Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Jeremiah 30-36, Lamentations Part 2 • Dr. S. Michael Wilcox • Oct. 17 - 23
Episode Date: October 12, 2022Dr. S. Michael Wilcox continues to examine the themes in Jeremiah and Lamentations.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 our sponsors:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsPike, Dana M. 2022. "Before Jeremiah Was | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/witness-restoration/before-jeremiah-was.Seely, David Rolph, and S. Kent Brown. 2022. "Jeremiah’S Imprisonment And The Date Of Lehi’S Departure | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/vol-2-no-1-2001/jeremiahs-imprisonment-date-lehis-departure.Seely, David Rolph, and S. Kent Brown. 2022. "Jeremiah’S Imprisonment And The Date Of Lehi’S Departure | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/vol-2-no-1-2001/jeremiahs-imprisonment-date-lehis-departure."The BEST: Rembrandt’S Jeremiah". 2022. Tradition Online. https://traditiononline.org/the-best-rembrandts-jeremiah/.Wilcox, S. Michael. 2022. Amazon.Com. https://www.amazon.com/Sunset-Passing-Those-We-Love/dp/1609088344.Wilcox, S. Michael. 2022. "How S. Michael Wilcox Has Held On To His Faith Despite Impulses To Leave". LDS Living. https://www.ldsliving.com/how-s-michael-wilcox-has-held-on-to-his-faith-despite-impulses-to-leave/s/94342.Wilcox, S. Michael. 2022. "Spiritual Rebirth | Religious Studies Center". Rsc.Byu.Edu. https://rsc.byu.edu/book-mormon-mosiah-salvation-only-through-christ/spiritual-rebirth."Yip Harburg: Over The Rainbow". 2022. Youtube.Com. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eNiXnzh3abk.Zollo, Paul. 2022. "Yip Harburg: The Man Who Brought The Rainbow To The Wizard Of Oz". American Songwriter. https://americansongwriter.com/somehwere-over-the-rainbow-wizard-of-oz-behind-the-song/.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of Dr. S. Michael Wilcox, Jeremiah chapters 30 through 36 and the Book of Lamentations.
You mentioned Zedekaya. Could you tell our audience who Zedekaya is and why they've probably heard that name before?
Yeah, let's make that Book of Mormon connection there.
Okay, yeah, Zedekaya, and then I'll do another connection for you in the Book of Mormon. Zedekiah is the name. We know
number one, it's fairly easy to pronounce in terms of kings of Judah,
because he's the king and when Lehigh is prophesying. So the book of
Mormon begins in Jeremiah. So the world of Jeremiah is Lehigh's world,
it's Laman and Lemuel's world, it its Nephi and Sam's world. So, and Saraya, there
is again, we go to the politics. Jeremiah wasn't treated very well. If we just talk about
his life, he's put in the stocks, we already know that. You talked about that last time.
In chapters 11 and 12 of Jeremiah, there's a plot to assassinate him.
Because politically he's not giving the message the king and the court want to hear.
Now the king at the time is a man named Jehovah Keme
with a K.
He is not too fond of Jeremiah.
In 11 and 12, there's a plot against his life.
And he goes to the Lord complaining to buy in the Lord,
says, well, Ferman, say, if you can't handle this,
let me tell you something even worse,
your own family's plotting against you.
It's kind of hard for him.
He's accused of treason in chapter 37.
He's walking out of Jerusalem,
because nobody's listening to him. So he walks
out of Jerusalem. They accuse him of treason and throw him in a dungeon. I do want to look at that.
I don't know if we want to do it now when he's in the dungeon. So Jehovah came, doesn't listen to
Jeremiah and the Babylonians come the first time and they killed Jehovah came and throw him his body out of the walls of Jerusalem
and they pick his son to be the new ruler, kind of a puppet king. And the son's name is Jehovah
Cheen, CHI-N. And then the king of Babylon says, Oh my gosh, I killed his father and maybe he'll
rebel against me. Maybe that's not a good idea. I better go back and put somebody else in charge.
And so they go back and
Jehoachin instead of fighting doesn't want his people. He's a good man doesn't want his people to be destroyed.
So he opens the gates of Jerusalem. Let's the Babylonians in and he's taken into captivity with his mother and now the
Babylonians choose another member of the royal family
name Zedekaya
To be the ruler so Zedek he's 21. He's a young man
He is really a puppet of the Babylonians. He's supposed to rule for them
He's a weak person. He vacillates between Jeremiah's words and the false prophets' words.
And I think we ought to do something about the false prophets here for just a second.
He vacillates between the two of them.
Chapter 37 verse 1, Kings Etaquia, the son of Josiah, reigned instead of Joachim.
Yeah, you'll see that. And this is in Josephus. It's just not in Jeremiah.
