Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Luke 22; John 18 Part 1 • Dr. Daniel Belnap • June 12 - June 18
Episode Date: June 7, 2023Can we weekly witness the Atonement of Jesus? Dr. Daniel Belnap explores the salvific nature of covenants, remembrance, and the sacred events in the Garden of Gethsemane as the Savior begins the Atone...ment.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Daniel Belnap00:40 Introduction of Dr. Daniel Belnap01:49 How do we make sense of Judas05:42 AWoe Pronouncement07:14 Elder Talmage on Judas08:14 Jesus, the Atonement, and Judas11:35 The Last Supper and a Passover meal14:40 The importance of meals17:16 The Sacrament as a meal20:14 Moroni, Jesus, and loneliness21:58 Four cups26:17 “Lord, is it I?”29:13 The patronage system32:43 What is a servant?35:19 John and Hank share personal stories of service37:42 Sacrifice as act of transformation42:45 Recognizing the Savior44:56 An asymmetrical story47:09 Mother Teresa story48:20 Conversion53:52 How Jesus prayers54:56 Does Peter fail?58:10 Jesus has faith in us1:00:49 Peter after Pentecost1:04:51 The Garden of Gethsemane1:08:51 What makes a place holy?1:11:30 End of Part 1–Dr. Daniel BelnapPlease 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith. I'm your host,
and I'm here with my converted co-host, John, by the way. Welcome, John, by the way, to follow him
another episode. Thank you, Hank. Yes, I went from SAE to metric. I've converted. You've converted.
I need to think about that. I'm converted. John, Jesus is going to say, in this week's lesson,
he's going to say conversion is an ongoing experience
and he's going to say to Peter,
when thou art converted, strengthen thy brethren.
We are in some wonderful touching chapters
of the New Testament today.
And we needed a Bible expert to join us.
Who's with us?
Yes, we got one, Dr. Dan Bellnap is with us again.
He was with us last year in Old Testament.
He was born in Cortelein, Idaho, raised in Pocahtello and Sandy, Utah,
served as mission in Pennsylvania, Pittsburgh mission. He married Aaron Pini in 1997. They have
four children Emma Jack Samuel and Tabitha. He has a BA in international relations from BYU
He has a BA in international relations from BYU, an MA in Ancient Near Eastern Studies from BYU,
an MA and a PhD in Northwest Semidics
from the University of Chicago.
He was part time instructor before coming
an assistant professor in 2007.
He achieved the rank of professor in 2020.
His areas of expertise include the Hebrew Bible, which I remember from last year,
Ugaritic studies and ritual studies. Many of our listeners will remember he was the co-editor of
that book from creation to Sinai. He was a co-editor with Aaron Shade, the Old Testament through the
lens of the restoration, that amazing book. And we're so glad to have you back. Been looking forward to this.
Welcome back, Dr. Bellnatt.
Thanks. Happy to be here.
We loved having Dan on last year,
and I know we're going to love having Dan on.
This year, he's just a brilliant scholar,
good friend of mine.
Dan, we're going to be in Luke 22 and John 18 today.
Of course, this is going to be looking at the Savior
in the Garden of Gessemony.
But before we do that, Luke 22 opens up with, we're back at the last supper.
There's now a feast of unleavened bread called the Passover, the Chief Priest,
and scribes are trying to kill him, and now you have Luke describing it this way.
Then entered Satan into Judas, so their name to scare it, one of the 12.
So before we go any further, Dan, I wanna ask you,
how do we make sense of Judas and what he does here?
That's a tricky question, a hard question.
And part of the problem is the text
never really does any of the gospels.
They never really give us insight
as to why Judas does what he does.
We know that he's one of the 12
disciples that Christ is called. We understand that. We recognize that. We have a few stories here
and there that suggest maybe he's not concerned about Christ's mission the same way. There's the
concern he has about the ointment that is poured over Christ. That cost a lot of money. Maybe we should have given that to the poor.
But then again, Christ had been teaching that you should be taking care of the poor.
And so who knows exactly what was meant by that?
The gospel writers certainly see that Judas is going to be tray Christ.
And this is reflected across all four of them.
But it's unclear exactly his reasons why he might have done that and the motive
that lies behind it.
One idea that some have suggested might just go with the term is scary it right here,
that maybe he's involved with a Jewish kind of freedom movement in some way or he was involved,
in which case, Christ's claim to be the Messiah is one that he's responding to.
There's a lot of people that might be thinking of him in a more political sense of that Messiah, right?
A warrior king who's going to come and restore Israel or restore Judah, Israel to its golden age of freedom and independence and power and so forth. And maybe he's got
caught up on that. Maybe he's looking at this and thinking, Christ, all of a sudden,
isn't acting the way I would expect the Messiah to act during this last week. We started with a
triumphal entry. Things were great, but it's just gone kind of downhill from there. He keeps
going home and leaving Jerusalem every night. But we don't know. We don't really know. We have this
text here from Luke, where he says, Satan entered into Judas, simply suggesting
that Judas has been overcome by the adversary, which really is a theme that's going to run
through both of these chapters of Christ's disciples dealing with the challenges of the
way this story is unfolding, the way these events are happening.
I don't think they're expecting him. No one's going to fully understand what Christ's mission was until, until after, at
which point when he shows up in a resurrected body, they're like, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah. Okay. Now that makes sense. Now, I grasp that now. That makes better sense. So,
Judas is like the other disciples just, he's lost. And I think both Matthew, it's not
in Luke per se, but both in Matthew and Mark, Christ
and mentioned, I'm a shepherd, you're going to be like sheep that have scattered.
I mean, you're just going to be offended these next day or two.
And by offense, he means to trip, to stumble, to fall.
You're just going to, you're going to be tried and they all get tried.
I can't speak to the whole narrative and I don't want to certainly apologize for what Judas does.
But in Matthew, for instance, when Judas leaves this table, Christ calls him a friend.
It's something that shows up a few verses later in chapter 22, in verse 22, you find, and
truly, the Son of Man goeth as it was determined, but Woa did that man by whom he is betrayed.
The concept of a woe, a woe oracle, right? This is a
woe pronouncement. We find these in the Old Testament elsewhere. They're often associated with a
prophetic statement where they come from is almost a morning background to mourn someone.
If someone's suffering or has died, you mourn them. And woe is the type of pronouncement you
would make their woe. They're in such bad
states. So you've got Christ referring to him as a friend in math. You've got a woe
penancement here in verse 22. There's a sense that Christ still very much loves Judas.
Even as he recognizes that betrayal is going to happen. You've got the story later of where
Judas is going to have great remorse for what he did. It just seems from these
stories that there's a sense that Judas, he knows why he did what he did, but I don't think he's
thought it through completely and understands all the ramifications of it. And when he does
realizes that he has betrayed Christ and he's destroyed by that.
and he's destroyed by that. Bitter tears of regret.
He'll take his own life as a way to maybe get through that pain, right?
And not that this is a great way to start this, but that's a dark sobering story of where
you're going to have someone who commits suicide and sees there is no way out.
There's no way out from their behavior except for suicide.
I think when you read verse 22, you see Christ almost prophetically mourning the death of his friend.
I wanted to read this to both of you. Elder James Talmud certainly had strong feelings about Judas.
He said, quote, he had pledged himself to the blackest deed of treachery of
which man is capable.
And from that hour, he sought the opportunity of superseding his infamous promise by its
more villainous fulfillment.
We are yet to be afflicted by other glimpses of the evil-hearted ischariot in the course
of this dread chronicle of tragedy and perdition.
