Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Matthew 6-7 Part 2 • Dr. Lili De Hoyos Anderson • Feb. 20 - Feb. 26
Episode Date: February 15, 2023Dr. Anderson continues to examine how to have the spirit of discernment as we follow the teachings of Jesus Christ.00:00 Part II– Dr. Lili De Hoyos Anderson00:07 Sermon on the Mount can change our l...ives00:49 Judging others05:57 Moroni 7 and how to judge09:03 Judgments as parents11:14 Sophistry and discernment15:29 Elder Holland’s address16:48 Courage to change ourselves19:32 Dr. Anderson shares a story 23:39 Fruits and roots27:15 Elder Groberg story of being stuck in a storm32:40 Marvin J. Ashton’s talk and how we treat others34:45 How do we act at home?37:07 Beware of false prophets42:06 Agency isn’t free of consequences44:45 Forgiveness and the first two commandments47:14 Nephi had to leave 49:50 Elder Oaks and “Love and Law”51:09 Motes and beams54:30 Elder Christofferson “When Thou Art Converted”57:30 Jesus taught with authority1:01:03 End of Part II–Dr. Lili De Hoyos AndersonShow 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
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Welcome to part two, Dr. Lily Anderson, Matthew 6 and 7.
Lily, today has been fantastic.
Let's move on to chapter 7, if you don't mind.
And great paragraph in the manual, I want to start with this.
The Sermon on the Mount is one of the best known discourses in Christianity.
The Savior taught with rich images, such as a city set on a hill, lilies of the field,
and wolves disguised
as sheep, but the sermon on the mount is far more than a beautiful speech.
The power of the Savior's teachings to His disciples can change our lives, especially
when we live by them.
Then His words become more than words.
They become a sure foundation for life that, like the wise man's house, can withstand
the world's winds and floods.
We've erote that great writer. How do you want to go about chapter seven really?
It's all about judgment. Again, this is something I hadn't really seen in previous readings of this,
which are many, but this time I saw this arc and I saw that this is the message of chapter seven.
It's about righteous judgment and And he gives us many applications
and things I think you're gonna see them fit together
and we're gonna have fun discussing it.
So let's start, it's right there in the first verse,
I'm gonna make sure I'm in the right chapter here,
judge not that you be not judge.
Now can I just say this is one of our favorite false doctors
in the church.
This is, yeah.
And it's-
It's not the JST.
It has done so much damage and continues. I can tell you the counselor, it continues to do terrible
damage to the saints and to our children and to our families and to our communities, to
not judge. And we are sitting ducks for Satan if we don't judge. Now, here's what I think
happened. As you say, Hank, Joseph Smith, bless him forever, came through in his translation
of the Bible and corrected this to say, Judge not unrighteous judgment.
Now why didn't that fix the problem?
Because people don't know what righteous judgment is.
So they would say, I'd rather be safe and not judge at all.
Because I don't want to judge unrighteously.
So even though this has been incredibly illuminating and clarifying if we allow it to be,
too many people have retreated into what they think
is the comparative safety of not judging at all.
And it's not safe, it's a disaster,
which we are gonna talk about today.
So let's go to Moroni 7,
which we're gonna spend a little time in today,
but let's start with verse 15.
For behold, my brethren, it is given unto you to judge.
Oh, please, can we just accept this once and for all that we are commanded to judge?
Try to explain to me if you can how you can use your agency without judgment.
Without judgment, making judgments every single day we have to.
It's so cool that President
Dalin H. Oaks is a former Utah State Supreme Court judge. That's right. And he wrote this
classic talk called Judge Not and Judging. Yeah. Is that where you were going? Yeah, it's
absolutely essential that people know about that. I mean, they should know about it. It's
such a great resource where he explains how to judge.
Yeah, let me give you just introductory paragraphs because I hope people will go look at up, find it in your August 1999 ensign, but he said in that talk, there are two kinds of
judging, final judgments, which we are forbidden to make, and intermediate judgments, which we
are directed to make, but upon righteous principles. And that, just that has helped me so much.
We don't do final judgment, but we have to make intermediate judgments every day.
So before President Oaks gave that speech, I actually taught my children this way, but it was the same message.
So it kind of depends on which terms are easiest for us to use or to use to describe these things to our children.
President Oaks, then Elder Oaks' speech is wonderful and his terms are great because he does differ
between intermediate judgment, which we must make, to navigate our lives on this planet and
use our agency.
And final judgment that they're on just described.
The way I had used terms before with my children was the difference between judgment and condemnation.
Same idea.
Because final judgment is a condemnation and I taught my children we have no right to condemn. That is way above our pay grade. There's no way we know enough.
And as Elder Oaks mentioned in that speech, he says, there's only one prerequisite for
being a judge, a final judge. And that's omniscience. You're like, that makes sense. You've got
to know everything in order to judge correctly. And none of us do that.
But he does. And again, we can leave in his hands with complete confidence because mercy
won't rob justice, but mercy will temper it. And God will get it exactly right in every
case. I am so grateful for that. We can leave that aside and never condemn, but we must judge.
And I love that Elder Oaks also specifies that we have to judge people
because I tried that first with my children
when they were very little.
I thought maybe that was the way I could teach them
that we judge behaviors not people
and you know what, it doesn't work.
So I know there's some of you out there
who are trying to do that.
It doesn't work.
We still have to make judgments about people
because we interact with people.
We date people, we marry people, we go into interact with people. We date people, we marry people,
we go into business with people.
We hire them to babysit our children.
Exactly.
Are we not gonna judge?
Valfour, don't ever,
I mean, how crazy would that be?
Of course we make judgments.
And so it's so ironic every semester
that I taught at VW and any other class
that you ever teach, it happens.
But every semester you could count on it and almost in the first
week or two somebody would raise their hand and say I know we shouldn't judge but
you know when I never let that occasion pass without launching into my
explanation about how we must judge because this is a really dangerous part of
our culture and what's ironic is that we're in total denial when we say that
because everybody is making judgments all the time as you just said. But we pretend we're not and then when it really counts we don't. So we're like doing the worst
of it, doing the unconscious judgment without even considering what we're doing or how wise we are
about it. And then we won't judge when it's right in front of us to judge. So let's just go on with
this wonderful Moroni 7 which as you remember these are the words of Moroni's father, Mormon.
