Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Mathew 18; Luke 10 Part 1 • Dr. Krystal Pierce • Apr. 17 - Apr. 23
Episode Date: April 12, 2023Who is our neighbor? Dr. Krystal V. L. Pierce examines the Lord’s command to forgive, to take care of every one of our brothers and sisters, and how to prepare the world for the Lord’s Second Comi...ng.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Krystal Pierce01:01 Introduction of Dr. Krystal Pierce03:19 Background to Matthew 18-The Discourse on the Church07:51 Becoming like little children11:48 President Nelson story of a child praying before surgery13:01 Definition of conversion17:02 Reprove with sharpness or clarity19:00 Disciples ask about rank in heaven20:53 Cutting off hands?22:12 Jesus talks about those who are lost 26:22 President Monson story of a boy in a grease pit29:54 Jesus instructs about reconciliation33:13 Elder Sorensen talk about forgiveness35:44 Is there a limit on forgiveness?39:11 The Parable of the Unforgiving Servant44:41 Elder Holland references the parable 51:43 Jesus’s conclusions about forgiveness52:35 John shares a story about forgiveness and a car accident57:23 Hank shares a story about forgiveness and a turkey1:02:42 End of Part I–Dr. Krystal PierceShow 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 another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith, I am your host and I am here with my
70 times seven co-host John
by the way
John, I'm not quite sure why I use that adjective to introduce you other than the fact that Jesus seems to think it's a lot and when I think of a lot
I think of John by the way
That's kind of straight, but a lot of what a lot. And when I think of a lot, I think of John, by the way, that's kind of straight. But a lot of what? A lot of good. A lot of good. 70 times seven comes up in our lesson today.
And we needed a scripture expert to come explain these things to us, John. Who's joining us?
We are excited to welcome back Dr. Crystal Pierce.
We've had her before and I just love reading this bio.
It's one of those that you read it and just go, wow.
So Crystal V.L. Pierce was born in Logan, Utah, raised in Taylor'sville, Utah, but has
also lived in California, Idaho.
Here's where it gets really cool, Egypt and Israel.
She received a PhD in Egyptian archaeology and Near Eastern languages and cultures from
UCLA and an MA and BA in Near Eastern studies from UC Berkeley.
She's taught classes in Egyptology and ancient Near Eastern studies.
At the BYU Jerusalem Center for Near Eastern Studies, UCLA and UC Berkeley.
She's participated in archaeological excavations
and surveys at sites in Egypt and Israel.
She's currently the head registrar
for the Tel-Shimron excavations
in the Galilee region of Israel
and the Chair of Archaeology of Egypt session at ASOR.
What's ASOR, Crystal?
So it is the American Society of overseas research. They changed it not too long ago to,
you know, make it a little more updated.
Wow. That's how I was going to say. Yeah.
For most recent publications, our co-edited volumes, excavations at the
Cila pyramid and you're going gonna have to help me pronounce this.
Fagel Gamos.
Yeah, that's what I was gonna say.
And approaching holiness, exploring the history
and teachings of the Old Testament.
That's a religious study center and desert book publication
in 2021.
So that's approaching holiness, exploring the history
and teachings of the Old Testament. And she and her husband, who's also been
on the podcast professor, George Pierce,
have two children and live in vineyard, Utah.
That's such a scriptural sounding place to live.
So welcome, we're so glad to have you back.
Thank you so much, I'm glad to be here.
Yeah, thank you, Crystal, for coming back.
We always have a wonderful time when you're here.
Let's jump right in to the lesson, Crystal. We have two chapters today. Matthew, 18, and Luke,
10. These are some action packed chapters. Do you want to start Matthew or Luke or somewhere else?
Let's start with Matthew 18. I think that's a good place to start. So maybe we can do a little
bit of setup, a little bit of background to kind of remind us where we're at. I think that's a good place to start. So maybe we can do a little bit of setup, a little bit of
background to kind of remind us where we're at. I think that's always helpful. Just prior to this,
we had the transfiguration. We also had Peter's confession that he believed Jesus was the Christ,
he was the Messiah. And so his Messiah ship has been acknowledged. He has told them that they are on their way to Jerusalem
and what's going to happen there, that he is going to suffer and be killed and be resurrected,
which they sort of struggled with that. When we think about Peter's sort of his reaction to that,
was, no, that's not what we want.
There's a lot before this about really recognizing
the identity of the Messiah.
What does that mean?
A lot of what Jesus is gonna say in this chapter
and in Luke 10 is to really show the people
that the Messiah that they thought he was going to be
based on the Old Testament and the Law of Moses
is a little bit different. He's told them he's not going to be based on the Old Testament and the Law of Moses is a little bit different.
He's told them he's not going to be there much longer.
Matthew 18 is really,
his trying to set up the church
or what he calls the kingdom of God or the kingdom of heaven
so that it can continue on after he's gone.
After he leaves the people,
he talks a lot about, this is the kingdom of heaven, this is the kingdom of God.
The king is here, this is how we're going to organize the church, this is how we're going to treat each other in the church, this is expected behavior, and that's really what a lot of Matthew 18 is about.
And then Luke 10 as well.
So Matthew 18 is usually referred to as the discourse on the church or the ecclesiastical discourse
because it's sort of separated into three sections. It starts out with talking about the people
in the kingdom of God or the church, especially what do we do with new people in the church?
So this is his reference to sort of little ones and how do we treat them?
How do we help them? People who are new converts or still learning and growing and
developing, how do we help them? And then he goes into those who are already part
of the church and may have gotten a little bit lost. How do we help those who
have lost their way? And then he ends with those who are in the church, what do we do if they have a disagreement?
If they offend each other, hurt each other, and it's all about reconciliation and forgiveness. How do we do that in the church?
And that never happens. No.
Never happens.
People in the church. Does anyone ever use this idea?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think I'm going would have offended someone in the church.
I can imagine that ever happens.
But if it did, glad we have this contingency plan.
Yeah, and I think he knew it would be a major issue.