For the present, let it be said that before Judas
sold Christ to the Jews, he had sold himself to the devil. He had become Satan's surf, and he did
his master's bidding. That's strong language from from Elder Talmud. Yeah, and it's possible that
Judas believes that of himself by the end. And that's what I'm getting at. You look at the overall across all of these
gospels. Judas, no, I'm not saying he's a tragic figure, but Judas comes off as a figure who is
who's completely taken over in the sense by saying whatever his reasoning was,
Satan's using that, Satan may hate Christ. I don't know if Judas ever does hate Christ, right?
He may be true what he thinks
is the right thing, but he's second guessing all the way through. And we end up with, I'm not
kidding, we end up with a suicide by the end of the story. It's a tragic, horrific account.
And yet at the same time, at least from a latter-day Saint perspective, Christ will go into the
Garden of Gethsemane and pay that price price to. We think of the sacrifice in the Garden of
Gisemite, the Atoning, act that Christ performs, and we think of it often in
terms of ourselves. We are egocentric, and I mean that in a positive sense of the
word, we think of the Atonement in the ways it fixes us, and we use it for all
the negative things that are going on in our life.
But Christ has just experienced the betrayal of a really close friend. And I wonder if there's
an element of that that lies behind this. This great promise that's given in Isaiah 53 that after
Christ pays this price, he should be able to see his seed. I don't know what's going to happen to Judas. I don't
obviously know the eternal ramifications of what he did, but he tried to fix it at the end
in the only way that he knew how. And it's a tragic way to go, but knowing full well that Christ
was going to have to pay this price, I think Judas is redeemable in the end. Now that's my opinion, that's Dan Bellnott's opinion. But I think he's redeemable in the end, and I think Judas is redeemable in the end. Now, that's my opinion, that's Dan Bell, that's opinion.
But I think he's redeemable in the end, and I think the texts suggest that Christ understood
that he is redeemable in the end.
Yeah.
We believe in an infinite atonement.
Infinite.
I've often wondered, love your comments on this.
If the atonement could have been accomplished,
perhaps without
Judas betraying him, there would have been other ways to find Jesus for those who are trying to
get him. I don't know. And I often thought, like we said, we don't really know exactly what he
was thinking. That statement that Satan entered into Judas is pretty strong, but I wonder if he
thought,
well, Jesus has gotten out of all sorts of things.
He can do anything, maybe he can get out of it.
We don't know, and that's why this gets tricky.
The text gives us no indication to motive, except for this statement.
The Forgoth's authors just don't comment.
Yeah, they don't.
They just report the facts on this one and just move forward.
And that might be indicative on its own.
They don't say, this is between Judas and Christ.
In that sense, there's an element of it where it even takes you to 76.
If Judas is a son of perdition, in 76, you're told for the sons of perdition,
there's a place for them. And then Joseph the prophet is simply told,
where they are, how big that place is,
what the depth of it is, anything about that, that's none of your concern that's between me and them.
At least from 76's perspective, there's an answer here and that answer is, their mind, I'll deal with
them, they're not your concern. And that's probably the best answer to say here with Judas. And you
see that because you can juxtapose Judas with what's going to happen with Peter
through this night.
Excellent.
Always a good answer isn't it?
Yes.
He can look at everything that's going out there, but look to your own self.
Let's keep moving forward here.
We're now back at the last supper.
You've got Peter and John saying, let's eat the Passover meal and ask Jesus, where should we prepare?
What's different in this Luke account than the other accounts we've read?
For the most part, I think it's the basic storylines, the same.
Grace tells them to go in and get a place for it. You'll find someone in there, tell them,
where's the guest chamber where she'll eat the Passover with my disciples, that's verse 11.
He'll show you the room, we'll go in there, we'll get, we'll get Passover. So that's exactly what happens. Obviously,
in verse 14, this is when it becomes, and when the hour was coming, sat down and the apostles with
him. Now, that little phrase with him, I know a couple of scholars have pointed out here that
this can be a way to play with an understanding of the events for the rest of this night. There's a discussion of who's with him, who's not with him. And we'll see that phrase with him or with
them in different places between chapters 22 and John chapter 18. We're getting a kind of an
underlying current who exactly is with Christ during this evening. And I already pointed out that
Matthew and Mark have Christ saying something about sheep being scattered, that the disciples will be like sheep being scattered. So there's
a real sense that these gospels are leading to an image of Christ all alone, whether that
happens in the garden, whether it happens on the cross, you're going to end up with
a Christ who is isolated and alone and perhaps lonely by that. So we're going to have a little bit of play back
and forth with this. Who's with them? Who exactly is with Christ? Obviously, this will take greater
significance when we end up dealing with Peter's betrayal of which he's going to pretty much
explicit say, I'm not with him. That's kind of the point. So just keep that in mind as we bounce through that. As for the sacrament itself, Luke adds verse 15 that the others don't, which provides
a sense of, again, mode of to what he's doing, he's doing. I keep coming back to this concept
of mode of, sometimes the scriptures just tell the narrative and they don't really explain
why people do what they do. But verse 15 gives us a little bit of an insight,
possible insight of which we can maybe tease it out
and pull it a little bit more and see what's revealed.
In verse 15, the reason why Christ wants this Passover
is says, I have desired to eat with this Passover
with you before I suffer.
Now, the way Luke is phrased that,
is he's just suggested that maybe one of the purposes
behind the Passover is not just to institute the sacrament and not just because it's Passover,
but because Christ knows that he's about to suffer.
Now, he might not know exactly what that suffering is, but he knows that.
He knows the game plan.
He knows what's supposed to move forward here, and he simply wants to have a meal with
his friends before he does. I think there's an element of the Gospels and of Christ's experience, his mortal experience,
and that's not to take away from his divinity at all.
The book of John establishes Christ's divinity well, but there is a mortal element of this,
and part of it is, is Christ is going to be alone, very much alone here, moving forward,
and having support from his friends and his family,
that would be important to anybody. So the idea of having this final meal, I think one element of it,
is like, listen, I'm about to do something that's really difficult. I'd like to just have a meal
with my friends if that's possible for me to. And I think that that goes to an element of just
why we have meals in the first place. I talk about this sometimes with my speeders.
We don't really like to eat by ourselves.
Eating is something that we have to do, but meals are often a social event.
And they're one of the primary ways in which we demonstrate kind of who belongs, who's
a part, how do we demonstrate inclusion.
And so when you look at different meals that we have,
you've got to regular meals during the week, we try to have a family meal at night. If that's
ideal, we all gather around, we share stories about the day, and maybe it's 15, 20 minutes long,
than everyone's scattered, but for 15, 20 minutes, we kind of remember that we're a group, right?
You've got Sunday meals. Sunday meals are usually your best meal of the week,
You've got Sunday meals. Sunday meals are usually your best meal of the week,
best food, the usually longer.
This might be a place where you invite people,
especially on fast Sunday.
Especially on fast Sunday.
Especially on fast Sunday.
And for students, that's a big one.
They tend to have kind of break your fast-type meals, right?
So the whole ward comes together.
So we use Sunday meals to demonstrate
who's part of the bigger family perhaps.
For here in the United States, thanksgiving is our greatest meal of the year. Best food,
best dishes, largest quantity of food, you're inviting all family and friends over. We use meals
to demonstrate who belongs. And I think at least for me in the scriptures, there's two great set
of symbols that to describe the power of the atonement for me. the Scriptures, there's two great set of symbols that to describe
the power of the Atonement for me. And the first one is clothing, the acts of clothing
or unclothing, divestiture, investors, is what we call them, which clothing tends to represent
identity. And by virtue of that, then the Atonement transforms us, changes our identity. But one of
the other ways is a meal. If we think of the word atonement
as to from the English meaning, at one with, right, William Tindell, this idea that we come together
to become one, one of the primary symbols used in the scriptures to describe that oneness or unity
that can emerge thanks to the Atonement of Christ are meals, eating. And you can see different variations
of those meals scattered throughout. And I think this is
one of them from Christ's perspective. I'm going to be by myself. Can we be one together one last time?
