Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 5; Luke 6 Part 2 • Dr. Lincoln H. Blumell • Feb. 13 - Feb. 19
Episode Date: February 8, 2023Dr. Lincoln Blumell continues to examine the Beatitudes in the Sermon on the Mount.00:00 Part II– Dr. Lincoln Blumell00:07 Salt and savor01:23 The purpose of light04:27 The Law and fulfillment09:31 ...Six antithesis14:39 Inward spirituality vs. outward behavior16:29 Jesus talks about divorce23:33 Jesus discussing oaths, vows, and forgiveness 31:25 The Berlin Wall story34:15 The commandment to be perfect 38:04 Dr. Blumell shares his takeaways from Matthew 544:17 End of Part II–Dr. Lincoln BlumellShow Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What does it mean when salt is lost in saver?
Why is it trodden under the foot of men?
Could you answer that one?
You know, I would think it's just like, well, if it's not good for saving or eating, what
then is it good for?
And so things are discardable.
You discard it and you can kind of walk over it.
The couple things that's good for it doesn't actually do.
It's lost its utility.
This is from Gerald Lund.
He says, so valuable was the commodity of salt
that Roman soldiers were often paid with bags of salt.
From this practice came the word salary,
from the Latin salarium or salt money.
Have you heard somebody say he's not worth his salt
for that phrase too?
Maybe that comes from that.
True.
So you're very valuable.
People fighting over salt or rights to salt.
There's always natural resources people fighting over them.
Well, at times there were battles over
who would control assault resources.
Very useful, very valuable.
So that's what the Savior's calling his disciples to be.
Useful, valuable.
You're the cache of the earth.
So don't involve yourself with impurities
because then I can't use you as my instrument, my tool.
And I like the idea of saver,
just everything is better with a little spice,
with a little saver, with the gospel,
everything's a little bit better.
And you be that way,
go out and make everything a little bit better.
I like that.
I think being voices that are different in an otherwise kind of mundane, and I don't
want to say maybe tasteless world where it seems everybody tends to have the same opinion at
times. And it's like, no, there's a different opinion. We bring something different. There's
unique, a uniqueness. I think at times we're called upon to do this. And this is why I like
this kind of fitting in with then 14. You are a light. People should see you and see something different.
And in 14, again, going back to what you have assault, it's not saying you are the light,
but what does it say?
I give unto you to be the light of the world.
And so there's that challenge that he issues.
Again, this is the same reading in the course of the book of Mormon in 35, 12, 14.
It says, you know, if you're a light, city on a hill can't be here.
People be saying lights, but then 15, you don't get light and then immediately put it under something.
There's a purpose for the light.
And just a note here, verse 15, either do men light a candle and put under a bushel,
put on a candle stick.
I would probably say a better translation here, probably more accurate would be,
people don't light a lamp
and put it under a bushel.
And here a bushel, I see it in Greek words, modium, it's kind of a measure here.
It's a dry measure, but like a basket, but they put it on a lamp stand.
So it's a little bit different in terms of not so much a candle here, but it's to a lamp.
He's saying you let it shine.
And the injunction is great to the disciples.
Let what you're doing shine.
Then right, verse 16, they'll see what you're
doing. You'll light your shine. They'll see your good works, the good, and they'll glorify your
Father in heaven. I like the following verse. You'd be like this, right? I give unto you to be like a
light. You don't go and hide your light. Let your light shine so that others will see your good works
and glorify your Father in heaven. There's a good work by Deeter Bonhoffer.
He was a German theologian who's actually put to death under the Nazis.
And he wrote a book called The Cost of Discipleship.
He posed this rhetorical question.
How do you resolve the paradox here of letting your light shine in Matthew 5 and then
in Matthew 6 saying, whatever you do, don't let anybody see it.
Don't let your right hand know what your left hand is doing.
Or when you give alms, don't let anybody see this. Or when you're fasting, don't let anybody know
you're fasting. The point he was making there, it's why are people seeing this? And in sickness,
about, well, they're seeing about it really to glorify you. What a swell person.
Gee, they're fasting. You're giving so much. But here it's, who are they glorifying? They're glorifying
God. That's the point. And so yes, this nice little aggression in his book there that always
really kind of touched me is, yes,
what are your motives? And if you're going to be a light, it's not about you,
it's about God and enlightening others with the love of God. So I really like how
Christ does this here and the focus there on the Father. So as you think about this,
striving to be like salt and light, this challenge to these first century disciples, even today, how can we be like salt and light?
Yeah, I like these two.
One salt is a preservative, like you said, keeping things from decay and then a light can
be that enlightening influence on other people.
So not only are you fighting against sin, but you're also a positive influence
for the rest of the earth.
I find this just kind of fascinating
because of all of the nicknames that Jesus has,
it seems like he shares this with us
because John 8, Feast of Tabernaclus,
he says, I am the light of the world.
