Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 3; Mark 1; Luke 3 Part 2 • Dr. Shon Hopkin • Jan. 23 - Jan. 29
Episode Date: January 18, 2023Dr. Shon Hopkin continues to explore the blessings of baptism and being part of the family of Jesus Christ.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https:/.../followhim.coApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM 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 TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
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Welcome to part 2 of Dr. Sean Hupkin, Matthew chapter 3, Mark chapter 1, and Luke chapter 3.
Do you remember Hank in Old Testament when Jesse is supposed to go get a new king for Samuel chapter 8?
The Lord says, you know they haven't rejected you, they've rejected me, but tell him the manner of their kings.
He's going to take your daughters and make them confectionaries, he's going to take your sons and make them run before the
kings' chariots. And that reminded me of that, as Sean, when you said that, that
they will be forerunners to clear the way, take out the rocks and fill in the
divots. But I love the symbol of that. So make the pad straight means to be a
forerunner. We won't go there, but I'm looking at Luke chapter 1 verse 17. He shall go before him. This is John the Baptist in the spirit and
power of Elias to turn the hearts of the fathers to the children. So notice John
the Baptist is saying although he dresses sort of in this way and he's described
in the gospel of Matthew in these terms that are reminiscent of Elijah of
Elias and he's going to go in the spirit and power of Elias.
And that's then what Joseph Smith is gonna talk about.
Let me read you something from Joseph Smith
about the spirit of Elias.
So this is from teachings of the prophet Joseph Smith.
Many of us recognize that as the old blue book
that I used to love that had a compilation
is by Joseph Fielding Smith.
Page is 335 to 36.
Spirit of Elias is to prepare the way
for a greater revelation of God,
which is the priesthood of Elias,
or the priesthood that Aaron was ordained unto.
And when God sends a man into the world
to prepare for a greater work,
holding the keys of the power of Elias,
it was called the doctrine of Elias,
even from the early ages of the world.
John's mission was limited to preaching and baptizing,
but what he did was legal when Jesus Christ came to any of John's disciples. He baptised them
with fire and the Holy Ghost. You can see the connection there with what we're reading here and what
we're working to get to, which is the baptism. I explained this to my daughter the other day when
she's like, well, what is John the Baptist role exactly? And I said, well, think of it as he gets
Instagram account going. It gets a couple of hundred thousand followers. And then when Jesus shows up, he
hands that Instagram account over to Jesus. Gives him the password and says,
it's all yours. Take it away. And she went, oh, okay, I get it. So in modern day
example of how John might look today, I love that. She's like, I get it, dad.
Yeah, that's what I get it. And honestly, let me just say, I think as Latter Day Saints
for me, the goal is, so if I serve as a bishop,
and it's okay to want to be the best bishop ever,
but I've sort of reoriented following John the Baptist's
example, at least tried to reorient,
to say, no, my goal isn't to be the best bishop
or whatever, ever, I want to prepare the way
so that the bishop who comes after me will be the best bishop or whatever, ever, I want to prepare the way so that the bishop who comes
after me will be the best bishop ever.
And there's something that sort of centers on us that says, I've got to be the best one
and it's about me, but no, I am preparing the way so that we have this crescendo, this
increase, and it's not about me, I am just as willing to disappear so that when I'm gone or it isn't like, well, that
was the true bishop.
Now we've got the follow-up bishop.
No, he's going to be in a better position to succeed after me.
And I think that's what we all want with our children, isn't it?
I don't want to be better than my children.
I want to prepare the way so that there is this crescendo leading up to the second coming of Christ and to see our children
Go beyond us as one of the greatest joys that we can have in life and they do so often and
That's sort of something I've learned from John the Baptist the preparer of the way. That's beautiful. I never even thought about that
That's great. It took me actually going to Israel to recognize
how important verse 5 is, then went out to him Jerusalem and all Judea and all the region round about Jordan.
I don't know. In my head, I just had him close to Jerusalem, you know, before I went there. And then I
go there and I think that is a long journey to go from Jerusalem down to the Jordan River. That is
a ways in to say all of Jerusalem and the region round about. that is a ways into say all of Jerusalem and
the region roundabout. This is a popular guy. There's a lot of people heading down that road from
Jerusalem down towards Jericho towards the Jordan River. It's one of the really fun things about
that area is below sea level. Right. It's the lowest place on the planet. And so we get this really
Right. It's the lowest place on the planet. And so we get this really literal physical level of meaning where Jesus descended below all things,
because he went to the lowest spot on earth to be baptized. And he descended below all things in
the way he was treated in the way he was born, but even to be baptized went below sea level.
That's such a great insight. I mean, this is the only time that the
Messiah, the Son of God, is going to be baptized. And where does he pick to do it? Literally, the
lowest place on earth. He's like, and I'm making this up, but he's like, okay, where are we going to
send Christ? Well, let's send him where he can be baptized at the lowest place on earth to symbolize that descent and what his ministry is going to mean and where it's going to start.
That's really great.
And to have all these people going out there, this must have been quite a scene that all
of Jerusalem and Judea and the region around about Jordan, everyone is going out there
to hear this guy.
He must have been so charismatic and powerful as a speaker.
And they all want to be baptized of him and even get the
attention of the leadership.
Well, yeah, and why would that be in verse seven?
But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees, do you
think they were coming to repent or to observe or maybe both?
I what do you think?
Now we're talking about some feisty right. He is not afraid to speak truth and by the way,
he is speaking in the classical tradition of prophets where there's truth speakers and they speak
what God wants them to speak because that's what needs to be heard and why is he critiquing these
leaders. He sounds a lot like Isaiah. He sounds
a lot like Elijah where he's saying, you have actually stepped on the face of my people.
