Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Joshua 1-8; 23-24 -- Part 2 : Dr. George A. Pierce

Episode Date: May 22, 2022

Dr. Pierce returns and explores the importance of remembering the hand of the Lord and tackles what modern readers do with violence in the Hebrew Bible.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (E...nglish, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing & SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast. I just want to say a few words about chapter 5. They've crossed the Jordan, and it's at that point that we all sort of cringed because everybody has to go through circumcision, at least all the males, to be participants of the Abrahamic Covenant. This is the outward physical sign that you are a member of that covenant in verse 12 of Joshua 5.
Starting point is 00:00:29 They've observed Passover and we get this. And the man has ceased on the Morrow after they had eaten of the Old Corn of the Land, neither had the children of Israel, man had anymore, but they did eat of the fruit of the land of Canaan that year. This is the close to the wilderness wanderings. After they observe Passover, the next day, there's no mana, because now they're in Canaan,
Starting point is 00:00:52 and they're able to subsist off of what is growing in Canaan. And we get this interesting encounter. Joshua 5, starting in verse 13, we have Joshua. He's going out by himself to kind of check out Jericho. See what's going on It came to pass when Joshua was by Jericho He lifted up his eyes and looked and behold there stood a man over against him with his sword drawn in his hand and Joshua went on to him and said unto him art thou for us or for our adversaries and
Starting point is 00:01:18 He said so this stranger with the sword drawn. He said nay, but as Captain of the host of the Lord am I now come? And Joshua fell on his face to the earth and did worship and said unto him, what sayeth my Lord unto his servant? And the captain of the Lord's host said unto Joshua, loose thy shoe from off thy foot for the place where on thou standest is holy. And Joshua did so. And so we're going to get the instructions in Joshua chapter six about what to do the Outer is holy, and Joshua did so. And so we're gonna get the instructions in Joshua chapter six about what to do about Jericho,
Starting point is 00:01:50 but it's an interesting situation in which Joshua has this encounter. He has this heavenly being with him. Some people will think this is an angel, so he think about the Captain of the Lord's Host, so Michael the Archangel, or someone encountering him. But that statement of taking off his shoes because the ground on which he's standing is holy, only other places where we see this happening is Exodus chapter 3 at the burning
Starting point is 00:02:14 bush. And that's the voice of Jehovah himself. I'm wondering if this maybe isn't a sort of pre-mortal, visit of Christ or something, in this sort of sense. Maybe not, who knows? But again, we have Joshua's encounter with the divine. And in this case, we can see that it's not Joshua and the Israelites who are fighting these battles. And they're going to be reminded of that. It's the Lord. And the Lord has sent the captain of the host of the Lord. That's how he's showing up.
Starting point is 00:02:43 He's in this in this role to help them and to be able to understand what they need to do to be able to conquer these cities. I think we're pretty safe here on you saying, we're not sure who this is, but. We're not sure, we don't know. However, people want to take that, whether it's an angel, Michael the Archangel, people want to say
Starting point is 00:03:02 it's a pre-mortal, parent of Christ, in some sort of way, and you know, maybe we'd want to argue against that theologically, but I just see it as Joshua knows that he has divine assistance, and he's instructed that this place is holy and take off his shoes and treat it with the respect, whether that was in the past in Joshua's present or in the future to Joshua, which would be our past, something happens there. And I think it goes a long way to show that the Lord is with Joshua. Again, so we're going to go back to that, be strong enough good courage. He knows, and he's given all these sort of signs and experiences to know that the Lord is on his side. I think we could also see these as almost bookend moments, the take off the shoes moments. Exodus three is, I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them out of the land onto a good land, and large, flowing with milk and honey.
Starting point is 00:03:57 Then you go all the way over to Joshua five, they're there, they're in it. Here's our bookend moment of, I did what I said, I was going to do. I told Moses I're in it. Here's our book end moment of I did what I said I was going to do. I told Moses I would do it. I almost think that the Lord wants to be there when he fulfills a promise. He made how long ago? How many hundreds of years ago to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, he's saying, I told you, I keep my promises. And Jericho has been there for a while. Archaeologically, we would stretch it back to probably 8 to 7,000 BC.
Starting point is 00:04:29 So it's been there a long time. And the reason why is because it's built right next to a spring, which is still used as the main water source for the city of Jericho and the surrounding areas. It's the same spring that Elisha is going to heal in second kings. It's a crucial place. It's where the Jordan has always crossed, and then from there you either go north up the Jordan Valley through what would be the territories of E from a manassah eventually to the Galilee, or you go up the hills to Jerusalem. Jericho is kind of a crucial place, a fortified city, as we see see it and Joshua is given specific instructions to be
Starting point is 00:05:07 able to take over Jericho. The Lord knows that they're not just going to rush the gates and that's that. That kind of valor isn't needed here. What they need though, instead of valor, instead of bravado, they need obedience. Did you just say instead of bravado, they need obedience? My wife's going to use that against me. I can't tell you how many times would I like that. Let me write that down. How many times do we charge into something without even thinking about it? And if we would just been obedient to begin with, then things would fall into place.
