Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Joseph Smith History 1:27-65 : Dr. Michael MacKay: Part I
Episode Date: January 10, 2021Imagine Joseph Smith, not as the prophet of the Restoration, but as a teenager filled with a cheery temperament. What was Joseph like before he was a Latter-day Saint? We get to know a teenager as he ...becomes a married prophet as Dr. Michael MacKay explains what it means that Joseph “has a work . . . to do." Suppose each religion and people are like a unique, indispensable fabric woven together by the golden thread of the Gospel, temple covenants, and the Savior; what is our part in the sewing? Dr. Michael MacKay reminds us that every human being has already chosen the Savior. Join us as we discuss how Joseph Smith brings forth what is to become the most inclusive religion the world has ever known.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study. I'm Hank Smith. And I'm John by the way. We love to learn, we love to laugh,
we want to learn and laugh with you. As together we follow him.
Hello, my friends. Welcome to our third episode of Follow Him, a podcast devoted to helping individuals and families with their come follow me study. My name is Hank Smith. I'm
here with my co-host John, by the way. Welcome, John.
I've got my pencil in my hand ready this time because I took so many notes the last couple
of times, so I'm ready.
Today, we are going to study the second half of Joseph Smith history and I looked
through my list of friends and people who owe me favors and I found the exact
person I want to talk to about this. We're going to interview today one of the
churches foremost experts on this part of this section of church history, the 1820s. His name is Dr. Mike
McKay. Welcome, Mike. Thank you. One of the kindest, most faithful people you will ever meet, and
he is brilliant. I know Mike, you worked at the Joseph Smith Papers project, right? Yeah, yeah. How
long did you do that? A little over three years, the earliest period of Joseph Smith's revelatory production
is what I worked on at the Joseph Smith papers.
The book that got me really hooked on Dr. McKay
was a book called From Darkness Untillide.
He wrote that with Dr. Garrett Dirkmont,
who's also gonna be one of our guests soon.
Joseph Smith's Sear Stones was another book,
and I've recommended that to many students who say,
I wanna know more about Sear Stones.
I'll say, well, there is a book for you, Joseph Smith seerstones.
That's just one of the ways that God reveals his word to his prophets.
I was so interested in that.
Like, how does a single item become the mechanism that bring forth God's word?
And so I'm really interested in that.
I'm especially interested in his revelations.
But can you imagine the revelation that's being produced
in the restoration is so prolific?
In part, it's because you've read God's Word,
and it works within you, and you want to be a part of it.
You want to find a way to follow God more.
When I read these things, it's not like a normal book.
You're talking about something that sometimes even in its most dull moments, it has the
ability to really inspire and change our lives in a matter of minutes.
Make us into better people, which I just don't find other things in my life that enable
me to change so readily than these God revealed in the restoration.
I feel like I was thinking of the words of one of the verses of the Spirit of God like a fire is burning
and we get used to singing it, but think about what we're singing.
The visions and blessings of old are returning and angels are coming to visit the earth.
It's happening and that's what's happening in this time period, especially right here.
I have my scriptures open to Joseph Smith history,
and the manual has this starting out around verse 27.
Now, our last discussion we had with Dr. Harper,
we left off with the first vision.
Joseph says in verse 27,
that he just pursued his common vocations in life
until 1823.
So it's been three years since he's had
any sort of experience that he's going to record for us.
So Joseph Smith during those years is 15 to 18.
Those of you who have a 15 to 18 year old
or you are a 15 to 18 year old,
you can imagine the things that you're interested in.
It's a formative time of your life
where you're wondering
what to do, you're following the influence of your parents
and the environment around you,
and you're hoping to kind of make something of yourself.
It's times in which you're feeling around
and you're trying to figure out the boundaries of your life.
And I think this is exactly what Joseph is doing.
Probably the microscope that you should put on this period
is we always see Joseph as the Latter-day Saint Prophet.
And at this point in our study,
like this isn't a Latter-day Saint Prophet.
This is an individual who is not a Latter-day Saint,
has not had the experiences that we usually place on him.