You are crushing my people. And he comes to protect the innocent. We see him as being
feisty and he is, but I want you to think of him as protecting God's children. He is standing up manfully, so to speak,
to really speak out for goodness and righteousness.
There's some pretty sinister things going on
or else he would not speak this way.
Sean, you might have already mentioned this,
but maybe it's worth hitting again
that by going down to the Jordan,
do you think he's recalling some old testament?
Going back down to the Jordan and saying, look, let's go back to the days of Joshua and Moses.
And I mentioned wilderness sort of this Exodus from Babylon back to Jerusalem
but I think just as well said is the Exodus as they come up out of the world.
So coming up out of the water and you remember that Josh was going to bring them,
so to speak, through the Jordan.
Moses had earlier brought them through the Red Sea,
and now Moses, okay, now we're going to the Promised Land.
I've almost liked the imagery, but it's imagery,
and so it can mean, I'm not saying this
is the correct interpretation,
but I've loved the imagery of the Red Sea being baptism,
and then when Joshua brings them through, now we're passing through the veil into the presence of the Red Sea being baptism and then when Joshua brings them through, now we're passing through
the veil into the presence of the Lord, speaking of sort of Solomon's simple imagery.
But here, and he comes into the presence of the Lord, and we don't want to jump too quickly
to the baptism, but we probably need to get there eventually. Where God is going to show up?
That's where this chapter is leading. I love that. The Red Sea, then
parting the veil, coming through and here, the presence of God. It's like Moses is such a strong
type of Christ, leading them out of physical bondage through the waters of the Red Sea.
And one way I've heard it is to sign eye is the mountain temple type of a thing, but they wouldn't go with him, right?
But that same kind of Moses being such a strong type,
this is what Jesus is going to do.
So he uses one verse to teach them.
So Sean, would it be fair to say that John the Baptist
going back to the Jordan is kind of like somebody today
in the US going back to Valley Forge,
or going back to Boston and go to the harbor and say,
let's go back to our roots. Let's get back to what we were supposed to be, the people of the
Promised Land. Oh, I really like that a lot. Yeah, you know, they're going to be crossing over
the Jordan. It was all one land, which you didn't have to get across. I remember, but to pick
that spot to stop and do things. And then you have, if you're going to talk about that sort of
historical memory, I think that's really powerful, Hank. And then of course, we've got all kinds of other things.
We've got ritual immersion going on here in this purification, ritual, and now this is for
a pintance, and it's going to end up being to enter into this relationship as God's people.
And biblical scholars will debate ad nauseam about when they see baptism starting.
There were, at some point, ritual
emergence for proselytes that we would think of as pretty close to what baptism is about
to bring Gentiles into the fold and they debate whether they can see that that earlier or not.
But of course, we've got some things in doctrine and covenants that talk about ordinances of washing baptism as
doctrine of covenants talks about it continuing on. What
exactly that looks like or how that played out over the
course of all of Israelite history is really tricky. But
there's clearly, I mean, the symbols of immersion and of
purification. And then he's talking about repentance and being forgiven.
This is all gonna be going back to home base a little bit.
It's all redolent with symbolism and meaning
for his Jewish listeners, I would say.
It seems to be something they're used to.
I mean, at least the fact that they don't say,
what are you doing?
Why are you baptizing people?
They seem to be somewhat used to it, but he is bold with them. This is the leadership of his people and the things
he says. Indeed, I mean, verse 10. But first, let's look at this, what's going to be a real challenge,
and it really prefigures Christ message. And then what's going to happen after with the ministry
of the apostles, after Christ's resurrection, look at verse nine,
think not to say within yourselves,
we have Abraham to our Father, I say to you,
God is able to, of these stones
to raise up children in Abraham,
he's sort of blowing it all up and saying,
just like a Benedict does with Noah, nope, you are missing it.
Let's go back to the 10 commandments,
this is what a Benedict does.
And he says, listen, God can make of these stones.
It's about holiness, It's about discipleship
as we would talk about it. It's about seeking after the Lord with all of your heart. You've got
to change the way you see the world. It's not about power dynamic. Who's your genealogy?
Right. Yeah, this sounds like a genealogy thing. It's fun to see, particularly, I think, in John's
writings where he talks about becoming the sons of God and as a
Teenager, I thought, wait a minute, I thought we're all sons and daughters of God, but there's kind of an encouragement to act like it
If you're the children of Abraham, do the works of Abraham. If you're a son of God, act like a son of God type of thing.
Sometimes I do think there are those who feel
like a son of God type of thing. Sometimes I do think there are those who feel some loss.
Well, if I come out of the wrong kind of family,
or even the wrong kind of genealogy,
I think it's very comforting,
and it just happens to be that way right now,
but has been for quite some time.
If you look at our highest church leaders,
the first presidency of the 12 apostles,
the majority of them come out of home situations
that have each their own challenges,
maybe less active parents, maybe one parent or an early death, some real challenges.
And that doesn't mean that you have to come out of some challenges in your early life for God to use you.
But it just says, God can use all of us. It's about us seeking after the Lord.
So he's trying to blow all of that stuff up.
And it's persuasive. People love it. It resonates with them. They're like, oh wow, this guy is speaking truth.
This isn't just the way it is. He's speaking to my soul and they flock to hear him because they feel it, I would say.
It's persuasive. Well, he's going to keep going. There's some really great imagery here about verse 10. And now also the axe is laid into the root of
the trees. It's quite a threat, isn't it? I mean, yeah, he's not pulling any punches.
