Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - John 2-4 Part 2 • Dr. Robert L. Millet • Feb. 6 - Feb. 12
Episode Date: February 1, 2023Dr. Robert Millet continues to examine the baptism of Jesus and the importance of following the path Jesus establishes. Dr. Millet bears testimony of the power of the love of Jesus Christ.Please rate ...and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coApple 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: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com00:00 Part II– Dr. Robert Millet00:07 Don’t spiritually eclipse Jesus01:55 Jesus and the woman at the well03:10 Samaritans06:02 Jesus offers Living Water10:53 Jesus is telling her he is the Messiah11:43 Literary critical historical studies of the Bible15:23 Jesus was the Messiah16:23 The woman at the well tells everyone about Jesus18:19 Jews didn’t travel through Samaria but Jesus loved much21:40 Jesus heals a nobleman’s son and Dr. Millet shares a personal story25:38 N.T. Wright story about his birth certificate29:38 Dr. Millet shares a story about he and his wife33:11 Dr. Millet shares a story about a young woman wanting an Alma experience36:18 Dr. Millet bears testimony of Jesus Christ and His love44:16 Dr. Millet shares a story about visiting a chapel from his youth48:46 End of Part II–Dr. Robert Millet
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two, Dr. Robert Millett, John chapters two through four.
This verse 30 is important to me when we talked before with Dr. Steve Harper about this,
but just briefly, the idea of a spiritually clips, Joseph McConkey in a classroom showed
us a picture of an eclipse once, and he said, what's happening?
Well, the moon's in front of the sun, he said, what happens then? If anyone or anything gets in front of the S-O-N, the sun, and he said, that's a spiritual eclipse and
shook his finger at us and said, don't ever become a spiritual eclipse. What a wonderful metaphor
I've never forgotten. Teachers really need to take heed. The issue isn't how impressive I am.
The issue is how I can point myself.
We've had teachers that did it the right way.
And that is you never left that person's class saying,
wow, this person is powerful.
I've never heard anybody knew the scriptures that well.
But you do leave deeply touched.
Maybe you're saying, I wanna to go read or I want to go study.
Yeah, the temptation is to get them pointed toward you rather than to the Savior. And I think that's
scary business. Meaning they're picking up on your charisma more than they are on the Lord himself.
The outcome that you're after is that people are closer to the Savior or they're intrigued. I
think that we've talked about that series called the Chosen and what I like is
people are saying, wow, I got to read that and see how the scriptures actually
described what happened there. And we all know they take a little bit of
license in that show, but if it's getting people to open up and read, I like that.
There's a humanity about Jesus and the apostles in the chosen that is so moving, very touching.
It's why millions are just in love with that series.
Okay, chapter four.
Let's start with verse five. Then come a Thee to a city of Samaria, which is called Psycar, near to the
parcel of ground that Jacob gave to his son Joseph.
Psycar would be what we would know as Shechem, as it's called elsewhere in the
Old Testament, for example.
Jacob's well was there, Jesus therefore being worried with his journey, sat
thus on the well, and it was about the sixth hour. That well, I think most people
believe the well is about seven to eight feet wide, about a hundred feet deep. It's fed by springs
down in the earth and so waters was constantly coming there. The sixth hour would of course
been noon. Jesus comes and sits down at the well. They are coming from the woman of Samaria to draw water.
Jesus said unto her, Give me to drink.
Could I have a drink?
For the disciples were gone away into the city to buy meat,
by food.
Then said the woman of Samaria unto him,
How is it that Thou, being a Jew,
asks his drink of me, which am a woman of
Samaria, for the Jews have no dealings with the Samaritans? We need to talk about them.
Sounds like she's saying, we shouldn't be talking to each other. Jesus would have
been condemned, of course, for talking with her, and she would be condemned. Think
about the fact that when the Assyrians came in in 721 and basically destroyed the northern
kingdom, that, anciently, often what kingdoms would do who are successful in winning a war,
is they will demoralize you by one, taking many of your people to their country and taking
some of their people and putting them in your country.
And that's exactly what happened after the northern tribes were
taken captive. People came into Judea and people and other parts of Israel. And they began
to live there. And many of them brought their ideals, their religious false religious beliefs
and practices with them. Eventually, they began to be intermarried and they grew up a people that came
to be known as the Samaritans, and the Jews looked upon them as kind of half-breeds and not worthy of
spending time with. Let me just read a few things that were beliefs. I made a list of things that are
beliefs of the Samaritans. One, they only accepted the Pentateuch, the first five books of Moses,
they did not accept the rest of the Bible, the other books of the Old Testament. They believe
that Moses was the final seal of the prophets. He's the prophet that they hold up. Third,
they believed in Jehovah alone after their own fashion, most of the people by the New Testament times.
