Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 15-17; Mark 7-9 Part 1 • Dr. Kerry Muhlestein • Apr. 10 - Apr. 16
Episode Date: April 5, 2023Who do you say Jesus is? Dr. Kerry Muhlestein explores how God’s covenant path creates a kingdom of priests and priestesses, how humility helps avoid hypocrisy, and how formal covenants change our n...atures.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Kerry Muhlestein00:56 Introduction of Dr. Kerry Muhlestein02:14 Background about Pharisees, Saduccees, and how they vary by region09:17 Ritual cleanliness and Jewish law and customs regarding parents16:15 Rationalization and loopholes17:46 What defiles a person21:53 Finding fault23:28 Jesus casts out an unclean spirit north of the Sea of Galilee28:39 Jesus teaching Jews, Samaritans, and Gentiles32:19 Jesus returns to Capernaum and Decapolis and performs miracles35:40 Jesus heals with touch, spit, clay, etc. and the symbolism connected37:30 Some Pharisees and Saducees asked Jesus for a sign41:43 When asking for a sign is a mistake42:28 Bread, yeast, and metaphors of corruption47:47 The challenge of the world’s influence51:02 Jesus heals a blind man in stages56:20 End of Part 1–Dr. Kerry MuhlesteinShow 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.
It's a beautiful day here in the studio. I am here with my rock of a cohost.
John, by the way, welcome, John, by the way, John, you're, you're a rock.
I'm more like a cream spinach, but I'll take it.
I bring that up because Peter is going to be called the rock today, our Peter.
So John, we are going to be in the gospel of Matthew today and the gospel of Mark today,
who is joining us to help us understand all this.
Well, I've been looking forward to this day because we've had Dr. Kerry Mewlstein with
us before in the Old Testament, and I'm so glad that he's back today.
So let me reacquaint everyone with Kerry. He earned two degrees at BYU and
Psychology and Hebrew and ancient Near Eastern studies. He received his PhD
from UCLA in Egyptology with a second emphasis in Hebrew language and literature.
He spent significant time in Jerusalem including as a student and a teacher at
the BYU Jerusalem Center. He directs an excavation in Jerusalem, including as a student and a teacher at the BYU Jerusalem
Center.
He directs an excavation in Egypt.
He's a historical and biblical geographer.
Leads tours and study groups in Egypt, Israel, and Jordan is a bestselling author who has
published nine books and he hosts his own podcast called The Scriptures Are Real.
And he and his wife Juliannene, has six children, and one grandson.
And I just wanted to mention his books,
Finding Promise Blessings on the Covenant Path.
Another one called God Will Proveil,
and one that a lot of people in our podcast
have appreciated called Learning to Love Isaiah.
So we're really glad to have you back, Kerry.
Thanks for joining us again.
Yeah.
I'm so happy to be back. I always had a good time with you guys.
And I always learned something.
This podcast has enhanced my study of the scriptures tremendously over the last few years.
We're grateful you'd say that. Kerry, thank you.
We love doing it.
Kerry, we've got a bunch to cover today.
So let's jump right in.
The name of the lesson is Thou art the Christ, and we're
going to be in two Gospels, Matthew and Mark. Where do you want to start?
I think we'll bounce back and forth between the two. Really, in this particular reading,
they cover pretty much the same material, but you'll see, like, for example, let's start
in Mark, because you'll get a little bit more of the story with the Pharisees in Mark.
You get a little bit more when we get to the Manor Transfiguration of Matthew, and we might just bounce back and forth.
And we'll try and highlight some of the unique things about each gospel and some of those
literary devices that each gospel writer is prone to use. You get advantages from a harmony
account and advantages from an non-harmonia account. And we've heard a lot about the advantages
of looking at each gospel writer, but I think there's also something about putting them together and trying to come to a more well-rounded picture of the Savior and highlighting the Savior in that way.
So we'll try and do both if it's all right.
Yeah, that sounds fantastic.
I'm going to put a marker in each one.
Yeah, no kidding.
I brought two Bibles with me today so that I can just jump back and forth.
Having both open?
Yeah. Yeah.
The Come Follow Me manual starts out by saying,
isn't it strange that the Pharisees and Sadducees
would demand that Jesus show them a sign from heaven?
Word is many well-known miracles enough.
What about his powerful teachings
or the multiple ways he had fulfilled ancient prophecies?
Their demand was prompted not by a lack of signs,
but by an unwillingness to discern the
signs.
And accept them, that comes out of Matthew chapter 16.
Where do you want to go from here, Kerry?
Well, let's start in Mark 7, and it does start immediately with the Pharisees, and maybe
we should just pause and say something about the Pharisees to begin with, because most
people in Galilee and Judea at the time, most of the Jews in that area are really following the Phariseeic tradition.
They're the ones who are setting the ideas of this is proper practice, Orthodox practice for how you live as a Jew.
Jesus is very Jewish, he keeps the law of Moses, he really is a good Jewish boy.
So people are going to follow the Pharisees, but we talk about the Pharisees as if they're this monolithic. Everyone is the same. Everyone practices the same.
They're wherever they're from.
They're saying, and that's not true at all.
They have schools within the Phariseism and different masters, different people follow
to have different interpretations and different ways of doing things, and even in the areas.
So it would seem, and I don't know that we have enough data to really be hard on this,
but it would seem that Jesus has a little bit
of a different relationship with the Pharisees
in the Galilee area than he does with the Pharisees
in Jerusalem.
And note that this is really specific in both accounts.
So we'll read Mark chapter 7, verse 1,
then came together unto him the Pharisees
and certain of the scribes which came from Jerusalem.
So he's in the Galilee area,
but these people are coming from Jerusalem up to meet with
him.
And typically the Jerusalem group, especially the Sadducees, that's who he's going to
have the greatest conflict with at the end of his life, that Jerusalem group seems to
be a little more hostile.
I would argue, and I've had discussions with some of our colleagues, even a little bit
of a debate on my own podcast about this, But I would argue that some of the Pharisees,
especially those from Jerusalem,
there's a little bit of a power struggle.
They see Jesus as someone who is gaining
in popularity and power,
and he hasn't gone through the same system
that they've gone through and that seems
to just cause a little bit of friction.
It's under their skin.
Yeah, we're eating a lot of things into it,
and I want to make sure we're careful,
and it's tempting for Christians in general
to just say Pharisees are bad,
and I don't think we can accurately say that.
