Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 21-23; Mark 11; Luke 19-20; John 12 Part 1 • Dr. Keith Wilson • May 15 - May 21
Episode Date: May 10, 2023How are the Triumphal Entry and a Hosanna shout connected? Dr. Keith Wilson explores Jesus’s glorious entry into Jerusalem and how modern-day disciples can honor Jesus Christ.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Keit...h Wilson00:56 Introduction of Dr. Keith Wilson04:44 The triumphal entry recorded in all four gospels07:56 We can do more to celebrate Easter12:15 Three things that influence the size of the multitude for the triumphal entry20:41 Symbolism during the triumphal entry32:53 Dr. Wilson shares a story about the symbolism of the hosanna shout 38:29 The lesson behind cursing the fig tree1:18:10 End of Part 1–Dr. Keith WilsonPlease rate and review the podcast.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way.
We love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to learn and laugh with you.
As together we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith and I am your host and I'm here with my King Lee co-host, John, by the way. Welcome, John, to Follow Him another week.
King Lee, I've been compared to a Joker before, but the King, as part of the King's Court,
I'll take that. John, we are in an after you 21 through 23 this week and also in Mark and Luke and John, we needed
a Bible expert to come with us. And he is here. Who's joining us?
Yes, I'm so excited to introduce Dr. Keith J. Wilson, who we both know that let me tell
our listeners about Dr. Wilson. He was born in Ridgecrest, California, the fourth of 10 children. He came to BYU as an undergraduate,
served a mission in Austria,
where the hills are alive, we've heard.
Came home, headed to medical school,
but then took a study abroad teaching job,
fell in love with teaching.
He has a master's degree from BYU in German,
a PhD from the University of Utah,
and educational administration.
And it kind of focused on the university's roots
and how many universities began as religious institutions,
became secular institutions and has some background.
And it has his studies on that, which
sounds really interesting.
He has eight children and a foster son.
He and his wife, they have 35 grandchildren
and two in the oven.
That's amazing.
Dr. Wilson actually started Wilson Diamonds
came back to teaching though.
He's been everything from a nursery leader to a bishop.
It's remarkable how similar those two colleagues are.
Just that message.
I don't know.
He served most recently as a patriarch. He's now currently serving
a mental health mission. He and his wife at South American Northwest area and we're just thrilled
to have him. Our opportunities to have him may be limited as he could be heading to South America soon.
So we're happy to have him and I have to tell you, I hate my personal connection.
I have here my master's thesis,
which has been read by approximately six people,
and Dr. Wilson is one-sixth of them.
So I have his signature here,
the poor man had to go through this.
So we became friends, and he's a respected
colleague and mentor to me for going through that process. So we're so happy to
have you here, Dr. Wilson. Thank you for being with us.
Well, thanks. It's an honor to be here and join you too in this podcast.
Yeah, we are grateful to have you keep. Are you heading to South America? Do you know?
In the next couple of weeks, Yeah, we finally received our visas
after waiting eight or nine months
or scheduled now to head down there.
Probably the mid to the last part of May
will head down to Lima.
I'll get to practice my German slash Spanish.
Okay.
Keith, I've heard you say this before.
You're going as junior companion.
That's right.
For 40 years, I've been teaching religion,
being a bishop and sitting on the stand,
and my wife has prepared herself to assist
missionaries with their mental health needs.
When we signed up for the mission,
she told them all my qualifications,
and they said, no, he'll not receive a special calling.
His calling will be to be your assistant.
And they knew it well because
it's all hands on deck. The workload is so high. Right now, missionaries are challenged with the
kind of the post-COVID scene with the early age, with the daunting task of missionary work and
a mental health kind of counselor support person really is essential in kind of the mission structure. And so we work 12, 14 hours a day, six days a week just trying to help missionaries.
And it's gratifying to see her touches with them really uplifting.
That's wonderful, absolutely wonderful.
All right, today we are going to be spending our time in all four gospels, Keith.
I don't know if we can make this more difficult for you.
In just a couple of hours, we'd like you to cover Matthew 21 through 23, Mark 11,
Luke 19 through 20, and John 12. And the lesson, since I have my King Lake co-host here,
the lesson is called Behold Thy King Comet. Thy King Comet. Keith, where do you want to start here?
Well, you've started in a great place just with your introduction, Hank.
And that is, it's not very often in the New Testament, do you have a singular incident being
reported in all four gospels?
There's just a handful of them.
There's the baptism.
There's the feeding of the 5,000.
There's the trial and crucifixion, resurrection, and there's the triumphal entry.
That's what you have all for.
And the reason behind that, I believe, is because everybody was reporting the things that
to them were most important about the Savior's ministry.
But these were the high points.
These were the mountain peaks of importance in the Savior's ministry.
The triumphal entry is just such a great one to zoom in on
and to catch the importance of that.
Awesome.