And so you kind of get to see,
what does Joseph Smith do before he's the Joseph Smith
that we know?
And you get to see him trying to find boundaries.
Boundaries are good for everybody.
And so imagine him groping around,
trying to figure out what his boundaries are.
And you literally get almost six years of him doing this.
Especially these three years
between the first vision and the first time he sees Moroni. This is Joseph Smith staying in his own words.
He says, a mingling with all kinds of society, I frequently fell into many foolish errors
and displayed the weaknesses of youth and the follies of human nature, which I don't know that he's
totally regretting this. He's actually saying, you know what?
This is how I figured out who I was.
Like I worked to know the boundaries.
It's not like I tried to breach them and constantly knock down the boundaries.
I was trying to find out the appropriate way to be a good person.
And in the process, yeah, I made some missteps,
but he does say they weren't too bad.
When you said ages 15 through 18, I thought of my judgment day and that part comes up on the video
screen. I'm going to be like, fast forward, fast forward, fast forward that. You've got to skip that,
right? Like one of the passages, Joseph Smith said, he says, I fell into jovial company, right?
And I think, I think, well, I've been trying to fall into jovial company my whole life. These
people are fun.
Hank Smith is a pretty jovial person.
He does say don't suppose me guilty of any great or malignant sins.
I was so impressed when Dr. Harper mentioned this and I want to see what you think about this, Mike.
He talked about how this certain account that we have here was written in the late 1830s
and how they're going through some of the most severe persecution, maybe the hardest year of his life,
is 1838 and 1839.
Liberty Jail, seeing his family and friends all being kicked out of the Satan Missouri,
and he mentions in verse 28 that he was being persecuted by those who are ought to have been his friends.
And if they really think he's deluded, why didn't they come to reclaim him in a proper and affectionate matter? What do you think about
that idea of his current circumstances of the 1830s influencing this storytelling?
I usually think it's defensive. I don't think he's taking the offense. You never hear him say names, you never have him identify specific people.
And in reality, he's gone through this very serious tough time. You know, you have hundreds of
people that leave after this economic crisis and this troubled time in the church. And so this
time period, he actually has the most ammunition to fire at people who are in many cases
demonstratably lying about him. And when they're not lying, they're
misinterpreting him.
How quick do I on social media? Oh, yeah, let's see if I can hint at who
is really bugging me here, you know, who's really treating me badly. To me,
that was one of the most enlightening ideas is when we read what
Joseph Smith writes, we have to take and account his current circumstances. Do you know what I like
here too? Is, you know, Elder Neil Anderson talked about, talked to those who actually knew Joseph,
and he says in a couple of places, here I had disposition to commit such sins was never in my nature.
And at the very bottom, this will not seem very strange to anyone who recollects my youth
and is acquainted with my native cheery temperament.
I'd love that phrase, but he's talking about
well, people know me, the people that know me know me.
I like what you said, Mike, about that he's a gentleman here
in the way he described that.
It really gives us an insight into his disposition
and character there.
I like that, John.
I like that idea of, if you want to get to know Joseph Smith, let's read his own words
and those who knew him best.
Let's get back, Mike.
What do you think when he says, I was guilty of levity.
I don't want to spend too much time on what he sees as his sins, but when he says he's guilty
of levity, I'm like, oh, me too, brother, me too.
There could be different readings of this.
I looked up in the 1828 dictionary, what it meant.
But if I were to read it straight out of its context in the sentence, I would say something
like lightheartedness.
I think that's probably true of Joseph throughout his life.
He's guilty of lightheartedness.
And I think sometimes this is that character trait that we love about Joseph is he is relatable. He isn't distanced. I don't imagine him distanced and not
Approachable. You see him wrestling. You see him guilty of levity. I think he says this and I would imagine even in 1839 is a 34 year old. He still feels guilty of this.