Josephus makes a little planar. If you read the story of Jeremiah in Josephus and Zedekai and
Jehovah Kim, this whole period, Ezekiel is prophesying at the same time. Jeremiah is in
Babylon. He's prophesying. He's been taken captive.
He's a young man when he goes. And he prophesies that Zedekiah will never see Babylon. Jeremiah
prophesies that Zedekiah will be taken captive into Babylon. He tells that to him face up.
Sometimes Zedekiah secretly asks Jeremiah for counsel because he's afraid of the other
powers that be. Politics always does that. And Zedekiah goes to Jeremiah and says,
tell me the truth. And he says, if you don't submit to the Babylonians,
they're going to take you captive. And Zedekiah says, well,
don't tell anybody else you told me that. Okay. Zedekiah will save Jeremiah's
life. So we have two prophets, Zeke, you'll say Zedekiah will never see
Babylon. And Jeremiah, saying you could be taking captive and
this confuses Zedekai says, well, you're contradicting yourselves, so you can't be true prophets.
And so he listens to the false advisors. Now, how does that fulfill? Well, they put out his eyes.
So we can't see Babylon. So he never sees Babylon. Ezekiel is correct. He is carried away captive into Babylon.
Jeremiah is correct. So that's see how that works. Maybe we could do something on these other
counselors because there's a great message in Jeremiah About false prophets and it'll help us understand false prophets today, but let's go to chapter 38
for a second and Mike by the time Zadakai is eyes are put out the lehigh's left
We heiz gone by that time he has
Here's layman and Lemuel
Can you see the spirit of their times?
Here's Laman and Lemuel. Can you see the spirit of their times? Profits are wrong. I mean, nobody believed Jeremiah. So Laman and Lemuel are in the group that are not believers.
They're not believers. Lehi believes Jeremiah. Nephi believes Jeremiah. Now Nephi prefers Isaiah.
if I prefer Isaiah. So in chapter 38, Jeremiah's prophesying that the city will be destroyed, the temple burned, and they'll all be taken captive. If they don't submit to the Babylonians,
some have already been taken captive. Now, that's what you could say in a political world, you could accuse Jeremiah of treason.
And that's what the accusium of.
Verse 4, chapter 38, the bottom part, this man's seeketh not the welfare of this people,
but the hurt.
Oh, how many times do people accuse prophets of that?
You're not seeking our welfare, but our hurt, but prophets are never thinking about themselves.
They're always focused on the people.
Then Zadokai, the king, said, Behold, he is in your hand for the king is not he that can
do anything against you.
I haven't got any power.
You're going to do what you want anyway.
They took Jeremiah and cast him into the dungeon of these people, which was in the core of
the prison. They let down Jeremiah with cords, and in the dungeon there was no water but
myrrh. So Jeremiah sunk in the myrrh. Can you picture that? There is a spot in the
Caiaphas. that there is a spot in the chaeophus. Chaeophus is palace, yeah.
Palace where you can go down in the
cistern and look up and see the hole
and you can visualize Jeremiah being
lowered down the hole into the cistern.
In Josephus' account, it's almost neck deep in mud
and water and they know he's gonna die there.
And so now we have a little hero named Abed Malek
and Ethiopian who goes to Zedekaya and pleads for him
and says they've put him in the mire, he's gonna die there.
And the king gives Abed Malek a little contingent
of guards and they lower in verse 11
old cast clouds and rotten rags by cords into the dungeon of Jeremiah and they
say put them under your arms and we'll pull you up because he's weak and then
verse 13 so they grew up Jeremiah with cords and took him up
out of the dungeon and Jeremiah remained in the court of the prison until the Babylonians
when the siege and Jerusalem falls and Jeremiah has let out of the prison. He's not down in the mud.
He's let out of the prison and this is when the captain of the guard says,
now what do you want to do?
You know, part of me says, oh my gosh,
I'm tired of these people.
Take me to Babylon.
Life's got to be better.
Ezekiel is over there and Daniel's over there.
And but his call is here with these people.
So he stays and he mourns with them
and he continues to counsel with them, even though they
never believe him.
But look at what they do to him.
Look at how they treat him.
The stalks, plots against his life, in the mud, in the dungeon, accused of treason.
There's a point in Jeremiah's life where he says, look, people, can you just do one thing
right? God will save you if you'll
just follow one counsel, one thing. I'm going to pick one thing in the law of Moses for
you to do. And what is the one thing that they're supposed to do? It's in chapter 34. There
was a law in the law of Moses where every seven years you release your
servants. I hate to use the word slave, but all contracts, all debts, all servitude ended,
all apprenticeships, maybe I would say every seven years was called the year of release.
And so in chapter 34 Jeremiah says, look, just do one thing right. Do one thing in the Law of Moses.
Release the servants. That's chapter 34 Jeremiah.
Follow that one thing. Can you just do that one thing?
And so they do, verse 9 and a 34, every man should let his man servant, and every man is made servant. Being a Hebrew or Hebrew us, go free.