A belief in one God, Jehovah.
A belief that Mount Girozim was the holy mount, this is in Shechem, and that their temples should be built there,
and their sacrifices should be offered there, rather than any other place in Israel, including Jerusalem.
And you can imagine the iron that brought up with the Jews toward them.
And finally, this one, which isn't as obvious from the scripture itself, but a belief in
what was called a ta'eb, T-A-H-E-B, or restoreer, who would bring in a new dispensation, teach the law, reestablish proper worship,
and he believed in a final day of reward hereafter for the righteous and punishment for
the wicked.
The Jews, of course, looked upon the Samaritans as ritually impure.
It was said, this is kind of gross, but it said, Samaritan women were according to one
passage in the Mishnah, minstruence from the cradle, which is a pretty harsh thing to say.
For that matter, Jesus drinking what she offers would have made Jesus richurally
impure by the standards of among the Jews. Now, we come then to verse 10.
Jesus answered and said unto her,
if thou knewest the gift of God and who it is that saith to thee give me to drink, thou
wouldst of ask of him and he would have given thee living water.
And here again, Jesus is going to be speaking on one level, and she's going to be understanding
on another.
If the woman saith on him, sir, thou hast nothing to draw with. And the well is deep.
From whence thend has thou,
living, where did you get this living one?
Meaning flowing water, flowing water.
Where did you get this?
Totally missed it.
Aren't thou greater than our father, Jacob,
which gave us the well and drank there of himself
and his children and his cattle?
Jesus answered and said into her,
who saw a verdr a drink of this water,
shall thirst again? I noticed he didn't answer that first question. You greater than our father,
Jacob? Well, actually. That's a good point, Hank. Yeah, he doesn't answer that question. I'll go
to your second question. But who's to have a drink of the water, I shall give him, shall never thirst, but the water that I shall give him shall be in him well of water, springing
up into everlasting life. The woman says unto him, sir, I'd like to have some of this
water. So I don't have to come back to this well and draw. You can see how fascinating
and beautiful this is. He's talking to her and she's missing the point.
And then, of course, he thinks, get a little more touchy here.
Verse 16, Jesus said on her, go call thy husband and come hither.
The woman answered and said, and said, and him, I have no husband.
Jesus said unto her, thou hast well said.
You've spoken the truth.
I have no husband.
For thou hast had five husbands, and he whom thou
now hast is not thy husband, in that sets thou truly in it. It was believed that Jews
would have been true probably for Samaritan's too should never have more than three marriage
partners. She would have been considered grossly immoral. Okay. Grossly immoral. That would be again why she comes
late in the day. Women usually went in the evening, coolness of the evening, to draw water.
She did not want to go then. She chose a different time to go there because she knew the kind of
scolding and blasting she'd get from the super righteous. Then the woman said to him,
sir, I perceive that they are a prophet, one of the real profound points in the scripture.
You think? Our father's worshiped in this mountain, and you say that in Jerusalem is the place
where men ought to worship. Jesus said under woman, believe me, the hour comeeth,
when you shall neither in this mountain nor yet
at Jerusalem worship the Father, ye worship, you know not what. We know what we worship
for salvation is of the Jews. Now, people read that latter part, later they say to read that and
say, well, so it was Judaism a way to go or was the Jesus gospel the way to go? Well, I think this is a way of saying the Jews have revealed through Scripture
Jehovah and who God is and who we should be worshipping and how we should be worshipping
It sounds like she's saying well who's right the Jews of the Samaritans and he's saying listen the Jews
Have the rightful temple
That's right. We're in the right place
The hour comeeth when you shall neither in this mountain nor yet
at Jerusalem worship the Father in verse 21.
I'm not completely sure what that means.
I suppose it could have reference to by 70 AD,
it won't matter much because the Romans
are going to come in and destroy what you have here.
But then we get into the essence
of this little conversation.
The hour comeeth and now is, when true worshipers share worship the Father in Spirit and in truth,
for the Father seeketh such to worship Him.
And then the next verse, God is a Spirit, as we read in King James, and they that worship
Him must worship Him in Spirit and in truth.
Now, of course, that isn't the way it reads.
It reads, God is spirit.
God is spirit.
Well, the 93rd section of the doctrine of covenant says, man is spirit.
To say, God is spirit is the same thing as saying, God can only be understood by the power
of the spirit.
God can only be approached by the power of the spirit.
God can only be grasped by the power of the Spirit and spiritual things.
I had this thrown in my face so many times as a young missionary. That's ridiculous.
