Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - John 1 Part 2 • Dr. Eric D. Huntsman • Jan. 16 - Jan. 22
Episode Date: January 11, 2023Dr. Eric Huntsman continues to examine John 1 and shares his testimony of Jesus Christ.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-te...stament/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
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Welcome to part two with Dr. Eric Huntsman, John chapter one.
If we can share screens here, I would show you how I lay this out in Greek.
This Johanna and Scarlett mentioned Raymond Brown, the late father Brown.
He made an argument back in the 70s, which I've really embraced, which is
a lot of times things about Jesus or the discourses, the words of Jesus himself
and the gospel
John are either poetic or semi-poetic.
In English, I've laid it out in the appendix of my little book on becoming the beloved
disciple, but I've also done it in Greek and other contexts.
Whenever the first 18 verses of John I are talking about Jesus, it's poetic.
But when it's ever talking about the witness that God sends to bear witness of the light, it's pros.
So we have this Newer poetic beginning.
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word is with God, and the Word was God.
Those of you who are doing the Psalms with me, see the parallelism there.
If that same was the beginning with God, often is remade by him, without him as nothing made.
In him was life. Life was the light of men. The light
shine in the darkness. The darkness, comprehend it, but not. But then also in verses 6-8 it becomes
very prosaic. Our body order is a man sent from God. His name was John. This guy wasn't the light.
He was sent as a witness of the light. So it's been very elevated, poetic, powerful discourse was talking about Jesus, the word, but then, oh, then there was a guy,
John, he was sent to witness for him. Then we go back to Jesus and it becomes semi-poetic getting
in 19 to 14. This was the true light which lighteth every human being that comeeth in the world. I'm
being gender-inclusive here because Anthropos is gender-inclusive in Greek. He, the word was in the world and being gender-inclusive here because the answer post is gender-inclusive in Greek.
He, the word, was in the world.
The world was made by him and the world knew him not.
On this verse, I'm going to have to inflict some more Greek on you, verse 11.
He came into his own and his own received him not.
Now in Greek it says, Aespa'tidia Elfen, he came to his own things.
It's Newter Plural in Greek, Khaehoyidiyo, outonu, Parallabon,
and his own people did not receive.
Now why that's so important is the elements, as we'll see in water and to wine, the elements
obey God.
They obey the word, the divine word, they obey Jesus.
But people have their agency and sometimes don't. I think it's in
healing. Is it in human where Mormon has this little kind of poetic aside? Just of the earth thing.
Yes, yes. He says the dust of the earth moving here and there and there and then, like the Almighty God,
but man, Harkin, if not, and that's what happens in John, and that's going to be this theme of
encounter discipleship. How do people respond?
We know the elements will respond, but how will people?
But as many as received him to him,
he gave power to become the sons and daughters of God,
even to them that believe on his name.
Now, you have to kind of unfold this.
So I did something called the divine family of God
in the gospel of John.
So that was my chapter, this last burial volume.. And I examine this and it's really interesting because Lardy
Saints were raised singing, I am a child of God. We're already children of God.
Why do we have to become the children of God? Now Bob Millett who both of you
remember, former Dean of Religion, he says this is all about alienation. We started
out as children of heavenly parents, but we lost that status
because of the fall, and then later by our own choices in spiritual death. Christ comes
to help restore that. So that's really interesting. He gives us the power to become the children
of God, as many of us as believe in His name. And then it goes on, says, which were born
not of blood, nor the will, the flesh, nor the will of men, but of God.
When it says the will of man, it actually is masculine there. What we have here is born not of blood. That's normal human conception,
nor the desires of the flesh, normal human conception, nor the will of man, a man as the agent of conception, but of God.
It's a spiritual birth, and of course later
when you read John 3, you read all about that.
That's a very book of Mormon principle as well.
Mosaic 5, you are the son of God of Christ.
You have been begotten this day by him, absolutely.
And then this is the high-crystallogy of John,
this divine word that was the creator
and the source of life and light.
The word was made flesh and dwelt among us.
This is what our Catholic friends would call the incarnation.
Anyone who speaks Spanish can get the Latin there.
Karnai has thought of it.
In the meat.
Okay, so he's actually going to be in the flesh and dwelt among us.
Once again, a little bit of a Greek here.
Kaiho logos, Sark's againatoo, Cahia, Skainosen,
the word for dwelt among us in Greek
comes from the word for tent,
literally meant he pitched his tent or tabernacle.
Now how did the pre-mortal word, the divine word
live the children of Israel and Exodus
and the tabernacle?
How is the incarnate word going to dwell with his people? He's going to dwell in the flesh of the man Jesus.