I think that's kind of beautiful. That's really nice. I like to think of the sacrament too as not
not just remembrance of his sacrifice, but the Savior saying come and eat with me again. I look at the sacrament table,
and I think it's like an altar, but it's like a table where we remember the last supper too, and
as you said, to eat with people is to accept them and affirm them that upset the scribes of
Pharisees sometimes. Like, he's eating with sinners, but the Savior invites us to eat with him. I
like to think of the sacrament that way. Maybe I'm going too far,
but I like that he's inviting us in fellowship back to that table.
I agree with you. I think of the sacrament as a meal. It's a symbolic meal, granted, a very small meal,
but you've got other places where he does the sacrament and it becomes a full meal.
You've got 35, 35 chapter 19. They eat until they are filled.
And you've got elements of the Kirtland Temple,
which carries with it some sacramental elements
of where they're all eating at night bread.
And it's a meal.
And even though we tend to eat in silence,
and we all take our little small piece of bread,
we have a small cup.
We do it communally.
The sacrament is a communal ordinance.
We do it together. Even The sacrament is a communal ordinance.
We do it together.
Even if we sit in silence, we're sitting next to our family, next to our friends, it's
very much a communal experience.
And I think sometimes we miss out on the sacrament if we don't recognize its communal nature.
We see this, is we move down through this.
This isn't necessarily unique to Luke, but when he goes on to say, for I say unto you,
I will not drink in the fruit of the vine until the kingdom of God come.
That's verse 18.
What's fascinating to me is his later days.
Saints, we have section 27 of the doctrine.
By 1835, Joseph Smith has received more instruction as to this future sacrament.
In verse 5, has him, in section 27, you have Joseph Smith being told,
but hold this is wisdom to me, wherefore marvel not, for the hour
cometh that it will drink of the fruit of the vine with you on the earth.
So he's talking about the fulfillment of this sacramental
prophets.
And I know others have talked about it, but it always strikes me about that.
He says, I'm going to be coming. Moroni will be coming.
Verse six, Elias will be there.
Verse seven, John the Baptist, verse nine, Elijah, verse 10, Joseph Jacob and Isaac
in Abraham, verse 11, Michael, 12, Peter James and John.
And then he sums them all up in verse 14 by saying, and also with all those who my father
is giving me out of the world, which means the sacrament is prophetic.
It's not just a memorial, it's prophetic of where we look forward to this all-inclusive
meal that will have with Christ, right?
The Messianic banquet that others have talked about.
We really do believe that in Saturday's Saints, and we look forward to that.
And so the sacrament isn't just a reminder of Christ's sufferings and trials.
It also points us towards a future event, a future sit down Thanksgiving meal with everybody.
I love that he says with Moroni because I mean, Moroni spent so much time alone and kind of the way I read it, it sounds like, you know, my father was killed in battle.
I, this was my father's life's work was this book of Mormon.
And then I don't know, I don't have ore.
Am I supposed to finish this and then he does beautifully.
And I just love that the Lord would say and with Moroni, who spent those last decades of his life, you know, alone.
Yeah.
You look at that chapter and I know we're slightly out of Luke 22 now,
but when you look at Mormon chapter 8, if we found out that
Moroni was depressed or it was experiencing even a, I mean,
always say, I have no or, I have no family, I have no friends, I have no place to go.
No friends, no kin, right? Yeah.
I don't even know what the Lord's will is for me moving forward right now.
That is another individual who is completely isolated and abandoned and from his sense,
forgotten and broken.
So again, these are kind of more sobering topics, but you're right.
There's this beautiful ordinance that Christ institutes of a meal, we'll get together and
we'll celebrate that aspect of the Atonement, the ability for Christ to bring us and make us all one.
And I think that's just cool.
So I kind of want to say the Passover was looking forward to the events of this weekend,
the events of the Atonement of Christ.
And he's telling us how to remember to look back to that weekend. But what you're
adding is, and it's also a prophecy that someday we will have another meal with him, and he
will accept take all of us in and we'll have another meal with him.
I think that's another way to look at the sacrament. The Passover, now we don't know exactly
how Christ performed the Passover, but we do know at
least later Jewish tradition has like four cups associated with that. And of course, they're
celebrating... Yeah, and that's mentioned in verse 20, the cup after supper. Is that the third one?
Yes, according to later Jewish tradition, it would be the third cup. If already got a festival that
reminds you of the freedom and liberating power of God
in Israel's life.
To that point, John, this isn't just a reminder of a past event when God delivered us.
This can actually be used to point us forward to a future event when we all celebrate the
liberty and freedom that has been made possible through the events that I'm about to perform.
Yeah, that's fantastic. I have a great thought from Charles W. Penrose. I bet both of you
know that name. Remember the first presidency, I believe, a long time ago. He said exactly
a dance saying here. In the sacrament, we do this in remembrance of him, in remembrance
of the atonement, which was wrought for us, an all-mankind who listened to his voice in
obeys commandments, and also to direct who listened to his voice and obeys commandments.
And also to direct our thoughts to another great event in connection with the history of
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, which is yet to take place.
We take this sacrament this afternoon, not only in remembrance of the past, but to direct
our minds to the future.
We partake of it to witness that we believe in the atonement wrought by the Lord Jesus on Calvary,
and also that we expect his reappearance on the earth.
We expect he will come again.
Not the next time as the babe in Bethlehem,
not the next time to be despised
and rejected of man, a man of sorrows,
and acquainted with grief,
but as the Lord of life and glory,
as the king of Israel to sit upon the throne
of his father, David, to rule from the
rivers to the ends of the earth, not to be brought in the subjection of men, but to have all things
made subject to him. And he goes on. It's really a powerful, powerful message. That's way back
in Journal of Discourses, volume 15. For me, the sacrament has another element to it, which ties into everything that's about to happen,
but in 3 Nephites chapter 18, when he introduces the sacrament to the Nephites, when he institutes it,
in verse 6, he breaks up the bread in this case, and he says, and this show you, I've always observed
to do, even as I've done, even as I have broken bread and blessed it, given it to you, and this show
you doing remembrance of my body, which I've shown unto you.
For the Nephites, the sacrament was in a remorial of Christ's broken body, but of a resurrected
body.
And I always think, how different would it be if I thought of the sacrament as a reminder
of Christ's resurrected body?
Resurrection.
How does that change this ordinance? And of course, when you,
therefore, when you read Moroni's versions of these sacramental prayers later in the book of Mormon,
and he talks about Christ's body, this is what he's talking about. This is the Nephide experience
of Christ's body. In the old world, you've got a body that is mortal, that hasn't died yet,
and that they'll end up seeing on a cross, and I ain't. And I get that, but from the Nephites,
they see a resurrected body. And how does that change the sacrament? So between that and section 27,
we've got two other ways to look at this. And I think that both of those are still very much
at least implicit or implied in the gospel versions of the sacrament.
That's awesome. I'm always intrigued by things the Lord has us to repeat.
And the fact that he wants us to do this every week just tells you how
important he sees that it is. And I think it was a
President Kimball, Spencer W. Kimball many years ago who said, when you look in
the dictionary for the most important word, do you know what it is? He said, it could
be remember.
