Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Luke 12-17; John 11 Part 1 • Dr. S. Michael Wilcox • May 1 - May 7
Episode Date: April 26, 2023Who are the lost among us? Dr. S. Michael Wilcox explores the themes of wealth and giving, the Sabbath and spirituality, and gratitude and distractions. 00:00 Part 1–Dr. S. Michael Wilcox01:29 Intr...oduction of Dr. S. Michael Wilcox02:35 Jesus teaches about wealth07:36 A parable about building more barns11:37 Why does God call this man a fool?15:09 There are more important things than bigger barns17:02 When death comes, we want to be giving19:55 We have knowledge but are we spiritually wise34:54 The danger of several types of pride35:47 Jesus and velvet truths43:07 The unjust steward47:09 Lazarus and the rich man54:55 What gulfs exist in our neighborhoods?58:43 Seeing those in need58:52 Theme of Luke 151:03:35 The lost sheep1:06:45 End of Part 1–Dr. S. Michael WilcoxPlease rate and review the podcast.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish 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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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 a new episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I'm your host.
I'm here with my rich man co-host, John by the way.
John, you are a rich man.
It depends on how you define it, but I'll take that.
We used to watch Fiddler on the roof as kids, and my dad would always say, listen to this
part right here, when Tavya would say, would it spoil some vast eternal plan if I were a wealthy man
Right at the end of the story
That's awesome
The nicest thing about that song really is the reasoning most wants to be rich though
Which really factors in what you're doing here if I rich, I'd have the time that I lack to sit
in the synagogue and pray, and maybe have a seat by the Eastern Wall. Still a little
pride there. And I discuss the holy books with the learned men seven hours every day.
That would be the sweetest thing of all. It's very Jewish, very lovely sentiment. The
main reason is, so we had time to do what we're doing today, study the scriptures.
John, before we go any further, we probably ought to introduce our guests today.
We needed a Bible expert and we have one here who's joining us.
Yes, and we're so glad to have Dr. S. Michael Wilcox back with us again.
And briefly, he received his PhD from the University of Colorado and
taught for many years at the Institute of Religion adjacent to the University of Utah. He
spoken at a campus education week for years, takes tours to the Holy Land, to China,
church history sites, Antarctica's we just talked about. He served in a variety of callings
including a bishop, a counselor in a state presidency, and I'm actually looking at one of his most recent books
holding on, impults us to leave and strategies to stay. Michael and his late wife
Laurie are the parents of five children and 14 grandchildren with one on the
way in office. So we're really glad to have you back.
Last one. Yeah. Thank you. It's always nice to be with you.
Yeah.
One more.
And then you start a new product line.
You start the great grandkids.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Maybe one of these days I'll be great grandpa.
I will see.
Mike, our lesson today is packed with incredible stories
and just profound teachings.
Luke chapter 12 through 17 and John chapter 11.
Where do you want to start us out?
Well, we can just start in chapter 12
and kind of go through.
Maybe there'll be a few times we'll jump
because there are some themes,
certainly one major, one that flows through those chapters.
And that deals with wealth, money, financial
issues, which it's good to know that the Lord is aware of practical temporal things in
our lives.
And he gives us a little bit of counsel on those kinds of things.
If I ask somebody, does Jesus teach more about family, which is so important to us in the
New Testament, or more about family, which is so important to us in the New Testament, or more about wealth.
A lot of people would be surprised that he doesn't teach a lot about family. We get some, we get to see him as a
child, we get one great teenage lesson out of him at the temple when he effectively says to his parents what every
Teenage should say to a parent. you may not know where I am.
You may not know what I'm doing. You may not know who I'm with. But wherever I am, whatever
I'm doing, and whoever I'm with, be assured I'll be about my father's business. If every
teenager, just every child just did that, they only need that one rule. Yeah.
That would be perfect.
And we see him as a son at the wedding of Canaan
and on the cross, but hardly anything about marriage,
he teaches.
But he does have a lot about wealth and financial matters
and some warnings.
And there's at least five parables
in this section that deal with it.
So let's just jump in since we have so much to do. We love to just learn from you,
Mike. So John and I might jump in once in a while, but where do you want to start?
Well, let's start. I mean, like I said, there's a lot of things. Maybe we can pick up a few
tiny things, but let's at least look at some of those parables. Parables are designed to teach us that we're
maybe not doing everything that we should be doing. Maybe we're not thinking the way we should be thinking.
They're not aimed at the intellect.
They're aimed at the conscience.
And it's important to realize that
because sometimes we doctrinalize some of the parables
and I don't think that's what to say of your men.
They're aimed at not the intellect but the conscience to help us live better.
If I skip the first part of chapter 12, because we're not going to be able to do everything,
and we pick it up in verse 13, one of the company that would suggest probably those who
travel with him, maybe not an apostle, but he traveled with more than them, said unto him, Master, speak
to my brother that he divide the inheritance with me. And he said unto him, Man, who made
me a judge or a divider over you? It's interesting. I just recently had this almost every trip
I ever go on, especially if we talk about Israel, Joseph, and his brothers and forgiveness.
Inevitably, I'm going to have one member of the group, sometimes more, talk to me about
family problems. They're not talking to each other. They have difficulties. They're mad
at each other. And I'm telling you, eight out of 10 times, it's over money and inheritance issues.
I just got back from a three month run
and not one week ago, I'm having a deep discussion
with one of the members of the company
that her brothers are mad at her
and because of the dividing of the inheritance
and it didn't come out well.
And I've heard it so much
and so many times
that there's a part of me that says,
you know, maybe if you are arguing with family members
over the inheritance, you ought not to have an inheritance.
It's rooting for you.
I don't mean that as a punishment.
I mean, you can't handle it because it's become more important
than family ties.
So here we have this very practical little story. He's going to miss a little parable,
but a situation that is as is so often the scripture is so relevant and common to our lives.