He still feels guilty of this. Just to be frank, I love Joseph and this is part of the reason is you get a real person struggling with life, but quite frankly enjoying the patterns of joy that come with life also and not being able to be so downtrodden by economic disaster, downtrodden by friends who are mean or frankly violent, which happens
throughout his life, he seems to be able to overcome that. So here's a character trait
that he can call a sin and I'll call what it looks like to be a saintly man.
I remember someone visited my class at BYU and said, you don't talk like a professor.
You know, I'm like, oh, you're right. Thank you very much. Yeah All right, so he says I often felt condemned for my weakness and imperfections tell us
I'm gonna let you tell the story here Mike. Tell me what what happens next. I mean, it's been three years since
Since the first vision. What does he decide to do?
He associates some of this with falling into the norms of society
He's apparently gone to some revivals and he's also working in manual
labor. So he's digging wells and he participates in even the folklore of the day, which seems
to be very Christian. Willer Chase, the conjoining farm next to theirs, accuses him of being
a money digger. And what he doesn't mention is that he's a devout Methodist and he too
was participating in these kinds of cultural activities.
Quite frankly, they're representative of their kind of spirituality too, like reaching out for
supernatural experience that could be framed as spiritual or discovering something and
giving credit to God or a supernatural agent. And so these are things that he participates in,
that's for sure.
So you said he was out digging wells, that's where he finds his first seer stone. How do
I explain that to my daughter? And you've already gotten into that a little bit, that it's
a different time and that this idea of seer stones and magic culture is very much a part
of the way they've experienced religion. Why would even notice a seer stone? Why would
that be something that he would be on his mind at all?
I think this is an extremely relevant question for understanding Joseph and revelation.
Like when I go to the temple, the temple is a place that I find my most
religious environment, a place where I meet God and it's sacred to me,
but it's just plaster and boards and even gold statues, right? So there's this
very material world that is so caught up with my communication with God. I go
in there and there's a quiet sacred environment and I'm actually the one that
created into a sacred environment. We are as a community and yet it's still just
a building. And so you think about this and it becomes relevant when you think
about like in ancient scripture, whether it's the just a building. And so you think about this and it becomes relevant when you think about like in ancient scripture,
whether it's the stones that Mosaic the second had,
or it's the two stones we call the Yerimum Thumum
for the high priest in the Bible.
You have a tangible reality that represents something deeper.
The reality of the tangibility is in as deep
as what you really feel and what you know,
but it's a good representation and it allows us to communicate about it.
I often struggle so I was like, what's the most spiritual experience you've had?
Well, if I tell you about it, then it actually isn't as good as it was.
So it's this struggle.
Joseph called it the prison of language.
And the prison of language can often be bridged with something physical.
I mean, there were items in the Old Testament, there were items in the New Testament.
There are all kinds of items, whether the words that appeared on the Leahona.
And so the reality that comes forth with Joseph, like, let's be honest, it could have just
been a rock.
And it could just be a building, but sacredness is built upon
and represented by the material world, whether we like it or not. Joseph was just very good at this.
He realized how it could happen. And I think God speaks to us through our language, right? And this
is part of His language. So how will Z, when he finds this first seer stone,
is that before Maroni, right? So 1822 is the marker. There's arguments that he found one as early
as 1819, but they're hard to argue that. So there's a debate about when he finds them. But he has these two
one he finds culturally through his neighbor, and he goes to the great lakes,
and he finds it on the shores.
And then he finds another one digging in a hole next
to his property, on the chase his property.
And so now you get this kind of device
that communicates for God.
But it becomes very powerful.
Think about all of the representations of God's word
that's more sure.
So how do you make God's Word absolutely sure? Well, God
writes it in an in stone tablets for Moses, right? He puts the words on the stones. And
now that's even an American idiom. It's written in stone. And so this security of God's
Word being inscribed in stone, like this is not just a metaphor. It's Joseph's reality of revelation.
And so this becomes a very sound way for God to communicate with him.
God could have done it.
Like you want to know the very most convincing way to translate the book of Mormon.
God's hands break through the veil and hands Joseph 600 pages of the book of
Mormon already translated by God, right?
Like he's got it.