We want to start in Matthew.
Do we want to start in Mark?
Do we want to start in Luke or John?
I think what I'd like to start with is I'd like to kind of
give you a little bit of an overview as to why this triumphal entry
and the events that follow right after that are so significant.
Let's do it. Yeah. And the place where I'd like to begin is with this idea, we all in life really
thrive on positive reinforcement. Sometimes we don't get as much as we'd like, but when we get
encouragement from those that we love and trust, it just
makes all the difference in the world. It's the whole essence of community and family and
loving other people. And I'd like to suggest to you that the triumphal entry is really one
of those touches in Jesus' life where he gets encouragement. It's just, we tend to think of him,
oh yeah, he's the son of God,
that he just kind of buckles up his belt
and does his thing each day
until he performs the atoning sacrifice.
And yet we miss the personal side of him.
We miss him when John the Baptist is beheaded,
just wanting to have private space alone.
He's hurting. We miss him smiling.
We miss him kind of disappointed at times. We miss him when he's a little bit upset.
So to see this personal side of him, to see the fact that the father seemed to build in
some events right close to when he would do the hardest thing of his whole assignment
that he built in some reinforcement. I just love that. It's like a mother when a little child comes,
leaves her a little note and says, Mom, I love you. And she just melts.
All the 24-hour day stuff that she's doing and, or like a teacher when somebody comes up and
thanks you for a lesson and you can tell they've
got a tear in their eye and they're really sincere. And just a myriad of other places, a businessman when
he says, you know, you made a difference. You were so kind and so generous. And you take it all across
the spectrum. It's just it's part of our nature and to be reinforced, I think in church terms, we call it tender mercies,
places where the Lord touches us. The triumphal entry was a huge tender mercy for the Savior
Himself. Okay. And so that's kind of where I'd like to start us.
Now, there's a second kind of tandem thing that I'd love to accomplish as we talk about these
chapters today. And that's this. As a people, as a religious
faith, we have been chastised over the fact that we don't do much to celebrate Easter.
So I've thought often long and hard, why? Why don't we as LDS do more with celebrating
Easter? There's a statement by Gordon B. Hinckly that it was Christmas time he said there would be no Christmas
if there had not been Easter. And so Easter is obviously the high point of our religious celebration
and commemoration of what happened during this time in the Savior's ministry. Why don't we?
Why aren't we the top of the heap in terms of celebrating Easter? And I think there's two or three things. One is we don't have any
build up to our Easter celebration. It's a one day celebration. And the second is our general
conference usually falls right in the same area. And we do have build up for general conference. We
all have been hearing the announcements in church. And we anticipate that and there's special sales in the stores and
everything else. And then the third one is that we never know when Easter is. It moves around.
It's got a latitude of about four or five weeks. That's crazy. We know exactly when Thanksgiving
and Christmases, we need a good influential person to say, let's have Easter on this day and just fix the date, rather
than attach it to some lunar cycle and everything else.
But so those are the three things.
In today's discussion, I want to hook you on the idea.
I just want to, in a fisherman's term, I want to set the hook that we can do better with
Easter.
And it will be largely because we begin to focus on Palm Sunday,
Triumphant Entry, and realize that something huge is coming in our celebration. It's easy
for me to get kind of cranked up on this because I see such importance with us commemorating
in a very appropriate way the resurrection of our Savior, the greatest miracle physically to occur.
That was great. Oh, man, I just agree that not only would there not be
Christmas without Easter, think of all the other things that wouldn't be. We wouldn't be sitting here.
The churches wouldn't be sitting here. Christianity wouldn't make any sense without the resurrection.
That's the ultimate triumph of the whole thing. And so a whole lot of things wouldn't be any sense without the resurrection. That's the ultimate triumph of the whole thing.
A lot of things wouldn't be without Easter. Maybe it wouldn't be the year 2023 since what?
Since the birth of Christ. Why would we remember that if he were nothing but just another moral
teacher? So yeah, everything kind of hinges on Easter. I like what you said.
That's great. Thanks, Keith. So you're saying,
Palm Sunday should be the beginning of our Easter celebrations. Yeah, a little bit like Christmas Eve
is to Christmas day. And the cool thing about Palm Sunday is we know that it was the first day of the
week. That then defines this what we call in Christian terms, the Passion Week. So there's seven
days kind of that are generally seen in the Passion Week, and Palm Sunday is the first of those.
Palm Sunday is just a huge thing. Look at all four gospel writers report on it. And the church has done quite a bit of work. You can go to their website now, and they'll have all seven days and things that families can do. And the end sign for March of this year, Brother
Huntsman and another colleague published a thing about family traditions and things you
can do during those seven days. And I just think, man, the more of that, we can kind of internalize.
The more appropriate our worship of Easter will be in this greatest miracle.