You believe God has a body. It says, here, God is a Spirit. No, it says, God is Spirit.
Man is Spirit as well. The woman said, I know the Messiah, comeeth, which is called Christ.
When he has come, he will tell us all things. This is one of the first
very direct statements that speak unto the M. He. Now, how scholars can read the Gospel of John
and not believe the Jesus, I mean, I've heard so many times through the years, Jesus never told
the people who He was. Well, He's telling her, I am the Messiah.
And using that phrase, I am. That's right. Something I didn't understand,
way back, was that just as there are liberal and conservative in political realms,
there are liberal and conservative in Christianity, and that some, the far end of the
liberal end would say, well, Jesus was a great moral teacher,
but he was not divine.
And I think one of the President Benson's strong things
about the Book of Mormon was its declaration
that Jesus is the Son of God.
And can you talk about that a little bit?
Now some scholars would say Jesus never said
he was the Son of God.
Yeah, just a little bit of a historical background if I can. In the early 1920s,
a movement grew up in the United States that came to be known as liberal Protestantism. It was affected, of course, by
what we would call higher criticism or
literary critical historical studies of the Bible. I
remember when I first got into a class
at Florida State, an Old Testament seminar, the professor said early in the semester,
now what we're going to do is we're going to bracket out in our study some things so that we're
not fighting always about issues. We're going to bracket out divine intervention, predictive prophecy,
divine intervention, predictive prophecy and miracles. I thought, what else is there? By the early 1920s, there's been a swing on the part of Christians to a liberal branch
of Christianity. You're talking today, be groups like, obviously, unitarianism, united
methodism, united church of Christ, groups that would not worry much
about the divinity thing, Jesus as a good person, as a nice guy.
The reaction to that was a swing right that takes place some 20 or 30 years later, a
group of Christians who swung to the right.
Now let me just say, on the far right would have been the fundamentalist,
fundamentalist Baptist, for example. They swung toward the middle is what their claim
is and they call themselves evangelicals, the new evangelicals. They're reacting to
the liberal Protestants. They don't want to go quite that far over there to fundamentalism
where you don't believe in science or you believe
that everybody ought to be condemned. What we see today is a growth in a liberalism of Christianity.
The day we're in right now, the day of where some 70 million people in the United States alone
have walked away from any form of religion or religious organization, 70 to 80
million people. That's a nation. And consequently, you also hear much these days
from some pulpits about, let's don't hang up on whether there was a real
resurrection. What that really represents is coming to life spiritually. I think
these things don't happen haphazardly, that is to say, the movement
toward no religion, the fight against organized religion, the growth of the numbers of people
that become nuns, you know, when he asked, meaning whenever they are asked to write religious
preference, they put none. These are those that want to be spiritual but
not religious. And to me that means I don't want to go to church. I'm just going to have
my beliefs. I think we have a challenge with liberal Christianity and certain branches
of Christianity that I would say one of the real differences between the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints and the community of Christ, formerly
the reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Many wonderful people there, but the Church has basically moved leftward to basically being
a United Methodist faith, a belief in the Trinity, a belief that there is no one true Church,
and so on and so on.
Great people, but it's been a surrendering
to this left movement.
I mean, that's a comfortable movement.
That's people as Elder Holland would say,
they want to smooth God.
They don't want a hard God that asks you to keep his commandments.
They want to smooth God.
He doesn't ask much of you.
That would be my reaction to your question.
Sorry, so long on that.
No, I just think the the point of Jesus saying I that
Speak into the M he and
acknowledging that he's the son of God in divinity. It's too easy for people sometimes say well
I think he was a great moral teacher, you know, what CS Lewis said about that. Well, you can't have it that way
That's right. He either was the son of God or he was crazy or something
can't have it that way. That's right. He either was the Son of God or he was crazy or something.
Verse 26, I that speak under the M on the follow-up on what you said, John, I that speak under the M he. You notice that he is a tallicized? What does that mean?
That's not on the manuscript. So what you're saying is right, it's the I am statement. It really reads
I that speak under the M. I that speak under the am. And there's a nice footnote comment there. The
term I am used here in the Greek is identical with the Septuagint usage in Exodus 314, which identifies
Jehovah. So I am that I am, which is such a great name. I've not I was. I used to be, I am, it's a great name. Well, our Samaritan woman has obviously been touched.
And so by verse 29, she's saying to the people in town,
come see this man who told me everything I ever did.
A little bit of an exaggeration, but she's got the point there.
He's looked right through me is not this, the Christ, the Messiah.
