Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 4; Luke 4-5 Part 1 • Dr. Jan Martin • Jan. 30 - Feb. 5
Episode Date: January 25, 2023How do you prepare for the Lord’s work? Dr. Jan Martin explores the preparations and temptations of Jesus, our divine nature, and Jesus’s declaration as the Messiah.Please rate and review the podc...ast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Apple 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: Cofounder, 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 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 a new episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I am your host, and I am here with my fisherman cohosts, John, by the way.
I'll take that one. Jesus is going to call a bunch of fishermen today, and aren't you a fisherman? Did I guess that right?
When I was a teenager, that was one of the things I love to do the most. I don't get out much anymore. We have a canoe that hangs in our garage. And guess what it does most of the time hanging our garage.
He says in the garage. It's got like Christmas presents in it.
This stuff from, we collect during the year. So it's a storage unit.
And I think you wrote a book on fishing, didn't you?
I did. Observations of a real man. Is that right?
Real. Yeah. See that little play on words there.
Yeah, you can tell I am a John by the way fan. Always have been.
Your taste will improve.
John, we are going to be studying quite a bit of the Savior's early ministry today.
And we needed a Bible expert and we have one who is joining us today.
Well, we've had Dr. Jan Martin before. We're so glad to have her back and let me give you a brief bio.
She was raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico, home of the New Mexico bowl, Goku Gers.
And hall of the Utah, where I am right now, yay, and graduated from Skyline, Go Eagles.
She served a mission for the church
in Richmond, Virginia. Mary T. Jared Martin, she has a bachelor's degree from BYU in physical
education, and a minor in German teaching, master's degree in exercise physiology from BYU
and early modern history from the University of York in the United Kingdom. How cool is
this? Now, here's my favorite. The PhD from the University of York in the United Kingdom. How cool is this? Now, here's my favorite.
The PhD from the University of York
of 16th century English Bible translation
with a focus on the early English reformers.
Her research interests include
the early English translations of the Bible
and early English reformers,
such as William Tindale, Myers Coverdale,
and John Frith. King James translation
of the Bible is one of her interests and the development of language of English theology.
The Religious Studies Center, sometimes Hank, we mentioned the RSC. They have a website,
you can go see some of their publications, but she wrote an article about the King James translation of the New Testament in a New Testament history culture and society
book that was edited by Lincoln Blumel who we've also had on the program. It just another great scholar and
I'm so curious about the insights we can get from the King James Bible because I just think it's beautiful and we were talking before we
Bible because I just think it's beautiful and we were talking before we you know started recording just about the
Beautiful language of the King James Bible and so I'm so glad to have somebody who is an expert in that area So thank you, Dr. Martin for joining us today. You're welcome. It was nice to be here again. It's fun
Yeah, Jan Martin is a friend of follow him. We love having Dr. Martin with us
Forgive me Jan, but we have so much
to cover here. Let's jump right in. We don't want to shortchange any of this. The Comfo
O'Mee manual has us in Matthew 4 and Luke 4 and 5. Where do you want to start?
I just thought we'd start in Matthew 4. That's probably the most well-known version of
the temptations. I think most people read it from Matthew, not so much from Luke, but we can start there.
And then there's so much good stuff in Luke.
So we certainly won't leave that out.
There's a lot.
They've really packed this one in.
I really feel for a gospel doctrine teacher
or seminary teacher this week who's going,
oh my goodness, how do I do all of this?
Yeah, I think one of the challenges teachers have
is not, what do I teach, but what do I leave out?
There's too much good stuff here.
Can we go back to two hour Sunday school now?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Just for this week.
This is gonna be a fun week.
I'm excited to kick off the Savior's Ministry here, Jan.
Yeah.
I mean, he's just been baptized
and I'm sure you've had some fun with that.
And that's the backdrop is his baptism. And then the scriptures don't always give us a good look at
the time in between events. But this is going into the wilderness seems to follow quite quickly
on the heels of his baptism. So we've got to look at that baptism as the backdrop. Also over in Luke, even though we don't
look at this chapter in Luke 3, 23, it gives us that important information that Jesus is about
30 years of age. This kind of is that reference to that legal age of maturity in Jewish society.
It's also the age at which those who were Aronic priests completed their five-year
apprentice.
And they had this apprentice-like preparation for the temple, their service in the temple.
So this 30-year-old thing is a big deal.
And for Jesus to go out into the wilderness at that age and to get things going, his ministry
starting.
And that's official.
It's important.
Yeah, that's really cool.
Well, let's jump right in.
Matthew chapter four and let's take it verse by verse and see what we want to do here, Jan. I'm excited.
Yeah. Well, obviously, as Latter-day Saints were blessed to have Joseph Smith translation and his
translations play a really significant role in the temptations. You kind of get some wrong ideas
without them. If you read chapter 4 verse 1,
that Jesus was led up of the Spirit into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil. That gives
you some really wrong ideas about the purpose of the Holy Ghost. So, you know, to have Joseph Smith
coming in and prophetically saying, no, he was led up of the spirit to be with God in the wilderness.
That's a significant difference. We need to utilize the JST all the way through here to make sure
we're not getting some wrong ideas about what's going on. So that's the first thing. I just
recommend to anyone be watching your footnotes, be marking those footnotes so that you can correct some of those interesting misconceptions
and what we've got with the biblical text.
Somebody gave me that advice long ago
to go through and mark all the JSTs in a yellow
and it's been really helpful.
I'm glad whoever long ago told me to do that, it's worked.
It's been good to be able to say,
oh, why, oh, there's a yellow marking again.
Oh, I'm gonna go check it out.
Yeah, it's important to understand
that the Holy Ghost has many roles,
but one of them is to testify of God.
But he sanctifies, he brings us to God, the Holy Ghost.
So that's really important that Joseph makes that change,
that Jesus is going into the wilderness to be with God.
And that's what the Holy Ghost does for all of us.
It leads us to higher spiritual environments.