So just like you have the pillar of fire and cloud on the Tavernacle and Exodus, you've got the divine Word in Jesus.
And the Word became flesh, well among us, and we beheld his glory, glory the glory the only begotten of the father and then this last part ends with John
Once again a little prosaic aside John bear witness of him and cried this is he up who might speak he that came after me is preferred before me before he was before me and
Then I think at least in my I'm working on the
Be your New Testament commentary volume for John In my translation and analysis of 16 to 18,
I think 16 to 18 is your narrator
or the beloved disciple speaking here.
The fullness we have all received, grace for grace,
the law was given of Moses, that was grace, that was a gift,
but grace and truth as its ongoing comes by Jesus Christ.
No man has seen God at any time.
The only begotten God or the only begotten Son who is in the bosom is the embrace of the Father.
He's the one who declared him.
Oh, we ended up reading all 18 verses.
That's fantastic.
When I was a kid, my mom did not like fake swearing.
Oh my gosh, you know, but anyway, I remember I always
probably on my mission when I thought we probably shouldn't say, oh my word because
that was because of Jesus's names. I haven't been able to ever since then because it's
capitalized and it means, ooh, that's his name. Anyway, that's great, John.
These verses, the first 18 verses is the first half of the prologue, and as I've
suggested, is introducing the primary theme of the gospel, John. It's high Christology, the fact
that the man, Jesus of Nazareth, was Jehovah. He was the incarnate Jehovah, the divine son of God.
Is he going to continue to use light throughout the Gospel?
Because he uses it so much in this prologue. Yeah, we're getting a little ahead of ourselves.
But 789 and the first half of chapter 10, all of those discourses of Jesus to the quote-unquote Jews,
the leaders in Jerusalem, are at the Feast of Tabernacles. And the Feast of Tabernacles and Jewish festivals Sukkot has two main veins, water and light. So you have in chapter seven, it's the
fall festival and they're praying for rain for the next year and they actually go
on the Geek Home Spring, fill up silver, things of water, bring it up to the
temple, pour the water in the altar and pray for rain. At that moment the
incarnate Jehovah standing in the temple
portico saying, hey you you're praying for ruin.
I'm right here.
If anyone wants water, come get it.
In the evenings, they would light the big, huge candelabra
in the courtyards.
And then they would actually have torch dances.
And they would dance all night by torch light.
So the feast of tabernacles had this image of light in darkness.
And that's why you have that one six miraculous sign, the healing of the man born blind. Someone who's always light in darkness and that's why you have that one six miraculous sign the healing of the
man born blind someone who's always been in darkness is going to be enlightened by jesus i'm
the way in the truth of the light yeah it's all through it and he goes and washes in water so
there's water in light the man born blind it's perfect on my mission and maybe others have
experienced this people who knew their scriptures a little bit, if you told them about the first vision,
they would say, wait a minute.
It says in John that no man has seen God at any time.
And I know there's a JST reference there
down below in the footnotes,
but I'm sure there's more.
What can you tell us?
Yeah, I guess that we could,
one way we kind of approach that is,
what does it mean the only begotten son
who is in the bosom of father, he has declared him? What does it mean the only begotten son who is in the bosom of father he has declared
him what does it mean to declare him
exegase that to i think is what it is in the greek means literally to lay it out to show
him
okay so one could almost make the argument we can only come to the father or see the father
through the son
now i know that's almost reversed of what we have at the
baptism, the transfiguration, the first vision where the father is introducing the
sun. But those are singular episodes. I think by and large the way we get back
to the father, right? Since the father was separated by the father the son brings
us to the father. So you can make the argument that you can't see the father
until you know the
son and then the son brings him to you. And that actually is consonant or goes along with
what the JST rendering is. I remember when I was trying to figure out that same thing,
in those days, would go back to Rousseau Macon, whose doctor in the testament commentary,
and he would cite the JST, no medicine got any time except he has born record of the sun, for except
it is through him no man can be saved.
So I think unless you bear record of the sun, you can't see God, and then when you know
the sun, the sun himself bears record of the Father.
I mean, we always explained it when I was trying to study this out as you can't be in the
presence of the Father in a mortal state
You have to be literally
Transfigured to be in his present and once again that's done through the agency of the Sun and I like what you said about
some of Jesus's titles imply
Three parties if he's an advocate he is advocating for us
Advocating for us to someone else to the Father. He's our advocate.