Most of them, I think, are fantastic and great
and have good intent and so on.
But of course, in any group,
and we could say the same about our own faith,
in any group you have people who are struggling
with doing things the wrong way or for the wrong reason,
and so on, right?
Okay.
A little bit of a power struggle from those in Jerusalem.
You can see that.
He lives in Galilee.
He doesn't live in Jerusalem.
Sometimes I would ask my students, where does Jesus live in it?
They say, oh, Jerusalem.
No, he never lives in Jerusalem.
He lives in Galilee, the northern part of Israel.
Yeah.
Very small percentage of his time is actually in Jerusalem, but it's significant when he goes there. So we hear a lot about it. And it's worth noting that the Galilee area is
known for being a hotbed, and this will become a much bigger deal as we get towards the end of
the Gospels, but it's a hotbed of descent against Rome and wanting to have the rebellion and
looking for a Messiah that will help them to rebel against Rome. The people from Jerusalem are
automatically going to be just a little suspicious of any big movements in the Galilee area. for a Messiah that will help them to rebel against Rome. The people from Jerusalem are automatically
going to be just a little suspicious of any big movements in the Galilee area. They see this as
possibly blowing up. And that's exactly when things come to a head at the end of the Gospels.
It is largely over this issue. Is this man becoming so popular that it's going to bring the
breath of the Romans upon us? That's a real part of what's going on. So let's read, they've come
as we read in verse one and in verse two. And when they saw some of his disciples eat bread with defiled,
that is to say, with unwashed hands, they found fault. Let's pause and talk about that as well.
Traditions about how much you need to wash and when you need to wash were in flux and they were
changing. And we try and look at records we have in various time periods to see when they've decided what. And the problem is that most of the records we have are from the
Mishna, which is quite a bit later than this. And based on the records that we have, it seems
like they're in the middle of a transition period right now. And that it's becoming increasingly
common to say that you need to wash your hands anytime you're going to eat or anytime you're
going to do a number of other things that might be connected with rituals and so on. But they're probably in a transition. So probably not
everyone agrees with that, but it's starting to become the norm. So they seem to be questioning him
on this practice and they don't say that you're not washing your hands. So I don't know if we can
know whether the Savior is or not, but his disciples aren't washing their hands. And let's take another step back and notice something that is happening here and you're
going to see it a bunch of times in the Gospels.
And that's a tradition among the Jews and especially among the Pharisees of debating points
of law and understanding of Scripture.
We might call it holocaust, this tradition over oral law or how do you interpret and act
out the law of Moses. And it's normal to have a debate. Why do you do it this way? Why do you interpret and act out the law of Moses?
And it's normal to have a debate.
Why do you do it this way?
Why do you say it this way?
Well, because of this and this and this and this.
And so we say, we do it this and this.
And usually you appeal to people who have already had arguments a little bit like we do
in court cases today.
You say, well, such and such decision and such and such decision make us think we should
interpret it this way.
That's the typical way of doing things.
Sometimes what we see is huge confrontations they would have seen is kind of normal discussion.
This is what we do.
We debate these things, right?
And that's just a cultural thing that is even some families are more used to, let's debate
this.
Whereas other families, well, contention, I don't know, I'm not comfortable with this. So we need to understand that this is typical for Pharisees to ask people questions, and
it may not be as confrontational as sometimes we think it is, although in this case, we will
see that by the end the Pharisees are offended.
So it got somewhat beyond the norm, probably because he calls them hypocrites.
That might be part of it.
But in any case, it starts out as a fairly normal
thing. I think they're saying that the norm now is that this is how we've interpreted the lie. You
should be washing your hands and your disciples aren't doing it. And looking verse four,
it even tells us about when they come from the market, except they wash, they eat not. So the idea
is that you've been to the market and there are Gentiles or there are people there
who may have things that are not kosher
or haven't been kept ritually clean,
just because you may have come into contact
with ritually unclean things,
you should wash before you eat.
Now this is about ritual cleanliness.
It's not about hygiene, right?
We think you should wash your hands before you eat
to get rid of germs.
They're talking about ritual cleanliness, right?
They wash their cups and their vessels and
their tables and all of these things. And then it gets back in verse 5. So Mark has that nice little
explanation of the current Jewish, at least largely Jewish and ferris-acal custom.
Then the Pharisees in the scribes asked him, why walk nut thy disciples according to the
traditions of the elders, but he bred with unwashed hands. So they're going back to say, look,
our group is established.
This is the tradition.
You're not doing it.
Why?
And this is an interesting thing,
because as I said,
Jesus is a good Jew,
but he's also not afraid to challenge
the kind of normal thing
that is being established
by hierarchy and leadership.
He's not afraid to go against the grain.
And that's what he's going to do here.
As he quotes Isaiah to them?
And this is where they may take offense.
And he says, and then, well, have this I say,
a prophesied of you.
I mean, I would feel bad if someone said this of me,
by the way, of you hypocrites as it is written.
This people honor it with their lips,
but their heart is far from me.
How be it in vain?
Do they worship me teaching for doctrines the commandments of men to take
Isaiah whom they revere and say when he was saying bad stuff, he was talking about you.
Oh man.
That's pretty sharp criticism.
I know we don't want to paint the Savior as someone who can come out harshly, but I
think this is pretty harsh.
Yeah.
And then he gets into a specific of how they do this.
He says that laying aside the commandment of God,
you hold the tradition of men as the Washington Pots
and Cups and many other such things as you do.
So he's saying, look, you're forgetting
about what God commands us to do.
And you're focusing on all these little things.
Right?
So for us, this might be you're focusing on,
hey, did you fold that sacrament cloth the right way?
That's not the way we arrange the cups in the tray, So for us, this might be your focusing on, hey, did you fold that sacrament cloth the right way?
That's not the way we arrange the cups in the tray,
as opposed to what the ordinance is really about.
So verse 9, and he said to them,
full well, you reject the commandment of God
that you may keep your own traditions.
For Moses said, now he's gonna get this is real law,
real commandment is when you would get to Moses said
in 10 commandments, this is as fundamental as it gets for them.
