Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Jeremiah 1-20 Part 1 • Dr. John Hilton III • Oct. 10 - 16
Episode Date: October 5, 2022How does the Book of Jeremiah connect with the Book of Mormon? Dr. John Hilton III examines the relationship of the Book of Jeremiah to the Book of Mormon, its chronology, and how the prophet Jeremiah... can lead us to Jesus Christ.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"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.comJohn Hilton's Podcast/Video class: https://johnhiltoniii.com/seekingjesus/Jeremiah Resources by John Hilton III: https://johnhiltoniii.com/resources-for-studying-jeremiah/Jeremiah Chronology by John Hilton III: https://www.bibletales.online/chronological-order-of-jeremiah/Ballard, M. Russell. 2022. "The Miracle Of The Holy Bible". Abn.Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://abn.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/2007/05/the-miracle-of-the-holy-bible?lang=eng&adobe_mc_ref=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/2007/05/the-miracle-of-the-holy-bible?lang=eng&adobe_mc_sdid=SDID=4219C2D53F7A7BF4-6D233CF6EAA9D476|MCORGID=66C5485451E56AAE0A490D45%40AdobeOrg|TS=1663714879.Bednar, David A. 2022. "“Hear Him” In Your Heart And In Your Mind". Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/inspiration/hear-him-in-your-heart-and-in-your-mind?lang=eng.Bowen, Matthew L. 2022. "Ominous Onomastics | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/prophets-prophecies-old-testament/ominous-onomastics.Brown, S. Kent. 2022. "History And Jeremiah’S Crisis Of Faith | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/isaiah-prophets/history-jeremiahs-crisis-faith.Christofferson, D. Todd. 2022. "The Blessing Of Scripture". Abn.Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://abn.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2010/04/the-blessing-of-scripture?lang=eng&adobe_mc_ref=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2010/04/the-blessing-of-scripture?lang=eng&adobe_mc_sdid=SDID=0346784C20E21F4E-7CE32EE7C052AE33|MCORGID=66C5485451E56AAE0A490D45%40AdobeOrg|TS=1663714837.Cook, Quentin L. 2022. "Lamentations Of Jeremiah: Beware Of Bondage". Churchofjesuschrist.Org. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2013/10/lamentations-of-jeremiah-beware-of-bondage?lang=apw.Draper, Richard D. 2022. "The Prophets Of The Exile | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/sperry-symposium-classics-old-testament/prophets-exile.Halverson, Taylor. 2022. "“I Will Write It In Their Hearts.” Jeremiah 16; 23; 39; 31 | The Interpreter Foundation". The Interpreter Foundation | Supporting The Church Of Jesus Christ Of Latter-Day Saints Through Scholarship. https://interpreterfoundation.org/res-i-will-write-it-in-their-hearts-jeremiah-16-23-39-31/.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello everyone, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith.
I am here with my incredible co-host.
Let me describe him for you.
He is a green olive tree, fair, and of goodly fruit.
John, as I was reading the book of Jeremiah, preparing for our lesson, I just could not help
but see your face when I read a green olive tree
fair and of goodly fruit. But correct me if I'm wrong, John, I've known you long enough, you don't like olives.
I don't. I pull them off my supreme pizzas and hand them to the children. But I do resemble the bark
of an old olive tree, gnarled old. That's where you saw my face.
It was that part, right?
That's true.
All the trees can live a very long time.
Yeah.
Well, I hope that's prophetic.
Yes, you will live for a very long time, right?
It's 500 years.
Like I mentioned, John, we are in the book of Jeremiah, and I got to be honest.
This transition from Isaiah to Jeremiah takes my knowledge from, hey, I feel like I know
a lot to, oh my word, how little do I know about Jeremiah.
And I think maybe our listeners feel the same way.
So we need to bring someone in who could help us make the transition from Isaiah
that we've been studying for five weeks to Jeremiah
who maybe some people have never studied before.
Who's gonna help us make this transition?
This is so fun for us, Hank,
because we have been friends with John Hilton III
long before we ever, I think before the word podcast was invented probably. I think so. Yep. And so it's fun to have John with
this again. He's been on here before we love his book considering the cross.
And I'm glad to have him here because I think you're right Hank. I think most of us
what we know about Jeremiah is oh he was kind of a contemporary of Lehigh and that's about
that's about where it ends. So let me
give you a quick bio John Hilton professor of ancient scripture at Brighamming University. He has
a master's degree from Harvard and a PhD from BYU both in education. He's the author of the founder
of our piece and of course considering the cross more recent and many other books audio recordings
articles. He loves teaching reading books, audio recordings, articles,
he loves teaching, reading, snowboarding,
traveling, serving, spending time with family.
He and his wife, Lonnie, have six children.
He also has a podcast called Seeking Jesus,
which is really good.
And I hope our listeners will listen to that.
We love having John here with us again.
So what should we call you today?
J3 and I'm JB or something like that. So what should we call you today? J3 and I'm Jb or something like
that. So it'll get mixed up. Jb J3. You got it. In my text messages back and forth, I usually call
him Jh3 and then I always have to throw in. He's so great. They made three of them. He really is
that great. Well, Hank, I remember you telling a story about John that he had heard President Nelson
say something about China and John just decided to learn Chinese on his own.