Starting point is 00:05:37 Joshua is instructed by the Lord, this is what you should do. You're going to walk around the city once, each day for six days. You're not going to make a sound. You're not going to let things clink against each other. You're not going to say anything. You're not going to be chatting in line, which is nearly impossible with any group of people. You're not going to be talking. You're just going to do this. And seven priests are going to carry the ark and they're going to carry seven trumpets. On the seventh day, you're going to walk around the city, not just one time, like the previous six days, but seven times around
Starting point is 00:06:08 the city. And in verse five it says, it shall come to pass that when they make a long blast, right? At the end of that seventh time around the city, the seven priests are going to blow their trumpets. And it shall come to pass that when they make a long blast with the Ramshorn, and when you hear the sound of the trumpet, all the people shall shout with a great shout. And the wall of the city shall fall down flat, and the people shall send up every man straight before him. And so Joshua then is going to relay those commandments to the Israelites. Look everybody. You shall not shout, as he says in verse 10, or like any noise with your voice. Neither shall any were perceived out of your mouth. Again, good luck with a group of people. Until the day I bid you to shout, then you're gonna shout, right?
Starting point is 00:06:45 Shout your heads off at that point. Now, they're given other instructions as well. When we get to verse 17, we have an interesting situation in which there are other instructions given for Jericho. In Joshua 6, verse 17, and the city shall be accursed, even it, and all that are therein to the Lord.
Starting point is 00:07:01 And we'll revisit that statement, accursed to the Lord. Only Ray have the Harlot shall live, she and all that are with her in the house because she hid the messengers that we sent. And ye, in any wise, keep yourselves from the accursed thing. Let's see, make yourselves accursed. When you take of the accursed thing,
Starting point is 00:07:18 and make the camp of Israel accursed and trouble it. But all the silver and gold and vessels of brass and iron are consecrated unto the Lord. They shall come into the treasury of the Lord. Disrelates go out. They walk around the city one time a day for six days. On the seventh day they walk around the city seven times and the priests of the Lord below their trumpets, everyone shouts, and we have in the situation of, as the song would say, the walls come tumbling down. What's interesting then is we get a principle in the Bible,
Starting point is 00:07:53 and it's called the Harem. And the Harem is a Hebrew word. It is a description of this sort of total warfare, if you will. And this is going back to that phrase, a curse to the Lord. A curse is an interesting way to translate this in the King James version, because the Hebrew word
Starting point is 00:08:10 Harem, it either means to be utterly destroyed or it means to be devoted to something, if this makes sense. This is the commandment that these lights are given in terms of a lot of these cities in Canaan. In fact, it dates back to Deuteronomy 7, in which they're instructed to go in and wage this kind of warfare. The Harem can be viewed as a sort of holy war of utter destruction decreed by Jehovah
Starting point is 00:08:31 to sort of rid out the Canaanites and their religious elements. But what it's doing is it's also then devoting all the spoils of war to Jehovah. The Harem is both utter destruction and utter devotion all the same time and it's an interesting sort of concept. People have tried to sort of reconcile that tension since even before the Middle Ages. How does this work? But this is the commandment that they're given. You have to follow these certain things and be obedient to these certain rituals, if you will, walking around the city, being quiet, shouting when the seventh time. And you have to have hands off because everything in that city is devoted to the Lord. And this is another reminder to them that it's not their power and it's not their strength
Starting point is 00:09:14 that is going to conquer Jericho. It's the Lord. And because the Lord is doing the work, then all the spoils will want to Lord. This is the instruction that they're given. When they do this, while it comes down, they're able to go in and take Jericho. Rayhab is saved, and we can see then that the benefits of being obedient are the blessings of not having to take Jericho the hard way, and that is trying to attack it straight on. George, what do you do when your students ask you about the violence
Starting point is 00:09:44 in Scripture? I know this is something you've talked about before. First of all, the concept of the Harem is kind of interesting because when we look at commands in Deuteronomy 7 and Deuteronomy 12 to go in and like utterly wipe out the Canaanites, first of all, we want to understand why that commandment is given. And that commandment is given because the intermingling of the Canaanite and Israelite societies, the major threat is going to be that the Israelites are going to be pulled away from Jehovah and start worshiping other deities. Now, we all know it's not like the Old Testament is a secret, we all know what happens, right?