For Moses said, honor thy father and thy mother and who so curse
with father and mother, let him die the death. Read that this morning with my son. He didn't
like that part. But I'm going to read that to my kids. I'm going to put that in vinyl
in the kitchen. So what does die the death mean? That's punishable by death. Yeah, they could
be stoned for not honoring father and mother. Now, of course, up to interpretation at what level of dishonoring rises to
crop capital punishment. But the clear thing is you should be honoring your Father and Mother
and taking care of them. But verse 11, he's highlighting their kind of lawyerish way around this.
But you say, if a man should say to his father or mother, it is
Corbin. We'll come back to that. That is to say a gift. By whatsoever, that might
be profited by me. He shall be free. And you suffer him no more to do ought for his father
or his mother, making the word of God of none effect through your tradition, which you've
delivered. And many such like things do you. So let's look at the example. And then we'll
say, here, they do a lot of other things,
and then maybe we can ask how in the world,
we probably do this in some way.
I think every member of the church
probably has some way they do this.
So Corbin comes from the Hebrew word Karab,
which means to approach or bring near.
And in Leviticus, you get this as the description of
when you bring an offering to God,
you approach God and you bring this offering near. So it's the word when you bring an offering to God. You approach God and you bring
this offering near. So it's the word that designates an offering. What he's saying is if you say this
is an offering to God, then you can't use it to take care of your parents. So hang on, I'll get
back to that. But what they're drawing on is something that we get in numbers. Numbers chapter 30
versus one through two, where Moses says, you cannot go against a note.
If you make an oath, you cannot break that oath.
And I think we'd all agree with that.
Your problem is that they're making an oath
that makes it so they can't keep a commandment.
Because what they seem in practice to be doing
is to say, okay, I know I'm supposed to take care
of my father and mother.
And this goes kind of to this idea
that as you get older, you can't really take care of yourself. They don't have social security, what they have is children that take care of my father and mother. And this goes kind of to this idea that as you get older,
you can't really take care of yourself.
They don't have social security,
what they have is children that take care of their parents.
But you've accumulated some wealth
and you don't want to spend it on taking care of your parents.
So you say, actually, when I die,
I'm going to give all of this to the temple
or something like that, right?
So that's Corbin.
It's now Corbin.
It's a vow that I am going to give
as an offering to the temple.
So now I can't use it to take care of you.
Whatever's left I can spend all I want, however I want on me, but when I die, then it's
going to be given.
And I'm just using this as an example.
We don't know exactly how the Corbin worked and what they would do, but it would be something
somewhat like this.
I don't have to use it to take care of you.
And Jesus is saying, and this is part of this holocaught, there's a debate. When you make an oath, you have to keep it. But what if that oath wasn't
oath you shouldn't have made because it makes us so you can't keep the commandments?
Jesus is coming out on this and he's saying, you can't do that. The commandment that
given a Moses is higher than whatever stupid idea you came up with that you made an oath
about. So quit making oaths that you shouldn't make is really what he's saying. They've found a technical way around,
yeah, that's exactly right. Around taking care of their parents, rather than going with what they
really, I mean, think of covenant and what we talked about, they should love God and love each other,
they should be taking care of their parents because they love their parents and they want to take care
of their parents, but they found a way out of that. And he says, you do a lot of things like that.
I guess one of my questions is, how might we do that?
Is this why the Savior says later, you strain at a nat that swallow a camel?
It's this idea of, you wash your hands, but you don't keep one of the big 10 commandments.
Right.
That's so cool.
That's exactly right.
And again, I don't think he's condemning everyone
or even every Pharisee, but it's this notion
and this idea that sometimes we find ways around it.
And I'll tell you, I mean, I know I'm exceptionally good
at rationalizing.
If I feel like, okay, well, I know things should happen
this way, but I'd like it to happen this way.
I can usually find a reason why it's okay
for me to do things the way I want to do things.
I'm a master rationalizer.
If you know the scripture is well enough, you can find a good enough.
You can find a little poem.
That's exactly right.
So I would just encourage everyone in the audience to stop and think, is there a way
I'm doing this?
Is there a way I'm rationalizing?
I'm not keeping the heart of the covenant or theizing? I'm not keeping the heart of the covenant
or the laws. I'm not keeping the core of it. I'm going through some actions, but I'm
not really acting out of love for God and each other.
I think the little verse six that he kind of introduces this idea with, they honor me
with their lips. Okay, there's these words. There's this commandments that you can say,
but where's your heart in all of this? And you see in those next verses, commandments versus traditions, commandments versus
tradition, making the word of God through none effect, word of God strong through your tradition.
And he's putting those side by side. And you guys have these out of order here. Your traditions
have become bigger than the commandments of God. Is that a fair way to put it? Yeah.
have become bigger than the commandments of God. Is that a fair way to put it?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think the big question is,
are you trying to find ways to not keep commandments?
Right, you're looking for justification
and if you need to use the scriptures
to make yourself feel justified,
then we're in the trouble territory.
Yeah, I would agree.
And let's make sure you love of God
and each other is at the heart of all that we do.
Oh, yeah.
We can keep moving on.
Verse 14, he's gonna make a bigger point
and this probably also is part of what offends them.
So we're still on Mark chapter seven, verse 14,
and when he called all the people unto him,
so he's not making this a small little conversation
just between him and the Pharisees.
He's going public with this.
Let's talk about this with everyone.
I go, oh man. Yeah, okay, now that I've got the megaphone, let's public with this. Let's talk about this with everyone. I go, oh man.
Yeah, okay.
Now that I've got the megaphone, let's go through this.
He said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said,
he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said,
he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he
said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he said, he he said, he said, he said, let him hear, and then he goes on to talk about this a little bit more and the disciples will say,
okay, we don't understand and he'll kind of explain it more. We get that a little bit more in the Matthew account.
But the principal really is, he's saying, it's not what you eat, it's not unwashed and hands or anything that defiles you,
it's what comes out of you. But I think we should take a step further and say, it's not just what comes out of you, but I think we should take a step further and say it's not just what comes out of you, right?
So he talks about the lasciviousness, sin, covetousness, all these kinds of things.
That's what comes out of us, but I think it comes out of us because of
what we are, what we've become. So what goes into us does matter in some degree if we're gonna look at the kind of the metaphor, the physical metaphor.
You are what you eat, right?