That nun should serve himself of them
to wed a Bajou as brother, release the bondage and slavery.
Now they do, in verse 10,
bottom, then they obeyed and let them go,
but then they have second thoughts.
But afterwards they turn and caused the servants in the handmaids whom they had let go free to return and
Brought them into subjections for servants and for handmaids again. I can just see Jeremiah throwing up his hand and saying what?
You can't do even one thing. Yeah
Give God some reason to still bless and be with you.
Samson kept his hair long and noticed in that story, God honors Samson.
If God can find an excuse to honor us and bless us, he will.
So, you know, poor Jeremiah, he's got all of this there is another theme here deals with false prophets
28 is about a man named Hannah Nyah and
Prophets used to do visuals in those days and so Jeremiah puts a yoke on his shoulders and walks around Jerusalem with the yoke
suggesting the is what is going to go into bondage and
Some of them have already gone in so now here comes Hannah and I at chapter 28 and
Hannah and I says in a couple of years all those who are in bondage are gonna come out of bondage
God said verse 4 I will break the yoke of the
king of Babylon. I like Jeremiah's a little bit sarcastic in verse six. Hanna and I
prophesize that Babylonians don't listen to Jeremiah listen to me. These bad things aren't going to happen.
Jeremiah says in verse six, amen. Can you hear him say that? Sure. Okay. Amen. Sure. Love it.
I hope you're right. Amen. The Lord do so. The Lord performed my words, which thou
has prophesied to bring again the vessels of the Lord's house and all that are carried away captive.
Amen. But and then Han and I in and his own display breaks the yoke off
Jeremiah visually. And Jeremiah comes back later, says, well, you can break a wooden yoke, but not an iron
yoke. And the iron yoke is going to come. That's in verse 13. In chapter 29, verses 8 and 9, he speaks of the prophets, prophesying falsely.
All through Jeremiah, you're going to see this conflict bit about people listening to the wrong voices.
Verse 25 of Jeremiah 23,
I have heard what the prophets said, the prophesy lies in my name.
Say, and I have dreamed, I have dreamed.
How long shall this be in the heart of the prophets that prophesy lies?
They are prophets of the deceit of
their own heart. They want God to say what they think. Verse 27, which think to cause my people to
forget my name, that's one of the things the false prophet does. Tries to get us to forget God's name.
tries to get us to forget God's name. Verse 28, what is the chaff to the wheat? Sometimes we have to learn to distinguish in the voices we listen to what is truly wheat and what is chaff.
Verse 30, I am against the prophet, sayeth the Lord, that steal my words,
Lord, that steal my words, everyone from his neighbor. They're taking the true words I want them to listen to and steeliness a nice image.
Verse 32, I am against them, the prophesy, false dreams. Sayeth, Lord, and do tell them and
cause my people to air by their lies and by their lightness, their disregarding
of Jeremiah's words. I sent them not, nor commanded them, therefore they shall not
profit this people at all. We have to learn to listen. Now, the nice thing about Jeremiah
in the idea of false prophets, I just showed you a few spots. We have a tendency to
think of false prophets in the context of religion. Much of Jeremiah's message, it's not a religious
message. It is, but it's politics. This is society. It's a little different. And sometimes we talk about, you know, the prophecy
is that in the latter days, even the very elect might be deceived. Now, I don't think the members
of the church are going to be deceived by somebody claiming to speak for God, but they might be
deceived by other kinds of, if we broaden prophets up to mean more than just religious people claiming to
speak for God. Does that make sense? Yeah, kind of like who's a thought leader in your mind? I think
one of our guests said that, Hank, a thought leader. Who are you listening to these days?
Yeah. Now, into the book of Mormon here. 1 Nephi 22 verse 23.
He's speaking of churches, but I want to use churches loosely.
I think President Kimmel said, whatever is more important to you than God is your God.
So let's see what churches are mentioned that Nephi warns about in 1st Nephi 22, 23. He says, the time speedily shall
come that all churches which are built up to get gain. Church number one, the church of getting gain.
I'm not talking about that in terms of River Lidge and I'm tag-less broadened. We're pulling the
idea of prophets. We're putting them more in a Jeremiah world. Where everything in their counseling is not godly.
In this case, it's political.
And I don't mean to say that as a pun, but there are prophets in the church of getting gain.
And all those who are built up to get power over the flesh, the second church is the church of power over the flesh.
Now, that community believes that the church is a part of the world.
And the church is a part of the world. The second church is the Church of Power over the flesh.
Now, that can be anybody from a political leader who's dictatorially controlling people
or something like drugs, you know, or pornography.
Those who are built up to become popular in the eyes of the world, that's a very hard
church for us to sometimes reject today.
