Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 11-12; Luke 11 Part 2 • Dr. John Hilton III • Mar. 13 - Mar. 19
Episode Date: March 8, 2023Dr. John Hilton III examines Jesus Christ’s teaching about commandments, the Law, and the Atonement’s healing power.Teaching with the Chosen: https://johnhiltoniii.com/thechosen/“Seeking Jesus�...� with John Hilton III: https://johnhiltoniii.com/seekingjesus/00:00 Part II– Dr. John Hilton III00:08 God is calling us to be like Him01:58 Jesus and Fence Laws about the Sabbath05:39 Parenting, Fence Laws, and Commandments07:44 John shares a story about shoveling snow on the Sabbath08:41 Dr. Hilton shares a story about his dad and a roommate10:27 Jesus heals a man’s hand on the Sabbath12:14 Dr. Hilton shares a story about his mission and a man bringing his family to church15:07 Jesus doesn’t ritually wash and calling out bad behavior18:28 Straining at a gnat20:07 Dr. Hilton shares a story about movies and Fence Laws23:19 Corianton and Alma26:09 The importance of following the prophet28:37 Dr. Hilton shares a personal story about flying lessons30:10 Jesus instructs the disciples about prayer36:11 Jesus instructs about idle words37:38 Dr. Hilton shares a story about his mission40:32 Dr. Hilton does a Dobby impression42:50 Comparisons between Jesus and Jonah47:50 Jesus and his mother and siblings51:11 Jesus helps us carry our heavy burdens52:28 Jesus and the The Founder of Our Peace: Christ-Centered Patterns for Easing Worry, Stress, and Fear57:57 End of Part II–Dr. John Hilton IIIShow 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)
Welcome to part two with Dr. John Hilton, Matthew 11 and 12 and Luke 11.
In the October 2022 general conference, Elder Oucdorf introduced the FSY guide like
this.
He said, it's also important to know what for the strength of youth does not do.
It doesn't make decisions for you.
It doesn't give you a yes or no about every choice you might ever face.
For the strength of youth focuses on the foundation for your choices. It focuses on values,
principles, and doctrine. Instead of every specific behavior, the Lord through His prophets has
always been guiding us in that direction. He is pleading with us to increase our spiritual
capacity to receive revelation. He is inviting us to hear him. He is calling
us to follow him in higher and holier ways. And we are learning in a similar way every
week and come follow me. And also, President Nelson, when your greatest desire is to let
God prevail to be part of Israel, so many decisions become easier, so many issues become
non-issues.
You know how to best groom yourself, you know what to watch and read, where to spend your time,
and with whom to associate. You know what you want to accomplish, you know the kind of person
you really want to become. Now my dear brothers and sisters, it takes both faith and courage to
let God prevail. It takes persistent rigorous spiritual work to repent and put off the natural
man through the Atonement of Jesus Christ. And that talk was October 2020. But those things
help us realize and they've added kind of a subtitle. So for the strength of youth, they want us
to call it a guide for the strength of youth guide, a guide to making choices. Not here, we're
going to make the choices for you, but this is a guide to help you make good choices. Not here. We're going to make the choices for you, but this is a guide to help you make good choices.
Yeah, and to remember that Jesus Christ is the strength of youth. And if he's at the center of
whatever these fences that we're inspired to create, then things are going to go well.
So let's jump back into Matthew chapter 12 and see how the Savior interacts with some of the
Pharisees, Fence Law. So this is right after his talk about the Yoke, chapter 12, verse
one, at that time Jesus went on the Sabbath day through the corn, and the
disciples were hungry, and began to pluck the ears of corn and to eat. But when
the Pharisees saw it, they said on Tim, behold, by disciples do that, which is not
lawful to do on the Sabbath day. Now just to be clear,
there's nothing in the law of Moses that says you can't pluck some grain on the Sabbath.
The commandment is don't work, but the question is, what does it mean to work? Like if I
check my email on Sunday, is that working? If I tell my kids to do the dishes on Sunday,
is they tell me that is a clear violation of the Sabbath day. I'm not doing the dishes on Sunday, right?
So what does this mean?
And one of the fence laws that the Pharisees had put in place was you don't pluck grain
on the Sabbath because that could lead you to the work of harvesting.
Okay.
So they're breaking a fence law, breaking a fence law.
Jesus says, have you not read what David did when he was hungry and they that were with
him?
How he entered into the house of God and did eat the show bread
Which was not lawful for him to eat neither for them that were with him, but only for the priests
So that's the story we looked at last year in 1st Samuel 21
David was on the run
He was hungry and he ate the special bread that shouldn't have been eaten by the common person
So there was an exception Jesus points it out
shouldn't have been eaten by the common person. So there was an exception, Jesus points it out.
He continues, or have you not read in the law,
how on the Sabbath days, the priests in the temple
profane the Sabbath and are blameless.
But I say to you that in this place
is one greater than the temple.
So in other words, sometimes you have exceptions,
defense laws, this is one of them.
And then Jesus quotes from Hosea 66, where he says,
but if he had known what this meaneth,
I will have mercy and not sacrifice, that's Hosea 66,
you would not have condemned the guiltless.
For the Son of Man is Lord, even of the Sabbath day.
Now that phrase from Hosea is really important.
Just three chapters earlier in Matthew 9, Jesus was eating with sinners. I don't know, you
remember this from a week or two ago. So when the Pharisees saw it, they said to the disciples,
why eateth your master with publicans and sinners? But when Jesus heard that, he said into them,
they that behold have not need of a physician, but they that are sick. But go and learn what this means. I will have mercy not sacrifice, again, Jose 6, 6, not to call the righteous, but sinners
to repentance.
So the idea of mercy not sacrifice is really important to Jesus Christ.
And when he says that, he's referring sacrifice there refers to the sacrificial offerings of
the law of Moses. So Jesus said, I want you to prioritize
mercy over rituals. He cared less about the strict observance of fairsacal fence laws, such as
prohibitions against eating with sinners or plucking grain on the Sabbath. What he really wants
is he wants us to be filled with mercy. A similar passage we looked at last year, mercy not sacrifice is Amos chapter 5, 21 through 24. One translation of
this verse says, the Lord speaking, I hate all your show and
pretense, the hypocrisy of your religious festivals and solemn
assemblies. I will not accept your burnt offerings and grain
offerings. I won't even notice all your choice piece offerings away with your noisy hymns of praise. I will not accept your burnt offerings and grain offerings. I won't even notice all your choice piece offerings.