So you become what you've, right? So you become
what you've eaten and then what you have become influences what comes out of you, what you do,
what you say and that kind of a thing. What comes out of your mouth? Yep. Yeah. I think that should
be our focus is what are we becoming and how that's manifest by the things we say and do. That's
what come out of us is what we say and do But the question is what are we becoming and that focus again not on the little things of what you do
But why you're doing it and so on that affect what you're becoming
Hmm. I think that classic talk that president Dalin H. Hokes gave it's called the challenge to become and you're just reminding me of that
Yeah, I love that talk it
Yeah, and it seems in here there's this focus on what are we doing. They've got the laws,
they've got the traditions, but President Oaks was like, it's not just what we do.
It's not just what we know, and it's not even what we do. When we know what to do, and we do what we
know, we become something different. And that's the outcome of all of this is what kind of
person are you becoming. And that's why I see that. You honor me with your lips. You've got the right words down,
but your heart were the intense. And that was the whole sermon on the mount. It was a higher
inner law. What are your motives? What are your reasons? And what are you becoming? That's
harder to measure. Do you remember Elder Lynn Robbins? He talked about we all have to do list,
but none of us have to be list.
Do you remember that talking?
Yeah. Yeah. He said,
I can take my wife on a date, which is a to do,
but being a good husband is a lifetime effort.
That's on my to be list, which I thought was a really
good way to look at it.
And that's what you're saying, Kerry.
What are we becoming? Yeah.
So Kerry is Jesus saying here, look,
washing your hands is fine
It's a fine law to keep but if you're not keeping these larger laws
Out of your hardest coming evil thoughts adulteries fornications murder thefts covetedness wickedness to see
Lecidiousness an evil eye blasphemy pride and foolishness if you're not worried about those washing your hand isn't gonna help you much
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
So if we were to translate this to an R-Day,
we can say, okay, so you don't drink coffee
and you don't smoke or bake,
but you're mean to your neighbor all the time.
Yeah, that's still a problem, right?
You should avoid taking the wrong stuff into your body,
but you should also be careful about what you are
so that
what comes out of you is kind to your neighbor.
Yeah.
Okay.
I am a thief, but I always wash my hands afterwards.
Right.
Yeah, that's good.
That is good.
I steal.
That's what we love about you, John.
Yeah.
I steal, but I never swear.
Wow, I'm stealing.
That's good.
I'm proud of you.
But I wear a white shirt and tie when I steal.
It's different.
Okay.
I think we understand this part finally.
Dejohn and I, if we can make jokes about it, we get it.
There you go.
There you go.
So, and that's this little confrontation with the fair season.
And again, it's probably less confrontation than we think it is.
It's a debating of law, but at some point they get offended so it must have been at least somewhat
confrontational. The Savior doesn't mince words sometimes. I wanted to just share something
really quick. In chapter 7 verse 2, this all started with them finding fault in others. This whole
conversation started because they found fault. And I've always loved this
Marvin J. Ashton quote, nothing is easier than fault finding. There's no talent, no self-denial, no brains are required to set up in the grumbling business. It doesn't take a lot of brain
power to find fault in other people. And I think Jesus is saying, okay, if you want to find fault,
we can find some more.
Let's talk about some of the faults I find in you since we're talking about that. So just be careful in fault finding in other people.
It's probably not going to lead somewhere you end up looking like the great guy, right?
That's good. And maybe we can also look at this from a different point of view.
The Savior always finds teaching moments.
So they bring this debate about law
and he turns it into a teaching moment
for the small group of disciples
and then a larger group of disciples
to talk about a principle he really wanted to teach
and talk about.
I think the savior can do things we can't do.
I don't know that it would be my place
to gather a large group around
if I'm going to tell someone what they've done wrong.
Yeah. That's not my place, but it is the Savior's place. So still, a teaching opportunity is something I
should be looking for. He does turn this into quite a, quite a lesson. If you've sent you brought it
up, let's turn it into a lesson. Be careful bringing things up around Jesus. He might just turn your comet into a bigger lesson. Yeah.
So after this, Savior's going to leave. So he's in the Galilee area at that point,
but now he's going to leave up into what is currently the Lebanon area, the area of the Phoenicians
and Tyre and Sidon. So this is a long walk. I have to say of one of the things that when I first
took my children to Jerusalem and
as we were driving around all the different places he went in the Galleierria, my oldest
son was 13 at the time.
And that was his comment to me.
I had no idea how much to save your walk.
He walked so far, so many places, just never tired of going around trying to spread the
word.
And you have to admire that about him and his disciples.
So they're going to go a long ways north up to Tyre and Sidon.
He enters into a house and he wasn't trying to be public,
but he was too public like everyone knew about him now,
so he couldn't be hid.
So we're still in Mark 7 and we get to verse 25.
For a certain Mormon, whose young daughter had an unclean spirit heard of him and came and
fell at his feet.
The woman who was a Greek, now I guess she's not actually Greek, this is just Mark's term
for meaning Gentile or something like that, because he tells this specifically, she's
a sero Phoenician by nation, so she is from Phoenician and that seria Phoenician area.
And she besought him that he would cast forth the devil out of her daughter.
But Jesus said unto her,
let the children be first filled,
for it is not meat to take the children's bread and cast it unto the dogs.
Now, that's interesting, right? That can also be seen as harsh.
And it brings up an interesting dilemma.
And let's go to the Matthew account of this,
where you get even a little bit more information.
We're going to be in Matthew chapter 15, verse 22.
And behold, a woman of Canaan, now they're not called Canaanites anymore at this time,
but a woman of Canaan came out of the same coast
and cried unto him saying,
have mercy on me, O Lord, thou son of David.
So she is acknowledging both his Jewishness
and this kind of royal Jewish line.
She's not saying son of God, but she's acknowledging who he is, including the covenant identity,
both Abraham and covenant and David covenant with all of this. And she's not of that line.
In the Matthew account, he doesn't even answer her. He answered her not a word. And his disciples
came and beside him saying, send her away for she cryeth after us.
And he answered and said, I am not sent but under the law sheep of the house of Israel.
So first of all, that statement doesn't make sense if the disciples are saying,
just toss her out, just get rid of her, because he's telling them why he's not going to deal with her,
which would agree with why they should toss her out.
So they must be saying, send her away as in, give her what she wants.
So she'll leave is what I assume here.
But he says, no, I'm just to the house of Israel.
And that's an important distinction here.
And for some of us, this seems like it can be rather
exclusivist or a leadist or something along those lines.
Like really, you won't even talk to the Gentiles.