And here in Matthew 5, 14, he says,
ye are the light of the world. But what in Matthew 514, he says, ye are the light of the world. But what you
just said, Lincoln is important because we're also told not to set ourselves up for a light. And
third Nephi just perfectly puts the two together how he is the light of the world. And ye are the
light of the world. We share that nickname. Third Nephi 1824 says, therefore, hold up your light that it may shine into the world.
Behold, I am the light which you show hold up. That which you
have seen me do. Behold, you see that I have prayed into the
Father in you of all witness. If you do what I am doing, then you
are the light of the world. I love how clarifying that is. But
isn't that cool that he shares that nickname with us and tells us we are the light? I don't know how many others I can think of where
he does that except for this one. That's awesome. Moving on Lincoln, the Lord is now going to talk
about Mosaic law, what has been said of old time, what they've heard before, and he's going to
either strengthen those Mosaic prohibitions, I guess, or he's going to
suspend maybe mosaic permissions.
Yeah, you have this discussion, and this is really where the icy kind of a turn now in
chapter five.
So you have this kind of unit in verses 17 to 20 about the law and its fulfillment, and then
you'll get examples then throughout.
You'll have what I call six antithesis, where here's what the law says. And now here is now
something more in terms of fulfilling the law. And when it talks about fulfilling the law, I don't take
this here as like, well, I'm going to destroy this because it's very clear. I'm not here to destroy
this. He says, when I think of a filling here, I think he's getting at here's now it's true meaning.
I'm going to bring out the full expression of what this should be. I think it's kind of a preparation for the gospel. It's requiring more. We talk about the law of Moses
going away. Well, right? The law is going to be fulfilled in Christ, but you have a lot of those
kind of symbolic ceremonial sacrificial aspects are done away with. But in the gospel,
a lot of the ethical components of the law are reaffirmed and, in fact, even strengthened.
So what you get here, like, in the law, here's one example, and we'll, of course, come to the
appropriate one. But you see this in the sermon on the Mount is the law is a lot about what I call
orthopraxy. It's doing the right thing. So you do the correct thing, whatever that is, do this,
do this, don't do this. Thou shalt not.
The law, if you read it carefully, does not get in to, well, what is a person thinking?
Doesn't worry about their thoughts.
Yes, it might talk about the heart periodically.
But what you're going to find here is an expansion is, or this fulfillment reading to the gospel
is, it's not only what you are acting.
It is what you are thinking internally.
That's part of this. So we get to, don't just
not do adultery, don't even let that enter in your heart, let's direct it against you like you've
committed it. And so this is what he sees doing. It's bringing us to its true meaning. You think about Paul
when Paul talks a lot about the law. He talked about the end of the law as Christ, or as to bring us
to this. And so I see Christ down the, saying, here's what the true expression is,
kind of repairing them for really what you have in the gospel.
He's very clear to say, right?
As you read on verse 18,
for Verily I said to you,
tell heaven earth pass,
one jot or one tidal shall knowize,
pastional law,
tell all be fulfilled.
And when it talks here about a jot or a tidal,
the Greek literally has here for
jot is a Yoda. And for tittle, it has this Greek word that means little horn. And what he's
saying is even the smallest parts, even the smallest letter in Greek Yoda, but here they do jot or
in Hebrew, a yode, or you hear you have a tittle, but like a serif. Not one of these things is going
to pass away until it's all fulfilled, brought out to its true meaning.
We're not going to remove this. And you think about law codes in the ancient world, not only among the Jews,
who are very fastidious about the law and not taking care of this, but others also, you even have a story saying don't remove a word or a syllable from a lot. It's a very serious offense.
And so just picking up the saying, the law is there, nothing to be destroyed, but we're going to
fulfill this, bring out its full expression. And I think the full expression of the law
relying on Paul, I think the law is a means to an end, IE the end is Christ. It's not an end
in of itself. This is what I see now is now following in what we have in these six antithesis
that are going to start here in verse 21, where he'll now invoke the law.
And also, okay, the law says, this is not saying, okay, we'll don't do that anymore,
but we're saying, well, really, to bring so its full expression to expand it, now, this should
really be naturally part of the law. What you get after introducing this. And by the way,
I should just note this here, when you read the third Nephi account in 1720, it is somewhat different from the
Mathian account. Of course, it drops or reference to scribes and Pharisees. I'm not surprisingly,
but just talking about this is very clear that the law has been fulfilled. This is a post-resurrection
sermon, where here this is before the act of Atomans, and kind of frames a little bit differently there.
But as you get into these six antitheses, you get the first one in verse 21. You have heard
that has been said by them of old time. I would say to the reader, pay attention to that because
often they'll say, well, you've heard of old time. And sometimes he won't say that. And when he
doesn't say it, it might not be significant, but it actually might be significant, certainly in
one case we're going to get to a little bit later in Matthew. So you've heard of old time.
So it's clearly he's referring to the law, right, Torah.
Thou shalt not kill.
And whoever shalt kill shall be in danger of judgment.