Awesome. So out of the four gospel authors, which one do we want to look at for the
triumphant tree, Keith? We're going to look at multiple or we're going to look at one.
Well, I think we can certainly blend them and there's some very distinctive differences between
John's account and the other three synoptics, Matthew, Mark, and Luke. But I like to use Matthew
because Matthew seems to be setting up a stage and sort of framing it a little
more tightly than some of the other authors.
I'm going to stay with the Matthew outline there as he puts it forth.
Okay, let's do it.
Matthew 21, right?
Right.
You'll notice right off the bat, a real important thing is that this triumphant entry is huge.
It's just huge. It is the only way you can say it.
It talks about in Matthew, you know, a very great multitude,
spread their garments, see in verse 8,
and then in verse 10 of Matthew 21,
all the city was moved, saying, who is this?
Now, what contributes?
Because this is an important thing.
In Jesus' ministry, most of the time,
he's seen by Jerusalem, which is the heartthrob
of Judaism at his day.
He's seen by Jerusalem and those that control things
as being just some wacko up there in Galilee.
Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?
Come on, give me a break and things like that.
And now we have him coming into town and it is huge.
Now, there's three things that if you read carefully, contribute to the size of the triumphant
entry.
Maybe we could mention one of the good commentary Bibles actually says that they estimated that
there was somewhere close to 100,000 people.
If you've ever been over to Jerusalem, you'll know it's a pretty tight little city.
And for 100,000 people, it just would be teeming and crawling and jam-packed with people everywhere.
Because the scholars estimate that Jerusalem at the time of Jesus is probably 10,000 people,
maybe five to 15 or some of the estimates that you'll see, but still a fairly small city compared
to our modern cities, but then in ancient times for that to swell to a hundred thousand,
and a few scholars go way off the edge and say a million plus people. So this thing is big.
So what causes it to be so big? So if you read there in John chapter 12,
verse 10, but the chief priests consulted that they might put Lazarus also to death.
The chief priests are so upset with Jesus taking control and being so much in charge.
So one of the things that contributes to this is the raising of Lazarus.
You've done a nice job of talking about that already.
This raising of Lazarus.
Now it's only reported in John, so it's nice that he brings us the aftermath of it here, too,
but it had a big impact probably just a week before this, and it's right in Jerusalem's backyard.
It's in Bethany, which is just up over the hill, talk. And number one thing that contributes to
the size is Lazarus. I've often thought that maybe the raising of Lazarus is the Savior's.
When it comes to his mortal ministry, it's his crescendo
moment.
He's been building to this moment and building and building and then the raising of Lazarus
is too much to anyone to look the other way.
It's his big moment, which leads to his triumphal entry.
Am I seeing that right?
I think so.
Now, it certainly did not sway everybody in the crowd that saw.
Some started to disbelieve, but it was so, I mean, those that had any kind of a heart
that could be penetrated were just blown away.
With Lazarus just coming out there.
Lazarus is the first thing that seems to do it.
A second is the Passover itself.
This is a pilgrimage festival in the Law of Moses, and this was the, there were three pilgrimage
festivals, feasts, in which people were supposed to travel to the temple and offer sacrifices.
And yet this one was the granddaddy. It was the equivalent parallel in our culture of Christmas.
That was Passover for ancient Jews. That's a big thing because Jesus comes right during Passover,
right, the start, and John's record, it says six days later is Passover. So there's a big one. Now the third one, though, you
have to catch kind of systemically from the whole of the Savior's ministry in the Scriptures,
and that is his ministry is crescendoing. He started to get even a large following in
Galilee with things like the feeding of the 5,000 and others, and word is spreading just like wildfire.
There's a guy that can do these things and things like that.
You'll notice six months before the triumphant entry, as far as we can determine, is the
amount of transfiguration and what we call the feast of tabernacles that just precedes
that.
And in that, John chapter 7, when Jesus is
coming back, and that's another one of these pilgrimage fees, when Jesus is coming back to Jerusalem
for the celebration of the feast of tabernacles, he sends his disciples in ahead of him, and he comes
in discreetly. See, his ministry then is taking off, and he doesn't want for it to come crashing down prematurely.
He sends his disciples in, and then he kind of sneaks in through the back door.
And that's just indicative that he's getting more and more popular and things.
The triumphal entry is kind of the crescendo of that popularity.
So it was just huge.
One thing, John, that I don't know if we've discussed very well that we probably ought to is a point
Keith is making here. And that is that Jerusalem and Judea and Galilee, where the Savior did a
majority of his work in miracles and ministry, they're far apart from each other. You might think,
oh, they're right next to each other, word is spreading, but you've got Judea in the south,
you've got Galilee in the north.
That's a good three-day journey if you're going to make the trip from one to the other. And you've
got Samaria right in between. Am I saying that right, John? Yeah, that's the way I understand it.
And how is this news traveling? Is this all word of mouth for travelers going back and forth?