The church of popularity, of worldly popularity, and the church of worldly popularity has
prophets who might steal and Jeremiah's words, steal my words, everyone from his neighbor. I just love the wording of false
prophets in Jeremiah 23, which might cause his people to forget his name because what is being taught
is not popular, the church of popularity. The fourth church, those who seek the lusts of the flesh, the church of lust, and then finally,
the fifth church, the things of the world. If I look at that verse not in terms of religious people
doing that, but I'm going to put it in Jeremiah's world. There are voices. There are people that we probably, they themselves would not say they're a prophet.
That caused the Lord's people to forget His name, that are giving people chaff instead of wheat, that are stealing God's words, every man from His neighbor, that cause people to air and that treat the
things of God as lightness and that will not profit the people. Those phrases in
Jeremiah chapter 23. I think Stephen Robinson talked about when he did that
whole thing on 1st Nephi 13 and 14 about an immense assembly of people. He used
the Greek great and abominable church of the devil
It's kind of disassociated evil of all kinds not a church like a building with a steeple
So right I like that the church of get gain the church of what would you call it social
Political correctnessy well false prophets you will find them today in the media, in politics, activists, conspiracy,
theorists, celebrities, experts.
I mean, broadened the idea of that.
We just have to watch a little bit that those statements, that the Hannah and I as aren't coming,
and those phrases in Jeremiah 23 are not happening to us.
There are good political leaders and activists,
and there's positive things,
but we have to be just a little bit careful.
That's all.
I have a statement here from President Nelson. It's from 2019, but it sounds like it can come
straight out of Jeremiah. This is September of 2019. He says, sometimes we as leaders of the
church are criticized for holding firm to the laws of God, defending the Savior's doctrine
and resisting the social pressures of our day. But our commission, as ordained apostles, is to go into all the world to preach His gospel
into every creature.
That means we are commanded to teach truth.
In doing so, sometimes we are accused of being uncaring as we teach the Father's requirements
for exaltation in the celestial kingdom.
But wouldn't it be far more uncaring for us to not tell the truth?
Not teach what God has revealed.
It is precisely because we do care deeply about all of God's children that we proclaim
His truth.
We may not always tell people what they want to hear.
Prophets are rarely popular.
You can almost hear that coming straight out of Jeremiah.
Yeah, that's a great statement that gives that impression. I like chapter 12,
just as thought, and then maybe you should go to 31, and I think one of the one assigned in Jeremiah
is when they cut up his words and burn it. One time he goes before Joe, okay, I mean, he doesn't like what he's hearing and he's
a burning's word. Jeremiah just writes them again. I like just this little thought in chapter 12 of
Jeremiah. Prophets don't always have all the answers. Prophets themselves have questions. They wrestle just like we do. They're doing the best they can. They question God.
And so here he is. This is when he's being told that his own family is plotting to assassinate him.
art thou, O Lord, when I plead with thee. I know I'm pleading with a righteous judge. Yet, let me talk with thee of thy judgments. Wherefore doth the way of the wicked prosper,
wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously. Thou hast planted them, yay, they have taken root, they grow, they bring forth fruit.
He just can't understand why.
Why do the wicked prosper so much?
David asks that question.
Habakkuk's going to ask that question.
Joseph Smith asked that question.
Shakespeare asked that question.
It's just nice to know that even prophets don't always feel to have all the answers.
And the nice thing about the whole Old Testament is that they give us a God that you can talk
to fairly flat out, casual bluntly. I know you're righteous God, but it looks pretty bad
to us down here. Let me talk about your judgments a little bit. It's Tevyeh in Fiddler
on the roof. The face of God that the Jews, that the Old Testament gives us is a God you can
talk to, you can engage with. Isn't it bad in the floor? You gave me five daughters. Do you have
to make my horse lame? That's Tevyeh in Fiddler on the... He's a very human God and you sense that in the prophets this
ability to engage God in conversation when you don't understand everything.
Well, let's talk about the hope of Jeremiah and the message that you really get in 31 and and thirty-two and thirty-three of the return. They're going to be taken captive, but this is a
merciful God. We did talk about that earlier. All through Jeremiah you're going to see the gathering,
the return. I'm going to bring them back. I'm going to bring them back. I'm going to bring them back.
You see it, dozens of places.
You'll certainly see it in the ones that come follow me.
The chapter is suggested that you really look at.
As all Old Testament prophets have multiple fulfillment, so does this one.
So, chapter 31, verse 3, this is a very tender chapter.
The Lord hath appeared of old unto me saying,
yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love. Therefore, with loving kindness have I drawn
thee. It's very powerful to really realize God loves us. Isaiah says that, you are precious to me. And I have loved you. There's a beautiful
story of Maya Angelou, who was had a very hard, difficult life. And she was once asked by a
friend of hers in a meeting to read a little paragraph that ended with God loves me. And so she read it the first time
God loves me. And this man that she really admired said, no, Maya, read it again.
You didn't read it. And so she reads it. And she reads it a number of times and tries to get
the emphasis right. So she says, God loves me. And he says, no, Maya, you're not reading it.