Behold, my brethren, it is given unto you to judge that ye may know good from evil. That's the whole
point we came to this earth so that we could learn to discern good from evil to make judgments.
That and the way to judge is as plain. I mean, it is so simple. God is going to lay it out for us
right here through the Prophet Mormon, that ye may know with a perfect knowledge as the daylight is from the
dark night. It's setting this up. Like, this is not hard. Stop making this so complicated.
And then avoiding it. Like the way it's like night and day. Can you tell day from night then you can judge and
So okay, am I getting passionate again? I can't help but verse 14 I'm gonna go back one where for take heed my beloved brethren that you do not judge that which is evil to be of God
And that which is good and of God to be of the devil now
That's the judgment that we are
warned against in Matthew 7. Do not judge unrighteously and what is unrighteous judgment? It's right there.
If we take good things and we condemn them or we turn away from them or we think they're bad. Now
Isaiah warned about this right that good would be called evil and evil would be called good and
that is unrighteous judgment and it will condemn us. And then he goes on this wonderful speech that the Spirit of Christ
has given to us, no good from evil. This is verse 16 and I show you the way to judge everything
which invites us to do good and to persuade to believe in Christ is sent forth by the power
and gift of Christ, where for ye may know with a perfect knowledge it is of God. And then the opposite,
whatever persuadif meant to do evil and believe not in Christ and deny him and serve not God,
then ye may know with a perfect knowledge it is of the devil. There it is. There it is. It couldn't
be more clear. If it leads you to Christ, it's good. If it leads you away from Christ, it's evil. And it
comes from Satan and banish it from your life. And don't hang with people who try to lead you
down that road. And we do need to judge people like President Alter, then Alter Oaks said, we do
need to make judgments of people, but they are intermediate judgments. They are not condemnations.
We don't know enough to know final outcomes for people.
There are so many variables God will take into consideration,
and he'll get it exactly right.
Plus, this is just the second act of the Third Act play as we've talked about
before. So there's more information that God will use.
That's not our business.
Our business though is to judge and please,
those single brethren and sisters out there,
please judge before you marry. And I just
say, please exert judgment and and use judgment in who you date. And in how long
you date them? Or if you want to continue or if you want to stop dating them and
then finding the people that you should date and that you should marry. Those are
judgments, please make them. And then when we are raising children,
look at the judgments we need to make. Why don't we light it into my home? What TV shows am I letting my
kids watch? Am I trying to be non-judgmental? Oh, well, you know, somebody made it and I guess we just
won't condemn it. We're not going to condemn filth. We're not going to condemn evil that wants to come
knocking on our internet doors. I mean, how foolish could that be? And how many times do we, or their friends? Well, I don't want to judge. Are you
kidding? This kid treats you badly. Are you really supposed to go back and play with them
more or hang with them more or spend time there? We have to judge all the time. Now people
say, but we don't condemn. People say like, Oh, how can you be a friend? How can your
kids be missionaries and a friend to Everybody, if you're only letting them play
with people who are already good or whatever.
And my answer to my children was always, it's about turf.
You make a judgment about turf.
Is it good turf or bad turf?
If it's good turf, you associate with everybody.
Like at school, if it's in a safe place,
and you're not hanging out in the dark recesses of D-Wing
or whatever, but if you're like out there in school,
where it's supervised
and you know it's a safe place, safe turf, then you're really having a friendly with everybody
because yes, maybe you can share the life of the gospel, maybe you can invite, maybe
you can lift and bless and be kind and all of those good things, be a missionary, but you
don't go on bad turf with anybody. We don't send our missionaries into the red light
district. We will not send the elders on that turf. We have to judge that constantly. Our associations need to be about turf.
Then we can see daylight from the dark night. We keep safe and we are able to be able to come to Christ and we see the things that invite and entice and the people who invite and entice us to serve God and to strengthen our testimonies and to do what's right
and keep our covenants, that's great.
I can judge those people to be worthwhile companions.
I have to judge Holy ground, standing on Holy ground.
What is Holy ground? That's the turf we're talking about.
We also, back to Matthew 7,
would people say that you shouldn't judge people?
I mean, I always kind of laugh and I think,
but I'm pretty sure when Christ says, cast not your pearls before swine, I'm pretty sure
he's not talking about livestock.
I'm pretty sure he doesn't really mean pigs.
So I think there's a judgment there.
And as I said, Matthew 7 is all about examples of this.
Now let me mention this because I think this is really important.
And the world's like ours and we're going to talk about sophistry in a minute.
That is going to be our big finish today. And so make sure
I get there and push if I need to be pushed. But we have to think critically. Now
I've been thinking about this with my grandchildren. So I really try to teach
my children to be critical thinkers. And now I'm seeing that my grandchildren
also need to become critical thinkers, of course. And their parents are pretty
good about helping them see this.
I get to help with that sometimes in our associations.
And let's consider critical thinking for a moment.
What is it?
Now, this is basically discernment that we're talking about.
And the Lord wants us to have discernment.
Discernment is another word, basically, for judgment.
But it's a little bit more subtle, perhaps, because sometimes with the sophistry of the world we can be deceived if we don't understand how to think
critically or make these discernments. So we could divide critical thinking into
these component parts. First, you need to know the doctrine.
There is no way you can tell truth from error if you don't know the truth.
And I know I say this every once in a while, but my children grew up hearing me say the
gospel is the best kept secret in the church.
But don't worry, I know where to find it.
It is in a scriptures and it is in the words of the prophets, but we have to study them.
We have to learn the doctrine so that when you hear something that pretends to be doctrine, it'll sound a false note
Because you already know the doctrine you're like, that doesn't sound quite right
Because I know what God has said on this subject
So I'm already able to discern better because I know
What God has said and what he teaches us so this is essential and can you imagine how inspired our leaders are in these last days full of sophistry and deception that they are instituting this home centered church supported gospel study where we take ownership for our
gospel scholarship and we every like what Moses said, oh men were prophets.
What that all God's people were gospel scholars.
Oh, man, we're prophets. What that all God's people were gospel scholars.
Let's not starve to death in the banquet hall,
brothers and sisters.
We have such access.
I mean, it's everywhere.
It's on our phones.
We still have our old hard copies.
We've got everything.
We've got videos.
We've got expansive access to the prophets,
to commentaries, but we have to partake
or we'll starve to death in the banquet hall.