Yeah, I would think so. And when the Savior, He comes to Jerusalem,
sometimes I think before I went to the Holy Land,
maybe both of you can identify with this.
But before I went there, I saw Galilee and Jerusalem
as close to one another, not realizing how far apart they were,
and that Jesus doesn't actually spend a lot of time
in Jerusalem, He just travels down for these pilgrimage feasts
that Keith was talking about.
There's three of them every year.
And then he returns home to Galilee.
So the miracles are happening in the North
and the people in the South are hearing about them.
Although, according to the Gospel of John,
he has done some miracles in Jerusalem.
Am I getting that right for both of you?
Yeah, and the separation, I think,
you can highlight that quite a bit.
You said three days, oh, it's 75 to 90 miles you can highlight that quite a bit. You said three days.
Oh, it's 75 to 90 miles depending on which route you take.
This is a good week, maybe even 10 days if you've got a lot of baggage and things.
There's a real barrier there.
I think that's an important part because you're thinking, well, if the chief priests have
seen all these miracles, well, they likely have it.
They've only heard of a couple in Jerusalem
and maybe heard of a lot of them in Galilee.
That's helpful.
So Jesus dies away from home.
Yeah, he really does.
Yeah.
First, we have the size and just what an incredible
outpouring it is.
And I'd like to depict it sort of as Jesus' day in the sun. And I find that fascinating.
At the amount of transfiguration, Moses and Elijah come, and Luke records to him concerning
his death. And then Joseph Smith adds his death and resurrection. Well, what's going
on that heavenly messenger just have to do that? I like to interpret that as they were encouraging him,
because he's coming up to this greatest of his assignments, and he's like most of us,
we have daunting things in our lives. And I believe he begins to weigh upon him. He'll
make statements to that effect, okay, an hour is not yet, but is not. And so it's a big thing. And specifically, there's a couple, two or three things
in which he is just framed right here in the sun as the Messiah.
So we need to talk about those.
Talk about them.
I think you're right about the amount of transfiguration, Keith.
If I remember right, I'm opening up to the Bible dictionary,
transfiguration, mount of.
In one portion in the second paragraph,
there's three paragraphs.
It talks about how these beings Elijah, Moses,
even John the Baptist, here it is.
The event was important in many ways,
prestered authority was conferred upon Peter, James, and John.
The significance of the Savior's work was emphasized
and the unity of various dispensations
and the close relationship
of Jesus and his prophets was demonstrated.
So I can second witness that, that I think a lot of these angelic beings are there to
encourage him, which is the way you started us out today, which was wonderful.
He needs that encouragement, just like all of us do.
One of my colleagues described the amount of transfiguration as a celestial correlation meeting
to encourage and to make sure that he was still willing
to go through with this.
So now we're at the doorstep literally of him doing that
with the triumphal entry.
Now, let's talk about the ways that the people respond
and the symbols that he employs in the triumphal entry,
because that's also something that every family
to incorporate into their Easter celebration.
You'll notice in Matthew chapter 21,
it talks about when they drew nine into Jerusalem
where come from Bethage and the Mount of Olives,
Jesus sent two disciples saying,
go ye over into the village.
Now, so we have this idea or this event of Jesus asking them to bring him a cult,
or a young donkey, an ass, and there aren't two animals there. That's probably something that
an editor made a mistake in the reading of Matthew, because you can compare the other ones,
and all of them are just a singular, and it makes no sense for him to kind of be trying to straddle
two animals or something in this triumphal entry. He's supposed to do that. Now, why? Do you remember what he's doing there?
He's fulfilling prophecy. And the prophecy is Zechariah's nine, verse nine. John, do you want to go
to that and just read it for us? You got that one memorized John?
Zacharias is a beast. It's hard to find right there at the end.
Yes, Zachariah 9.9. Rejoice greatly O'Dodder-Azion, shout O'Dodder of Jerusalem. Behold, I King Cometh unto thee. He is just and having salvation,
lowly, and riding upon an ass and upon a cult, the fall of an ass.
Isn't that interesting? I feel pretty certain that Jesus knew his scriptures well enough in the
way that he studied and recites the Psalms and things that he was aware of this, and he specifically
directs them to go and get an ass young donkey for him to ride into town on.
This also is reminiscent of Solomon when he was crowned king of ancient Israel,
instead of riding on a horse or anything, he specifically summoned a donkey and he rode an ass into town.
And that became the symbol of a king, lowly and humble, but still a kingly kind of entrance.
Kind of a symbol of being a peacemaker.
Exactly.
If he'd been conquering the town, he would have come in, of course, on a horse, but he comes
in on a donkey, a domestic animal, a burden of peace and things.
I actually have, in my margin, written here, he's coming lowly on an ass versus coming on a war horse in Revelation 19.
At the second coming, so I think it's interesting.