And she says, God loves me.
And he said, Maya, read it.
And she's almost in tears.
And finally, it hits her.
And she says, God loves me, me.
And he said, that's right, Maya.
That's right.
Changes her whole life.
And so in a difficult world, a Jeremiah, an Old Testament world, it's always
important to know that verse three, I have loved thee with an everlasting love, with loving
kindness, have I drawn thee. And then he talks about all the hope, I'm going to gather you
again. You'll notice in 31 that he's talking about both Israel and Judah. Israel's already
gone. The Assyrians took them in chapter 31 verses really one through
22 is you'll notice it's Israel. That's the northern kingdom. They're already
carried captive and the emphasis is on Ephraim. So for instance, verse 20, again,
notice the tenderness and the hope. 31 20. is Ephraim my dear son
Is he a pleasant child?
For since I spake against him I do earnestly remember him still
Therefore my bowels are troubled for him. I will surely have mercy upon him
Sayeth the Lord so Mike Ephraim is the northern king
Yeah, this was northern kingdom Yeah, a hundred years ago in the Lord is So Mike Ephraim is the northern king. This was northern kingdoms.
The hundred years ago in the Lord is saying, I haven't forgotten. I haven't forgotten.
Yeah. For sometimes we think he's forgotten because it takes a while. Remember
Jeremiah and Lammitation says, you got to wait patiently. In verse 23, he starts
the land of Judah. Can you see the emphasis on Judah in verse 23, Judah, verse 24, verse 27, both of them,
the house of Israel and the house of Judah. So this chapter, verse 31, the house of Israel and
the house of Judah. So this chapter is hope for all of them and what's going to happen. I'm going to
for all of them and what's going to happen. I'm going to bring them again. And there are four ways that you can read chapter 31. There's maybe five or six, but the idea of returning. So verse six,
there shall be a day that the watchman upon Mount E from shall cry, a risian, let us go up to Zion under
the Lord our God.
Verse 8, I will bring them from the North country and gather them from the coasts of the
earth, and with them the blind and the lame and the woman with child and her that traveled
child together, a great company shall return Fither. I will cause them, verse 9, to walk by the rivers of waters in a straight
way. I am a father to Israel. Ephraim is my first born. Verse 13, that beautiful
verse, then shall the Virgin rejoice in the dance and the young men and the
old together. They'll dance and the young men and the old together.
They'll dance and I will turn their mourning into joy and will comfort them and make them rejoice from their sorrow.
And I will say, shape the soul of beautiful verbs, say, shape the soul of the priests with fatness.
And my people shall be satisfied with my goodness, sayeth the Lord. You're going
to get that all through Jeremiah, the return, the hope. I'm going to bring them all back.
Both Israel and Judah, one of the ways we interpret that is they do come back. Number
one, they return from Babylonian captivity when the Persians conquer Babylon. I can read these and say,
that's when they were fulfilled. I can read it in an immediate reading.
The second way I can read it is long term, I can read it in actual, since Jeremiah such a political book, the actual establishment of the modern state of Israel. Now if I go to verse
6, there shall be a day that the watchman upon the mount shall cry a rizzy, let us go up to Zion.
And I'll tell you there, verse 21, set the up way marks, make the high heaps,
set thine heart toward the highway,
even the way which thou wentest,
turn again, O Virgin of Israel,
turn again to these thy cities.
Now that's in a very literal way,
gonna be fulfilled with the return of the Jewish people.
And we really don't have time to do much about the story of Theodore Herzel.
But if I were to say you want an example of a watchman saying a rise and go to Zion and
set your heart to the highway, it's a Hungarian Jew in the late 1800s named Theodore Herzel. He's the father of the modern state of Israel. You will eventually move to Vienna and he will at a time when anti-Semitism is born in Europe.
Where they're not against them because of their religion, they're against them because they're ethnicity. Anti-Semitism isn't, I don't like
your religion, it doesn't like you because of your race, your ethnic qualities. And it's
growing all over Europe. And at this time in Europe, late 1800s, it's a time when most Jews
believe in assimilation. Just be good Germans, good French, good Hungarians. This is post-enlightenment. The answer to what
was called the Jewish problem is be good citizens and good religious people. And especially
in Western Europe, they really believe in assimilation. In Eastern Europe, they believe in the
Messiah will lead us back. And nobody's really thinking about establishing a political solution to the Jewish question.
And theater hersels sees the rise of anti-Semitism in the mayor of Vienna, who's a populist leader,
populist leaders like the rally, and they like to turn people against each other.
And he sees that.
Programs are starting in Russia.
Bogner writes a little tract about the influence, the bad influence of Jewish thinking on music.
There's just a lot of things going on in Europe.