It helps us, we sanctify, it helps us elevate.
And so you see that important thing right off the bat
with Jesus' ministry, before he even starts anything.
He's being raised, he's being elevated,
he's coming close to God.
So I just think that's really important.
Yeah, I think that's pretty crucial change.
Interesting that right after his baptism, he's going into the wilderness to be with God,
to maybe solidify this experience that he's had,
to take time to really connect with God after his baptism.
I think that's crucial.
Sometimes we have these wonderful spiritual experiences
and then we kind of just go back to our life. And something that I was reading from
one of our colleagues, Andrew Skinner, that I thought was just a really important idea. And he's
saying that this moment going into the wilderness, he says is foreshadowing, obviously the millennium.
So when Christ comes back and kind of creates this higher environment, the
earth is going to be raised back to its parodicycle state at the second coming. He kind of just
says, this is kind of an interesting idea that Jesus is going into the presence of God
in this sojourn in the wilderness and just be thinking about the millennium that's coming
and the Garden of Eden that was there before.
So I loved that. I loved that he made that connection with where is Jesus going and he's really going
in here to be with his father. And then he's just gotten the gift of the Holy Ghost
with his baptism just like the rest of us. We all get the gift of the Holy Ghost in the same way.
And even Jesus needs to get the gift of the Holy Ghost. And we sometimes overlook that because he's the son of God. But his baptism
puts him into the kingdom of God, then gives him access to the gift of the Holy Ghost. So you kind
of have this really beautiful idea of the Godhead communing together in the wilderness. So wow,
verse one is just so rich with spiritual meaning when you stop and think about who's
there and what they're doing.
There's another thing I wanted to mention that our friend and colleague Bob Millett has
talked about.
I think he calls them high mountain low valley contrasts that right after this, almost
the offene, I get the whole Godhead, this is my beloved son and whom I'm well pleased
and the spirit of God descending like a dove
right after that
here comes Satan and
He kind of uses that as an idea of when you have a significant spiritual experience in your life
Expect that somebody's gonna try and come and take it away put a spin on it in a similar example
And there's probably odds, but just one more, Moses chapter one.
And then right afterwards, Satan comes to try to poison it
to take it away.
Well, I've thought, wow, high mountain low valley experiences
right after this baptism, here comes the tempter.
And we should be prepared for something like that.
Yeah, and you can use Joseph Smith's first vision example.
There's that pattern is in the scriptures
and it clearly is taught multiple times.
I think it's Elder Holland who talks about that.
I think in his talk that was given at BYU devotional
about cast not a way there for that confidence,
he talks about that all the way through as well
that we can expect Satan to be coming
and trying to twist and undermine
our powerful spiritual experiences, that we need to be firm and be confident in those.
Yeah. Yeah. I have a quote from that talk, actually, Jan. Great.
We're all on the same page here, you guys. Yeah. This is Elder Holland, and you've got the talk
right on. Cast not not therefore away your confidence.
I wish to encourage every one of you today regarding opposition that so often comes after
enlightened decisions have been made. After moments of revelation and conviction have given
us a peace and an assurance, we thought we would never lose. In his letter to the Hebrews,
the Apostle Paul was trying to encourage new members who had just joined the church who undoubtedly
had had spiritual experiences and received the pure testimony of light only to discover that not only had their troubles not ended, but some of them had only begun.
He says, Paul pled with those new members about the way present hinkley is pleading with new members today. This talk was given back in 1999. Back to the quote, the reminders that we cannot sign on for a
moment of such internal significance and everlasting consequence without knowing it will be a fight,
a good fight and a winning fight, but a fight nevertheless. Paul said to those who thought a new
testimony, a personal conversion or spiritual baptismal experience would put them beyond trouble,
call to remembrance the former days in which after you were eliminated,
you endured a great fight of afflictions.
And you're right, the rest of the talk he goes on to talk about.
Satan shows up just after these experiences trying to take them away.
I was thinking too of right after the sign of Sammy the Lamanite,
the signs that were given it says, and there
were liings sent forth. So the spin machine just right away. And I think President Iring
talks about kind of a purpose of keeping a journalist to document the hand of God in your
life and write those down so that when those times come, you can go back to your journal
and say, no, that really did happen. I really did feel that and don't let Satan change it or recolor it or something.
Yeah.
He's going to try to do that.
I love the patterns in the scriptures that show that he does that repeatedly.
He doesn't just do it with Jesus or with Moses or with Joseph.
He does that.
And so we need to be prepared.
And this is a good place to be prepared.
In light of that, then when you look at verse two, that Jesus
had fasted this 40 days and 40 nights. I just want to talk about this concept of 40 days
and nights in the scriptures. It's in there a lot. Then the old and new testament, I think
somebody had counted it to be 159 times, you see, just 40. And then the 40 days and 40
nights appears as well. I just want to give us some reminders of how often it's there.
So Genesis 7, you've got the time the rain fell during the arc.
You get Exodus 34 with Moses on the top of Mount Sinai receiving the law.
You get Numbers 13 with Moses sending scouts into the Promised Land. They're gone the 40 days.
You have Samuel with Goliath
taunting the people of Israel for 40 days before David goes out there. And so it's on and on
this 40 days and 40 nights. You have Elijah who fled from Queen Jezebel and took the trip to Mount
Horib. 40 days, you have Jonah, his prophecy to the Ninevites. It's coming in 40 days, and then you have Matthew here with this.
It's just interesting to think about this concept of 40.
I've kind of looked into what scholars have said about that,
and there's some controversy and disagreement,
but some have said that in Hebrew,
this represents a very long time,
and that we shouldn't just take it literally,
which is interesting to think about.
But other people have said that it symbolically represents things like repentance, newness,
preparation, self-examination, transformation.
And in all of those stories, I've just kind of talked about, you see those things happening
there.
So then you hit Jesus and you start thinking about 40 days and 40 nights. What is this really teaching me?