The animal is a symbol of what kind of message is coming at that point.
So that's a great point.
Yeah. Now as you continue reading there in Matthew,
so he mounts the discolored and they set him on it.
And then why don't we do the next two verses? They're real significant to
Hank, do you want to do those? Eight and nine. Matthew 21, eight and nine.
And a very great multitude spread their garments in the way. Others cut down branches from the trees
and strad them in the way. And the multitudes that went before that followed cried, saying,
Hosanna to the son of David, blessed is he that cometh
in the name of the Lord, Hosanna in the highest.
So now we have the second two symbols
that are very prevalent in this triumphal entry.
He's sitting on this donkey riding into town.
They put their clothes in front of him.
Now, the clothes was a sign of great respect
and you can imagine back in ancient Israel,
even when Jesus is crucified,
the soldiers try to decide who gets his clothes
because clothing was so hard to weave and to procure
and you probably only had one set of clothes
and things like that, but they take their clothes,
their cloaks,
and they put them in front of him.
So that instead of riding on the dirt
or cobblestone or whatever the surface was,
he's riding on something softer, something that's cleaner.
And it's become really the welcome
for the red carpet treatment and a kingly kind of royal welcome.
So there's the first big symbol that they do. Then the third
is they use tree branches. Okay, it says they put tree branches in front of him. Now, John of our
four authors is the only one that defines those tree branches. John, do you remember what he says
about those? Those the poems? Exactly. Their're palm branches, and John says that specifically in his.
That's kind of interesting that John would pick up on that,
because John has Jesus in a very what we call high Christology
where he sees him very closely connected as the Son of God.
In the other gospels, you see a little bit more
of the mortality of Jesus, but John has him more connected as the Son of God in that sense of
vyingness. The fact that they do palm branches, now what's the palm branch represent? And why was it so specifically not just a tree branch?
In the ancient Middle East, the palm tree was seen kind of associated with kings and sort of shade, and they used it for a lot of things.
Shade was kind of symbolic. Also, it's fibers, robes, and writing, using parchment from palms and
things like that. But the symbol that seemed to co-opt at the most was Greek mythology. Nike
mythology, Nike was the athletic kind of God, and Nike was symbolized by a palm branch. So it became kind of the sign of victory in competition and things like that.
It's just interesting you have these three symbols.
Now I have a slide here that I'd like to show for those that are watching with the video,
but in that there's these three symbols, the donkey, the clothing, and
the palm branches.
And here's the symbolic interpretation of those.
Remember, they're putting their clothes down because he's royalty, so the prince of
peace, he's riding the domestic animal of peace, rides into the city victorious.
Isn't that cool? domestic animal of peace, rides into the city victorious.
Isn't that cool to see the three,
the convergence of these three symbols?
Now, as a family, do you wanna know what we could take
from this on our Palm Sunday observance?
We should reenact the triumphal entry
and use branches and things like that
to just kind of symbolize and then the great shout,
which they made, which was
the capstone of everything. And it really set the Pharisees and priests and everything on edge.
And that was Hosea Ana, is the way that they'd say it in Hebrew. Hosea Ana. And that was coming from
Psalms 118. That was where the word was coined, and in Hebrew it meant,
save us or save us now.
We beseech thee.
Salvation is now.
When they say that, and that's a messianic Psalm,
from the book of Psalms and David's kind of prophecies,
when they use that phrase, oh, that is the final deal,
that seals the deal.
We are accepting this man as the Messiah, the promised Messiah.
And you can see the Pharisees are just beside themselves.
In some of the accounts it says, don't you see how the whole city is moved?
And we are nothing. And they come back at Jesus and say, verse 15 of Matthew 21.
And when the chief priests inscribed,
saw the wonderful things that he did
and the children crying in the temple
and saying, Hosanna to the son of David,
they were so displeased.
And said unto him,
here's thou what these say,
and Jesus say,
Ith unto them,
yay, have you never read
out of the mouths of babes and sucklings
thou has perfected praise. Okay.
So, do you notice something here?
Jesus just kind of throws this in back in their face.
It's like he gets to say, isn't this great?
They're acknowledging me as the Messiah and the chief priest and everything are beside
themselves.
Now, he does one thing there that just really draws the chief priest into the argument
and wanting to bring
him down. And that is Matthew has him cleansing the temple on the very day of the triumphal
entry. Look at verse 12, Jesus went into the temple and cast out all them. And then look
at 13 and said into them, it is written, my house. Now, in the book of John before, at the start
of his ministry, he goes into the temple and cleanses it,
but there he refers to it as who's housed, do you remember?
He said, my father's house.
Exactly.
And so now he's taking direct ownership of the temple.
Do you know how threatening that would have been to the Sadducees and the Pharisees?
The Pharisees are there to kind of show their purity and things, but the Sadducees are running the temple.
That's a cash cow for them.