I love that imagery. Right when you're going to chop it down, the first thing you do is let's see,
here's where I wanted to lay it at that root root and then you take your backswing. That's exactly what you do. And it's like,
oh, this is really close. And then you hit about six inches different
where you planned on where you aimed. You know, that Hank loves to talk about Jacob 5,
but it's so interesting how often in the scriptures trees are people in Isaiah
The cedars of Lebanon will fall by a mighty one the word but the god becomes a lumberjack and he'll hune down and
He's not talking about deforestation here is he
He's talking about you guys are the trees and the acts is laid at the root that's like I'm just about to strike
We know wake where's your good fruit? What'd you say, Sean?
He's not pulling any punches.
I like that.
He is very bold with his leaders.
He goes to a tree and you're talking about this Jacob five
and trees are individuals.
We just came in the previous verse out of,
hey, your ancestry isn't gonna save you
and then he goes right to what we still today use a sort of this genealogy symbol
He's like, no, this can be chopped up if you're not drawing sustenance from the roots
You're sort of already separated from the roots. So let's just make that clear
I've heard somewhere that viper's distinct from just being snakes viper's a subset of snakes
But that viper's are venomous, and that he's
actually referring to them as not just snakes, but venomous. And we know from the scriptures, in fact,
it's a source of confusion, that snakes have been used for good symbols, too, like the brazen serpent.
But that here, they're not just snakes, but they're vipers, and comparing this Pharisees and Sadducees
as being venomous is
a strong indictment on how John's talking about them.
Does that make any sense?
Yeah, it does.
And I think I would be really uncomfortable here because I just don't like conflict.
So to witness this little exchange, I'd be, whoa, he's really saying some strong things
to these guys.
That's really great.
And I love that.
I've just been looking that up while you were
talking at Kiddna or a Kiddna, a snake, our texts do not permit identification of species, but the term
ordinarily suggests a poisonous one of Vipara emotites commonly known as sandviper. So I think
you're spot on. We may not know that with 100 hundred percent certainly by that seems to be what he's doing a poisonous snake
Goodness and Hank I just think you're right when you look an example of courage
You think of John the Baptist don't you in front of the crowds no less right the crowds are there
I wonder if all the crowds are hearing this and they're going whoa
And oh and what's the example Jesus uses later on like Like, yeah, I'll answer you if you answer me.
The baptism of John, was it of God or of men?
And they're like, well, if we say that.
We can't say that.
Yeah, they're still scared of John after his death.
We fear the people.
Oh, we don't know what answer the end.
Jesus says, well, need to do.
I tell you by what authority I do these things.
I love that Jesus brings up John the Baptist again after he's already gone.
He's preparing the way.
What a great connection between day thinking their genealogy is going to save them and
him saying the Lord can cut that genealogy right in half with the root of the tree.
I'd never seen that before.
Change your roots and branches to use the Malachi language.
Yeah, your roots and branches.
Now in classical Hebrew prophetic form, he's feisty, but look at, he turns it positive. It's
not lacking in hope. So he's going to a pretty strong sort of saying, hey, you got to see
this accurately, but notice the very next thing that he says, I indeed baptize you with water and repentance. Come on,
come be baptized, repent, come and be cleansed, change, adopt a new way of seeing the world.
But he that come after me, and he's testifying of Christ, even as he's baptized, he's pointing
beyond himself over and over again. He that come after me is mightier than I. He's the one that's
going to baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire. But then his fan is in his hand.
He will thoroughly purge his floor. I think most understand the imagery that's being
used there. There is a chaff that gets ground up as you're trying to separate the wheat from
the chaff. And then you toss it into the air, and the wind will blow that chaff away.
Because the chaff actually, there's no substance,
there's no value, what you want is the wheat head.
You want the fruit that has really substance in it,
and then he's gonna gather his wheat into the garner.
That's the imagery there in verse 12.
So you tossing it up, and the chaff gets blown away,
well, the wheat comes back down to you. Exactly, but the other way, you're tossing it up and the chaff gets blown away while the wheat comes back down to you. Exactly.
But the other way, you're going to burn it and it's there that chaff remains to be burned. It's the wheat that you want.
So there's different ways of doing that, but you're separating the chaff from the wheat and then gathering.
And President Nelson talks a lot about gathering and we have John the Baptist right at the beginning
of the Meridian of Times using gathering image
for imagery for the wheat.
Gather the wheat into the garner.
It's really nice.
Yeah, so he is bold, but yet he offers them an opportunity.
Yes, it's tinged with hope and opportunity, as you said.
You don't have to stay where you are,
change your way of seeing things
and then come and show it by being baptized
by going down into the water as he says,
unto repentance.
Now we come to it, the big moment.
Here we are.
We've been building to it.
Let's read all of the verses
and then we can talk about them.
Yeah, let's have John do a little reading.
John's got a great reading, boys.
Verse 13.
Then comeeth Jesus from Galilee to Jordan and to John to be baptized of him.
But John forbade him saying, I have need to be baptized of thee and come us thou to me.
And Jesus answering, said, and to him, suffer it to be so now for thus to becomeeth us to fulfill all righteousness, then he suffered him.
1617.
And Jesus, when he was baptized,
went up straight way out of the water
and low the heavens were opened unto him
and he saw the spirit of God descending like a dove
and lighting upon him and low a voice from heaven saying,
this is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased.
This is so crucial, This is so pivotal. There's all kinds
of imagery that we learn from and we sort of pull from different places about baptism, but this
is right at the beginning of Christ's ministry. So this first 30 years leads to this moment and it's a gateway and it doesn't end things.
