is the motivation and the desire,
and the understanding of who we are as children of God and all of us becoming eventual heirs to the throne.
One of the things I love about God is He's not trying to keep us below Him.
He's trying to help us become like Him. And pride is Satan's tactic of there is Satan who
receives the glory and all of us, in a sense, stay below Him. That is not the Lord's way. He wants us
to all receive what He has. He wants all of us to be heirs to the throne. He wants all of us to use
this. It's His power for the salvation and the joy of other people. That's what we're searching here.
And that's why, in a sense, this becomes so dangerous. It's because in this case for Jacob,
he sees the utter destruction, the possibility of what happens. He saw the pride of his own brothers.
He does not want it happening here. The Lord is calling him to come out and speak to this.
Pride is a dangerous sin. Pride is what caused the fall of the Lamanites. Pride is the warning of
President Nelson for us in our day. Sometimes I'm afraid that we may not understand how absolutely destructive pride can be. I'll give you one more
quote from President Benson here. He says, Pride adversely affects all of our relationships,
our relationship with God and His servants, the relationship between husbands and wife,
parent and child, employer and employee, teacher and student, and all mankind.
Our degree of pride determines how we treat our God and our brothers and sisters.
Christ wants to lift us to where He is.
Do we desire that same thing for others?
Then of course, God will have a humble people, Alma 32, but He's going to have a humble
people whether we decide to be humble or not.
We will be humble.
Every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is the Christ. For us, I almost think the question is, how painful is it going
to be for us to get to that process? President Benson talks about this, but one of the antidotes
to pride really is love. Seeing people as God sees them, and that comes from keeping
covenants and making covenants, which that leads us into this next part. But if we're
a covenant keeping people, then we shouldn't be filled with pride
It's a hard thing to understand
The manual references because I have been given much him to 19
Because I've been given much I too must give because of thy great bounty Lord each day
I live I shall divide my gifts from thee with every brother that I see
Who has the need of help
from me.
Just beautiful.
Can I read you something from Brigham Young?
The worst fear I have about this people is that they will get rich in this country, forget
God and his people, wax fat and kick themselves out of the church and go to hell.
This people will stand mobbing, robbing, poverty, and all manner of persecution
and be true. But my greatest fear is that they cannot stand wealth.
I have used that quotation in my classes before and I say, how many of you woke up in the
middle of the night having this nightmare and you were so glad you woke up? Oh, I had
this dream that I got rich. It was just horrible. Horrible trial. Yeah. I love that Brigham
Young would say, this people will stand all of this and they'll be true. Do you know what
this reminds me of? President Nelson has said that really quotable line about the joy we
feel has less to do with the circumstances of our lives and more to do with the focus
of our lives. And a lot of times we look to Christ in times of
hardship and poverty
Now Jacob's people are being tested. Will you look to Christ in a time of abundance?
Or will you switch real estate you've built your heart on Christ
You've built your foundation on Christ now. Are you gonna build your foundation on your stuff?
That's a different challenge. Will you still focus on Christ now? Are you going to build your foundation on your stuff? That's a different challenge. Will you still focus on Christ when you have abundance in your life?
Thankfully, as you've mentioned, we all know people who do and who have, and it's inspiring
to know people that are pretty wealthy, but who are so consecrated. I like my trials in cash too, John. Isn't it nice? Can I read a really cool
Old Testament verse that I think is so fascinating? This is Ezekiel 16 49. Behold, this was the
iniquity of thy sister Sodom. We all know what happened to Sodom and Gomorrah. Pride, fullness of bread, which is a great way to say abundance. When
it's famine, it says cleanness of teeth in the Old Testament. But when there's abundance,
it's pride, fullness of bread, and abundance of idleness was in her and in her daughters.
Neither did she strengthen the hand of the poor and needy." What a great
description. The idea of abundance of idleness is part of this. You have time
to seek gold and silver. You're not thinking every day, how do I feed my
family? Now you've got leisure time and that's a doorway to a lot of temptation.
When you've got nothing to do, there's an old saying that Jesus chose his disciples when they were working,
Satan chooses his when they're idle.
Oh, that's really good.
That's what Nephi does when he's separating himself from his brothers.
And that's one of the first things you see them do is that hard work,
that industriousness that comes through there.
I love in verse 18 where it says,
But before you seek for riches, seek you for the kingdom of God.
That solves so many problems.
It's really about our motivation.
Richness is relative.
It's that comparison that's the problem.
It's all relative.
But the answer for so much of this is,
before you seek for riches, seek ye first the kingdom of God.
There's a great quote from Elder Maxwell.
He says this,
Therefore, what we insistently desire over time
is what we will eventually become and what we will receive in the eternity.
If we desire to get rich, we're gonna lose it all anyway.
If we desire to build up the kingdom of God, we are going to be in the next life
abundantly filled with the relationships of people that we genuinely desire to serve and bring unto the Lord.