Starting point is 00:10:18 Spoiler alert, they start worshiping other deities. Are ready into an oronomy it's set up, like go in there and wipe them out because this is the threat, it's a real threat and it's not like religion now and I was talking about this with Crystal this morning, it's not like a religion now as some people kind
Starting point is 00:10:35 of treat it. Like yeah, I can read my scriptures in the morning and then I go about my normal job, which for you and me that's studying scripture. So that's not like count, but I go about my normal job. I don't know, selling cars or something.
Starting point is 00:10:46 Or go to worship on Sunday, and then the other six days a week, I'm living my life doing my thing, trying to have family home, even ever once a while, but, but for the K&I, it says, while it's in this period, every religion is just enmeshed into all their life, all of it.
Starting point is 00:10:58 There is no separation of religion from the rest of their life. It is their life. And so the Lord recognizes there's a real threat there. This raises the question, what do we do with all the violence? What do we do about women and can I write women and can I write children? Because they're going in here. The book of Joshua says they're like wiping out everything and the animals aren't living and nothing's being touched and they're burning it all to the ground and doing all the rest of these things.
Starting point is 00:11:18 We have to sort of back up and just think about things. First of all, the language that's used within Joshua and Deuteronomy and in First Samuel, because we still have more of the conquest going on in First Samuel. The language that's used as scholars like myself would look at it, is similar to language that's used elsewhere in the same period talking about like a Syrian kings and other type of kings that are conquering things. And they'll have all sorts of bravado. We went in, we wiped out every single person, there was no male that was living. We conquered this place, and we burned it to the ground, all the rest of it.
Starting point is 00:11:48 And then the very next paragraph, they're like, and we had to go back and campaign against these people. So even they recognize the language is a bit sort of hyperbole to that point. Joshua himself recognizes that they didn't do all the things in the conquest that they should have. And the book of Judges in Judges chapter one says they didn't do all those things.
Starting point is 00:12:06 The language, it's evoking these sort of military language. That's common in this period. Second, if we think about this logistically, and students will come to me and say, well, Dr. Pierce, right, they're still like going in, and the Bible says that they took out all the men, and they killed everybody on us. It says annihilation,
Starting point is 00:12:22 and I think that's the word we can use at this point. And annihilation like that is logistically impossible during this time period. If we go back to Joshua chapter two, Rahab says that they've heard about all their sort of exploits. So let me just put it this way, right? Hank and John, you're just living in a town and you've heard that some people have been very successful in their warfare and their God has done all this sort of stuff.
Starting point is 00:12:41 Would you stay in that town very long? Absolutely not. You hear that somebody's coming to attack your town. You do exactly what Lehigh did in the Book of Mormon. You pack up the wife and kids, you get a tent from REI and you head out. All right, so in fancy scholar terms, we call that an indigenous hardiness structure.
Starting point is 00:13:00 It means that these people at this time were able to transition between living in houses, to living in caves, or living in tents very easily, much more than we could. Because I tell you what, I go camping once a year, and I don't transition very well to living up in the canyon. It's just, that's me. Right, so I don't have that indigenous hearty instructor. These people did. Thirdly, I would probably say Jericho in Joshua Chapter 6, the city of I in Joshua Chapter 7, and I believe it's mentioned in Joshua Chapter 8 as well, and the city of
Starting point is 00:13:33 Hotsor further on in Joshua Chapter 11, these are the only ones that are listed as utterly destroyed. Nowhere else in Joshua doesn't mention the cities being destroyed, and so the major emphasis actually is on taking out the Canaanite kings or defeating their armies in the field. And it's not about destroying cities and women and children and all the rest of these things. And I think finally as I tell my students, one of the things that we need to think about
Starting point is 00:13:55 when it comes to violence like this is to realize that when we read it, we're bringing to the text baggage from the 20th century. We can think about the Holocaust especially, or the Rwandan genocide, or those in Cambodia, or the Balkans, or anywhere else that this has occurred, and we're reading it through that lens. This is the perspective of the historian who wrote it. And he is a product of his time embedded in these cultures. And we had to sort of think this is not like a systematic program of an industrialized nation trying to commit a genocide. This is agro-pastoral economy and people trying to move in and trying
Starting point is 00:14:38 conduct warfare against cities and trying to take out the power structure in Canaan so they can eventually settle. It leads to attention in which we still have to reconcile how does a loving God issue a commandment like this. And I think that that's attention that we have to come to grips with. And there have been various schools of thought on this, and I could go into all that if you really, really want everything ranging from outright rejection of the text to using this text to justify current racism, which is completely wrong. I tell my students this, if there's a problem with us understanding God's commandments and his actions, then the problem doesn't reside