Away with your noisy hymns of praise, I will not listen to the music of your harps.
Instead, I want to see a mighty flood of justice, endless rivers of righteous living.
So, Hank John, this idea of mercy not sacrifice, what do you think this might look like today?
How could we be seeing similar situations that we're talking about from Matthew 9, Matthew
12, and the Savior's interaction with Fence laws?
Yeah, I was thinking about how I as a parent, I'm probably breaking the commandments in the
way that I enforce my Fence laws.
I'm judging and condemning when one of my children hasn't actually broken a real commandment, not that
that would even merit that kind of reaction.
But I think we can be harsher in the ways we try to teach and try to get our children
to be obedient.
And we're in that act of trying to make them obedient, we ourselves are breaking commandments
of being kind and merciful and just.
And I think the Lord would come down and say,
look, one of you did break commandments here,
and it wasn't a kid.
It was you.
Although Hank's kids, I don't know if you listen
to follow him podcast,
but you should still, do what your parents say.
You should thank you, John, thank you.
But here's a concrete example of this,
Hank, I don't know what family scripture study is like
with John and Hank at your guys house
By their special musical numbers and sure lots of reference
Yeah, but and we're pretty good at our house, but sometimes people aren't paying attention or kids are wrestling and there's been a time with you
When I'm shot up or going to be quiet. We're trying to feel the Holy Ghost right?
Right, they were the only ghost
Wasn't there fault the whole goal of this family scripture studies were trying to come closer to Jesus Christ,
but like you were saying, my actions could totally negate that.
Now, I'm just trying to get obedience through force, which is not what I wanted.
I love that this is coming on the heels of Matthew 5, 6, and 7, the sermon on the Mount where everything that was so outward
and observable in the law of Moses like sacrifices,
Jesus is making it higher and internal.
What are the intents of your heart?
And when the verse of Mercy not sacrifice,
I think sacrifices of the law of Moses,
here's these outward observable things.
We had an occasion in my ward one time ago when we had a pretty substantial snow storm
and I remember going into pre-stead meeting back when we used to have a three hour block
and our bishop just got out the chalk and said, we have a lot of elderly folks in our ward
who need their walk shovels. We had it was Sunday and we divided up everything on the chalkboard of who was going to go do what.
And we all went home and got our snow shovels out
and not on the Sabbath day, if you can imagine,
and remove snow for all these folks
so that they could get out of their houses
the next day.
It was such a beautiful lesson about which is more important.
Well, we don't mind if these folks slip and break a hip because at least we didn't break the Sabbath or this bishop stewardship he decided, no,
this is more important. Let's gather all in here and let's do this. And I'll never forget that
day of running home and putting on our blue jeans and getting our snow shovels on the Sabbath.
So my dad generally is part of his worship of honoring the Sabbath day didn't watch television.
So that was a fence law that he created for himself to keep the Sabbath.
When he was in college, he had a roommate that completely was not participating in church activities,
but there was a certain TV show that this roommate loved and it was only on Sunday nights.
So my dad started making some treats every Sunday night and would sit down and watch the TV show with his roommate. And over time, they built a friendship and his roommate started coming back to church,
got married in the temple.
And to me, like, what you just shared, that's mercy, not sacrifice.
I'm not so focused on the nitpicky rule.
I'm seeing the big picture of loving God, loving my neighbor.
That doesn't mean anything goes.
That doesn't mean, yeah, all my friends are going to the beach today.
So I better support them.
You still have to be smart. But sometimes we can air on the sacrifice side. And Jesus is
reminding us, be careful about that. Yeah. Reminds me of the story of Brigham Young. You both know
where they had hand-card pioneers that were stuck out in the snow. And it was general conference.
It says the next morning at Sunday morning services in the Bowery in Salt Lake City,
President Young announced with an urgency he said was dictated by the Holy Ghost.
Many of our brothers and sisters are on the planes with hand cards,
and they must be brought here, go and bring in those people now on the planes.
And attend strictly to those things which we call temporal,
otherwise your faith will be in vain.
Don't sit here and sing songs and talk about the gospel, go live it right
now. Leave and go. That was his general conference talk. And it says, by the end of that October,
250 rescue teams were on the road. I'm going to live my beliefs here.
It's interesting, Hank, John, those examples you shared were kind of around church communities
and how they were balancing mercy, not sacrifice.
So let's keep going in Matthew 12 verse 9 because right after the controversy of plucking
grain on the Sabbath, there's another controversy.
And by the way, both of these Matthew 12 controversies, great clips from the Chosen.
And again, I think it's really fun to watch these and then go into the scriptures. So Matthew 12
9, it says, when he was departed, thence he went into their synagogue. Behold, there was a man
which had his hand withered and they asked him saying, is it lawful to heal on the Sabbath days
that they might accuse him? And Jesus said to them, what man shall there be among you that shall
have one sheep if it fall into a pit on the Sabbath day? Will he not lay hold on it and lift it out? How much then is a man better than a
sheep? Wherefore it is lawful to do well on the Sabbath days. Then say, atheity to the man,
stretch forth thy hand and he stretched it forth and it was restored whole like as the other.
So to us this whole story seems like common sense.
Of course, it's good for Jesus to heal the man.
Why is this even a question?
But the fact that they're having a discussion about it suggests that there's some kind
of fence laws that are in play and is Jesus going to break them or not.
In fact, just after this healing, we read that the Pharisees went out and held a counsel
against him how they might destroy him.
So they're clearly focused on the fence, not the mark.
Do you feel the absurdity of this?
He healed a man.
You're not supposed to do that.
But plotting to kill somebody on the Sabbath day, that's okay.
It's so easy to point a finger at the Pharisees and say, boy, can you believe
what they're doing? But I want to share a story where I'm involved. When we see something
kind of similar with the church community, so I'm on my mission in Denver, Colorado, and
there's a man that we've baptized. He's married and he has three kids, but his wife and
kids are not members of the church. They've never been to church. We're always telling
Brian, invite your wife and invite your family.