I think it already was sort of a major issue.
He's like, I'm going to lay out some ground rules.
So we take care of each other and we can reconcile
and I'll help each other and be this kingdom.
OK, so this is kind of a, when I'm gone, this is how my community is going to be ram.
Yeah.
A discourse on how to behave.
Yeah, you know, once the, the king of the kingdom isn't here anymore,
what do we do?
How do we continue on?
This is him trying to set that up as best as he can before he goes.
So we can jump right into verse one because the disciples have a question for him.
This question says, who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?
Of course, kingdom of heaven, he's been talking about this kingdom.
He's here, the king is here, he's building the kingdom, he wants the kingdom to continue,
and it's sort of supposed to be a reflection of what the kingdom in heaven will
be like, like this kingdom on earth.
There's supposed to be very similar.
They have this question.
They're concerned if it's a kingdom who is the best in the kingdom, who's the viseer,
the vice president, who ranks the highest.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like a worldly temporal, if we're talking about a political government, we need to know
the hierarchy of the government.
It says at the beginning, at the same time.
So this is coming right off of Peter being told, he's the rock of the church.
He's going to have the ceiling pre-studed keys of authority.
They're thinking maybe, is it Peter?
So they asked this question,
they've argued about this in several other places
in the New Testament.
Yeah, other passages.
Mm-hmm.
What does he do?
He calls a little child to them.
Sets the child in the middle of them.
So that's verse two.
And then he tells them, except you be converted
and become as little children, you can't even enter the kingdom of heaven.
Let alone be the greatest. And then he says, if you're humble like this child, then you're the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.
And I think this would be a shock to them. If you were to ask someone, who's the greatest in the kingdom, it's the king. It's Jesus. That's the answer, but he brings out a child, doesn't say Peter, doesn't say John the Beloved,
children in this time period had no status, had no responsibility, no power, no authority.
Kind of like today, children are there, but we don't ask them for advice usually or we don't look at them and say
that's who should be the leader. We mostly just wait for them to become adults before we I don't want to say talk to them
but you know there's this whole you know seen and not heard they're just there and
they're sort of seen as in this time period property of their parents. So this would have been a shock to say this
child who doesn't have
education or power or wealth or even really a separate identity, independence, things like that.
This is who's the greatest. And I think this was sort of meant to shock them a little bit.
We see this all over in the scriptures in the book of Mormon, King Benjamin says,
you got to become like a child.
And then he lists all these qualities of children
that are really good.
I have this list here.
He says children are submissive,
meek, humble, patient, full of love,
willing to submit to the Lord.
They easily forgive people.
They're very trusting of people.
They easily love people.
You can think of all these great qualities that we know about kids.
On their best days.
Yeah.
They're in a state of innocence.
Yeah. And I think to me, all of these different characteristics of children are good.
But to me, when we're told to be born again or become as a child,
like you referenced a state of innocence going back to that state of innocence,
we know we're told children cannot sin because they cannot be tempted.
So it says that in the doctrine and covenants.
And to me, when he says, be like this child or go back to this childlike state,
it's because get to the spot where you're not even tempted by sin. Maybe you've
sinned, you've repented, you've moved on, you don't even think about that sin anymore, you've become
like a child, you've gone back to that state of innocence where you're not even tempted by that sin
anymore. And I like this idea of getting back to that point where you're in that special
And I like this idea of getting back to that point where you're in that special
Innocent spot and then you you have to work on the next sin and then maybe that sins and becomes not a temptation anymore
So I like this I did too of this is who's the greatest the unexpected
Which is what Jesus did all of the time all the time
And they seem like we have said that there's other places in the scriptures Hey,, who's going to sit on your right hand and who's going to sit on your left?
And the mother of the sons of Thunder, doesn't she ask that too?
And they have this idea about that.
Then I don't know.
I think that so often we're seeing Jesus say, okay, you're thinking Gentile.
You need to think this way.
You're thinking Gentile leadership.
But actually,
the greatest ammonia will be the servant of all. And it's like you said, kind of turns things
upside down a lot. Yeah, he definitely loved to sort of make people think, shock people, but really
make people think and not just here's the expected response and what they think I'm going to say.
And let's
say something a little bit different.
President Nelson once told the story way back in 2003 of a little boy who's laying on
an operating table.
He's eight years old.
He has a appendicitis.
He's laying on the operating table.
He looked at the surgeon and said, Dr, before you operate, will you pray for me?
The surgeon looked at the boy in amazement.
I can't pray for you.
Then the little fellow said,
if you can't pray, please wait, will I pray?
Then on the operating table, the boy got on his knees,
folded his hands and began to pray.
Heavenly Father, I'm only a little boy.
I'm awful sick and these doctors are gonna operate.
Will you please help them that they will do it right?
Have a leave, Father. If you will make me well, I'll be a good boy.
Thank you for making me well.
He then laid on his back, looked up at the tear-filled eyes of the doctors and nurses and said,
Now I am ready.
Like you said, faith.
Yeah. I think they're more recently close to God, I think physically.
As we get older, we have more life experience.
We lose some of that, I think, a little bit.
So it's beautiful when you think of the child and how just they get things sometimes more
than we do.
It's amazing.
And are quick to believe.
Yeah.
I like how he does say you have to be converted.
It's interesting because if you look at the Greek word here, the root, the literal meaning of converted means to turn in the opposite direction.
Oh, wow, that's really makes me think about how do I need to turn in the opposite direction of what I'm doing right now and go back towards God or go back towards Jesus Christ.
It's such a great definition of what it
means to actually be converted. Yeah, that's good. It's interesting here because in verse 6,
he switches from little child to little ones. So he's kind of trying to transition from not just
talking about children, but also talking about those who are like children, who have the nature of children,
and this is sort of this concept of new ones in the church, new converts, or those who are still
learning and growing, no matter what age they are. And he says, whoever offends these, and this word
offend means to trap or trip or obstruct, put an obstacle in front of them. So he's really trying to say,
we would need to be really careful in the church with children, newly baptized children, or people who
have just joined the church or sort of looking into the church, that we do not put obstacles in their
path. We have to be really careful with that. He says it's serious.