It wasn't his language he learned on his mission and he just started studying it.
And is that true, John?
Are you pretty fluent in, is it Mandarin?
It's true.
Yeah, I can't read or write in Mandarin, but I can
pull the conversation and do a little talking. Yeah.
That's John. That is John to a T, but also, maybe I've shared this before.
I've had people in my family pass away over the last few years and who's at my door, or John Hilton.
He mourns with those who mourns. I'll tell you that. John, we've been friends a long time. It feels like since the 1900s, it really does. It feels
that long.
John, how do you want to approach Jeremiah? Knowing, I think, that a lot of our listeners,
this may be, hmm, really first time through. I don't know a lot about this. I want to know
something.
How do you wanna begin?
So I wanna begin with two words, get excited.
It's so fun, I think, to have a book of scripture
that we really just don't know that well.
Jeremiah is the longest book in the Bible.
And it's probably one of the ones that we know the least.
But I wanna give you just upfront
for those of you who are deciding like,
do I even wanna listen to this episode? Let me just give you a few reasons why I think
you'll really want to study Jeremiah. First of all, I personally love lesser-known Bible
stories and Jeremiah is full of them because we don't read it, so we don't know the stories,
but they're fun. Also, Jeremiah has some powerful teachings that can help us come closer to
Jesus Christ. Another reason why we really want to own Jeremiah is because of his connections to the Book of Mormon.
If you think about it, my guess is, 1st Nephi 1 is the most frequently read chapter in the
Book of Mormon, which makes 1st Nephi 1 verse 4 one of the most frequently read verses.
Let me just read it to you.
For it came to pass in the commencement of the first year
of the reign of Zedekaya, King of Judah,
my father, Lehigh, having 12 Etruslum in all his days,
in that same year there came many prophets,
prophets and other people that they must repent,
or the great city Jerusalem must be destroyed.
Jeremiah was one of those prophets,
and it mentions Zedekaya by name.
Well, three quarters of all the references to
Zedekaya in the Bible are found in the book of Jeremiah. So in other words, if you want to really know
what's Lehigh's Jerusalem like, what's Nephi's Jerusalem like, you want to read Jeremiah. It's our
best source for understanding Jerusalem in the time period of Lehi. And not to like get over the exuberant,
but Jeremiah's writings are also on the brass plates.
Nephi studies them.
He says, first Nephi, chapter five,
once they got the brass plates,
they said they contain the prophecies
of the Holy prophets from the beginning,
even down to the reign of Zedekiah
and also many prophecies which were spoken
by the mouth of Jeremiah.
And several hundred years later, another prophet named Nephi, Nephi, the son of Helaman,
is going to talk about Jeremiah.
He says, we know that Jerusalem was destroyed according to the words of Jeremiah.
Oh, then why not the son of God come according to his prophecy?
So in other words, Book and Mormon prophets are studying Jeremiah.
So one at us.
Absolutely.
And you're talking about context here, John, that I think most people need to understand.
Let's just do a brief cursory history here.
We lost the Northern Kingdom of Israel in 721, 722 BC, 130 years later or so.
We lose the Southern Kingdom of Judah. and that is the time of Jeremiah,
right?
Right, during that same time period.
It fits right in like a puzzle piece with the Book of Mormon, because that's the same
time the Book of Mormon begins.
Exactly.
And we only got maybe one or two chapters about this back in Second Kings, as we talked
about the fall of Jerusalem
but now Jeremiah is all in this time period a few decades before starting in the reign of Josiah
all the way down Jeremiah will see the fall of Jerusalem.
So Lehigh gets to leave town and Jeremiah gets to stay
Yeah, there's some powerful lessons we can learn from that sometimes you get to be the Lehigh
But sometimes you're the Jeremiah. And you stick around. I can see there are two
mission calls sitting side by side. And he's like, oh, really? I got to stay here and witness
the fall of Jerusalem where Lehigh is on the way up. So I also want to say it front, maybe
there's probably some good reasons why we don't
know Jeremiah as well as maybe we could. First of all large chunks of the book of Jeremiah are
him preaching to the people and the main messages repent or perish, but he might take five
chapters in a row to go through that same message over and over again. And so as modern readers maybe
that might feel tedious sometimes to some people. another trouble with Jeremiah is the book doesn't appear
in chronological order. So we would have to rearrange the chapters to read it as a straight
through storyline. And we can put this in the show notes, John Hilton, I, I, I, dot,
com slash Jeremiah, I've put the chapters into chronological order. So if you're interested
in saying like, I want to read the book chronologically. But some of you are like, man, I've put the chapters in a chronological order. So if you're interested in saying like,
I want to read the book chronologically, but some of you are like, man, I don't know if I want to
read the whole book of Jeremiah, a bunch of chapters there. Here's my biggest tip for studying
the book of Jeremiah, and that's to watch the movie called Jeremiah. It stars Patrick Dempsey.
Have you guys ever seen it? I don't think so. It's so good. It's available for free on YouTube.
So if you just go on YouTube and you know put Jeremiah
I also link to it at the johnhiltoni.com slash Jeremiah page
It's not a hundred percent scriptural
But a lot of it is scriptural and when you see these scenes some of which we'll talk about today all of a sudden Jeremiah comes to life in a new way
So I definitely recommend the Jeremiah movie and if you've got teenagers that could be a fun movie to watch as a family one Sunday afternoon.