And on this one particular Sunday,
my companion and I were speaking in church.
So we really put the pressure on Brian.
You've got to come.
So is that Sunday morning?
I'm on the stand.
Brian's not there.
It's opening him, opening prayer.
Sacrament him starts.
He's still not in the room.
And I started to get nervous.
Because this word had a little tradition,
when I say it's a little fence law
where during the sacrament some of the teachers in the Aaronic priesthood would shut the chapel doors and they'd stand by the door
So people don't go in or out. I think this is sort of like a little fence law to protect the sanctity of the sacrament keep it a reverent atmosphere
So the sacrament's being passed and I see Brian swing open the
chapel door and he walks in with his wife and three kids. And I see the look on his face
and he's so proud. It's yes, I did it. I made it to my new church. I'm here with my wife
and kids. And I watch a 15 year old say to him, Hey, you can't be here. Now, I know what
the 15 year old meant was, okay, we got a little thin slot. Can you just come back in in two minutes, but Brian's confused. He doesn't, he doesn't
know why this kid has said, don't be in here. So he turns around and he walks out. Now,
what should I have done in that exact second? Jump off my seat, right? Get, go, right,
but could I break the fence? La, could I disrupt the sanctity of the sacrament? So my
mind, okay, well, I'm just going to wait. I'm the sanctity of the sacrament? So my mind, I'm, okay, well,
I'm just going to wait. I'm going to wait till the sacrament's over and we'll see what happens.
So I wait. Sacrament's over. Brian does not come back into the chapel. At that point, I did
get up. We drove to his house, but it was too late. Brian said, I was humiliated. And he
said, I will never come back to your church. And he didn't. I am not being critical of,
I'm sure there was a great
word council that was thinking and praying, how do we help the sacrament be more
reverent in our ward? And I was a missionary, I definitely should have known
better. But sometimes we create these extra structures that I think we could
maybe liken that a little bit to the sacrifice, right? I'm so focused on God
have a reverent sacrament meeting that I missed the mark of mercy and love and outreach.
So I do think that we can see these same kinds of things
even today.
Wow, what a story, John.
Oh, that's painful.
That's a gut punch.
And to me, that's a reminder for me,
like Hank, you've talked a lot about leading in the home
as a parent.
John, you've mentioned yourself as an Elder's corn president or a bishop. So it's a reminder that whether it's at home or as we serve in
local church callings, to be careful that we're really focused ourselves in helping those we serve
to be focused on the mark, loving God, keeping the commandments, and then focusing on Jesus Christ
as opposed to getting so tied up in these extra rules or fence laws or things we've put in place that we missed the mark.
So let's turn over to another example of Jesus interacting with fence laws. This one's in Luke 11.
So we'll flip over to another chapter as part of our Come Follow Me studies this week.
So in Luke chapter 11 verse 37, we read, a certain Pharisee besought Jesus to dine with him, and he went in and sat down to meet.
And when the Pharisee sought, he marveled that Jesus had not first washed before dinner.
So Jesus doesn't wash his hands and the Pharisees amaze.
And just to be clear, we're not talking about good hygiene here.
This is not like wash your hands, you sanitize your, don't double dip the chip.
That's not what the Pharisees focused on.
This was a fence law or some extra rules that had been put in place in order to do some purification,
some washings that weren't specified in the law of Moses for ordinary people to do but had been
added by later tradition. So the Pharisee surprised Jesus doesn't do the sexual washing and then Jesus says to him, you Pharisees cleaned the outside of the cup and of the dish, but inside you are
full of greed and wickedness. You fools did not the one who made the outside
make the inside also. So give as alms those things that are within and then
everything will be clean for you. But what do you Pharisees for you? Tyve,
mint and rew and herbs of all kinds and neglect justice and the love of God.
It is these you ought to have practiced without neglecting the others. That's a really powerful
passage. There's lots to unpack there. Anything that you guys kind of want to start commenting on?
I love the little activity it suggests in the manual. Perhaps your family could discuss these verses while washing dishes together.
You can talk about why it would be a bad idea to wash only the outside of things like bowls and cups.
You could then relate this to the need to be righteous,
not just in our outward deeds,
but in our thoughts and feelings.
That's a good analogy even a kid wouldn't understand.
Let's just watch the outside of that bowl,
not the inside.
This is the same way Jesus is going to say,
you're like a white encepliker.
On the outside, you're very clean.
On the inside, you're full of death and excess like oh
Can you be any more plain? I?
Don't know about you, but we talked really about video depictions of Jesus Christ
We don't usually see videos of Jesus saying these words the video depictions we see of Christ are usually a lot
You know, he's kind doing loving acts
But this is a reminder that sometimes Jesus said some really hard things the Savior Savior's not afraid to call out bad behavior and say, this isn't right.
Notice where He says, you tithe mence and all kinds of herbs and neglect justice in the
love of God.
So, I'd be again kind of saying, I'm really focused on making sure I exactly obey the
tiniest nitpicky rule, but then I forget about
loving my neighbor.
Just train at a nat, swallow a camel.
And to be clear, you've been alluding to Matthew 23, Matthew 23 and Luke 11 have some similarities.
So camels and gnats are both not kosher animals.
You shouldn't eat either one, but why would you go to all this effort to strain out the
nat only to turn around and swallow the camel?
Right.
So, I'm talking about that some more.
Talk about straining your water and what that is because I think strain might sound like
a muscle strain, but tell them what's really happening.
Yeah, so what you're sharing, Johnny, I've got a glass of water, but what if a nat has accidentally
fallen into my cup, so I'm going to strain, I'll
put it into a strainer to make sure that in case there's any gnats that have accidentally
fallen in, I won't drink them. So I'm going to all that effort. There's a little comic
I've seen, you know, where there's a guy has a tiny little net in his cup and the man
next to him has a gigantic camel into this, he's eating camel soup and he's like, there's
a net in your soup,
why would you go to all this trouble to strain out the nut
if I'm gonna turn around and have a camel steak?
And I think it's interesting that Jesus says,
these you ought to have practiced
without neglecting the others.
So he's not saying,
hey, anything goes, do whatever you want.