And it's about this self-examination transformation task fulfillment, nourishment, growth,
fulfillment, and a new generation of a new life. Jesus is about to embark on a new life.
He's gonna become out in the public and he's to be doing things he hasn't really been doing.
We need to think about this fasting and what it does for us as we enter into new periods of our lives or new challenges
or want to change something so that really helps us see what the symbolism might be with this 40 days
and not just read it as 40 days. There's more to it here.
I love that. I was thinking of the children of Israel coming through the Red
Sea and then being in the wilderness for 40 years. And here Jesus has just come
out of the water and he goes to the wilderness. They're wondering if Matthew is
trying to connect us to Moses and the children of Israel. Absolutely. And that's
what Matthew does. That's one of his motives. But there's so much
symbolism here is what the Savior is doing and preparing for and how his own people he
was trying to prepare them from baptismal-like experience to entering a promised land and
what happens in between those two places. And so here's Jesus kind of having that experience. 40 days, 40 nights is really fun
connection to the Old Testament to all those stories of the past and then what's happening here with
preparing Jesus for a rough time. This is not going to be easy. His ministry is full of all sorts
of lovely experiences, but he's persecuted and threatened and accused and is going to end in
crucifixion, lust of repair force. It's just really nice to think about that and threatened and accused and is going to end in crucifixion, luster
prepare force.
It's just really nice to think about that and then to pause and think, how often do
I utilize fasting to assist me with the think of great importance to me?
I went and looked at General Conference talks that cite verse two just to see what leaders
of the past were saying about fasting.
And many of them are pointing out that what's going on here is Jesus gaining inner strength,
spiritual power. He's utilizing fasting so that his mortal body might be subjected to his divine
spirit. And you just see this repeated thing that fasting helps us discipline our bodies
to do hard things.
And so when we're faced with some hard things
in our own lives, it's worth really thinking about,
how could I utilize fasting to help me be able
to discipline myself that may not want to do hard things
to be able to do hard things that my spirit wants me to do.
Boy, but none of us I think would be expected to fast for 40 days and 40 nights.
Who can actually do that except for someone like the Savior, whether that's literal or
not?
I have a hard time fasting for 40 minutes, but 40 days, 40 nights.
So I guess we would say that's because he was divine and he could do that.
Yeah, but something elder Delbert L. Stapley said many years ago, I mean he's
given this talk in 1951, but I loved his comment. He said, I know that Jesus's
spirit was humbled. His soul was sanctified. It gave him the moral strength and
the spiritual power to resist the temptations of Satan.
It also prepared him to go forward
and complete the great mission
that God has sent him on earth to perform.
So what a plug for thinking about fasting
and trying to get past the maybe starvation feeling
that we have once a month
and then really start using it
as a preparatory experience for difficulties and for things that we would like
to improve on or whatever.
So, wow, you just look at verses one and two
and we've had this really great thing
to think about with spirituality and preparation.
That's Alma 17, right?
That's Sunsimozaya had given themselves to
much fasting and prayer.
And they had the spirit of prophecy and the spirit of revelation, I think it says.
It's a good point, Hank, because when I teach Book of Mormon, that...
Oh, they had testimonies. They saw an angel. Oh, that's... That was just the beginning.
Other people saw angels too. That was just the beginning. But after that, what did they do?
Oh, they fasted and prayed. They studied the scriptures. They really prepared themselves and the angel was just the beginning, but after that, what did they do? Oh, they fasted and prayed. They studied the scriptures. They really prepared themselves. And the angel was just the beginning, but
their testimony didn't come from that. It came from what came afterwards.
I was teaching about the sons of Mosaic just a couple days ago. It was the last part
of my book, a Mormon class. But I had a student just mention here comes Aaron. And he's
been imprisoned and beaten and starvedved and he comes out of there
and then he goes to teach King the Monize father without batting an eyelid.
And the student just said, most people I know had they been in prison and beaten and starved
would just have given up and gone home and said, I'm done.
You have to stop and ask yourself, how do you forgive all of that and just mildly go on to your next area?
You should investigate her.
You've been transferred out of prison.
Yeah, but I would argue that this fasting and praying that they're doing is helping them
put aside that natural tendency that we all have to be offended, to be hurt, to be unforgiving,
to hold grudges, to give up and go home.
When you think about King the Monae's father, he was the one that kind of was overseeing those laws of
imprisoning those people. So then Aaron goes over to teach him and you're just like,
how do you even turn the other cheek like that? But as you said, they've been
doing a lot of praying and fasting. And that enables us to do hard things and
discipline ourselves and overcome that natural self.
I just think here's the savior, he's gonna have to put up
with a lot of unkind things coming his way.
It seems like the understatement of the millennium here
when it's like, he fasted for 40 days and 40 nights.
He was hungry.
Yeah, he could work.
He was hungry, yeah, of course.
Yeah, he was hungry.
Another cool comment that Elder Matthew Callie made about this moment moment too. Again, back in the 1950s was during this
fasting period, Jesus had been constantly aware that not only does the body of man need bread. Of course, you're going to be
constantly aware of that over that length of a time, but that the spirit of man needs God. Like what a beautiful
comment. What's Jesus doing out there is letting his spirit commune with God and
just get all that nourishment that comes from that kind of connection and
disciplining that body that needs bread, of course, being aware that it does to
have it later and have it when it's appropriate to have it. What a fantastic insight that is in fasting, you're actually getting nourishment where you
would think, no, I'm losing nourishment.
I'm starving.
Yeah, you're actually being nourished.
Yes.
And I think that helps us.
So easy is to just kind of become this habitual faster, the fast once a month, because
that's what you do,
and it loses its meaning.
But if you can take that focus from Elder Calli
and just think, what am I doing here?
I'm allowing my spirit to feed on God, which it needs.
And I'm focusing on that and not letting my body
and its needs detract from my spirit and its needs.
I think that's really powerful.
It's interesting that he went into the wilderness.