Not everybody's going to have inheritance issues, but a lot of families really deal with it, and sometimes they stop talking to each other.
So the Savior says, first of all, I don't want to be involved in these things.
And then He says, take heed and beware of covetousness for a man's life consists of not
in the abundance of the things which he possesses.
Really a great phrase.
We sometimes assess ourselves by the things that we have, and he's
trying to get them not to do that. We don't want well money things to divide family,
family is more important. So now it gives a little parable. The first of a number of parables,
I can say there are five, I can count the prodigal sound because the prodigal sound is a parable about inheritance.
It's really about forgiveness, but it's about
inheritance too. So we speak a parable saying,
the ground of a certain rich man brought forth
plentifully. I've been blessed plentifully. A lot of us
have adequate and beyond. And he thought within
himself, now as you go through these three verses,
three little verses, I sometimes say, count the eyes, the mys, and you see part of this man's problem.
What shall I do because I have no room where to bestow my fruits." And he said,
this will I do. I will pull down my barns and build greater. I'm going to come back
that phrase. And there will I bestow all keyword, all my fruits and my goods. And I
will say to my soul, soul thou much good laid up for many years,
take vine, we could add vine to the eyes in the eyes,
take the nice, eat, drink, and be merry.
So you can see right away the emphasis part of the problem is,
we tend to think of ourselves, maybe too much.
Even the phrase to soul, that was much good. Part of me says, the soul might say,
you know, I don't need any of this stuff. I eat different things. The soul, I think the Savior's
craft is parable very, very well. And I think the fact that He says to the soul because the soul doesn't
need what He has in the barns.
There is a tendency and I think there is a warn in the Savior's giving, not only don't
fight over inheritances.
Don't let inheritances, don't let wealth divide families, families are more important.
And the other thing I think he's suggesting here is we do have a tendency to build greater.
I call it the creeping average.
I grew up in an average middle-class home, 12 hundred square feet.
It had three bedrooms one for me.
My mother, my two sisters had one bathroom and a little half bath.
A kitchen, a living
room. We had one TV, the family car, one telephone. This was standard middle class. A house
I live in now, on that my children go up, we have more. And what is considered average
for my children and on my grandchildren has crept up quite a bit.
Does that make sense?
Without not trying to condemn it, not trying to say it's wrong, I'm just saying there is
a tendency in our lives sometimes to want to build greater and greater and bigger and
more.
And so he starts this little parable with the warning.
Don't let it divide families. And maybe the question that we
always ask in politics, are you better off now than you were four years ago? Maybe the proper answer
is, I was fine four years ago. I'm fine now. I don't have to have more. I don't have to build greater.
Then he finishes the parable with God, said to him, the scriptures are always very blunt.
They always tell you the truth.
Sometimes you don't like the truth. Sometimes the truth hurts, but there's a very blunt statement that assesses this problem.
He simply says, Valfoul.
Now, we want to be a little bit careful. We don't want to bash the wealthier the richest.
There's a lot of wonderful people who do really good things.
But this man kind of has the eye, my problem, and the build greater problem, and the want
more problem.
So there's three reasons why God calls him a fool.
This night thy soul shall be required of thee.
Then who shall those things be which thou
has provided?" Number one, you don't know when you're going to die. I was in Cambodia just a
little while ago and there's a lot of Hinduism there and Hindus like riddles. And one of the riddles
that's in a series, the last question is, what is the greatest wonder on earth?
It's a very famous one, and the answer is that people die every day,
but nobody wakes up in the morning saying, today is my day.
So he's saying, that's the greatest wonder.
I think someone said once we all wake up like the turkey on Thanksgiving morning,
thinking we're going to have lunch as usual. Yeah, that's a good way of saying it. Yeah, you might be lunch. In Ecclesiastes, I know it's
Old Testament and last year Solomon gives the same idea, the answer to that question,
who shall those things be which thou hast provided? The first thing you may die tonight, the second thing, who's going to get it,
and what are they going to do with it?
And in Ecclesiastes chapter 2, one of the things that Solomon is concerned about,
he says, I hate it all my labor under the sun. That's probably a too strong of a word.
Because I should leave it under the man that should be after me. I'm going to work all this and then I have to leave everything I got.
And who knows whether he will be a wise man or a fool.
Yet she'll have rule over all my labor, wherein I have labored and wherein I have showed
myself wise under the sun.
I was wise and you had handled, but the next person didn't.
I went about to cause my heart to despair of all the labor which I took
under the sun. For there is a man whose labor is in wisdom and in knowledge and in equity, yet to a
man that half-not-labored therein shall he leave it, for his portion this is vanity. There is a little
bit of a sense of if you earn it and work for it, you're probably going to be more responsible in it, but if it's just given to you, you may waste it.
Which parable in the New Testament teaches that fairly powerfully, even though it's not
the purpose of the parable, and that is the prodigal son.
So part of the wisdom Christ is helping us with the financial matters might be, it isn't
always wise to leave a lot of money,
even though we wanna leave an inheritance
and a legacy to our children and grandchildren,
they may not be able to handle it.
So we need to think a little bit.
There are studies that say 85% of people who leave,
I think it was over $50,000 to their children.
85% it's gone in a year
and in almost all cases it has a negative impact on people.
Wow.
There's a link to the protocol sign.
We don't want to focus on the protocol sign, but that's what he's saying.
Be careful, you may die before you could enjoy it and what's going to happen to those
you leave it to.
And then the last thing in verse 2,
and so is he that layeth up treasure for himself.
That's the I, my problem and is not rich towards God.
So that's the first parable that he's dealing with on this theme that runs, especially
through the Gospel of Luke Luke on temporal affairs.
Temporal affairs impact our spirit. He knows that.
Now, there is the Luke chapter 12, most of it,
to get to the end. He continues to talk about that,
and a lot of it is a repeat of what I'm sure you talked about back in,
the sermon on the Mount, the files of the air,
and the little ways of the field, and you can add to your stature and
Seek first the kingdom. I'm sure you talked about all that so I don't want to go there
Basically the rest of those next two columns of scripture the Savior is saying can you just simplify and
Just worry about the basics if you just worry about the basics present hinkley's words was
a modest house and a basic car.