Both are important,
but you're clearly missing the emphasis.
I'm focused on the
nitpicky and neglecting what's really important. The outward and observable rather than the inward
and invisible, the love of God. So in Luke chapter 11, people criticize Jesus for skipping the
extra washing, but they miss all the miracles that he's performing. Maybe we can talk about a practical application here.
Hank, you mentioned earlier that your wife does a great job of teaching the why to her kids about the
fence laws. And I know I've done this myself, been a teacher where I'm a fence fence fence fence
and the students might walk out of the class and say, I'm not sure about what the law is, but I'm
really clear on the fence.
I got the fence.
So here's a little example from my life.
I don't know what your guys' opinions about PG-13 movies are,
but maybe you'll agree with me that there's
some PG-13 movies that are so good.
It's fine for the kids to watch.
There's others that are so naughty.
I shouldn't watch them.
There's a wide range.
So when my son, Levi, was 10 years old,
he wanted to watch this certain PG-13 movie. And I didn't want to have to always be having conversations.
You can already tell him a bad parent. Oh, always be talking about kids about him.
Which movies are okay? Which movies aren't? So I just on the spot I created a fence
law. I said, Oh, Levi, don't you know that in our family, we don't watch PG 13 movies
till we're 13. And he's an obedient kid.
He's like, oh, okay.
And I was like, sweet.
Just save myself three years of arguing about movies.
I'm thinking about movies.
But of course, you can guess on the day he turned 13,
what did he want to do?
Watch three PG-13.
Yeah, he had to make a list.
Yeah.
So, he had a big list.
So a few years later, like, I've learned a little bit more
about these principles that we've been talking about.
And so now my daughter, Maria, she's 11 years old. She wants to learned a little bit more about these principles that we've been talking about and so now my daughter Maria
She's 11 years old. She wants to watch a PG 13 move with her friends. She's like dad kind of watch this movie and I said well
Honey, what do you think? Why don't you look it up and see what's in the movie and she stopped she's like dad what?
I
Thought in this family. We don't watch PG 13 movies to work 13
And I said honey, why do you think we
have that rule? And she thought for a minute, I know, you don't want to watch bad stuff
until we're older.
Wow.
Oh,
Oh,
Oh,
Oh,
She completely understood the fence, right? But the core law, you want to have the holy ghost
with you. and sometimes bad movies
are going to drive away the spirit.
Like I had completely not taught the doctrine.
And I think another way to think about this idea, we've been talking about fence laws
and core laws comes from elder David A. Bednar, who's emphasized doctrines, principles,
and applications.
So doctrines being that the core eternal laws and principles growing out of those doctrines and then applications would be more like the fence laws we've been discussing.
So it would have been our said applications such as items on the lengthy to do lists of many members tend to receive disproportionate and excessive attention. I am not suggesting he says that applications should never be studied
learned or taught. Appropriate applications are necessary but can never stand alone. What is needed
is a balance among doctrines, principles, and applications. And for many conscientious and
diligent members, a serious imbalance exists.
You guys can educate me on this, but I remember President Boyd K. Packer emphasizing that
verse, I'm a 1232, about he gave Adam and Eve commandments after having made known
it to them the planet redemption.
And if I remember correctly, after that, all the seminaries would spend the first couple
of weeks of every school year reviewing the planet salvation.
And then you had a place to make sense of all the do's and don'ts.
You had the why behind it all.
And is that true that the seminary started doing that, started teaching the plan,
reviewing the plan the first week or two of school?
Yeah, first two days of class.
And I think it's interesting if you go later to Alma 39 through 42
as Alma's talking to his son, Coriantantan who had been involved with some sexual sin. Alma does not spend a ton of
time talking about the dues and don'ts of the law of chastity. It goes through
resurrection and spirit world and then Elder Packer said true doctrine
understood changes attitudes and behavior. Quicker than a study of behavior will
improve behavior. Seminary teachers love study of behavior will improve behavior.
Seminary teachers love that verse. That's the kind of the Alma 31 5 thing.
Hank, you mentioned that. Are your standards fences or guardrails?
I think similar elder better, I had a tree in there and say,
if your boss said to you, hey, remove that tree and all you did was hand him a bag full of leaves,
he might say, you missed most of the tree.
And the leaves don't
just float out there. They're supported by branches which are tied to a trunk and roots.
And in the same way, the rules are like the leaves. Don't watch entertainment that is
vulgar immoral, pornographic in any way. That's the rule. What's the principle? What's
the branches? Well, whatever you look at or listen to has an effect on you. What's the branches? Well, whatever you look at or listen to has an effect on you.
What's the doctrine?
Keep the spirit.
We've made a covenant at the sacrament table.
We live in a way that we could always have a spirit
to be with us.
And that's the doctrine and the roots.
Okay, well, what offends the spirit?
That's when we try to create the Fensla.
What is it that it's offensive to the spirit?
And one of the things I noticed in all of the for the strength of youth
Editions over the years is it always comes down to the spirit even dress and grooming
dress in a way that you can have the spirit to be with you
Watch media in a way that doesn't offend the spirit. So I'm saying well that doesn't offend me
Well, that's not the standard the standard is does it offend the spirit?
Boy, that's a higher holylier way, isn't it? That puts the burden on us. What is offensive to the spirit? Like we've
talked about, go figure that out through your own prayer and pondering. James E. Fouse, too, I just
love when I was a kid. He said something once that is stuck with me through my parenting and through
anything that I've done in the church. Very simple a very simple statement, but it is really helpful.
He says, your criticism may be worse than the conduct you are trying to correct.
And that seems to happen all the time to the Savior with the Pharisees that they're trying to correct Him,
but in their correction, it's actually worse than the conduct that they're trying to correct.
And I've seen that with my parenting and my own children,
sometimes my criticism makes the situation much worse
than the conduct that they were involved in.
Same thing at church, we can come down on people way too harshly
for things that their heart was in the right place.
They were trying to do the right thing, the best thing.