I've often wondered about Enis who goes hunting.
And for some people, being out in nature
is just you feel a little closer to God.
You go up in the mountains.
And I've wondered if Enis went out there
and suddenly lost all interest in hunting
and put down his bow or whatever he was using and started to pray.
Think about God, yeah.
Yeah, because he was out there in nature. I've always wondered that. We'll ask him one day, but...
One day, yeah.
So, as we jump into these particular temptations, there's some interesting things to be looking at,
but another comment that I came across as I was doing some of this background
research was from Elder Hubey Brown.
And it's worth just sharing this as we talk about the Savior's power, the ability, the
talents that He's got.
He says, with every gift of power that comes to us, there comes a temptation to dishonor
it, to abuse it.
I repeat, with every gift of power comes the temptation to abuse it.
So we're going to jump in and watch Jesus being tempted to abuse his power in particular ways,
but it's worth just starting off with that concept and thinking about the power that we all have,
our talents, our abilities, and this temptation to misuse those things,
and how we have to really guard against those temptations,
because they're really prevalent and really easy to do.
Man, you found some great thoughts here from the 1900s.
Oh, I know. It was fun to go back, and everyone could do this.
I just used the Scripture citation index, BYU uses.
But you can look up any verse.
It's scriptures.biu.edu.
And you can look up any verse you want
and go all the way back in time
and just see how different prophets have been interpreting it.
And there's some real fun gems doing that.
It was a fun exercise.
I want to take note of that,
that Jesus has these divine gifts,
and he is going to be now tempted to abuse them. We have
to all been given divine gifts. Don't be surprised when you are also tempted to abuse them.
That reminds me of section 121 about, as soon as you get a little authority, is they supposed
to have this now? No, don't abuse that. Yeah, that's what I was just going to say is,
you quote that, we've learned by sad experience that when you give people power, they immediately begin exercising unrighteous dominion.
How that looks can vary depending on the circumstance, but Satan is going to tempt Jesus to do
that exact thing with his power, abuse it in different ways.
So just be aware of that.
I don't know, Jan, if you want to move in, verse three, but the first word of the temptations
is if you're the son of God, which you want to move into verse three, but the first word of the temptations is if
if you're the son of God, which you just found out you were, yeah, yeah, it's a
prove it type of a thing. And again, it's that undermining of that previous spiritual experience that
God has come and testified that this is my beloved son and Jesus has been part of that and had
that confirmation. Now we're going to we're gonna undermine it with that if
Elder Sean Douglas gave a great talk just in conference
of last year, October 2021.
And he just made this really important comment
that I just wanted to share,
because it was really powerful.
He said Satan seeks to lead us to the breeding ground
of doubt. What an imagery, the breeding ground of doubt.
What an imagery, the breeding ground of doubt.
Now Jesus goes out into the wilderness
to find a breeding ground of communing with God.
And here comes Satan trying to turn that place
into the breeding ground of doubt.
And here it is in every single temptation
you can find the word if there. So people who are marking their scriptures, you'll see first three verse six verse nine. Yeah. Yeah. It's there.
You call that undermining previous spiritual experiences. My guess. That is.
That is applicable in so many different ways. It's the high mountain low valley thing again.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we love talking about some of the things Elder Holland has said.
But he also gave another great devotional of BYU about self-doubt and discouragement and things.
And he taught some really powerful principles about that.
And I'll just want to read one more thing that he said about this. We all have troubles, but the germ of discouragement, the self-doubt,
discouragement the Satan's trying to use, is not in the trouble.
It is in us, or to be more precise, I believe it is in Satan, the Prince of Darkness, the Father of Lies,
and he would have it be in us. You watch Satan, even with
the Son of God, trying to plant that self-despairagement, or who am I, and what am I doing, and can I do this,
and seeds of discouragement right in there? It's really damaging. It's worth watching the Savior
handle that. For anyone who struggles with self-doubt and discouragement.
This is a really great place to watch the Savior handling the attempt Satan's making to get him to start questioning himself and his power and what he came to do.
And there's some powerful lessons of how to handle self-doubt in here as we go through.
We can watch. Wow. And Jesus has this power if thou be the son of God, which he had just heard,
this is my beloved son and whom I am well pleased,
command these stones to be made bread.
So going right after a weakness, it says he was hungry.
John, you'll know that reference in the book of Mormon.
Let me attack the weakest city.
Right. That's what the Council of War, what's our weakest spot?
Let's fortify the city of Noah. I think it was because that's our weakest spot and
Reminds me of the Harold B. Lee someone that I think it was a
Group of missionaries somebody asked him what's the most important commandment for me and president Lee thought about her for a long time and said
Most important commandment for you is the one you're having the most trouble with, which is such a great answer. He's attacking first is hunger, then what is identity?
Yeah, he attacks his identity very first. Obviously, if that'll be the son of God. And then
he's going for the mortal flesh weakness. I know you're hungry. So let's jump in on your physical appetite.
And let's try to have you use your power to obtain food in an inappropriate manner when it's not
the right way to do this. Elder Holland, Elder Howard W. Hunter, they've all given good talks about
the inappropriate use of power in this moment to satisfy appetites of the flesh as a lesson for verse four.
So we know he has this power. There's plenty of examples of Jesus creating bread when it's
needed for thousands of people. And yet I can't find once in the New Testament where he ever
uses this power to feed himself. Yeah. And I think what self discipline you must have.
to feed himself. Yeah. And I think what self-discipline you must have. Yeah. I don't know how many people out there have heard Elder Holland's talk, the inconvenient Messiah from BYU devotional of 1982. But I
highly recommend that one as well, because he goes through all of this. He says here that the
temptation is not in the eating. Jesus has eaten before. He will soon eat again, and he must eat for the rest of his mortal life.
The temptation, at least the part I wish to focus on,
is to do it this way.
To get his bread, his physical satisfaction,
relief for his human appetite, the easy way
by abuse of power and without a willingness to wait
for the right time and the right way.