I think my favorite title for the Savior and I might change my mind tomorrow, but I love
advocate that He is our advocate before the Father. He stands beside us. And this verse reminds me
of those other titles like Advocate or Mediator or Intercessor. He's the one that will bring us back
to the Father. And so no man has seen got it any time
And then it goes right to about the Sun. He's the one who's going to take us there again
Well, since you brought up advocate of course you start thinking of
The Section 42 again where the risen Lord is talking to Joseph Smith and says listen to him who is the advocate before the father
45 thank you father behold the suffering and blood of that son. That's him who did no sin. So here's an interesting once again,
theological, Jew, whiz moment. So advocate the Latin term, Edward Caughtus, which means
being called to one side. Well, the Greek version of that is Paracletos. Once again, being
called to someone side to represent that person, to intercede for that person. That's what's translated in John 14, 15, and 16 as comfortors, paracletos.
In some translations, you'll see it rendered as just another Greek word, paraclete.
Someone's called the paraclete, saying, so when he says, I will send you another
comfortor, the word is actually, I will send you another advocate, another helper,
another person to represent and their seed for you. The reason it turned out to be comfort is the King James Shenslators in older
English, comfort meant to give support in a real way. I mean, it's true the Holy Ghost and Jesus
comfort us in an emotional sense. But it's more like, treason laws don't give any aid or comfort
to the enemy. So when it says, I will give you another comforter, I will give you someone to give you what you need physically. I will stand
up for you and I will intercede for you. I will represent you. And in fact, in that passage, I know
we're a long way from John 14, but he actually says, I will not leave you comfortless in verse 18
is it 14, 18? I will not leave you comfortless. I will come into you. The word
comfortless in that verse is or fondness. He says, I will not leave you orphans. See, an orphan is someone without any
source of support, no comfort in the archaic sense. I will not leave you as orphans. I will come and be your father. So just as our heavenly parents are our spiritual parents
and give us spiritual life and our earthly parents are, give us physical life, Jesus Christ comes to us
as our covenant father and gives us eternal life. Anyway, we'll do that when we get to John 14th,
16, later in the year, but it ties into what's happening here. We can't do anything without Jesus the gospel, John, and I think that does
help with that difficult verse, verse 18, about not being able to see the Father without the Son.
Yeah, and I put my margin acts, chapter 7, you know, the stoning of Stephen, where I saw the glory
of God, and Jesus standing on the right hand of God and thought, well, that's what
Stephen saw, the Father and the Son. And what's interesting is if he doesn't declare him, that when Stephen sees the father
and the son, Jesus actually says this in the gospel of John.
I bear witness to the father, the father, the witness to me, and the Holy Ghost bears witness
of us.
So you can't get any of those three without the other.
And since this is primarily a book about Jesus, you can't get to the Father without the Son.
And what's really interesting is even though the Holy Ghost is operating in his normal role as a witness of truth, etc.
when we get to those chapters 14, 15, and 16, when Jesus is present, the Holy Ghost lets him do the stuff.
So what's really interesting is for the disciples they knew Jesus first
when Jesus is gone he sends the Holy Ghost to be the Comforter. Now we start out with the Holy Ghost
but eventually Jesus comes into our company and that's I think what Joseph Smith's doing with John
14 about the second Comforter. So once again the original disciples started with the man Jesus
when he goes they get the Holy Ghost.
We start with the Holy Ghost, but we're working up to getting the presence of Jesus just as the disciples had him in the first instance.
Interesting.
It's all in John.
I mean, if you have to have only one book of scripture, I think you'd have to go with John. Well, book of Mormon. But next, John.
scripture. I think you'd have to go with John. Well, book a morning. But next, John.
Now, it switches from verse 18 to verse 19. It makes a change.
Eric, what is that little symbol there?
Yes. So you have this up to about halfway through acts. You've
got that little looks like a backward P with two stems. That's
a paragraph, Mark. So that is the editorial convention in many
editions, the King James, to let you know where paragraphs begin and end. It stops about
halfway through X. So it doesn't help you with Paul, which is exactly where you'd need it.
Unraveled Paul. So that's something you know you're moving into a new section. The technical
term is prickly. We would just say paragraph paragraph you've actually had several paragraphs in that first section you had one at six you had one at fifteen and I had one at
nineteen but nineteen is a bigger change for reasons I've laid out I think verses one to eighteen
are the primary theme of the divinity of Christ the high crystals of john and then nineteen to
fifty one is the secondary theme of encounter the the theme of discipleship. Here comes the disciples.
Yeah, and the first disciple,
internally, is the man sent by God
already in the first part of it,
which is John the Baptist.
Now, let me clarify that.
He's never called John the Baptist
in the fourth gospel.
He's John the Baptist in the synoptics.