That's great.
Thanks, John.
I didn't know about that.
So maybe we can just dive in with Jeremiah Chapter 1.
And just so you guys know, sometimes I'll be quoting from the King James version.
Sometimes I'll be quoting from the new Revised Standard version.
And often today I'll be quoting from the new living translation.
The new living translation is designed for six graders.
And I think that sometimes when you're approaching a book like Jeremiah, that's really unfamiliar,
it can be helpful to read it at a six grade reading level because then some of the complicated
parts you're just able to get through and understand more easily.
And honestly, it's hard to love a book of scripture if you can't really understand what it says.
And it doesn't do you a lot of good to read Jeremiah and not get a single thing out of it.
So yeah, go pick up one of these alternatives.
So let's just dive in to Jeremiah chapter one.
Okay, picking up just at their very beginning.
These are the words of Jeremiah, son of Hylchaya, one of the priests from the town of Anathoth and
the land of Benjamin. The Lord first gave messages to Jeremiah
during the 13th year of the reign of Josiah,
that's about 630 BC.
The Lord's messages continued throughout the reign
of King Jehaya, King Josiah's son,
until the 11th year of the reign of King Zedekaya,
another of Josiah's sons.
In August of that 11th year, about 586 BC,
the people of Jerusalem were taken away as captives.
So these first four verses are just introducing us
to the timeframe of Jeremiah's life and prophesying.
The time of the captives, John 586.
And so Lehigh's leaving Jerusalem approximately 600 BC,
Jeremiah's there, a couple of decades before that,
he's there a decade after that.
So that's part of the reason why this is so exciting.
This is really Book of Mormon context.
But that means that we've taken a jump
from the time frame of Isaiah, doesn't it?
Even though it's just one page away.
Yeah, that's a great point.
So that's one of the reasons why I think it is helpful
how we studied Second Kings a few months ago,
so we can kind of see where it fits in the storyline Isaiah's in the time around the scattering of Israel with the a Syria being the dominant try or dominant country
So now we're jumping forward a century
Babylon is the new superpower. So that's a great point from Isaiah to Jeremiah. We've jumped forward and we fast forwarded about a hundred years
I would say this is an absolutely crucial skill.
If you really want to understand the Old Testament is the way it's set up.
You've got the Torah, right?
The five books of Moses, then you have the history, then you have the writings,
Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Psalms, and then you have these prophets, Isaiah,
through Malachi.
Each of these prophets, correct me if I'm wrong, John, but each of these prophets and then you have these profits Isaiah through Malachi.
Each of these profits, correct me if I'm wrong, John,
but each of these profits fit somewhere back
in that history that we talked about.
And they did input them in order, of course not,
you can't put them in order, they can't make it easy for us.
They put it in order of length of how long these books are
and stuck them back.
So you've got to know your history
in order to know what the context is
for the prophet who's speaking.
Really well said, and that is a great scriptural skill.
Because if you're thinking,
oh, we're continuing on past the time of Esther,
we're not, we're going now backwards.
To where do we have the verses,
the actual scriptures this would fit in?
We're basically here between 2nd Kings 23 to 25.
So if you were to go back and read these chapters of history,
that would give you some additional context for Jeremiah.
When Jeremiah is alive and what he's doing.
Okay, we're actually about to get much more,
like there's more histories and stories about this time period
in the book of Jeremiah than there is in those couple of chapters in second kings.
Got it.
Okay.
So we're going to get more stories, not just preaching.
Correct.
That's my favorite part actually, it's the stories.
So we've kind of set up a little bit of the context and background.
Probably the most famous verses in Jeremiah are chapter 1 versus 5 and 6. God
calls Jeremiah saying, before I formed the in the belly, I knew the and before thou came
us forth out of the womb, I sanctified thee and I ordained thee a prophet unto the nations.
And I just love this assurance from the Lord, I knew you before you were born. And by the
end of today, when we get to Jeremiah chapter 29, we'll look at another verse where the Lord says something similar and maybe put those together at that point and talk more about this, this principle.
But God has special plans for each of us, not just Jeremiah.
I think it's interesting though that Jeremiah doesn't feel up to the mission. He goes on to say, I can't speak, I'm a child. Oh, Lord God, behold, I cannot speak for I am a child.
Don't choose me.
You kind of see a pattern there.
I look at the footnotes.
You've got Exodus 410, so what did Moses say?
I'm slow of speech, I'm slow of tongue.
What did Enoch say?
I'm only a lad, all the people hate me.
All the people hate me.
What did Isaiah say?
I'm a man of unclean lips. I draw on and you see I love that it's not oh yeah I got this.
I knew you were gonna call on me.
Yeah this is beyond what I'm able to do and I a lot of us maybe can relate to that I can't do that.
can relate to that. I can't do that. So I like that that how consistent that is in the footnote 6A their list Moses and enoch and I wrote in Isaiah 6 because I thought it wasn't exactly the same,
but he just said I'm I dwell in with the people of uncle well what did he say I am undone I mean
that's yeah I'm coming apart I can't do this. But then in verse 7 just like in the same pattern
that you've highlighted, the Lord responds,
say not, I am a child, for thou shalt go to all whom I sin thee.