He's like, yes, I got it.
But the point is, is the whole process
and the experience of having God reveal the word to him
is essential, essential part of the foundation
of the Restoration.
So Joseph Smith and others like him would say,
okay, I've got this seer stone.
I can find buried treasure.
I can find things that maybe Native Americans have left or Spanish explorers.
Is that the idea?
I'm going to go or I can find a lost cow, right?
You lost your cow.
It wandered off.
I can find it.
Within the palmire newspapers, there's legitimate discoveries within the soil in the area. And even there's legitimate stories of finding a pot
that's associated with the Smith family.
And so this is an abnormal like there are people
finding buried Native American items.
And there's the legendary silver that was placed thereby,
the Spanish.
And so you have this kind of common agrarian practice
that's associated with spirituality, supernaturalness, and they are inevitably right in the middle of that.
Right. That this is that this is their world by 1826. Dad and Joseph are saying maybe this is
going to be not exactly what we thought. He's going to use this for more spiritual.
Imagine like in your own world,. There are things superstitions and
premonitions and we try to distinguish those from spirit field revelation that are good and then
there are those things that are good for religion. Like most people struggle today to find the
boundary between science and religions. Some are comfortable with an overlap between those two cultures.
And so boundary making is still essential to being a faithful God believing individual in all of the world.
And so to see their struggles, because they're different than ours, as bad is probably a misstep.
Like, see this as a very clear way of Joseph trying to be good.
The process from 1820 to 1827 is Joseph maturing
and trying to make better decisions.
I don't wanna get too bogged down
because I wanna talk about these visits from Moroni.
So he says it's September 21st.
I'm about to go to bed.
So I decided I needed to know my state in verse 29, right? My state and standing before
God. I had full confidence in obtaining a divine manifestation as I had previously had one.
Is there any particular reason that it's September of 1823 that he's like, I really,
or do you think this is just something that's been brewing for a while? I need to, I need to find out
more. You know, I was contemplating this at one point. Like, there is a change of season,
so November is a major part in the adjustment of crops and what you go do.
And Joseph in November seems to go do manual labor, you know, during the winter months.
So September is a marker of the end of a season, right? So you've been doing something all summer long, reaping the crops, for example,
so that agrarian marker becomes the exact time when Moroni comes. And Moroni comes every year on
the 22nd, right? That becomes the pattern. I'm not sure if it originally, it's just because he was
contemplative after a particular time period, which we go through this, right? Times of putting our head down and then lifting it up and being very contemplative.
And I think for you and I, it's the end of the semester.
Oh, yeah.
Right.
Yeah.
We drive hard through this semester.
We put our head down in September and we put our head up.
Second week of December and go, oh, yeah.
So it just like in his first vision, he's like, I wanted to know if God was okay with me.
So after three years of sort of maybe not being that devout,
he wants to ask God, he's trying to do better.
Now, to be fair, he doesn't do that much better
for a couple of years.
Yeah.
I always call it the probationary period.
Now remarkably, guess when he gets ready,
when he gets married,
like he has these sort of stability factors
in a life that begin to emerge.
And by the time he gets them
and he's gone through some struggles,
he's ready to get the plates.
Yeah, I've always said that.
What happens between the third and the fourth visit
is Emma, right?
She seems to change everything for him. So he said,
I was in the act of calling upon God, I discovered a light appearing in my room, a person
that appeared at my bedside standing there for his feet did not touch the floor. I've always
pointed that out to my daughter saying, well, if Maroni appeared, he couldn't even see the floor
in your room because it's covered in dirty clothes. So, now, I've always thought that his description is him saying,
look, you didn't think my first vision was real, so I can give you a description here.
So, you can't tell me I didn't see it. Is that probably what he's doing?
I've always assumed that, but what do you think? I mean, he gives a long description of
his clothing even.
I think there's a couple of things going on there. So let's think about when he writes it.
When he writes it in 1839, this is a moment when he is contemplating the nature of God.
And so this is a time of theological expansion from 1839 all the way to his death.