And we know actually the Savior interacts
with the Gentiles a lot. Luke will point that out a ton, but we get
it even here in Matthew. He certainly interacts with Gentiles, but he seems to be saying,
my mission is to covenant people. And there's a pattern that we can see all over in scriptures,
including happening today that if we understand that pattern, I think we can understand
what's going on here.
The Father sends the Son.
We're too cut off from the Father's presence to interact with him directly.
So the Father sends the Son to interact with us.
He's the intercessor.
The Son will primarily interact with covenant people.
And I think there's not exclusively, right?
I don't want to say that people who aren't in the covenant that believe in Christ don't
have experiences with Christ and often real, powerful, and meaningful experiences.
Of course they do. But in this kind of official capacity, he is going to work with people who have
entered into a formal and clear relationship with him that has changed their nature enough that they
can interact with him in a different way. And So he will have that group that he interacts with, and then he sends them out to everyone
else to get them to join that group.
So it's our job to go to the world and get them to come to Christ through covenant so
that Christ can bring them to the Father.
So that's the order of things.
We bring people to Christ, he brings them to the Father, and that, I think that's what
we're seeing here, is that he's saying, no, I'm brings them to the Father, and that, I think that's what we're
seeing here is that he's saying, no, I'm going to interact with you, my disciples, my covenant
disciples, and then I will, and we'll see this when we get to Acts, and we see it a little bit
in the gospels as well, I will send you out to everyone else. And initially, he sends them
all over the house of Israel. The first time he sends a message, just go to the House of Israel, then he's going to send them to the Gentiles eventually.
And you talked about this, for example, when you had Matt Grayon and you talked about the Tabernacle,
you have these degrees of holiness or degrees of nearness to God.
Anyone can be near to Christ in a way, but as President Nelson has been teaching so powerfully,
when you're in a covenant relationship with them, you have greater access to his power,
you have a closer relationship with him.
So he will interact with you and get you
to get others to come to him.
Okay.
Does that make sense, and John, you said,
you get lots of questions about this,
is there some other ways that you look at this
or you explain this?
The only thing that comes up sometimes is,
yeah, but what about the woman at the well?
She was a Samaritan, is she considered part house of Israel then? And that's why it was okay for him to kind
of go home that way and talk to her.
Yeah, it's a great question. And I would say, first of all, yes, I mean, she's partially
Israelite, intermarried, but partially Israelite. But second, we also want to be clear, the
Savior doesn't exclusively interact with Jews.
We're going to seem interact with any number of Gentiles.
I would guess that in some way, I mean, I think he knows what's going to happen here.
I may be wrong, but I think he knows.
I think this is a teaching point.
He wants to make sure that he teaches exactly what we just talked about.
He's going to go to the covenant people and the covenant people are going to go to the
world, which is exactly what we're engaged in right now as a church. Gathering
into Israel the greatest cause on earth today. I like that, Kerry. I like also that he probably
knows how much faith this woman has and he's going to teach his disciples a lesson when they're
saying, she's a Gentile. Just give her what what she wants she'll go away and he's like,
oh, I'm not here for Gentiles, but then kind of thinking doing self-watch what this Gentile's
about to do. She's going to teach you something. She could take offense at this when he just called
her a dog because the parable or the analogy he uses to teach this is I'm sent to the children,
the children are the house of Israel and I'm feeding them. Why would I give food to the children, the children are the house of Israel, and I'm feeding them. Why would I give food for the children to the dogs?
So he's calling her a Gentile dog, basically.
And but look at her humility and her faith,
then came she and worshiped him saying,
truth, Lord, yet the dogs eat of the crumbs,
which fall from their master's table.
So she is not going to be deterred for one thing.
And let's highlight, we're gonna see in this reading
a couple of times, parents wanting blessings
for their children.
And my guess would be that any parent listening right now
has felt that way and will feel that way many more times.
I have experienced no pain for myself
that has been as great as the pain I've experienced
when I want my children to be really from pain
and when I want to bless my children. And we're gonna see that again and again. So she is not going to give up
and she's humble enough to accept what he said and still demonstrate her faith. I believe
that even just a teeny little bit of what you're doing, if you can do just a teeny bit, you can
heal my daughter. That's incredible faith. And then that gets us to this incredible verse that's
in verse 28. Maybe John, could you read that and talk about that for us? Then Jesus answered and said unto her,
oh, woman, great is thy faith. Be it unto thee, even as thou wilt, and her daughter was made
whole from that very hour. So faith precedes the miracle type of a thing.
of a thing. Cara, I like what you said. He probably knows what's about to happen. He's like, let's
insult her and watch her reaction. She is going to end up teaching the disciples. This is
what faith looks like.
It's a beautiful lesson. If only we had the faith of that woman and the humility of that
woman to say, maybe I'm not worthy of every blessing, but I believe we need this blessing. And we believe you can give it to us.
So I'll down to care what I'm called. That's fine. I'm a Gentile. I know how this works.
I just need this blessing. And as Kerry said, if you're seeking a blessing for your child
and you can't give the blessing,
I mean, you're at a point where I'll take crumbs, anything you've got because it's my
child.
I'm talking about here and that makes you pretty humble at that point.
Anything you can do, please do it.
Yeah.
Welcome back to that idea because it comes up a number of times in this reading.
Now, if we continue in the Matthew account, we get kind of a broad sweeping story
and then we'll get an individual story
in the Mark account.
In the Matthew account, verse 29,
after that powerful verse that John read,
we get Jesus departed from then,
so from that Phoenician area
and came nine into the Sea of Galilee,
so he's going back to where he typically is,
right home bases in Capernaum.
He's doing a lot of moving today.
He's doing a ton of walking.
Yeah, in fact, I'll tell you one of the things I do
in my classes is at the beginning of class every day,
I put up a map and I say just for the reading for today,
here's where we see the save you go.
Here, here, here, here, just so that they can kind of picture.
And it's incredible how much he travels
to try and have everyone be blessed.
In any case, he comes back to Galilee and he went up into a mountain and sat down there,
and a great multitude came into him having with them those that were lame, blind,
the dumb, maimed, and many others and cast them down at Jesus' feet and he healed them in so much
that the multitude wondered when they saw the dumb to speak, and they maimed to behold,
and the lame to walk, and the blind to to see and they glorified the God of Israel.
This is just continuation of this mass,
wholesale healing and miracle working
that he's doing everywhere he goes,
that serve as signs of who he is.