And whatsoever I command thee,
thou shalt speak, be not afraid of their faces,
for I am with thee to deliver thee.
This is so applicable, right?
You and I, we're gonna receive some kind of calling,
we don't feel up to the task, and the Lord says,
you can do this. Be not afraid.
I am with you.
The thing I loved about that was the Lord didn't say,
Moses, you're great.
You're awesome.
You're so great.
He just said, I will be with you.
And I thought, what a great.
That's very consistent.
What else do you need if I'm with you?
I'll be with you.
It's almost like it's good that you're sensing your inadequacy,
but I will be with you.
And if we jump down to verse 17, we hear more of that kind of the Lord saying this. Get up and prepare for action. Go out. Tell them everything I tell you to say. Do not be afraid of them.
Forci today, I have made you strong like a fortified city that cannot be captured. Like an iron pillar or a bronze wall.
You will stand against the whole land, kings, officials, priests,
and the people of Judah. They will fight you, but they will fail.
Wow, what a pep talk.
Yeah, seriously. I am with you. I will take care of you.
And I just love these words. If you're like me, and sometimes you get afraid, you're fearful,
and you collect scriptures that give you strength, that Jeremiah chapter one is full of powerful reassurances
from the Lord that strength in Jeremiah
can strengthen us as well.
Absolutely.
If you're feeling discouraged, if you're feeling like,
I'm not up to the task, come to these verses
and go slow through them, read them.
This is where you, this is what my daughter writes
on her mirror with her dry race.
I am with thee, say it the Lord, I will deliver thee.
Jeremiah one five.
In my study of the Bible, I don't see a lot of references to a premortal life.
I feel like there is a kind of a clear one here.
Am I proof texting there?
Before I formed the In the belly, I knew thee.
I don't think that's proof
texting. I think it's fair to say that's one of our best biblical examples of a reference to
the premortal life. I think that's totally fair. Yeah. And if I could add something to that,
Dr. Robert Millett that we've had on our podcast taught me that don't use the phrase pre-existence
because other religious traditions use that and they don't mean the same thing.
They think that maybe we pre-existed in the mind of God, but this sounds like more than that.
And ever since that, I've done what you two just did, call it pre-mortal life or pre-mortal
existence. This sounds like more than I just you existed in the mind of God. This is I knew thee. You had a character,
you had a competency before you got here. And I think it sounds a little more than just
you pre-existed in my mind. Absolutely. I just wanted to make sure we hit that and I wanted
to see what our expert had to say. And while I feel vindicated, that our expert likes my
take on that. But I think when you run into maybe what you see
is the reference to the pre-mortal life in the Bible,
take note of that because it's not often.
So the next several chapters,
Jeremiah two through six are primarily focused
on Jeremiah's preaching to the people
and warning them to repent.
And I thought we would just sample a few of these
versus along the way before we get
to the next big story in Jeremiah seven. So in Jeremiah chapter 2 verse 13, we read,
for my people have done two evil things. They have abandoned me, fountain of living water,
and they have dug for themselves cracked cisterns that can hold no water at all. So John
Hank, I know you guys both lead tours
to Jerusalem and so forth.
You've seen a bunch of cisterns.
Why would a cracked cistern be such a big deal?
Oh, this cistern is going to...
That's the only way to survive.
You're going to have your rainy season
and then comes the dry season.
And if you do not have water storage, I almost said food storage. if you do not have water storage,
I almost said food storage.
You don't have water storage.
It's certain death.
You need water to survive.
Yeah, so the Lord saying,
you've done two things wrong.
Number one, you've abandoned the true living water.
And number two, your replacement, it's cracked.
There's no salvation in there for you.
Yeah, and I like that. It's not just that you need water. It's living
water versus sister in water. Sister in water is subject to stagnation
because it's holding still living water from a spring. That's the pool of
Psyllum. That's where Jesus sent the man to wash right at the beginning of
John 9, which is living water because it comes from a spring.
Now, here's a PG 13 passage that since it's in the book of Jeremiah, I thought it was fair to read.
He was Jeremiah 224.
The Lord says to Israel, you are like a wild donkey sniffing the wind at mating time.
Who can restrain her lust?
Those who desire her don't need to search for she goes running to them.
When will you stop running?
When will you stop panting after other gods?
But you say, save your breath.
I'm in love with these foreign gods.
I can't stop loving them now.
Jumping down to verse 27, we see a similar idea.
To an image, car from a piece of wood, they say, you are my father.
To an idol chiseled from a block of stone, they say, you are my mother.
They turn their backs on me.
But in times of trouble, they cry out to me, come and save us.
But why not call on these gods that you've made? When trouble comes, let them save you if they can.
For you have this many gods as there are towns in Judah. So the Lord is using these different
metaphors to say, you guys are not faithful to me. And this is a key theme throughout Jeremiah. He's highlighting idle worship.
Stop turning to other gods and focus on the one true God.
That's a theme we've seen throughout the Old Testament.
I love all these metaphors.
Yeah. Can you just tell us which translation you just used there?
So that's the new living translation.
That's when I mentioned that's at a sixth grade reading level.
So again, I think it's helpful when you're reading some unfamiliar texts to kind of make the meaning plain.