Starting point is 00:15:19 in him. The problems in our limitations of understanding his purposes, hopefully that makes sense. We may not understand all of it, and I don't think we will without having his perspective. Nephi tries, in 1st Nephi, what is it, chapter 17, verse 35, Nephi is understanding of it, as he was working through it, says, Behold the Lord is steameth all flesh and wine. He that is righteous is favorite of God. But behold, this people had rejected every word of God and they were ripe in aiquity. And the fullness of the wrath of God was upon them
Starting point is 00:15:52 and the Lord had cursed the land against them and blessed it unto our fathers. Yet he had cursed it against them unto their destruction and he had blessed it unto our fathers and to their obtaining power over it. And then Nephi starts to talk about the sovereignty of God and how God rules over everything and the earth is his footstool. And so this is how Nephi understands it. They'd been given
Starting point is 00:16:10 their chances. They were going to reject it. They were full of inequity and the Lord is sovereign. That's where I kind of ended with my students is. If we don't understand it, it's not a problem with God. It's a problem with our understanding of God and our understanding of the circumstances. And we can It's a problem with our understanding of God and our understanding of the circumstances. And we can unfortunately have to live with that tension that's there, but have faith that our God does love His children. And if in this life or the next, He's going to give them the opportunity to respond to His call, to be able to live with him again. Two thoughts. One last week we talked with Dr. Satterfield
Starting point is 00:16:48 about God playing a very long game here. He doesn't see it in the terms we do in the average human lifespan. He is seeing this from creation to millennium. I'm going to get my end result, which is exalted children. This is my work in my glory to bring to Pasimortal any eternal life of man, not necessarily the comfort of man while they're on earth. So we can see this may be playing into his larger plan. My friend Andrew Smith wrote in the religious educator in 2018 about a Christian
Starting point is 00:17:20 Theologian by the name of Terence Freethium, and he quotes him saying, in pursuing divine purposes, God does not act alone, but works with what is available, with human beings as they are, with all their foibles and flaws, as well as their wisdom. God does not perfect people before working in and through them. God can work even through human evil toward the divine purposes. And he goes on, he says a little bit about what you said about some Christian Theologians have the spectrum. Theologian, Denny Weaver states the rule of the devil attempts to rule by violence, whereas the rule of God conquers by nonviolence. On the other side, another Theologian, Miroslav Vulf, concludes, there are things only God may do. One of them is to use violence.
Starting point is 00:18:06 Then Andrew Smith says this, to be sure, both positions are well thought out and based on valid intellectual interpretations of scripture. I like what you're doing here, is you're kind of leaving it a matter of faith in God. Maybe it is hyperbole, maybe it's not, but let's trust that God loves His children. There's all kinds of positions that you can actually be a faithful member of the church
Starting point is 00:18:30 and adopt. There's what we call radical discontinuity, and that is God in the Old Testament is vengeful and judgmental, and Jesus is about love, peace, and grace. There's modern discontinuity in which we say God doesn't work that way anymore, right? It's a different dispensation. He does not work and command us to go out and to slay people. There's a eschatological continuity in which the conquest is meant to be a type of things that will come in the end times. That's how the New Testament writers are going to interpret the conquest and say, this is how we're going to frame end times things
Starting point is 00:19:05 through the lens of this. And then there's what we call, and this is what I kind of adhere to as a spiritual continuity, in that in the Old Testament God physically fought the enemies of Israel, and we see that in Joshua. But there are times in that God actually fights Israel itself because it needs to be called a repentance. God is going to come in the future as the divine warrior,
Starting point is 00:19:24 and we see that in Hosea 11 11 and Revelation 19 that Jesus will return. And he's going to be the one doing the fighting. But as we've seen the New Testament, Jesus is the one who fights spiritual powers and authorities. And so the conquest in is just part of like you said, it's part of this long game of spiritual continuity. There are certain rules and rituals that need to be followed. It's not up to us to do this.
Starting point is 00:19:49 In fact, the prime moment is when Jesus then gets semini and the soldiers come to take him after his prayer to the Father and Peter starts swinging the sword and he ends up cutting off the high pre-servance ear. And it's in that moment that Jesus kind of informs him that the kingdom of heaven is not going to be brought about by violence in a physical sense. It's about him to bring it in. In that same sort of way, he's working through this Old Testament through the history of Israel to bring about his purposes, things that we're not commanded to do, things that we're not going to take upon ourselves or shouldn't take upon ourselves to engage in. And again, it goes back to, we may not understand all the purposes in the book of Joshua and those
Starting point is 00:20:31 commandments in Deuteronomy 7 and Deuteronomy 12. But that's because I have a limited understanding. And I just have to live with that limited understanding and go forward in faith and obedience and say, what he's commanded me to do in the 21st century is to go out into minister and to love others and to serve others and to bring about the kingdom in those ways, not him by physical violence in any sort of sense. I was just reading this book this morning, four of you's on the Canaanite genocide, and the very last chapter is a great one because of the theologian Trevor Longman. He's like, look, we're not commanded to go and be physically violent.