And then he talked about the sacrament prayers that we do in remembrance.
That's fun because you go through the Book of Mormon and you see warnings about forgetting.
How could you have forgotten?
Nephys says to his brothers, and I'll remember remember my sons.
And it's a fun way next time you go through the Book of Mormon.
Watch for remember and forget.
It's kind of interesting to see that in the Jaredites.
And they remembered the things the Lord had done
for their fathers and things go bad.
And they did not remember.
And they did not remember.
Yeah.
Yeah, no, that's important stuff.
Dan, I've noticed that right here
during this amazing sacrament experience,
the apostles are still yet to really fully grasp
who they're supposed to be.
And I say that knowing that I have,
I'm a long way away from that further than they are.
But in verse 24, it says,
there was a strife among them
about who should be accounted the greatest.
So here they are at this last meal,
the Savior wants to eat together.
And it sounds like my family.
Come on, let's all get together.
Let's have a wonderful time
and then there's strife among them.
Right. That also happens at big skimming.
It's not what I envisioned.
Don't talk about politics. That's a big skimming.
And this question seems like, when do I get to go to the big table?
I mean, that's one of the fun things about things.
Right. There's a little bit of a right of passage. If you're at the small table,
by that way, we know it's the kids.
When you get to move up to the big adult table, that's a good sign.
That's a big event. You can take part in the strife too.
Right. Exactly.
So the way this has been working, so he's established the sacrament. We talked a little bit about that
now, right, that this, the body. And by the way, back to verse 19, there's an element of this,
which is unique to Luke, right? This is my body, which is given to you, so, are this the body. And by the way, verse 19, there's an element of this, which is unique to Luke, right?
This is my body, which is given to you. So are given for you.
So we've got now four different ways to think about this sacrament.
But in any case, he's done that. And then we get verses 21 to 22,
which we kind of talked about when we dealt with Judas, about how that the betrayer
would be there. Christ identifies this individual and says that he's here with this.
And I mourn the fact that he's here with us. And I mourn the fact
that he's about to betray. And then to get verse 23 and they began to inquire amongst themselves,
which of them it was that should do this thing. Now that's a positive, I think, as everyone looks
and maybe does a bit of a self-interspection, it goes, is that me? What am I doing?
It's an eye. Right. But according, Luke, apparently that conversation goes a little bit further and then we get under I never would. And I don't know if that now means that like,
well, I never would. That's just I've got to be the greatest then. I would never of course
betray. I mean, that's crazy talking. By the way, who are we going to determine is the leader of
this group and the greatest? Right. Who is the greatest among it? Right. Oh, man, I would,
I would never do that. So I
must be better than others. And this could be a place where Luke ties in something that Matthew
dealt with. Matthew puts it a little bit earlier, but somewhere during this last week, he has a
discussion with his disciples, the mother of John and the sons of Zebedee come to him. There seems to be a question about, again,
who's got placement and who's going to have prominent positions with Christ? Luke puts this
into that discussion, or at least that contention. He's what he'd get here within the last
supper meal. So they've talked about, is it me, what it's not me, but who's among us?
Is the greatest
who gets to determine this? And you get Christ saying, the kings of the Gentiles exercise
the Lordship over them, and they then exercise authority upon them are called benefactors. So we have
a description of this idea of benefactors, right? The idea that one of the ways in which authority
was spread across the the Grecord Roman world was through a means of patronage, meaning you would give
money and you would become part of this patronage system, they would take care of your needs,
you would give your loyalty to them by them supporting you that way. And in benefactors, maybe you
would put down a set of money, the rest of the Roman Senate would look after you then.
Maybe you'd become a part of that Roman Senate a little later.
The idea is almost that you could buy favor in some way, that this was an economic exchange.
It was a social system, but it was based on more of an economic exchange, this sense of
benefactors.
And for Christ, he's like, that's not how this is going to work.
That's not how my system and my kingdom is going to be set up. And since you're going to have questions about
whether or not he's the king, particularly in John 18, are you a king? What is your kingdom?
And he's going to say, my kingdom is not of the Sirth. It's not, it's not the same. You're getting
another element over here. So part of one of the things that the Gospels are doing during this
last bit is giving
us insight into this kingdom that Christ is establishing.
He is still the king, even if he's not going to be this incredible political Messiah, they're
all expecting.
You're still learning things about the kingdom.
And in this kingdom, patronage isn't the way we're going to do this, nor this system
of benefactors.
That's not how it's going to be.
Instead, he says, the greatest among you, let him be the younger, or by virtue of this,
the junior member, or the servant, right?
This is the idea that the greatest among you is the servant of all.
Let him be the younger, and he that is chief, as he who does serve.
So interestingly, he switches the idea.
The greatest should help out others. There's no question
they should help out others. But it's a question, are you doing it for a patronage system?
Or are you doing it to actually serve this individual, authentically serve the individual?
Where do you see yourself? John develops this idea a little bit further in the last supper,
when of course you have Christ washing the feet of the disciples. And it could be that Luke who didn't add that story in is still caring with him
elements of that, right? Reflection that even though John's account is unique in that way,
you still see bits and pieces of it alluded to or reflected in the other Gospels.
And so that conversation could very well have arisen then because we see it in John,
John chapter 13,
where we see Peter talking about this. I don't want you to wash my feet and Christ's
like, my job is to serve you. I'm here to prepare you for a kingdom. And you see that in verse
29 of Luke 22, and I point unto you a kingdom as my father, the pointed unto me. It's
that same idea that Christ had taught in John that, I'm to wash your feet, prepare you for entrance into my father's kingdom.
That's what I'm here to do.
And if I am your master and your servant now,
then maybe I'm setting an example of how to engage in leadership what I've got.
You know, when I was reading verse 27,
for whether it's greater, he that's
sit at that meat or he that's servant is not he that's sit at that meat, but I am
among you as he that's served. I was thinking, I bet Martha liked that verse
right there. I was thinking, Martha, see, I was serving. I was doing the right thing.
There is this theme that runs through Luke, all of the book of Luke, of where you see this,
what is a servant, how do you serve it, what's the value of service.
Mary and Martha is, in fact, an important narrative of this account.
And you can see these little elements where the writer of Luke is masterful in that they're
able to bring back little ideas.
It was back there in chapter 10 of Luke.
This had been set up for you to start thinking differently about how to serve in the kingdom
and what service is and how that determines leadership and authority and so forth.
I think those lessons have been building and I think it's very possible that the reader,
even if they're not fully aware of it, have been led to that point
by Luke in this narrative. So that you can see how this teaching of Christ is like, now this fits
exactly what he's been teaching. I'd love the personal stories we get from our modern day prophets
and apostles about this type of service. If you read present-monson's biography, if you read
present-irings biography, I'm sure if you read any-monsens biography, if you read present-i-rings biography,
I'm sure if you read any of them, you find out they have been serving and serving and serving when
really nobody was watching. What was it, present-monsens and how many widows, John?
85 or something. 85 widows.
This is a word. I think that's the number. And he's in his 20s.
Yeah. Right. He's what a 22-year-old bishop. Yeah.
And I guess, I don't know, I guess he had 85 ovens made them all turkeys. I don't know how he
did that, but I remember he. Yeah. I used him as an example of this type of Christ-like service.
We work for the church. I don't know when he's doing this at Christmas time. He goes and visits
all those widows. I looked it up once just because that's the type of geeky thing that I would do.
But I looked up how many conference addresses present at Montsen is given over his lifetime.
If someone thought, boy, he sure talks it.
He's always got a story about a widow.
I'm like, you're right.
He does.
Yeah.
And he still had about 30 widows that we don't have stories of.