And they went out of the city and
came unto him. Here we go again with levels of understanding. And meanwhile, the disciples
prayed him, saying, Master, eat, but he said unto them, I have meat to eat that you
know not of. Therefore said the disciples, one to another, have any man brought him something
to eat? Jesus said in the,
my meat is to do the will of him that sent me
and to finish his work.
When you read this, my meat is to do the will of him
that sent me and to finish his work,
reminds me of Joseph Smith saying,
it is my meditation all the day and more than my meat
and drink to know how I shall make the saints
comprehend the visions that roll
like an overflowing surge before my mind. Powerful statement. Jesus used that similar language.
My meat, I feast on, I find strength in, serving, helping, building people up.
I think it's fun. I've got in my margin the different things that the woman at the well calls Jesus and there's a progression
She goes from how is it that thou being a Jew she goes from Jew to Sir to profit to Christ
Yeah, it's kind of fun to see that progression with her
You know in one of the touching things too is chapter three
He meets with a very religious man, Nicodemus.
Chapter four, he meets with clearly unreligious woman.
I think this is organized this way on purpose to show Jesus is out to find all the sheep,
every one of them.
Didn't they travel in a way to avoid going through Samaria?
Was this unusual for him to even be there.
Jews didn't generally go through Samaria,
they would go around it.
Clearly Jesus went through Samaria on purpose.
He had a divine appointment, he wanted to attend to.
And interestingly, what he's going to do
is teach the gospel to Gentiles, if you will,
long before the Cornelius episode in Acts 10.
This becomes a half-step, if you will, toward taking the gospel to all the world.
So that when we get into the book of Acts, and you come to Acts chapter 8,
Philip is going to go into Samarian, have tremendous success. Why?
Because Jesus has already laid a foundation. Yeah, verse 39 says, many of the Samaritans of that city believed on him for the saying of the woman,
which testified he told me all that I ever did.
And then in verse 40, he stays there two days.
Many more believe because of his own word and said in the woman,
now we believe not because of thy saying, for we have heard
in ourselves, and we know that this is indeed the Christ, the Savior of the world.
That's a beautiful statement.
Bob, let's compare those two one more time.
I really like that exercise.
I didn't want to cut it short.
Here you've got a male Jewish educated leader, and you've got a Gentile female immoral woman. Yes. Outcast. Outcast. Which one becomes the missionary?
That's correct. It seemed to almost matter more at this point, at least, matter more to the woman
who sends it been greater. I mean, isn't that a little bit like what's the, is it Luke 7? Her
sense of her given for she loved much.
Not much, yeah.
It's fascinating to me that he comes in the dark
and she comes in the light.
And the light, yeah, you could put those side by side,
that's a fun exercise.
My mind is no question that John organized it just this way
to make the point that Jesus comes for everyone.
And at a certain point you just say,
you know what?
Sin is sin.
Everybody needs Jesus.
And I don't care whether you're in the depths of sin,
or you are a hyper religious person,
you may need Jesus in some cases
more than the horrible sinner
because you're sinners of a higher level,
a sin against charity.
Public and the Pharisee, a parable, fits that.
The one who bangs on his chest and says,
God be merciful to me, a sinner.
And he goes home justified.
That's right.
The Lord is much more open to people who acknowledge,
who acknowledge their sin.
I was just thinking of a book of Mormon corollary
where Almas preaching to his sons,
and you come to Shiblon, in chapter 38 of Alma,
do not say, oh God, I thank thee that we are better than our brethren, but rather say, oh Lord,
forgive my unworthiness and remember my brethren and mercy. And then I love this.
Ye acknowledge your unworthiness before God at all times. And of course, King Benjamin teaches the same thing. The way to retain
your remission of sins from day to day is to one, acknowledge the power, the greatness,
the goodness of God, and my own nothingness without him. That's how you maintain and retain
a remission of sins. Let's begin with the verse 46 of John 4. So Jesus came again into Cana of Galilee, where he made the water wine,
and there was a certain nobleman whose son was sick at Capernaum.
When he heard that Jesus was come out of Judea into Galilee,
he went unto him and besought him that he would come down
and heal his son, for he was at the point of death.
Then said Jesus unto him,
except you see signs and wonders you will not believe. and heal his son for he was at the point of death. Then said Jesus unto him,
except you see signs and wonders, you will not believe.
The nobleman, Seth unto him,
sir, come down, air my child, I, before my child dies.
Jesus, Seth unto him, go thy way, thy son, liveeth.
And the man believed the word that Jesus had spoken unto him,
and he went his way. It's intriguing because you would think Jesus would have to be there or touch them,
or say something to them, or inquire about their faith.
I don't know what the distance was, but it sounds like a long distance,
just another kind of miracle that he could do.