It would be better to have a millstone tied around his neck and be drowned in the depth
of the sea. Of course, these millstones are these enormous stones. They could be six
feet wide. I mean, huge and burned by an animal usually and turning grain into flour. We do have records
that Josephus, who's this first century Roman Jewish historian, he says this was a real punishment
that the Romans inflicted. Wow. And he says the worst part was not the drowning. The worst part was
that they wouldn't be able to recover the body for burial. That was the worst part.
So that's why it says, drowned in the depth of the sea, because of course, like having
the body, preparing it, making sure that it's ready for burial, a proper burial, maybe
some things put into the burial, people could visit.
That was really important to them.
And so the punishment was that you were just gone,
not recovered. And it's meant to shock us and the disciples who are listening that that's how serious it is.
We need to take care of those who are new believers.
Thank you for that, Crystal, because I had never thought of this as
new believers or maybe maybe children in their
gospel growth or something.
That adds a whole new dimension to how welcoming we are when somebody walks into the church
that we've never met or seen or that is new.
I thank you for that.
You know, sometimes we can come on a little strong with, I think, new people in the church. We just want them to know everything
all at once and sometimes it's like a fire hose and put any obstacles in their path. Give them time
to learn and to grow and to develop and really get their own personal testimony and understanding
of Jesus Christ before we start bringing in, as Joseph Smith says, all the appendages,
all the things outside Jesus Christ
that can be hard to understand sometimes.
I was on a writing committee for the church
a long time ago, and I'll never forget what they told us.
They said that the majority of the people
that would be reading these manuals
and teaching from them would have been members,
most of the people using them will have only been members for a couple of years. I was just,
whoa, and I think that's why the basics are reiterated in general conference and things like that.
We're not talking about appendages. It's faith in Christ and it's repentance and it's keeping
the covenant of baptism and
the covenant path.
When you think of it that way, you think this is why we have to emphasize first principles
over and over again.
Yeah.
Yeah, if we can build that foundation, they can add to it, you know.
I like what you brought up your gentle with new members.
I also thought of being gentle with my own children.
President Eakley said, there's much need for discipline within families, but discipline
with severity, discipline with cruelty inevitably leads not to correction, but rather to resentment
and bitterness.
It cures nothing and only aggravates the problem, itself defeating.
He talks about Dr. E. Covenants 121 and then he says, I need not remind you that your
example will do more than anything else and impressing upon their
minds, the pattern of life. So just a call for parents
be gentle. In that same place, Hank, 121,
reproving be times with sharpness. I remember Bishop,
presiding Bishop H. Burke Peters and saying sharpness. I remember, Bishop, presiding Bishop H.
Burke Peters and saying sharpness means clarity.
It doesn't mean clenched teeth and harshness.
It means with sharpness, means with clarity.
I love that way of thinking of sharpness as clarity.
Yeah, that's perfect.
Cause in, you know, in verse five, he says,
if you receive one such little child in my name, you receive me.
So the way we treat children is almost as the way we're treating the Savior
because his nature and what he tells us about himself is very much like a child in terms of
humility and these things. So that's perfect. I need to go tell my kids, I'm sorry.
I know.
You'll excuse me for a minute.
Yeah.
I need to run over to the school.
I'm telling you.
Can I get them out of class?
They're looking at me.
What are we gonna do next, Crystal?
So Jesus has said to this question,
who's gonna rank the highest in the kingdom of heaven?
He flips it around and says,
you have to be humble and gentle like a child. You said he introduced the idea of little ones,
meaning new members and children, anyone. You have to be very gentle and very caring with these
people. What's he do next? Okay, so in verses eight and nine, he makes a comment on why the burden of sinning is so heavy
and why it might be worth it to sacrifice some things
to stop sinning, kind of going along with this idea
of how we treat the, this is the transition
between treating children and new converts
and then getting into those who are already
have been in the church for a while.
So he makes some shocking statements here in verses 8 and 9. He says,
if your hand or your foot offends you, then cut it off and get them away from you.
Throw them away from you. And then he says the same thing about the eye, your eye.
If your eye offends you, and remember this word offend, means is a stumbling block or a trap or a snare
or something like that, then get rid of that
because he says it's better to remove these temptations
or stumbling blocks from your life
and be sort of temporarily have some discomfort
than to have sort of eternal judgment for these sins.
It's better to do that.
So if you have bad eyesight and it's actually literally causing you to stumble, you would
go take care of it.
You would go to a doctor, you'd again to exam, you'd get medication or glasses or something
like that.
So this is what he's saying, get rid of the temptations out of your life,
even if it's as bad as sacrificing a limb
is kind of what he's saying here.
Elder Walter F. Gonzales in October of 2007
commented on this teaching that also appears in Mark chapter 9.
And this is what Elder Gonzales said.
Fortunately, the Savior Himself taught the
meaning of cutting off our hand. It's not about self-mutilation, but rather about removing from
our lives today those influences that keep us from preparing for tomorrow's times of adversity.
If I have friends who are bad influences for me, the advice is clear. It is better for
thee to enter into life without thy brother than for the and thy brother to be cast into hell. And that's the mark 941. JST, that last part that I quoted, but
I love that he emphasized influences. What are we letting influence us and influences may need to
be removed? Now, John, I have that same talk in front of me. He says it follows that cutting off refers not only to friends,
but to every bad influence.
In appropriate television shows, internet sites, movies,
literature, games, music, engraving in our souls,
this principle will help us to resist the temptation
to yield to any bad influence.
Then he says today is the time to be valiant
and decide to give our souls a serious
profound exposure to the Savior's teachings. Great talk. Okay. So we just finished the first section
of the discourse on the church where he talks about taking care of new members and comparing them
to becoming as a child. And now he's going to talk about those who have been in the church and may have been lost.