I just note here, it's the clarification.
KJV puts kill, technically it's murder.
I think there's a distinction there,
I was saying you shouldn't murder.
And I think we all say, yep, that's a good law.
Let's not murder.
Let's not do this.
That's a good law.
And so it's not abrogating that.
You're saying, yep, that's a good law, right? Don't murder. But then look in 22. He says, well, I'm now going
to bring us full expression. Not only should you not murder, but I say to you that whoever
is anger with his brother says, without a cause, shall be in danger of judgment.
He picks up on judgment also in 21. And whoever shall say his brother rack a shall be in danger of
the council. Who's ever shall say that fool shall be in danger of hellfire. As he's expanding, saying, look, don't murder.
Everybody says, don't even get angry with somebody to the point that you start berating
them and doing these things, calling them raqqa.
Raqqa is just, it's actually, well, it's an aromantic word, but it's from the Hebrew that
you find in the beginning of Genesis, where it talks about emptiness, or there was a void
and saying, you're empty-headed.
And so you're really berating somebody.
And so it's not only don't murder, but you don't do this.
This is full expression of what is in the law.
Now what's interesting here is you have this little phrase in the KJV without a cause,
which actually, when you read that carefully, does say,
well, maybe somebody really is empty-headed, that's okay to do this.
But both in the JST and in the Book of Mormon, it actually gets rid of that.
So it's saying there is no reason to go and do this.
And what I find really interesting here, again, is one who works in manuscripts.
When you go back and you look at the earliest manuscripts of our New Testament, they similarly
have dropped this particle.
It's not there.
And later manuscripts then add this.
And because the King James', the textual base of the New Testament is reliant on later
manuscripts, you have this reading in here.
In fact, most modern Bibles drop this.
But it's clearly a scribal interpolation.
Somebody reads it says, that's a hard saying.
Well, maybe there's a cause here.
Somebody could really be this.
So they add this in here.
And so I think the JST, yeah, removes. And this is one of the JSTs,
you know, often, at least I'll speak for the moment, the server on the mount, the JSTs,
often, you know, the, of course, on the book of Mormon, and they're not born out in ancient manuscripts.
So I don't think that's a big deal, right? Based on the insure evidence. But here's one that actually
we do find that actually does appear in our earliest manuscripts. This reading is not there in
the JST actually agrees with it, just as an interesting aside,
but it does change the frame, right?
No, there's not an excuse to do this.
It sounds like he's upping the bar a little bit
where don't murder, that's an easier law to keep
versus don't get angry.
To angry to the point you start berating somebody,
because I think people say, well, can you be indignant?
Is there such thing as the wrath of God?
Righteous indignation, but it's this point where you start berating and doing those things. He says, yes, this is not acceptable.
And you might look at this also here as you're unlikely going to go and commit some heinous act like murder.
If you don't even become angry at somebody and start berating them, it would seem to me as you in this escalation.
you don't even become angry at somebody and start braiding them. It would seem to me as in this escalation, that's kind of the pinnacle.
And it's saying, no, don't even ever get to even close to that.
Don't even do these other things that could potentially lead to that.
I think this is something you'll find with adultery here.
And just a point on the law, I just want to make here.
You have this one first of all with murder.
And then you get into 27 and 30.
And here you have again, going back to one of the 10 commandments.
You have heard it's been said by them of old time, thou shalt not commit adultery.
Good commandment, both in Exodus 20 and in Deuteronomy 5.
But then he goes and he's now going to say, okay, don't do the act, right?
Talk about orthopraxia.
He says, now 28, but I say unto you, the whosoever look at the one woman to lust after,
hath committed adultery with her already in his heart.
So it's now expanding that to don't even let that enter into your heart.
I think here, you know, maybe the story of David and probably a great modern
application, right?
But we could relate this to.
I think at the day society, there are going to be scenarios where you're
doing nothing wrong.
And out of the blue, there's this going to be something that's going to come
in right in front of you in vision.
And I think responses, what do you then do with that? I think with David's case I'm a Shiba okay there's something wrong do I sit there and develop let enter in or do I say okay
I come across it okay I'm now gonna move I'm gonna get away maybe like Joseph I'm gonna run the
other direction and so here it's like you let it enter in and you say I'm gonna reckon this
against you and probably I'd imagine that people that go and commit adultery,
probably many cases, just an improper new thing.
It's probably a lot of thought put it in that beforehand.
Yeah.
And I say, I think avoid the action.
And now don't even let the thought penetrate into you.
Because I'm going to count that against it.
It really enters into your heart.
Got it.
So it seems that both of these are focusing on kind of an inward
spirituality versus outward
behavior. Like the law takes care of the outward behavior and the savior saying, I want
your internal spirituality to be in line as well.
I think certainly this one is with internal and it's interesting. So you say, you know,
don't do this. And then look what he says, you get some releasing advice. And if you're
right, I offend the pluck it out and cast it from the, now you do have a JST here.