In other words, he gave like 50 to 60
conference talks over the course of his lifetime. He could have told one story about one widow for every
conference and still would have had extra. But to visit these widows every Christmas, every single one
of them during the Christmas season, that is commitment. That's a commitment of time more than anything
else. In fact, that's what we talk about a little bit. There's lots of ways to serve, but time may be the biggest
sacrifice of all. In some ways, it's easy to ride a check. It's easy to do certain things.
Going to visit someone, that's commitment.
Yeah. I remember when I was living in Provo after my wife and I were married, there was
a guy that was moving
out of the ward, and of course the Elder's Corm gathered over there to help. And during
the course of it, we discovered he didn't really have a moving van, and our Elder's Corm
and President rented him a van. And then I was surprised to find out Brother Kitchens ended up driving the van
to St. George from Probeau, and I'd stop, wow.
I mean, because like you said,
Dan, you can write a check,
and lots of people can do that.
But to say, I didn't plan on this,
but I'm gonna help you move to St. George
in a van with a limiter at 55 miles per hour.
I'm gonna probably,
oh man. And just being like, whoa, that is service. George in a van with a limiter at 55 miles per hour.
And just being like, whoa, that is service. That was a great example to me.
I never forget that.
I have to share with both of you this,
I don't think I've ever shared this before.
And I hope my wife will not be upset with me.
I don't think she will.
We lived in St. George and we had been dating
six or seven months. So it felt like like we I felt like I knew her pretty well
And I was driving by the care center which is close to the college at the time
And I saw her truck there and I thought, what's interesting? It's back when St. George is a little smaller. I think
I didn't think much of it. I thought maybe her dad had taken her truck and gone over there to do something.
And then happened again, a couple of weeks later
that I saw her truck there.
And I thought, you know, did she have a secret boyfriend
in the care center, like what's going on?
And I finally got a chance to ask her about it.
I said, I've seen your truck over the care center
a couple of times.
And she said, oh, yeah, I go there once a week.
And I said, How come I've never known about this?
And she said, Well, I don't know.
Do you have to know where I am at all times?
I'm like, Yes, I have to know where you are.
And she said, No, I just go over and I paint nails because the CNAs don't really have
a lot of time to paint the nails of some of these women.
And so I just go over and paint nails every week.
And she wasn't looking for notoriety. She hadn't told me a thing about it.
I had just happened to see her truck there a couple of times.
And that, to me, is, again, time, like you talked about, Dan, giving of your time to sit with someone.
We sometimes call these sacrifices.
And we tend to think of sacrifices as a loss.
So a sacrifice something on behalf of something, I've lost something, whatever it is.
Maybe it's the item, maybe it's the animal, maybe it's the money, whatever it is.
But the word sacrifice is a Latin word, right?
And it really means to make holy or to transform.
And sacrifice then is an act of transformation.
It's an act of change.
It's not loss.
I think sometimes we mistake those two.
It's an act of agency by which we transform something from one state to another.
So we can pick tithing, for instance, you can say, well, I sacrifice tithing.
And I want to go, you didn't sacrifice anything.
You didn't lose the money.
You didn't drop it down the drain.
What you did is you changed the way you're using that money. And a sacrifice of time, you've changed it. You've used it.
Where is you were going to use it to do laundry? Now you've decided to use it to help out the poor. You've changed it. A sacrifice of time is similar.
We sometimes see it as, I'm going to lose an hour or I'm going to lose two hours. But what you really do is you're changing the way you use that time. It's a transformation.
I've made my time holy. Exactly. And the word holy is an English word, which is tied to the word
whole, to be whole, to be finished, to be complete. So the concept of holiness cares
it with a sense of to become completed, to become whole. And sacrifice then is
this primary way by which we through our agency choose to make things whole. That's one of the best
insights I have ever heard. Yeah, that's great. I'm writing it down. I don't know to save that. But it
gets even funnier in the Hebrew than you look at the Hebrew word for this and you learn that the word this
Caduce, this, this root, which we can transliterate is QD, SH type thing.
Here's what the two nuances to it.
To be holy is in, I've been made holy, I've been moved into a new state of holiness and so forth, but there's also this one of which it's Kadoosh, which is what's the
words used to describe God. God is Kadoosh. He's holy. But he's not made holy. He makes things holy.
So this Kadoosh carries within a sense of dynamic movement or dynamic activity. So that when you
read in Leviticus, be holy even as your God is as holy then you have to go which version of the Hebrew am I looking at am I looking at
Kodash as in I'm being made holy or am I looking at Kadoosh I'm being asked to be holy and the word there's Kadoosh right in
other words God is asking us to become holy as he is to make things whole to make things complete to make things finished
which is actually how it ties into, at least in my
mind, to the sermon on the Mount when Christ says, be perfect. That Greek word, teleost there,
cares what the same sense of to be finished, to be whole, to be complete. That's ultimately
the plan of salvation, to become whole. And what Christ is about to do is perform an act that makes
it possible for us to become whole, complete,
finished.
And we demonstrate that through sacrifice by which we make things whole, complete and
finished, which is why it's a sacrifice of broken art and contrary spirit.
Wow.
That was fantastic.
I remember, President Hinckley saying, what appears now to be a sacrifice will actually in over time be
an investment that will pay you dividends for the rest of your life.
I think you've just talked about the omission, but I think you could apply that to anything.
It's not really a sacrifice, it's an investment to become holy.
Right.
And Paul's going to describe it this way.
Romans 12, he says, I beseech you therefore, brethren, it's near the end of his letter.
I beseech you therefore, brethren,
by the mercies of God,
then you present your bodies
a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God,
which is your reasonable service,
and be not conformed to this world,
but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.
Paul seems to have grasped
that sacrifice is a transformation.
He sees this, right?
This final one, make yourself a sacrifice, be transformed.
Without ranging too far off, Amulic teaches a very similar principle in Alma chapter 34.
When he points out, you can pray to God just as Alma taught you to do, you don't have
to be an ascending God to pray.
But if that's all you're doing, if that's all you're doing, then something's missing here.
And he goes through a list of conditions of how to take care of each other, take care of the needy,
take care of the poor, the sick, they're like, maybe something else, someone says,
therefore, if you're not charitable. Now, for me, for me, that bounces to the next element of
the book of Mormon, which is of course, Moron I 745 or 48, right? Where we learn charity. For me, that verse
tells me how to get it and why I want it, and by virtue of that, ends up telling me what it is.
Obviously, we don't want to go through all of charity right now, but how to get it? It's not easy.
It's not inherent within us. We have to pray with all energy of heart, according to Mormon,
to get this. It's bestowed only upon those who are true followers of Christ, and we all get to determine
perhaps amongst ourselves what makes us a true follower,
what makes us just a follower.
But he goes on to say, so that you might become the sons
and daughters of God, and then he says,
that when he shall appear, we shall be like him,
for we shall see him as he is.
What I find fascinating about that is,
is what makes us like Christ,
is that we'll be able to see him as he is, as he really is. There's the way he'll appear, there's
the way he is. Do we know who Christ is? And that makes us like Christ. But if that's
true, then what makes charity the pure love of Christ is he knows us for who we are.
Not the way it appears to be, not the way things may seem to be, but the
way things are. So charity I look at it and I go, this is divine knowledge sent directly
from God to the true divine nature of another human being. We know who they are versus the
way they seem to be, or the way they appear to be. And when you know the true nature of
another human being, you don't serve out of pity.
You serve because you know who this being really, really is.
And because you know who they are, how could you not but treat another human being that way?
If we truly recognize the divine nature of everyone around us, that implication would
be where the presence of divine beings.