It is the temptation to be
the convenient Messiah. So what a great insight there. I'm hungry now. Why don't I have to go back to
town? I can just have it right here. And the savior refuses to do it that way. It does everything
the appropriate way. You were probably going to talk about this, Jan, so I hate to take it from you. But how often do we have similar type temptations
where it's who's in control, your body or your spirit?
The body wants one thing, the spirit wants another.
Not that the body is evil,
but it does come with natural appetites and passions.
And we have opportunities daily to decide who's in control here.
I wrote my scriptures that Jesus is spirit rules his flesh, his spirit is in charge of his body.
And you look at his answer. I mean, obviously his answer is a scripture quotation,
I think, from the book of Deuteronomy, is what we're looking at there.
But he uses scripture, but that's a whole thing in and of itself.
But you look at what the scripture says says is that man shall not live by
bread alone. And so there's Hank, there's that priority. When I'm tempted, what's
the priority is doing what I know to be right, the priority, or doing what I want
that's easy in the moment, the priority. And Jesus is clearly teaching the
spiritual priority takes precedence over the physical need.
And he's quite happy to wait to eat till it's appropriate and not let that spiritual focus be overtaken.
And you're right. There's a lesson there in answering temptation with Scripture.
Scriptures? Yes. Absolutely. And he does it on every temptation. You'll see him quoting Scripture. Scriptures, yes, absolutely. And he does it on every temptation.
You'll see him quoting Scripture.
They're all, I believe, from Deuteronomy as he goes through there.
But a couple of our general authorities,
Elder Packer, Elder Brock Bank from the 1970s,
they've all noticed that Jesus was using Scriptures.
But one thing I just wanted to share is Richard G. Scott.
He's been in a apostle that's had an enormous effect on me in some pretty important ways, but
he said, I suggest that you memorize scriptures to touch your heart and fill
your soul with understanding. When scriptures are used as the Lord has caused
them to be recorded, they have intrinsic power that is not communicated when they are paraphrased.
Sometimes when there is a significant need in my life, I review mentally scriptures that
have given me strength.
There is great solace, direction, and power that flows from the scriptures, especially
the words of the Lord.
So I heard that talk back.
He gave that talk in 1999 in general conference in
October. And that one really struck me personally. So I did a little
experiment to apply what he was teaching to take his advice and memorize some
favorite scriptures and start using them when I was struggling with personal
challenges. And I did it. I memorized probably six or seven of them.
And then when I was having these self-doubt moments or whatever,
I'd literally just say them in my head or say them out loud
if nobody was around.
And there is real power in the Word of God that isn't there
when I would just, well, I know there was this one scripture somewhere
that says this kind of a thing, which is better than nothing. But when I could actually quote God's words, word for
word, I felt and could see the power of Satan turning away from that. He doesn't like that. He doesn't
want to hear that. And that power really sends him fleeing. and I just wanted to testify. I've personally
done this in my own life and seen the power of having memorized scriptures to use at difficult
moments. And Jesus has taught us a principle of doing that all the way through here, but
I personally can can testify that it works. I've done it.
He gave a similar talk, Elder Scott in October of 2011.
And he says, the scriptures provide the strength of authority to our declarations when they are cited correctly.
They can become stalwart friends that are not limited by geography or the calendar.
And he goes on to say it again, great power can come from memorizing scripture.
To memorize a scripture is to forge a new friendship.
It is like discovering a new individual
who can help in a time of need,
give inspiration and comfort,
and be a source of motivation for needed change.
He goes on later in the talk,
the scriptures can form a foundation of support.
They can provide incredibly large resource
of a willing friends who can help us.
A memorized scripture becomes an enduring
friend that is not weakened with the passage of time.
And why is that? It's because we have such confidence that this is absolute truth. It's
not a story, it's not from a collection of quote, this is scripture. It just takes such
a high level that we rely on that is absolute truth. But I think
it has to be written on the fleshy tables of our hearts. Because as I've been thinking about our
last couple of podcasts in the Christmas story, when Herod went to his priest to ask where the Messiah
would be born, they knew their scriptures. But it wasn't written in their hearts, I guess.
The Messiah was right in their midst, and they didn't even know it. You did it in such a way,
and what Elder Scott's talking about is it becomes a part of us, part of our heart, and then it gives us
that added power. I've at least felt there's something about the actual words, so I'm glad Elder Scott
said that it's, don't paraphrase it. Use the actual words. There's another level of power and there isn't there.
Yeah, and if I can just be a little more personal, I think sometimes listeners appreciate seeing how we're living the gospel in our real lives.
So we're just real people. But my background has some unfortunate experiences in it, one of which was being seriously bullied as a child.
I unfortunately did not come across well to my peers and they made that very clear.
And for all of junior high, most of high school, I was a target of unkind things and rejection.
That leaves a scar. That's not a fun thing. And back in the 1980s, when I was going through that,
our society didn't really care about bullying like they do today. It wasn't a subject. It wasn't brought up.
And if you approached it with adults, which I did on a few occasions, their response was always,
well, that's just how kids are. Nobody ever intervened, nobody helped me, nobody cared about it. It just
went on for years. And you know, that leaves leaves a lot of damage. And so you can imagine when
people say unkind things to you, you start to believe those things. And when they reject you and
treat you as a social pariah, you come to kind of accept that that might be true.
And so part of my developmental journey was overcoming that.
And it is in that realm that I used scriptures.
It's in that place of healing that I had to start saying, are you going to continue believing
these things that all these horrible teenage kids in their developmental years,
people can be really unkind because they're looking for themselves and they can be really impatient
and unforgiving. But are you really going to let those people define you or are you going to let
God define you? And so at a key moment, listening to Elder Scott, that was the message to me from the Spirit was,
if you want to overcome this past,
why don't you embrace truth, like real truth,
like God's truth to help you reject things
that were not true, but that I had been told so many times
that you kind of come to believe them.