Starting point is 00:21:06 That's Jesus' role in the future as he fights spiritual powers and authorities. It's not our role. Their big thing was people taking stuff of the 21st century, like these chapters in Joshua and justifying racists and sometimes terroristic actions using the Bible. George, this has been fantastic. Let me quote a gospel topic, essay, entitled Peace and Violence among 19th century Latter-day Saints. Towards the end of the article, it states,
Starting point is 00:21:35 and this is published by the church. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints condemns violent words and actions and affirms its commitment to furthering peace throughout the world. Throughout the Church's history, Church leaders have taught that the way of Christian discipleship is a path of peace. Then Elder Russell M. Nelson of the Cormor of the Twelve Apostles connected the Latter-day Saints faith in Jesus Christ to their active pursuit of love of neighbor and peace with all people. Quote, the hope of the world is the Prince of Peace.
Starting point is 00:22:06 Now as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, what does the Lord expect of us? As a church, we must renounce war and proclaim peace. As individuals, we should follow after the things which make for peace. We should be personal peace makers. So I like what you've done here, George, as you've said, look, if there is going to be violence, that's the Lord's role, not ours, leave it to him.
Starting point is 00:22:31 Our job is to do as he is commanded and to be peacemakers. Our charge, as we look at in the New Testament book Mormon, the doctrine of covenants is to go forward and to usher in the kingdom through peaceful means. The Lord's role is to take care of those things in the end times. And so historically, when these chapters of Joshua or other violent episodes in Scripture are used to justify actions, whether that's the Crusades or any sort of other holy war or justification by dictators running evil governments or even just by Westerners who see the Bible as the inherent word of God and use that for racist or violent means, we can see in Scripture that Jesus Himself can dem such things. We have to understand different dispensations, different times, and different
Starting point is 00:23:25 missions, and what we're called to do. We're not carving out a place in the promised land. We are ministering to each other and serving each other. And we can't answer everything. One thing we need to say probably before we move on is, there is some ambiguity there. There's some tension there, that's hard. And that's okay, it's okay for it to be hard. I want to return to this article from Andrew Smith from the religious educator in 2018. He talks about Joshua and other chapters of Scripture
Starting point is 00:23:57 where there's quite a bit of violence. And he says, the divine violence exhibited by Jesus in these chapters contrasts distinctly and somewhat paradoxically with the divine mercy he shows in other chapters. Without a proper contextualization, which George is giving us today, the differences and seeming contradictions can cause consternation. It has been shown that these scriptures and the events they portray are meant to be understood
Starting point is 00:24:21 as challenging and somewhat discomforting for us as well as God. However, they also show that we need not be scared of engaging with challenging and discomforting sections of Scripture. He goes on to say these chapters provide valuable doctrinal instruction about the relationality and the differences between God and his mortal children. As Latter-day Saints, we must constructively view and understand all of the scriptures that have been preserved for us, even those that are challenging, so that we may derive a stronger knowledge of and a relationship with the Lord our Savior. As teachers in Zion, it is also of utmost importance for our students, that we develop the capabilities
Starting point is 00:25:01 to guide the in use of such methods, approaches, and tools and understanding, and properly applying the doctrines, principles, and narratives found in the scriptures. In this way, discomforting and unsettling sections of scripture can be turned into faith-building way-stops, rather than doubt-inducing stumbling stones in our paths of discipleship. I like what he said there that we're not scared of these texts, we deal with them the best we can, we can't answer every question that we have about these, and we again turn to faith in the Savior. And we don't understand, again, I go back to my statement of, if we have a problem in understanding, it's not that there's a problem with God,
Starting point is 00:25:40 it's a problem with our understanding and our limitations. Sometimes we do have to live with attention and say, I don't understand it all now, but in the attorneys, I'll get it, and it works for me. I'm going to quote my friend John, by the way, he frequently reminds me, if you lack information, you can ask Google, but this is the type of thing that needs wisdom. And you only get wisdom from one place, right John? If any of you lack information, ask of Google, I tell my class, especially things like where's the nearest five guys.
Starting point is 00:26:11 But if any of you lack wisdom, that's an entirely different matter, isn't it? Yeah. I think with all scripture, we're gonna get more. We don't have the whole story. Book Mormon many times. I'm telling you a hundredth part. I cannot include a hundredth part.