Not the capstone baptism isn't it's the beginning of a pathway. It's the beginning of a journey,
but it changes everything here. That symbol that moment. So let's talk about it in the New Testament,
but before we're done I want to talk about it a little bit in the ordinance of baptism here in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. But first, let's sort of dig into
these verses a little bit. Make sure, as you're studying this, that you spend some time with Nephi and
second Nephi 30, as he talks about Christ, the sinless one, who still fulfills righteousness, to show us the way.
And epistle to the Hebrews is going to do a lot of this where Christ is marking out a pathway.
He's strengthening us for that path. He's showing us the path and he's enabling us to walk
upon that path. I often ask students, did Christ need baptism? And the answer is, well, no. But if Christ hadn't
been baptized, would that have been sinful, so to speak? Well, that would have been his first
moment of rebellion. Here in this moment, he could say, I don't need this. This is extraneous.
And I think sometimes people may feel that is they gather on the Sunday.
Well, I'm doing fine. Why do I need to go to church? Why do I need to gather here?
And others are feeling, no, I need this like a thirsty man needs water in the wilderness.
But Christ here is saying,
suffer it to be so. I love my father and I submit, so to speak, this symbol of loyalty, the symbol
of submission, the symbol of, and of course, it's a symbol of new birth. So if you think
of the way the earth began, the way it's described in Genesis 1, is that it's a watery
globe and then land emerges, right? And if you think of Christ imagery from Christ's atoning sacrifice, you have both in the Garden of
Gessemony where his sweat was as it were, great truss of blood. And so you have this bloody sweat, water and blood imagery.
You have at his crucifixion as the spear goes into a side water and blood imagery, a birth imagery from his atoning sacrifice
and Christ, the sinless one, the perfect one, becomes a new soul, so to speak. This is part of
growing grace for grace or grace to grace, and it's so powerful, it's so crucial that we signify
our inner commitment with a behavior of holiness by going down into the water.
Sufferate to be so now for this, it'd become with us to fulfill all righteousness
than he suffered him this beautiful moment.
And Joseph Smith has talked about, and you see it in verse 16, Jesus when he was baptized,
went up straight way out of the water.
We've all seen depictions as later, he. Saints that are a little sensitive to us when Jesus is down in the water and then
there's he's not immersed, but there's some other form in it.
This is immersion that's being talked about here.
Joseph Smith talked about the meaning of this word where it's to
immerse or to dip, you're going into the water.
Joseph Smith says this, we find no subject so nearly connected with salvation as that of
baptism.
In the first place, however, let us understand the word baptizes derived from the Greek verb
baptizo, which means to immerse or overwhelm, and the sprinklers from the Greek verb,
and it means to scatter on by particles.
The gospel requires baptism by immersion for their mission of sins, which is the meaning
of the word in the original language, namely to bury or immerse or, as we might say, to dip. You have all kinds of
doctrines that are near and dear to the Latter-day Saint heart, the imports of baptism,
Christ showing us the way. If even the Son of God needs to fulfill all righteousness by being
baptized, then how much more so we... there can be a debate with some of our Protestant friends.
Well, is it essential for salvation?
And in my discussions with them,
not that I'm winning the argument or anything like that,
I mean, we both go away,
still viewing it pretty much the same way,
but I say, well,
there are a requirement and that's sensitive to some
because they don't want there to be works that we're it sounds like a work that you have to do or
Something but at the same time if
baptism is available and I say no
Then I've rejected a gift God is offering me and I can't be saved and reject God at the same time
So it starts to feel a little bit to me like we're parsing meaning so far that
I don't understand the difference anymore. Yes, God offers all of us this gift and as Latter-day
Saints would understand it and we need to accept so that we don't reject God, God's love, so to speak.
So in preparation, I spend a little time in the Bible dictionary under baptism and there's
just some great statements here.
I'd like to share. This is the last paragraph. Baptism is a most sacred ordinance, which a person
having received it can remember throughout life as a reminder of the personal commitment to
Jesus Christ. Kind of that day I committed my life. It symbolism is beautiful and its consequences
ever so desirable. Isn't that beautiful? It's symbolism is beautiful and its consequences ever so desirable.
Isn't that beautiful?
Its symbolism is beautiful and its consequences ever so desirable.
Well, why don't we pause then and talk about baptism for a moment as we experience it as those of us who are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. There's a verse that I've always loved in doctrine, Covenants 84, that says,
in the ordinances of the priesthood,
the power of godliness is manifest.
I had an experience on my mission.
I served in Spain.
I didn't see very many baptisms
during my mission or at that time.
But there was a baptism occurring,
and we had invited some people
who were learning about the church to come and see the baptism.
Well, we got there, and it was a rented chapel and I was used to sort of a
bigger American style chapel and they had sort of a swimming pool with little metal rung
stairs that was there for the baptism. That's how they had set it up. And I remember being distracted
because I was a little embarrassed at the way that it looked.
And the little children, as we often do,
were invited up to the front to this beautiful ceremony,
this beautiful ordinance.
And at the end of the ordinance,
the children started clapping and they're like,
do it again, do it again.
And I was like, oh goodness,
my 19 year old self was feeling a little embarrassed that it wasn't a little bit grander, so to speak.
And then I looked over at those that I had invited and they were weeping and I realized that I had totally missed.
And it's so quick, there's all this build up and then you're immersed and then you come up.