And what's really interesting about this
is even though John's baptism
of Jesus is implied as you turn the page when he says, when I saw the Spirit just standing
upon that was the one, and we all know that's the dove blah blah blah. You actually don't
see John baptized Jesus and John because I argue the primary role of John the son of Zacharias
and Elizabeth in the fourth gospel is not as a
baptizer, it's as a witness. In fact, in my little book, becoming the blood disciple, I always
call the prophet John, rather than John the Baptist, because he's the man sent by God to bear witness
of the light. So we shift in verses 19 through 28 to John's witness to the Pharisees and the Levites who are sent from Jerusalem
to say, who are you? And then you get this whole business of him burying his witness. So we are
promised in verses 67 and 8 and then in verses 15 that God is going to send a witness and then we see that witness in verses 19 through
28 as he bears witness by the side of the Jordan to those sent by Jerusalem to find out who this Jesus is
But that's actually not the important witness of the prophet John
The important witness that makes a difference is the witness he bears in verses 29 to 40. Let's do 29 to 34 and then 35 to 40.
29. The next day John sees Jesus coming unto him and say, we don't know who he's talking to, he's just sitting around him,
behold the Lamb of God who takes us away the sin of the world. So this is the real witness of the prophet John.
Not just what he's saying in a priest and Levi,
it's all this guy, he came before me
and I can't lose his latchet on his sandal.
The real witness is this is the Lamb of God.
And in fact, when we get the passionate of sin John,
John more than the other gospels really portrays Jesus
as the Paschal Lamb's going to be offered.
Now notice it says the sin of the world not sin.
Years ago we were recording the Messiah with the time that could acquire.
And Mac Wilbur could done a very scholarly and careful addition of it and he's just a
master and he was just rehearsing us rehearsing us rehearsing us.
And we're recording it when you record you take after take after take.
And he said, wait, you're doing it wrong.
You're saying sins of the world.
So the singers were all saying, behold the Lamb of God.
It's a beautiful chorus of Messiah.
Behold the Lamb of God which take it the way and they were all saying sins of the world.
And Matt kept getting on the stick and saying, no, it's sin.
And I finally told my fellow baritones later,
you're saying sins of the world
because you're all busy thinking of your individual sin.
But what Trump's doing is more global.
Sinters of the world means the fallen state of the world.
And it's not just the world, the people in the world
is the entire fallen creation.
By the way, just G. Wiz for when you get to Paul.
In the early letters of Paul,
the secure letters of Paul, sin is singular. In the later letters of Paul, when he's dealing with
the nitty gritty of people, it sins. What John and the early Paul are focusing upon is a state of sin,
which comes from living in a fallen world and being born separated from our heavenly parents.
Adam and Eve were driven out of the garden, they were cast out, we were simply born into
this state.
So he has come to take away the fallen state of the entire world.
That's fantastic.
Now I've never seen that before.
The sin of the world singular.
Right.
It reminds me of the ether 12 about given to men weakness.
People say weakness is no, it says weakness. It sounds like a more global. Right. And if you
need a confirmation that I think it's in the book of Jacob, there's also discussion of weakness.
So I always tell people he has given us our fallen state where we need strength. That strength is grace.
Now we have all kinds of individual weaknesses.
And he does so, I'll make weak things strong to you.
So our individual weaknesses will be strengthened,
but we're missing the global picture.
The global weakness.
Exactly.
Well, since we mentioned Lamb of God,
skip ahead to this next section, 35 through 40.
On the next day, again, John stood and two of his disciples,
and we'll find out who they are in a moment. And looking upon Jesus as Jesus walked, he said,
behold the Lamb of God. He says it again. From that moment, the two disciples heard him speak,
they followed Jesus. So John had followers, people who were watching him and supporting him and learning
from him, had been baptized by him. Two of them here at this testimony from the prophet
John that this is the Lamb of God and they follow Jesus. And Jesus turns and sees them
following and says, what are you looking for? Sorry, I'm translating on the flyer. And
he said, he's sure, Rabbi, where are you staying? Where do I go?
I said, come and see, I remember years ago, I think it was the top of present
months in, come and see.
If you want to know the true folks of the Gospel, come and see, just give it a try.
Jesus says, come and see, and they stayed with him that day.
One of the two which heard John speak and followed him was Andrew, Simon, Peter's brother.
So you've got the prophet, John is the first first witness and now Andrew is going to be the second.
Now by the way, we don't name the other disciple.
We don't know, but it could be the beloved disciple.
But at this point, he's not trying to insert himself into the story because what's important
is what Andrew does, not what the other disciple does.
What does Andrew do?
Simon Peter's brother, verse 41 to 42.
First, he finds his own brother, Simon,
and says, we have found Messiah,
which is being interpreted the Christ.
We've found the anointed one.