And we will be deceived. I guarantee it. death in the banquet hall and we will be deceived. I
Guaranteed in a world like this. We will be deceived. We've got to know that's the first part of discernment and critical thinking as we have to know the doctrine study
Like crazy if you're gonna discern truth from error
You have to know what the truth is. So you can hear those false notes. You can hear those discordant parts
Exactly, and then you have to listen carefully enough to what people are saying that you find those false notes. You can hear those discordant parts. Exactly. And then you have to listen carefully
enough to what people are saying that you find those false notes. You hear that inconsistency.
You don't just absorb it and go like, oh, yeah, I suppose that's true. But you think like,
well, wait a minute. Did that match up? So we're talking about that critical thinking part,
that evaluative part. What are they saying? Am I listening? Well, I've to understand,
where they're going with this and what the implications of what are they saying? Am I listening? Well, I've to understand where they're going with this
and what the implications of what they're saying might be.
Like if they're stating that this is true,
what does that lead to?
Does it line up with obedience to commandments?
Does it lead me to Christ because that would be good
and I wanna make that right to judgment
or does it lead me away?
Does it lessen my resolve to live my covenants,
to be obedient, to become more like Christ, to conform
to the image of the sun.
So it really is this like knowing the truth and then listening and trying to see like,
where does it match up?
Oh, if it matches up, it's true.
That leads me to Christ.
If it strengthens all that, it's true.
If it doesn't, where's the falsehood?
What part did not match up?
And where does it lead?
It leads us away from Christ.
And then we have to be willing to be courageous and call it out.
Now we call it out inappropriate stewardship situations.
I'm not suggesting that we start fights in the street or online and stuff like that.
Because we can get into the weeds that way too.
But we teach the truth and we testify of the truth in situations that are kind of murky.
So we can be a light and we shouldn't hide that light in the Bushell
We should be defenders of the faith. This is what Elder Holland invited us to anyone to be why you in August of 2021
That's defend the faith for Pete's sake
Can we not defend the truth? We have the truth and we hear this error
There are people who are spouting worldly philosophies and we know that much of this has started in the university settings all over the world
Where it's pushing in more secular line of thought it's pushing more godlessness more worldliness and trying sometimes
Incorrectly to combine the two worldly philosophies
Maybe we can kind of conform that into something that one of the prophets said
But there is discord there and I'm going to use an example here in a little
while. But anyway, this righteous judgment has to be used with critical thinking, which
means we have to know the truth, and then we have to listen for the false notes. Now, look
at some of the examples he gives in this chapter, and I want to go kind of quickly over this,
because even though this language is so beautiful and worthy of a lot of thought, I don't want
to miss our big point that's coming. But he talks about righteous judgment,
includes not confusing beams and modes. Now there's a good warning in there, of course, not to be so
critical of other people and to be willing to look in the mirror and say, Lord, you know, what lack
I yet? Where do I need to improve? How can I repent? What should I repent of next? How can I grow in
the way that vow its desire that I focus on next? Sometimes revelation is hard to get, but
that revelation seems to always come easily. You ask a prayer about how you should
change and grow and improve, and it seems like all of a sudden every scripture is
about something that you should change or every talking churred, and it's
wonderful because the Lord so values us and our petitions to him to help
ourselves become better and not to sit there and try to correct
everybody else. There was a great version of the serenity prayer that somebody wrote a while back that
says, God grant me the serenity to accept that I cannot change other people. The courage to change
the person I can and the wisdom to know it's me. That's awesome. Like, I'm right to the point, which is wisdom to know it's me.
And this is really applicable and marriage.
We really want to change our partners sometimes.
But we need to change ourselves and use that opportunity to grow in ways that
the Lord can help us be refined in whatever circumstance.
Now, I will say that there is a difference here and I'm going to talk about that in terms of beams and modes.
I already talked about that three-row model.
And that I'm going to suggest that some behaviors,
as I have before, are celestial behaviors.
They are destructive.
They are sins.
And then there are terrestrial problems,
which are human imperfections.
So there's a big difference between indulging a pornography addiction or who lies or
who isn't honest or isn't faithful in their marriage or who won't work to support a family, things
like that. There's a big difference between those celestial component behaviors that are destructive
and condemned by God and watching too much TV. I mean, if you're watching really ugly, horrible
pornography TV, that would be celestial. But if we're watching the news too much or we get too much TV. I mean, if you're watching really ugly, horrible pornographic TV,
that would be celestial.
But if you're watching the news too much,
or we get too much into some Netflix series or whatever,
we can be doing something that's not really helping us progress
and it's kind of keeping us attached to some of the world.
I'm not saying you can't enjoy a movie once in a while or shows or whatever.
I'm just saying some people over do it.
Or they watch too many sports on TV.
Or they go to too many sporting events
and they're not spending time with their family
or with their spouse.
And they get a little too intense about some of that stuff.
And we've been warned by our leaders over the years
to simplify and not put the family in a secondary position
and not put the things that matter most
at the mercy of things that matter less and so on.
But those are more terrestrial problems.
You know, to get overburdened with good activities.
They may all be good works, but that's a problem.
And we have been warned about those things, but can you see the difference between those
kinds of terrestrial problems like I mean, I start every year thinking like I'm going
to lose 10 pounds or 50 and I don't.
You know, that's okay.
I'm kind of a weak terrestrial person in there maybe, but I'm not like indulging in
addiction.
I'm not destroying myself or other
people through my behavior. I don't have a terrible damper that I let fly all the time.
So let me give you an example of how people confuse these beams and modes and how damaging
it is. So I had a couple that came in to see me. I mean, I could tell you this story as
a billion times with different details, but this pattern repeats incessantly. So here
was a husband. They were both members of the church. They'd been married in the temple. He's a return missionary.
They went to church and so on, but he would still sometimes smoke pot. He really liked to smoke pot.
He knew it wasn't right, and he wasn't really a temple recommender stuff like that,
but he continued to indulge himself in that pot is now legal in some places,
but it wasn't legal back then where he was and whatever.
And so he was breaking the law of the land as well as the laws of the church and the laws of God.
And this is a little unusual with pots sometimes, although it does all kinds of other damage, but he was a mean drunk.
Like sometimes pot makes people mellow, but not this guy.
He was one of those guys who would have been a mean drunk.