And we come down on some rule because we feel so strongly
about it. Our criticism
can be worse than the conduct we are trying to correct. That's an important point. I do want to
shift gears to some other teachings in these chapters, but I do before we leave this point,
I want to be so clear about the importance of following the prophet. John, you brought up a higher
and a wholelier way in letting God prevail in our lives. If I don't approach the new for the
strength of youth pamphlet with that paradigm, I'm missing the mark as well. It reminds me of I was on
a tour in Israel with a group and we were talking about Fenslauze on the bus and as we're getting off
the bus, I hear the mom say to her 10 year old son, okay, don't forget to stay with your buddy and
the 10 year old mom, that's just a Fens. You don't know. No, I just said.
We have to be careful that we don't throw out things
that are really important.
Yes, we do need to be careful that we don't become overly burdened
with too many fence laws or miss the mark.
But at the same time, if the profit is teaching something,
that is a totally different category than the types of fence laws
that we've been talking about.
I mean, you could imagine the profit teaching a specific
fence law in a person saying,
I don't see why I need that fence.
But another person might say, well, that's the point.
It's a profit, seer, and revelator,
seer, see things that we don't see.
It reminds me of the statistic that 93% of Americans
think that they're above average drivers.
And you don't have to be a mathematician to know that 93% Americans are not above average
drivers, but we tend to think that we're better than we are.
So I'm more likely to think, oh, well, yeah, I'm an exception.
I don't need that prophetic guidance and teaching.
But I remember President Iring one time saying every time in my life, when I've chosen to delay following inspired council,
or decided that I was an exception, I came to know I put myself in harm's way. Every time I've listened to the council of profits, felt it confirmed,
in prayer, and then followed it, I found that I've moved towards safety. So in these issues we've been talking about, I know that as we follow the prophet,
as we listen, really listen,
we give diligent heed to the Holy Ghost,
we'll be able to balance things out.
And I do hope that this discussion
has given us kind of a helpful lens
to think about some issues that are really common
and prevalent in our lives.
It will be bumping up against a lot.
Excellent.
The Lord is not gonna hold the for the Strength of Youth book accountable for your choices.
He's going to hold you accountable for your choices.
And the For the Strength of Youth is a guide for making choices, just what we've talked
about, which is so good.
I have been talking about fence laws when I took flying lessons down at the Provo Airport
and how one time I wasn't kind of watching my altimeter,
when you're in the pattern, the rectangle,
one side of which is the runway,
you're supposed to be at 1,000 feet,
and I was at 800.
And I hadn't just hadn't been watching
in my instructor reach over and pulled my throttle out
and just basically put my engine on idle
and said, save our lives and land the plane.
And it was a
simulation so I in the pattern turned base and final and I the trees by
Utilic State Park were coming up too fast and we're not gonna make it and I
could see we weren't gonna make it our sink rate was too much so I had to push
the throttle in and that was a fence law don't go below pattern altitude a
thousand feet I remember Elder Hartman, Rector Jr.,
which you guys won't remember, but he talked about
flat-hiding in the Navy.
Flat-hiding, I'm so impressed.
I remember I got you, John.
He said, we had a commitment that I'll
shall not fly the airplane in the trees.
You remember that?
He said, so I added my own 1,000 feet
extra to make sure that if my engine sputtered,
I wouldn't be in the trees.
Fence law is important.
This is really helpful.
It could save your life.
We don't just throw them out, like stay with your buddy in Jerusalem, but we get the core
laws you've talked about.
Well, there's lots more on the topic of Fence laws.
If people are interested, I've got a whole section of my website that's dedicated to it. John Hilton, ii.com slash Fence Laws if you want to explore more.
But let's turn to some other important topics and maybe we'll go first to Luke 11.
So at the very beginning of Luke chapter 11, we read that Jesus was praying and after he prayed,
one of his disciples said unto him, Lord, teach us to pray.
So Jesus gave them some instructions,
and the first thing he said was,
when he pray, say, our father, which art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name.
And I think it's worth pausing just there,
like that's the most simple part,
but some scholars have suggested
that the simplicity of the address father was unique.
These scholars have suggested that there's more complicated
titles for God that might have been prevalent in prayer
at that time, something like Dear Lord God of Abraham,
Lord of Isaac and Jacob, or Mighty Creator,
the universe king of, you know,
and it's so interesting that rather than given this
lengthy complicated title, Jesus says, Father. And probably for us, we're used to praying to your
Heavenly Father or something like that. We don't even think about that. That just seems normal,
rather than potentially being sort of a revolutionary teacher. That was out there for them, wasn't it?
Yeah, to say, you're talking to your father.
And of course with the phrase, hallowed be thy name,
Jesus is still pointing out God's sacred character.
We, I'm not talking to my buddy,
I am praying to a sacred being.
So continue with his instruction on paired Jesus tells us to pray,
thy kingdom come,
thy will be done as in heaven, so in earth.
Give us day by day our daily bread
and forgive us our sins.
For we also forgive everyone that is indebted to us
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil.
So I'd love to hear any of your thoughts on this prayer,
but one thing that I think is interesting is that
Jesus says, forgive us our sins.
For we also forgive every one. It's in the present tense
So in Luke chapter 11 it's like saying forgive us our sins for we too right now in the present tense are forgiving those
Who have wronged us and that's not always an easy
Prayer to say sometimes forgiveness can be excruciatingly difficult. I
Think it's just interesting that this is one of the
things that Jesus emphasizes about prayer. Anything else that you guys want to highlight here on this
version of the Lord's prayer? Yeah, I think that it gives us another layer of meaning because the
Matthew is, forgive us our debts as we free of our debtors. And maybe that debt is people who sin
against us because the way it said here, instead of our debtors is our sins. And then that debt is people who sin against us because the way it said here, instead of
our debtors is our sins.
And then everyone that is indebted to us, which is, I guess, another layer of meaning,
are they really debts like we're giving out loans?
Are they people that have sinned against us?
Yeah.
And that's an interesting difference between the two.
I also think that there's some JST additions that are helpful here, like lead us not into
temptation.
Well, is our Heavenly Father ever going to lead us into temptation?
Probably not.
So you see the JST down there and let us not be led unto temptation.
And I think the Matthew, JST also, suffers not to be led into temptation.