He says, I'm speaking to you as a parable, which I think should be obvious to the readers,
right?
Don't literally go and don't pluck at your right eye and go or cut off one of your members,
but he's saying, if these members are causing you to stumble, he says, get rid of them.
He said, it's better to go into the kingdom, maimed than to not go in at all.
And I think a great application here, If I were to give what I would call
a very loose dynamic rendering, it could be appropriate.
I would say this, sometimes this is my class to say,
if your computer screen offends the, pluck it out.
If your phone is offending you, if the television toss it away,
it's better that you get into the kingdom
and to be maimed, so to speak,
than to not get there at all.
It's very applicable with this.
Where there are things that can engender feelings
of adultery and other things that you might come across
on a computer screen elsewhere.
And that's really the message there of you is saying,
if there's things you're causing you to stumble here,
in this case, to allow this to enter in your heart,
get rid of them, remove them from you.
It's far more important.
So I think we can really apply this today,
I think about the immorality, which actually we're going to talk about immorality here in a moment,
we get to the next couple of verses, I think is really applicable.
Yeah, absolutely. This is something that is prevalent today and could be used by more people
today. It's this idea of get away from those things. It's better to live a life without
those things so you can go to the Kingdom of God. Lincoln, those are our first two.
What comes next?
Jesus now will in our next one,
number three, versus 31 and 34,
will talk about divorce.
So he said, it has been said,
whoever shall put away his wife,
let him give her writing of divorcement.
And here he's talking, you're right,
we're from Deuteronomy 24,
we're in the law, people were permitted, where in the law people were permitted,
you could bring a marriage together and you could then dissolve a marriage. And in the law,
when you read Deuteronomy 24, one and forward, they're at least driven by the man. The man can initiate
a divorce. So we see I said, okay, Moses allowed you to do this. So there was divorce. It's in the law.
And then you follow in verse 32, he says, but I say unto you, the Deuteronomy shall put away his wife,
saving for the cause of fornication,
cause a third to commit adultery,
and who so shall marry her that is divorced,
commit adultery.
This I think deserves some unpacking now
about what does Jesus say here about divorce?
I would start you know the nitty gritty,
because there's nitty gritty we gotta talk about.
There's also what's interesting here,
a ton of textual variance.
It's clear that Jesus teaching on divorce and these textual variants are such that scribes
did not like what he was saying because he takes a much stronger stand on this.
We will talk about that.
So he says, okay, the law granted divorce, but whoever goes and puts away his wife, meaning,
gets a divorce.
If it's done, and the only exception he gets is the cause of
fornication. Now the Greek word here for fornication and you're going to know
right away with English word is it's Pornéa, which is fornication or sexual immorality.
You could even extend this word Pornéa to can denote even apostasy. Although
primarily it has to do with theosexual immorality. So he says, okay, if you go and you put away your spouse and they're committing Pornaya's
sexual immorality, if that person is remarried, she commits adultery and whoever marries her
commits adultery.
Now, this is interesting, right?
The second part of this, because this last line here in verse 32 is missing in various
manuscripts.
So you're trying to think, okay, what is he saying? Because when you go over to, for example, in Mark 10, because Jesus talks about divorce really
four times. So he talks about it here. He talks about it in Matthew 19, where in fact, he will reiterate
this. And then you have a Mark 10 and also in Luke 16. And it's interesting that the Mark
conversion is basically says, well, whoever divorces and Mary's commits adultery, he kind of strengthens this.
So the question is, okay, what's he getting at here with this?
And so he gives one exception.
And by the way, there's a lot here to this, right?
When you read one Corinthian 7, 10 and 11, Paul actually picks up and he says, I'm not
speak to the Mary.
He says, I'm not speaking what the Lord's speaking.
If you get divorced, you should not be remarried.
He says, now I'm going to go back. He says, speaking but the Lord's speaking. If you get divorced, you should not be remarried. He says, now I'm going to go back.
He says, that was the Lord's words.
And so it does seem that Jesus does take a stronger cord on this.
And what I would do here with this passage is Jesus trying to say, look, marriage is sacred.
Not only should it not be entered into lightly, it should not be dissolved lightly.
Does grant there is a ground here where it could be dissolved.
When you think about Jesus' day,
there are two notable rabbis in his day.
We read about one is this rabbi called Shammai,
another is Hillel.
And Shammai is known as this more right kind of conservative
and Hillel's more conservative, liberal,
I don't know if that's the greatest way to describe them.
But you have cases that is talked about in the Mishna basically where Shama
says, you know what, the only grounds for divorce should be unchastity, which actually agrees
what Jesus is saying here. You know, it's somebody committing poor nail where you have Hillel
says, well, because it says back in Deuteronomy, if she finds no favor in your eyes, and he says,
well, if you find somebody prettier, and he gives some of these examples that really would make our cringe worthy,
right? If she spoils a dish, I.E. Burns dinner. Now, again, these are real extremes. I don't
want to say this was the norm in Judaism at the time. In fact, Rabbi Akiva even said, again,
he said, clearly, if you find somebody prettier, that is okay. And I bring this up because
it's very clear that in his world, some of this is going on, right?