One of my Baptist friends, Pastor Brian Reedus, his name and he ended up joining the church
I had to quit his pastor at that point and
Join the church and he actually asked me to be the one who baptized him and I didn't get him under the first time
So we had to do it twice and he said that's okay Sean
It gave me more time to appreciate what was going on
It's so quick, but it's a gateway
It's a door and if you think of what's happening
If you think of the baptismal waters almost like a veil and you're going into them and Paul says it symbolizes death of the old man
And then the new man is reborn and then we emerge and the very next thing that happens at Christ baptism and that happens at
Latter-day Saint baptism that baptism today are the gift to the Holy Ghost is given.
You enter into the presence of God.
It's powerful, it's sacred.
You've got even the way we set up at the baptismal font with those cherubim, so to speak,
guarding the way into the presence of God.
They want you to come in, but they're saying, we've got to do this right.
You know, a toe floated up.
We're just trying to do it the way that God has indicated. Well, let's do it again. And then you come into the Prince of God and that's exactly what we see
happening here. And it's so powerful. It's life changing. My son, who's just started his mission,
that we're all different. But I can remember the day I was baptized. And sometimes people can't.
My son remembers after he wasn't sure he felt very special with the baptism
but then after hands related on his head and he was offered the gift of the Holy Ghost and then
he talks about my grandma getting up to speak and bearing her testimony and he said I've never felt
that way before and then as he's born testimony of that in later years it comes back to him and
the spirit reaffirms this is real in the ordinances of the priest reaffirms. This is real.
In the ordinances of the priest of the power of godliness
is manifest.
Oh, that's good.
So if you think of this gateway to opening the path
and then that's how it functions for Christ Himself.
And this is powerful.
I don't know that two of you, any thoughts
from your own baptismal experience
or that with your family members? I just love the idea of you any thoughts from your own baptismal experience or that with your family members?
I just love the idea of a new start and the born-again idea. We sometimes can say baptism is being
born again, but I think baptism is more from what I understood. One of the events in the process of
being born again, that being born again is a process. Elder
Christopher Sinaldo Bednar have talked about that and baptism is kind of an
event, but I mean it's fun to read out on the five where he's my brother and
of the church. Have you been born of God and he's like, you've been baptized, but
you haven't been born again and that it's part of the beginning of that process.
But I love that it's kind of like the sacrament, this kind of physical
outward symbol that we do. But there's great meaning in it. Like you said, it's a new start
to be born again and start over. And as you mentioned, Paul, it's like the old man of sin is buried
in you walk in newness of life. And it's such an outward symbol, and I think of just anciently, not everybody
was literate, but they could be taught by these symbols, and they could see the power of
godliness in the symbols, like you mentioned.
I love that you took us to Alma 5.
If you think of something else, he says, if you've felt to sing the song of redeeming love,
can you feel so now?
Well, so think of an Old Testament precedent for that is after they've come through the Red Sea and they're on the other side Miriam song there.
This song of I'm saved. I've come up out of Egypt and it's miraculous. How could this have happened? And this song of redeeming love and notice it's right after what Paul describes as a baptism symbol of the coming through the Red Sea and up and out on the other side
And they sing what I would think of as the song of redeeming love and then he's like
But then you put yourself back into captivity like I redeemed you
But you keep going back and saying that song again
And I'm so grateful that the sacrament then and it's these moments when we have these internal beliefs, and then we act them out with behaviors of holiness
with our physical bodies that God has given us.
I will stand as a witness, and it's personal.
It's between me and God, we do ordinances.
We tend to do them in very public kind of spaces,
because it's like marking our doorpost.
This is who I am.
I'm like John the Baptist.
I'm not embarrassed by it. This is who I am. I'm Mike John the Baptist. I'm not embarrassed by it.
I will participate in this ordinance
because I'm standing as a witness of God.
And I'm using my body to sort of cement my beliefs
so that they become engraven upon my very soul, so to speak.
I'm not just gonna hold it in here or in here.
I will act it out in behaviors of holiness. And those
are powerfully changing moments. And they have to be replicated elsewhere in scripture,
study, and prayer and in private, personal, religious behaviors. But those ordinances are
powerful gateways that help us connect with our God, who, as Slatterday Saints believe,
of course, is a physical slash spiritual being
himself and he reaches through the veil to connect with us and help us to become a
seeous.
Thank you.
There's a great verse in Moses 6.59 where the Lord talks about being reborn.
He says, you were born into this world by water, blood and spirit and became of dust, a
living soul. Even so, you must be born
again into the kingdom of heaven, of water, and of spirit, and be cleansed by blood. Even the
blood of my non-nubi gotten. You talked earlier, Sean, about birth imagery. There's a lot of
three things when a baby is born. I've seen this happen with my own children being born. There's a lot of blood, there's a lot of water,
and there's a lot of spirit.
And the Lord seems to be saying,
we were gonna do that again.
You're gonna be born of water, you're gonna be immersed
in totally in water, you're gonna be given the gift
of the Holy Ghost, but this time it's not gonna be
the blood of your mother that gives you life.
It's going to be my blood that gives you life.
I've always liked this connection
because the day my children were born,
I remember that day.
And yes, there was a lot still left to go.
Definitely wasn't an ending point.
It was a beginning point.
There's a lot of growth still left.
But man, that day where they became ours
is a special day.
And I think of baptism the same way that the Lord looks at this brand new member of his family saying,
now you're mine. Now you go where I go.
And now I take care of you. You're in my family now.
Thank you, Hank. That's a very book of Mormon now. What is Mosaic 2630?
Blessed is this people who are willing to bear my name.
For in my name shall they be called and they are mine.
I love that because I put my name on my scriptures at Deseret Book.
They emboss it.
And that means their mind.
And we put upon us the name of Christ.
And that means we're his.