Because he's not going to lead us into temptation,
but he can deliver us from you. To me, I think that's a really practical example. It makes
me think about my prayers. In Therunif I chapter 18, as Jesus is ministering to the people
in the Western Hemisphere, he says, you should follow the example of the prayers that I've
been getting. You prayed the way that I've been praying among you. This is, I think, part
of that. And so it makes me wonder how often am I praying to be delivered from temptation? Am I praying for the Lord's kingdom to come?
These are some simple but I think powerful things that maybe should be more a part of my personal
prayers than they have been. I really enjoy the simplicity of this prayer that we could be really ordinate and complicated in our prayers, but it seems like the Lord is saying,
honor God, talk about your own needs, it's okay to talk about your own needs. I will be done and how can I be better
treat other people and keep my life in line? It seems to me to be very simple and it's probably going to lead us to not so focus so much on the prayer itself,
but on what's being said and how it could be incorporated into my life.
I think the simplicity is what makes it powerful.
Yeah, I agree.
Jumping down to Luke chapter 11 verse 14,
we read that Jesus was casting out a demon that was mute. But when the demon
had gone out, the one who had been mute spoke and the crowds were amazed. But again, there's
a controversy, right? People start to say, well, I think Jesus is casting out demons
through the ruler of demons. And you know, Jesus kind of shows the how still leave an idea
that is. And then in verse 20, he says, if it is by the finger of God that I cast out the demons,
then the kingdom of God has come among you.
I think that's so interesting because these exorcisms
are pretty common in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
We read a lot about them.
And that's sort of a miracle
that might be a little bit harder for us to apply
or think of today, but to me kind of stepping back when you see this phrase, the Kingdom of God has come along
you.
A key lesson that I think we can learn from Christ's exorcisms, these miracles is that
Jesus has power over Satan, period.
He is showing, he is establishing his kingdom by conquering Satan.
The demons are being driven out. His kingdom is coming.
Sometimes in our lives, it might feel like the forces of evil, they just can't be defeated,
but through Jesus Christ, they can be.
They are right now.
They will be.
I think that's a really helpful message.
So you or I might not be literally possessed by demons right now, but we might feel like
there's demons in our lives.
There's challenges and problems. And the kingdom we've got is among us. So we don't need
to fear. Love it. Let's jump back to Matthew chapter 12. We spent a little bit of
time at the beginning of Matthew 12. In verse 36, we read one of my favorite
verses from these weeks chapters, Jesus is talking, and he says, every idle word
that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof
in the day of judgment. I mean, that's a scary thought. I am going to care,
take John, you've got both do a lot of public speaking. Have any of you ever had any
incidences with a hot mic where you said something you didn't think you were on but you were on
and oh man, that that are having any interview. Well, I just added here every word, I had a word that
men shall speak and I've added or text or blog, or
comment blog posts.
Yeah.
They shall give an account there.
I like, man, the Lord's going to bring up my Twitter feed or my
Instagram feed and say, did you mean this specific part?
Yeah.
That was because these aren't words you give in a talk.
These are idle words.
Right.
So is it off the cuff comment.
Yeah.
This is the second scariest verse in the standard works.
What's the scariest?
Oh, thank you.
You just just, exactly what I don't want to do to do.
I think the scariest is Alma 1214.
I link these two together.
Our words will condemn us, our works will condemn us,
our thoughts will condemn us.
And in this awful state, we shall not dare to look up to our God.
What does it say? We would fain be glad if we could command the rocks and mounts to fall upon us and hide us from his presence.
So if you need a Halloween activity, there's a couple of verses you can read that are scary.
So a quick little story from my life on this. So I was serving my mission at the University of Colorado.
I was a singles ward and I've been there for a little while. So I do pretty much everyone in the ward. And it's
sacram�ing one day and I noticed a woman come in to church late. I didn't recognize her and she
kind of looked out of place. Her clothes were kind of gross and her hair was all fallen apart.
So she kind of didn't fit in and as soon as the closing prayer was said, she like got up and just ran out of the chapel,
but I ran faster and introduced myself
at who she was, turned out that she was a less active
member of the church,
but we arranged to meet with her at the Institute Building
that Wednesday night.
So we get to the chapel Wednesday night
or the Institute Building Wednesday night.
I look around, she's not there,
but on the couch was the release society president.
And I'm thinking to myself,
I'm not really gonna be able to help the sister. She's already there, but on the couch was the release society president. And I'm thinking to myself, I'm not really going to be able to help this sister.
She's already been baptized. I need to connect her with the release society president.
So I go over to the res society president and start telling her about this woman's situation.
And I said, yeah, you know, I could tell she didn't fit in. She had kind of really bad hair
and really terrible clothes. And she was late to church. And I hear this voice behind me say,
clothes and she was late to church. And I hear this voice behind me say,
I wasn't late.
And I turned around.
No.
In fact, she had been in the room the whole time,
like when I walked in and looked around,
but now her hair was nicely combed.
No, it was just looked so different.
Her hair was combed.
It was very difficult.
I did not even recognize her.
So this moment of time, it's just frozen in my mind.
I just looked at her and I was like,
I have to go to the bathroom.
I just ran to the bathroom.
Just so you know, she continued to come to church after that.
So hopefully, all was in the last, but every idle word,
even like you were saying, John, those words that we,
we're not even thinking of, we're not scripting.
So that is a reminder to just be careful what we say.
I'm fascinated of the idea that the gospel actually asks us to think
our thoughts according to a plan. The look unto me in every thought was at the end of section 6 I think.
And that we can let idle things happen. We can let our thoughts be random or what we go through
through today. And there's a little bit of mental discipline. I don't want to think about that. I'm going to think about this instead implied there, which, but I wonder if either of you
have ever been answering a text message and you put one on the wrong thread and then
had to say never mind.
That wasn't for you.
Have you ever done that?
That's a terrible moment. I was thinking that we often get too casual at home in the way we speak, that we are
pretty when we're out among strangers or acquaintances, we're pretty careful about what
we say, but at home, we can be a little too casual with our children or with our spouse
and say things that are hurtful and the Lord's gonna bring those up at judgment and say,
why did you say that to this child? Why did you say that to your spouse? You think,
oh, I shouldn't have, right? I shouldn't have said that. So a little funny story with that one,
just last night we're having a home evening activity at our house and
Hank and John, you guys both do amazing impersonations. I've been trying to do a doby impersonation
recently and so I'm talking to my kids and my doby impersonation.