I do like verse 17, which is when he led the by the way I had to underline that one, but you don't
have to. I was just going to say, John, these are pretty extreme metaphors, but sometimes subtle
doesn't seem to work. So what's just flat-out said, would you rather have this beautiful living water or this nasty
rancid water in a broken sister?
Would you go rather chase through lust, other gods, or would you want the God who is sitting
here waiting for you?
Would you rather call a stone a father or a mother and see what it can do for you?
These are aggressive metaphors, I guess you can say, that you can't miss the point.
Which gives us some context for book and more times.
Why are the people angry with the prophets?
Why do people seek Lehigh's life?
The prophets are being very bold.
Jeremiah is a great example of being bold and speaking out against sin.
So if we flip the page to chapter three, we see one of Jeremiah's favorite words and the word is backsliding.
I don't know about you guys.
I did not hear the word backsliding very often growing up
means to fall back into sin basically,
but Jeremiah uses this word more than
all other scriptural authors combined.
So when you hear the word backsliding, think Jeremiah,
here's, I'll just read a few examples
of chapter three, verse 12, return down backsliding Israel. Sayeth the Lord, and I will not cause my
anger to fall upon you, for I am merciful. Verse 14, turn, O backsliding children. Verse 22,
return ye backsliding children, and I will heal your backsliding. And I just thought this, all of us
are going to backslide. We're all going to fall back into temptation at time.
But the Lord is saying, I'm merciful.
Return to me.
We can make things work.
And I love that.
It's kind of fun to imagine that King James translators sitting around,
behold, what shall we use?
What word shall we use here?
You old translator.
I suggest backsliding.
It's returning to sin.
Just falling back.
You feel like I've gotten out here, I go and then back in.
And that can be discouraging.
But here it says, the Lord, over and over.
I'm here.
I'm here.
I can redeem you backsliding Israelites.
I have been in my life before, I think, a backsliding Israelite.
Gave something up, got rid of it entirely, and then it came back. I think we talk about the pride cycle a lot in the book of
Mormon, and I guess this is a different metaphor kind of for the same thing. You're returning or
you're going back to an old way of living that you had conquered before. Yeah. The Savior told
a great parable about this when he said there was a house that had an
evil spirit and they cast evil spirit out and then it returns with seven of its friends
because the house wasn't full of anything else.
The sins returned with even more sins with even more friends.
That would be an example, right, John, a backsliding back into what you were
before. Let's maybe jump ahead to chapter 7. Let's get back into the storyline and we'll kind of
read through it, but this is one where if you can watch the Jeremiah movie, this scene will come
alive for you in ways you'll never forget. But in Jeremiah chapter 7, Jeremiah goes to the
House of Lords. He's at kind of this temple complex area and he's preaching. First he offers hope if we look at verse 5.
He says, if you truly amend your ways and you're doings, if you truly act justly one
with another, if you do not oppress the foreigner, the orphan, the widow, or shed innocent blood
in this place, if you do not go after other gods, I will dwell with you.
I mean, so that's a promise, but Jeremiah goes on to say, you're probably not going to do this.
And through Jeremiah, the Lord says, will you steal, murder, commit adultery, swear falsely, make offerings to
ball and go after other gods that you have not known, and then come and stand before me in this house, which is called by my name
and say, we are safe only to go on doing all those abominations.
In other words, what the Lord is saying is, you guys think that because you have the temple
here with you that everything's okay, you can do all this bad stuff.
It's like, oh, we got the Lord's house with us.
It's fine.
He's saying, no, that is not.
That is not okay.
You can't do all these things and then come stand before me and think, no big deal, everything's fine.
And so this is where we get a really powerful line.
Through Jeremiah, the Lord says,
has this house, which is called by my name,
become a den of robbers in your site.
Go now to my place that was in Shiloh,
where I made my name dwell at first
and see what I did to it for the wickedness of my people.
And maybe there's two things we can unpack here. Let's do the harder one first. What's this
reference to Shiloh? So the Ark of the Covenant had been in Shiloh and Shiloh was destroyed.
So it's kind of like the Lord is saying, look, maybe the people of Shiloh, they thought they were
all good because they had the Ark with them, but Shiloh was destroyed. Now you and Jerusalem,
you think, oh, we're all good, we've got the temple with us.
No, you would be destroyed.
The ark won't protect you, the temple won't protect you
if you're not living up to the covenants.
And that helps to see why the other one
that's probably a little more obvious
is Jeremiah's use of this phrase, den of robbers.
What's that reminding you guys of right off the bat?
I'm thinking of Jesus in the temple.
He says, you've turned to my house into a den of thieves.
Yeah, so clearly Jesus is alluding to Jeremiah
when he says this den of thieves,
then of robbers, the den of,
and then robbers are thieves.
It only appears in these two passages.
So it's a clear reference.
So now maybe with understanding that extra context
from Jeremiah and Shiloh, we can see that when Jesus says, you've made my house a den of
thieves, it's sort of a subtle threat or implication. Remember how Jeremiah said the same thing?
Remember what happened to the temple in his day? The same thing is going to happen to your
temple. You people here in Jerusalem that I'm talking to. Wow. That makes sense. Absolutely. And it only hits home.