But not this guy. He was one of those guys who would have been a mean drone. So instead of getting mellow He got nasty and like he would come home stone and he would wake up his wife from a dead sleep in the middle of the night and say
The kitchen floor isn't good. It wasn't clean well enough and he would insist that she get down and scrub the kitchen
For in the middle of the night or things like that and it was really awful and abusive and it was horrible
She was really just being hurt and mistreated again and again.
So anyway, she came into counseling and he didn't like the way she was becoming a non-victim.
So he came into counseling, which is a good thing because sometimes if one person in a marriage changes,
the other person might be more interested in, well, what's going on here?
Because something's changing and I'm no longer able to get away with my behavior.
And that's a really important thing.
He came in and he said, well, when do I get to talk about what she does wrong?
And I said, right now.
So he said, well, and it's kind of what I just mentioned.
Well, every year she plans to lose like 10 pounds.
And then she just stops exercising and she gets busy and she doesn't really lose the
weight.
Now, let me just say this woman was sitting there right in front of me.
And maybe she could have lost 10 pounds.
Maybe she was certainly not obviously heavy.
And she had like six kids or something.
And so she was taking pretty good care of herself.
But okay, maybe she wasn't slimmed down to model size.
And then the other complaint he had was that she doesn't
follow up on the kid's chores very consistently.
So they complain because when they're doing their next chores,
sometimes it wasn't finished well by the sibling who did it before. So she has some problems too.
And I said, okay, okay, let's look at this. Here we've got a woman who won't complete her physical
fitness regimen and routine and lose 10 pounds. And she doesn't always follow him. Like,
I mean, this ride, she's always follow up on the job chart as consistently as you think would be good and
could help the children.
And you break the law and are a mean drunk and her abusive.
And I'm like, let's just measure that out in the balance of God, beams and moats.
Now let me tell you, that makes me a pretty unusual counselor because I have heard sadly
from too many people and I'm not sure I think there are other counselors who do that but sometimes
they don't know how to judge this beam and moat situation and so what happens is that somebody
comes in with those kinds of different level problems, some are T-lestial and some are terrestrial.
The principles of the gospel can help us discern beams from moths.
Which weeds do you pull out of your garden first?
The tiny ones?
Yeah, the worst.
It's the worst ones that draws to the garden
because they're so obvious from the street.
And we're from the back window.
And so we're like, oh, gotta go weed that garden.
And we take out those huge weeds first.
We have to address first things first.
That is judgment prioritizing correctly.
Please help people in your stewardship to do that.
I just have to tell a quick story that I heard
from a good friend about a bishop that he knew
who became kind of legendary for helping people,
marriage problems, parity,
or obvious different problems. So I think it was the state president or something.
Anyway, somebody came and said, like, how do you seem to be such a good judge in Israel?
And he said, well, I guess what I do is I listen and I find out where the sins are
and I help them repent. That's exactly what we're talking about. Let me just first say that as part of this admonition on how to judge in chapter 7, God
makes a big point about fruits.
This is another tool for judgment.
Look at the fruits.
That's what we were saying about.
What are the implications?
Where does this lead?
If this is a true idea, does it lead to good things? Because it will. It will lead people to Christ.
It will lead people to a better life, to better peace and safety in their
personal lives and in their families. So what are the fruits and use that to
judge these false prophets as well? What are the fruits?
No, people always, I mean, many people will use this in a good way with
Joseph Smith and other people are foolish about thinking that like, no, I mean, the church
is great, but Joseph Smith must have been a fraud or a charlatan. And they're like fruits and
roots, buddies. Fruits and roots. You can't get that kind of fruit out of bad roots. And God
makes that point right here again. Do you grab, do you try to harvest grapes from fissiles?
Who does that?
Who does that?
Yeah.
You don't expect grapes to grow from fissiles.
No, it doesn't happen.
And then again, let's go back to our other great judgment.
Chapter, Moroni 7, and Matthew 7, remember.
And he says this earlier than what we read before.
But it's also a very powerful message that I love
the language of. We hold, this is verse six, God has said, a man being evil cannot do that,
which is good. And that's interesting. And then he goes on and he said, because he said
in the verse before by their works, he shall know them. Same thing as fruits, right? And
then verse eight, if a man being evil, give it a gift, he do it. Gradually, it is counted
into him as if he'd retained the gift, et cetera. And then verse 10, a man being evil give it a gift he do it. Gradually it is counted on him as if he'd retained the gift, etc.
And then verse 10, a man being evil cannot do that which is good neither will he give a good gift for.
Behold, here's the nice metaphor, a bitter fountain cannot bring forth good water.
Yeah, same thing as good fruit, doesn't come from fissiles.
Neither can a good fountain bring forth bitter water where for a man being a servant of the devil cannot
follow Christ. And if he follow Christ he cannot be a servant of the devil all things which are good come of God and that which is evil coming from the devil
Again, these are all ways to judge like pay attention use critical thinking what are the fruits?
What's going into this and what's coming out of this?
And is it blessing is it bringing people to Christ? Is it helping to keep covenants?
Is it helping people to flourish or be protected or have the blessings of light and truth in their lives?
Or is it pulling them away? Is it causing disruption? Confusion?
Pain, angst, you know, is it taking them away from basic gospel principles?
And let's just hit that because I know the time goes so rapidly here, and I want to spend some time on this.
Let me talk about our fruits for a minute. As a counselor again, I see sad situations where I'm going to want
to hear a lot of sad stories and I'm glad people come and talk about them. But sometimes
people are so unhappy because of the troubles that they are experiencing and we understand
that. It's very human to bleed when you get cut.
But if we can't find our hope in Christ, if we can't see the fruits of gospel living in our own lives,
sometimes we are a terrible advertisement for gospel of Jesus Christ, even to our own children.
If mom and dad are miserable, but boy, they're faithful. They go to church, they pay their tithing, they go to the temple, but they are miserable.
What kind of sermon are we really preaching?
And where are kids going to go for fruit, for good fruit?
If they can't see the fruits of gospel living in our lives.
Now, I realize that we have some limited control.
We might have a spouse who's very difficult to live with.
