Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 4; Luke 4-5 Part 2 • Dr. Jan Martin • Jan. 30 - Feb. 5
Episode Date: January 25, 2023Dr. Jan Martin continues to examine the invitation Jesus Christ gives every disciple to leave their previous lives behind to follow Him.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: 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Jan Martin, Matthew chapter 4 and Luke chapters 4 and 5.
Let's jump over to Luke chapter 4 just so we can have a look. We've already looked at the temptations.
You'll see those at the beginning of Luke, but when he comes out of the temptations, we have this return.
You look at verse 14 of Luke chapter 4's where we'll pick it up. And Jesus returns in the
power of the Spirit. But that was the whole point he went into the wilderness was to come out with
this crested spiritual power. And he does. He's going to go public now. He's going to go announce
his ministry officially to people now. And he does it from his hometown. So he goes back to Nazareth where he brought up. And I love
verse 16 where he goes and does something and in this phrase, as his custom was, he did this all the
time. Yeah, he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath day, first of all, so that tells you something about
his obedience to the laws of things of going to where he needs to be, when he needs to be there, and
then he stood up for to read. Now, whether his custom was to go there and read every time
he went there, I don't know, but very possibly he was someone who would be handed a scroll.
That's what you do in their synagogue. If you can read it, you're handed a scroll, and
you stand up and read it and then explain it to the group. And so it sounds like he maybe did that frequently.
Kind of like a gospel doctrine slash fast and testimony meeting together.
Yeah.
They seem to at least be comfortable enough within being there.
First of all, and then handing him scrolls to read.
So maybe he's been reading them in the past.
And this is not his first time reading, but he stands up to read.
And then we get this book from the prophet Isaiah. For those of you wondering about the word is
sious in verse 17, that is the Greek version of Isaiah's name. So you're not confused like
who's this prophet isi as well. Prophet Isaiah. Any opens up the scroll. We have scrolls.
And this is one of the fun things about reading a KJV New Testament for example
They often anglicize
Concepts opening the book. They don't have books in those days. They have scrolls
And so you just need to be aware he's got a scroll
Not a book that we're familiar with and he unrolls the scroll and we'll be reading that
Allowed and then we have these powerful verses of Isaiah to deal
with. So, here we are. That's interesting with the KJV. They're like, he unrolled the scroll.
Well, he opened a book. And you'll see that a lot in the KJV Bible all the way through the Old
Testament, New Testament. They'll take words that English people are more comfortable with and
put them in there instead of using a more literal translation
But that should be a scroll. I love when the book of Mormon says he unfolded the scriptures like
We'll save that for next year. Yes, what is that? That can possibly mean
Yeah
We have a lot to think about here with Jesus standing up to read standing up to teach
He doesn't have any official credentials as far as the typical education system We have a lot to think about here with Jesus standing up to read, standing up to teach.
He doesn't have any official credentials as far as the typical education system goes
for doing what he's doing.
But people obviously are touched by the way that he teaches, the power that he teaches,
and then he causes a ruckus right here with this verse.
Luke, it's quick to point out this is where he was brought up.
This is his hometown. Yeah. As he announces, you where he was brought up. This is his hometown.
Yeah. As he announces, you know, the spirit of the Lord is upon me. He's anointed me to preach
the gospel to the poor. He sent me to heal the broken hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives.
These verses from what I understand from Old Testament scholars that people in that day
interpreted them as millennial, that these verses are gonna take place
when the Messiah comes later.
So they're familiar with them, they recognize them,
but to have somebody saying,
this is now, and this is about me,
you can see why that would be controversial,
cause a bit of a ruckus,
because the typical understanding of these is millennial,
not now, and to have them
applied to somebody that's standing in front of them would be unusual. And then their response
is not this Joseph's son in verse 22. Like, we know this guy, we grew up with this guy, how can he
possibly apply these verses in this way to himself. You can just imagine the whisperings
and the offended feelings going on
with verses that they understand in a particular way.
When we did Isaiah 61,
I think I mentioned this before,
but I love to think of this as,
well, I ask my students,
choose your favorite Old Testament verse
that you think perfectly describes the Savior
and that sends them on a search.
But then I'm like, we don't need to choose it. Jesus chose the one. that you think perfectly describes the Savior and that sends them on a search.
But then I'm like, we don't need to choose it.
Jesus chose the one.
And he used this verse to describe his mission
and look at what he says.
The Spirit of the Lord is upon me.
He has anointed me to get those commandment breakers
to punish those people, to tell them they're all disobedient.
That's right.
The way we sometimes look,
actually, I came to preach the gospel to the poor, to heal the broken hearted, like you've talked
about so beautifully, Jen today, I came to heal broken hearts. I came to preach deliverance
to the captives, recovering of sight to the blind, set at liberty, them that are bruised, the manual this week asks us,
do you know anyone who is broken-hearted
or who needs to be set at liberty,
to them that are bruised, to have Jesus choose the verse,
to have it be about healing broken hearts,
is another window into how he sees his mission, I think.