If you just have the basic modest things, you don't have to be in verse 29 of a doubtful mind,
worried and anxious. You're going to have enough. There are more important things to seek
than building better and bigger parts.
So if I were to pull one thing out of chapter 12, that seems to be one of the major things
that he's dealing with, and he's going to pick it up again in chapter 14, and he's
going to pick it up again in chapter 16.
He's going to pick it up in 15.
It really runs through this section.
Peter has a question in verse 41. He says,
Lord, are you speaking this parable to us or to all? I mean, how personal are we supposed to take this?
Now, he adds a little thing about knocking at the door. I mean, I'd like to just spend a little
time on that, but we may not have time. And Jesus often doesn't answer his questions, people's questions directly. He wants
us to apply him to ourselves. And the Lord says, I want you to be faithful, wise stewards.
We're going to see a parable that suggests everything that I have belongs to God anyway.
So we're all stewards. So what I'd like you to do in verse 42,
So we're all stewards. So what I'd like you to do in verse 42
instead of accumulating would you give see that word in verse 42
Who is the wise and faithful steward whom his lord has made shall make ruler over his household
To give them their portion of meat and do season
Blessed is that servant whom his lord when he come, shall find so doing. It's a parable and a section about preparing for the second
coming, preparing for the coming of Lord whenever, preparing for death whenever it comes.
And when that comes, I want to be giving. I'm giving the meat, I think means teachings, knowledge, truth,
to feed them, feed the sheep.
That's a more important thing than accumulating something that you may not live to enjoy
and may hurt somebody that you leave it to.
Give them the things that won't hurt them.
Give them the meat in due season. Give them truth. Give them a things that won't hurt them. Give them the meat in due season.
Give them truth.
Give them a great legacy.
The Buddha, you know, when he left, he was wealthy, he was a prince, and he left to seek
enlightenment.
Or his wife and his child and for all mankind, he tries to find a way to end human
suffering.
He spends years, and he comes up with an answer. The answer
is to live selflessly and in compassion. That's the key idea of Buddhism. And he comes
back and his wife says to the son, go and ask your father for his inheritance. Maybe
she's a little upset that he left. But he's seeking a solution for them too. And he says,
I have nothing to give my son as a worldly inheritance. It will
only cause him worries and anxiety, but I will leave him a better inheritance. I will
leave him the gift of a holy life. And his son follows him and the wife and it changes
and the family reconciles himself to this search he does to try and find an answer to human suffering and dilemma.
So I sense that in chapter 12, let's give meat and do season.
And when Christ comes, whether it's death or in his own second time, he'll find us teaching
primary, happy family home evening, on a mission, he'll find us giving meat in due season
rather than counting how many things we have in our barn and building bigger and bigger.
So that's kind of my takeaway for chapter 12.
I love it. Maybe the best thing we can offer children is a spiritual inheritance,
and not a financial inheritance.
Not maybe.
I think that's what Lord's saying here is, we work so hard to give them a financial inheritance,
but are we working to give them a spiritual inheritance to carry on?
Yeah, I think so.
There's one other thing I would do in chapter 12 just because it's so indicative and
necessary for our world. If we go to verse 54, he say,
I've also to the people, when you see a cloud rise out of the west, straight way
you say they're coming to shower. And so it is out of the west off the Mediterranean,
where rain comes into Israel. When you see the south wind blow, you say,
there will be heat. That's coming off the desert and it comes to pass.
Just go to the next phrase, ye can discern the face of the sky and of the earth.
But how is it that you do not discern this time?
Ye, why even of yourselves, judgey not what is right?
Jealous, judging not what is right. I look at that and I think we have so much technology,
so much knowledge, so many things we can do medically.
Just last night, my granddaughter and her husband
were showing me chat, GT, I know you haven't known,
I'm talking chat, GT.
Yeah, this artificial intelligence,
and I think what a time we live in, and yet the Savior
is saying, yeah, you know a lot, but do you discern the times, the times that are going
on?
Do you understand what is right and wrong anymore?
When I look at our times, you know, I say, well, what is the times?
We are confrontational.
We are judgmental.
We are canceling.
Everybody wants to be victims sometimes in this world.
Where our times are permissive.
Our generation, you know, our baby Boone of Generation.
We were called the me generation.
And then the next generation was called the me me me generation I
Called at just for fun
Again, I'm not trying to be critical too much because we do live in a very critical time. We're just very critical and
judgmental and harsh on one another and
We're kind of the selfie tick-tock. Cameras pointed the wrong direction.
I think the savior would say,
you need to point the camera the other way.
I was like, the around with selfies,
please don't get me wrong.
I use this as a descriptive.
Or a posturing on TikTok,
or selfieing ourselves.
And there's just something about that question
that has bothered me all my life. Am I discerning my time, the spirit of my time, the problems of the time?
Am I losing the anchor that is what is right, what is wrong, what is moral, what is ethical,
what isn't, what is the meaning of life, what is the right way to live?
How do we interact with people in our relationships?
And it just seems like we're not discerning the time very well.
I hope I'm discerning that well,
and I don't want to get caught up in some of
everybody probably will answer that question a little bit,
but I think it's a good observation of the Savior.
You can do so much,
but you are losing track of other things
that may be are important.
Just in this most recent general conference, President Nelson said, I am greatly concerned
that so many people seem to believe that it is completely acceptable to condemn, malign,
and vilify anyone who does not agree with them.
Many seem eager to damage another's reputation with pathetic and pithy
barbs. Anger never persuades, hostility builds no one, contention never leads to inspired
solutions. He goes on, I'm sure all of our listeners have heard this talk, but...