And we have this verse 11, which is one of the most beautiful verses, I think, in this chapter.
He says, for the Son of Man is come to save that which was lost.
And it's short, but it's succinct, and it covers so many aspects of who Jesus Christ
is, who He is. What's fascinating about this is this title, Son of Man, usually refers
to a human being, a Son of Man. But one of the things he's referencing here with this title is the Old Testament sort of prophecies about the Messiah
and specifically Daniel, Daniel had a vision where he saw the Messiah who was like the Son of Man
but he came with the clouds of heaven. So we have this interesting duality, Jesus Christ is mortal, the son of man, but he's also immortal, the son of God.
And he comes with the clouds of heaven. And then Daniel went on to see the son of man,
this Messiah, would have dominion, glory, a kingdom over all nations, all would serve him. The
kingdom could not be destroyed. And this is a lot of where they got these expectations of a warrior king. So when they read save, they thought save Israel from its enemies from the Romans from corrupt leadership and
He's saying I'm coming to save that which was lost in another way. I am saving those who have gone astray or
Are confused about things or have lost their identity of who they are as a child of God.
So there's this beautiful spiritual saving that goes on here.
I love that because that's where we get the name Savior. That's what he does. He saves.
He's definitely saying, I am fulfilling this prophecy of these Old Testament prophets, but maybe not in exactly the way you think I am.
Just like exactly in the way you might not think children are the greatest in the kingdom.
So he's sort of turning things around like we talked about.
He does that a lot, doesn't he?
Yeah.
Often saying the exact opposite of what you think he's going to say.
I love the sermon on the Mount.
Well, actually, blessed are the poor in spirit and actually, blessed are the meek.
And what?
I love that too.
He's like, you may have heard it said or written, but actually now we're going to elevate
it to something much better.
It's like you still have to do that, but now there's more.
So he then goes and shares a metaphor about, I could see he says this
and they're trying to process maybe thinking about Daniel's prophecy and what does this
mean he's going to save those who are lost and then he uses this metaphor of the shepherd
and the sheep. And he starts out with if a man has a hundred sheep and that's a typical
size of a flock during this period.
So this wasn't an outrageous thing.
They're probably thinking, okay, this is a realistic, you know, I get this.
And he says, if one of them was gone astray, he would leave the 99 others and go into
the mountains and search for this sheep.
And he would rejoice finding this sheep even more than the 99 that are still back,
that are still safe.
And we have other scriptures,
other verses that mention shepherds going off
and finding lost sheep and how important it was.
So they definitely would have thought,
okay, this is, yes, that's true.
Even if one was lost, I know a shepherd,
it would be valuable enough for this shepherd
to go find that one sheep.
And this is where he's really referencing, if there's a lost sheep in the church, in
the kingdom, you got to go and find it.
It's important.
That person individually is important.
Whenever I hear this scripture of this, leave the 90 and 9 and find the one,
Heidi Swinton tells this story of President Monson who was 22 years old when he was called
to be the bishop. One Sunday morning he noticed that a young man named Richard was missing.
That was not unusual because Richard often missed church. But Bishop Monson decided to try
to find him. First he went to Richard's home. When Richard's mother answered the door,
she said he was working at the gas station.
So Bishop Monson drove to the gas station.
He looked everywhere but couldn't find Richard.
Then he felt inspired to look down in the grease pit
at the side of the building.
As he looked down into the dark pit,
he saw a pair of shining eyes looking back at him.
And he heard Richard say,
you found me, Bishop, I'll come up.
Bishop Monson told Richard how much the priest corps missed him and needed him. Richard nodded and promised to come to church the next Sunday.
He came to church the next week and the weeks after that. Then he and his family moved away.
One evening, Bishop Monson got a phone call from the Bishop in Richard's new ward. He asked
Bishop Monson to give a talk in the ward before Richard left to serve a mission.
Richard served as a valiant missionary
and he also later served as a bishop.
He said the turning point in his life
was when Bishop Monson found him in the grease pit
that Sunday morning and encouraged him
to come back to church.
Wow.
Isn't that great?
Yeah.
You found me, Bishop.
It's a grease pit.
When I try to explain this to my students,
because most of them haven't been shepherds,
but quite a few of them have lost a pet before.
A dog runs away or something,
and they're out looking,
and I say, how many of you are that worry,
that concern, you're out there searching
for this lost pet.
I've done this a number of times as a dad searched
for a lost dog saying man
We've got to find this dog or everyone in the family is going to be devastated and then when you find it
I found her right and everybody's so happy that you found her
Maybe that's not the exact same experience, but it is something similar where you can say you remember how we lost our little dog
Esme, you know, we found her that's kind of like bringing someone back to the gospel.
Yeah, it's in the same way pets are like family members.
We would do anything to help a family member and we're all family members when you think about it.
There's this definition of love by G. K. Chesterton, who was, you know, this philosopher and he said
and this is paraphrasing, the way
to love anything is to realize that it could be lost. And what would you do to save that
person or that thing? This is what he's talking about. He says, this is the will of your father
in heaven in verse 14 that no one is lost, no one perishes. And I think sometimes when we look at verse
13 and actually says, he rejoices more in the one that was lost and comes back than the
99 who were never lost. Sometimes I think we get like a sort of progenial son type thing
where we're like, wait, aren't the ones who were never lost? Aren't they the ones who are never lost aren't they the ones he's most happy with? But when you think
about it, we will all be lost at some point. Every single one of us will be that one lost
sheep at some point. And I think we all hope that when we are, that someone will come get us,
someone will come find us and do the will of the Father. When he says he's rejoicing in the one, that's everybody, because everybody's going to be the one at some point in their
life. And you want to be saved.
Yeah, that's wonderful.
So now we've gone through how in the kingdom and the church new converts and children should
be taken care of, how we should take care of those who have been lost or make sure
that people don't get lost who are part of the kingdom. And then he goes to what happens
when there are disagreements in the kingdom. People have maybe heard each other or offended
each other and then he gives some instructions about reconciliation and forgiveness. He gives some pretty specific things here
that almost seem just self-explanatory,
but he says, if somebody has trespassed against you
and in Greek this word trespassed,
it literally means miss the mark.