I've come to heal people and to bless people,
and it wasn't a big obedience commandments thing, I think I've come to heal people and to bless people and
It wasn't a big obedience commandments thing which are all important
But how does he characterize it? He chose the verse that's a question. I've always had maybe you know
Jan and Hank but Did they hand in the scroll or did he say give me that one did Jesus say give me the Isaiah scroll?
Yeah, now you look at verse 17
It doesn't tell you they're delivering him this scroll,
but there's no information at all about how.
What if he asked for it?
Yeah, did he ask for it or did someone just bring it?
Or maybe Jesus was so good no matter what scroll they had me.
I know where I'm going to go.
He could just do it.
Yeah, but they handed in this one and I just love that you want to know how the Savior
Described his mission announced who he was well that's Isaiah 61 and it's about healing broken hearts
I think it's awesome. Yeah, and you look at verse 21 how how bold he is this day. Yeah, this scripture fulfilled in your ears
like what like right now today? You're taking this millennial scripture and you're moving it up like really
That's the mic drop moment, isn't it?
Yes.
And I love verse 22 because after he says that, and all bear him witness and wondered at the gracious words which proceeded out of his mouth.
So they're feeling the spirit of it, they're seeing the light of it, there's something different about this claim,
but they're having a hard time getting their head around it.
It's not this Joseph's son.
Okay, let's have this conversation.
As the interaction goes on, you look at verse 23 and he starts into trying
to help them understand kind of who he is and what's going on here.
So I'd be interested in what you guys make of that conversation as he starts looking at
people who are not Israelite and the miracles that have happened for non-Israelite and
how you connect that to this conversation about his identity.
I have some ideas obviously, but it's fun to just talk about it.
Yeah, I've been impressed that he says,
I know what you're going to say.
You're going to say, you're going to say,
you've heard of some miracles being done.
Do some miracles.
And he says, it's almost like you have to believe first.
Don't you remember these stories from the Old Testament?
Don't you remember the story of Elijah
and the story of Elijah and how they were rejected by Israel, their own people, but accepted by Gentiles,
accepted by people you wouldn't think who would accept them.
Yeah, and you have name in the Syrian being mentioned as being healed of his leprosy.
And I just find it really fascinating is they're struggling to get past what they think they know about Jesus
What he's doing here to kind of help them a little bit
Find it fascinating to me. They're gonna say, okay, do a miracle do a miracle then if you're really who you are
And it's like that's not how it works
Yeah, and then you look at 28 after this conversation here comes all the anger
Like verse 22, they're feeling the graciousness and recognizing the spirit.
And then he does kind of this, I'm not going to do what you wanting me to do.
And here's my reasons.
And now the anger comes.
And then they try and take his life.
How dare you compare us to those ancient Israelites who rejected prophets, let's reject him.
Yeah.
You can't be you because you're from just down the street and you're Joseph's son.
And my students have asked me, Hey, wait a minute.
I thought that the reason they took Jesus to Pilate was because they couldn't do capital
punishment. I remember I asked one of my professors, he was because they couldn't do capital punishment.
I remember I asked one of my professors, he was Kelly Ogden, wait a minute, I thought
they couldn't do that.
And he said, well, he said, this is more like mob behavior in verse 20.
This is mob behavior.
Yeah.
And so that's different thing than an official state capital punishment.
So they just wanted to all of them throw him off the brow of the hill.
They're just mad.
You know, this is a rage moment, isn't it?
A mob mentality of, you've made me angry.
But again, as we are talking about in the temptations, notice this.
They want to cast him down.
They take him to this point up on a hill and then they're going to bring him down.
So again, the spirit of contention, the spirit of anger, the spirit of rejection, and it always leads to going down. So again, this spirit of contention, the spirit of anger, the spirit of rejection,
and it always leads to going down. It doesn't make things better. If they just stopped and
started recognizing what spirit was leading the show here, then they could have said, wait
a second, we're not actually being filled with a happy spirit.
This is, he's right in there, missed, and they don't get it. He's right there in front of him. Isaiah says that the
Savior would be a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. This has to be one of those moments where his own
hometown
Decides they'd rather have him dead than be taught by him. It says he passing through the midst of them went his way
But I wonder if his head was down.
That didn't go well.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But as soon as he leaves there, verse 31 and goes down to Perneum, then all.
And then we have a very book of Mormon sounding type verse that they were astonished at his doctrine.
His word was with power.
Which again is what he was in the wilderness for. And here he comes out and you see him being
able to with power and authority teach, unlike anyone else. This is one of the common themes through
the gospels. His people are just repeatedly astonished at his way of teaching, the power of
his teaching that he's got. This authority that their other scribes that they're used to hearing from don't have and clearly they're recognizing something, even if they can't always figure
out what?
When somebody says, astonished at his doctrine, his word with, is that a feeling?
Because I think we felt that before, somebody's teaching and we go, whoa, is it a feeling,
is it a spirit that carries it to them?
Is it both?
I guess it's all of that
because I'm sure there were other people
who could teach scriptures and stuff,
but when Jesus taught, it was different.
Sounds like he had a way with it, yeah.
Yeah, where does it say elsewhere?