Well, I'm glad I'm in the right channel here, because that's exactly what I think you
saying about we can do a lot, but are we discerning our time? Do you understand our time?
And are we losing sense of what is right and wrong? So that's the last thing in chapter 12.
Quickly, if we want to go to 13 and the first part of 14, maybe just one thing I thought would be
a little bit on the Sabbath. He Jesus heals on the Sabbath in both chapter 13, the woman with an infirmity,
that's 1311, and in 141, he starts healing.
And sometimes I wonder if Jesus, I don't want to say, enjoyed kind of,
I hate to say breaking the rules,
but at least challenging the accepted rules of the time
because it seems like he does a heck of a lot of healing
on Sabbath.
And part of me thinks, I just wonder if he's doing that
on purpose because he prefers it
because he wants to make a point
that people are carrying things too far.
And that if I made a list of just some of the things
he said, what could you do on the Sabbath
if we look in 13, verse 11, there's the woman
which had a spirit of infirmity 18 years
and could no-wise lift up herself.
Well, you can lift up people on the Sabbath. That's a good thing to do
Jesus saw our call to or and said thou art loose from that in front well you can lose people from
Infernity on the side. I'm not just talking about physical things here. I'm just trying to get some phrases to stick in my mind
to say am I losing, am I lifting up? Immediately
she was made straight. Am I helping people to be made straight and to glorify God? Or
16, not this woman whom Satan hath bound, am I be loose from the bond, am I loosening the
adversary's bonds? Chapter 14, verse 3, Jesus spaked the Pharisees, is it lawful to heal
on the Sabbath day? To pull out of the pit. I just like those phrases, if I use them in terms of spiritual things, we can lift people up
are we? We can loose them, we can make them straight, we can help them glorify God, we can
help to remove their bonds, we can heal, we can pull them up, pull them up. I just like all those
phrases. And probably the rule breaker in me kind of, maybe
I'm justifying. I probably am. If I can't see a good reason for a rule, I may be willing
to bend it, if not break it and bend it so much that I have a little comfort in the fact
that I think he did it on purpose. I think he was trying to make a point. Let's be a little more moderate. Let's not just get too caught up in every tiny little detail of life. The more
rules you need, it's a sign of spiritual immaturity. More rules, the more spiritual
immaturity I think people are. I hate to keep going to Buddhism, but it's been on my mind a lot because of where I was. The Buddha said, there is no pathway in the sky, enigmatic, but what he meant
among other things is you don't need the pathway. You don't need the signposts and barriers
because we would say the spirit's going to tell you what to do all the time. He's just
going to guide you and you're going to know what's right. So if you need a lot of rules, it's okay, but we're hoping to get you to a little higher
level of spiritual maturity where you can walk in the sky without a path. That's kind of, so that's
kind of 13. If I were going to pick something out of 13. Yeah, I think if it would heal, if it would uplift, if it would get someone out of a terrible
situation, if it would help someone become more God-centered, that sounds like a Sabbath-day
activity the Savior would approve of.
Yeah, I like the phrases.
I just like them and applying.
He's talking about physical things, but everything Jesus did on a physical level,
everything. It's all the miracles that he did for an individual, was his way of saying,
what I'm doing for this individual I can do for everybody on a spiritual level. And we have to
look at the miracles always that way, saying, how does that apply to me and to my life on a spiritual level, whether it's heating the blind or the
lame or in this case these two walking on water feeding the 5,000.
We're going to see the raising of Lazarus here a little bit later.
It's always a visual of what he will do for us spiritually.
I just look at the visual and I'll get the message.
To give an amen to what we've just been talking about, verses three and four of Luke 14,
is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath day?
You mean, he looked around lawyers and Pharisees.
Yeah, he's teaching that it's okay to do good on the Sabbath.
I love this.
This daughter of Abraham, 18 years, and his adversaries were ashamed when he said
that he was appealing to their humanity. And so I love that the next chapter is it lawful to heal
on the Sabbath and they held their peace this time. And I guess trying to say, look, people are
more important than this policy here that you've taken too far. That's my major takeaway from those.
I mean, there's lots in here. Orteen, we get a number of parables.
The first party gives some pretty good common sense.
If you go to a feast, take the lowest seats.
Don't go out and take the seat of honor because you may embarrass yourself.
So it's humble.
And if you're going to make a feast, we're going to see this list in verse 13 again,
who we suggest you invite to the feast,
when you make a feast call the poor, the maim, the lame,
the blind, those four, okay?
And you'll be blessed because they can't recompense the,
if you invite, you know, the wealthy,
they may return the favor, but you're going to do this.
We're going to see those four again in the next parable. So if we pick
it up in verse 16, then said he unto him, a certain man made a great supper in Bade Mani. Some people
say the Father is the great supper, or Jesus is the great supper. There's a great feast awaiting in
the gospel. The Savior has a lot to feed us.
He's the bread of life out of His flows, the living water.
It's a great supper.
He's going to give us the new wine.
There's a lot of eating imagery in the New Testament and the old.
So here's the great supper, and He invites many.
And He sent His servant at supper time to say to them,
that were bidden, come for all things
are now ready. And they all with one consent began to make excuse. And they're not bad people.
It's just that they're things that are more important to them than the feast that he wants to give
them. The first sent to him, I have bought a piece of ground. I got a real estate I need to handle.
a piece of ground. I got a real estate I need to handle. I must needs go and see it. I pray that you have me excused. Like I said, they're not bad. They just have a little priority challenge here.
You probably could go to the feast and see the piece of ground tomorrow. And another said, I have
bought five Yoko vox and I go to prove them. I pray that you have me excused. And another said, I have bought five Yoko box and I go to prove them. I pray they have me excused.
And others said, I have married a wife
and therefore I cannot comment on that one.
I don't know what to do with that one.
It sounds like a better excuse than the other ones.
It might.
Yeah.
In Matthew's account, he says,
some went to their merchandise.
And so there are more temporal things
that are preventing them from feasting.