Just a few weeks ago doing Malachi, it was clear, right?
Where you have people divorcing their wives,
see together women, and there were not appropriate grounds.
Lord actually says in Alex, I hate this.
And you have the Jewish historian Josephus.
He was divorced multiple times in a one case.
He says, I divorced the lady having after Shib bore me three children because I didn't like her manners.
And he talks about this is kind of this is what you do. And I think what Jesus saying, look, this is going on, but he says this is a sacred act.
It should be sacred and you should not dissolve it lightly, but he does grant a ground for that. Now in Matthew 19, he will go into some more detail on this and says in fact he says,
God joined you together and you become one flesh. This is not brought up here.
We way I would teach you saying it's really sacred. Now of course in the church today, divorce is
granted beyond just if one partner is sexually unfaithful. There's a talk, the one that come to mind
for me is by a Dalinate Chokes on this where there are reasons they allow for this.
So I would take the principle behind this really is it's sacred and should not
be dissolved lightly because it's clear in Judaism that some of this is going on
and the Savior was not pleased with this and want to make this point very
very, very, very clearly to his listeners at the time.
Wow. That is a strong stance. I'm nothing to say on that.
Just wow. Lincoln, before
we jump into number four, can we say something to the divorced so they don't feel alienated?
Someone who's listening maybe got divorced for not for fornication, for other reasons,
and they're thinking they maybe did something wrong. We might not always follow the exact practice,
but what is the principle?
And Christchurch makes it sacred and says, here are the conditions I'm putting in place
for its dissolution in the first century. We have prophets and apostles today. And in
Elder Oaks talks, understanding that people, at times time is through no fault of their
own, it takes two people to marry, but only one person to end a marriage. And we read
Elder Oaks talking to the other comments that people who are keeping their covenants to use the word saver will not lose their
reward. If they're covenant-keeping people, Anna Spell's chooses no longer to keep their covenants.
In fact, that's why I even brought up with this word, Pornaya, the principal meaning is sexual
immorality, but you could even have an element of apostasy. So, of course, there's other things too.
El Roaks talks about abandonment, abuse, all these things.
There are certainly allowances.
I think that when this does happen, it's a very challenging, difficult, hard thing.
Obviously, but I would say to people, look to the Lord, be true to who you are, and if you've kept your covenants,
and you've done your best, you know that you can stand before
the Lord and say that. I absolutely know that. You can sample and I said, I did my best. Elder
Oaks talky says marriage doesn't require two perfect people or requires people to try. And if you
are trying your best, you can sample Lord, whatever your situation might be, you can't control
their person. You can sample and say, I did my best. And you cannot be
faulted for that. Cause this is a hard thing. And this is, yes, there are challenges and
people will make decisions, there are allowances for this. Okay, Lincoln, what's number four?
What's the fourth old time law that he talks about? The fourth one is verse 3337. And
here it's talking about force-swearing.
Again, you have heard that's been said by them of old time,
thou shalt not force-swear thyself, but shalt reform under the Lord thine oaths.
Here, when you think of force-swear, it's basically swearing falsely,
or making false oaths. If you go back to numbers and do it,
or on me, it's like, if you make a vow to someone and you swear upon this, don't
break that. It's really deemed a grave act to do so. What I love about this is the Lord
says, don't make false oaths, be a person of integrity. But I love how the Lord then goes
on and says, look, you shouldn't even have to swear at all, whether on Jerusalem or
anywhere else, to be a person of your word or a person of integrity.
He says, really, all your communications should be, and this is in verse 37, is yay, yay, or nay,
nay. We think of our society today, right? Think of a juridical setting in a courtroom. Well,
will you place your hand on the Bible and tell us the whole truth and nothing but the truth to help
you God? Because it's like, well, they do that. Now they'll tell the truth. My dad was a lawyer
and said, people still lie all the time anyway,
even when they do that.
But the point is that for disciples,
you shouldn't have to do that
to be a person of integrity.
You should say, yes or no.
Your word is your bond.
And so this is what he's getting at
that all this swearing is really not needful.
He said, well, I know they're telling the truth
because they just swore on Jerusalem
or they swore on something else.
No, you're just a person of integrity in the law to really make sure somebody's doing
this, okay, you make a vow or a no.
And he says, this really shouldn't be necessary.
I think it really needs to be a person of your word.
And really, this is one of the more simple ones, you know, and look at ourselves.
It's our word, our bond as disciples.
Since this is the challenge here that he issues to go and to do this.
As we move into the fifth antithesis, we have now in 38 to 42, an eye for an eye.
As you get down to this passage, you've heard it has been said, an eye for an eye and a
tooth for a tooth.