That is the personal element where I found the power of,
in the word of God, healing the wounded soul,
as Jacob talks about in the book of Mormon,
that the word of God can really heal.
And I use those scriptures to combat those past beliefs
and have changed.
Now, I don't have those old beliefs anymore.
The new beliefs are God's words about who I am and what I have to offer.
So there's personally real power in utilizing those scriptures and they do become your friends.
So I would recommend that to anyone who's struggling with any kind of hurt like that from the past.
And I'm sure I'm not the only one that's had that.
But I found incredibly powerful healing through the word of God becoming part of me.
Stephen Covey did something once
and he had a group, I believe, of young adults,
had them take a piece of paper,
fold it in half, make two columns.
And one column was what others think of me.
And my recollection is that he was surprised at how negative well they think I'm strange they think
I'm weird they think I'm unattractive they think I'm this they think I'm that okay next column
what does God think of me the worth of souls is great in the sight of God I mean all of these
things that you've been talking about Jen words, words of the prophets, and then he just said the coolest thing.
They're looking at what others say, what God says, and brother Kavie just said,
who are you going to believe? Yeah. Just brilliant. And that sounds like what you did,
or what were you inspired to do. Yes, because you carried that around for a long time, and you need
healing from that. And the question is, how do I heal from hurtful things people have done or said?
And for me, that was an answer through general conference from a prophet, some small, simple
thing that I could do.
In talking about that, it may sound like it was this instantaneous and miraculous healing
in the moment.
It wasn't.
It took many, many months of me practicing this,
of combating those habitual self-doubts,
and saying, no, I don't believe that.
I believe this.
And then I'd say it and recite it.
This is what I believe.
And after long enough, that actually became written
on my heart, that's actually what I believe now.
But it wasn't an instantaneous fix.
I had to make an effort. I had to do my part,
but as I was doing that, I could really feel the power of those words becoming and healing and fixing
the damage from from the past. So it was really powerful. Reminds me of President Nelson, you are a
child of God, you are a child of the covenant, you are a disciple of Christ,
and don't let go of those identities.
Yeah.
One other thing I'll offer to listeners too,
who are purking up and listening and saying,
hey, maybe that's something I could do.
I also incorporated memorizing statements
from my patriarchal blessing,
and from other priesthood blessings
I had received over the years and
written down. And so I didn't just use scripture, I used statements that God had made directly
to me through priesthood. And those were incredibly powerful too. They were scripture. And my
spiritual blessing parts of it and the compliments, the Lord paid me and some other compliments
he paid me later on through other blessings. Those were incorporated into my memorization and I used those too. There's real power in
having your patriarchal blessing and having other blessings and writing those
things down and cherishing them as we've talked about and making sure we
remember what the Lord has said to us and then using that to combat the false
things that Satan's going to throw
at us himself or through kindness of other people.
Dan, Jan, you're almost making me weak here.
I want you to turn to him and be like, you don't know who I'm going to be.
I'm going to be a King James scholar one day you guys.
That's right.
I am.
You have no idea.
Yeah.
I wrote a book years ago called What I Wish I'd Know When I Was Single.
In my Franklin planner, remember those days, I called it a Hope page.
I had scriptures.
I had quotations for my patriarchal blessing.
I got married a little later in life.
One of the verses that was burned into my heart that helped me so much was, it's easy
to remember, section 111, to remember section 111 verse 11,
111, 111. Therefore, be as wise as serpents and yet without sin and I, God talking, I will order
all things for your good as fast as you're able to receive them. That was my rock. He's got this
and I'm trying to order things and make it happen, but he's saying,
I got this, and I will judge when you're able to receive them and help me tremendously.
Sometimes I had to go to that Franklin page, and my blessing says this, my blessing says this,
and 1-11 verse 11 says this. That's a personal example of how knowing that scripture was a rock to
rely on. I used to take the ones I chose and that's what I'd start my scripture study out with
as I go through all of them and I'd say to myself, this is what I believe about myself or this is
what I want to believe about myself at the beginning. That's kind of where I was. I want to believe
believe about myself at the beginning, this kind of where I was. I want to believe this. And after a while, it was what I believed. And then anytime there was a low point during the day,
which happens, yeah, I could then go back and say, right, I've already gone through this
this morning. And I remember right where that is, nope, this is what I believe. And so much power
in making that choice or agencies and now involved in you choosing what you believe it by yourself.
But that word's coming from God.
Yeah, I love the practicality of this Hank and Jen. This is how we use scriptures. It's not interesting. You look at the temptation to use his power for
physical appetite in verse four. And then you look at verse five. And of course we have a JST there
that you absolutely have to have. It's not the devil taking Jesus to the holy city and putting him
on a temple. It's the spirit doing that. But Satan, of course, is going to come along and try and
twist that moment. But I found another really great comment from Elder Sterling W. Sill back from the 1960s about this moment
that goes along with what we're talking about with people who maybe don't feel that great about
themselves and are looking for a way to overcome that and actually believe the truth about ourselves. But anyway, he says, from the pinnacle of the temple, Satan said to Jesus, cast
myself down. And then Elder Sils says, we are all aware that there are powerful
influences in the world inviting us to look down. Then he says, it has been said
that one may not always look where he is going,
but he will always go where he is looking. If we merely look down long enough, many will
be sure to fall. I had been taught as a kid from my peers that I wasn't worth anything
and that I should always just look down and hang my head. And you know, that really happened
when I'd go into a room
where there were people, I'd always look at the floor,
I wouldn't look at anyone when I talk to them,
I always felt less than or not welcome or whatever.
And so you watch this, what Satan's doing here too,
of trying to get Christ's focus on worldly things,
but I think elder Sills comments help us
with this concept
of feeling bad about ourselves,
of just looking down.
And that's what Satan wants us to do,
is always look down, look down,
and never, never look up.
It's better to look up.
Yes.
And that's what the Holy Ghost will do.
That's what Jesus will do.