And in Mosaic 18, when the elder takes them out to the waters of Mormon.
And he gives them what Elder Holland called the most complete
scriptural statement on record as to what the newly baptized commit to do and be and
I think together we could probably remember it all are you willing to
Come into the fold of God to be called his people to mourn with those that mourn to comfort those who stand in need of comfort and
to mourn with those that mourn, to comfort those who stand in need of comfort. And to me, it's interesting that part of it is personal, as part of it, is now
what are you going to do for others? To mourn with those that mourn, to comfort
those who stand in need of comfort. And as you said, Sean, the stand is a
witness of God at all times and all things and all places. We get such a nice
list about what it means for us to be baptized in Mosaic 18.
Yeah, I just like the idea of those same way I care for my children. I take that
responsibility when they become mine. When my wife and I held that baby in our
arms and said, Gade, this is our responsibility to make sure this one grows and
is healthy and safe. And I think the Lord sees us that same way
when we're baptized.
I will take care of you.
You are mine.
You are in my family.
It wouldn't be heaven without you there.
I will take you with me.
So blood, water, and spirit,
we talked about these sort of blood
and water images at Christ atoning sacrifice.
And then the sort of pregnant,
I probably shouldn't use that word,
but this sort of pregnant pause as he has promised them
the gift of the Holy Ghost, and then it's fulfilled 40 days later
on the other side of this 40 day time of preparation and testing
and kind of thing.
But then think of birth so there can be a lot of water
and there's a lot of blood, but then that breath of life
when the baby breathes in.
Oh, and then the spirit you feel at a childbirth and then the spirit you feel as you are witnessing
that at baptism. But as Joseph Smith says, it might as well baptize a bag of sand as a human if
you're not going to give them the gift of the Holy Ghost. Yeah, it's half a baptism. Yes, yes, and
the spirit. And then for that then to play out in this very powerful way.
And I love the family connection because there is something clearly crucial
in Christ's development here when God, His Father, now shows up, so to speak,
and proclaims the family relationship. If you look at the
Gospels, it appears to be a public moment. Maybe Jesus is the only one that
can see the Father, but the voice appears to be heard by others. He's speaking
about Christ. This is my beloved son, not you are my beloved son, so in third
person. That appears to be a public witness that is both for Christ to then cement that surety and then
it propels him forward through the rest of his ministry, but also for others where God places his name,
so to speak, his family name upon him. I love what you talked about putting your name on the
scriptures. It's engraven. Have you had Christ image engraven? Even the word for ordinance in Hebrew is coke,
or the verb is hoke, a statute,
or an ordinance is from the same word as engrave, right?
Sort of think of God engraving the Ten Commandments.
And so he's engraving his identity.
This is my beloved son.
This is something unique. This is something
different. This isn't just a really good guy. This is or as it's called in
other languages, my only begotten son. And I am pleased. Then Satan in the very
next chapter is going to come and try to wipe all that away. And notice that when
Satan comes attempting, he does often does so just before spiritual experiences
or just after them.
And the goal is not just to erase the spiritual experience, it's to turn it upside down.
And there are those who, when that happens, then all of a sudden, their early spiritual
promptings begin to feel sinister to them.
Oh, that was false.
It wasn't just not true.
It was a lie. and Satan tries to come
and turn it upside down for Christ, but it's so powerful what happens. So let's talk about this
last reason. We've talked about the importance of baptism by immersion leading to the gift of the
Holy Ghost. He comes to the, well, we didn't talk about this, but he comes to the authorized
individual in order to perform that baptism. And now let's talk about this, but he comes to the authorized individual in order to perform that baptism.
And now let's talk about this emphasis on three members of the Godhead.
Now, by the way, your Catholic and other Christian friends can read this verse and it does not
undo for them the doctrine of the Trinity, right?
They certainly the understanding, the traditional Christian understanding of the Trinity, is that God is the Trinity can be represented in the way that's here in these verses.
And I would say at the same time for Latter-day Saint Readers, we're like, yeah.
And it seems almost like the Gossal Matthew is pushing this point point is emphasizing this. The location of this, Jesus is coming up out of the
waters. The Spirit of God is descending like a dove, so you've got movement from heaven to earth
and lighting upon him and then God's voice from heaven. This is my beloved son. So it's almost
emphasizing there's a father, there's a son, and there is the Holy Ghost. And of
course, for Latter-day Saints, that first article of faith in this understanding,
that they are one but three separate beings. Other Christians would say three
persons but one being. Latter-day Saints see that really strongly taught and
echoed here in chapter three. I think two things. First, I think one of the,
the flinest kind of our understanding
of the Father, Son, Holy Ghost talks I've ever heard
was Elder Holland.
October 2007 called the only true God
in Jesus Christ whom he has sent.
Super good explanation.
But one of the things I love to show my classes here
is how often do we hear the voice of the father, not very often, and the footnotes are right there. So if you look at footnote 17b, you see Matthew 17.
So there's the Mount of Transfiguration. You see third Nephi 11. There's Jesus coming to the righteous among the Lamanites in the fights and then you see Joseph Smith history
117 so there's the first vision and the consistent part is what does he do as you said Sean?
He confirms his this is my son in each case and I love the titles of Jesus's mediator advocate
intercessor
But sometimes the one that Jesus is advocating us to, is that
the way I would say that, the father, sometimes the father's voice shows up and confirms this
is my son.
So I like those footnotes.
They are certainly significant moments when you hear the father's voice.
Interestingly enough, if you look in a second Nephi 30 and 31, there's this really fascinating thing Nephi does.
The Father says this and then the Son says this.