It's the national bank of ancient Judaism, and he's taking possession of it symbolically
as he comes in.
It's like throwing gasoline on the fire.
This just causes such animus towards him.
But this is the one day when he just kind of says, I'm not worried about
what you think. I am here to present myself because this is my assignment. It's a really cool
setting. Most of the time Jesus doesn't ever get to be the guy that the crowds cheer for and things
because there's not crowds. But this one, the crowds are cheering for Jesus. Maybe a hundred thousand
people cheering for Jesus. Yeah, that's beautiful. Of any of you ever been over to Jerusalem at the
Easter celebration and the Palm Sunday? I've never been there for Easter. It is quite the thing.
Usually about 30 to 50,000 Christians assemble over on the Mount of Olives, Beth Fage, and things right there.
And then they do the processional up.
It's just such an incredible kind of fun thing as a Christian community to celebrate Easter
that way and reenact the triumphal entry.
We'll have to go there on Easter, John.
You know, one of the things I've always wondered about the triumphal entry is, were they expecting the Messiah of popular expectation, as we've heard it coined sometimes, that he's going
to deliver us from the Romans, he's the Redeemer of Israel, meaning political Israel, or were some
there knowing he was going to deliver us from death and sin. And I wonder if Jesus knew what kind
of welcome was he getting, were they welcoming
him as the political Messiah or as the spiritual Messiah? What do you think?
And John, I believe that they would have known the Islamic verse, 118, there, closely
enough, that they would have sensed that that was referring to their salvation. And it
was beyond just their physical deliverance. Now, he did a couple things to let them know.
Now, the cleansing of the temple
could have been seen still as a political messiah.
Come in and overthrown.
But then what did he do?
Matthew records in verse 14,
and the blind and the lame came to him in the temple
and he healed them.
Right there in the temple, he heals them, okay? And how that must
have been such a moment in which there is no doubt as to what kind of Messiah he is. Yeah, I think
you're right. On the surface, some could have just said, oh, this is a big phoneme that's coming
in the town and it's a circus act and things, but at its core, it was messianic, it was salvific.
He makes that point again and again.
Now, we have a parallel, interesting parallel
in our own LDS worship today
with the triumphal entry that I'd love for families
also to kind of capitalize on,
and that is we have the Hoseanna shout
in one of our own religious rituals or practices,
if you will.
When does that occur?
Tell me a little bit about that.
That's temple dedications, right?
Exactly.
And now with the church doing kind of this close circuit,
temple dedication, everybody,
whether they live close to a temple or not,
pretty much has the opportunity
to experience temple dedications.
I'll never forget the first time that we, as a family,
went to one of the temple dedications.
It was happened to be a while back.
It was the Palmyra temple dedication.
And it was a beautiful service.
We all dressed up.
They canceled church that day
and we drove to the stake center.
And we were there early
and there was quite a reverential feeling with the music to the stake center and we were there early and there was quite a
reverential feeling with the music, the prelude and everything. And then the service commenced and
it was just everyone in white and the temple itself was spectacular and the talks and the singing
the spirit of God like a fire is burning. And I just had a real deeply moving spiritual experience.
And as it ended, we quietly left our stake center as a family.
We got in the old family van and started to drive home, and I just won my kids to remember the moment.
And so I said, so what did you like most about the temple dedication today?
And they piped up with, oh, daddy was beautiful to see the chandelier,
and to see everybody in white, and singing the spirit of God was so cool. And the talk that
President Hinckley gave, and they went on and on, and then they kind of trailed off, but they
hadn't hit the one point that I was hoping that they'd remember. And I said, prime the pump a
little and said, what about the Hoseanna shout? And there was dead silence in my big old van as we drove. And then my oldest
daughter, also my most outspoken probably, she piped up from the back of the van. Dad, it was weird.
It kind of was a shock to the heart. But then I realized that I hadn't taught them anything about
the historical significance of the Hosena shout.
And the fact that, anciently, people were accepting Jesus into their lives, into their
city, acknowledging Him as their Messiah.
And that I'd fallen short with that.
And all my daughter saw was just kind of this ritual waving of a hanky, kind of in a robotic
way and things like that and not realizing that
it was the hanky and the waving was to say, we welcome you into our lives, into our hearts,
into the center of our city. So that one's always kind of stuck with me. So if families as they
celebrate the triumphal entry, can you incorporate that in? I think it will tie two things together.
Our temples with the fact that we're entering the house of the Lord as he entered the city.
What I think is also unusual about that is the idea of shouting. I mean, we've, we have
the kids singing the chapel door seem to say to me, you still. What's that joke, Hank?
We spend the first two years teaching our children to walk and talk in the next 16 telling him to sit down and be quiet.