He taught with authority and not as the scribes
and then the JST says,
he taught with authority from God
and not with authority from the scribes and it makes it even better
He taught with authority from God
So I was I was again doing some background research on teaching credentials and what this means for Jesus because he doesn't come through the typical
scribal
Education process the Jews have several levels of education that you can go through and And if you're going to become a rabbi or a teacher or a scribe like this,
you follow someone who's well known for that.
You become a disciple, you sit there in their school for years and years.
And then when you come out of it, everybody knows who you have followed.
Like when you learn about Saul, he says, I follow Gamaliel.
Who's your rabbi?
And Jesus doesn't have any of that.
So I was looking just into some of that
and found a great article by Matt Richardson
on the Religious Studies website and you can find it.
But the title of the article is Jesus,
the unorthodox teacher.
So if anybody wants to go and have a read of it,
it was pretty helpful.
But one thing he said was, what is astonishing
is not that Jesus was without proper credentials,
but that the people even cared.
Most teachers without proper training would be dismissed
without a second thought.
But this, uncredentialed teacher,
astonished the people to the point
that they not only recognized him as an outstanding teacher,
but they actually addressed him by the title teacher, and some even went so far as to call him a teacher
come from God. So that's in John 3. So as we're talking about this, clearly he doesn't have the
typical worldly credentials, but people are being touched to the point that they're carrying and interacting
and calling him a teacher anyway. Like, what does that say about what he's doing here?
Could you please display your degree so that we'll know? And I like that is it in John 7,
or where did you get this doctrine? And my doctrine is not mine. It's him that sent me.
Yeah. Yeah. Because that seems to be a common question.
Wait, wait, who did you study under? Where'd you get your degree from? Who's your rabbi?
We get those kind of questions today. Where'd you do your degrees? Where'd you come from?
But Jesus actually just is like, from God. From God? Where else would I get it from?
If you know who I am, where you think I'm getting this from. So is that an accredited school?
Yeah.
Exactly.
So as we pointed out, he's been rejected by his own people.
And one thing that I just wanted to mention is that that is sometimes the most painful
type of rejection that we have in this life is to be rejected by the people that are closest
to you and that should know you the best.
Sometimes the people that we know the best kind of limit what we can be and do.
Sometimes they don't want to let us be seen differently and you watch that profit.
Has no honor in his own country.
I can't get past your preconceived notions of me.
So I'm now going to go somewhere else where they don't know him from a child. They don't know him
from a teenager. And he has some really powerful experiences elsewhere because they aren't limiting
what Jesus can do by their preconceived understanding. That's kind of important to think about
for us when we're dealing with our own families and friends or people that are our families and friends and let's try and maybe not limit them to their past or
limit them to what we know about them. Yeah, especially when they get a calling or something
whoa they call really? Yeah, I know him or her. But isn't that wonderful? Look what the Lord can do
with an amuleck. Yeah, so then we had
over to Cumpernum. I think it's worth just helping people with Cumpernum if you aren't familiar.
This is up on the northwest shore of the Sea of Galilee. It's a fishing village from what I
understand. It had about 1500 inhabitants at the time. It's also located on the famous Roman road,
the Via Maris, the way of the sea.
You're going to have lots of people from different towns and nations coming through here.
You just have to kind of get the background for the population and the visitors and the tourists
and the travelers and different nations that will be coming through here because the road
linked Egypt with Syria and Mesopotamia.
So it's a big, long road and it's highly traveled.
It's Peter and Andrews home town as you'll find out. And then from what I have found,
there's more recorded miracles in Capernaum than any other town. You know, maybe because it's such a
a melting pot, they just have an ability to allow the spirit to work without restraining it or
something. But this is quite a place
where we have a lot of powerful things happening. And for anyone who wants to know,
Capernaum has been abandoned. It was abandoned in the 11th century. There's nothing there
but ruins today. But at one time, it seems to have been a bustling pass-through spot where you'd come
through as you're on your way somewhere. So good place for Jesus to be. Excellent. This is great. I'm excited to get to Luke chapter five,
where Jesus actually starts calling his apostles. Can we go into Luke five?
Yeah, let's do it. One of the things about Jesus that I appreciate as a teacher
is that he was willing to teach anyone, anywhere in any way.
So here's an example. He's not in a synagogue, he's not sitting comfortably,
somewhere. He's at the side of the lake and he gets out in a boat and he goes out there and he
thrusts out from the land and he sits out there and he teaches anyone who's willing to come and listen.
We have this beautiful example of teaching,
but then we moved to this interesting interaction
with Simon Peter calling him.
And the backstory is here that they've been fishing all night
and weren't able to get any kind of a catch.
And then we have this miraculous,
oh, just put your net in here.
And you got to love Simon for being willing to put the net in.
He does say that we didn't catch anything, but he does it anyway.
Sounds like they're all done for the day.
They were washing their nets.
They were putting everything away.
Yeah, they're coming in.
It's, yeah.
I saw Michael Wilcox re-enact this once that I thought was so funny because he was like
Simon answering said, Master, we've toiled all the night and have taken nothing.
Nevertheless, at Thy Word, he talks about the nevertheless, like you're looking at
the Savior.