Exodus 21 or Leviticus 24, right?
Deuteronomy 19.
I'll mention this in eye for an eye.
I mean, we want to take a digression here just for a moment on the law because I talked
about this before in an earlier section about fulfilling the law.
When people think about the law, they think well, this law is this bad, horrible thing.
It's an I for an I just to reframe that a little bit.
When I think about what the law is, and there's a Latin legal phrase that I think kind of encapsulates
the law, and it's the phrase le Tallyonus, or a law of
retribution, or almost like tit for tat. And what the law is trying to do, people say, well, it's
about revenge. I think, well, the law is not about revenge. In fact, what does Christ say about the
law and Matthew later on in the terminal in the mount in Matthew 712? He says, therefore, all
things whatsoever you would that men should do to you, do you even
to them for this is the law and the prophets. And so what the law is about relates to law
of absolute justice. If you wrong me, I can now go back to do something to you in like measure.
And I think in that respect, the law is a good thing. I think in ancient society or in any
society, you probably have what's probably the law of the jungle
Where you have okay you wrong me or you call me a name? Well, I'm gonna call you a worst name and then you call me a worst name and then you hit me
It keeps on getting escalated it goes up and up and the law is saying if somebody rungs you
There is a cap on what you can do back to them. It's reciprocal if somebody calls you name you can't go and kill them
You can only do something back in like measure, an eye for an eye. Well, in the law, by the way, something knocks
out your eye, you can't go actually knock out their eye. It is basically, typically, it's a
monetary fine. Okay, what is equivalent to that? So I think you have to think about the law in this
sense. And Christ does say, this is the law. We're going to now expand that. And what you're going
to expand this now is saying, okay, yes, in the law, you can act justly against something. You've wronged me. I'm not going to wrong you back
in a certain measure or redress this wrong. And he's saying, you know what? Maybe you
just ought to forgive them and not go and carry out justice against them. So here, for
example, it will talk about turning the other cheek. And so I think there's something
really beautiful in this, this whole idea of forgiving. It's easier to do that sometime than to go and seek justice.
I think this idea of forgiveness.
I mentioned the parable unforgiving steward forgiving.
There's a quote by Alexander Pope where he talks about,
to air is human, but to forgive divine.
In this especially, trying to be like savior, okay, being forgiving.
When we're wronged, okay, it's not gonna say, you know, I'm just forgiving.
I'm turning another cheek on this.
If you've wronged me here in this, again, I think requiring more where the lock is, you
can act back in a just way.
Now we're gonna forgive.
You got an expansion of this here in this antithesis where he brings this up.
That is absolutely beautiful.
And it's something the Savior teaches often.
This isn't the only place where the Savior teaches.
It's easier to forgive.
We're trying to be disciples.
And just a note here, I know that some people in the passage you have where it talks about
he resists not evil.
People say, what does this mean?
Well, I think a better thing is resist not the evil doer.
So it's not saying we'll just go and let evil yearamp it,
but if somebody wrongs you some time, okay, it may happen.
If they strike you, well then turn the other cheek.
Paul gives some counseling Romans 13 on this
when people are wronging you.
You know, still treat them as a disciple on it.
And this is really nice because this really sets up
the final antithesis, which for me I think
is one of the most challenging things. A lot of people listening, probably don't have too much of a problem with
murder and some of these things, but I think here, right, you think of now forgiving and now what's
the hard thing it's leads into is, well, now loving those who do not love you back. And so we have 43
to 47 about loving enemies. Look how it says here, you have heard of the half been said, they'll shut love thy neighbor and hate thy enemy. I did point
out earlier on. I said that often he'll say you have heard that's been said by
them of old. He doesn't say that, but here's it's being said. You should love your
neighbor. Well, if you go to Leviticus 1918, we know where it says, love your neighbor
as thyself. Okay, we have that. What's entering a thing is though it says and hate
the enemy. If you go back and read in the law, there is nowhere where it says you should
hate your enemy. As we were wondering, well, where are they getting this from? This is
a good question. As I read here, it's been said or it's being said, there's maybe a trade
in there in Josiah. It is saying, look, we don't like our enemies, whether they're Gentiles
or someone else.
In fact, in the Dead Sea Scrolls, they have this document called the Community Rule.
It's kind of like a charter for things they will adhere to.
And one of the things that says, they're repeatedly says, okay, make sure you love all the
sons of light and totally hate all the sons of darkness with an everlasting hatred.
I either people not in our group or they're wicked.
And I'm not saying that Jesus necessary
responding to this group, but I could see in a society
where people are saying, okay, let's love those
who love us back and let's hate those who don't love us.
Because it's not in the law.
And this is where he then leads into saying,
well, you know what?
What you really ought to do is love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray
for them that, despitefully use you, and persecute you.
And why do you do this?
That you may be the children of your father.
Now, going back, think about this.
Who are the children in the, uh, be attitudes, the peacemakers?
You don't fight fire with fire, right?