This is what gets people to recognize
that this is eventually they'll go from even a great profit to more than a profit
and we'll talk about that as we get to chapter 16. But we get a very specific story in the mark
account. Okay, so we're going back to Mark. Back to Mark 7 and when he talks about them coming
on a gallery through the midst of the coast of Decapolis. So that's an interesting thing that
touches on what we were just talking about. Historically, as they kind of carved up this area, the Romans carved up the area
into administrative districts. Got Judea as one administrative district. So Mary is
one, Galilee is another. But there was this group of ten cities that were not very Jewish.
They're, they're, we'll say Hellenistic. They're not necessarily actual Greeks, but they're Hellenistic from all sorts of areas. And they were worried because there had been some
earlier under the Maccabees. There had been some forced conversions. They were being forced to
convert to Judaism when they didn't really want to be Jewish. The Romans set aside this area that's
on both sides of the River Jordan that they called a capitalist, meaning ten cities. They're ten
cities that they form a geographic area. And those are very, very Gentile cities. They are not Jewish. They're
probably Jews in them, but they're largely Gentile. So the Savior is going through some Gentile
areas. Maybe he's only preaching to the Jews in there. I don't know. It doesn't tell us,
but he certainly is going through some Gentile areas.
For example, if people are familiar with it, Baycheon is one of the capitalist cities that's
somewhat close to the Galilee area. Hip-Poses right next to the Sea of Galilee. It's a decapolis city.
So you've got a couple of those that are likely candidates for where the Savior is going as he does
this. It's Tiberius, one of these cities. No, it's solidly in Galilee. Yeah, it's in his
realm, right? It's becoming his capital. So it's here in Antipasus city, but he is going to make
it more Hellenistic than most of the cities around there. So that's a good point. Anyway, and they
bring unto him one that was death and had an impediment in his speech, and they beseech him to put his hand upon him, and he took a side from the multi,
he took him aside from the multitude and put his fingers into his ears, and he spit and touched
his tongue. That's maybe not good hygiene, but there's some great symbolism here, right? We've
had a number of times where we've had touch being associated with healing or with miracles.
And then we get this, and he looking up into heaven's side and said unto him, Fatha,
that is, be open.
So it comes from the Hebrew word patach, where he's probably speaking Arabic, but it's a
cognate language.
So patach means to open and so he's saying be opened.
And straight where his ears were open and the string of his tongue was loose and he speak
again.
And then interestingly, he, meaning Jesus charged them that they should tell no man, but the more they charge them,
the more they tell everybody. Yeah. Yeah. Which is sometimes how it goes. And at
time you tell someone to keep a secret, that's the best way to make sure everybody knows.
But yeah. The savior is certainly getting to become well known as a miracle worker. I like what you said there about touch.
The guy can't hear him, so he's got to do something else to give him something to know
what's happening. That's a good point. I hadn't even thought of that. He can say, be open,
but then and other people will hear that, but he's interacting with him in a way that
works for him. And it's a symbolic action, which is important for this culture as well.
So yeah, yeah.
Give him something to have faith in.
Yeah.
Now, I don't know how much you'd like to talk about the feeding of the 4,000.
This is after he's fed the 5,000.
And we have a very similar story where he has to kind of teach the disciples
again and get them to bolster their faith again.
But it's similar enough and you've talked about that with the feeding
into the 5,000.
Yeah, I think we're okay to move on,
because we've got so much other good stuff here.
Yeah, we really, really do.
Well, let's go back to the Matthew account.
And chapter 16, verse one,
the beginning again is really interesting to me.
The Pharisees also with the Sadducees came.
Now, they're usually, I mean, they work on the council,
the Sanhedrin together, but they're often somewhat at odds.
So when they're working together, this is significant.
And what's more, Sadducees are largely from Jerusalem.
They're power bases, the temple.
And these are the descendants of Zadokai priests,
that's where the word Sadducee comes from, Zadokai.
So they're not exclusively from Jerusalem, but that's where their power basis.
So again, it suggests that we've got a group of Pharisees and a group of Sadducees from Jerusalem
coming up. And they are specifically, it says, tempting it's like to test him or to try him,
right? They're trying to find a way to have a problem with him. And typically, the more the Sadducees
are involved, the more this is the case. And so they ask him to show us sign, and I say just personally, I love the sign he talks
them about. He takes them to task in verse two, he answered and said into them,
when it is evening you say, it will be fair weather for the sky is red.
And in the morning it will be foul weather today for the sky is red and lowering.
So now I just have to say before I even recognize this in
the scriptures, I knew this saying that it's basically the same saying my family loves to Watersky.
When I was really young, my dad built a boat because we couldn't afford to buy one. He built a boat,
we'd go to Watersky, well, he learned to Watersky on a canal in Provo on a canal behind a car.
And then he built a boat and we went Watersky and we just skied all the time and we'd go to Lake
Pell and everything. So from the time I was young, my mom and dad taught me this saying,
pink at night, sailors delight, red in the morning, sailors warning. We'd always want to know because
best skiing is in the morning when it's calm and you don't have other people out on the lake or
whatever. Every night if we wanted to go skiing, we'd go and look to see if it was peak every morning
if we're going to go. We'd see if it was red. I had never ever found a time that that was wrong.
Now, sometimes it's not either pink or red, right?
So then you don't know.
But often it's pink at night and then you know, okay, we can go skiing tomorrow morning.
It's red in the morning, like, ah, not going to be a good day.
That sign was completely accurate in my experience growing up as a water skiing fan.
And that's exactly what the Savior's telling him here. He says, look, you know this little thing, you can read those signs, but you've already had
plenty of signs for me that you are refusing to read. So why should I play this game with you?
I've already given you what you've asked for. I know you know how to do your signs. You've shown me,
you're just not going to believe. So I'm not getting involved in your game.
And he uses it then as a teaching moment,
verse four, a wicked and adulterous generation
seeketh after a sign.
Now, I think we want to be careful with that as well.
Sometimes because of that and Joseph Smith says,
anytime someone asks for a sign,
you can be sure they're an adulterer.
We start to think any kind of signs are bad,
but the scriptures are actually full
of all sorts of signs that aren't bad.
So I would say it's the show me a sign
or I won't believe.
If we combine what we've got here
with some book of Mormon stories,
I think that's the kind of sign.