Maybe they are involved in some very hurtful behaviors and they're not ready to repent yet. I'm not going to get into
all the details of how to deal with that. That's another topic, but I am going to say that
we still can find peace in Christ. You remember this great Groberg story that he told about
being on his mission into Headey and they were going to a far island that was like four hours
away in the local fishermen were taking them so they could go teach a family. They're on the
Lord's errands, exciting thing to teach a family in the mission and a storm
is coming and the local fishermen are like, hey, we got to pull into one of these islands because that's
a bad storm and they pray about it and ask the Lord to bless them and protect them and the weather
and whatever and they keep going. And then those local fishermen are like, this is a really bad storm.
We can see it coming. We got to pull in and they're like, no, we're on the glorzeria and anyway, they're capsized and
They lose all their scriptures and everything else, but that's not what's most important
They are fighting a storm to see for a very long time. I forget how long but I think it was hours before they were able to swim to one of those islands and get on dry land again
Goodness elder grover describes as a young missionary having this, he said worse than losing all of that,
worse than fighting the storm to see was fighting my own confusion because we had prayed to the
master of the universe who commends the winds and the waves and they obey him. And we had asked for
his protection on the Lord's errand and he didn't calm the seas. What's going on? And he felt so
confused and hurt and kind of disrupted by that, and then this beautiful message from Elder
Grover that he learned as such a young man, he said, I learned that sometimes the Lord doesn't calm the sea.
Sometimes he reaches his hand through the storm to calm his child.
That's so powerful. No matter what the storms of our lives, we can be a better
advertisement to our children and others of the fruits of gospel living. We can find
that calm in the midst of the storm if we seek it. If we trust in it, if we know the end,
remember God has told us the end.
It, Christ has already won the victory.
All we have to do is stay on that team,
stay on the Lord's side,
and the victory is ours as well.
And yes, it will vanquish every foe.
This is what he told Joseph Smith and everybody else
who had trouble.
He said, if I endure it well, God shall exalt thee on high.
That shall triumph over all they foes.
This will be by a small moment.
It's part of the refining process.
Let it refine you.
Don't become miserable.
Maintain a bright hope in Jesus Christ because He is the conqueror and we can conquer in His victory too.
If we overcome our fears, our doubts, our despair
and exchange it for the hope of gospel living in Christ
because He is our hope.
And then how our children can be blessed
by seeing us even in the midst of the storm,
have a bright faith and find happiness.
Bring a meal. You have to say this. We should be the happiest of all people.
And it doesn't mean we haven't had crazy trials as a people and as individuals.
And that will always be the way because that is the way of refinement.
And there is no other way. But if we let it destroy our attitudes,
if we let it bear us down, we are not bringing forth good fruit.
And that is so tragic because so many faithful people then discourage their children from following
this path. Don't do it. We can do better and God will help us find that peace in the storm.
So are we mostly happy? Can we have that bright hope in Christ? What fruit does God really want?
Well, he tells us right here in this chapter,
he wants us to come to know him.
These people try to bring forth their fruit in the judgment day.
Lord, have we not done many mighty miracles?
And didn't we have all these callings?
Didn't we show up for the blood drive?
Didn't we do all these donations? Didn't we deal with
the young men or young women? Girls camp? Didn't we do all that stuff? And we even were able to do some
healing blessings and we were able to do temple work. Wasn't that it? And what does he say? And of
course, again, we're so indebted to Joseph Smith for this wonderful clarification because instead of
I never knew you, the real answer is, you never knew me. You got so caught
in the busyness of your life that you did not find me in the wilderness. I was there with
opened arms waiting to embrace you. So you could come not only to know me, but to be like
me, which is what we talked about before, that conforming to the image of Christ, closing
the gap between the ideal
and the real, stifling that divine discontent with growth and progress and that bright hope
that if we continue, that it's not a race and it's not time limited.
But if we set our feet on this gospel path and we pursue it diligently, that the Lord
will promise that we can complete it.
If we falter not, if we endure through
whatever our life journey is, He will consecrate that for our gain. So that's what He wants from
us is to come to know Him, to become integrated, to become not just Christlike in our behaviors,
but Christlike in our being through the saying to find how the Holy Ghost, we talked about
all that. I want to mention this because this is a quote that I love forever.
Marvin J. Ashton, April 1992, in a speech called,
the tongue can be a sharp sword.
I quote this all the time.
And Marvin Ashton said this, he said,
the best and clearest indicator
that we are progressing spiritually
in a coming to Christ is the way we treat other people.
I heard that, it like leapt off the screen.
That's the fruit that we actually
treat people like the savior treats them and they feel that love. That is John 1335 by this
Shell Menno. It's not how many callings. It's not who's in your genealogy. It's not the blood drive.
This is how you know, and Sherry do talks about that one of her books, seeing somebody
ask the question, how do you know when someone'sry do talks about that one of her books seeing somebody ask the question
How do you know when someone's truly converted and writing all the answers on the dry erase and this
Unmained General authority raised everything except for how we treat others
Maybe it was elder ash to not have been because he tells similar story about writing all those things in the board
But that is the punchline and when the enzyme came that time, I copied that and I put it on the refrigerator and I asked my kids to learn it and memorize it
because this is the fruit God wants from us
is that we are conformed to the image of His Son
and we treat people in the way He does.
And it is love that comes to them.
They feel the love of Christ through us.
Now, can we just look at our close relationships?
Because there are some people who can be great
in their church callings and they're vowsy at home.
And that's just the truth.
They get too angry at home, they're too critical,
they're too controlling, but they sure bear a rousing testimony
that brings the masses to tears.
And they can teach a great lesson
or they can do great service
or they can actually run these programs great ways
or they can be great missionaries, but actually run these programs great ways or they can be great
missionaries, but they do not treat the people closest to them in the way that the Savior would.
It is not acceptable and He will tell us, you never knew me. I love you, but you never knew me,
and I cannot let you enter worlds without end, because you didn't use your experiences in life to become like the Savior.
It's a long journey brothers and sisters but let's get on it. He'll help us. He enables us.
He lifts us but we have to have the determination and we have to stop being hypocrites.
We have to stop thinking. My works will save me. My callings will save me my temple recommend in my pocket will save me or my tithing donation slip
No, it's how are we conforming to the image of Christ and do the people around us feel it?
What would they say of us in that moment of judgment?
We're the secret acts of men are revealed and shouted from the haustops. How did my dad treat us at home? How did my mother treat us at home?