If somebody has missed the mark with you,
and this could be a range of many things,
like actually hurt you or just offended you.
If this is happening, he says, go and talk to them privately.
Try to work it out with the person,
and you know, we think, well, yeah, of course,
but do we do that?
We tell everyone else except for the person.
We do the exact opposite of what Jesus says.
And this word tell in Greek, it means it's a legal term.
It means properly explain things with evidence.
So when you talk to the person, you be assertive and you say, I feel this way or this has hurt
me and it doesn't necessarily mean they're going to just automatically agree or repent,
but you need to approach the person first.
And there's so many great things in this chapter.
Crystal, I've noticed in these verses that the Savior kind of gives an order.
He says, look, if someone has really hurt you, go and talk to them.
And hopefully, you too can work it out.
And you've gained a brother.
But if he will not hear thee, then you can take other people with you to go and try to reconcile.
And if he still doesn't hear you, then you can go to a church leader and ask a church leader to work it out.
I've noticed that the Savior's saying, look, you're very likely going to offend each other.
Hopefully you can work it out between the two of you, but if you can't, you can involve the church
to help you work this out. In my mind, he's introducing boundaries here
that if someone's hurt you and they are not stopping, then you don't really have to be alone with that person
ever again because you can involve now other people and you can involve the church. I like the
boundaries the Lord is setting up. Yeah, so there's this great protection here. I do like that this is all about
reconciliation too. When he says, if they hear you, which kind of makes it sound like,
you know, if they're just listening to you, but this word here in Greek is a koo-o,
which is where we get acoustics from. So if they listen to you, surround sound,
like they really comprehend what you're saying, and not So if they listen to you, surround sound,
like they really comprehend what you're saying,
and not even that they agree with you,
but they really are taking in what you're saying
and listening completely, then you gain a brother.
And this word gained here, this is a commerce word.
It means to avoid loss.
To come out of the situation with more than you had before.
You don't even get back to status quo with this person
You are even maybe even closer to this better place. Yeah, exactly
I like that in the come follow me manual for individuals and families
There's a quotation from elder David E. Sorenson, which our listeners will recognize as the sponsor of our podcast
This was in your April of 2003, General Conference,
he gave a talk called forgiveness, will change bitterness to love, and this excerpt is in the
manual from that talk. Although we must forgive a neighbor who injures us, we should still work
constructively to prevent that injury from being repeated. Forgiveness does not require us to accept or tolerate evil,
but as we fight against sin, we must not allow hatred or anger to control our thoughts or actions.
So think what you guys are talking about, boundaries, and I'm always intrigued with
there came a point where Nephi in the book Mormon just had to leave. He couldn't fix things with his
brothers and just had to go. It's a sad thing,
I'm sure, for Nephi, but there came a time when we have to go. We just got to go.
Yeah. Sometimes I think we get confused that being a Christian means just turning out the other
cheek and being a doormat to a degree. Yeah. But the Lord has established boundaries like in this
chapter, and you can think of other times where a Nazareth tried to kill him and he never went back or when Peter said something that was out of line
He corrected him swiftly to say that Jesus didn't have boundaries would be incorrect
He definitely has boundaries of
Things you can say and do to him or around him that he's going to say,
nope, that's not okay.
Yeah, exactly. And I think it's great. He says, try to work it out yourself,
then get witnesses. And we know the witnesses were not necessarily to witness
that this person had hurt you, but they were a witness for you that you had attempted reconciliation.
And they were supposed to sort of give an outside perspective
because they could come in and be like,
oh wait, we see things from a new point of view.
Yeah, add some new eyes to the.
Yeah, and then, you know, if they're still not hearing
and again, this idea of like full, complete,
acoustical type hearing,
then you go to the church and you get help there.
So there are so many avenues of help in your process of reconciliation and forgiveness.
Very good.
Now, which is what we're after.
Our goal should be righteousness and reconciliation.
That should be the hope.
So then Peter says, let's do this.
So at this point, you can think of the disciples, the apostles, sort of processing what he's saying about reconciliation and forgiveness.
And Peter has a question.
Peter says, if someone sins against me, and this is that same sort of idea of Mrs. the Mark,
and he hears me, he listens, and I forgive him. And then he does it again.
Do I continue to forgive him?
Or what's the limit on forgiveness?
Let's put a limit here.
And at this point in time, the Jewish rabbis
sort of interpreted the law as you could forgive someone
adequately three times.
And then after that, no more forgiveness.
That was the limit. I can think
Peter's thinking, I'm going to say more than double because clearly, this is a law. I'm going to
say seven times. That's over double the amount that traditionally they thought you should forgive.
Jesus, he comes back and says, I say not unto thee until seven times, but until 70 times seven.
And so he says, 490 times.
Of course there's more to this and these numbers.
Of course, we know the number seven has a lot of importance in both the Old Testament
and the New Testament.
The Hebrew word is related to the root for completeness, wholeness, fullness, all these being satisfied. So Jesus is saying,
you forgive completely. You forgive holy. He's not saying chalk up 490
forgivenesses and then 491 is where he's done. you've reached your limit. He's saying, you just keep forgiving.
You just keep forgiving until it's done.
And the word for forgiving, Greek means to let go or release.
Well, forgiveness many times, I think we think is about the other person,
but more often, I think it's about us.
Not necessarily letting them go or releasing them,
but releasing ourselves from the pain that comes from holding on to things that people have done to us.
That's well said, Crystal.
So if I'm hearing you right, Peter is thinking he's going to be over the top generous because
the Pharisees are like three times is a lot.
He's like, what about seven times?
Thinking Jesus is gonna say something like,
well, that's a little much.
But Jesus says 70 times seven.
The group of them, I can see them going,
I thought Peter was being generous.
Yeah, that's infinity pretty much is what he's saying.