I'm not gonna believe until you show me a sign.
That kind of a sign is a problem,
but we find examples in the scriptures of people
so like Gideon and others, you say,
okay, I'm already doing what you asked me to do.
I just wanna know, are you still with me? Am I still doing this the right way? Is this the way you want me to do it,
or is this the way you want me to do it? They believe and they're acting and they just want some
direction or some interaction or something like that from God. And I think that's a different kind
of sign that God seems to be willing to work with. It's like the do on the fleece. That's the
Gideon sign, right? He's a believer. I've heard S. Michael Wilcox talk about this. I just need a fleece. That's the Gideon sign, right? He's a believer. I've heard S Michael Wilcox talk about this
I just need a fleece I need something to help me to keep going and the Gideon's already there with an army
It's not like he's not already acting. I've certainly had this in my life where I'm just seeking and seeking and seeking for an answer to prayer
And nothing's coming and so I try and follow like what Elder Scott and some others have said, keep moving forward and the Lord will let you know if it's the wrong way.
And sometimes I just say, you know, if this seems like it's what you want me to do, I'm
going to move forward.
You need to send something to tell me it's wrong.
If this isn't what I should do.
And sometimes I've had something that was a pretty strong sign.
That's not the right way.
And sometimes pretty good sign.
Okay, this is the right way. And sometimes pretty good sign, okay, this is the right way.
Often only after a long time of not knowing what was the right way.
Yeah, and keep working, keep moving forward.
Our friend and colleague, Dr. Robert Nullett, I remember him saying once, what do adultery
and sign seeking have in common?
And he said, a sign seeker says, I want the evidence, I don't want to do any of the work
or exercise any of the faith. An adulterer says, I want the pleasure of another person, but I don't
want any commitment. But that was a, oh, okay, it's kind of a something for nothing mentality that
both of those kind of imply. That helped me to see why those are so often grouped together by the
savior. I want something for nothing. Yeah, no effort, just payoff. Yeah. Which goes back to what we were talking about earlier, you don't
become what you need to become with that kind of a scenario. Part of the reason that effort is
required for all good spiritual things is because we're a gospel of becoming to use President Oaks's
phrase. It's about what we become as we do think, pray, and so on.
And that really takes us into the theme of the next part,
which is when Jesus is going to, again,
create a teaching moment.
We got verse five, we're still in Matthew 16, verse five,
and when his disciples were come to the other side,
they had forgotten to take bread.
So he's gonna use this as another opportunity to teach,
and he said into them, take heed and beware of the
leaven of the Pharisees and of the Sadducees. And the reason among themselves saying, is it because we've
taken no bread? What's it talking about? Right? So they're a little off course off track there. Yeah.
They're like, huh, he's telling us to go in and buy bread, but make sure you don't buy from Pharisees.
Perseus, yeah. So don't buy the Pharisees. Parasis, yes, sir. Don't buy the Pharisees bread.
It's bad bread.
They have poisonous yeast or something.
And so let's talk just because I like people to be able to picture
what's happening and how life works for them and make the scriptures real.
They didn't use 11 the way we use yeast.
Typically, most of the time when they raise bread, what they do is it's a little
bit like we do sourdough.
You have to have a bit of dough that was left over from the last one that is fermenting,
right?
That's what causes it to rise.
And then you mix that dough in with your new dough you've just made.
And then it takes a long time.
It's not fast like what we do now.
It takes a long time like some of the reports are that the women would have time to go to
the temple and come back and now they're dough has risen, right?
So it takes a while for that natural fermentation to happen.
So basically what you do, if you are going to make bread and you don't have
any starter dough with you, you've got to go get someone else's starter dough.
So that's kind of the symbol.
He's saying, don't go get starter dough from the Pharisees and then let that ferment.
And that's why most of the time, not all the time, but almost all the time,
love and becomes a sign of the K,
or spiritual decay, or spiritual corruption.
Because what makes the bread rise really is fermenting,
and that's good if you let it go to a point,
but it always becomes a problem
if you let it go too long.
So it becomes a symbol for something
that can become corrupting.
That's what he's talking about. And I think it's a great metaphor for the Pharisees or for some
of the things we were talking about earlier. And again, I don't want to say every Pharisee or
anything along those lines, but at least that group that was just there questioning the Savior,
trying to cause a problem for him because he says the Pharisees and the Sadducees, and that's
the group that had just been with him. And I think he's saying, look, they're both built on a good base.
They both got a good starting point.
But if you go too far with what they're doing, this will corrupt you.
And that's what, at least that particular group that was just with them,
they had become at least corrupt to the degree where they are trying to cause a problem for the savior.
So again, we have to ask ourselves, what from the world around us is good,
taken in little measure, but we just keep letting it ferment in our lives and it becomes corrupting.
And my guess would be that the answer is just about everything.
Whatever you're taking in from the world, if you do too much of it, it's a problem. I think that's probably part of why President Nelson said, and I'm just paraphrasing,
but why I said, if you get all of your information from social or other media, you will be deceived,
so you need to make less time for that and more time for Christ. Because if you're getting more
from the world than you are from Christ, you're gonna go moldy as it were spiritually moldy
That's what we don't want. It's great when they figured out in verse 12
Yeah, and understood they how he paid them not be aware of the leaven of the bread
But of the doctrine of the Pharisees and she's okay. That's what you meant
I love those moments and I do love that we see that, how patient the Savior is.
I wonder how many times He's sitting up there going,
why don't you get this?
I've taught this to you so clearly
and you're doing your own thing,
but I'll just keep working on explaining it to you.
And I will be honest that sometimes
that explanation has come through listening to this podcast
or general conference or other sources like that
where you're finally going, oh, oh, I get it.
You know, that wrong this whole time.
Oh, that's really helpful.
So it's nice that the Lord can just keep patiently working with us.
Yeah, and we have to be aware of that of any doctrine that doesn't come from Christ, it
can be a corrupting influence, any teaching that doesn't come from the Savior.
You've got to watch out and be careful around that.
And there are certainly good things that come from the world around us.
But as you said, you've got to be careful.
Even a good thing, if we go with it too much becomes a bad thing, if it's anything but
coming from God.
That's why we need more general conference and less of some of the other stuff I listen
to.