At one point, I was there at the site and the missionary was trying to
explain how his brothers and sisters were all there in the room and it was a kind of vision, right?
And so it was a theory, rather than physical. And so you think about this, like, is he not trying
to demonstrate our nature and the way we communicate, how an angel might communicate.
And so this is extremely relevant.
So we have this really, really late.
This is more interesting than fact-based,
but you have this really late notion
of the endowment, for example.
A woman explained that her mother told her this story,
that the person who created the first temple clothing,
sat there with Joseph and Joseph explained the first temple clothing sat there with
Joseph and Joseph explained what the temple clothing would look like and his
explanation was, well, I know what it looks like because Marona was wearing it,
right? I think he's given me exactly what I would want though. Really? What did he
look like? He didn't have shoes? What was it?
I would want to know exactly all those details.
So I love that he's, no, really.
This is what he looked like.
And I could see his hands, his wrists.
I could see, I love the detail there.
What I'm hearing from you, Mike,
is this is not just the 14 year old boy describing his experience.
This is also the prophet of 1839 teaching About angels about about experiences like this. Yes. I tweeted about this the other day
I wonder if they still get together right?
Marona and Joseph Smith you know every September 21st 20s I get in the spirit. You know, spirit world to get together
Hey, how are things? You know, this is our weekend. I imagine Maroni kind of goading him and being like,
you remember when you tried to take
the plates? That wasn't appropriate.
Joseph, do you remember that?
So let's, let's keep going.
And and I want to hear about this.
So he says his name is Maroni,
and that my name is going to be had for good and evil among all
nation's kindred stungs.
And we talk about that in the church all the time.
It's one of our ways of dealing with
You know the idea that there are people still today who hate Joseph Smith who make it their full-time
Almost a full-time job to tear him down online
That's one of the first thing he says to God has a work for me to do and people are gonna hate me
The 15 year reminiscent like why would he remember this notion?
Adding to what you said, I'd like to
suggest the notion that Joseph remembers this because he knew he lacked confidence. He knew
that he thought it was impossible for him to be the person that is bringing forth the restoration.
Now, you think about this as like an 18-year-old, like him sitting there wondering why this
habit is happening to him.
And then you get this dominant, very powerful, angelic figure sent from heaven who comes
down and says, everyone's going to know who you are.
And Joseph thinking about it going, well, that would be remarkable. So the confidence of an angel invested into
a boy who had no confidence that he could bring forth the restoration is a powerful notion.
And I can see why Joseph remembers this 15 years later. I mean, I'm sure he's a little bit resentful
that his name may be had for bad and good. But the fact of the matter is, is this angel has just told Joseph Smith
that he can do it and he's going to do it.
That's powerful, right?
For an 18 year old, when I was 18,
maybe I had more confidence than I should have,
but I certainly didn't have that much confidence.
I didn't know that I was capable of just about anything. And so here's Joseph finding out that
everyone will know who he is.
That phrase that God had a work for me to do is so
incredibly empowering and must have been for him. He's talking about his weakness and foibles and stuff.
In the come-following manual, it has a whole
paragraph on that God has a work for me to do.
And I'm reminded the new Aaronic priesthood theme starts. And this is an applic the way to apply this verse
that I am a beloved son of God and he has a work for me to do. And
for every young man, you weren't just sent to earth, well, maybe you'll make a contribution.
We're just gonna watch and see what happens,
or maybe you can just pass the time,
but God has a work for you to do,
the same words that Joseph Smith used.
And I wanna quote President Russell M. Nelson here,
this is from the manual,
and he gave this invitation to every young person,
ask your Heavenly Father in the name of Jesus Christ,
how he feels about you
and your mission here on earth. If you ask with real intent over time, the Spirit will whisper
the life-changing truth to you. I promise you that when you begin to catch even a glimpse of how
your Heavenly Father sees you and what he is counting on you to do for him, your life won't never be the same. And that's in the manual, but that phrase,
God had a work for me to do.
He's telling him, you can do this,
and in fact, God has something for you to do.