And theater, Herzl says, the only solution to the Jewish question is an establishment
of a modern state of Israel. And he writes a little pamphlet called their Judenstad, the Jewish state,
which becomes the Bible of what's called Zionism. And almost single-handedly, it's a wonderful story.
Again, I want a time to go into it.
But when I read, the Watchman will cry, arise,
go up to Zion, and set your heart on the highway.
It's hard for me not to think of theater,
herzel, who will say to the Jewish people of Europe,
not only is it desirable to establish a Jewish state,
but it is practical, and it's going to happen. And the Jews who will it will have their own state.
Now, and all this is a controversial fame, we've got problems in the Middle East, and
but theater, herzel in a second fulfillment of Jeremiah's prophecy
will be the single voice that really he's called the father of the modern state of Israel.
He will talk to the Kaiser, the Sultan of Turkey, who will offer to pay all the Turkish debts
if Turkey, which is controlling Palestine in late 1800s, early 1900s, will give the Jews place
in Palestine for a state.
And he will raise the idea that the solution to Jewish persecution in Europe and Russia,
they have to, is a political solution.
He will bring it to the attention of the world.
And in a Congress, I'll just do this and then I'll go on to
the next one. He'll have the first Jewish Congress pushing for the European powers, the
Middle Eastern powers, to establish a land in Palestine for a homeland for the Jews. 1897, the first Jewish Congress is in Basel, Switzerland.
When it's done, he says this, where I to sum up the Basel Congress in a word which I shall
guard against pronouncing publicly, it would be this, at Basel, I found the Jewish state. If I said this out loud today, I would be
answered by universal laughter. Perhaps in five years, certainly in 50, everyone
will know it. The Jewish people who will it will have their state. You and I who
go to the Israel a lot and love Israel and the Jewish people, the Palestinians
also, the Muslims, I feel very sad about that.
That was 1897.
What year was Palestine by the United Nations partitioned?
1947. In 1947, exactly 50 years from the Basel conference, and the state of Israel will be announced by David
Bungerian in May of 1948.
It's hard for me not to read Jeremiah and say a second fulfillment of his prophecies. There will be watchmen who will cry, rise up, let us go to Zion, set your heart on the highways.
I can read those and think of many people, but certainly, hersel who writes the little book, the Jewish state, and makes the possibility of a homeland
for the Jewish people in Palestine, a political reality and calls it to the attention of the
world and his faith in it.
He is kind of the prophet of Zionism, okay?
It's time to go home. It's time to go home. Yeah. It's time to go home and they go. Now I can read these
prophecies a third way. I can read them in the terms of Latter-day Saint that the church today
is fulfilling their own gathering of Israel. So I can look, for instance, in verse 31, start there. Now I'm thinking
of me. I'm thinking of Joseph Smith. I'm thinking of the restoration. I'm not thinking
of theater, herzel, and the state of Israel. I'm not thinking of Nehemiah and Ezraul coming
back. I'm thinking of Joseph and Brigham and you and I. Behold the days come, say
of the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house
of Judah, not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers in the day I took
them by the hand to bring them out of the land of Egypt, which covenant they break, although
I was a husband unto them. But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel. We have patriarchal blessings to tell us we're
being attached. We need to look at Old Testament prophecies as though they are written of us. I will make the house of after those days, say,, Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts.
I will put in the heart of Michael Wilcox, my law.
It will be in his heart and I'll write it in their hearts.
And I will be their God and they shall be my people.
And they shall teach no more, every man is neighbor,
and every man is brother, saying,
know the Lord, for they shall all know me
from the least of them unto the greatest of them,
from the primary child to the present of the church.
Everybody will know him. I will forgive their iniquity. I will remember their sin no more.
We could spend a whole time talking about that beautiful promise of Jeremiah. I will remember
their sin no more. Joseph Smith is going to put that in the doctrine and covenants. We worship not
only a forgiving God, we worship a forgetting God.
And so I can read those verses and say, he's talking about me and my life and my time.
And if I'm Jewish, I can read it. He's talking about herzel in 1947 and my time. And if
I'm Ezra in the amai, I can say he's talking about 70 years after the Babylonian
captivity. And all through Jeremiah, and we want to read all the Old Testament prophets
in those multiple levels of reading them. Now if you, if I can maybe just conclude, be a little bit personal. It's kind of sad. You only get five times
in Isaiah. Poor Jeremiah, nobody listened to him in his day, and unfortunately nobody listens
to him today. It's kind of sad. Isaiah still gets the flags and the attention and poor Jeremiah.
I can hear the Lord say in that assignment time, but you'll get a book in the old
testament, but not many people are going to read it.
It's right next to Isaiah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Right next to Isaiah, you're going to be in that tough neighborhood to compete with.
But I use this as an illustration, hopefully it may be of comfort to people, but also as
a way of saying, you never know where God or the Holy Ghost is going to find the verse
you need in your life at critical points.
And that is one of the reasons we want to be familiar as much as we can with all of them.