That's what God will do.
When they come into our lives,
they invite us to look up.
They invite us to look where they are and to come up,
where they are and they're inviting us to come up.
This pinnacle of the temple is a really fascinating moment.
Of course, so we're gonna tempt Jesus to jump off there
and misuse his power, but the concept of bringing myself down
and looking down and not remembering who I am is very real.
And I really
appreciate Elder Sill for kind of pointing that out. Can you repeat that again?
I'm sorry, I really want to write that down. I'll read that part. It has been said
that one may not always look where he is going but he will always go where he
is looking. If we merely look down long enough, many will be sure to fall. Wow, that's from April
1961, General Conference. What a beautiful segue into this next temptation we've been talking about
overcoming self-doubt. And here it is again with if and then look down and look at the wrong things.
And Jesus is having none of it. He just has none of it.
And his response is again, scripture, we're not going here. You're not tempting me with this.
Not shall not tempt the Lord thy God. And I doubt Jesus was like, let me look it up. Let me go
through my scrolls here. See if I can find it. He's got a memory. He knows it. Now one other thing I
just want to throw in here is another comment from Elder Holland.
He brings up this self-concepting into this temptation again and he says here that this
temptation is even more subtle than the first one.
It's a temptation of the spirit of a private hunger more real than the need for bread.
Would God save Jesus?
Would He? Why not get spiritual confirmation,
a loyal congregation, and an answer to this imp who heckles all with one appeal to God's power?
Right now, the easy way off the temple spire. But Jesus refuses. Elder Holland then goes on to say
refuses. Elder Hullin then goes on to say that he personally, he says, I've had to struggle to know my standing before God. As a teenager, I found out hard to pray and harder to fast.
His mission was not easy. I struggled as a student to find out that I had to struggle afterwards
to, in this present assignment as an apostle, I have wept in egged for guidance. He talks about this need we have to be known of God and to be recognized by God.
And then he says here, it is ordained that we come to know our worth as children of God
without something as dramatic as a leap from the pinnacle of the temple.
All but a prophetic few must go about God's work
in very quiet, very unspeakable ways.
And as you labor to know him and to know that he knows you,
as you invest your time and your convenience
in quiet, unassuming service, you will indeed find
that he shall give his angels charge concerning me.
And in their hands hands they shall bear the
up. It may not come quickly, it probably won't come quickly, but there's
purpose in the time it takes. Cherish your spiritual burdens because God will
converse with you through them. And you just have to love that. That's the
journey I've made is to come to know that God knows me and that I know him and that he
loves me and that I'm of worth. And boy, is it taken some time, but I've done it through a very
similar process of what you're reading here in Matthew of using the word of God coming to know the
word of God and having that witness that I am indeed valuable through that word of God. And you watch Jesus just brilliantly doing this for us
so we can learn to do it too.
I wonder what kind of following he could get to
if he just did his magic tricks.
Jump off the temple, everyone will follow you.
And you guys have probably both been there.
That would be the spot if that's the Southwest corner
of the temple.
That's a long ways.
There's a lot of people around.
You'd have a big audience.
That would be quite spectacular.
You could see why he would choose that spot.
That's not why he wants followers.
We're going to learn that in John VI that when people come just for the free food, he says
that's not why I want you here. You came because you were
filled. I could give you bread. And some of us really, really desire that. We just want people
to like us. We want people to love us. We want the end to that aching on the inside. And
some of us will do anything to get it, even drop our standards or drop what we believe. And you see those messages here that Jesus
is gonna have followers, definitely gonna have them,
but not this way.
And they aren't real followers
if they're following him for the free food.
He wants ones who love him and follow him
for who he is and when he's teaching.
And later on, and that same thing
is when some walk no more with him in that same chapter,
and will you also go away? You were following me for the wrong reason. Well, this is a hard doctrine,
so we're leaving. Exactly. And when Herod wants to see a miracle, he won't do it.
Yes, some really great stuff there for people and their identity and for how they feel loved,
and how the Savior is working with those temptations himself. And I just have really found
personal inspiration and help in overcoming my challenges with that and sharing
that, hoping to touch anyone out there who feels that way too, who've had that
experience of being rejected. It's tough. And don't be surprised when the adversary wants you to question your worth.
Yeah, that's his strategy.
Go to move.
Is question your worth as a son of God, as a daughter of God.
Don't be shocked when that comes and look how the Savior responds.
And look at these phrases which you've brought to light for me, Jen, in verse six and verse nine,
cast thyself down, fall down. It's all the down, down, down stuff. That's what he wants us to do.
Yeah, and you watch this progression, like it's interesting that the temptation for the bread just
happens on earth. You're on a normal, you know, you're out in the wilderness somewhere. Then you're
led by the spirit to a higher plane, which will be the pinnacle of the temple, which is what the Spirit does. He takes you up higher. And next, we're going to
go up to the mountain, and we're going to even go higher than the pinnacle of the temple. So as we
follow the Holy Ghost, we're always going to be led up. And as we saw, Satan wants you to come
down. There's those again, the pinnacles and the valleys being taught here. But as I come into
Christ, he's going to lead me upward. And any of those horrible negative thoughts I'm having
that bring me down are not coming from God. God does not talk to his children like that.
And that's a helpful thing to remember. So good. And it's come into Christ
and be perfected in him. It's not be perfect before you come.
Exactly.
We get the sequence mixed up.
It's a come as you are invitation,
wherever you are, just come as you are
and be perfected in Him.
And then we'll work together
and I'll help you become something even more.
But Satan gets us to mix that sequence up.
Yeah, and anytime we see that happening in our mind,
that's a really good clue to say,
this is not of God.
God doesn't work this way.
You know, this negativity, no, he doesn't do these things.
He doesn't say these things.
He doesn't feel this way about me.
And I can immediately identify
Satan's influence when I feel those things.
That's not coming from God.
Yeah, I just thought it was so cool.
And we looked at the story of Jonah.