Yeah.
This is a fullness of forgiveness.
I remember having Dr.
S. Michael Wilcox with us before and I heard him just make such a beautiful
point out of this. He said that he didn't think the Lord would ask us to do
something that he wouldn't also do and that sometimes we may repeat the same
dumb thing we did before and that the Lord will forgive us seven times seventy which I thought I'm so glad you said that
If he's asking us to do that he will be that merciful with us as well, which is nice to hear
Yeah, so it's not a bad thing. He said that. It's a really good thing for us that he said that because he's he'll be willing to be a
delightful because he'll be willing to be delightful, forgive her. I think Dr. Wilcox told us, a delightful, forgive her.
And of course, at this point,
Jesus says, let me tell you a story.
So he has the parable of the unforgiving servant.
And I like how he starts out in verse 23.
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened
unto a certain king.
He makes it pretty clear that even though he's sharing this parable, it's about the kingdom of heaven. This unto a certain king. He makes it pretty clear that even though he's
sharing this parable, it's about the kingdom of heaven. This is what he expects. This is how he
expects people to act. And then he says a certain king, and the word used here for king is the one
that's also used to talk about Jesus as the king of kings. So I think they also would have connected,
ah, okay, the kingdom of heaven. and the king, this is about Jesus Christ,
and then the servants and the word for servants here
are sometimes used for followers of Jesus.
So then they're like, okay, we're the servants,
we're the disciples, they would be sort of figuring this out.
And this king, he had some servants who probably worked for him
or maybe were vassals or something like this.
And so he was looking into the accounts, reckoning the accounts, and he found out that one of his
servants owed him 10,000 talents. Now, this is probably when the disciples would just be like,
shocked. This amount of money is such an incredible amount of money. So,
incredible amount of money. So 10,000 talents, one talent was equal to 6,000 days of work, one talent. So we times that by 10,000 were 60 million days of work. I mean, it's incomprehensible.
So they're listening to this and thinking, okay, I get it. The king and the servants,
and then all of a sudden this number comes out. And they're supposed to see and thinking, okay, I get it, the king and the servants, and then all of a sudden this number comes out.
And they're supposed to see it say, this debt is unpable.
It's outrageous.
I mean, you can't even imagine that number.
I think just think of the national debt.
And there you go.
And that's the deal.
So Crystal, in my mind, I hear the Savior saying there was a man who owed this king a
couple billion dollars.
There's no way to pay it back.
Especially has nothing to pay.
Like, what'd you do with the money?
Yeah, he's in debt.
What happens in verse 25, this is fairly typical.
Someone would either sell off everything they have, including they could actually mortgage
themselves or their family into servitude to try to pay off the debt, including they could actually mortgage themselves or their family into
servitude to try to pay off the debt, or they could be thrown into debtors' prison.
So he says, okay, we're going to sell you and your wife and your children and all of these
things. The servant, it says falls down and worships him and this is falling on his knees.
And he says, have patience, I will pay the all.
Listening to this, you think, that's ridiculous.
Patience, he's asking for patience,
that's not what he needs, right?
He doesn't need time.
He needs redemption, he needs forgiveness.
He needs the person who he owes the debt to
to just say, the debt is gone.
I forgive the debt.
Yeah, it's impossible to pay back. I think it's supposed to be, right? Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, it's supposed to be a number that there would be no way. Even mortgaging
himself or his wife or these things. This was something common under the
mosaic law. So someone didn't have to go to prison. They could say, I'll work for you till I pay off the debt.
And this was really common, but many times the debt was so high, they couldn't pay it off on their own,
even if they worked 60 million working days. They couldn't pay it off. A family member could come in,
who had more money, who didn't have any debt, and could pay it off for them. And this is where we
get this, the goel, the
Kingsman Redeemer. Oh, yeah, we talked about that last year. Yeah, that's what
this family member would become. You would be redeemed from your debt. You would
be taken out of servitude and it would be paid off basically with absolutely
nothing you did. It was all somebody else who came in and the king here in verse 27, it says,
he's moved with compassion. And I love the way this is actually said in Greek, it's talking about
his insides, his heart, lungs, liver, kidneys, God all twisted up, which I think is sometimes we
feel that way, right? When you see someone who is begging for help.
They're in a really bad place. Your stomach gets all twisted and turned and it says he
lost him. He forgave him. And this is the same forgiving as the word before that meant to let
go or release. So he loses him from servitude, from the debtors prison, from 60 million hours of work, all of these things
are just gone, forgiven.
Wow.
Just, if you stop the parable right there,
it's a great story.
Right.
It's gonna have more to go.
And this is like a contrasting.
Here's how the Lord acts,
and here's how one of us might act,
and here's the warning.
They're like, oh, this makes sense to me, right?
This is great.
The King is Jesus and we're the servants.
And they get it.
Because when you think about it, we all have
an unfathomable amount of debt when we think about sin.
60 million working days of debt.
And he comes in as our Kinsman Redeemer, our brother, our family member,
and just releases it. He releases it for us. It's incredible when you think about it. And if the
parable stopped here, then it has a great message, but he continues on. This is not the only message.
Let me read this fairly recent Elder Holland, October 2017.
He references this parable.
And he says, as a personal debt, this is an astronomical number, totally beyond our
comprehension.
Nobody can shop that much.
But he says, for the purposes of this parable, it's supposed to be incomprehensible.
It's supposed to be beyond our ability to grasp, to say nothing of beyond our ability to repay.
That is because this isn't a story about two servants
arguing in the New Testament, it's a story about us,
the fallen human family.
He says, Jesus uses an unfathomable measurement here
because his atonement is an unfathomable gift
given at an incomprehensible cost.
So this first part is, I think, teaching us is an unfathomable gift given at an incomprehensible cost.
So this first part is, I think teaching us about the Savior's Atoma, what we owe to him
and how he is so quick to forgive.
It's amazing because you think,
well, how can anyone pay off an unfathomable debt?
And it's because he had no debt.