So yeah, I think it's a powerful lesson, just be
aware of the corrupting influence. Yeah, how much of the
world's dough are you mixing in with your new bill is a
question for all of us to ask. And this sounds to me just
like a repeat of what we've already talked about, how much
traditions of men have taken over from the commandment of God
or from the word of God. And it's just another way of saying it.
I think that this probably is the greatest challenge that we face today.
And I'd say certainly the generation of like young adults and youth, but I think really
everyone is how much we're influenced by the world and how that corrupts the way we perceive
or receive the things of God.
I think if you go and look at President Nelson's talks the entire time he's been president
of the church, you'll find that theme in just about every talk.
You can see ways he set this up, whether it be him asking, how do you hear him?
And then after that saying, okay, are you letting God prevail in your life more than
anything else? You have to let God prevail more than the world in your life. And then
saying, okay, like I said just a minute ago, make more time for Christ. Let's take you to
the next step. You're letting God prevail. You need to do it even more. Listen to the world
less. Listen to God and Christ more even to where we get to this last one where he says, if you're accepting the world's values of power, popularity, possessions or pleasures of
the flesh, you will find they cannot satisfy you and give you peace and rest.
You will have to go to God and Christ through the covenant if you really want peace and
rest.
He just keeps teaching us this in a thousand different ways.
And actually, President Oaks has given that similar themes
a lot of times, the influence of the world,
beware of the influence of the world.
And yet we listen to the world so much,
we have these little ear pods in
and we're listening to all sorts of stuff all the time.
And I think we don't realize how much we are influenced
by the way the world thinks
and what the world tells us is important.
And how we should get things,
this incredible individualism of the world and so on, the you do you idea.
And then when the prophets tell us something, we start to filter it through what the world
has told us and we either twist it or we reject it or we live with some dissonance and friction
in our lives like, well, okay, I believe the prophets, but I don't believe it on this
because the world told me this and so on.
But we don't quite see it that way.
And it inevitably causes us problems where really what we should be doing is
filtering everything that the world tells us through what the prophet is telling us.
And what the scriptures, what crisis telling us through ancient and modern prophets.
Let's put it that way.
Too often we don't do that because the lion's share
of our time is given to listening to the world,
not to God.
Excellent.
And I see that struggle so much with the youth
and the young adults in the church today.
I see it with me too, so with everyone,
but especially with that group that has grown up
with so much access to listening to the world all the time.
Yeah, so today the Savior would say,
maybe don't but wear the leaven of the Pharise and the Thadji Cs, he would say, be
wear the 11 of the world, beware of what the world teaches you,
because it can spread. Yeah, and it does spread. Just think of
your mind as the dough, and you put that fermented dough from the
world in, and it's just going to infiltrate your entire mind. So
that's what we have to be careful of. It influences the way we think more than we realize and we have to every now and then stop and ask
ourselves how am I thinking about this issue and how much of that is influenced by the world as
opposed to the way God would have me think of it. Excellent, thanks, Kerry. We're not spending a
lot of time on the feeding of the 4000 and so on, but right
after that in the mark account, you get a really remarkable story that I think is worth thinking
about, and my guess is that a lot of our audience will resonate with this. So Hank, do you want to read
Mark chapter 8? Do you want to read verses 22 through 26 for us? Absolutely, I love this story.
And he come with two Bethseda and they
bring a blind man unto him and besought him to touch him. And he took the blind man by the hand,
let him out of the town. And we had spit upon his eyes and put his hands upon him. He asked
if he saw up. And he looked up and said, I see men as trees walking. And that he put his hands
again upon his eyes and made him look up. And he was restored and sought every man walking. And that he put his hands again upon his eyes and made him look
up. And he was restored and sought every man clearly. And he sent him away to his house
saying, don't tell anybody, right? Neither go into town nor tell anybody in the town.
I'm sure he did anyway. Yeah. And lots of others probably did as well. Now, that's a really
unique and unusual story because typically, I mean, it's Savior heals other blind
men and he just touches them and they can see fine.
This one is interesting that takes a minute.
He heals them in stages.
I don't know why we can theorize all sorts of things, but I'll tell you at least one
lesson that I've taken from that that I taught a number of times, but it's become more
real to me recently.
It seems to me that often in life, the Savior doesn't answer our prayers all at once.
Everything made fine and whole, all at once.
It can be a process.
And that process is still miraculous, but it's harder to see the miracles when it's a process,
right?
And I've thought and believed that for a long time.
We have for a while gone through some
trials as a family. I have a child who's had some really difficult health challenges that,
of course, they're difficult enough in your, in your body and your mind and your act that they
can become mental health challenges and so on. I cannot tell you how much over the last, it's almost
exactly a year now that some of these got more acute and it started a really tough year.
most exactly a year now that some of these got more acute and it started a really tough year. And I cannot tell you how often I have prayed and pled and begged for miracles. And
really it's kind of taken over our whole life. And we've just played for miracles. And
President Nelson about a year ago said pray for and expect miracles. And I have taken
that so seriously. And I keep praying. I say, I know you can do miracles.
We're praying for all sorts of healing. Please, please, please.
And there have been times where I've thought, why isn't this happening?
But there have also been times where we've been able to look and say, you know, we've actually seen a number of little miracles.
And we're not where we want this to be yet, but I believe it's going to get there.
And I don't know how long it is. yet, but I believe it's going to get there.
And I don't know how long it is.
And honestly, I wish the road were shorter and I wish it were less painful.
And I'm not talking about for myself.
I'd like it to be less painful for my child.
And I'd like it to be quicker for my child.
But when I think about it, we have seen miracles.
We have seen things that would be like, oh, I can see men walking his trees.
I'm not where I want to be yet, but I'm not where it was.
It's gotten a little bit better.
And that's true, both the physical healing and emotional healing, not just in our family.
I think that's probably true for a lot of people where sometimes you just have to stop and
see the miracles that are there while you're
waiting for the full miracle, like this man who was at Bethesda, and take joy in the process,
even though they're still pain, or as President Nelson described in his last talk, we can
have this in the midst of our most vexing problems.
They're still joy from the little bits of miracles that we see as we're healed and made whole
in stages. I would guess that a number of people are feeling that in their lives right now.
I have in my margin right there, I have BRM, which is my code for Bruce Armaconky, who
said, men also are often healed of their spiritual maladies by degrees.
Yeah, and it doesn't lessen the miracle, it's still a miracle, and I'm grateful for this
story to help us recognize that that's sometimes the Savior works that way.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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