And he brought him, he brought Peter to Jesus.
And when Jesus be held in, he said,
thou art shimone.
You are Simon, the son of Jonas.
That shall be called kefis or seifis, which is by interpretation of stone.
And we all know that in Greek, Petros means rockies.
And I know there's JST here and we talked about sear stone and Peter will be a sear, but
we also have the sense that this man is going to become a rock solid disciple.
So we have the Prophet John, their testimony. We have
Andrew then go and their test to his disciples. Then we have Andrew go and their testimony to a brother.
This begins what I call my book, The Great Chain of Witnesses. Our of us got our testimonies from
somewhere. It might have been our mom, it might have been our father, it might have been the missionaries,
it might have been the person, the month, and it might have been a teacher, it might have been the missionaries, it might have been prayer the month, and it might have been a teacher.
And then we go and share it with someone else.
And who is it we first want to share it with?
It's our family.
So Andrew goes and finds Peter.
And then what happens next?
The Anisean is along queer in verse 43.
The next day following Jesus would go forth in Galley and find a Philip and say, Son,
who will follow me.
It could actually be that Andrew or Peter finds Philip.
So the antecedent of the verb in Greek findeth is unclear.
We find out later that Andrew and Philip are actually
very good friends.
They appear together throughout this gospel.
There's a passage in, John, I think it's 12,
when some Greeks come to the temple, want to see Jesus.
And who do they go to first?
They go to the ones with Greek names. Andrew means manly in Greek, and Philip means I love horses.
So they go to some people from Bethesda, Bethesda, which was a Hellenized city, who know Greek.
Anyway, this is an example of how Andrew and Philip are together.
Oh, they're also the two are together at the feet of the 5,000 in John 6.
Right.
So we have Andrew go to his family, his brother,
and then we have him go to a friend.
And then what does Philip do?
He goes and finds the Samuel.
We have found him of whom Moses in the law,
and the prophets of Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph.
So we go and find another friend.
And the Samuel says in the term,
can any good thing come out of Nazareth? Philips says, come
and see. That's just what Jesus said earlier to Andrew and the
other disciples come and see. Jesus sees Nathaniel come into
him and says, say if he can behold an isserolite indeed in whom
there is no guile. Now, because of good bishop partridge, Edward
partridge in whom there was no guile. I think we are always predisposed
and interpret this positively.
The Nathaniel's just a guileless guy.
I wonder if maybe there's a little sarcasm going on here.
Because Jesus knows that Nathaniel has just dusted some town.
Can any guy come out of a language,
no offense, paying which people?
But can anyone recover a little town?
So Jesus showed her, he knows what he had done, right?
It's not just what he had said, it's what he had felt insane.
The thing is, how do you know me?
And Jesus says, before Philip Candidate,
when you were under the fig tree, I saw thee.
We have to kind of fill in the gaps,
and some of this is just guesswork.
But there was something about same. When you were under the tree the other day, I saw you.
And there's something to think it was sane or doing there and disconverts it.
I think in some versions of this, something that chosen does this.
I think that chosen has them praying under the tree and sees the light.
One reason I want to compare them to Oliver Caldry.
Remember that wonderful passage where Oliver hasn't succeed in translating.
And the Lord says, you remember in the night when I spoke
peace to your soul, the Samuel was praying about something.
And I suspect, I do not know, I'll always say what I'm just
guessing, I do not know, but I suspect he was praying about when the Messiah
was going to come. When are we going to be
liberate? When are we going to be free? When are we going to be saved? And the fact that Jesus knew both what he had
said about his home town and what he had been praying about converts him. And what does
he say in verse 49? Rabbi Zauart, the son of God, Zauart, the king of Israel. In other words,
you're the Messiah, the one I was praying. Now here's something interesting, so we have this chain of witnesses,
a prophet to a disciple, to a family member, to a friend, to another friend. And the
application section of this chapter in my little book is, what are our chain of witnesses,
or where we got our testimony, and where are we going to share our testimonies. But in terms
of Christology, for those of us who are interested in that, for us, biblical studies geeks,
I've mentioned that John has a high Christology.
You go chapters and chapters and chapters most of the gospel
in Mark Matthew Luke before anyone says,
you're the son of God, right?
It's not till Cesaria Philippi in Mark Matthew Luke
that Peter says, you are the Christ the son of God.
We have people from the get-go chapter one,
saying things such as, this is the Messiah,
this is the one who is
promised. But look at this Christological confession. You're the son of God and the king of Israel.
No one says anything like that. For chapters and chapters and chapters in the other gospel.
By the way, just because I never want to speak without giving our sisters a shout out.