Nevertheless, okay.
It's like, you're, who are you arguing with?
Yes.
Well, you have to wonder what the Savior's facial expression
was right there.
Because He's listening to this explanation.
We've toiled all night.
And you just wonder what body language is going on there
for Him to go,
nevertheless.
Sure, that Jesus is like,
I don't remember asking.
Yeah, but this big pause in there.
Okay, so I have a question though.
Why would they call him master?
Is this the first time they met?
Did they know him?
Now I did some looking into that word again
because that's a King James thing.
So the word that's under there in the Greek is
Dydascalos, which would be translated as teacher.
Now the interesting thing about the King James version
is mostly it uses the word master,
but most other modern translations
will use teacher or rabbi here.
Yes.
This is kind of a KJV thing,
and why would they be doing that?
Well, back in their culture,
they kind of have that social hierarchy,
they kind of have a way of using that word
master. That's a very inglessized viewpoint for the 16th century, 17th century. So that them,
but a normal modern translation, but either have teacher here or rabbi here. We just need to
remember what Peter's going after is this kind of links us to our conversation about why did they
see Jesus as a rabbi or a teacher
when he didn't have any credentials?
But by this point, they've seen him teach
and heard his doctrines at least enough
to be giving him that title.
Interesting, yeah.
They knew something different about him
enough to call him Master.
What was the great die?
Die, Daskelos, yeah, that's the word. But like I said, most of the other translations will either put teacher there or rabbi there. They don't use master KJV kind of keeps that to itself. But that you have, you'll see Samwise the character calling his master, Frodo master all the way through there. Just a very English, very English way
of showing respect to somebody and conveying that they're on a higher plane than you. But
that's not really, I think teacher Rabbi would be closer to what the Greek is having there.
I think verse five lets us in a little bit on the personality of Peter.
And he's like, what?
We've just been fishing.
We just did that.
We just cleaned up.
Yeah.
But okay.
I know I love the pause.
I'm nevertheless.
And the depiction of this in the chosen,
I just thought was so delightful.
How excited they were when they pulled those nets up
and all the others came running and that's when I got,
okay, I gotta watch this show.
That was so well done.
Yeah.
And to me, you see in this explanation,
like, I don't know if any of you have this experience
with your students, but you've asked them to do something and they haven't done it. And then the first thing
they do is give you all the reasons why they haven't done it. And I can imagine the
look I give them usually is and I realize that you're all of those, but I still need you to do the following.
And so what a fun student teacher interaction here.
It's just very typical.
Peter, you almost feel like he feels a little defensive,
a little bit, but we really did try to do this.
So we've done our best.
We've worked all night.
There's nothing out there.
I promise there's no fish out there.
And then that kind of look from the superior rabbi of, oh, okay. I'll
do it. You got to trust me on this. You got to trust me on that. Right. You got to trust
me. Go do it again. I'm the fisherman. So what do you know about fishing? Yeah. I wonder
if that's why it calls him teacher, John. He's like teacher, not Fisherman. You're a teacher. I'm a fisherman. I'm the fisherman. I'm the expert on this part at least.
Then I've been out here all night. So just the amount of fish that they get, you just got to love that imagery.
They filled both ships and they both began to sink. The boats are sinking with all that tilapia. Yes, exactly.
And then you look at this reaction, especially since we've been having fun with that first interaction of kind of the
I know what I'm talking about, but I'll do it anyway. And then you look at Simon Peter. He falls down. Jesus' knees depart from me for I am a sinful man, O Lord.
Yeah, you almost get the feeling he knows what's coming. He knows you're calling.
I know that some people get a sense that a calling is coming and their first reaction is,
no, not me. I am not the guy. I am not the woman you're looking for. I promise.
Can I read something from Elder Holland about this, sir?
This beautiful phrase in verse four,
launch out into the deep.
This is what Elder Holland said about that.
Peter could not have known the ever widening circles
that single command would make in the stream
of his plain and simple life.
He was launching out into the expanse of godliness
into the eternal possibilities of redeemed and simple life. He was launching out into the expanse of Godliness into the eternal
possibilities of redeemed and celestial life. He would be learning the mysteries of the kingdom,
he would be hearing unspeakable things, to launch out into that limitless sea of the gospel of
Jesus Christ. Peter brought his craft ashore, turned his back on the most spectacular single
catch ever taken from Galilee for sook all followed him from that moment on Jesus taught and trained Peter at
every opportunity that September 1975 ensign.
Brian.
We'll make sure to link all of these quotes in our show notes on follow him dot
CEO.
So you can go to one place to get all of these great quotes we've been using today.
There's something else too that I think is true. Verse six says, they're net break.
But when Jesus comes again, post resurrection, the net doesn't break.
And I've always wondered if there's a symbolic meaning there or something. So I'll throw it to you guys.
Yeah. Well, I mean, there's lots you could do with that of the life that you've lived
is going to be different now. Yeah. Those nets that you're going to be using to catch men.