Yeah, to actually have something where we are supposed to shout is unusual. It reminds me of a spirit of God like a fire is burning will sing and will shout with the armies of heaven. So this is a good point. We need to teach them. This is an appropriate time to shout for joy. And as you said to welcome the Savior and to say,
Hosanna, teach us how to be saved. Teach us how to come and save us. So I'm glad we talked
about this. I don't want them to say that was weird. This is a fun thing for a family to do.
And it's just so appropriate on Sunday, the triumphal entry or the Palm Sunday, we've
these things together in your family worship. And then everybody's looking forward to a
culmination of that, which is the following Sunday in the resurrection. And so you have
a great way to start it. Now, in the scriptures, it's difficult to tell which day, which things happened in Matthew chapter 21,
22 and 23, even Matthew chapter 24.
The next real strong marker we get is Passover.
And we usually assign that to Thursday, even though there's some scholarly discussion about that.
But so the first, second and third days, they kind of meld together.
Now the writers themselves will notice in Matthew, he says, in verse 17, he left them and
went out of the city into Bethany and he lodged there.
First off, let's stop just to take that specific point.
Why would he go back to Bethany?
Dindy liked the Golden Arches Hotel in Jerusalem?
I mean, because Bethany is a good couple of miles out of the city and up over a steep hill.
Why Bethany?
Maybe you wanted to check on Lazarus.
Make sure he's still feeling a lot better.
He's very good there.
In fact, that's where he stays.
Yeah.
I wonder if he's trying to get away from not being taken arrested.
Exactly.
And the way you can see this is there's such vitriol and they, and in some of the accounts
there, it says when he says things that are really pointed towards the Pharisees and the leadership,
chief priests and scribes, it says they, they sought to lay hands on him. They want to take him
right then and bring him down. It's not the moment, even though it's close, in which he'll turn
himself over to them. He still has some things to accomplish. The crowds are his buffer,
because all the crowds are with him. So then
at night time, when everybody dissipates, he's got to be out of sight or they'll arrest him prematurely.
So he goes out to Bethany and seems to lodge there each evening.
I imagine every time he comes to Jerusalem, if he's staying in Bethany, that he brings a big
entourage with him. And that would, I can see why Martha
is saying, I've got a lot of work to do whenever you come here.
Right. Good point. Now, you'll notice then in verse 17. So he goes out to Bethany. That's
Matthew 21 verse 17 at the end of the day. And then when he's coming back in the next morning,
he curses the fig tree when he wants to pick a piece of fruit
off of that because he's hungry.
But that sequence is different in the book of Mark.
So Mark has him cleansing the temple on the second day.
So it's hard to tell sometimes what happened on which day.
But do your best to do that.
Remember, don't throw the baby out with the bath water,
that just because all of the four accounts aren't completely harmonious on each detail,
that's the function of human memory.
We remember things differently, and that's the beauty of it.
To me, it says, this really is a real event because people remember it differently,
and they're not just copying the same text.
Generally, from Matthew's lead, we have the
cleansing of the temple, and then we go into the day two and day three. Two and three are very hard to
differentiate between the two of them. In fact, there's no clues in Matthew 22 and 23, which one
happens on which day? But here's the overarching thing that I'd like you to remember on these chapters, and that is
Jesus is portrayed and acts very messianically. He is in control, and he fields questions from them,
and he will poke right back. He'll put parables out there that are so scathing, and the Pharisees and
Sadducees, they know that he's talking right to them and condemning them, okay? But they can't do anything because of the crowd. So he's very
messianic in his teachings and the way he feels questions.
He gives them a couple of entrapment parables in Matthew 21, where they condemn themselves,
kind of like with David and Nathan, for what we studied last year, he tells them about
the two sons and the one about the wicked husband
and the wicked renters who kill anybody
who come to take the rent.
And both times they answer the question.
And then in verse 45 it says,
and when the chief priests and the Pharisees
heard these parables,
they perceived that he spake of them.
That's great.
He's talking about us.
I don't think he's talking about us.
Yeah. Yeah.
Now, a couple of little notes on that, if you combine the three accounts on this wicked husband,
then both Mark and Luke refer to him not as his son only, but as his beloved son or his well-belive
son. Oh, look at the similarities of that. This is my only begotten son. This is the beloved son,
and it's no wonder that they get it. They know exactly that he's jabbing at him.
And the parable, the two sons, Matthew's the only one that records that parable. It's in chapter 21 there,
but it's just so apparent that he's saying to them,
you've been commissioned and agreed, and now you're not coming.
And then the other. So he really goes after him.
Now, just a quick comment about before we leave it there
on this morning of the second day
when he curses the fig tree.
Occasionally you'll have people, Bible readers,
got various scholars, take a shot at Jesus and say,
oh, he was angry, a tree that doesn't have fruit.
He just wants to beat up on it and things like that.
And so you have to think through that. Rather, do you want to give some reasons why he might have
done this other than just a temper tantrum when he's hungry? Yeah, I doubt Jesus is just angry here.