And the servant came and showed his Lord these things, and the master of the house being angry
said to his servant, go quickly into the streets and lanes of the city and bring here.
Here's our list again.
So he said, we want to invite these.
So here's our four, the poor and the maimed.
He changes the word from lame to halt and the blind.
And the servant said, I did it.
There's enough room for more.
Now go into the highways and the hedges
and urge them.
Compel, unfortunately, was used by the Inquisition
to justify forced religion.
So the better word is urge. Urge them to come in that my house may be filled.
Before I send you that none of those men which were bid and shall taste of my supper. So here's
another one about distractions. In the rich fool, you know, he got a little distract because he
had so much and needed some space. I wanted to build more. And in this one, they're busy.
They're doing, they're not doing bad things.
It's just that there's a priority that's not in the right order
and they're missing the feast.
Now, what's interesting about this is Isaiah 25 talks about a feast
and Dr. N. Covenant Section 58 combines both Isaiah 25 and this parable and applies
it to the temple. So if we wanted to get specific, we don't have to get specific. There is a
general feast for all of us of truth and goodness and spirit. Love that the Savior wants us to have.
He says, I'm the bread of life.
He is the feast also sometimes.
But there is a wonderful feast in the temple.
I mean, I know I do sometimes just say,
I'm just so busy proving my oxen
and looking at my piece of ground
and going to my merchandise that I just don't quite have time
to feast on maybe some of the things
that would help me in the spiritual thing. Remember I said to my soul soul, we have enough.
Well, but the soul says, well, there are some other things I'd like that maybe you aren't doing.
So it's a priority issue there again. He's just trying to give us food for thought and
an assessment of our life where the parables are designed not to appeal to the intellect but to the conscience
to the will so that we learn to be better people
Mike I would say isn't this the the parable the sower and weeds, too many weeds that the plant can't grow.
Yeah, and the plant's not dead in that one, you know, the plant dies on the shallow soil,
and the plant never grows on the wayside, but this plant grows, the phrase that's so powerful
is it brings no fruit to perfection. Too much of the strength, there's fruit there,
So much of the strength, there's fruit there, but it's just not to perfection. It's just not edible now because it didn't have enough strength to bring it to where
you need it to go.
It can't compete with everything else.
Everything.
So I say it's surprising to me when I teach this how much in the New Testament he does
talk about these issues to help us not be distracted. There
are prides that come out of different things. We're warned of pride of being of wealth. We're
warned of the pride of learning. But that's not the most dangerous pride Jesus says we need
to be aware of. Interesting. The most dangerous pride is the pride of righteousness. Isn't
that interesting? There's a certain temptation in feeling morally superior and feeling that you're morally superior.
Self-righteous judgmental. Again, we go back to the spirit of our times. That is a very dangerous
pride. He's fairly easy on the wealthy in turn. He's trying to warn him, but he'll really nail
people for self-righteousness.
Over and over. Yeah, I don't know why I brought that in, but anyway, he does have another priority issue here in
14. I'm going to skip 15 and come back to it because we'll go to 16 and kind of finish this theme.
Verse 25 of chapter 14 says, there went great multitudes with him and he turned and
said to them. A lot of people are following him. And mostly Jesus teaches what I call
velvet truth. We're going to get the most velvet of all velvet truths ever in history
in chapter 15, the prodigal son. But every now and there's a little sandpaper. It is. And here's an example. He turns to the
multi-following, says, if any man comes to me and hate not his father and mother and wife and
children and brother and sisters, and even his own life also, he cannot be my disciple. And I said,
wow, that's pretty strong. Now, he likes hyperbole. Jesus teaches with hyperbole and he teaches with
figurative language. He's a very literary teacher. Okay, English majors love the Gospels. Okay,
because they're so literally beautiful. So he is a little bit of hyperbole there and hate here
means also could be translated to love less or to prefer over.
And in the Matthew version, he doesn't say,
hey, he says, if a man loves them more than me,
he can't be my disciple.
But it's a matter of preference.
He wants father, children, wives.
But I think he said, there may be a come a time in your life
where you may have to make a choice, a difficult choice between me and a relationship.
If you want to be my disciple, the choice will need to be me. Now, the only reason I bring that up
is that sometimes people choose not to be as disciple for a lot less reasons than this very serious
one that he's, I could say he's talking in hyperbole. I don't read verse 26 literally. I
think he's trying to make an emphasis, but people do choose to cease being an apostle for things a lot less than
Mother, Father, wife, children, brother, siblings and
And I think this is when he says so look you count the cost and does a little tower parable
I want you to build a tower
And some people start they don't finish so make sure you understand that eventually
what the cost might be. And I need to be a priority, the priority, right? I need to be the priority. Yeah. If I am,
things will probably be better with wife, children, some other sisters, et cetera, and so
forth. But it's so, again, one of those a little more sandpapers things. You get the tower
parable there, start in 28, don't start building and not finish. The similar thing is in the story of
the Jaredites when the Lord says, they've built some barges and done half of their journey.
And even the brother Jared, they get on the beach and they camp for four years.
Like this is a nice situation. Yeah. Yeah, it's nice. It's good. And the Lord says,
he didn't want them to stop. He doesn't want us to stop halfway. He wants to get us all the way
into his kingdom. Don't take half the journey. In this case I don't take half the journey.
In this case, don't build half the tower,
but understand that as you build,
and I'm gonna give you a whole lifetime to build,
and I'm gonna give you even after this lifetime to build.
I'll give you every chance you need,
but understand that, and there may be some very difficult
choices if you want to be
my disciple, it's not easy. You know, he's going to ask Peter, love us thou me. Well, he
asks all of us that question all the time. And we want to be able to say, yes, Lord, I love
you. And I'm going to, I'm in for the whole journey. And I'm not going to walk away. And I'm in for the whole journey and I'm not going to walk away and I'm not going to quit.
Even if it costs a lot, which verse 26 suggests, it might cost you.