You know who else has one of the strongest Christological confessions in the gospel, John? Martha. She says in chapter 11,
she actually uses words that you're used to hearing Peter say when she says
Yehler, this is 1127, Yehler to believe and know that that aren't the Christ, the
Son of God, who shall come into the world. So people are bearing powerful testimony to Jesus right and left in this gospel.
And it starts in chapter 1 with this chain of witnesses, which shows how people respond
to Jesus when they encounter Him.
And what I ask your listeners to do as they read the rest of this gospel is every time
someone encounters Jesus asks, how is this person reacting to Jesus?
How is this person getting a testimony? What how is this person reacting to Jesus? How is this person
getting a testimony? What testimony is this person bearing? And then in terms of takeaway
and application, do I identify with that person? Do I identify with that character? And even
if I don't, do I know someone who does? Do I know someone like the woman at the well
who has been ostracized because she's a woman and she doesn't get to draw water at the other women at the town and she's a Samaritan.
Or do I know someone who's too big for his bitches and a professor?
Read Crucible of Doubt by the Gimmons.
Some of us have a hard role and are crucible, strength of weaknesses to being a questioner.
Some people have simple faith.
How many of us are like Peter and Thomas?
Thomas gets a bum rap for not believing what the other apostles say.
When he just wants the same sure witness and the physical thing that he needs is an apostle.
And Peter and I is three times.
But Thomas and Peter are the ones that are at the appearance and gallery in chapter 21.
Thomas is mentioned by name in chapter 21.
And then of course, Peter has the threefold affirmation
of love that rehabilitates him for the threefold denial
that he knew Jesus.
So we've got farabal but faithful disciples,
in person but devoted disciples.
And you know, if any of our leaders say
or do something we think isn't perfect or is a mistake,
well, guess what?
Our leaders are in great company.
Abraham Isaac, Jacob, Noah, Peter,
they're farabal, sure occasionally, but not in their teachings, but
they're faithful. Sometimes we all get a little animated, the
possible Paul shot off the mouth all the time. Paul was
fiery blue. I identify by one of the beloved disciples, I'm
really Paul. Okay, I speak too fast and I'm too passionate. And I
have to take back my words sometimes
Doesn't take away from the strength of his testimony or the power of eaching
So you've got all these characters in this gospel and chapter one is prepared us to find them
And I hope you just embrace this gospel and find these characters you find soulmates in them
You find kinsmen in them kins women in them
But most of all come back to the beginning of what we did in chapter one you find kinsmen in them, kins women in them. But most of all come back to the
beginning of what we did in chapter one, you find Jesus in this gospel. Yeah, that's beautiful.
John the Baptist seems that he has a better sense for a mission of the Savior when he talks about
him being the Lamb of God. Lamb's are sacrifice. This is the first time that titles ever used. Yeah,
that titles ever used. Yeah. Right. Lambs are sacrificed. Right. You've got John later saying, we did not yet know that he would rise from the dead or that in Luke, you've got other disciples
saying, well, he died. That wasn't supposed to happen. But do you feel like John the Baptist
here has a better sense for what the future holds for Jesus with this title? You can't put me on the spot so I haven't given the same thought so I make
X cogitating here but in the synoptic gospels Jesus says there was never a
greater profit than John. All right. My gut reaction since you put
a meal in the spot is to say John the son of Zachariah, John the Baptist in
the synoptics, is the greatest witness of
Jesus up to that time.
By the way, all this mentions this, some people are aware of this, section 91, all of this
is kind of echoed in there, and you're going to have the fullness of the witness of John
et cetera.
There's a real question, this wonderful, I use that word logos or logos, the logos
hymn, that poetic first part of chapter one.
There's a real question who wrote that?
Is that John the beloved, the apostle, the source or author of this text, or is it the prophet
John when we know it's on the Baptist?
I have a working idea.
Listeners, this is just book of Huntsman.
This is not gospel, it's just an idea. I like to compare the Prophet John and the Apostle John
to Lehi and Nephi. So Lehi has this dream, this prophetic dream of the Tree of Life
and his powerful and symbolic, but then Lehi when he asks about it, when he hears his father
preach that dream, he gets the most unbelievable apocalyptic vision in
chapters 11 through 14 with more detail. And section 93 presents that maybe the concepts, the principles
that we read in the beginning of John chapter 1, now were first preached by the prophet John,
but then the apostle John when he was was riding it down, had it revealed
to him even more fully and expensive.
So rather than try to take a side in the section 93 debate, is this John the Baptist or John
the beloved who wrote this hymn, I'm going to split the difference and say they've shared
it.