I thought of my own experience
getting my patriarchal blessing,
and Mike, I had a lot of unearned confidence.
And I think the Lord in my patriarchal blessing
could have just told me the truth, which was things don't look good.
Right, like, you've got a lot of unerent confidence,
you've got some serious issues.
Instead, in my patriarchal blessing,
as much like Marona here, God has a work for you.
You are gonna do it.
You're gonna be amazing.
And I think the Lord realizes,
in order for us to succeed,
we gotta have some confidence.
Joseph, you are gonna be known for good.
You have a work for you to do.
Okay, all right, I can do it.
And I wonder, part of Marona and the back of Marona
is head is going, oh, it's gonna take us a while to get there.
I don't know how many young people in 1821,
whatever had written a book later on in their life
that we are still talking about today. That you know, you're sitting on a bus and a kid says,
you know what, in 200 years,
every nation, kindred, tongue, and people
will be talking about me.
And you'd probably move to another place in the bus, right?
Uh, Joseph didn't say this about himself.
He may not have believed it.
An angel told him that.
And now here we are talking about it.
The angel nailed it,
because we are here talking about it right now.
That's fascinating.
I want to start this next section, Mike, by saying, I think it's univly.
You'll know this quote.
People want angels to appear to them, but all angels do is quote scripture.
So just read your scriptures, right?
Because that seems to be what Moroni does from here on out, Old Testament prophets.
Why insert all of this?
I mean, there's got to be
certain a point in him in 1839 telling us all this, right? We always associate, like he quotes this
concept of Elijah returning, I'd like to emphasize that. He starts saying, well, there's this priesthood,
and the priesthood is a group of people. It's an order, not an entity, but something you join instead of something you possess.
And when you join that, you have joined an order that Adam is part of, and Abraham is part
of, and Paul is part of.
And Joseph Smith is part of.
Now when you're talking about the ceiling of these dispensations together, you start realizing
why the priesthood order
was so important, because it's that one space in which we are all combined together, and
we do the work of salvation to connect each other to each other, and we start understanding
Malachi even better.
And you get this sense of what it is to be sealed. And you get this grand arc narrative that DNC 84 describes, DNC 107 describes,
DNC 68 describes, and DNC 27, especially describes in which all of those ancient
patriarchs will help restore the next dispensation, then the next dispensation. And in fact,
the person who started it will end it. And Adam will return in
it. Adam on diamond. And when he returns, Christ will take over. But what are we going to do with
the millennium? Well, we're going to baptize the out of everyone quite literally and metaphorically.
And so here we have this connective tissue in which dispensations become a central focus of what ceiling and what ladder de saints do as a people why we are that true church is because we can seal all those people together and the adjustment of malachi in that verse says if it not so, God's plan would be destroyed. The plan for us come to
earth would be destroyed if we don't connect ourselves all the way back to Adam. I've never thought
about that, but I love that idea because you just said, listen, when you create division, you create
problems, you know, this idea. But God's going to tear down the divisions and connect us all.
you know, this idea, but God's gonna tear down the divisions and connect us all. Marone, I just gave this amazing testimony of the Old Testament and of the Bible.
And Marone, I didn't come and start quoting, here's how you'll know the book of Mormon is true.
Open up, is Ezekiel 37 or something.
He's talking about these dispensate, I'm gonna tie the whole big picture together.
Yeah, I love that a lot.
And the fact that Malachi ended in what,
430 BC or something, he quotes the Malachi there. And I hope we get to talk a little bit about
some differences in Malachi with what Maroni actually said. And that's a question that comes up with
my students a lot is why are they different? How come this is this in Malachi, even in the book
Mormon, is different than what Moroni said.
Let's focus in on that one statement because it is the one that's found in
doctrine covenant section 2, which is part of the lesson for the week.
It's also one of the only scriptures that I know of that's just found throughout
the standard works in its different versions, right?
Doctrine Covenants, it's in the Pro-Great Price here, what we're reading.