Even your own life is same.
Verse 33, whosoever forsakeeth not all that he hath cannot be by disciple.
So, some fairly strong teachings there about counting the cost of discipleship.
I like the tower image. I like the tower image.
I like the journey image in the book of Mormon.
We want to say to the Savior, you have my vote.
I'm here.
I'm here for the long time.
And if you'll be patient with me, brick by brick, I'm going to build that tower.
Nothing's going to determine from it.
Nothing's going to be more important than my discipleship
to you, that even relationships that are important to you. I guess I think there's a little hyperbole in
verse 26. But I think it's following up the same idea in the, oh, I have oxen, I have a piece of land,
elder f. Melvin Hammond, he said,
perhaps this parable could be called
the don't bother me now, Lord parable.
Right, yeah.
We try to excuse ourselves in various ways.
Each rationalization comes from selfishness
and almost always relates to something temporal
or some it's the word of wisdom
for others, the log timing,
perhaps it's a reluctance to live the law of
chastity, whatever the reason we who reject or delay our response to the Savior's invitation
show our lack of love for him who was our king. I just like what you said at the beginning that
so many of these parables are not to be taken apart intellectually they're speaking to the conscience. They are. I'm gonna come back to Luke 15
because there's probably the greatest chapter
of all scripture.
I say, it's the prodigal son.
So there is a nice pacing.
I can read 12, 13, or 14
and feel a little down.
You know, I can feel like, wow.
I'm like, ah, shit.
And I don't think Jesus wanted for us to feel bad.
I can do it, you know, I can find guilt, I can, I can,
I can feel the sandpaper, I prefer the velvet.
So it's almost as though, okay, I've given you
some pretty tough things here.
Now let me just make you feel wonderful and good.
I'm gonna, I'm gonna give you this beautiful story of hope, the prodigal son, the lost sheep,
the lost coin, and the pacing that sometimes in the scriptures, the positioning of things
carry some of the message.
So if ever you want an example of reproving be times with sharpness, which means correct and the right time early,
be times means early, correct early with truth, sharpness means truth, and then show an
increase of love.
So there's been a little challenge, it'll be a little challenging here, and now he's
going to keep his own role.
He's going to just give this, even if you waste it in rightist living, there's forgiveness.
But let's come back to that and finish this other.
Chapter 16 has two parables. I want to focus on the second one. They both have to do with this theme
of temporal things and wealth. The first is a very, sometimes a difficult one. The first is a very sometimes a difficult one, the unjust steward. I won't read through
most people know it. The steward is found that he's been wasteful. He's not been a very good steward
and he's going to get fired. So he goes to the credit of the people that owe the debtors of his
master and he says, look how much do you owe? Well, I owe a hundred. Well, write down 50.
Well, you write down 80 and he reduces them because he wants to have some friends later on who
will take care of them because he took care of them. Okay. It's a rather strange parable. I have to admit.
And then we go to verse eight, the Lord commended the unjust steward because he had done wisely.
I would probably translate that with another word, maybe cleverly, fruidently, might be
a little bit better a word.
He's looking after his future.
And the point of the parable is we want to be looking after our spiritual future as well as people look
after temporal future. So if I'm trying to build my better bar, bigger barns, let's have
bigger barns in heaven too. And if I'm trying to make friends here on earth, let's try to make
friends in heaven. Verse 9, I say unto you, make to yourself friends of the
mammoth of unrighteousness that when ye fail, meaning when you die, they may receive you into
everlasting habitations. Use the resources and the blessings God has given with you to make heavenly friends that when life is over, you will go to an everlasting habitation.
He that is faithful, Matt, which is least. So he considers temporal things, money, and stuff least.
Eleven, if there for you have not been faithful in the unrighteous man, and who will commit to your trust the true riches. So show me you can at least handle your resources, your talents, your opportunities.
Well, and I will give you really the great riches. And if you have not been faithful
in that, which is another man's, who will give you that, which is your own. So it's its consecration.
Everything I have belongs to him anyway. So please try and use it
in the proper ways. That's kind of that's what this parable is all about.
Is what's my 401 in heaven look like? Yeah, I appreciate this about this parable because it is
a little different than a lot of them. Elder James E. Talmadge in Jesus the Christ, he said,
be diligent for the day in which you can use your earthly
riches will soon pass.
Take a lesson from even the dishonest and the evil.
If they are so prudent as to provide for the only future
they think of, how much more should you, who
believe in an eternal future, provide therefore?
If you have not learned wisdom and prudence
in the use of unrighteous man,
and how can you be trusted with the more enduring riches?
That one helps a lot.
That's the principle, that's what it's saying,
but it is a little difficult.
It's difficult because he commended him for doing wisely,
and we're thinking,
when I mean, he was dishonest.
But I can say, you don't push the parables too far. You take what that's meant to say, get your heavenly 401 loaded
up and use your earthly 401 to get your heavenly 401 loaded up better. I think you're right
on here, Mike. It sounds to me that the Savior's saying, look, your money's not going with you,
but your relationships will. So use your money to create great relationships, if you have any.
Yeah.
Let's jump to another parable I really love.
I mean, the prodigal son, I think, is the greatest one.
We're going to get there in just a second.
But I love this parable, the second part of Luke 16.
We're going to start in verse 19.
When I teach this parable, I like to ask people,
and as I read these first couple of verses,
ask yourself, what are the differences between these two men?
There was a certain rich man,
which was clothed in purple and fine linen
and fared sumptuously
every day. And there was a certain beggar named Lazarus which was laid at his gate full of
sores and desiring to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man's table. More over
the dogs came and licked his sores. Now I just stopped there. And so, okay, what are the differences between the two people?
I won't put you guys to the test here,
but I'll get, well, one's wealthy, one's not.
One's has enough to eat.
One doesn't have enough to eat.
One has sores and one is in good health.