And whether that's actually the Father speaking or if it's Christ in his role as the one who gives spiritual life,
but it's sort of fascinating, but it's all connected to baptismal discussions.
At the opening of the pathway it's there and then in the like you
said the amount of transfiguration and then how fascinating is it for
Latter-day Saints. At the opening of the dispensation of fullness of times there
is the Father once again confirming that this is going to center on the
atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ who is the power to lead us to the Father.
And then it's really beautiful to see Christ own
the His sonship, so to speak.
And that's so meaningful to him.
And he's constantly pointing to the Father.
As the Father points to him,
he consistently points back to the Father
that beautiful relationship, Father, son relationship
that's there.
I'd love that you said that to open up the restoration.
Here's the Joseph Smith history, the 117 reference, and it's also kind of fun to think
that here's John the Baptist at the Jordan River, and then when he shows up at the beginning
of the restoration, where is he?
The banks of the Susquehanna River.
He's at a river and then invites Joseph and Oliver to be baptized there. So John likes
rivers. That's what we're hearing. Yeah, he likes rivers. It would appear so. He likes cleansing
imagery, new birth imagery. All right, there's maybe one other point that we should take a moment on
here before we start to conclude. And that is this idea of the Spirit of God descending like a dove.
Like a dove, right? Yes. And as Joseph Smith, he's going to talk about this here, and I think it's
important for us as Latter-D Saints to understand this. And this comes from teachings of the Prophet
Joseph Smith, pages 275 to 76. The sign of the dove was instituted before the creation of the world,
a witness for the Holy Ghost, and the devil cannot come in the sign of a dove. We don't learn that anywhere else. That's from Joseph
Smith that we learn that the devil cannot imitate that sign. The Holy Ghost is a personage and
is in the form of a personage. So the point he's making is that the Holy Ghost doesn't shape
shift, right? It's not like the Holy Ghost is a dove, or he's put himself in the form of the dove.
You could say the Holy Ghost descends,
and if you look at John, he's descending like a dove
and then Matthew here as well,
so peacefully, beautifully,
the symbol of new life.
It does not confine itself to the form of a dove,
but in the sign of a dove,
the Holy Ghost cannot be transformed into a dove,
but the sign of a dove was given to John to
signify the truth of the deed as the dove was an emblem or token of truth. Now, just for fun,
let's look at where dove comes from. There is a dove that, of course, signifies that the land has
emerged after the flood, and notice you've got water and new birth symbolism and
then a dove on the other side signifies okay now the story can move forward if
you look at the first creation story you may have implications of this remember
the spirit of God is hovering over the waters is sort of the way that the
scriptures describe it now that's maybe a little bit more symbolic or
metaphorical but I think there's a connection being made there with dove kind of imagery and the spirit of God.
And then a really fun one is the name Jonah. And remember Christ is going to talk about Jonah
as the symbol for his ministry and his atoning sacrifice, Jonah descends into the water, ascends out of the water three days later
in this sort of similar kind of imagery,
and Jonah's name, lo and behold, means,
dove.
That's what the name Jonah means.
Sort of fascinating to see the dove connected
to these rebirth images and moments,
in a way that according to Joseph Smith seems to be set
so that the adversary
cannot replicate it or repeat it.
And one application of that might be, and something you'll hear later to say a lot, is
that you can get a lot of different replicated feelings from the adversary, but I think
most later to say it's would feel comfortable that, but peace doesn't seem to be one of those.
Peace doesn't seem to be one of the things that Satan is very good at mimicking or replicating, so to speak.
I think an important little, almost an aside, but to help us understand the Holy Ghost better, or at least not to misunderstand how we would read this, the Holy Ghost descending as a dove or like a dub. I want to bring up a doctrinal point that to me is kind of interesting is that we sometimes talk about
baptism as having our sins washed away.
And I found in the book Mormon, there's many more verses that it's actually the Holy Ghost
that cleanses us, or the refiner's fire that cleanses the Holy Ghost as a fire that cleanses us. But I found both.
And in the article of faith, baptism by immersion for the remission of sins. And then it says,
Holy Ghost later, but scripturally, I think it sounds more like the Holy Ghost is the cleanser.
That's why I really appreciate that Joseph Smith saying, if you baptize someone and don't give
the Holy Ghost that's half a baptism. So I kind of feel like baptism is a word umbrella that has both of those things, born of water,
born of the spirit type of a thing.
That's how I make sense of it, but I'd love your comment.
I just totally agree that one needs to lead to the other.
You go through a gate because there's something on the other side.
If you think of sort of old Testament temple symbolism, then there's these symbols
in the outer courtyard.
There's water.
There's blood with animal sacrifice.
And then you're through the door if you're one of the priests you pass into the holy
place.
And there's this menorah shining light.
And Neph even says, now the Holy Ghost is going to show you what to do.
And now you're through the gate,
and now the Holy Ghost helps you afford to walk through a gate,
and then not receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
You think, well, okay, well,
what was the purpose of walking through the gate?
That's, you might say the second half,
as you're saying, John,
or the fulfillment of that ordinance.
A member of the Godhead is promised as your companion through the walk of life.
Perfect.
So, second Nephi 31, 17.
This actually, like the second half of the verse, for the gate by which you should enter
is repentance and baptism by water, then come a remission of your sins by fire and by
the Holy Ghost. Then are you in this
straight and narrow path. I feel like the straight and narrow path is very much a biblical metaphor,
but the book Mormon, either it's talking about the same thing or a different thing, but I feel
like it's the same thing, but it's adding some more elements, like the gate at the beginning of
that straight and narrow path. You could even say,
and the tree of life at the end of it, and this element of opposition in the great spacious building,
and the mist of darkness and everything. So sorry to try to wax eloquent there, but
that verse 17, I just thought, look, the remission of your sins comes by fire and by the Holy Ghost, but sometimes we speak of it coming by
the water as well, don't we? That's why I wanted your comment on that.