When Jonah was asked to go to Nineveh,
he went down to Japa and went down into a ship
and then went down into the water.
And then the fish vomited him up on the land
and he went up to Nineveh.
And when we're going away from God,
we're down, down, down, where we're going toward God,
we're up, up, up.
So just, I'm a fan of prepositions.
Yeah, it's cool.
But those directions, they matter where we're headed
and Satan always leads us down.
God will always lead us up.
And we can judge what we're doing and choosing very easily
if we just stop and look, I'm where am I going?
Downer up, okay.
One may not always look where he is going, but he will always go where he is looking.
Yeah, such a great thing. So then we hit the mountain, we hit this temptation of the power,
have all these kingdoms, have all this stuff, which Jesus already is going to have in the future
anyway. That's what's so exciting. So interesting about this temptation. And the other interesting thing about it is that Satan doesn't actually own any of these
things. He can't actually give any of these things, but he pretends to be able to give them.
That's what he does to us. He offers things that he pretends he has the power to give when in reality
he doesn't have that power. And you won't end up with it if you follow Satan.
We got to be careful of being able to discern with Satan's lies and promises. There's always something dishonest in everything that he offers.
It reminds me of what is it? Second Nephi 28. Thus the devil cheated their souls. He totally cheats.
You couldn't have given me that anyway. He's the father of all lies, at least for our planet anyway.
And anytime he's saying, this is what you're gonna get,
you just have to know that there's something
twisted and evil and lying about it.
Jesus is gonna have all these kingdoms
and have all these things, but he'll have them later on
and he'll have them in the appropriate way,
and he's not abusing his power to get them.
If you read the book of Mormon,
there's Gideon High promising Lakones.
If you yield yourselves up onto us and unite with us
and become acquainted with our secret works,
we'll just be best buds.
You will become our brethren and our partners
of all our substance.
There's these false promises.
It reminds me of, I will give you all of these
things which I he can't give. No, and I just wanted to share a fun little comment because I love
CS Lewis's Screwtaped Letters. I love reading that book. It's really inspiring. One comment that he
makes in there when Screwtapes talking to his nephew. He says the belief of ignorant humans is
that there is no hope of getting rid of us except by yielding.
That's one of the things Satan offers is, well, it just give in, just capitulate, and then you
can be part of my little group, but there is no group. There's no society of love and support
from Satan. There's nothing to offer there, but you think you're going to have it if you're just yield, but yielding just ends up
having you be alone. And once again, he answers with scripture. scripture.
yeah. Right. It just his friends come to his aid every time as Elder Scott would say,
thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and him only shout thou serve. Yes. Now then we move to verse
11 that the devil leave with him. For now,
obviously Satan isn't going to be permanently gone. He'll be back to Tim Tim later.
But one of the things that I discovered is I was doing some research for this. And I really
thought this was so powerful to share. We've got two of our previous leaders of the church talking about resisting temptation until it no longer is
a temptation. Elder G. Smith said, as you resist Satan, you have power over him and he loses
his power over you. And to that degree, he is bound. So he gives some examples. He says,
if you've learned to pay tithing until it is no burden or real temptation anymore,
then to that extent you have bound Satan.
The same is true in keeping the word of wisdom
or living love chastity or other laws of the gospel.
Satan then becomes powerless to you in that field.
Then he says, step by step, you may bind Satan now.
You don't have to wait for the millennial reign, which I thought was
really powerful. And then, just a few years later, you have Spencer W. Kimball teaching the
similar idea. And he says, it should be our desire and design to strive to bind Satan in our lives.
And then this is one of my very favorite quotes. I've actually memorized it because it was so powerful.
He said, when Satan is bound in a single home, when Satan is bound in a single life, the millennium has already begun in that home in that life.
So what do you see here? You know, Jesus bound Satan every time he resists the temptation and off he goes
into his ministry, at least for this point, having bound Satan and Satan will continue to be bound
for Christ. But what a motive for us as we resist Satan. This actually is happening to us,
and maybe we never thought about it this way, but I love what these leaders have taught.
And to get to the point with the laws of God
that we want to do them, and Satan can't actually tempt us through them anymore, because we know them,
we love them, we see the value of living them. And then as we've done that, Satan literally has no
power over us in those areas anymore, and he is bound. And the Millennium for us can start in
those areas right now.
And what a beautiful thing to be thinking about.
John, you brought up Stephen Covey earlier.
I have to paraphrase here, but the idea is that Jesus goes through these temptations and
is able to then go public.
And he talks about this private victory coming before the public victory on that he's he's able to then go out and
have this incredible ministry because he overcame as Gen. W. A. he bound Satan in his life.
Listen to this for Melder Maxwell. How is it that you and I do not see that while initially
we are stronger and that temptations weaker, dalliance, I think
the only time I've ever heard that word in my life, be dallying and something, right?
While initially we are stronger and the temptations weaker, dalliance turns things upside down,
you entertain it, you think about it, and all of a sudden the temptation becomes stronger
than our power to resist. April 89, general
conference. Yeah, I don't remember who it was because I've read lots of quotes over the last few
weeks, I'm trying for this, but somebody else said that. He said the problem is that you watch
Jesus and he never once entertains any of these temptations. He doesn't mull over them. He doesn't,
I think the word the person used to his process, he doesn't process them. He just rejects them and he doesn't
entertain them at all. He doesn't dally with them. And that's a powerful teaching
as well for us is, of course, we're going to have temptations. Of course, we're
going to have thoughts come in from somewhere, but we don't need to entertain
them. We don't need to keep thinking about them. We can just reject them, move on.
Good thing that only took us an hour.
I know.
To get through the temptation, Jan,
you hit so many home runs.
Have you ever seen Steph Curry play basketball?
Because you are just draining everything.
This is such good stuff.
You just could spend so much time in here
learning from the Savior.
It's great. And we did. We spent an hour. Yeah, but yeah. So touched by this.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you