He had zero debt, he had zero sin. He was the only one
who could do it. When you look at it that way, it makes sense. He can come in and pay off the debt.
Who is this guy that he's just paying off billion dollar debts? No big deal. I can take care of it.
Wow. I love the first part of this parable. The second part is not my favorite, but the first part of this parable is fantastic. Yeah, so that in the second part, that same servant who had been forgiven of his
debt, released of this huge amount of debt, he goes to one of his servants who owes him money,
and it says that he owes him a hundred pence, and this was about equal to a hundred days of work.
a hundred pence, and this was about equal to a hundred days of work. So an amount of debt that's not a small amount, but could be paid off, three and a half months of work, and
it'd be paid off. And he takes him by the throat, and he tells him to pay him, and his servant answers him and reacts in the exact same language and behavior that he had with the king, asking for patience and he can pay it.
And this is believable, he could pay it.
He could sort of mortgage himself into work and to work for a few months and pay it off.
But the other servant reacts and throws him into debtors prison. Takes him into prison and doesn't even give him a chance. Doesn't even give him the opportunity.
The other servant see what happened. They go and tell the king and the king. The Lord is, he's upset,
he's angry, and he calls him wicked. The wicked servant, yeah.
Yeah, and this word wicked in Greek,
this is related to the root for pain.
So he's saying like, you have caused pain to others
and to yourself.
Many times our sins affect others and cause pain,
but most of the time they cause us pain too.
And this is what this word wicked means.
You've caused pain.
I forgave you of all the debt.
Shouldn't you have compassion on your servant
as I had pity on you.
And compassion and pity here, this is really,
this is talking about mercy.
This is what this means.
The king is Roth, this word Roth here.
This is sort of a legal term that really reflects or stands for justice.
He says, so the Lord was Roth and the justice was to deliver him to the tormentors, which sounds
really scary. I was thinking about this in preparation today. How would you like that for a job?
What do you do? I'm a tormentor.
A tormentor.
Yeah.
These are those jailers, the ones who work at the prison who sort of examine the prisoners,
sometimes not with the best tactics, we'll say.
When you think about it, he's talking about mercy.
All the first part of this is all about the law of mercy and compassion and forgiveness. But when we get these words Roth and delivered and tormentors, this is the law of justice.
The law of mercy comes first always.
If we refuse that mercy through our actions, then the law of justice comes in.
And that's consequences and our sins torment us.
That's part of the consequences of sin.
No, delivered him to the dementors.
It sounds like an ascaban.
I say that in my class.
I'm reading it and I'm like,
and he delivered him to the dementors and it's,
I'm like, wait, sorry, wrong book, tormentors.
But it sounds just as bad. Very succinctly in section 64 verse 10,
I the Lord will forgive whom I will forgive about all of their debts. But if you
it is required to forgive all men, it seems like the same lesson here.
I've noticed in this parable, the Lord doesn't call him wicked when he owes him money.
He doesn't call him wicked when he can't pay it. He calls him wicked when he owes him money. He doesn't call him wicked when he can't pay it.
He calls him wicked when he won't forgive. He will not forgive. I think that's an important piece here.
And I also think he said, in verse 33,
should you not have had compassion on thy fellow servant, even as I had pity on thee.
It sounds to me like when the Lord forgives us, we're not only supposed to be grateful, but we're also supposed to learn that's how to forgive.
Yeah, follow his example.
Follow that same example.
And lastly, I thought, oh goodness, was it worth it?
Was it worth going after your friend there that owed you a little bit of money because now you've got to pay back all of it.
The 10,000 talent debt has returned.
You know, I have a longer version of the Elder Holland statement.
He was doing a training for CES teachers back in 1992 and he said the teacher noted the
100-pence forgiveness, which we were all expected to give one another,
and acknowledged was a pretty fair amount of money, was now preciously little to ask in light of the
10,000-talent forgiveness Christ had extended to us. That latter debt, our debt, was an astronomical
number that the teacher reminded us, almost incapable of comprehension. But that he said was exactly
the Savior's point in this teaching
and essential part of the parable. Jesus had intended his hears, since just a little of
the eternal scope and profound gift of his mercy, his forgiveness, his atonement. And
then Elder Holland said this, for the first time in my life, I remember feeling something
of the magnitude of Christ's sacrifice for me. A gift bordering
to this day on incomprehensibility. But a gift that made me for the first time
seriously consider my need to forgive other people and to be unfailingly generous
regarding their feelings and their needs and their circumstances. We find the
conclusion here, right, this last verse, verse 35, and he says,
so likewise, shall my heavenly Father do also unto you.
If you from your hearts forgive not everyone, his brother, their trespasses.
So the conclusion is how many times should we forgive, as many times as we want to be forgiven
by Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ? That's how many times as we want to be forgiven by Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. That's
how many times. I love, he's kind of puts it in your hands, right? Forgiveness is a power
you have. You can't necessarily change the other person or force them to do anything, but you
have the power to release yourself from that pain or whatever that came from through forgiveness.
And you want your heavenly Father to forgive you unlimited times. So it kind of puts things in
perspective here right at the end. When I was in junior high school, my family moved from one
part of Salt Lake City to another. And I remember in my English class having this buzz around that, hey, Barbara
was coming back and I didn't know who that was because I was new. And finally, Barbara joined
a class after being gone for, I don't even know how long, but she had a really noticeable
limp and she had a prosthetic leg. And I had just asking people, somebody jumped a
curve and hit her and they finally had to amputate her leg and everything and I
had heard that story well. It's interesting how life unfolds. She ended up being in
my mom's ward and then in my mom's release society presidency, this Barbara,
and she talks about how she just figured when she was young,
nobody would ever want to marry someone like me
and things like that, really some heart-wrenching things she went through.
But things worked out beautifully.
There was actually an article in the new era about her in December of 1977.
So this is how old I am Hank, but about her young
women's group rallying around her and her leaders and everything. And Barbara married
a great guy and everything. And she started thinking about this woman that hit her.