Starting point is 00:26:25 The last verse in the book of John, if all the things Jesus did, were written. I suppose the world itself could not contain the books that should be written. I think we're getting a fragmentary account in the Old Testament too. So I love what you are saying, George, is what are the lessons the doctrines I can learn? We're going to have an explanation, I believe, one day for these other things that maybe don't make sense to us now. John, I expect in the spirit world and in the millennium and long past that, I'm going to be doing lots of, oh, I get it now. Section 101, that day, I, the Lord of the Ville, all things, hidden things which no men
Starting point is 00:27:01 knew, that part right there, hidden things, things of the earth by which it was made, the purpose and the end thereof, things that are above things that are beneath. And he just gives us this list. Like, I'm going to tell you everything one day. So for you're not even unto death, in this world your joy is not full and neither is your wisdom. It sounds like, but in me, your joy is full. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:24 And please don't throw out the whole book because this piece causes you a little tension. Live with the tension, live with the ambiguity, it's okay. And as I tell my students, I reverse 1st Nephi 1117. So I tell them, I don't know the meaning of all things, nevertheless, I know that he loves this children. So I just sort of like flip that on Nephi. I don't know, but I know he loves us and I know he loves them.
Starting point is 00:27:45 And it'll all work out in the end. It's interesting George, the comfolememanule does a big fast forward to the end of Joshua. I just want to draw one thing just because as an archaeologist, I can't let it go. The book of Joshua presents us this sort of conquest narrative and they go in and they fight this city, and they fight that city. Archaeologically, we can feel a little bit more of the picture. John was talking about how we only get like a hundredth part or not all of the pieces together.
Starting point is 00:28:15 Joshua tells us one thing. Archaeology tells us that it wasn't just going in conquering cities. They also peacefully settled in some regions. The book of judge just tells us that they had their villages and the Canaanites had theirs and they didn't engage in warfare. Sometimes Canaanites made covenants with Israel. We see that in Joshua chapter 9, those of Gibbian want to make a covenant with Israel and come in that way. If I wanted to draw our attention to just one thing and I thought I
Starting point is 00:28:41 had this morning as I was studying this in preparation for our discussion. Joshua chapter 11. So there's a whole bunch of, they fought this and they defeated this king and this king and we get down to Joshua 11, at the very end of it, verse 23, as we're wrapping up the conquest, because chapter 12 is a whole list of cities and kings they conquer but we get this Joshua 1123 so Joshua took the whole land according to all that the Lord
Starting point is 00:29:11 said in De Moses and Joshua gave it for an inheritance unto Israel according to their divisions by their tribes and the land rested from war that rest is not just the Israelites got to then hang out and go on vacation and not do anything. Rest in the Bible meant that they were able to start settling the promised land. They were able to start dividing things up. They were able to start building homes, planting crops, doing what they're supposed to do, fulfilling their roles. And so when you look at this concept of rest and I think it's important we think about it in terms of Genesis as well.
Starting point is 00:29:49 So six days of creation on the seventh day, God rested. It doesn't mean he didn't do anything. It means that then he was able to take up his rightful role in preserving creation and sustaining it, as we see in the book of Colossians, but also then ruling over creation. So it's not like he just didn't do anything. What rest in I think here, especially in Joshua and for us in terms of application, means that
Starting point is 00:30:16 we sometimes have conflicts in our lives, whether we've created that or we've stepped into it or been drawn into it or it's a personal challenge or family matter or employment or calling or anything, we need to have that rest to be able to concentrate on those things that matter and to fulfill our role. And Genesis is where this helps out with this. We need that day to be able to fulfill our role to learn how to be more like the Savior, to be able to act in a way that the Savior would act, to be able to eventually fulfill our role of being like him, as isn't that the end goal.
Starting point is 00:30:55 We can put the conflicts aside, they may rear up again in some sort of way, take the time and take the opportunity to have that Restroom War to be able to do what we're supposed to do, and to be more like the Savior. All right, we come to the end of Joshua. We gave him a good run as we close out, Joshua's time as the leader of Israel. What do we have to say towards the end, the last chapters? So in Joshua chapters 23 and 24, we see the division of the land
Starting point is 00:31:19 between all the various tribes has been done. And sometimes it's not very exciting reading but it's there for a purpose to mark out the the territories and Joshua then calls Israel together and he knows his time has come. He gives them some encouragement. Says that in Joshua chapter 23, it came to pass a long time after that the Lord had given rest unto Israel from all their enemies around about. The Joshua waxed old and stricken in age and he calls for Israel and all the elders to come together and he gives them sort of his last testimony, if you will, about what the Lord has done for them.