How did they treat each other? I mean this is what the Lord wants from us. That's
the fruit. That's the fruit. He's telling us, you want to judge your fruits? You
want to judge your life? This is it. This is how to judge. Matthew 7 is telling us how to judge
and what pitfalls to avoid in our judgment. So let's talk about a vital use. Here we go. We're
getting to my topic now, sophistry. So, you know, we hear this word every once in a while,
the words of the prophets and in scripture. One time I decided, I was quoting President
Hinkley. Remember when he introduced the
programation to the world on family? He used those words. He said, with so much of
sophistry that is passed off his truth. That was kind of his introduction to the
presentation of this wonderful proclamation, which like we said, back then was
like a snoozer. And now it's hate speech. So really prophetic, really powerful, saving doctrines, like
saving doctrines in the storm of this world and the last days, these are saving doctrines.
And he warned us of sophistry, which like, wow, this is so relevant. So I left up meanings for
sophistry just to get like what's my favorite definition? And there are a lot that came up that I
didn't really care for too much. And then this one came up and I like it. It said
unsound or misleading but plausible clever or subtle argument or reasoning. I think that nails it.
found or misleading, but plausible, clever, and subtle argument or reasoning. That's a great definition of soft-ster-president sisters.
And Elder Ballard gave this great statement in October conference of 1999.
Therefore, let us beware of false prophets.
Now we just read about that in Matthew 7.
He warns against false prophets. He wants us to judge.
He wants us to have critical thinking skills so that we can evaluate and we can find the discord.
We can find those dissonant notes, those harsh notes that don't match up with gospel music.
Beware of false prophets and false teachers, both men and women who are self-appointed,
declares of the doctrines of the church.
They're all over social media brothers and sisters.
They're all over.
And who seek to spread their false,
gospel, and attract followers
by sponsoring symposia, books and journals,
whose contents challenge fundamental doctrines of the Church. Beware of those who speak and publish in opposition to God's true prophets and who actively proselyt others with reckless disregard for the eternal in the book of Mormon, they rely on sophistry to deceive and entice
others to their views.
Now, what does that mean?
That means it sounds clever, plausible, it's subtle, but it's unsound and misleading,
and that's what they're saying.
They're making statements that sound right.
They have that initial, clever, or plausible sound, but they are unsound and misleading and they take people away from God.
They set themselves up for a light into the world that they can get gain and praise of the world, but they seek not the welfare of Zion.
Now, we have great examples in the Book of Mormon of Antichrist, of Sophists, Zezerman Korohor, the two that come to mind
quickest, but there are others, you know, and other times that, but let's talk about Korohor,
or no, sorry, Zezerman that talks to Amulek in Alma 11, verse 34, and look at the language.
Let me find that for a second. Alma 11, did I mark that?
That's awesome. Yeah, it's a great statement. It's a great statement. So, okay, let's look at this
verse in the book of Mormon here when Ziazrom is going after Amulac. And listen to the language.
And think of that definition, unsound or misleading, but plausible clever subtle argument and
reasoning. So here's Ziazrom who says, because the son of God that's coming, and Ziazrom says,
again, shall he save his people in their sins?
Okay, now if we know the gospel, we heard the discord right there.
We heard the false note.
Well, he saved his people in their sins, but that's subtle.
That's subtle.
The other language is very familiar.
Christ will save.
He is the Savior.
He will save his people.
But he throws
in this little word that makes it totally unsound and misleading. But it's clever and
plausible. There could have been a lot of people who didn't catch that because they weren't
as solid on doctrinal ground. And so they weren't listening for the discordant note like you said.
Listen for that false note. Shall he save his people in their sins? And Amulic answered and said, I sand you, he shall not.
For it is impossible for him to deny his word.
Now the Ezra who jumps in there, all excited now, right?
Says to the people, see that you remember these things.
For he said there is but one God and said, the Son of God shall God, but he shall not
save his people as though he had the authority to command God. He skips over the entire point in order to continue
his misleading doctrine to deceive the people. And Amulac says, behold, bow hast lied. Now,
that's not kid ourselves. Sofists lie. They are not mistaken. They're not just making a human error. They are deceiving. These people lie on purpose on purpose.
They are twisting little words. They are using language and clever ideas to try to resonate truth while they are actually telling lies. Samuel, like answers, and said, behold, thou hast lied for thou sayest that I speak as though I had authority to command God because I said he shall not save his people in their sins.
And I say unto you again that he cannot save them in their sins for I cannot deny his word.
And he has said no unclean thing can inherit the kingdom of heaven.
So how can you be saved except you inherit the kingdom of heaven?
Therefore you cannot be saved in your sins.
So he explains this is the error with this
sophist. This deceiver is this anti-Christ is trying to twist things and use clever, plausible,
and misleading, but subtle argument to twist the truth into error so that you will be deceived
and destroyed. He cares not for the welfare of Zion, he wants to tear it down. He wants to prevent
it from even being built in the first place.
So there's our great example.
There are plenty of others, but let's talk about this further.
So let's listen to the language of some of these things.
Now, this is one that a lot of people still make an error of,
and I am not accusing you of being a softest if you say this sometimes,
because this is kind of a cultural remnant,
but free agency.
More like, yeah, president Packer said, take the word free off of there.
That's right. He says, the scriptures never say free. Now, I think back in the day when I was
young and growing up, as long time ago now, people didn't really think you meant free when you said
free because it was a more terrestrial society, at least back then in middle class, post-World
War II America,
and people didn't really take your word if you said it was free.
They knew that you had to pay a price somewhere, but now when our world has become increasingly
selfish, increasingly about the natural man, increasingly hedonistic, then when people
say free, they think you really mean free.
And how many times do we hurt people to take that argument?
And it's true, they can.
God won't stop.
Because He has given us agency, but it is not free. It is not
without consequence. We choose the beginning of the path. We choose the end of the path. As you
say, board k packer in the speech said, let's stop calling it free. It is moral agency. And there
is a consequence attached to the use of our agency. How about this one? Judgment versus love.
Judgment versus love.
Judgment versus charity. Now we've talked about how, again,
this is one of our favorite false doctrines,
to not judge.
And I have seen this used as a weapon all over the place
in families and situations with others
where relationships where people say,
you shouldn't judge this person
Now we talked about how sometimes you have to judge people in an intermediate not condemning or final way
But to navigate life effectively and God does not want us to be victims of talk about that
We need to be anti-fragile. We need to be non-victim Christians again
There's a whole sermon on that someday, but not now. And what he wants is,
he doesn't want us to be chronically victimized.