Many years ago, my wife and I were struggling with family members that was really having
difficulty with life, struggling with life, and it just sort of worn us down.
We were in a meeting with one of the members of the 12, and he listened, and he was very
moved and concerned.
And I remember he gave us each a blessing and as he put his hands on Sean's head
He gave her a blessing
personally and then he said I bless you and through you I
Bless your children as though my hands were laid upon their head right now that I think is what we're talking about
Isn't it wow yeah?
That, I think, is what we're talking about, isn't it? Wow. Yeah.
In other words, the distance doesn't matter sometimes.
And I had a loved one that was having difficulty
a long ways away.
And I remember the number of times I've said to Lord in prayer,
I have a faith that if I could be there,
I could give them a blessing and they could be made well.
And I've asked the Lord, would you bless them
as though I were there? I think
there's something to that that's significant. Distance is not an issue.
I have a statement, another statement of Elder Bruce Arma Kanky, he said, though he was
in Kena, Jesus gave the command and the nobleman's son, some 20 miles away in Copernium was healed.
By the power of faith, the sicker healed regardless of their
geographical location. God is God of the universe. His power is everywhere. Manifest.
Beautiful.
We said, Bob, this has been fantastic. Let me read to you something out of the manual
here. I really like it says at a marriage feast in Cana, Christ changed water into wine.
An event John called the beginning of miracles. That's true in more than
one sense. While this was the first miracle Jesus performed publicly, it can also symbolize another
miraculous beginning, the process of our hearts being transformed as we become ever more like the
Savior. The miracle of a lifetime begins with the decision to follow Jesus Christ, to change and
live a better life through Him. This miracle can be so life-changing that being born again, so now they bring in Nicodemus, is
one of the best ways to describe it. But rebirth is just the beginning of the path of discipleship.
Christ's words to the Samaritan woman at the well remind us that if we continue on the
path, eventually the gospel will become a well of water inside us, bringing up into everlasting life.
Love how the manual kind of said, there's a beginning miracle here of changing water into
wine, and it can become a born again experience, and then eventually a well of water.
I thought it was a great way to put these three chapters together.
What do you hope our listeners and feel free to become
Grandpa Mella here? What do you hope our listeners get out of these four chapters? Is there
doing their best to live the gospel and to raise righteous children? What do you hope
they get out of it? Let me read you something first. I brought this for some reason and
maybe this is part of it. I'm reading to you from a man named
NT Wright. NT Wright, Nicholas Thomas Wright, Tom Wright, perhaps one of the most respected and
beloved believing scholars of the New Testament in the world. That's a large thing. Let me just read
what he said. He's talking about rebirth. I've lost my birth certificate. It's
the sort of thing that happens when you move house, which we did not long ago. I knew
where it was in the old house. It may have been accidentally thrown away, but I suspect
it was put into a very, very safe place, and the place was so safe that I couldn't find
it. Fortunately, I don't need it at the moment. I have a passport and other documents. Sooner or
later, if it doesn't show up, I shall have to get a replacement, which means going back to the town
where I was born and paying to have a new copy made from the register there. But, of course,
the one thing that a birth certificate isn't needed for is to prove that a birth took place.
needed for is to prove that a birth took place. Here I am a human being.
Obviously, I must have been born.
The fact that at the moment, I can't officially prove when and where is a minor detail.
When Christians discuss the new birth, the second birth, or the birth from above, they
often forget this. Some people experience their entry into Christian faith as a huge,
tumultuous event with a dramatic build-up, a painful moment of decision,
and then tidal waves of relief, joy, exhilaration, forgiveness and love.
They are then easily tempted, and there are movements of thought within Christian culture,
which make this temptation all the more powerful.
Tempted to think that this moment itself is the center of what it means to be Christian.
As though what God wanted was simply to give people a single, wonderful spiritual experience
to be remembered ever afterwards with a warm glow.
But that's a bit like someone framing their birth certificate, hanging it on the wall, and
insisting on showing it to everyone who comes into the house.
What matters for most purposes is not that once upon a time you were born, of course,
sometimes it matters that you can prove when and where you were born, what matters is
that you are alive now.
And that your present life, day by day, moment by moment, is showing evidence of health and
strength and purpose.
Physical birth is often painful and difficult for the baby as well as for the mother.
But you don't spend your life talking about what a difficult birth you had.
Unless for some tragic reason it has left you with medical problems, you get on with being
the person you are now.
So when Jesus talks to Nicodemus about the new birth, and when John highlights this conversation
by making it the first of several in-depth discussions Jesus has in this gospel, we shouldn't suppose that this means
that we should spend all our time thinking about the moment of our own spiritual birth.