Dooby will save you, you know, and my son is recording what I'm saying.
And he's, I'm going to share this with all my friends.
And I sound very silly.
And also, I realize, wow, what if, first of all,
that cyberbullying don't do that.
But then second of all, what if, what if my son is recording every conversation
that goes on in my house and these are all going to be broadcast?
Yeah. How do I feel?
I think it's kind of similar language, but what you're talking about Hank
Yeah, make sure that you're okay with the Lord being involved in every conversation that you have that you'd be
Comfortable with him being there that changes the way we think and speak
Because even if there's not a hot mic and even if no one's recording us
There's that celestial recording, right?
And boy, these days you guys are both teachers.
You ever approach a hard topic or try to answer a hard question and see people's phones
come up?
You know, like they're, I'm going to record this.
And we don't want to be make each other an offender for a word, but I like the advice here
that, you know, be careful what you say. So speaking of that phrase, make people an offender for the word, but I like the advice here that, you know, be careful what you say.
So speaking of that phrase, make people an offender for the word.
That is definitely the environment Christ is teaching in, where people are trying to trap
him, trick him.
And if we jumped out to chapter 12 verse 38, we read, certain of the scribes and of the Pharisees
told Jesus, we want to see a sign from you.
But he answered and said unto them, in evil and adulterous generations seeketh after a sign,
and there shall be no sign given to it,
but the sign of the prophet Jonah.
For Jonah was three days and three nights in the whale's belly,
so shall the Son of Man be three days and three nights
in the heart of the earth.
The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment
with this generation and shall condemn it,
because they repented at the preaching of Jonah and behold a greater than Jonah is here.
And again, once again, there's lots to unpack in this verse. There's been a few times both in chapters 11 and 12 and in over in Luke 11, where the Savior is kind of drawn a contrast
between this other group had this level of
night in knowledge.
You have so much more and you're missing the mark.
It reminded us we have a ton of light in knowledge today in our time where much is given
much is required.
But what I'm going to focus on is this idea of the connection between Jesus and Jonah.
Just a few weeks ago in our Come Follow Me readings we were in Mark chapter 4,
where Jesus fell asleep in a storm just like Jonah was asleep on a storm. And I want to
read a quote from one of my favorite Christian authors, his name is Timothy Keller. He said,
both Jesus and Jonah are in a boat. Both are in storms described in similar terms. Both boats
are filled with others who are terrified
of death. Both groups wake the sleeping prophets angrily, rebuking them. Both storms are miraculously
calmed and the companions saved, and both stories conclude with the men and the boats
more terrified after the storm is stilled than they were before. Every feature is the same
with one rather large
apparent exception. Jonah is sacrificed into the storm, thrown into the deep, satisfying
the wrath of God so the others will be safe from it. But Jesus is not. Or are the accounts
so different at that point. Actually, Jesus is the ultimate Jonah who has thrown into
the ultimate deep of eternal justice for us.
How ironic it is that in Mark 4 the disciples ask,
Teacher, don't you care if we drown?
They believe he is going to sleep on them in their hour of greatest need.
Actually, it's the other way around.
In the Garden of Gesemini, they will go to sleep on him.
They were truly abandoned him, yet he loves them to the end.
Jonah was thrown overboard for his own sin,
but Jesus is thrown into the ultimate storm for our sin.
That's the end of the quote.
I do think that's a really powerful reminder of the connections
between Jesus and Jonah might be even more deep
than we sometimes see on the surface.
That's Keller.
Yeah, Timothy Keller.
So what comes next is a strange teaching that I've puzzled over sometimes.
Maybe you have two.
Jesus tells a story about an unclean spirit being cast out of a person.
He says, when the unclean spirit is gone out of a man, he walk through dry places seeking
rest and findeth none. Then he
said, I will return into my home from whence I came out and when he has come, he
findeth it empty, swept and garnished. Then go with he and takeeth with
himself seven other spirits, more wicked than himself. And they enter in and dwell
there. And the last state of that man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be
into this wicked generation. So I'm puzzled over this passage,
and I hope you find this a little bit humorous. I turn to Jesus the Christ and Elder Townmage actually
refers to this as a quote, weird example. That's not so. That's not so good. If Elder Townmage thinks
this is a weird example, then maybe it's okay with me. To continue the quote from Jesus the Christ, Elder Thomas says, in this weird example is typified the condition of those who have
received the truth and thereby been freed from the unclean influences of error and sin,
so that in mind and spirit and body they are as a house swept and garnished and set in cleanly
order. But who afterward renounced the good, opened their souls to the demons of
falsehood and deceit, and become more corrupt than before. And we see something kind of similar
in the Joseph Smith translation, which makes it clear that in this passage, the Savior is discussing
the sin of blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. So here's JST 1243 through 45. Then came some of the scribes,
and said to him, Master, it has written, every sin shall be forgiven, but ye say,
whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven. How can these things be?
And he said to them, when the unclean spirit has gone out of the man, he walketh through dry places,
seeking rest and fighteth none, but when a man speaketh against the Holy Ghost,
then he say, if I will return into my house from when I came out and when he's come,
he fight with an empty swept and garnished for the good spirit, leaveeth him unto himself.
So the idea blasts for me against the Holy Ghost that sometimes used interchangeably
in terms of denying the Holy Ghost or the unpardonable sin.
I don't know if you guys have things to expound on this.
I remember when I was a little kid,
I was about 11 years old.
I had heard that like the unpardonable sin
was to deny the Holy Ghost.
And I was walking home from school one day
and this little thought popped into my head.
I denied the Holy Ghost.
And I was, no, I'm due.
It's all over for me.
But Joseph Smith said to deny the Holy Ghost is like seeing the sun,
SUN looking at it and saying, it doesn't exist.
Our president Kimball said, you have to have this immense amount of knowledge to deny the Holy Ghost.
So I think for us, the best way to maybe liken this parable is the idea that we see frequently
in the Book of Mormon, that those who had the truth and left it, their state is worse than if
they had never known it to start out with.
I went right there.
Alma 2430.
Oh, nice.
So, let's just conclude with one more story.
Let's jump down to Matthew chapter 12, verse 46.