Starting point is 00:32:01 He tells them that he's divided the land and the Lord God has expelled out these people from before them. And he reminds them as he goes to chapters 23 and 24 that it's the Lord who's done all this. In verse 14 of Joshua chapter 23, and behold, this day I'm going the way of all the earth and he know in all your hearts and all your souls that not one thing has failed of all the good things which the Lord your God spate concerning you. All are come to pass unto you, and not one thing has failed thereof. And I think that's just a good reminder for them. All those promises the Lord made, he made good on them. He brought you up out of Egypt, he brought you across the river, he chased out the
Starting point is 00:32:45 canis before you, he fought your battles for you, everything that he promised, he came through. And I think that's a great lesson for us too, because everything that he's promised us, he's going to come through. And I mean, we can go into the title pages of the Book of Mormon with Moroni writing this part of the purposes to remind us that the Lord keeps his covenants. And so he says, basically gives them the blessings, verse 15 of Joshua 23, therefore it shall come to pass that all good things are come upon you,
Starting point is 00:33:14 which the Lord your God promised to you. So shall the Lord bring upon you all evil things until he has destroyed you from off this good land which the Lord your God have given you. So it gives them the flip side as well. Listen, he promised you good things, he delivered, but if you're disobedient, then you're going to face the judgment that's coming.
Starting point is 00:33:33 And so what we get in Joshua chapter 23 and 24, essentially is a covenantal renewal. Joshua 24 talks to them, going back from the time of Abraham, he gives them this historical lesson. From Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and Moses, and it's like a curtain call here, because you have Abraham. It's a big, long history lesson. It talks about like, uh, Bailem and Bailem and we get to verse 11 and he went over the
Starting point is 00:33:55 Jordan and came over to Jericho. So now he's talking about recent history that they should all remember and how the Lord sent out the Hornet before them, which is kind of interesting. Lord using natural things like a hornet to sort of discomfort people and make them leave. And it says here, I've given you a land for which she did not labor and cities which she built not, and he dwelling them,
Starting point is 00:34:15 and of the vineyards and all of yards which she planted not, do you eat. And so a reminder of the Lord's goodness to them. You got into this land, I did all the fighting. You're dwell in cities and in houses. You guys didn't even build, right? You're eating of stuff that you didn't even plant. Joshua 24 verse 14, fear the Lord and serve him in sincerity and truth. And he gives this call in verse 15, Joshua 24 verse 15, choose you this day whom ye will serve. I mean, whether the gods, which your father served,
Starting point is 00:34:46 that were on the other side of the flood, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land ye dwell, but us for me and my house, we will serve the Lord. It's a great reminder, and I think in terms for us, it's a challenge. Choose you this day whom you're going to serve. And each day brings a sort of promise or the sort of hope that we're going to serve the Lord, but it's a conscious choice we make.
Starting point is 00:35:13 It's just a powerhouse verse. It's one of those verses you want your kids to memorize, right? Choose. Choose who you're going to serve. Isn't Elijah going to say that same thing later on? How long haughty between two opinions? You know, if the Lord is God then serve him. I love that because it sounds like that.
Starting point is 00:35:30 You got to get off the fence here and decide. I think literally in Hebrew it's like how long are you going to jump between two branches? If you have the image in your head, how long are you going to jump between two branches? And when is that other branch going to break? When I was growing up, we actually had this on the wall of my home. My dad had this plaque, choose you this day whom you will serve. And it's for our house, we're going to serve the Lord. And we try to make that happen. And when it doesn't, that's the great part about covenantal renewal. That's what Israel is doing here. They're renewing their covenant before Joshua dies. We have covenantal renewal every week
Starting point is 00:36:03 available to us. George, Dr. Pierce, this has been a great day. I love the book of Joshua much more than I did before. I think our listeners would be interested in your personal journey of faith and your biblical scholarship, how those two have intertwined together, and your conversion to the church, which some might be surprised to hear, was not all that long ago. It was not. I was raised in a Baptist household. My father previously was a member of the Church of
Starting point is 00:36:34 Jesus Christ, the Luridate Saints, and left that and became Baptist for his own reasons. But we were raised with the same principles as a gospel and Devotion of family into the Savior that we would consider to be standard nowadays in our church and so that Language was always familiar to me, but I've always grown up and going to Christian schools And so for the time when I was four years old up through my first master's degree I up through my first master's degree, I attended Christian schools and colleges and universities, and so Bible study was always part of my life. And reading these chapters, especially in the Old Testament, the historical narrative, like Joshua, Judges, Samuel, and Kings, that was what I did when I was bored in other classes. And so reading the narratives over and over and over and