If one, you know your scriptures.
And two, it tells me Jesus knew his scriptures.
Yeah. Sometimes we don't notice how well Jesus
knows his scriptures until we're reading the Old Testament
going, Hey, that sounds a lot like something Jesus said.
It looks like those references are both there.
Footnote it below Matthew 21 13 and Luke
19 46.
Yeah.
If we just go a little bit further in Jeremiah chapter 7, verse 27, this has got to be
one of the most all time discouraging passages of scripture to the person receiving it.
So the Lord says to Jeremiah, you shall speak all these words to them, but they will not
listen to you. You shall call to them, but they will not listen to you.
You shall call to them, but they will not answer you.
I mean, how does that sound like a discouraging mission call, right?
You can call to labor and such and such a mission.
No one will listen to you.
They will reject every word you say, but have great experiences.
You go.
Go for it.
And Jeremiah, he's already been preaching for years and he's going to go on and preach
for decades longer.
And that's, I think, a great kind of subtle message from Jeremiah.
I mean, seriously, think about it.
Sometimes you work hard at something and then you don't see the results.
You plan to have this really spiritual trek and it gets canceled by COVID.
There's all sorts of things that we work really hard on and fail.
And I don't know what you, but I don't like to fail.
When I'm doing something, I want it to go awesome.
And probably Jeremiah did too, but the Lord tells him, look, it's not going to.
And for me, I think that's really an important message for us.
Sometimes we're going to fail.
And just because we're working hard and doing what God wants us to do doesn't mean everything
is going to turn out perfectly.
Yeah.
What verses were that with that, John? That was Jeremiah 727.
I don't have a reference, but I heard that someone had confronted mother Teresa once and told her,
you can't possibly save all these people that you're trying to save and give them some dignity
and death and everything. And I like you guys just totally admire mother Teresa. She said,
well, we're not called to be successful in all things.
We're called to be faithful in all things. And that's like what Jeremiah was doing.
He was doing what he was asked. And sometimes we might not realize the personal cost to Jeremiah.
If we jumped over to Jeremiah chapter 11 verse 21, the people of Jeremiah's hometown, they tried to kill him.
They said, do not prophesy in the name of the Lord,
or you will die by our hands.
And then just a few verses later,
chapter 12 verse 6, we learned that even Jeremiah's
family members had abandoned him.
So it's not just that he's working hard,
but he's got a good support group.
He's working hard and he's abandoned by the people
of his hometown, he's abandoned by his family,
but he still keeps pressing forward.
So in Jeremiah chapter 12 verse one,
and again, the context is hometowns abandoning him,
his family's abandoning him.
Jeremiah, he cries out in anguish to the Lord.
He says, okay, you'll be right Lord
when I lay the charges against you,
but let me put my case to you. Why does the way
of the guilty prosper? Why are all those who are treacherous thriving? And I love how Jeremiah
starts out as complainers like, all right, God, I know you're going to correct me, but hear me out.
Let me give my complaints anyway. It's like, my life is terrible and all the wicked are doing great.
What's going on? And I can sympathize with Jeremiah, right? Like he didn't want to be called to be a prophet. He told the Lord, I'm a child. You would think that God's
going to like respond back to Jeremiah in a really comforting way, but it's actually he gives
him kind of a challenge. Looking for five. The Lord says, if you've run with the footmen and they've
worried the how can style contend with horses? And if in the land of peace weren't outtrusts,
they worried the, then how will thou do
in the swelling of Jordan?
In other words, the Lord's pup talk is,
Jeremiah, this is just the beginning.
I mean, you're still in the foot race,
and it's about to heat up.
And I think that's a powerful scriptural phrase for us
to ponder if you've run with the footmen
and they've worried you, how can you contend with the horses?
I automatically thought of Mormon at the end of Mormon, where if you read Mormon,
not Book of Mormon, but the little Book of Mormon inside the Book of Mormon,
he says that he prayed notwithstanding their wickedness, I had led them into battle,
I had loved them according to the love of God which is in me, my soul has been poured out
in prayer and in my God all day long for them. Nevertheless, it was without faith because of the
hardness of their hearts. He goes on later to say, I was without hope in Mormon chapter 6. He
laments the loss of these people. So there are these callings of you are going to move forward.
You're not going to see success. And by the way, you're tired now. Oh, just wait.
Just wait, it gets worse.
Hank, I think you picked up on something that's really powerful and that I think we can really can see connections between Mormon and Jeremiah
and that this would be like a great thing to kind of study side by side and look at more connections
I mean, they're both called to preach to their people.
And in some ways, they both fail.
Jeremiah and Mormon both see their people destroyed.
I love that insight that you just shared.
There's, and we could probably, you know, find additional parallel connections between Mormon and Jeremiah.
But I think again, that's telling us sometimes God's going to send you on a mission,
and it's not going to succeed. Sometimes you're going to knock on that door or minister to that
sister for 30 years and not get the outcome you hope for. But Jeremiah and Mormon, they're right
there with you. You know, it's one of my favorite lessons because when Mormon says this to Moroni,
he says, but we can't cease to labor. We have a labor to perform all in this tabernacle of clay. You remember the verse, not with
standing their hardness, let us continue faithful. It's not about what they are
doing. That's a little bit out of your control, but let us continue faithful
with what we've been called to do. And I love that little thing that Mormon did
there, not with standing their hardness. It's not about them, it's about us doing what we were called to do.