It matters that it happened, of course. Sadly, there are many inside the church as well
as outside whose present state suggests that one ought to go back to examine whether
in fact a real spiritual birth took place at all.
But where there are signs of life, it's more important to feed and nurture it
than to spend much time going over and over what happened at the moment of birth. Do you see
that it's beautiful? That's awesome. What he's addressing himself to is that so often,
Christians will say, I became a Christian when I was born again on January 12, 1969.
And that's great.
The real issue becomes, yeah, what kind of a person are you now?
I mean, this gets at the whole issue of being born again
as a gradual process.
Let me give you one personal experience of I may.
As a teenager, and just before I left on a mission,
I had some relationships
with young women, good girls, but more than once, they made a wise decision and left me.
In fact, in one case, I found out that while they were going with me, they were growing
with someone else at the same time.
It just sort of bledioned my heart.
So I went on a mission, had a good mission, came home,
two years after being home, marry my wife, Shana. She's an amazing, amazing person. But I had a
problem. I had a jealousy problem. And it dated back to those times when people were dishonest to me
or hurt me. And time after time, I would say or do things that really hurt her.
One day, I remember we were sitting in the car
where now the BYU law school is, it was a parking lot.
We were sitting there in the car,
and she looked at me and she said,
have I ever done anything?
Really done anything that would cause you to doubt my loyalty to you?"
I said, no. Then she said, why then do you continue to torture me? It was a word torture
that got my attention. And I knew then and there that something had to change.
I began a serious season of prayer and fasting and seeking and hoping.
And it took a few months, but I look back now and I can remember when it was no longer there.
I think of those moments back then when I would say insulting things to her
and it just kills me. I can't imagine me doing that. I know of the reality of the new birth because
I've experienced it. As I prayed, I remember saying to the Lord, I sensed that unless this gets
solved, I'm going to ruin a beautiful thing. And it was something they had to be changed. And so it
was, think heaven. And I think being born again, it sort of defies, there's a sense in which
it defies physical birth. Because in many ways we're born again and again and again.
Elder Maconkey said it, we're born again a little bit here and a little later we're born again and again and again. Elder Maconkey said it, we're born again a little bit here and a little later we're born
again.
We spent our life being born a new in the sense that we come alive to things we feel
or we didn't feel before.
If I find myself thinking or doing things I shouldn't, well, I do everything I can to
solve that problem.
But there are some things I can't do to solve that problem, and only God can solve.
I just think the concept of the New Birth, we need to be wise in how we look at it, because, while there are dramatic experiences, again and again and again, especially in the Book of Mormon,
of people being born again almost in an instant. That is seldom the case. Those
experiences are revealed and put into the scriptures because they are so dramatic. It would
be like supposing that every time we pray, we need to have an enus experience. I'm guessing
enus didn't have that kind of experience many times in his life. It was sufficient. I think it would be wrong for us to pose,
to suppose, that we need to be worrying and worrying and worrying. I had a young lady when I was
teaching early in my teaching at BYU, a young lady, a beautiful young lady in my class,
Book of Mormon. She came into my office and said, could I speak to you? Certainly, come in.
She began to cry. And this is,
when I say a beautiful girl, I don't just mean pretty. I mean, she glowed. There was
just a light that just burned within her. And in class, by the way, she was the head of
the class. She knew the gospel. She came in and she said, she's starting crying. I said,
what's the matter? She said, I'm so ashamed. And I said, and now is this something you want to talk to me about? Or should you talk to your
bishop? She said, no, it's not that. She said, I don't think I've ever had an experience like I
almost had. At that moment, I thought of the different ways I could answer her. I guess I could have
said, I could have said, really? That is really too bad.
Or, whoa, you better watch out when you cross the street.
Or, what if I'd said this, or hang on, you'll have it one day eventually.
It would be wrong for me to do that.
Why? And I said to her, I can see in your countenance.
You don't have to have an almy experience.
You've grown bit by bit by bit, but you don't notice it, but other
people do. The whole notion of being born again, we have to bring it down to life and say, I begin
to get better at things. I begin to get better at this and this with the Lord's help. In my case,
gradually, gradually, gradually, jealousy left me and now seems like something that horrifies
me that I ever felt that way.
But it took time.
I think I probably got this from you, brother Millic, but President Ezra Tafed Benson
said, for every Paul, for every enus, for every King Lemona, there are hundreds and thousands
of others for whom the process of repentance is much more subtle,
much more imperceptible day by day. They move close to the Lord, little realizing they are building
a godlike life. It's a beautiful statement. They live quiet lives of goodness, service, and commitment,
and they are like the laymenites, who the lords who are baptized with fire and with the holy ghost,
and they knew it not.