Yeah. I'm going to have you catching men. You're not going to be doing this anymore and
I need you to be willing to kind of separate from your old life, which would be really hard
to give up. I've always tried to help my
students see that this is very much a first Nephi 3.7 because if Simon has a wife and kids and
this is their only means of livelihood, how do you take the main provider out of the house and
not have him providing fish anymore? And so this moment allows them financially to leave.
Like, this is a windfall, a financial windfall.
And so how does the Lord help us fulfill
calling city assets to do?
He does help us.
And we've got to look at that enabling.
Here's enabling power of the atonement
into Peter's life and James and John's
life because they're these major breadwinners. How are you going to have those families survive without
the money from the fishing and look at this? There's a preparation and help financially to do
what they need to do. So the way's been provided. Me too. I loved what Peter sees in himself and what Jesus sees. Two totally different
things. I'm a sinful man and Jesus sees a fisher of men. I think Jesus knows about Peter.
Yeah. What do you see in you versus what does he see in you? Yeah. 11 verse 10 too, that he starts it off
with fear not. Of course you're going to be nervous. I'm a fisherman. I'm not a
missionary. I'm not a leader of a something. I don't know. I've never done this. I don't work with
people. Fear not. I am going to tutor as Elder Holland said, I'm going to tutor and train you
into catching men, which is going to be a steep learning curve, a difficult time. Everything's
going to be different for Peter, James and John from Henceforth. They have every reason to
be insecure and to be anxious and afraid, but I need you to not be afraid. I'm going to
help you.
Yeah, and we can all take comfort in that with any new calling. Yeah.
Getting the calling to be the gospel
doctrine teacher or the early society president or the young women's
president. Fear not, you can do this. And then you have that lovely verse
verse 11, they first shook all and followed him. Now one of the interesting
things that when I was reading about teachers and disciples and the education system in the Jewish times to just understand why Jesus was so unusual,
but one of the things I read was that teachers and people you wanted to go study under, they
didn't invite you to come study with them.
You went and asked if you could study with them.
But Jesus is always inviting people to come study with him.
Come and see, come and follow me, come and forsake everything and come, come, come. Again,
that makes him an unusual rabbi. He's always inviting disciples, and that's not normally what you did.
You had people coming and asking to study under you, which is the typical academic way. Even today, when you do PhDs, you have to go and approach
a doctor of something.
You find a tutor and you ask if you should apply
and you get support.
You don't just apply for a PhD program.
You find someone you want to study under and ask if you can.
This is, again, just really fascinating with,
he's inviting them to come and study under him. And
they are, they're willing to leave everything behind.
Hey, follow him. It's right in there, isn't it, Hank?
Hey, we kind of like that phrase. Yeah. And you got to think that maybe part of Peter
is like, let's stay here and do this, Well, let's stay here and catch all these fish and get really rich
But it's no I give you enough like you said Jan
I've given you enough to where now you can walk away and go full-time to the ministry
It's like Elder Holland said if I want fish I can get fish
He's saying that the Savior's saying this to if I want fish I can get fish
I need you to be a fisher of men.
There's another quotation that I like with this
that elder John Longdon, we're talking in the 1960s
before you and Hank were born.
He said something like, and he was quoting,
it's kind of an old saying type thing.
Satan chooses his disciples when they are idle. Jesus chose his when they were busy at their work
And I thought what an interesting idea is that they were busy at their work and Jesus chose them Satan
Chooses people when they're idle and that's a whole interesting topic
The doctrine of covenant to end the book of Mormon talk about people that are full of idleness
And I guess you get in trouble when you have nothing to do type of a thing. But Jesus chose people who were already working. I
thought, it's interesting insight. Yeah. And what that says about their work ethic, because
preaching the gospel, all of this is work oriented. We have to wear the garments of the laborer.
And you want to pick people who already have a work ethic and invite them to then transfer their good work ethic
to something of more eternal value
than maybe what they were doing.
And so Peter, James and John clearly are hard workers.
They've been up all night, they've been fishing,
they've been trying to earn a living.
It's not like they're sitting around waiting
for the fish to just come to them.
They're out there looking.
But now we're gonna take all that talent and hard work and we're to have to put it in a realm where they're not used to working and see if we can transfer the skills over to do something new, but you're working withde dies in a second Nephi 4 and in second Nephi 5
He takes his people they call it the land Nephi and Nephi says and I did cause my people to be industrious and to labor with their hands
There was a lot of things he could have done. All right
We're gone. Let's party, right?
He says, okay, let's get to work and they did they built a temple. Yeah, and then you're looking at what they were asked to give up.
They first shook all,
left their families behind to whatever extent.
They left their jobs, they changed their focus.
They went on traveling around,
instead of staying at home.
That's something to think about too,
is sacrifice is part of the gospel.
It's one of the first principles of the gospel
that we learn to sacrifice and you watch a massive sacrifice happening here. But then
you think about all the things that Peter James and John are going to get to receive
and return for their sacrifice that they could never have had any other way.
And doesn't Peter bring that up later? Hey, we for say can all.
Well, that's when he's asking about the rich people who can get into the kingdom, isn't
it?
When he says the rich people can't get in.
And he's like, well, we've given up everything.