She had been prevented from talking to her by her lawyers and her family. She didn't
get that as a kid.
Why didn't this lady apologize
and she didn't get why she couldn't and come
and just say I'm sorry that my car hit you,
but one day she started thinking about this woman
whose name was Anne and she thought,
I should look her up.
And she got in the phone book and found this woman and gave her a call and said,
could I come and talk to you?
And she said the phone just went silent.
And finally, this elderly woman half-heartedly agreed and then I'm going to read exactly
from Barbara's account.
She says, after she rang the doorbell, the woman I knew as Anne, only now much older, came
to the door. She the woman I knew as Anne, only now much older, came to the door.
She did not invite me in.
Instead, she invited me to sit on the front porch.
I instantly realized she was very nervous
and scared of me.
She wanted to know what I wanted from her.
I reassured her I was only there to tell her something.
I'd wanted to say for many years, I told her.
I want you to know that what happened that day in January 1975
wasn't accident. I said I had no hard feelings for her and my life was great and
I was very happy. I really was fine. She told me of her hard life. Her husband
had died young, leaving her with only one child, a son who was mentally disabled.
The accident had practically destroyed her. She and I talked
and talked and we both cried. At some point in the conversation, I asked her why she had
never come to see me or even call me after the accident. I told her as a child I had been
taught when you heard someone, you should tell them, I'm sorry, it had been hard for me
to understand why she never did that. She told me she had been told by her attorneys not
to speak to me that that would imply it in mission of guilt. She told me she had called the hospital many
times and asked how I was doing. When we finished our conversation and looked me in the eye
and said, now I can die. I feel content with my life. I told her I didn't want her to
die, but I felt such a lift as well. I had spent
about an hour enveloped in some of the most tender feelings of my life. It was the closest
thing to the pure love of Christ I had ever felt. I have since come to realize and appreciate
that feeling as charity. I will never forget that experience sitting on a bench in the
little front porch with a woman who really I'd never known, yet who had occupied my thoughts for so many years.
Walls had come down, barriers had been broken for both of us.
Could Anne's life have been happier had I come long before now?
What if she had passed away before I finally got around to calling?
As a young girl all I could think about was why didn't she come and say
she was sorry. As an adult my heart ached for the pain, suffering, and guilt she most certainly
had been feeling for so many years. Why did it take me so long? Barbara is one of my heroes.
I love that they both could go on that porch. And she said some of the most beautiful
feelings of my whole life came from that. John, I love that story. It's from if I
remember right, it's from your book born this happy morning. It's a little
Christmas book, right? Yeah, Barbara allowed me to share that very personal
story, but she's amazing. I brought my own story as well if that's okay. I
remember this one. I remember sitting in general conference hearing this in
October of 2005. It was a Sunday morning session and President Hinckley stood
up and he just said I wanted to talk about forgiveness. And he says there are
so many in our day who are unwilling to forgive.
Children cry and wives weep because fathers and husbands continue to bring up little shortcomings
that are of no importance. There are many women who would make a mountain out of every little offending
molehill or word or deed. Then he says, I clipped a column from the Deseret Morning News written by Jay Ebbinson.
And then he quotes the article,
how would you feel toward a teenager who decided to toss a 20-pound frozen turkey
from a speeding car headlong into the windshield of the car you were driving?
How would you feel after enduring six hours of surgery using metal plates
and other hardware to piece your face back together.
And after learning you still face years of therapy before returning to normal and that
you ought to feel lucky you didn't die or suffer permanent brain damage.
And how would you feel after learning that you're a sailant and his buddies had the turkey
in the first place because they had stolen a credit card and gone on a senseless shopping
spree just for kicks. This is the kind of hideous
crime that propels politicians to office on promises on getting tough on crime. It's the kind
of thing that prompts legislatures to climb all over each other and is struggled to be the first
to introduce a bill that would enhance penalties for the use of frozen foul in the commission of a
crime. The Unions Times quoted the district attorney is saying that this is the sort of crime for
which victims film no punishment is harsh enough. Death doesn't even satisfy them, he says.
Which is what makes what really happens so unusual. The victim, Victoria Ruvolo, a 44-year-old
former manager of a collection agency, was more interested in salvaging the life of her 19-year-old former manager of a collections agency was more interested in salvaging the life
of her 19-year-old assailant, Ryan Cushing, than in exacting any sort of revenge.
She pestered prosecutors for information about him, his life, how he was raised.
Then she insisted on offering him a plea deal.
Cushing could serve six months at the county jail and beyond probation for five years
if he pleaded guilty to second degree assault
Had he been convicted of first degree assault the charge more fitting for the crime
He would have served 25 years in prison finally thrown back into society as a middle-aged man with no skills or prospects
But that's only half the story the rest of it. what happened the day this played out in court is the truly remarkable
part.
According to the account in the New York Post, Cushing carefully and tentatively made his
way to where Revolo sat in the courtroom and tearfully whispered in apology.
I'm so sorry for what I did to you.
Revolo then stood and the victim and her assailant embraced weeping.
She stroked his head, padded him as he sobbed, and witnesses, including a reporter heard her say,
it's okay.
I just want you to make your life the best it can be.
According to the accounts, hardened prosecutors and even reporters were choking back tears. President Inkley to go on to say, what a great story that is.
Who can feel anything but admiration for this woman who forgave the young man who might
have taken her life?
Niko's on to say, I know this is a delicate and sensitive thing, but the great atonement
was the supreme act of forgiveness.
The magnitude of that atonement is beyond our ability to completely understand.
I know only that it happened, and that it was for me and for you. The suffering was so great,
the agony so intense that none of us can comprehend it when the Savior offered himself a ransom
for all the sins of mankind. May God help us to be a little kinder, showing forth greater for
bearance, to be more forgiving, more willing to walk the
second mile to reach down and lift up those who have sinned, but have brought forth fruits of
repentance, to lay aside old grudges and nurture them no more. Man, isn't that good?
It's beautiful.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.