And like you said, Aldemann, Kanky said, oh, those are so extreme, they get written up in the
scriptures, but yeah, I think that's a really important point to make. It's a warning is too strong,
but it's a caution for teachers of the gospel. Yeah. That we not so dramatize the experiences,
the dramatic experiences in scripture to the point where
we have students leaving thinking they've got to have something like that or they haven't
really been born again. When in fact day by day they're getting better and better and
better. That's true with homemakers, that's true with men or the priesthood is true with
children. The ones in the scripture are exceptional, not typical. I think Elder Christophe
says something recently in the same way.
But that is helpful because you may think, I'm supposed to feel like this or else I'm not
doing it right.
You don't need an album experience because you haven't been where Alma was.
Thank you, Evans.
Good point.
It is a process and in many cases it's a slow process.
Here's a thought and a question for both of you, straight out of the Come Follow Me manual,
says Elder Jeffrey Arhalland taught,
quote,
the first great truth of all eternity
is that God loves us
with all of his heart,
mind and strength.
And then this question,
how have you felt the love of God
through the gift of his son?
We want all of our listeners to feel
that if they can, in all the various ways that God manifests Himself. How have you felt
the love of God through the gift of His Son? Well, I start first personally. The reason
I can bear testimony of the power of Christ to forgive sins is He's forgiven my sins.
I think that's where most of us have to begin and say,
I know what it's like to feel awful. I know what it's life to feel dark. I know what it's life to feel like. I'm never going to make it. I've been there. But I also know what it's like for that to
be lifted, like a film, and to feel clean, to feel strengthened, to feel edified again. I testify of the Christ the
Thoma because I've experienced Christ the Thoma and I continue to again and again and again.
Let me give you a cute story. When I was State Prison, a young lady came in,
beautiful girl, return missionary came in for a temple recommend. So I ask all the right questions
and she gave all the right answers. I asked this question.
So spiritually speaking, tell me, how are you doing?
And she said, present milk, I am doing so, so good.
I said, well, how good are you doing?
She said, I haven't had to repent in months.
I said, whoa, you are doing good.
I don't think I've ever met anybody like you.
Now we talked about it.
And clearly what she's saying is,
I haven't done something so horrible
that I had to confess it to my bishop.
Right.
And she missed the whole point that President Nelson's
now trying to teach us, that is, it's a daily process.
And to help her see that was a really fun experience
because when she thought a repentance,
she thought, oh, I got to go talk to the bishop.
Oh, I mean, repentance is improvement.
Repentance is refinement.
Repentance is growth.
I've experienced it in a lot of ways.
I've experienced it too.
I've experienced the love of Jesus through the years, through people who changed my life. That is, the Lord had blessed them
with a light and a power about them, and my life was never the same after that. I think back of
key people in my life, teachers, Sunday school teachers, priest advisors, mission presidents,
wonderful little lady that taught us in Sunday school. It's one of the most distant memories
I have of sitting in Sunday school, her teaching lesson in bearing her testimony. I'll never be the same.
I think, for example, we've got a little branch made up largely of sisters. This is in Louisiana.
Not many brothers there. Either their husbands had died or their husbands were in active or
their husbands weren't members of the church, but it was the testimonies they bore in testimony
meeting that moved me to the core. Normally, you think a teenager would hear somebody
old talking to you, oh yeah. No, there's something about that. So the Lord's blessed me through
other people. The Lord's blessed me through the teaching of great teachers.
I've been moved by His Spirit as I've listened to people who are with they teach.
There is an integrity about them that touches me.
I felt the love of Christ in my life, a great deal from watching myself change, watching
gradually as things that I valued so highly matter-precious
little to me now. Things that I hated before that are now an important part of my life.
There are a lot of ways the love of Christ can bless us, and it isn't just through forgiveness.
The number of times I've been physically very, very ill, and I had to speak somewhere. I was on a know-you-religion tour through Alaska.
And we came into one big city and I had a horrible, horrible, horrible headache. I was nauseous.
And the people picked me up and I was going to stay at their home and I said to them,
I'm so sick, I'm so sorry, but could I go lie down, sure?
I'm lying down and after a while they call me down for dinner and the last thing I wanted
was dinner.
And the smell in the air made me sicker, but we got to the church finally and I'm sitting
on the stand while the state president is conducting the meeting and I'm thinking
myself and I mean to be gross. I was trying to decide whether I was going to pass out or throw up.
Which would be less offensive to the congregation. And I prayed and prayed. I stood up. The headache was gone immediately.