And if those people can't get in, who can get in?
And yeah, interesting watching what it costs us to become a disciple of Christ, the things
that we get.
It's that doctrine of
covenants verse that neither I nor Ear have comprehended or whatever were
used, the things that God has in store for them that love him. First Corinthians
2.29. Yeah, that's how it is. I have not seen nor Ear heard neither of
entered into the heart of the man. Yeah. Well, it's in the manual too. This was
quoted recently in general conference, page 22 in the manual, too. This was quoted recently in general conference,
page 22 in the manual,
men and women who turn their lives over to God will discover
he can make a lot more out of their lives than they can.
Know how this happened to Simon Peter and his fellow fishermen.
Jesus saw something greater in them than they saw in themselves.
He wanted to make them fishers of men.
Fascinating who he chooses.
He doesn't choose
these students of the scriptures in Jerusalem. He chooses fishermen from Galilee and then over
in verse 27, he chooses a publican. That's got to be hard for some in a group. This is Matthew in
verse 27, his publican named Levi, and he left all. There's that word again. He left all, rose up and followed him.
He's kind of putting together quite an odd team.
An odd team.
He is, and that's something we have to remember too,
is, and I remember Elder Ballard saying this,
he came to BYU a couple of years ago
and did a question answer session,
but one of the things he said to the students was,
sometimes you misunderstand what it means
to be a general authority. I'm not an authority on every subject. My job is to bring you to
Christ and to teach you how to come into Christ. And I'm an expert in that. I'm not an expert
in every biblical subject or every scriptural topic or every church history subject. And we need
to remember what our leaders do and what they don't do. And none of these people
were scriptorians. He doesn't call anybody who's been studying under a scribe or who's got an
education. Everybody has to learn the scriptures from the ground up and our leaders are very similar
to that. Some of them have had a seminary teaching background or something, but large majority of
them come from whatever walk of life and then whatever you look at the first presidency right now
Yeah, you got medicine law and education
So we need to be reasonable about what we're expecting them to be able to teach us and remember that they're learning and
studying and getting revelation the same way Hank has heard me talk about a
interesting experience in my life. I was 17 years old
and called to be what they used to call the junior Sunday school chorister. I was a primary chorister
basically and I was 17 and a boy and I know that I love telling the story. I have time for here,
but there were other teachers watching me struggle to teach their kids. There were other primary teachers going, who
called him?
Who called him?
I'm sure that was happening. And it's a fun story to tell because suddenly I found myself
opening an area in the Philippines in Benelonin, having a bunch of people show up to our branch
and a lot of kids. And I knew exactly what to do.
It was a really interesting moment for me to go, I know what to do.
And I knew the songs they were in my head.
So we may have those moments who called him.
Right.
Or who called her.
Who called her? But the Lord is smarter than we are.
And he might call a publican and a fisherman and say,
I'm going to make you apostles. Yep. And he does. And he's perfectly capable of
transforming us all into things that we've maybe never imagined. We're joking around earlier.
I'm this little picked on bullied nobody who's ostracized socially in a loner
basically to turn to see a future of being able to be a teacher and be in front of
people and be able to do stuff like this. Wow! What a transformation from this,
the person that hit in the corner and never wanted to be noticed and did
everything to avoid any attention because it was usually negative to being
comfortable teaching and interacting with
a large population of people. You are a personification of that idea. Men and women who turn
their lives over to God will discover he can make more out of their lives than they can. You didn't
see it in yourself, but he saw it in you all along. And you taught physical education for a while,
too. Yeah, I did a degree in that. I that did little student teaching and things, but it was just kind
of one of those realizations that though I wanted to be a teacher, I hadn't quite discovered
the field that felt exactly right.
I had a journey to figure that out.
And I'm so grateful that I'm here, but it didn't start there.
So all of us kind of have this adventure figuring out who we are and what our purposes in life
and what the Lord has for us to do.
And for me, it wasn't remaining in that.
Yeah, I think for all of us that teach you, I mean, adults sometimes there, well, should
I major in this, you should have major in that.
And you're kind of like, for a lot of people, it really doesn't matter.
The Lord is going to find something he wants you to do.
So you might work in the same degree you studied and
you might not. You might not. And I certainly don't. It was an adventure. It was just line upon
line learning piece by piece, gathering the preparation for certain things and you just let the
Lord lead you, but he's got it. He can get you where he needs you to be. I will order all things for
you're good. Yes. It's fascinating to me that he calls this fisherman and he calls this public end and then he throws
a dinner party.
That's going to be our first order of events.
We're going to have a dinner party and he gets highly criticized for it.
He's eating with sinners and publicans.
What a great answer he gives.
Oh my goodness.
Yeah.
That's verse 31, right John?
31. They that are whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. How do you argue with that?
I came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance. So he's got them all called and he's
like, all right, let's get started. Let's get started. Yeah, let's get to work. I like how Elder
Holland says the church is not a monastery for perfect people
Although all of us ought to be striving to become better
But he said it's more like a hospital for those who are ill and want to get well
This is an important thing to remember because I think it's elder Maxwell that said we are each other's clinical material
We're all running around in this clinic together of the church being a clinic.