Because the verse you need may be in Habakkuk. It may not be in Alma. It may not be in Section 88.
The verse you need for your life, maybe in lamentations.
It might be where it is.
And so that's why I want to make sure I kind of,
I'm familiar with all of them.
So let me just share this personal situation.
I think most people know my wife passed away 12 years ago of cancer.
And that really changed my life.
I have learned there is a love we call longing.
And that's a good love to feel.
There is a love and marriage we call appreciation.
And there's a love we call affection. and there's a love between husband and wife.
We call passion and there's empathy and there's forgiveness and all those we can share when they're alive.
But when they're gone, the only love other than memory of those that I have is longing. I long for her. And longing is
a good thing. The only thing I want God to give me when I die is Laurie. That's all I want.
Now I want my family there. For me celestial glory is a relationship. It's not a place. It's
not radiating light from my soul. It's a being. It's a relationship. Now, Laurie and I loved
the story of Jacob and Rachel. I used to call Laurie my Rachel. Jacob worked seven
years for her.
And there's a verse that says, they seem, but a few days for the love he had to her.
God beats Romeo and Juliet in Shakespeare in terms of power.
They seem, but a few days, I can read that two ways.
One, the time went quickly that he was waiting for her to marry her.
Or I can read it, wow, you only had to
work seven years for Rachel, you got a bargain because he's working for her. And when
Larry died, I told the Lord, I said, Father in heaven, I will give you the whole rest of
my life, whatever, whatever labor, whatever value, whatever I can, whatever I can offer you.
I will be your Jacob, he'll be my laban, and I will do what I can in your kingdom.
In every way, I just want when I die for Larry to be there. And for her to say yes again.
for Larry to be there. And for her to say yes again. Most important word I ever heard in my life was that an alter in the Alberta temple when she simply said
yes. I just want to hear say yes again. That's that's all I want. When Larry
died a few months later, I have this intense longing for her.
I just want her.
If I can't have Laurie, it doesn't matter where God puts me.
I'll be in hell, it doesn't matter.
I wanted what I call fleeces.
Maybe you talked about that when you did get in.
He just wants to ring the water out
of the fleece because he just wants to know what he believes is going to happen. I just wanted
reassurance. She's still mine. That there is a lorry and she's still my lorry. I just want that.
I'm like the man that said to Jesus, I believe. Help thou mine unbelief.
I believe, help Thou mine unbelief.
I just want to know, and I was going to Israel. She died in December, and I was going to Israel in March.
And the Spirit just kept saying, go to Rachel's tomb.
Go to Rachel's tomb.
I'd been to Israel 50 times.
I had never been to Rachel's tomb.
I love the story, but we always go to Bethlehem. I just never time to go to Rachel's tomb. It's a Senate half. We don't know that she's
there. Anyway, I'd never been to Rachel's tomb, but I'd get this strong burning in me. Go to Rachel's
tomb. So when I got into Bethlehem, I had a guy, a good friend of mine and some Palestinian friends that are there in Bethlehem, and I said, I need to go to Rachel's tomb.
They had a private car. They took me while the group was doing other things, and I went off alone with my guide and the driver.
Now Rachel's tomb is right by the security wall in Israel now. They build a big security wall.
Jews want to visit it so close to the border it's a dangerous place to go sometimes.
So it's kind of enshrined in concrete. And when I got there, I went into it's a cenotaph.
There's the tomb is there. There was a lot of Orthodox Jews praying. And there's a big beautiful black
velvet cover over it that had Hebrew letters written on it. I don't read Hebrew. I don't know what
those Hebrew. I don't know what the words are on the tomb. I went in there. I felt nothing.
I reread the Genesis story of Jacob and Rachel. I kept waiting. I'm waiting for some.
I'm waiting for Laurie to appear and say, Mike, I'm still yours and I love you. I don't know why
God is pushing me. Go to Rachel's tomb. Go to Rachel's tomb and nothing's happening. Nothing's
happening in Rachel's tomb. I'm there for an hour. I'm waiting. I'm reading. I'm pondering. I'm nothing's happening.
So I gave up.
I left Rachel's tomb. I walked out where my guide in the car was waiting and I looked over on the side and there
next to the wall with all this concrete this the last place in the world, you feel you're going to have
a spiritual moment because it's a contentious area. There's a little tiny garden, teeny,
small, little spot where some flowers are planted. So I naturally looked at it. I went
over there and there on the wall above the flowers was a scripture from the book of Jeremiah,
the 31st chapter, verses 15 through 17. And it just happens to be in English as well as Hebrew.