The Savior himself quotes it in 3rd Nephi, andance, it's in the Pro-Great Price here what we're reading. The Savior himself quotes it in Third Nephi, and of course it's in the Old and New Testament. So why does this one become so important to Latter-day Saints?
Well, Joseph's specifically add and then important to Latter-day Saints.
Okay, so let me be specific. Instead of smite the earth for the person it will be utterly wasted. That's verse 39.
Yeah, those are two very different outcomes.
39, yeah. Those are two very different outcomes. One is a punishment and the other is that this won't work. The earth life that we are participating in will have failed if we can't connect them
back together. And so you think about like what Latter-day Saints are doing right now,
is they're building resources. We're not even close to have sealed and endowed and baptized
all people. We've done this very little teeny bit of this, but what we have done is we have in pre-millennial
fashion, we have created the resources so that in the thousand year period, we can actually
accomplish the whole of Malachi's promise, right?
And so the millennium is essential to what we're doing now because we are pre-millennialist
and that was Joseph's emphasis is that we are to prepare the world for the second coming.
And by building almost 200 temples now, like if you do the math every year when we get
new temples, I start doing the math, how long will it take us now to baptize?
Then every temple we build becomes an investment
in the second coming, in the millennium.
I think as a teenager, I pretty much thought,
you know, we're gonna go do the missionary work
so that everybody will believe when Jesus comes.
And there's a lot of work to be done in the millennium.
And I've heard it said, we are gathering the gatherers
because we'll still be doing this work in the millennium. So I like that perspective and it helps me to know that the second coming is the beginning
of a lot of work that we have to do.
You know what I'll tank?
It reminds me of just the one by one nature of there's not a blanket ordinance for everybody,
but when Jesus came one by one, you know, visited everybody in temple work, each individual
is important enough
that one at a time, and he's kind of expressing this
to Joseph Smith, you know, this idea of we're gonna include
everyone, Gentiles and Jews, right?
He quotes that from Joel, the fullness of the Gentiles
was soon to come, right?
Yes, and that's a really good point,
like the Joel passage, especially representing the inclusion of Gentiles.
This is an absolute notion of inclusion.
Christianity in itself, as it emerges and spreads to the enabling Gentiles to become part
of that covenant.
This is just a small notion, just the point that's being made from Judaism to Christianity
in the Book of Mormon especially.
Think about that on its broadest scale in which we care about every brother and sister.
Our doctrines of the pre-existence enable us to value every person.
In fact, every Hindu, every Buddhist, every Jehovah's Witness,
in the pre-existence already chose Christ. It was essential to even come here,
they have made the commitment and an eternal commitment to Christ even though they're not a
Latter-day Saint. That's a kind of inclusion that the temple caps off and enables us to demonstrate
why there are so few Latter-day Saints.
Latter-day Saints aren't few because we are elitists or exclusionists.
We are few because we are those who Malachi is speaking to, enabling us to be inclusive.
Be inclusive.
And this to me then bridges right over to my kids.
We've got to be inclusive in our family, in our ward, in our friendships, right?
We have got to be people who make the tent bigger,
as Isaiah would say, right?
In large the tent and allow people in.
Yeah, I can automatically make that bridge.
Geno Reese has recently done this big
gathered data about Latter-day Saints.
And one of her conclusions was that
at least for Gen Xers, the number one reason that people leave the church is because of its
exclusive nature, like it doesn't include other people. And so this is actually a moment where
us as Latter-day Saints need to ask the question, if this were an exclusionary church, then why am I baptizing the dead? The fact of that
matter is, is we believe all people are God's people, and the priesthood, as Malachi said, enables
us to unwrap everybody within God's family again. That is not exclusive. That is completely
inclusive, and the temple demonstrates that through and through which addresses a major issue we're having today.
We need to talk about that more. That's awesome. That's exactly how do we miss it? Look at what he's asking us to do.
We include, include, open up. Right. All. Let's keep going here. He says that Moroni comes, quotes all these scriptures
even more, he says that I can't even offer explanations here.
And then it closes and then the light,
he says comes back and he, the same heavenly messenger
is there.