And we're all imperfect people.
We all do and say things that are not helpful sometimes.
And it can be really difficult to be a member of an organization with imperfect people.
But this is where we have to apply the gospel and say,
where all disciples, I can forgive, we can work things out.
And just because something unkind happens,
which happens, doesn't mean I have to leave the organization
and be offended by it.
I need to expect that people are gonna do things
that aren't great.
And I need to find a way to work it out
and continue being a disciple instead of leaving the clinic
and going elsewhere,
because I was bothered that somebody
didn't do the right thing.
Yeah, Elder D. Todd Christofferson gave this talk called Why the Church?
And I took that apart and just made a bullet point for everything that he said are so many good reasons
But one of them was to experience the application of divine doctrine and then he said we have to put up with each other's idiosyncrasies.
And then he said, or his president packer called them our idiot syncrisies.
But where do we learn love and forgiveness and mercy? Sometimes in our own church,
we're learning to get along. And like you said, we say things that we are hurtful or didn't
mean to be hurtful. Sometimes maybe somebody did mean to be hurtful. Well, what are we gonna do?
Well, where else are you gonna go?
This is still the Lord's church
and we're all doing the best we can.
So I like that you brought that up.
This tough.
I've lived long enough to have had many
of difficult experience with various church members,
but the ultimate question you ask every time
something happens that's hurtful or disappointing
or didn't go the way that you hoped it would is, why am I here and who am I following? I'm following Jesus. I'm here for the Savior.
And that makes everything else go to the sidelines and be put in their proper place. I'm not here
following that particular leader or I'm not here following that particular member who hurt my feelings. I'm here because I love Jesus Christ and I'm a disciple of Christ. So I'm going to stick with Christ
and then I'm going to learn as painful as it is to apply his teachings to help me deal with
everyone else who's following Christ. It can be hard. Elder Christopherson, he said that in that talk about who am I following.
He said that we are striving not for conversion to the church,
but to Christ and his gospel.
And I thought, I have used that language myself.
My dad was a convert, but I noticed the Book of Mormon never calls it.
They were converted to the church.
It always says converted unto the Lord.
And there's one verse. I want to say 3rd Nephi 28, 23, I think, where it says,
and they were converted unto the Lord and united with the church.
And you kind of see, the object of our conversion is Christ,
not the members, not the church.
And if we're converted to the right thing, then we can have that perspective and stay in.
We're experiencing application of doctrine.
Yes.
We are.
Could be so painful.
And it really pushes us right where we are,
right in that core sometimes,
to have to work with forgiving other members of the church
for things they either did or didn't do.
But it's important to remember this concept
of who am I following? I'm studying under the Lord Jesus Christ. or didn't do, but it's important to remember this concept
of who am I following?
I'm studying under the Lord Jesus Christ.
And he can handle everything that's going on
in the clinic.
He's aware of all of those little things.
In fact, later on when the Savior talks about his disciples
and how he's aware that on occasion
they were finding and having contention amongst themselves.
Like, it's not like he was blind to that. He knew about all of that, but his
teachings are there to help us how to handle all of that and still be a
disciple. So we belong in this group even as sinners. He's saying they belong
right next to me right out of manuals as sometimes people feel guilty when they are tempted to sin.
But even the Savior who lived without sin was tempted.
Jesus knows the temptations we face and how to help us overcome them.
So anybody listening who's saying, well, I'm not a fisherman or a public and I'm a sinner, well, you were invited to the party as well. Well, and you know what's so funny about this comment.
I mean, the richness of it and the all-encompassingness of it is amazing.
Because the scribes and Pharisees are murmuring because they think they're better spiritually
than everyone else because the way they live their lives.
And here's the Savior saying they that are whole need not a physician, but they that are
sick.
But the people he's dressing that comment too are sick as well,
because of their judgment of others, their rejection of others.
That they're sick too.
It's kind of this invitation here of, well, I am going to hang out with these people,
but I actually need you to come and be part of these people,
because you're kind of part of these people.
All of us are sinners in one way or another.
All have fallen short of the glory of God, right?
And it seems like the Savior is harder on people who think they have no sin.
How would you say it? He seems to be harder on hypocrites than on sinners.
Hypocrisy is not willing to admit that you're a sinner. Why are you eating and drinking with publicans and sinners?
Well, who else am I going to find on planet earth to eat with?
Exactly. All the lords ever had to work with his imperfect people, Elder Holland, you know, that famous thing. Yeah.
Must be incredibly frustrating to him. He deals with it. And so should we, this is all there is.
I couldn't find a perfect person. So I chose this guy to be the bishop.
That's what my ward said.
And that's such an important thing for us to do
when we're tempted to point fingers at the weaknesses
and sins of others is to really just stop and say,
well, maybe I don't do that particular thing,
but there's other things that I do.
In the minute you start doing that, you can be humbled and get off the judgment pedestal, be like, maybe I didn't like that that person did that, but these are my weaknesses, and I want someone to be merciful for mine.