Their clothing is different. And then I'll say, well, they'll do all
these. They get all those. And then I'll ask, you've missed the most significant difference
between the two men and the baker.
And the answer is, one of them is given a name.
That's what I was gonna say.
I should have gone for it.
Okay.
Tell me if I'm wrong, the only parable I can think of
where Jesus gives a character in the parable of proper name,
which I think we're probably gonna talk about
why in a minute.
Yeah, he gives him a name,
but that's not normal.
It's the wealthy that have the name.
I mean, you can sit and say,
okay, who are the big names in the world?
Oh, you're gonna come to the stomach,
I'm not gonna go through all the name,
but people can name them.
It's the unnamed masses. I just got off a three month run of trips and I see a lot of
poverty. I just see a lot of poverty in a lot of places. I see a lot of wealth too, you know,
but a lot of poverty and a lot of beggars, a lot of people are coming up or they're trying to sell
you something for a dollar.
You can't help everybody.
But I always think whenever I see people, they have a name.
And God knows that name.
He gave the name to the poor man.
He was a subtle teacher, Jesus sometimes.
And beautiful in his subtlety.
This is a beautiful thing if we catch it. That it's the poor man that gets the name. And he's the one that becomes personalized.
The other one is just another rich man, I say.
That's a rich man.
But it's the opposite in the way we look at the world. Now, he's going to carry this
on. The English major is coming at him here now,
because I really like good writing, a really like good storytelling. So I'm going to read the next
verse. Now we're going to, I'm going to read it in the tone. The tone of scripture is important
to get sometimes. I'll read it in an obvious tone so you get it. So now I'm going to go to verse 22 and it came to pass that the
beggar died and was carried by the angels into Abraham's bosom. The rich man also died and was buried.
And can you see what he's doing there? Again, it's the reversal, it's the flip, it's the flip.
It's the wealthy who get the eloquent description, the big funerals, the allergies, the
write-ups, and it's the poor that this just are dyed and are buried, just dyed and buried.
I think that he's doing this on, is part of the power and the wonder of the
parable that we take notice. They have names. You just don't bury them, but that's kind of what we do.
I was at the killing field just about 10 days ago and graves with thousands in them.
You know, it graves with thousands in them.
They have a big memorial in one of them by Panampan. And this was from the Khmer Rouge in 1975, 1979,
when almost two million were killed.
And you can see as you come up to the memorial,
the skulls of all that they've pulled out.
You know, in this memorial, I just cried. I was overwhelmed.
I didn't realize I was going to be affected as much as I was. And I thought about this, as I was
walking, they're saying, he, he knew every name of every Lazarus that died there. I could hear their cries. I could feel their fear. There
be wilderness. The astonishment of what was happening to them and it was comforting to
know. He knew everyone. He knew all their names and that people are carried by the angels into Abraham's
bosom. A week at end right there, I love that part. There's one little thing that I really
like, at least in terms of how well crafted this is. In hell, he lifted up his eyes, being
in torment, and see if Abraham afar off and Lazarus in his bosom. And he cried and said, Father Abraham, have mercy on me and send
Lazarus that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue. I am tormented in this
flame. This is again, the litter of imagery, but how much water would be on the tip of your finger if you dipped it in water. How much water?
Maybe a drop or two. A drop. Now what word in verse 21 matches drop? He just wanted crumbs.
He just wanted crumbs. See, so you get that again, it's just such a well-written, beautiful, crafted store.
Your situation has been reversed.
It's been reversed.
The tip of the water, the drop versus the crumb, the name versus not the name, the eloquent
burial versus just died and buried.
Sounds like Lazarus could see the rich man from where he was, and now the rich man can
see Lazarus from where he is
Yeah, now we tend to just a very quick comment maybe on the last part
We won't go into again detail here. We tend to doctrinalize this last part
I'm always cautious about doctrinalizing
parables because again, I think they aren't written to the intellect. They're written to the
conscience because again, I think they aren't written to the intellect. They're written to the conscience. So Abraham said, remember in your lifetime, you had good things and he had evil things. So now he's
comforted in your torment. It's kind of opposite. I think 26 might be said with a little ironic tone.
Beside all this, between us and you, there is a great, gulf fixed so that they which would pass from
hence to you cannot, neither can they pass to us that
would come from vents. I can say we tend to
documentize that. I don't mind documentalizing that there is
barriers in the spirit world, but I don't think that's what he's trying to teach here.
I would say since that's what he's trying to teach here. I would say since
he's talking about financial wealth, rich, poor, I would leave that and say, you know, wealth
does create great gulfs between people where you can't cross over class, structure, and
status. I use this example when I moved to Salt Lake. I'd never
lived in Utah before. I moved Salt Lake 35 or so years ago, trying to find a house. I
can't tell you how many people gave me advice on different places in the Valley to buy a
house. It didn't take me very long to realize that in the Salt Lake Valley, there was a great
golf fixed.
It was called I-15.
I'm saying this is, I'm glad you're laughing because it is just so true and different comments
people would say about those two sides.
And you don't want to live over there. Yeah, that's right. Right, right here, there. You know,
this is where the proud people are. Well, here's, we're humble here. You know, we don't want to go
over there. But when you're buying a house, location, location, location, I understand that.
But there was a certain golf that was fixed. I mean, you can't read English novels and not see class structure in that.
There are gulfs fixed in these things.
I lived in a small Mormon town in Canada.
There, the gulf was those who lived on the hill and those who lived on the river bottoms.
So there's just some gulfs.
I like to think that verse 26 is stated with a
little bit of an ironic tone about gulfs being fixed, and it's not really a doctrinal statement
about the hereafter. And then he says, well, he's changing the rich man, send, you know,
send somebody to my father's house, I have five brothers, I don't want them to end up like me.
Yeah. Like me, which is good. He's he's learning and Abraham says, well, they have the scriptures and
they can listen to them and he says, well, but they won't. But if somebody came back from the dead,
they would and then Jesus makes, I think, a reference to himself. If they can't be persuaded by the prophets, even if I
if they can't be persuaded by the prophets, even if I rise from the dead,
they're not gonna be persuaded.