I think this is a beautiful message.
While Jesus was still speaking to the crowds, his mother and his brothers were standing outside
wanting to speak to him. Somebody told him, look, your mother and his brothers were standing outside wanting to speak to him.
Somebody told him, look, your mother and your brothers are standing outside. They want
to talk to you. But to the one who had told him this, Jesus replied, who is my mother and
who are my brothers? Improving to his disciples, he said, here are my mother and my brothers, for whoever does the will of my father in heaven is my brother
and sister and mother. And I think that's so beautiful that Jesus says, do you want to be a part
of my family? It's easy. Come on to me. Do the things that I'm saying and I'm teaching and then
we are part of this family together.
That's a beautiful invitation to the people around. Sometimes you might think of this as the Savior insulting his immediate family, but I don't think he is. He's trying to say,
these are all my family in this room. Everyone who's trying to do the will of my father,
which is in heaven, you're my family. It reminds me of John 17,
where the one thing he asks God for in John 17 is all those whom now has given me be with
me where I am. It sounds like he really believes that anyone who follows him is his family.
This is John 1724. I will that that also whom now has given me that they also whom now
has given me be with me where I am
That they may be hold my glory which thou has given me for thou loves me before the foundation of the world
And he finishes that the love wherewith thou has loved me may be in them
So I think he really does deep in his heart believe that those who follow him are his family. That's beautiful.
You know, it's interesting how you mentioned it seems like Jesus might be putting down
his family.
In Mark's account of the same scene, it does seem that at least some of Jesus' family members
think that Jesus is kind of going crazy.
They're hearing all the stuff that's happening and he's out of his mind.
So Mark seems to suggest that at least maybe some of Jesus' family members might be going to correct
Jesus Christ. But I'm reminded of Mary, the mother of Jesus, who we read recently in John chapter 2.
In fact, John chapter 2 are the last words that we hear Mary speak in scripture and she says to
the servants, do whatever he tells you. I think that's powerful. We often think of how Jesus' father introduces him, hear him,
and now Jesus' mother says, do whatever he tells you.
So I'm not as worried about Jesus' mother and siblings trying to correct Jesus,
but rather kind of what you're saying. Jesus, he knows this mother's faith.
He knows that Mary has said, do whatever he tells you. He's trying to maybe not so much dis his family, but include everyone
in his family. You're all part of this, like that beautiful verse you shared in John 17.
We get really used to calling each other brother and sister at church. This is a good reminder.
Who is it? Jacob or King Benjamin? It says, be familiar, talking about your, the things with which you have been blessed. Look at the word familiar. What's the root? Family.
Be family with each other. To wrap this up, I want to take both of you to a November 2006
enzyme. This is elder Dalin H. Oaks. He heals the heavy laden. And he starts his talk with,
the Savior said, come unto me, I'll you to that labor
and are heavy laden and I will give you rest.
Now, the roke says,
many carry heavy burdens.
Some have lost a loved one to death
or care for one who is disabled.
Some have been wounded by divorce,
others yearn for an eternal marriage.
Some are caught in the grip of addictive substances
or practices like alcohol, tobacco, drugs,
or pornography. Others have crippling physical or mental impairments. Some are challenged by
same-gender attraction, some have terrible feelings of depression or inadequacy.
In one way or another, many are heavy-laden. To each of us, our Savior gives this loving
invitation, come unto me, I'll eat that labor, and our heavy-laden, I will give you rest.
Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am me, lowly in heart, and you shall find rest
unto your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light. The title for this week's lesson is
I will give you rest. So I wanted to give both of you an opportunity to comment on, I think we
have many listeners who would love to have more of that peace in their lives.
John Hilton, I know that you wrote a book called The Founder of our Peace, talking about some of these ideas.
So what would you say to our listeners who really need the peace that the Savior is offering?
Well, I think it's embedded in that front part that Jesus Christ says, come unto me.
And my guess is that all of us, we're trying in lots of different ways to come unto him.
I found that in my own life sometimes though, if I'm not careful, I can become a box checker
rather than a come unto Christer.
I did a remiss for today, check, fam for today, check, pray, check, went to the temple, check.
But in all of these things that we're doing, if I'm sitting
in sacrament meeting, am I sitting in sacrament meeting coming unto Christ? And for me in my own
life is I found that I'm centering myself in Jesus Christ. There's so much that's in the periphery,
there's all these fence laws, there's other things, but as I focus on Jesus Christ, even as I'm doing
really good things, like studying my scriptures, if I can focus that on Jesus Christ, even as I'm doing really good things, like studying my scriptures.
If I can focus that on the Savior,
then I find that invites peace into my life.
I love that.
It's not coming to me and you can be more anxious.
It's coming to me and you can find rest.
And I'm reminded of the Korahor story.
Is it Gidona who says, why do you teach
this people there will be no Christ to interrupt their rejoicings? I'm like, oh, so if we believe
in Christ, we should be rejoicing. We should be so anxious. We should be rejoicing. Thanks for
reminding us of that, John. Elder Oaks goes on to say, the Atonement of Jesus Christ and the
healing it offers do much more than provide the opportunity for repentance. The Atonement of Jesus Christ and the healing it offers do much more than provide the opportunity for repentance.
The atonement gives us the strength to endure pains and afflictions and temptations of every kind.
Because our Savior also took upon him the pains and sicknesses of His people, brothers and sisters,
if your faith and prayers and the power of the priesthood do not heal you from an affliction, the power of the atonement will surely give you the strength to bear the
burden." And then he quotes again, come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden,
the Savior said, and I will give you rest unto your souls.
What a great day we've had today, John Hilton III. We want to encourage all of our listeners
to go visit John Hilton II, I, I, I, remember,
John Hilton III.
Go visit his website, learn more about fence laws
and how you can use the chosen and your teaching.
And all of those things are available to you
at John Hilton's website, which I'm a frequent visitor.
John, we want to thank you for being with us today.
Thanks for taking your time to teach us.
It's been fantastic.
Thank you.
Such a joy to be with you guys.
Let's do it again.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sonson.
We want to thank our sponsors, David and Verla Sonson.
And of course, remember our founder, the late Steve Sonson.
We hope all of you will join us next week.
We have another episode coming up on
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