So, how can I find it in my heart to be merciful to someone else's problems. That then allows that unity you were talking
about to happen humility is a major component of being able to be unified. We all have to
just be humble and then it's easier to connect. So I love that he's saying something like that
that he's coming to heal the sick, but kind of sending a message to the people he's talking to that they're included in the group.
As good as you are.
He's like, oh, what was the joke?
It was like zig-ziggler or somebody that said that, oh, I'm not coming to your church.
There's just a bunch of hypocrites.
And he said, well, we got room for one more.
That's funny. I want to read this paragraph to both of you out of the manual and
get your thoughts on it. Kind of sums up the entire lesson. It says, from his youth, Jesus seemed
to be aware that he had a unique sacred mission. But as Jesus prepared to begin his earthly ministry,
the adversary sought to plant doubt in the Savior's mind, if they'll be the Son of God, Satan said. But the Savior had communed with his father in heaven.
He knew the scriptures and he knew who he was. To him, Satan's offer, all this will I give
thee was a hollow one. For the Savior's lifelong preparation allowed him to receive the power of
the Spirit. That's that reference to look for. So despite temptation, trials and rejection,
Jesus Christ never wavered from his appointed work. Quote, I must preach the kingdom of God for
therefore, I sent. And then we could add that he called others in that same way. Jan and John,
both of you, what do you hope our listeners walk away with from these three chapters we've
studied today?
I would hope that they would walk away with a love for what's here and a practical way
to apply it to that common problem of self-doubt and not maybe feeling comfortable with me or my
mission and what I'm here on earth to do and to really be able to connect with
the Savior who's kind of shown us a way to handle that. As we said with the
temptation section we spent so much time looking at that but every single
verse is incredibly rich about how do I deal with
Satan, how do I deal with the weakness of mortality, how do I deal with temptations and still
remain faithful and true to the fact that I'm a daughter or son of God.
And I was sent here to do some specific things.
And I would hope that the audience out there would
just be really touched it. Here's some tools I can use to discover that and remain faithful
to who I am and what I came here to do. And to see that in others as well, it seems
that he sees that in himself and then he goes and finds these fishermen and publicans and
even sinners and he sees something in them. He sees a greatness in them as well. You know, I love that idea. I thought I love it when we can find a way not just to see what's here and to try to be
scholarly and to be able to say what do I do with this and I think Jan you helped us find a
beautiful way to apply how Jesus answered those temptations and that all of us can
how Jesus answered those temptations and that all of us can, can think that God sees more in us maybe than we see in ourselves. I like to what you said about practical ways that
we can take these passages and to help us go through this life. I really like that.
I love that he has those experiences and then just even announcing who he is and the pushback he gets from announcing
who he is. And it's not just Satan who keeps questioning if, if, if it's other people.
Now, even that last incident that we're looking at with the scribes and Pharisees saying,
why are you eating with publicans and sinners? There's an if in that. If you were, who you
said you were, you would not be doing this.
That's one of our biggest pieces of adversity and mortality is forgetting who we are and
what we came here to do.
So I appreciate present Nelson's reminders of those identities and that we need to really
cling to those eternal identities and not apologize for who we are and what we came here to do and push through the adversity
that comes against those things and not let them dissuade us from that.
So easy.
And I've had so many times in my life where unkind things have been said or people complained
about something.
And it can really devastate you and make you question, why am I even doing this?
Like, why am I even trying to teach the gospel?
How come I'm even up in front of those people when sometimes it just feels like you're a target
for the complaining or the misunderstanding or the whatever and it can really undermine you
and every time that happens, it's a real temptation to cave and to self-doubt and to say,
well, maybe I am in the wrong place, maybe I do need to find another job. But when you come back to
those spiritual moments and you're like, no, this is what the Lord has asked me to do. And as I focus on
that, I can overcome any of the pushback. And we're all going to get it. So it just gives us the strength to be comfortable and confident like the Savior is he's so confident and he never
deviates from his purpose. So well said. Wow, what a fantastic, fantastic day,
John. How did we get this job to sit at the feet of people like Jan Martin and to
learn today? It's just been an absolute treat.
My scriptures are well marked after today.
I've got a whole bunch of to-do's.
Go find this, go find this, go find this.
Some of the things you shared,
cherish your personal burdens.
Whoa, wow, go find that.
Yeah, thank you, Jan.
Yeah, you're welcome.
Been fun, thanks for having me.
Absolutely, we wanna thank Dr. Jan Martin
for being with us today. We wanna thank all of our listeners. Of course we want to thank our executive producer Shannon Soronson, our sponsors David and Verla Soronson. We want to remember our founder, the late Steve Soronson, and we hope all of you will join us next week. We're going to come back. We're studying more of the New Testament on Follow Him. Today's transcripts, show notes, and additional references are available on our website, followhim.co.
Followhim.co.
And you can watch the podcast on YouTube with additional videos on Facebook and Instagram.
All of this is absolutely free, so be sure to share with your family and friends.
To reach those who are searching for help with their Come Follow Me study, please subscribe, rate, review, or comment on the podcast, which makes the podcast easier to fight. friends.
and BL Kuwadra. Thank you to our amazing production team.