And you do have, I think, a specific reference
in verse 31 to his own,
but it's also one that if the scriptures can't change you,
then probably nothing is gonna change him.
Or that Lazarus is gonna,
a real Lazarus is gonna rise from the dead.
Or a real Lazarus, which is,
we've got this week too, okay?
Hey, can I ask you a question? The English major in you, I absolutely love
a Christmas Carol and the Charles Dickens story. And I've wondered if, by some chance, he got this idea
from verse 28 of Jacob Marley coming to Ebenezer Scrooge and warning him about
this place.
Well, you can certainly make that connection.
Whether he got it or not from that, you can certainly make the connection.
I wondered if you knew.
I just think it's interesting.
I don't.
England, in the 1800s, one of the ways they celebrated Christmas was to tell ghost stories.
So it's kind of natural that he would tell a ghost story, but did he get this idea of
sending somebody back?
Be nice, wouldn't it?
We'd love to think, I'm sure Dickens knew his New Testament.
And whether he did or not, the match works, but I don't know that that's where he got,
that's where he got it.
One thing I noticed from this parable is this great gulf between them seems to be created
by the rich man himself.
Even in verse 24, he says, Father Abraham have mercy on me and send Lazarus.
He still sees Lazarus as less than him.
He's his servant, send Lazarus.
And by the way, we learned that the rich man knew who Lazarus was.
He calls him by name right there.
He calls him by name.
That's right.
Yeah, he does.
The naming of the beggar is the most significant part
of the parable.
I think it's the one point we want to get above all
that they have names.
If you didn't give crumbs away while you are on earth,
you're not going to get many drops.
In the next life, I asked my students when I read this, what would you give away if you
knew the only thing you'd have in heaven are the things you gave away?
That's a good way to ask it.
They'd have a lot of gum, a lot of cookies, a lot of old clothes and old stuffed animals.
So we've had a good time with that, but I like the question.
What would you do?
Well, let's go back to Luke 15 and kind of change the subject
a little bit.
You see that theme flowing through there.
I got to tell you both, Mike,
I can barely keep these pages in my scriptures.
These are the two that...
You warn them out.
You use so much that they are worn out.
Yeah, they're hanging on by a thread.
I don't know how yours can handle it, Mike.
Yeah, minor scotch tape. It's a beautiful chapter. I don't think there's anything in chapter 15 that isn't just pure velvet. It's given to two main audiences. Sometimes it's helpful to know
the audience. I don't think one of the main
audiences in verse two is the Pharisees and the scribes, in terms of audiences who read it and
bring it. Sometimes we think that the older brother is kind of matches the Pharisees and the sinners
match the protocol. The main audience is in verse one, then drew near unto him all the
publicans and sinners for to hear him. That's who he's giving the prodigal
son for to. So those people who need to know, I just love this. I never get
through this. For those people who need to know that there is a robe,
and a ring, and shoes, and an embrace, and a kiss waiting for them,
no matter what they've done, no matter where they've been,
the robe, the ring, and the shoes are sitting there waiting for them.
and the shoes are sitting there waiting for them.
That's the main audience. The sinners he's telling this for, because we're going to find out that the prodigal doesn't feel worthy and often that's the way people feel. People just don't feel
worthy. Sometimes when I teach this, I can tell by the comments of people who they think they are in the parable.
You can read the parable in three different viewpoints. The viewpoint, some people think,
I'm the prodigal. Some people think, I'm the older brother.
And they get a little upset sometimes, you know, or at least they make comments that want to,
well, but he's not going to be equal to the other one who never sinned. And I say, well, you say that because
you think that's who you are in the parable, okay? The best viewpoint you read from is
from the father's viewpoint, okay? That's the best viewpoint. So the main audience is
those who need forgiveness. And they didn't know that the robe and the ring and the shoes are there.
And that you don't come back as a servant, you come back as a son.
The other main audience is for, and there are lots of them in the church today, for parents of children who have gone into far countries.
And far countries can be a lot of different things.
So those are the two audiences.
There is another audience that he's addressing to, let's not be threatened by the prodigal that returns home.
And all one of the most beloved characters in the Book of Mormon
is the prodigal son named Alma the Younger.
So let's not be threatened by them coming.
It's just a beautiful story for any parent,
the most beautiful story ever told is for
people who need to know they can come back and
For the parents of those people and that's who I think he's given it to. It's the only parable that has too many parables
Introducing it so we start with
Verse four, what man of you having a hundred sheep if he lose one of them does not leave
the ninety-nine in the wilderness and go after that which is lost, until he find it.
We never give up on these people.
Never.
And when he had found it, he layeth on his shoulders rejoicing.
And when he come up home, he calls it together, his friend, some joy needs to be shared.
And neighbors saying unto them, rejoice with me.
This is Jesus that is inviting best.
He's saying to the Pharisees and the scribes who are murmuring the treating with sinners,
be happy with me.
Look at their listening, their coming.
This is a cause for rejoice.
Don't condemn them.
Rejoice with me. I have found my sheep, which was lost.
And I stand you that likewise, joy shall be in heaven over one center that repenteth more than over ninety and nine just
Persons which need no repentance. I don't like to read anything in Luke 15 negatively.
I
Don't think that that's an ironic statement that, well, you are the
99 out there. Don't think you need repentance because the 99 are going to match the older
son. And he loves the older son. Like I said, there's nothing negative for me in this.
There are two kinds of joy, though. There is the intensity of joy over the one and there is the constancy of joy over
the ninety and nine and there are different kinds of joy, but I don't think God loved
Alma the younger more than Nephi, but there's a different feel to it. And that's the only way I can
describe it, that there's an intensity of joy of the prodigal, and there's a constancy of joy
over the 90-in-line and the older brother. Please join us for part two of this podcast.