You fight with water, right?
You try to put it out.
And in fact, you even go beyond that you actually show them love.
And I think this can be a really challenging thing,
but I think it's again the cost of discipleship.
There's a great story that I think really epitomizes this.
And the story relates back to events surrounding
the aftermath of the building of the Berlin Wall
in the early 1960s. And so I think everybody knows the Berlin Wall, right, was put up in the early 1960s.
It separated your east and west Berlin, but also east and west Germany.
And it was real, a symbol of an ideological divide with communism and then the west.
And this wall got put up.
And literally, if you go to Berlin today, right, the wall still up,
or they'll have place where it's marked on the ground,
it literally went right through the middle of neighborhoods
And there's a story that's told is that as the swallows put up is that one morning people living on the western side of the wall woke up
And the people on the east had thrown all their garbage over that night onto their side of the wall
If you wake up up one morning and your neighbors thrown all their garbage deliberately on your lawn
What are you likely going to do?
Let's be honest,
what we're probably gonna throw back on their lawn
and say, there, we got you back, right?
Throw the lawn, throw it back on your lawn.
So they said, okay, those darn East Berliners or commies,
let's just throw the garbage back on the other side
of the wall.
So they do that.
Well, they go to bed, they wake up.
What do you think happens the next day?
Well, there's more garbage.
So they have this garbage work,
kind of throwing garbage back and forth over the wall. And a local minister, I believe it's a Lutheran
minister, heard about this and came to those who were in his congregation. Some of the
weren't said, I heard this is going on. It shouldn't be throwing garbage over this wall.
But he says, let me ask you a question. If Jesus was given garbage, what would he do?
And they himden haught and said, well, he probably wouldn't return garbage with garbage.
And he says, okay, what should we do? And they said,
okay, when garbage is thrown over,
let's just scoop it up and we'll haul it off.
So they scoop up the garbage, they haul it off.
A short time later, he comes back and says, okay,
let me ask you again, what would Jesus do?
And the decision was, well, Jesus wouldn't return garbage with garbage.
In fact, he'd probably return it with love.
So he says, okay, how can we show love to these people? In fact, the stories we're hearing that
they're very oppressed. It's a very challenging regime. They're shortages. And so they determined
saying, okay, when garbage is thrown over, we're going to throw over blankets, food, letters,
things like that. Guess what happened in one night to the garbage? It stopped. It totally stopped.
And letters and things started coming over
saying, thank you so much. We're in a very hard situation. Have you seen family members and all
the same? And there was a relationship built up because somebody showed love to their enemy.
Eventually, you know, it's for GeneFan, I don't put a station there so they put a stop to that.
But I think it illustrates a very profound lesson. Your natural reaction is to return garbage
for garbage, especially to an enemy,
but if you take the time and show them love,
sometimes profound things can happen.
And I would even say, even if it didn't make a change,
we're still commanded to do it.
But I think more often not, you'll see how it can change
somebody when they're truly loved, when they've wronged you.
And so that's talking from here really illustrates
the power of this is to love your enemies,
and to do things with them that even if it's really challenging
Well how that changed that's a beauty for ashes thing I'll return beauty for ashes and that's a great one
That is wow. I'm gonna use that. That's beautiful and as I look at these
So you have this and into the season and for me anyway, I think a challenge is this is probably for me one of the hard
Single loving your enemies made is why this is last.
And then what you have, well, now we have the final verse.
Be there for perfect, even as your father and heaven is perfect.
What is the JST, what is it's something for?
It's your command to be perfect.
What's interesting here, here's a case where the JST now actually differs from the Book
of Mormon, because the JST, in many cases, correspond, what does the Book of Mormon have? Therefore, I would achieve perfect, even as I,
or your father, who is in heaven is perfect.
So Jesus now includes him in this.
When we think of this term perfect,
I think, for many people, they don't like hearing this term.
I'm never gonna be perfect, I'm nowhere close,
going back to this idea of Greek, this Greek word,
Telaos.
What does this mean? Well, it Greek word, Telaos. What does this mean?
Well, it means complete or a finished product.
In fact, I'm gonna bring in some Aristotle.
Aristotle is the one that begins defining this
and the use of this word is teleology.
What is perfect?
Well, it's the end or purpose in something.
It's the purpose you are to become.
And so as I look at this, it's not something that you just
happens all of a sudden.
It's a process.
You become a finished product.
And I even bring that parent.
This is important.
That even Jesus, it's only after the Resurrection
is even as I or your father is perfect.
And of course, now the question that begs is,
well, was Jesus not perfect?
Well, if we look at this, yes, Jesus lived a perfect life in the sense that he followed the will of the Father.
However, it's very clear when we think about perfection, becoming like the Father ever way, Jesus there was progression.
The passage that is a great passage, I'll mention it really quickly that is worth looking at.
We have DNC 93 about progression, but in the New Testament, it's Hebrews 9 and 10, which you actually even says using the verbal form of this about Jesus.