I remember many times as a seminary teacher, it doesn't happen as much at BYU,
but knowing when that kid walked out of my class as a senior, that was probably the last time
he was going to see the inside of a church building. And taking responsibility for it.
Yeah, I'm just going.
I wish I could have found a way.
I wanted to reach you.
I know grandma and grandpa and mom and dad have been praying.
I know how that road ends too.
I've done this enough times.
I know how this road ends.
It's a heartbreaking thing, but to realize here is validating that it's
happened to the greats of the past, the Jeremiah, the Mormon, even a benediet who doesn't see
the success, maybe, of his call.
And I love that phrase that you used. It's validating. I really think it is validating for us
to remember. And there's lots of examples, maybe some lesser-known people, remember, calm in the book of E3. He fought against
the robbers much, but he didn't prevail against them. Or Nephi, the son of
Helaman, it says, he went to the land northward, he preached the word of God, and
they did reject all his words. That's probably not the kind of thing that
your daughter wants to write on her mirror. That's not the verse that makes it to
the mirror, but in some ways, I think it could be. Is it a reminder to us that it's okay to fail?
Yeah, Jesus in his own hometown, John.
Jesus in Nazareth is rejected by his own hometown
and according to the Bible, never returns.
It's a heartbreaking moment.
It reminds me every time of Isaiah saying,
the Lord will be acquainted with grief.
Jeremiah, Mormon, and all these others we've
been talking about are those who have been acquainted with grief. It is definitely part of this work.
So in Jeremiah chapter 12, the Jeremiah was kind of pouring out his heart to the Lord and the Lord
kind of responds, you know, like, hey, step it up. But if we jump to chapter 15, there's a similar
passage and the Lord responds more gently to all those faithful Sunday school teachers, seminary teachers who are out there who are
trying their best to get through to their classes and to know that sometimes it doesn't
work out.
If you're in that situation, you're standing shoulder to shoulder with some of the best in the Lord's work.
Sometimes, despite your very best efforts, they do not hear.
It's also a helpful reminder to me, and I bet it has been for both of you, to realize they have a Lord,
they have a Savior, and I'm not him.
So though they might be lost to me, they're not lost to him.
And you never know, they may hear something. That was Alma. I remember my father to have taught
the people concerning Jesus Christ the Son of God who could forgive sins and my mind got hold upon
this thought and that's such a wonderful verse that he somewhere back there, he heard what his father
was saying.
And never know what might stick.
So let's look at Jeremiah chapter 15, 15.
Jeremiah says, Lord, you know what's happening to me.
Please step in and help me.
Punish my persecutors.
Give me time.
Don't let me die young.
It is for your sake that I'm suffering.
When I discovered your words, I devoured them. They are my joy and my hearts delight for I bear your name, Lord God of Heaven's armies.
I never joined the people in their Mary feasts. I sat alone because your hand was on me.
I was filled with indignation at their sins. Why does my suffering continue? Why is my wound so incurable? Your help seems as uncertain as a seasonal brook like a spring that has gone dry
Take a moment to unpack that like if you felt that way like I just love Jeremiah's raw emotion
It's like those verses you quoted Hank from Mormon where he said my soul was filled with anguish
Yeah, you can just sense that
But in verse 19 the Lord responds with encouragement. He says, you must influence them.
Don't let them influence you.
They will fight you like an attacking army.
I will make you as secure as a fortified wall of bronze.
They will not conquer you,
for I am with you to protect you and rescue you.
I, the Lord, have spoken.
Yes, I will certainly keep you safe
from these wicked men.
I will rescue you from
their cruel hands. Things can be excruciatingly difficult, but I love Jeremiah's open honest conversation.
He doesn't just beat around the bush. He's like blaze it all out with the Lord, and then he
receives comfort from the Lord. This is something we learned about in the book of Job that even a prayer of
frustration is an act of faith.
Even a prayer of I'm upset. I
This is this is not going the way that I thought it would go. That is still an act of faith. You're still calling out to God
and God knows how you feel so you might as well be open with him.
He won't be shocked that, what?
What are you saying?
I can't believe you're saying these things to me.
It's okay.
I love Jeremiah's prayer.
It reminds me of Joseph Smith.
Where are you?
As we keep moving forward, Jeremiah's main message is that the pilgrims are going to be destroyed
if they don't repent.
Another message that he returns to a few times has to do with the gathering of Israel.
Let's jump over to Jeremiah chapter 16, starting in verse 14.
We read,
"'Therefore the days are surely coming,' says the Lord,
"'when it shall no longer be said, as the Lord lives who brought up the people out of
the land of Egypt, but as the Lord lives who brought up the people out of the land of Egypt, but as the Lord
lives who brought the people of Israel up out of the land of North and out of all the lands where he had
driven them, for I will bring them back to their own land that I gave to their ancestors.
And let's just maybe pause right there for a minute. So basically, like the biggest miracle of
all times has been the Exodus, right? Coming out of Egypt. But now the Lord saying there's
going to be a numerical that takes place. And that's going to all of a sudden relegate
the Exodus to be like one of the not the greatest hits of all times. Now it's the gathering
of Israel, the return of these tribes. People won't be talking about the red sea anymore.