I spoke for an hour and 20 minutes, sat down and the it came back. I thought, have you guys
experienced that? That sometimes the Lord blesses you for the benefit of others. It was a
funny experience. I just think that present ironing was the one that taught so beautifully,
the value of sitting down at the end of each day or frequently and writing the things that the Lord
has done for you. Writing down the things the Lord has done for you.
Document the hand of God in your life. Never forget that. Yeah.
That's it. Yeah.
This topic in John 3 of being born again and you must be born again. I find that phrase
throughout the standard work. She must be born again. So I ask my class, if you must be born again and I find that phrase throughout the standard or she must
be born again.
So I ask my class, if we must be born again, we must figure out what that means.
And is being baptized the same as being born again.
And I get answers all over the place.
And I think what we've arrived at through statements from the living prophets and things is that baptism is an
event, but being born again is a process, as you have said. It's kind of like my temple wedding
was an event, but having a celestial marriage is an ongoing process, mostly of me repenting.
I love what you said about your born again and again and again. So yeah, baptism, I can tell you the date and the time and show you a certificate if I
could find it.
But being born again, ongoing and let's be patient with ourselves as we keep ongoing.
And maybe we're born again to principles at a time.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Something you might have thought so strange and unusual on odd.
You look back on it and you say, I totally missed that. I think I understand it now. I mean,
maybe it isn't this large grand process so much as it is little pieces at a time of my soul
being born again. My understanding of this and my appreciation for that. I think one of the things
too that we ought to say, and that is this, because the brethren
have stressed it so much, and I've seen it so much, dear, dear friends of mine, who were
once very strong members of the church, very much involved in the church in its programs,
who experienced, well, I don't know what else to call, but spiritual amnesia.
They leave the church, and then they've got to find some reason for having
left. There has to be a rationale whether they realize they join it or not what they're doing is
saying, I'm redefining my past. I'm going to say, I suppose that what I experienced in the temple
didn't really happen. I suppose that what I felt when I bore testimony is a missionary, that wasn't real.
And I know that Elder Holland's talked about this a lot.
That is, once you've had that kind of an experience, don't run away from it.
Keep those things in memory. That concept of remember, we had an experience
my youngest son and I went down to Louisiana for a visit many years ago.
My custom, because I'm such a sentimental cost,
is to always go back and visit old places where I was,
which drives my family crazy, they're bored to death.
But I took my son and we drove north of Baton Rouge
to a little community where we had once attended
a branch that became a ward.
And I said to my son, you see that church house there,
it was art church, he said, yeah, I said, you know what?
You see that white paint on the outside?
He said, yeah, I said, I put that there.
He said, really?
I said, yeah, and I'll show you where else I painted.
I painted there.
You see how steep that roof is right there?
Yeah.
I helped put those planks up there.
And I slid down that roof once and a nail caught me and I still have a scar.
And I went on and of course, he's thinking, what in the heck are you doing?
What is this about?
And what I was saying to him was, there's something of me in that.
That is the memory I have of, I said, that's the building where I first bore my testimony.
That's the building where I left and I went on a mission. What it
reminded me of was this from the book of Mormon in chapter 18 of Muzaya. It came
to pass that this was all done in Mormon. Yeh, by the waters of Mormon and the
forest that was near the waters of Mormon. Yeh, the place of Mormon, the waters
of Mormon, the forest of Mormon. How beautiful are they to the eyes of them who
there came to the knowledge of their Redeemer?
Yeah, and how blessed are they for they shall sing to his praise forever?
There are those moments of memory that are so sacred that we need to hold on to, that when
I'm having a moment of doubt or time of doubt, I need to stop and say, wait a minute, let's
think about what I've experienced. Let's think about what I've experienced.
Let's think about what I've come to know. Can I really doubt that avoiding the spiritual
amnesia that is so rampant out there, someone literally having to reinterpret their past?
I think that's sad and Elder Holland has taught so many times. Let's remember what you
experienced. Keeping your head and your heart, what you went through.
I like King Benjamin. He taught me commandments, but keep it before their eyes.
And a Mormon to Marona, saying, I'm sorry, may not the things which I've written,
grieve the things are so bad, but may Christ lift the up and may his sufferings
and his death, his showing our body to our fathers, let that great phrase rest in your mind forever.
There are there be some things that are in our heart and mind that never leave.
Yeah.
What a great day we've had with Dr. Robert Milleth.
He's our friend Bob to us.
Thank you so much for being here.
We've loved having you.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Soronson.
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And of course, we want to remember our founder, the late Steve Sorenson.
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We're continuing in the new testament on Follow Him.
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