Great job. I love to that. That's beautifully said.
Sean, before we wrap up, I wanted to just come back to something that I remember you saying earlier in our interview and
I thought it was so important. It's just it stuck with me. I'm always looking
for motivators for me to do things because sometimes I don't want to do them. I sometimes find
myself like you said, I need to do this. Well, I don't want to do that. Or why should I? I don't need
it. I'm vying the way I am. And then I think the application here of Jesus, his non-rebellious spirit that you
talked about saying, I'm willing to do something that perhaps I don't need to do, but I'm going to
do it because it's been asked of me. That could be applied in so many ways in our lives. And I could,
I'm definitely going to talk to my children about this, about there might be things
you don't think you need to do or want to do, but we do them because we're submissive to the
Father's will. Is that something that you remember talking about? Yeah, and I love that. And I would
maybe just echo that with a couple of comments. First, that the way that baptism book ends, the decision
Christ makes to submit to the Father, then maybe prefigures the decision He'll make in the Garden
of Guassimony. And you have another, it's either water imagery, he's talking about, I don't want
to drink this cup, let this cup pass from me, is either water or wine wine which would maybe be blood imagery nevertheless that I will be done.
And there's this really beautiful moment in doctrine and covenants 19 where he's talking about
his garden of Gethsemane decision and he says, I shrank and would that I might not. And interestingly
enough, that's exactly the same language Nephi uses when he's being asked to do something difficult with Laben at the beginning of the Book of Mormon story. I don't, that's exactly the same language Neyph I use is when he's
being asked to do something difficult with Laban at the beginning of the Book of Mormon
story. I don't know that we want to quate those too closely, but being asked to do something
that's hard, it changes us. And so I don't think I want to live life not ever. Well, you
shouldn't make yourself do something you don't feel like. And it is true. We got to be careful
or not to suppress our feelings because God's given us feelings. But at the same time, to always just do
whatever my feelings say, I don't think that's what I'm going for either. I want to do what God
wants me to do. And there's doing hard things changes us. So let's submit. Let's be willing
to do that. He does it right here at baptism. Let's submit it with
priesthood ordinances, whether it's sacrament and be in a position to take the sacrament, to go to the temple, etc.
I think that's a really powerful thought.
Hank.
Yeah, I just I love the application of that. It's going to motivate me to maybe do some things that I've been putting off because I think, oh, I don't really need to do that thing.
And here's the Lord saying, maybe I don't need to,
but I'm going to because it's been asked of me.
And to tie that to the Garden of Guest,
I'm going to try else and difficulties
and submitting our will to God is,
I love the bookend idea.
That was really cool.
Well, and let me add Hank.
As we've said, there's the ordinance of baptism,
but then it's only half an
ordinance if the spirit doesn't come afterwards. So I love what you're saying. So yes, the ordinance
is, but then what does the spirit tell you you got to go do? And if we don't get to that, it's sort
of half an ordinance, then the spirit comes in and it draws you into a new way of being and new
behaviors. I love that. Whatever the spirit is telling you, yeah, you need to go do this. Stop delaying. Don't make it half an ordinance, so to speak. Let the spirit
come in and guide you forward. You have helped me kind of see John the Baptist. I've always
seen the given it to him straight, but I love the invitation, kind of the softer gentler,
come and repent and come and be baptized. I like the way
you've helped me with that today. And the first paragraph in the Come Follow Me manual, it says it
beautifully. Jesus Christ in his gospel can change you. Luke quoted an ancient prophecy of Isaiah
that described the effect that the Savior's coming would have. Every valley shall be filled, every
and every mountain and hill shall be brought low,
and the crooked shall be made straight, and the rough way shall be made smooth. That's another Handel's Messiah.
This message is for all of us, including those who think that cannot change. Listen to this line. If something as permanent as a mountain can be flattened,
then surely the Lord can help us straighten out our own crooked
paths. As we accept John the Baptist invitation to repent and change, we prepare our minds and
hearts to receive Jesus Christ so that we too can see the salvation of God. Beautiful. Could I
maybe bear a witness that I'd like to share here as we're beginning to conclude our study.
And that is, as I think about ordinances, I think about Christ's baptism and then the Holy
Ghost descending upon him. And then as I think about ordinances in the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, I just want to share my witness that these things from my own experience
are real, that they have power to change us, to call us into greater
powers of holiness, to encourage us, to comfort us, and to challenge us to be better.
And these are not just nice things to talk about.
There is power in the ordinances of the priesthood.
I am so grateful for the restoration of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and the difference
it has made and continues to make.
And I desperately need it to continue to make that difference in my life.
This is real and it has power and it continues to give me joy and to challenge me to be a better
man.
Beautiful.
Beautiful.
I think that was the perfect way to finish.
Sean, thank you so much.
Yeah. So good. We want to thank Dr. Sean Hopkins for being with us today. What a powerful
fun day. I've got so many notes in Matthew chapter three. I think I filled up every margin
here. Thank you, Sean, for being with us. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon
Sornson. We want to thank our sponsors, David and Veron. We want to thank our sponsors David and Verla Soronson and of course we want to remember our founder,
the late Steve Soronson. We hope you'll join us next week. We have another episode,
another New Testament episode of Follow Him. Today's transcripts, show notes and additional
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