If the other disciple with Andrew was, in fact, John the later apostle, he would have heard John the Baptist,
whom I call the prophet John, preach these things all the time. And then as he grows in faith and
knowledge and comes to know Jesus personally, and then later when he's preaching this and then
writing it down, he writes it this beautiful poetic format. I just feel like John the Baptist,
he was filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's
womb.
I feel like he was just at a different place from the beginning.
He didn't have the learning curve that the others did.
I like calling him John the prophet.
It's not John merely the Baptist.
He's John the prophet too.
He's powerful witness.
I love later on how he'll say, he must increase.
I must decrease. He just seems to get it from the very beginning
I'm impressed with John the prophet here
It says he has his disciples in verse 35 and look at him saying go to turn them over
Yeah, yeah
In fact in the application section of my chapter on the great chain of witnesses and becoming the beloved disciple
I actually use the example of how hard it was for me for just a few days when President Hinckley died, because I
knew and loved President Hinckley so long, and we have a shift in profits, and it takes a while to
kind of transfer the loyalty, or I grew up a Spencer Kimball, and then when it was President Benson,
and what happens is you have to realize is you're facing your loyalty as much as you love
The individual is not that that person is the person he represents
Sometimes we have a hard time transferring our loyalty yet Andrew and the other disciple did it
Just as President Hinckley wanted us to transfer our support to President Munson and
As President Nelson will want us to support the next president of the church
because they're all serving the same Lord. So when we come and see, it doesn't matter who the prophet is at the moment. Eric, we have had a fantastic day here in the gospel of John and John
chapter one. If I'm at home and I'm a listener and I'm so comfortable with the book of Mormon,
how do I become that comfortable with the Book of Mormon, how do I become that
comfortable with the New Testament? I made it through the Old Testament last year and my default
zone is, let me go back to the Book of Mormon, yet here's a New Testament scholar saying probably
going to tell us, don't do that. Stick through the New Testament. What are we going to find?
Since you've framed us in terms of the Book of Mormon and so many of our members being
familiar with that, remember what we read in the Book of Mormon.
Don't say a Bible, Bible, we have a Bible.
The Lord gives His Word to one people and to another.
You can never have too much Word of the Lord.
And if we remember the Old Testament, the first Testament,
and then the New Testament is the second Testament in as much as it's new,
and the Book of Mormon is the other testament.
We have three members of Godhead. There you've got three pillars right then and then you layer on that the doctrine of confidence and the progress. I guess I never have understood this feeling. I
only need to like one book of scripture. I only need one book of scripture here when we are
been given such a gift. Years ago, I heard, but the porter was traveling with us and the choir. He was our general authority
shop owner. We're in Washington and he shared something with me. I've used in my teaching
a lot. He said, the New Testament gives us the facts of the atonement. What Jesus Christ
did to bring about our salvation. The Book of Mormon so clearly gives us the doctrine
and the Holy Ghost gives us the application. So you read about Jesus and what he's done and that's got
its own power and then the Book of Mormon focuses that with giving us the doctrine behind it.
But in the end, neither of those are fine on their own. We need to have that witness in the Spirit. It's
true and then the direction of the Holy Ghost and the channeling to the Holy Ghost of that grace.
It's a narrative and you've heard of me talk about my son before but one of the
great gifts, if I can call it a gift, of having a special needs child, is it forced me
to approach the gospel in a very direct and simple way. I mean your listeners have heard
me spout off about Greek and exegesis and symbolism and yada yada yada. But when it's
me and Sam, Stylen book of Mormon or the New Testament
or finishing seminary,
we're about to start doing preach my gospel,
it's just simple and it's basic.
And one of the things Sam really needs is narrative.
He needs the story to make it real.
Of course, it's dovetailing
because we've got him here with us in the Holy Land
and we go to the places where Jesus was.
In the beginning of our new Easter book,
we talk about using the New Testament gospels
to walk with Jesus through his final week.
Here we have the text, and we can actually walk
where Jesus walked, but I just think
the New Testament can draw people,
and particularly the gospels,
what we'll leave the Pauline epistles
and the other things for later in the year,
with the gospels, it's a chance
to really just join the world of Jesus.
To imagine, even if you can't come to the Holy Land most people don't have that opportunity,
to imagine what it was like to be with him and talk with him.
I mean, you get that in third Nephion, I think that's one of the reasons people love third Nephion
so much is the Lord finally makes his appearance.
I just hope that people will make the Lord real in their lives. And of course
he was real to the people in the book of Mormon. And of course he was really just talking
to the Joseph Smith and Dr. and Covenants. But there's a reason we call it the meridian
of time. It's kind of that focal point where everything came together. Here's another
thing that I've learned from our Christian friends of other faith. Our church doesn't
do this as much. A lot of the churches, they have what's called the Turgical Calendar. And we do it at Christmas as a some extent at Easter.