He repeats the exact same thing without the least variation
which having done, he informed me of great judgments
which were coming upon the earth.
So he repeats it the same thing
and then adds a tiny bit to it, almost like he's like,
oh wait, I forgot something, let's start over
and go through it again.
And then it says, to my surprise,
the same messenger is there to repeat over again to me,
the same things as before.
And then he adds another thing, telling me
that Satan would try to tempt me in consequence of my family's just really poor of using the plates to get
rich.
All right.
So Mike, have you thought about what the three visits here are about?
Like what is this?
Why would Joseph number one, why would it happen three times two?
Why would he report it?
Well, it ends up being four times, right?
Four times, yeah.
The next morning, right? Because the ends up being four times, right? Four times, yeah, the next morning, right?
Because the next morning it happens again, right?
Okay, so maybe this has to do with mnemonics, right?
Like this is a device in which she wants to remember something.
So if he wants me to remember this and there are these four passages from Scripture, mostly
from the Old Testament, and so you get this idea where you have these prophetic notions
of the millennium and how all of these dispensations
will be connected across.
Like this is Joseph's interpretive world
with dispensations.
Like you think about this,
we are, we naturally attach the restoration
to the apostles of the New Testament, right,
with Peter, James, and John.
And so we emphasize this at great length that we are restoring Christ's Church.
While Moroni is going to great lengths to help us realize that it isn't just restoring the New Testament Church.
It's restoring God's Church, which goes back to Adam.
Right, this is much older than the new Testament church.
But if I'm sitting around with my 16 year old,
my 14 year old, and in this scripture keeps coming up
over and over and over, he shall plant in the hearts
of the children, the promises made to the fathers,
and the hearts of the children shall turn to their fathers.
If it were not so, the whole earth would be utterly
wasted at his coming and its other forms
that it's been given in scripture.
How do we say, okay, this is why this matters.
It's coming up over and over and over.
I think as a parent, I'm a religion teacher
and I still am like, well, I don't know.
Yeah, I mean, it's getting into the much wider view
that Mike has talked about today.
We're gonna bind all of the families of the earth together.
It's Abrahamic covenant, you know?
And what Marona says adds a little bit
to what Malachi
said or adds maybe he says it differently for our context. He was like, why do they keep coming up
with that scripture? Why is that one so important? Like what I've said previously, I think is a central
component of what we do as a Latter-day Saints. So the question is, is what does our priesthood do that
gives us our particular role in the plan of salvation. And that particular role
is very clear. We are to be the thread that sows together everyone else. So this is my
little analogy. Like imagine, if knowing the pre-existent doctrines that all of these are God's
people, and they've already chosen Christ, and they came here in a diverse role in God's
plan, imagine all of the people around the world being represented as peoples as
beautiful pieces of fabric. Each unique, each very important, like summer,
our wall to keep you warm and summer silk to make you look good. And so here's
these these very different pieces of fabric that represent everybody across all time
on Earth.
Now, the Latter-day Saints and the Covenant people are so small less than 1% across Earth's
time.
So, knowing that, you have to place Latter-day Saints within the plan of salvation with
a specific role.
And that role is not represented very well just by saying we have the priesthood.
You have to have a better analogy because that's not different.
It's a difference without a distinction.
And so the distinction here is we aren't a patch of material.
We're the thread that sows together all of those patches into a beautiful blanket.
That blanket is beautiful because it's got different patches.
It's a patchwork blanket. The beauty is is because it's got different patches. It's a patchwork blanket.
The beauty is is that it includes all of them. The role of Latter-day Saints, which a few
is to sew them together. It's not to get rid of them. It's not to make them look less. It's not to
make them feel less. It's to make them work together as you sew them together to be the comfort of the blanket, the beauty of the
blanket, the power of the family. That's what we get. The ceiling power that Malachi talks about
is a thread. A thread that if isn't there, they will all be separate. They won't be together.
That's why in the temple you feel the way you do. That's why you feel the presence of God is because you're sewing.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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