I just happens to be in English. And I stood there and I read these words,
now remember the state that I'm in and what I'm hoping for. Thus, sayeth the Lord, a voice was heard
in Rama, Rama is nearby. Lamentation and bitter weeping, Rachel weeping for her children refused to be comforted for her
children because they were not. Thus, say,
the Lord, refrain thy voice from weeping, and mine eyes from tears, for thy work shall be rewarded. Say,
of the Lord, and may she'll come again from the land of the enemy. And there is hope in
thine end, say, of the Lord, that thy children shall come again to their own border. Now those
are beautiful, where the beautiful words for the Jewish people. That's why they put them
there. Rachel weeping as the children of Israel leave Jerusalem going into Babylonian captivity. And Jeremiah is the Lord, quoting the Lord here, most of chapter 31
is God's voice. Same. Don't weep. I know you're weeping as you go into captivity, but I'm going to
bring you back. But that's not how I'm reading it. I'm reading it that the Lord is saying, Mike, I hear your lamentation. I hear your bitter weeping.
You refuse to be comforted because your wife is not here.
Refrain from weeping and your eyes from tears. I know what you offered me
and your work will be rewarded and she will,
she will come again. And there is hope in your end. As I stood there crying, crying,
the guide came over to me. He saw I was moved, what I was reading, and he said, words on Rachel's tone. Now who knew that? My father in heaven knew it. Maybe Laurie
knew it. I didn't know it. The last place I probably would have gone to for comfort.
But God knew where the verse I needed was. And I believe that's true of all things.
He knows where the verses are we need, and if we'll be as familiar as we can, He can direct
us in His own way.
And then the words of verse 13 will be true for all of us.
Whatever we face, I will turn their mourning into joy and will comfort them and make them
rejoice from their sorrow.
And my people shall be satisfied with my goodness.
How can I not be satisfied with the Lord's goodness with the very next verses that he gives
as proof in my life, personally, of his goodness? Are the words I need that I think of all the time
when I get nervous that she's not there and she won't be mine. I hear the
Lord say, don't weep mine. Your work will be rewarded. There's hope in your end.
Every time I hear somewhere over the rainbow, I think of my dream. Somewhere over the rainbow.
Skies are blue.
Somewhere over the rainbow.
Larry is.
And the dream that I dare to dream.
Really will come true.
And I'll be with her again.
So I love Jeremiah for that purpose. So a lot of wonderful things in Jeremiah.
But those verses are the ones to me and the most to me.
And you probably didn't know Hank that Jeremiah 31
went so much to me.
Being able to share Jeremiah with you
and with the people has been an honor and
a privilege. There's a lot of wonderful things in Jeremiah. Well, we we loved having you and
I think you captured Jeremiah perfectly. John, don't you think? Yeah. I can't imagine
it, Michael. Just hearing that story, I think I'm more in love with my wife right now.
I can't imagine what you've been through, but what a personal message for you right there.
That was beautiful.
God is good.
If I can end with one last Jeremiah, maybe this is a good one to end with.
It's chapter 29.
It's again that hope, verse 11.
Again, I make it very personal, Jeremiah 29,
11 through 14, 15.
I know the thoughts that I think towards you,
sayeth the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil to give
you an expected end.
Say, again, you imagine how I feel when I read that.
I know the thoughts I think towards you, Michael, or whoever you are out there.
I know the thoughts I think towards you.
Thoughts of peace.
I want you to have peace, not of evil, to give you the end you want,
to give you the expected end.
Then shall you call upon me, when you really know what kind of a God I am, then shall you
call upon me, and ye shall go and pray unto me, and I will harken unto you. And ye
shall seek me and find me when ye shall search for me with all your heart. And I will be
found of you, say, at the Lord, and I will turn away your captivity, and I will gather you from all the nations and from
all the places where there I have driven you.
And I will bring you again into the place once I cause you to be carried away captive.
Again, the multiple meanings of that verse that I can read in terms of 70 years hence establishment of the state of Israel, the restoration
of the gathering or me personally, but for me personally versus 11 through 13 are very
powerful.
I know the thoughts I think towards you and their thoughts of peace.
And I'm going to give you your expected end.
You call on me and pray and I'll listen and you'll find me when you search for me with
all your heart.
No matter wherever you are, house of Israel, wherever you are in Denver or Frankfurt or
Taipei or Rio de Janeiro, wherever you are. If you look for me, you're going to find me,
my thoughts of your thoughts of peace.
And I'll give you what you want in the end,
because most of us don't want improper things.
Most of us want what things will truly make us happy.
God will give them to us.
If we'll wait patiently, as Jeremiah said, just wait patiently.
And it will seem but a few days.
Yeah, time does go faster. I long for her. I do.
Thank you for being with us today.
We want to thank Dr. Mike Wokox for being with us today.
We want to thank our executive producers Wilcox for being with us today. We want to thank our executive producers
Steve and Shannon Swanson our sponsors David and Verla Swanson and we hope you'll join us next week on another episode of follow him
We have an amazing production crew we want you to know about David Perry Lisa spice Jamie Nielsen
Will Stoten, Crystal Roberts,
and Al Kouadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.