I think that's what's so
beautiful about Jacob. You just know that he is seeking the kingdom of God. We don't know his
wealth status. We have no idea. But there's one thing we do know about Jacob, and that is his
intentions and his motivations are pure, so it seems. He is seeking the kingdom of God, and he
is seeking whatever he can do to help people. It's the same motivation of King Benjamin. It's what we saw with Benjamin. It's what we saw with Nephi. It's what we see with Esther. It's what we see with Sarah.
It's what we see with Eve. It's this focus of both these women and men of trying to do all that they can to put their own lives
in the hands of the Lord to serve other people and bring them to Christ. That's the issue.
One of the best ways we get rid of pride is to focus outward.
Elder Bednar has this incredible talk called The Character of Christ. And in this talk,
he talks about reaching outward and reaching out beyond ourselves. This is one of the answers
to this comparison. It's putting ourselves in a position where we really are trying to
clothe the naked and feed the hungry. He gives one story of a woman he was talking to on
the phone. She was the stake relief society president, and she calls them and tells him that there's been an accident,
and three of the young women in his stake have been involved, and one of them has already passed away,
and they don't have the identities of any of them.
President Bednar, he's the stake president, is on the other line, and he says,
Early one summer morning, I was showering.
My wife called me in the middle of my shower and indicated that I was needed immediately on the telephone.
This was the day before cell phones and cordless phones.
I quickly put on my robe and hurried to the phone.
I next heard the voice of a dear sister and friend inform me of a tragic automobile accident that had just occurred in a remote area involving three teenage young women from my stake.
Our friend indicated that one of the young women had already been pronounced dead at the scene of the accident and that the two other young women were badly injured and presently were being transported to the Regional Medical Center in Fayetteville.
She further reported that the identity of the deceased young woman was not yet known. There was an urgency in her voice, but there was no panic or excessive alarm. She then asked if I could go to the hospital, meet the ambulance when it arrived, and assist in identifying the young woman. I answered that I would leave immediately.
Then he continues, During the course of our telephone conversation,
as I listened to both the information being conveyed and the voice of our friend, I gradually
became aware of two things. First, this friend's daughter was one of the
young women involved in the accident. Our friend lived approximately 35 miles from the hospital and therefore needed the assistance
of someone who lived closer to the city.
Second, I detected that the mother simultaneously was using two telephone handsets, with one
in each hand pressed to each of the upper ears.
I became aware that as she was talking with me, she was also talking with the nurse.
At a small rural hospital who had initially
attended to the three accident victims. Our friend was receiving updated information about
the conditions of the young woman in the very moment she was informing me about the accident
and requesting my help. I then heard one of the most remarkable things I have ever heard
in my life. I faintly heard the nurse telling this faithful mother and friend that the young
woman pronounced dead at the scene of the accident had been positively identified as her own daughter.
I could not believe what I was hearing.
I was listening to this good woman in the very moment that she learned of the death
of her precious daughter.
Without hesitation and with a calm and most deliberate voice, our friend next said, President
Bednar, we must get in contact with the other two mothers.
We must let them know as much as we can about the conditions of their daughters and that they will
soon be in the hospital in Fayetteville. The Christ-like character of this devoted woman
was manifested in her immediate and almost instinctive turning outward to attend to the
needs of the other suffering mothers. It was a moment and a lesson that I have never forgotten.
In a moment of ultimate grief, this dear friend reached outward when I likely would have turned inward."
He then talks about going to the hospital, identifying these women, and eventually finds that all three of them have been killed.
And then he tells the next story of another mother who was a ward relief society president.
And after identifying that her daughter had also been killed,
she was asked before speaking at a funeral, she receives a phone call from another woman who says,
I am sick and I need help and I need you to bring food to my house. Not realizing that that exact day
this mother was going to the funeral of her daughter. And he just says,
these people are learning to think outward. This is the character of Christ.
Although I recognize that this is such a high moral standard for all of us to live and difficult
to even imagine, this is what Jacob is trying to teach here, that we need to care about
each other, that we need to feed the hungry, liberate the captive, administer to relief
to those who are afflicted. Everyone is our friend. Everyone is our brother and sister. Everyone is somebody
that should be cared for and taken care of at the highest levels. And Jacob gets it,
but it's a hard lesson to learn. That's his concern is that that is not happening among these people.
They are comparing themselves. And rather than serving and helping and lifting each other,
they're comparing and thinking they're better than each other. That's a serious sin, but something that in our day, I think, is perhaps too common.
Wow, Barb, what a story.
Yeah, that is brutal.
I remember back in April of 2010, Elder Uchtdorf talked about center of the universe syndrome.
He says, you can get center of the universe syndrome, which leads people to believe that the world revolves around them and that all others are just supporting cast in the grand theater of mortality in which they have
the starring role. Coming up in part two of this episode. As women and men, but especially as women,
women and men, but especially as women, we deal with ambiguity and each of us receives our own errand from the Lord.