How would you not want to serve someone like that?
So to your wife's story, hey, this is an individual who could see the divine nature of a group of people who,
in many cases, have been forgotten by society, have been regulated to something over here.
But she saw more than that.
She saw beyond that. She saw a divine being encased in this body.
And that's what makes it the pure love of Christ.
It's pure.
It's not solied by the way the world sees things.
Even though charity isn't necessarily mentioned in this story, Christ is about to perform an
act because he knows the divine nature of every human being who's ever been and he sees
it and he acts on it.
This is where Christ is's great role model of someone
who who knows and sees the true divine nature of every human being that has ever lived on this
earth and ever will live on this earth and is able to get past it. One scholar talked about some
of these things of an asymmetrical story. I talk about the gospel in sometimes with my students
as asymmetrical, meaning that description of charity by Mormon in Moroni chapter 7 verse 48
Charity isn't dependent on whether or not others have charity for you
If it really is divine knowledge
Then it's asymmetrical whether anybody else has charity for me
Doesn't change the fact that I need to have charity. Does that make sense?
I know this stuff now. I know it to be true. And since I know it to be true, it doesn't matter
whether anybody else knows it to be true. I know it to be true. And it changes the way I act,
and it changes the way I see things. Lehigh talks about that in 2nd Nephi chapter 1. It's in verse
21 where he speaks to his sons and says, arise from the dust my sons and be man and be determined to be of one heart one mind.
And that's a word that determined to be of one heart and one mind.
The one heart one mind is the way we describe Zion.
Zion is a group of people who are of one heart one mind.
Lehigh adds in, yeah, I don't want you to just be of one heart one mind.
I want you to be determined to be of one heart one mind. I want you to be determined to be of what
heart one mind. And that determination isn't based on anybody else. It's individualized. Whether
Sam Nephi's brother is determined to be of what heart one mind doesn't matter. Nephi is expected
to be of determined of what heart one mind. It's asymmetrical. And I think there's an element of this
as Christ is teaching. Listen, it doesn't matter whether anybody else wants to be the greatest of all.
You need to make the decision on your own, right, to serve. That's an asymmetrical decision.
It isn't reciprocal. Whether someone serves you back doesn't matter.
The asymmetry is reflected in the golden rule.
Do one others as you would have them do unto you. It doesn't say do unto others
if they do unto you. The implication is, is that you will do because that's just what you should do
regardless. And so I think in Luke 22, there's an element here of the kingdom of which Christ is
teaching a principle. If you're going to serve in the kingdom, it's going to be asymmetrical.
You're going to do it because you know better, not simply because you should.
Not because everyone else will.
Not because everyone else will.
Reminds me, Mother Teresa, there was a reporter following her around and she was cleaning out
this person who I think had a leprosy or some sort of disease.
And the reporter watching it just said, I wouldn't do that for a million dollars.
And Mother Teresa said, oh, neither would I.
Because like you said, Dan, she sees a human being.
She sees a glorious being inside this.
It's incomparable.
It's that pearl of great price.
It's that it is an incomparable greater than Ruby's end goal.
It's a treasure that you just, when you can see that divine nature and another human being,
it changes everything. To me, that's the beauty of the temple ceiling. When someone gets
married in the temple or just the wedding day or whatever, it's a celebration and there's
so much going on. But for that 15, 20 minutes, you just see how God sees this individual
across from you. And that's how that relationship begins. There's promissory that are laid down, but there should be this moment where you see the divine nature
of this being across from you and how God sees this individual. That should be the foundation
of that relationship moving forward. I think it's beautiful.
Me too. The next thing the Savior says, he turns to Peter and he calls him Simon.
It says, Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath desired to have you, that he may sift you as wheat.
But I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not. When you are converted,
strengthen thy brethren, a famous statement there. To Peter who you would think is,
is they already converted? So what do you make of these of this little exchange here?
This begins now, and to me, make of these of this little exchange here?
This begins now, and to me, an interesting element of this narrative moving forward, as Peter
becomes involved in this story, right? We're about to read what Christ goes through, but
intertwining it is this narrative with Peter, and this kind of begins it, at least from Luke's
perspective, this begins it. Matthew Mark put this story
right when they go to the Garden of Gethsemane. So they enter into the Garden of Gethsemane
before Christ begins to pray. He tells them, as I already said, this idea of a shepherd who's sheep
are going to be scattered, Peter and some of the others are like, no, that'll never be me,
no, never be me. Well, Luke puts this account in part of the last supper, right?
Before they go out, which is funny, but it sets up here and allows him to maybe do a couple of
different things with it. The first one would be he calls Simon by name in this case. Whereas before,
it's Simon reacting to something Christ says, now the Lord turns to Peter and actually says,
St. Desires to Have You. One of the things that we said with Judas,
the difficult story of Judas,
is he's not the only disciple
who's going to struggle this evening.
He's not the only disciple who's going to make
some really difficult and wrong decisions.
We never get how Judas feels about that outside
of a narrator who tells us what happens
to him.
I would find it fascinating to see what Judas would say about this, but we do have Peter.
And Peter, we end up with this narrative, and we know what becomes of Peter later.
So one of the things that strikes me about this is, I'm always curious when I read these,
who's telling them these stories.
This is Peter's story, but every gospel has Peter
telling him this aversion of this account
of what's going to happen, this prophecy that's given by Christ,
and the fulfillment of this prophecy later.
Some go into greater detail.
Luke is one of those that goes into greater detail.
John's going to give us a little bit more detail,
but they all tell a story.
And I always think, what does that say about Peter to allow this really difficult, perhaps
shameful story, humiliating story of maybe when he was at his lowest and made all the wrong
decisions to be put in his record?
And it's not even his record.
He's allowing everyone to tell the story in their gospels.
That just takes guts. I've always impressed in the scriptures where when
we find these prophets who are willing to tell these difficult stories about themselves.
Nephi doesn't always come off looking great in the book of Mormon. Joseph Smith tells us of the time
that he completely disregarded the Lord's advice. And That's his opening revelation in the doctrine of evidence, right?
You have Section 1, the intro, Section 2.
This is what Marone, I told me Section 3, this is when I completely messed up.
That's just wow.
And to say that needs to be in the record.
I think we look at these individuals, for examples.
And I know that we tend to look at Peter, we say, well, he's impetuous and he makes wrong
decisions.
He's sometimes emotional and all that.
And I go, yeah, but he's still let this story get in.
He knows this story and he's letting people tell this story.
He's probably telling it himself.
And I want to think, how does that perhaps reflect verse 32?
We'll talk about this conversion
and strengthen the thy brethren,
is their power to telling a story of where you failed,
where you did not live up to the expectations,
perhaps of yourself, perhaps of others.
Yeah, and being vulnerable,
especially with your own family, right?
Saying, I haven't always been.
You know, my kids, I think my kids think
I was born in a shirt and a tie.
Started teaching the moment I, you know, to the doctors in the delivery room.
Right.
What does Peter tell his kids about this story?
Do they hear the same thing they're reading in the text?
I mean, I would assume he would or else he wouldn't be in here.
The fact that it's in all four of the Gospels, this account tells you it's a significant
part of this narrative moving forward, but it's in there.
And this is where it begins.
So if we look at verse 31, we have the Christ turning to Simon saying, Satan has desired
to have you that he may sift you as wead.
We've already seen Satan's agency play out at the beginning of the chapter.
He entered into Judas, right?
Here we learn that he wants to do the same thing to Peter.