It's fun to kind of make a list over the things that the Savior demonstrated. He had
power over and
men, yes, women, yes, children, yes,
animals, yes, and here we have plants, the weather, yes, and
all of these things, I think
demonstrated of course first his compassion and his love for people,
but secondly, it demonstrated who he was. And I think to have this fig tree come out,
in the institute, the religion 211-212 manual, it says, the leaves on the fig tree indicated that it
should have had fruit, but it did not. With its misleading appearance, the tree symbolized hypocrisy,
so he was being a teacher.
And its fate perhaps represented what awaited those
who professed righteousness,
yet applauded the Savior's death.
And my understanding of fig trees,
and it might be fun to mention,
how did you say it?
Beth Fage, Beth, how do you say it?
Beth, page, yeah.
Beth page means house of figs.
So take your pH and change it to a means house of figs. So take your your pH and change it to an F Beth Beth house of figs Beth page
So that was a common symbol around there
But my understanding is with a fig tree the leaves and the fruit grow at the same time
So if the leaves are there and there's no fruit
This is kind of a symbol of you're all leaves leaves and no fruit. What's the Texas phrase?
You're big hat and no cattle.
So there's a look of hypocrisy to the tree itself.
So Jesus used that as a symbol.
So that's how I boys understood it.
What do you think, Hank?
I think so too.
I've always thought it was an object lesson.
I even told my students, Jesus probably knocked all the figs off that tree the day before.
He's prepping his classroom for his object lesson.
Right out of the manual, come follow me manual, first paragraph.
The Savior was hungry after traveling from Bethany to Jerusalem,
and a fig tree in the distance looked like the source of food.
But as Jesus approached the tree, it bore no fruit.
In a way, the fig tree was like the hypocritical religious leaders in Jerusalem.
Their empty teachings and outward demonstrations
of holiness gave no spiritual nourishment.
I've also thought too that in about less than a week,
he's gonna be hanging on the cross
and people are gonna say he has no power, right?
He has no power to save himself.
I think the disciples who see this are saying,
no, I've seen him, he has the power to destroy.
I know that, I've seen him. He has the power to destroy. I know that. I've seen it
in right in front of my eye. So he's choosing not to destroy when he's hanging on the cross.
And one of the accounts, Peter comments back and says, as they pass the fig tree that's been all
withered up, he says, wow, Lord, look what happened to it after you cursed it. And here's another
interesting thing. That fig tree would have been on the Mount of Olives there, Mount Scopus and everything. And as they came back down into the city
each day, just like you said, the manual pointed out it was symbolizing the hypocrisy and the
form of religion without the conversion of the heart and without the fruits. Exactly. And the breezes,
the sea breezes come in, and that's how Jerusalem
stays kind of cool and temperate with the warm temperatures year-round, is you've always got a breeze,
but when you kill a tree mid-season, okay, and the leaves are on it, the leaves don't fall off.
They stay attached. So the breeze with the attached leaves would have been almost like an audio reminder.
Even a visual audio thing there, the leaves are wrestling as they go by kind of warning
them, you're going into an area here that is full of form without content.
Now another thing too, what time of the year is it?
It's April.
It's Passover.
Does fruit come on a tree in April?
I'm a small little orchardist and I have about a hundred trees
That's my avocation. I love it, but I can guarantee you the earliest fruit around here is cherries and apricots and they're still July
And the real fruit season is September apples plums peaches
You just go down the line. They're all on then why? Because the tree
uses the growing season to put fruit on and make it sweet, put sugars and things into it.
So why is Jesus expecting it? The fig, like John pointed out earlier, is an anomaly.
It's what they call an early leafer, and it puts out its starchy fruit just right with the leaves. It wouldn't
have been the most succulent fruit, but it still would have been edible. That's what Jesus
is going for. He's not having a temper tantrum over a tree that shouldn't have even had
fruit on it at that time of year. The fig was an exception. Like you pointed out, it
was showing his power over all things. It was just such a multifaceted symbolic thing
that he did there.
It's far, far from Jesus having a temper tantrum
because he's hungry.
Yeah.
So rather than saying, oh, Jesus was angry, it's no.
He's always a teacher.
He took another opportunity to use something right
in front of them and teach.
That makes me go, oh yeah, he's always teaching
in a beautiful way.
So Messianic is in this last three days here. And then he goes really into hiding, not hiding, but he celebrates the Passover with just a few people. And then Gassemini, three people are aware
that he's there suffering. This is his Messianic kind of pulpit, if you will. He's standing up and
just doing things to teach
them right here at the last, the multitudes.
I was going to say Matthew 21, 21, I've always laughed when Jesus says, if you have faith
and doubt not, you can also kill trees.
That's the dream right there.
And you can remove mountains. Move Mountains. Please join us for Part 2 of this podcast.