Right in the Come Follow Me manual, it quotes President Nelson, you are sent to earth at this
precise time to help gather Israel. There is nothing happening on this earth right now that is more important than that gathering. The gathering should mean everything to you.
So that's a perfect place to maybe our role in this first 16. I am now sending
for many fishermen, says the Lord, they shall catch them. And afterward I will send for
many hunters and they shall hunt them from every mountain, from every hill and out of the
clefs of the rocks. That could be an illusion to our bowl as hunters, fishers, gatherers
taking part in this most important effort. That's taking place right now. You can kind of feel
with that quote that you shared President Nelson urging us to fulfill our part in the gathering of Israel. This verse means something to me and my family because I went on what we might call
a Fisher mission where people were friendly to us. They wanted to listen. They invited us into
their homes in the Philippines. I could throw a net over the side and find people to teach.
And my son went to what we might call a Hunter Mission, which is one at a time, and where
teaching opportunities were difficult and hard to find.
And it helped, as we discussed back and forth in our letters, that some are called to
Fisher missions, and some might be called to Hunter missions and they're a little different, but they're all
part of this great gathering. So that's an application, of course, but that verse means
a lot to us and our family for that reason.
I love it. That's beautiful.
This, to me, speaks Book of Mormon language. That Nephi, Lehi, and Jacob, they're living the scattering. So is Jeremiah.
He's living in the scattering. They've just a hundred years previous. The northern kingdom of Israel
was taken captive, gone. They're seeing, living, or almost to have lived in the destruction of the southern kingdom of Judah.
And this has to be a comfort that one day I'll bring everybody back.
It probably won't be tomorrow, but one day one day I will bring everyone back.
And it seems to me the more clearly I read the book, Mormon or the more carefully I read
the book, Mormon, I see Nephi and Jacob holding on to that promise probably more than anybody else in the book.
After Nephi and Jacob, they kind of lose it a little bit.
You don't hear from it much in Mosiah or Alma.
You don't hear from it much in Helaman.
Then all of a sudden in third Nephi, Jesus brings it back up.
He's like, oh, do you remember?
You are scattered Israel,
and I made a promise, and I'm going to keep it. So is this the comforting message to Jeremiah,
John, that you are living in the days of the scattering of Israel? But one day, I will bring it all
back. I will fix it all. And I think that's interesting. How you said to it's probably I can happen
tomorrow. So for Nephi and Jacob, I love how they're able
to still have hope in things that may not even happen
in their lifetime, that did not happen in their lifetime.
And so to me, there's a clear message,
maybe there's some problem in my life right now
that actually it is not going to be resolved in mortality.
But Jacob, Nephi, Jeremiah, they're having hope
for future events.
If I can have that eternal perspective, that's a game changer.
Yeah.
And it will be huge.
Isn't that what the Lord's trying to say in these verses, John?
That this gathering will be huge.
It will be so big that no one's talking red sea anymore.
Everybody's talking the gathering.
What was Isaiah told?
You're going to have to enlarge the place of your tent
because this house of Israel will be breaking out
on the right hand and on the left, and you're going to have to enlarge the place of your tent because this house of Israel will be breaking out on the right hand and on the left and you're going to have
to strengthen your stake.
This gathering is going to be big.
Yeah, it's like this new super hero's movie is so big.
No one's even going to be taught like Marvel is going to be a thing of the past.
Once you see this new movie that's coming up, that kind of thing.
When we talk about hunting them out of the mountains and the hills and of the holes of the rock, how many people listening today to our podcast are thinking
that was me at one point. In verse 16, the Lord says, I will send
fishers and hunters into the mountains into every hill. That's a high percentage
word, every, every hill and out of the holes of the rocks. I bet this hits home a little bit for the
both of you. Having missionaries just returned. John, by the way, tell me your kids went where?
My oldest daughter went to Leon France. My son went to the call said Copen Hagen Denmark,
but then said serving in the Iceland mission region. And he's currently teaching Icelandic in
the MTC. And then my daughter was called to Tahiti
But because of COVID spent the about the first half of her mission in Tucson and then finished in Tahiti so amazing
And John Hilton you have a couple of missionaries. Yeah, my son Levi. I just got back from the Georgia, Atlanta North mission and my
daughter Ann Maria serving in the England Leads Mission
speaking Mandarin. Wow. There's something about Jeremiah 1616 that to a parent of a missionary
sings your children and even all of us, we did this back in the 1900s, went into the hills and
mountains and rocks and went looking. Isn't it
similar to the Savior saying, I leave the 99, I go find my one out there. So any missionary
listening, this is you. What is present Nelson say, John, you are part of something huge,
something big, bigger than the parting of the Red Sea. And I think it's fair to say that even if
you're not a full-time missionary, all of us are part of this.
We are all right now on the mission to be fishers
and hunters and gatherers,
whether we've got a name badge or not.
And President Nelson might add on both sides of the veil,
which just expands the whole thing in amazing ways
to the temple.
To think it all started out with six little members
of the church in upstate New York. Is it fun little thought?
It's only a little hand of priesthood you hear the sea here this evening.
Yeah.
It will fill the earth.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you