What's he gonna do in the kingdom with a bunch of victims?
We need to act, as Lehigh said in Secondary Five II,
and not to be acted upon, not to be acted upon
consistently by evil people.
Section 98 talks about that.
Honestly, that's what the book this year,
if I can get that done,
is gonna be talking a lot about that.
But this is a softest argument. Again,
not always said with intention to deceive, but it is very deceptive and destructive. Because
if we think that we can't judge, then we don't protect ourselves from evil people.
If we are told that we have to keep giving people the benefit of a doubt, if we have to keep
trusting them, you have to give them another chance, you have to give them another chance,
because otherwise you're judging. You're judging. don't judge them. You need to be more charitable than that. You need to forgive
Forgiveness creeps in here a lot too with them not judging and so we become victims and we're kind of like how come this isn't working as well
Where's the good fruit of gospel living if this means that I get beat up by the same person again and again or deceived or be trade or
Injured by this person again and again. And is this really what God wants?
That I just keep putting my hand in the same lion's mouth.
And then I'm surprised when it gets bitten off again.
Like, is it better to not judge you or should maybe I make a
judgment?
And if I do that am I not loving?
Now look what President Monson said in April 2008,
the face of sin today often wears the mask of tolerance.
I said that, the truth.
And look how the world, through sophistry, and I don't even have this one on my list, but
it's good to talk about, has reversed the two great commandments.
When God was asked what are the great commandments of the law, he gave two.
In correct order, the first is to love God with all our heart, my mind and soul.
And the second is to love our neighbors herself.
The second, and it does not supplant the first,
but look how our world wants to have commandment number two,
supplant commandment number one.
And that's what's happening.
That sin is wearing the mask of tolerance.
That I have to love everybody to the point where I never make a judgment,
which we, please, I hope we've convinced you that we must judge.
And if we don't judge, we're fooling ourselves.
I mean, we're just not making the right judgments.
And we're avoiding judgment where we should and we're probably judging when we shouldn't.
But if we supplant the fruit in our effort to be kind, in our effort to not judge our
neighbor, then we throw God in his gospel end of us.
We end up ashamed of the gospel of Jesus Christ because it makes people feel bad if they're
sinning.
Don't cast aside the gospel of Jesus Christ and the sacred atoning sacrifice of his son
Jesus Christ on our behalf in order to not offend our neighbor by defending the truth is
sophistry involved in all of that.
And sometimes I see this in family life.
You're not forgiving so and so you're not, you should be more tolerant, you should be more loving, you're not charitable,
you're judging instead of like, well, let's see, help me understand what's been going
on here, if it's your business in the first place. But if you have a close relationship,
you could ask like, well, what's been going on? And then if you see a pattern of injury
or abuse or mistreatment or exploitation, Then like heaven forbid you should keep putting your hand on that lines mouth. Good for you. That you are choosing a
wiser, safer agent course rather than victim course. And you're acting rather than being
acted upon in unrighteousness. That's a big one.
I don't know Lily if I heard this from you, but I liked the idea that Nephi got to a point
where he didn't say, I guess I'm just judging Laman and Lemuel in there.
He just had, we have to go.
It came to a point where I have to leave.
I'm sorry, Lehigh, I couldn't keep the family together,
but we have to go.
And the Lord inspired it.
Yeah, I was intrigued by that idea that sometimes it's,
you can't fix it.
I just got to go.
For the safety of me and my family.
To be, we have to leave.
A non-victim Christian.
And again, what is God going to do in the kingdom
of the Vengeance Victims?
We'll be hugging our inner child while he's building worlds.
We need to find safety in this journey.
You can see how that just wouldn't work.
So the same thing is true in Scripture of Abraham.
God tells him to leave his father behind.
And I hear so many times people saying,
well, I need to honor my father and mother.
And so they put their head in a lion's mouth,
or their hand in the lion's mouth every time they go over
for dinner or for a holiday and are mistreated perhaps by maybe
some celestial living parents
Now I'm not saying all parents write that but if parents are harmful to you and or your children
Why are you doing that? Is that what is that teaching your children to be a victim?
And that somehow we have to love people who are doing damage to us now
I'm not saying we have to hate them, but I'll tell you it's a lot easier to love them if you stay out of range
I mean get out of range.
And you can have some soft feeling still because you have divested them of the power to continually abuse or hurt you.
And but this is a problem that people have all the time in counseling.
They come in and they don't know what to do with these very painful relationships.
And you know what? So ironic. Talk about not knowing how to judge and bless their hearts.
I know these people are trying to be so kind, but they'll come and they'll tell me this litany
of problems that have emerged over the years
with a painful parent or a painful spouse
or a painful somebody in their life
that they have to have continual interaction with.
And at the end, they say, well, you know,
but they're really good people.
I'm like, hang on.
Oh, hang on, just a minute.
Didn't you just tell me that they do this
and they say this and they treat you in this way
or your children, how does that work
with being a good person?
These are serious problems.
If you're sitting here and counseling,
then what are the fruits of that?
Yeah, I do say often, God's stuff works better than that.
I'd say that a lot. And if this were what he wanted, it would work better. But you are chronically
being hurt. Let me throw in another talk of elder Oaks called love and law. It's very similar to
what you're talking about right now. Does one supplant the other? No. Yeah. Here's another one,
present-mountain statement. After saying the face of sin today,
often wears the mask of tolerance, he went on to say, do not be deceived. Behind that facade is
heartache, unhappiness, and pain. You know what is right and what is wrong, and no disguise.
However appealing can change that. Present Oaks talked about that in another speech,
he gave it to you, called,
Way to Your Matters of the Law.
Very excellent speech that is worth reading and rereading.
There's a place in the Book of Mormon.
I'm so grateful for this because it gives me
a chance to have my students make a note to the proclamation
to the world on a family in the Book of Mormon of those three
P words to preside, provide, protect, like
you've been talking about. And when it talks about the stryply warriors and their mothers
who are so wonderful, I say, well, where were their dads? And the students sometimes say,
maybe they died in the war before as they no go backwards and look what it says here.
We received provisions from the fathers of those my 2000 sons.
Look, look what they're doing.