And by that, by extension, you can say, he's wanting to do that every one of the apostles. And for Christ to prophesy, again, in Matthew
and Mark, that they're going to be scattered this night. They're going to be offended as
in. You're going to run. You're going to be broken. This is not going to be a good night
for you guys. You are not going to represent yourself as well as you could. Let's put it
that way. Satan's, this is his hour. There it is right there in verse 53.
When Christ meets up with the individuals outside of the garden, when I was daily with you,
in the temple, you stretch forth, no hands against me, but this is your hour and the power of darkness.
This is Satan. Satan wants you, Peter. He wants Judas. He's got Judas. This is not going to be pretty tonight.
So with that said, verse 32, but I have prayed for thee.
One of the things I like to do in the scriptures
is look at Christ's prayers when we can, when we can find the text
that is Christ's prayers.
John 17, 35, 19, places where we find Christ actually 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35, 35 interesting question, maybe I'll turn it to you guys. I prayed for the that they faith fail not. And when they are converted, strengthen the labor.
Other it did Peter's faith fail then over the course of this evening.
That gets into that whole thing we talked about. President Kimbles was was Peter commanded
to deny Christ or was he to save his own life or was, yeah, what was his motive?
That by the way is one of the problems with these two chapters.
There's some really tricky, difficult things that are being said of which we don't have
great answers to.
Yeah, I'll turn it over to Joseph B. Wurthlin.
He said, imagine for a moment that you were Peter three years ago a holy stranger invited
you to set aside your fishing boat and your
nets.
Your means of support for yourself, your family, and the nasty to follow him.
You did so without hesitation, and for three years you have continued to follow and to love
and support and sustain him.
You have seen him confound the wise, comfort the weary and the afflicted, heal the sick,
raise the dead to life.
You have seen him conquer evil spirits.
Calm troubled seas, and for a few minutes at least you even walked on water toward him.
You are at his side when Moses and Elias appeared to him, you saw him transfigured before your
eyes, you have committed your entire life to him, and now he questions you by instructing
you to strengthen your brethren when you are converted.
He says, Peter was surprised.
Maybe Joseph Bewerflin has an insight.
Peter was surprised.
He assured the Lord.
I am ready to go with thee, both the prison and to death.
But Jesus knew and understood.
He was not condemning Peter for a lack of conviction.
Peter demonstrated his conviction during the Lord's arrest.
Rather, the Savior was telling Peter
what he needed to do when his testimony
became more secure. rest, rather the Savior was telling Peter what he needed to do when his testimony became
more secure.
I like that insight that maybe Peter thinks his testimony is secure, but perhaps it's
not one more sentence from Elder Wurthlin.
As he knew Peter, the Lord understands you and me.
When our testimonies may not be the brightly burning bonfire, you may think they are or want them to be.
I like that because I think that might give us a little bit of insight. When Christ says,
I've prayed for the that they faith failed not. One of the things that makes us tricky is that we
could easily say that Peter's faith fails. But Christ suggests here that it hadn't. It might have wavered,
it might have been blown. If we use the bonfire imagery,
it might have gone down, but it never failed. It never went out. That at some level here,
even with failure, you didn't fail yet. You didn't fail completely. I don't know how to
explain that anymore than that, but the idea that I've prayed for the that I faith failed
not. We can easily look at this and go, yeah, your faith, you did not have faith
when you denied the savior, but that doesn't mean your faith is a failure. I know both of you have
talked about this before with audiences. We're going to fail. And that's just going to be a part
of this. I theoretically, we could live sinless lives, but we're not going to do that. Theoretically,
we would never question the gospel ever.
I mean, these are all possibilities.
It's just not normal reality.
We're going to fail.
The challenge is that the adversary wants you to believe
that once you fail, that's you failed, there's no,
there's no coming back from that.
Whereas just because you failed in this instance
doesn't mean that your faith is a failure.
Does that make sense?
Just because you've made a mistake
or that maybe you went into a period of doubt,
doesn't mean that you've fully failed.
That your faith hasn't completely gutted out.
At least it doesn't have to.
Failure is just going to be a part of this process.
So part of me is just this idea that Christ has prayed for you.
I have prayed for the faith fail not.
Christ seems to have faith in us and a lot of it.
One of my favorite verses is actually in Galatians where Paul talks about this element and I'm
just going to bring it up here.
I don't know if I've read this with you guys before or not. But Galatians 2, verse 20, he says,
I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ's living in me,
and the life which I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God,
who loved me and gave himself for me. Now, there's two ways to read this faith in the Son of God.
He says, I live by the faith of the Son of God. One could be, I live because of my faith in the Son of God. He says, I live by the faith of the Son of God.
One could be, I live because of my faith in the Son of God.
I've gone through a lot and I live by my faith in Christ.
I think that is what we'd often say,
that my faith in Christ sustains me and so forth.
But the Greek is vague enough that it allows for,
I live by the faith of the Son of God,
I.E. His faith in me.
I am sustained by Christ's faith in me. And if you read it that way, then those following
clauses explain how Christ demonstrates that faith. I live by the faith of the Son of God
who loved me and gave Himself for me. How do I know that Christ has faith in me? Because
He gave Himself for me. That's my proof. That's my evidence that Christ has faith in me. How do I know that Christ has faith in me? Because he gave himself for me. That's my
proof. That's my evidence that Christ has faith in me. And for Paul to go, if that's what he means,
I'm sustained by my faith in Christ. I think there's an element here of where Christ is saying Simon,
you're going to fail, you're about to fail, but I've prayed over you and your faith is going to fail completely.
Peter doesn't know what that means yet, but Christ does.
And I think maybe that's what it might mean with thou art converted when Peter understands Christ's faith in Him. Yeah, not his faith in Christ, but Christ's faith in Him.
Right. I think conversion then requires a twofold understanding of Christ.
One, one, we understand why we must have faith in Christ, but I think there
needs to be a part of that relationship where we recognize he has faith in us.
Then he has faith in us, or else he wouldn't do what he does. And Peter needs to know that.
We don't know when that conversion takes place, but we do know, according to Paul, that at some point
of following the resurrection, Peter and Christ had a one-on-one by themselves. And what we do know
from that is that the end of that process, as described in Acts 4 and 5. Boy, when Peter decides that he's on board, he's on board.
He's amazing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
50 days after this event,
he's gonna be able to go up to these same people
that he denied Christ to and go,
you remember that Jesus, you know,
the one that you guys crucified,
the one that you killed?
You remember him?
Yeah, that's the one I'm talking about right now.
He's bold.
There's a boldness to Peter 50 days from now
And I think he learned how to weather a faith crisis if I can put it that way
You actually quoted acts chapter four verse 13 now when they saw the boldness of Peter and
Proceed that they were unlearned and ignorant men they marvel. Oh those chapters are so fun to teach
ignorant men, they marvel. Oh, those chapters are so fun to teach. This is Acts 5, but in verse 29 and 30, he's engaging with the high priest of the temple, the leadership of the temple,
and then Peter and the other apostles answered, said, we ought to obey God rather than men.
The God of our fathers raised up Jesus, whom you slu and hung on a tree. You remember him?
You remember that guy? That's the one I'm talking about. That individual, the one that you just killed, that's the one I'm talking about today.
We are his witnesses of these things.
And so I think Peter learns a lesson of how to act when the knowledge that Christ has faith in you.
Man, you're just pulling me away today.
So can I say that faith in Christ means making an effort to see his faith
in me? I think that can be a part of it. That we are sustained not just by our faith in
Jesus Christ, but by His faith in us. And if He has it, then it must be there. Right?