Starting point is 00:37:29 understanding the stories and trying to wrestle with these things happened at a very early age. And questions and concerns which just then led to further study and knowledge. And I graduated with a degree in history, but there was always a call to biblical studies. And I found myself happiest when I was studying the Bible and studying scripture. I had a class in biblical archaeology. That sort of led me down the path of archaeology because not only do we have the text of the Bible but then there's now material culture. So, reality. And I think that's helped in some way to strengthen my faith but also to give me some my perspective. I'm having stood at some of these places or having visited or pondered over these things and thought about how it works and feeling the spirit testified to me at these
Starting point is 00:38:11 places. Not of maybe the reality of the place, but of the reality of the doctrine that's taught within those narratives, thinking about those things and going forward, study biblical archaeology on a graduate level and archaeology in general, which led me after a time in living in Israel to UCLA. For my doctoral work, it was while I was at UCLA, as a Presbyterian, that I encountered another graduate student, Crystal Lords, who was transferred in from Berkeley. As graduate students, we all kind of hung out together. And we obviously noted that she was different from the rest of us. There may have been some consumptions of things that were not compliant with the word of wisdom at the time, but not her. She lived a life that was devoted to the gospel already. And it was through
Starting point is 00:39:08 devoted to the gospel already. And it was through her witness just living the gospel. There was no putting the book of Mormon in our face, no discussions from preach my gospel. Nothing else like that. She just lived the gospel and it made a difference and it was very noticeable. We'll skip the story and go straight to we we started dating. So my agreement with Crystal while we were dating was that I would not try to give her any anti-church material or lead her away from the Church of Jesus Christ, Latter-day Saints, and she would not present me with a book of Mormon or proselytized me in any sort of way. That sort of worked out for a while, but then I started getting more interested in the church, and she went away on excavation to Egypt and gave me a lot of time to read and
Starting point is 00:39:45 So I read through most of the encyclopedia of Mormonism to understand the church. That's where a doctor at student goes to Yeah, right and I read through most of the book of Mormon after release tealum in 12 I didn't even get to the good part yet So I'll be human 12 and she came back and I started going to church with her But what really made sense in my mind and where it all clicked is we came up here to visit her parents in Utah and they took me to Temple Square. We went to the Joseph Smith Memorial building and I watched Prophet of the Restoration. Everyone kind of checkles at that but it's there that it made sense in my mind. Watching that and sort of piecing everything together and what really made
Starting point is 00:40:24 sense and Hank, you'll appreciate this because we were there together, was when Joseph was hauled out of the John Johnson farm and Tarton Feathered and Sydney Rigden as well. And yet the next day was out preaching and more. And in my mind, I said to myself, and this was months ahead of Elder Holland's testimony, I said to myself, if it was not true, why? Why would you ever go
Starting point is 00:40:51 through all that? If it isn't true. And that's when as an academic it made sense to my head and it made sense to my heart that there's a truthfulness to this. Because I know I for one would not want to be tired and feathered and go out and continue to preach the gospel I would have been like guys. It's been a good run, but I'm gonna go back and dig wells eventually We had a word conference that was focused on missions. I looked at crystal and we both said Maybe we should call the missionaries those two missionaries had a golden convert because I was already decided I just wanted to see what they were up to so Elders Brown and Rorke came and gave me the lessons and it went from the
Starting point is 00:41:26 two of them talking to me and in Crystal's living room to eventually adding on the word mission leaders, the elders quorum presidency, most of the elders quorum in the Santa Monica III ward. Till eventually I was like, all right, let's just get baptized and go forward. In June of 2009, I was baptized, a member of the church, a year and change later, Chris and I were in doubt at the Okra Mountain Temple. At the end of July of 2010, we were sealed in the Salt Lake Temple.
Starting point is 00:41:53 And then June of 2013, I started teaching at BYU, which was a daunting experience, teaching Book of Mormon to return missionaries. And I'll be honest, when I got baptized, I still had only read up through healmen 12. So I have read the rest of the Book of Mormon between now and then. So I know the ending.
Starting point is 00:42:12 That's my story. Being an archaeologist in Israel has allowed me the privilege and opportunity to be able to be hands-on in the dirt where some of these things happened, and to be able to understand the life of ancient Israel and the Philistines and the Canaanites and to be able to bring that to my students and say these are real people with real problems and The real solution was obedience to the gospel or to the the law of God as we see in the Old Testament
Starting point is 00:42:41 Being able to share that with the students is priceless. I love it. Your story itself is a testimony. That's so cool. Thank you. I'm so glad to meet you. Thank you, George. I, that was beautiful. I was, I was very excited to share George with you, John.
Starting point is 00:42:58 And I'm sure Crystal was as well. And as well, the rest of our listeners. We hope you, you love George and Dr. Pierce Prime. Dr. Pierce Prime. Dr. Pierce and Dr. That's very prime. That hope you love George and Dr. Pierce Prime. Dr. Pierce Prime. Dr. Pierce Prime. Dr. Pierce Prime.
Starting point is 00:43:07 She's called. We want to thank all of you for listening today. Thank you for staying with us. We want to thank our executive producers, Steven Shannon Swanson, and our sponsors, David and Verly Swanson. And we hope all of you will join us next week when we come back with another episode of Follow Him.

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