And Hank, didn't you do a talk about wise men's foundations
or something?
Yeah, I was talking about the last part of chapter seven.
I've always loved these two stories in chapter seven
about the, the, the, the mountain of the beam,
which I think is kind of funny, you know,
this guy's got a two by four in his eye.
What, you can't tell? You didn't know. You're out going, you've got something in your
eye, pal. I do. Yeah. I was trying to kind of funny like, you've been at the lumber yard
recently. Yeah. And the other one with the man who builds his house upon a rock. And
I've always loved this story because I think the foundation of the house is what we
talked about previously with your private life. That's what gives strength to your public life
is your private life. And I figure like this foundation, if you don't have a foundation, if you don't
have a strong private life between you and God and no one else, your public life is...
And how you treat the people closest to you.
But your public life is gonna fall apart.
If you do not have that foundation,
your public life is really creaky.
It's a beach house.
There will be storms, I like that part too.
It's the Helim and 512 thing, they'll come,
but what's your foundation and then you'll be all right.
Let me read something from Elder Holland.
I think it goes along with exactly what you're saying here.
He says, no child in this church should be left with uncertainty
about his or her parents devotion to the Lord Jesus Christ,
the restoration of his church and the reality of living prophets
in apostles, who now as in earlier days lead that church,
according to the will of the Lord.
In such basic matters of faith, prophets do not apologize for requesting unity, indeed
conformity in the eloquent sense that the prophet Joseph Smith used that latter word.
In any case, as Elder Nile Maxwell once said to me in the hallway, there didn't seem to
be any problem with conformity the day the red sea opened.
Parents simply cannot flirt with
skepticism or cynicism, then be surprised when their children expand that flirtation into
a full-blown romance. If in matters of faith and belief, children are at risk of being swept
downstream by this intellectual current or that cultural rapid, we as their parents
must be more certain than ever to hold to anchored, unmistakable
mornings, clearly recognizable to those of our own household.
It won't help anyone.
If we go over the edge with them, explaining that through the roars of the falls, all the
way down, we really did know the church was true, and the keys of the priesthood really
were lodged there, but we just didn't want to stifle anyone's freedom to think otherwise.
And then this last statement, no, we can hardly
expect the children to get ashore safely if parents don't seem to know where to anchor their own boat.
That's beautiful. A prayer for the children? Prayer for the children, April 2003.
You were talking about Lily, do our kids see the fruits of the gospel living in our home?
And as I've said before in this podcast, I sometimes have to repent
in front of my children. I was mad about this or whatever. And I want them to see that, yeah,
I make mistakes and I have to repent too. But let's have family prayer and ask to help us tomorrow.
So I love that talk. It's so important. But if we don't have that certainty and help our children
to come back and testify of it and exemplify it by our fruits,
they're lost because they are being bombarded with this false anti-Christ message.
All right, so Lily, there's a talk called One Now Art Converted by D. Todd Christopherson,
then of the presidency of the 70. He said years ago, when I served as a sick president, a man came to
confess a transgression.
His confession surprised me.
He had been an active member of the church for years.
I wondered how a person with his experience could have committed the sin that he did.
After some pondering, it came to me that this brother had never been truly converted.
Despite his church activity, the gospel had not penetrated his heart.
That's what we've been talking about in this episode with you, Lily.
It was only an external influence in his life.
When he was in wholesome environments, he kept the commandments.
But in a different environment, other influences might control his actions.
And then other Christophsson asked some questions.
How can you become converted?
How can you make the gospel of Jesus Christ not just an influence in your life, but the
controlling influence, the very core of what you are?
He goes through and he talks about how to make this happen.
And at one point, he says, is there something in you or in your life that is impure or unworthy?
When you get rid of it, that is a gift to the Savior.
Is there a good habit or quality that is lacking
in your life? When you adopt it and make it part of your character, you are giving a gift
to the Lord. And then he finishes what I mean, it just feels like this entire episode
was kind of talked about in this talk. He says, this is the last paragraph. We have talked of
desire, submissiveness to God, study, prayer, service, repentance, and obedience.
From these coupled with your worship and your activity in the church,
will come testimony and conversion.
The gospel won't just be an influence in your life.
It will be what you are.
I just feel like that was the second witness to all you've said today.
That's beautiful. That's beautiful. Let me just end with the last verse of
Maconkey's beautiful pay-on of praise to our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
I believe in Christ he stands supreme from him I'll gain my fondest dream and
while I strive through grief and pain,
his voice is heard, ye shall obtain.
I believe in Christ, so come what may,
with him I'll stand on that great day.
When on this earth, he comes again
to rule among the sons of men.
I testify of our Savior Jesus Christ.
He does stand supreme and He invites
us to be lifted up to become co-airs with Him. The mercy, the generosity, the grace of that
astounds me every day. I am willing to follow in His path. He is love, but it is his love and his way.
And if we submit to it, nothing can stop us from gaining the victory with him.
Very well said.
I can see why it says at the end of Matthew 7, verse 28,
and it came to pass when Jesus had ended these things,
that people were astonished at his doctrine.
They were very impressed by this sermon.
And we have been with both Dr. Blumel and Dr. Anderson, been really seen this sermon in
a new way. John, you have any closing thoughts?
The next verse, for he taught them as one having authority and the JST adds authority from God,
not as having authority from the scribes. It's just one of my favorite JST entrances that
not just authority by his personal presence or the way he spoke, but there was something.
I guess in what they felt the way the Spirit carried his words, he has authority from God.
in what they felt the way the Spirit carried his words, he has authority from God. And Lily, you've helped us just acknowledge that authority today as you've talked.
We have to acknowledge that authority.
Excellent.
We want to thank Dr. Lily Anderson for being with us today.
We want to treat Lily. Thank you so much.
We love having you on follow him.
We want to thank our executive producer Shannon Swanson, who's also good friends with
Dr. Lily Anderson, they share grandchildren.
We want to thank our sponsors, David and Verla Swanson, and of course we want to remember
our founder, the late Steve Swanson.
We hope all of you will join us next time.
We have more new testament to go through on Follow Him.
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him.co, follow him.co.
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Thank you.
We have an amazing production crew.
We want you to know about David Perry, Lisa Spice,
Jamie Nielsen, Will Stoten, Crystal Roberts,
and Al Kuwadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.
Bristol Roberts and BL Kuwadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.