I'm encouraging people to do it the whole week before Easter. They'll kind of mark through the
seasons what Jesus did in the seasons of his life. There's a real power to that, I think, because you
take a sacred text and you take sacred place,
even if the space is in your mind
as you're imagining Galilee and Jerusalem
and you've sacred time,
you're taking yourself back to where Jesus was
and it just becomes very real to me at least.
I think it's like some of the people are drawn to the chosen.
I know we don't just endorse
what particular portrayal of Jesus
or in particular show,
but I think people are really moved by the chosen
because they're just making Jesus
and the apostles so real at Mary and all those figures.
Well, one of the reasons I always encourage my kids to read, and with Sam it's like pulling
tea sometimes, but if you just go and see the movie, rather than reading the book first,
you don't have to exercise a lot of imagination. But reading is a much more active engagement
because you have to
imagine the things you're reading. And I wonder if there's something that's why
we're taught to read scripture and study scripture rather than just watch videos
of it. Because it's not just your imagination that you're using as you're
trying to work through and recreate what the scriptures portraying the
spirits there as well. For me, my Scripture study time is a sacred time and it's a very personal
time and I try to close off the rest of the world and I open those pages and it's
just like I'm there with them. One of the great strengths of doing come
follow me is it's got so many people in the church in the Scriptures and in
the Scriptures together,
even if you don't have a family,
you're doing it with your word family.
For instance, when you get to the last supper
when we get close to Easter,
it's not Jesus and the apostles with the last supper,
it's all of us.
And we talked earlier in this discussion
about John being kind of a type
and leaving himself anonymous.
When the beloved disciples leaning in the arms
with a savior, I mean,
that's you. That's you in his arms. And I do that a lot of times when the sacmants
mean pass. I try to imagine myself in the upper room and walking the kitchen valley at
Inga Seminy and following Jesus to the cross. It's like Peter and John were following
him when he was arrested and John and mother of Jesus and the other Mary were there.
I'm just kind of talking in abstract terms here. I just hope the scriptures can become real to people.
That's beautiful.
Yeah, just that whole idea of looking at how different people encountered him and everything.
The very first paragraph in the Come Follow Me manual says, have you ever wondered whether you would have
recognized Jesus of Nazareth as the Son of God if you had been alive during his mortal
ministry?
For years faithful Israelites, including Andrew, Peter, Philip, and the Samuel had waited
and prayed for the coming of the Promised Messiah.
When they met him, how did they know he was the one they had been seeking?
The same way all of us come to know the Savior by accepting
the invitation to come and see for ourselves. We read about him in the Scriptures. We hear
his doctrine, we observe his way of living, we feel his spirit. Along the way we discover
as Nathaniel did that the Savior knows us and loves us, wants to prepare us to receive
greater things. So I think reading it with your imagination
and imagining what if you're one of these characters is a perfect way to put that and to
make the New Testament alive. The Book of Mormon is the resurrected Christ. This was the
mortal Christ in the gospels that some recognized him, some didn't, and that's why I like
the intrigue of that, what I believed it,
and that's what our manual kind of talks about there.
You know, as you were speaking, John,
I just wanted to bring one more thing
because we've talked a lot about imagining
and finding him in text.
One other very famous passage in John,
this is John 717,
if any man will do his will,
he will know the doctrine,
whether it be of God or I think of myself.
So it's not enough for us just to revel in the text and use the spirit to
aid our imagination and encounter him that way.
When Jesus said, come and see, we've got to do it.
We've got to walk with him and do the things that he would do and see him
in the poor and the marginalized and the hurting and the happy and the successful and the
fed. Sometimes we only talk about the marginalized. I mean, to find Jesus in everyone and that's what
we actually read in the synopics, right? If you close the naked and visit it the prison, I mean,
you've done it under him, if you've done it to the least, and we need to come and see and then do.
Remember, I said about discipleship.
It's not just learning from the master.
It's becoming an apprentice and striving to be like the master.
Beautiful.
We want to thank Dr. Eric Hunsman for being with us today and sharing with us all this knowledge.
I am so excited to continue reading the Gospel of John.
John. John. Because with all this introductory information,
now I feel like, okay, I know what I'm looking for it
with this 30,000-foot view.
Now I can zoom in and use subchapters
and really find the Lord.
So Eric, this has just been wonderful.
Thank you for being here.
Thanks again for having me.
Yeah.
We want to thank our executive producer Shannon Sonson, our sponsors, David and
Verla Sonson, and we always want to remember our founder, the late Steve Sonson.
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