This is a very dark narrative. This is not happy, but you've got these glimpse, these little elements of where
Christ is clearly pointing to greater joy, greater happiness, whether it's the sacrament
of which, yes, this is going to be a memorial. You're going to remember this night. Trust
me, moving forward. But it points us towards a time when we're going to all have this great
celebratory meal. Or in this case, Peter, your faith is going to be tried. It's going
to, it's not going to be pretty. It's not going to be pretty,
but I've prayed over you.
I prayed for you that I faith wouldn't value.
So I think there's an element where,
when you look at verse 62 of this
and Peter went out and wept bitterly,
I think he thinks his faith has failed him.
But Christ's prayer will sustain him.
Christ's faith in Peter will let him know,
I've got faith in you.
Your life is sustained by my faith in you. How do you know? I gave my life to you. Now this is
just me guessing, but back there in verse 19 when Christ had said, this is my
body which is given for you. And we get this whole story with Peter, is that
what Peter remembers from this? Is this lesson where he learned that Christ gave himself for me. I prayed that your
faith wouldn't fail you. So you're fine, Peter. That's fantastic. And I love what you said earlier
about he must have been sharing these stories. And if that's part of it, this is what he's
sharing to strengthen the church members. You can fail. Not that you'll want to fail, but things will happen. You're going to fail.
But that doesn't mean your faith has failed. In fact, odds are it probably hasn't, because Christ
prayed for you. We could rely a lot more on Christ, if we gave the chance. I think there is something
liberating and freeing to know that Christ has faith in you.
I think so too.
I think it's compelling.
I can do this because he believes I can.
As I've talked to people, they feel like they're grateful for Peter being so honest
about his ups and downs because they feel like they have it.
And I'm thankful. I was talking to my
class yesterday about isn't it interesting the Book of Mormon starts with a family that
had a lot of problems. Not a perfect family. The family where at times they were, hey, let's
kill Nephi. Hey, let's kill dad and Nephi. The fact that Peter had these ups and downs is willing
to share them with us makes us go, okay, maybe there's hope for me because there was hope for Peter and the Savior, he corrected him over and over
again, but he never abandoned him.
That's great, John.
Dan, let's move now to the Garden of Guest Semini.
We have our Luke 22 account, but we also have this story in both Matthew and Mark and John,
a little bit different in John.
Walk us through what happens here.
Okay, so this begins at verse 39 for us,
at least in Luke, right? Luke 22.
Like the others, like a Matthew and Mark
and John for that matter,
they leave where they are for the last supper, right?
The upper room for the last supper
and they go to the Mount of Olives.
Interestingly, almost all of them point out,
as we see in verse 40,
and when he was at the place, they don't tell you where on the Mount of Olives, but everyone, on the
readership, right, the writers assume, we all know where this was. We all know. We all
know the place. You know the place. So I don't need to describe it to you, but the place
where he's want to go where we all went, he went to that place. We all, we all know that.
I would love to know that if you've ever been to Jerusalem, go to the Mount of Olives, boy, they've all kinds
of, they've got all kinds of places where the place could be type of thing, right?
But wherever it is, that's where he goes.
I think that's intriguing to me in the sense that Christ goes to a place that he's comfortable
with that he knows well on the Mount of Olives to perform this act.
Sometimes I think we think he just goes the Mount of Olives, perform this act. Sometimes I think we think he just goes
on the Mount of Olives, you just find some place
and then he begins to pray.
These texts suggest that isn't the case.
There is a place.
There is a place specific to the Mount of Olives
that Christ went to for refuge, for repose, to rest,
to maybe look over the city.
He shared it with his disciples.
This is his place. This is his
sanctuary. I don't want to call it a temple, but it's his. And he's made it his. And again,
it's not like this is the first time he's ever been there. He's apparently been there many times.
This is his place. When we read about him going to the Mount of Olives, this is his place.
This is his place. When we read about him going to the Mount of Olives, this is his place.
And so he's going to a place that he's familiar with, that he's comfortable with, that he feels secure in. This is his place, and that's where he goes to perform this.
So for me, verse 40, when he's like, and this is when he was at the place,
all the writers are like, well, you know the place. We all know the place. This is his place.
One of the gospel authors says, as he was want.
Yep.
Right.
He goes to this place straight in 39.
In our conversations, we say things like, oh, that is my happy place.
And I have places that I like to go.
I like to go up partly as Ken and overlook this little lake.
If I want to go think or something.
And so when I see that I think,
yeah, that's where I go. I'm glad you pointed that out. This is a place that he knew and a place
where maybe he had communed with his father before and he goes back to this place.
Well, and I think it's important to have a place. I mean, if we go by earlier Luke,
he knows he's about to suffer. I mean,
I don't know what that means, but he knows. As he said with the sacrament, I'm doing this
before I go suffer. I know I know something's about to happen and it's going to be extremely
hard. So I want to go to my place. I want to go to my rock. I want to sit under my tree. I want to I want to be in
my place when I do this. So there's a sense that there there are things to this. He can't fix. He
can't fix the pain and suffering that he's about to go through, but he's going to try to find the
right environment for it. Luke doesn't mention it, but the others do. They say songs. He is creating
an environment that'll be most conducive for what he needs as he goes through this.
A holy space. He's making a holy space that's exactly right. And it's possible it didn't look like
anything else, anything particular to the Mount of Olms. It's not like this was a more beautiful place.
It's just it's the place, right? The waters of Mormon and the Book of Mormon are a great example
of this. I know we have that beautiful picture by Arnold Friedberg. I love it. The beautiful waterfalls in the background.
It's perfect. Wow. That's incredible. Of which if I were the king, I would own that property.
But they're running to a place that is outside of the territory. It says it's a temporary
watering hole for animals. I don't know if any
of you have hunted or gone to any temporary watering hole of animals, those places steeped their
muddy and disgusting. But how beautiful is this place to the feet of those who entered into the
church and the covenants that were made there? The water is a Mormon. I think we're probably
absolutely gross. I know that goes against some. I understand that.
But the description of the Book of Mormon, so yes. And yet it became the place, right?
It's beautiful to those who there came to the knowledge of their Redeemer.
They were hiding from the searches of the king. There is a set of Book of Mormon paintings,
Here is a set of Book of Mormon paintings, another set by an artist named Walter Rein, R-A-N-E. Look up that one.
I love this one because Almo, the elder, was a young man, a heat-defended eventi.
And if you've seen this, he just looks like this young man.
If he's got his arm out, he's inviting people into the waters of Mormon.
See if you can find out a Walter Reign,
they have them up at the BYU Salt Lake Center
on the fourth floor, all of these whole series.
And I think one time there was a virtual gallery
on church with Jesus Christ.org
of the Walter Reign Book of Mormon paintings,
but that's one of my favorites
because we can deduce he was about 25 years old,
that I'm the elder and the painting, he looks like, he looks like one of my favorites because we can deduce he was about 25 years old, down the elder, and the painting he looks like.
He looks like one of my students.
I love it.
When you're at the Jerusalem center, we take students to the Jabic River over in Jordan.
Now the Jabic, that's not even a river.
It's a creek now.
It's a stream.
It's disgusting.
It is absolutely disgusting, right?
I mean, the water tends to be fluorescent because of so much of the
waste that's up stream. But we take them there and we sit them in a gravel pit. I mean, it's
where we take them. It's just off the side of the road. And we sit there and talk about how Jacob saw
God there. What makes a holy place? Yeah. Standing in holy places, what makes a place holy?
What is it about that?
How are you making it holy?
Back to this concept of holiness,
this place wherever they are in the garden of God,
wherever the garden of God's family is,
it's Christ, it's his place, it's where he goes. Please join us for part two of this podcast.