It calls him the captain of their salvation, and it says the end of 10 was made perfect
through sufferings.
We look at this, right?
This process, and Hank, you quoted that thing about that rough stone rolling.
These things happen, right?
This is a process until you become there at this smooth shaft in the quiver of the Almighty. The Greek word really, it's a process. I really like the Aristotelian
teleology. It's kind of the end. This is what you're seeking for. You're striving for.
You're looking to be a finished product like the father. I wouldn't look at that as like,
oh, I'll never, I can ever be perfect. Well, I don't ask you to this. It's saying you're
moving in this direction like you're trying to become a finished product.
It's this process.
And by doing the things that you see leading up to this, this will now help you now expedite that work of becoming Talaeus.
That finished product like the father and like the son.
That's great.
President Nelson, when he was elder Russell and Nelson in the sort of been October 1995 general conference.
And forgive me if I don't pronounce the Greek as well as you did.
He said the term perfect was translated from the Greek
tellyos which means complete.
The infinitive form of the verb is teliono which means
to reach a distant end to be fully developed to consummate
or to finish. Please note that the word does not
imply freedom from error, it implies achieving a distant objective. Which is just what you were
saying. This is a process. And more recently, Elder Jeffrey Arholen gave that talk called,
be therefore perfect eventually. Eventually. Yeah, yes, eventually. And it really is.
You know, as I think about this, we define ourselves by our potential.
This is our potential.
It's a lot to go there, but this process, this development.
And I love this because the sermon, to this point, is kind of putting the building box
in place and you want to do this.
Here's what you ought to start doing and working at in this process.
Lincoln, this has been a fantastic day going through this one chapter.
I just so much in 48 verses, so much to talk about, so much to see.
What do you hope our listeners walk away with from Matthew 5?
What I would hope is, first of all, if I were to tell somebody, they say, you want to be
a disciple, I'd say, well, then start in the sermon on the mount where it starts and so what is Jesus teaching his disciples?
What's the advocating? I would also say here how does
Restoration scripture both the JST in the book of Mormon?
How does that give us a better understanding?
So often you'll find I command you I give unto you to be this and so you sometimes you read it and you're saying, oh my goodness, how can I be a writer?
How can I be this?
But it's a charge to be like this.
It moves along, okay, you want to be a blessed state.
Do these things.
It expands the law.
And really, the capstone is right,
this idea of being complete, being whole,
but it's a process.
Jesus knew that it's a process.
When you read the Gospels,
we really get one disciple focused on most in the Gospels. Peter, it's very clear that
Peter's process to become to lay us or to be refined is a long process. And if that's
for Peter, it's for all of us to disciple. So I would say, and even for himself, not to
be overwhelmed or discouraged. I struggle with enemy.
How do you deal with this?
I think love them back.
Show them genuine love.
Pray for them.
In those times where I've tried to do this,
there can be a profound change.
I guess little by little, right?
I'm trying to become this developed disciple.
And do you think Christ would have me do?
I would just say to people, yeah, it's a process.
That's what I like the reference to talk. become perfect eventually. But you're moving in the right
direction. Just keep moving. There's that statement of heard that the path of
discipleship is not always a straight path. Sometimes there are detours or
there are things by say, just keep going in the right direction. Every single
day do those little things. You know I quoted Pliny, the elder here,
where he talks about salt and then about sun.
He has this other great line.
We were such a prolific writer,
but one of his lines, I won't quote the Latin here,
but more or less, he says,
every day I write a line.
He says, I do something, he says,
he said, every I do something.
I would bring it into a God's perspective
of small and simple things.
You'll say, hey, I can't do all this,
well, let's start with one thing. Just every day, by small and simple things. You'll say, Hey, I can't do all this. Well, let's start with one thing. Just every day by small and simple things are great things
brought to pass. And if you do this over time, cumulatively, you will see a big, big difference.
This is my takeaway from the sermon on the mountain. Really, it's the essence of the gospel.
I can say you do get peace from it. Absolutely. I have, like all of us, have some profound struggles in our own life, personal struggles,
but the peace and the comfort have come through the gospel.
And if works for me, it works for you.
Those are my big takeaways from this chapter.
What a great day we've had in Matthew 5.
And there's more of this sermon on the Mount coming too.
That's what's fun.
Yes. Couple and more chapters.
So two more chapters.
Yeah.
Yep.
Great as sermon ever given. Lincoln, you definitely did it justice today. Thank you for
being here.
I hope it was helpful.
I love just getting your insights and everything. So I really enjoy this. So thank you for having
me on.
Yeah. That was so many good things. I just can't tell you how many notes I've taken in
my scriptures here to really draw out the power of this chapter has been a lot of fun
We want to thank Dr. Lincoln Blumel for being with us today. What a treat
We want to thank our executive producer Shannon Swanson our sponsors David and Verla Swanson and we always remember our founder the late Steve Swanson
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