Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Mosiah 18-24 Part 2 • Dr. Melissa Inouye • May 20-26 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: May 15, 2024Dr. Melissa Inouye expounds upon accepting the difficult path, shouldering burdens, and accepting the Lord’s will.GOFUNDME LINK FOR MELISSA'S FAMILYhttps://www.gofundme.com/f/7zjjr-help-melissa...s-familySHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM21ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM21FRPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM21PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM21ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/DKXqLsn3gtQALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part II–Dr. Melissa Inouye01:04 Mosiah 18:30 - Conversion and beautiful places 03:10 President Nelson” and Elder Wirthlin’s Heroes of the Book of Mormon 04:40 Elder Eyring’s “Our Hearts Knit as One”06:38 Mosiah 18:32 - Religious freedom and Kenya09:26 How do we help in a global church?10:53 Come into the fold of God12:26 Mosiah 19:7 - Wicked kings have feelings14:57 Mosiah 19:12 - Family loyalty15:57 Mosiah 21:1-5, 14 - Nephite afflictions17:06 Mosiah 21:14-15 - Humility and God’s mercy19:36 Mosiah 21:13-14 - Accepting hard things & Kate Holbrook21:42 Mosiah 24:15 - Chris Clark and accepting the path before you23:06 Mosiah 21:16-17, 33- By degrees and patience25:50 Mosiah 21:14 Prayers answered through others27:23 Dr Inouye’s Chinese family in Utah29:25 President Jones and acting on a prompting31:30 Mosiah 24:8-15 Why does this happen to me?36:09 Mosiah 24:17-19 Suffering40:25 Write your own history41:48 Saints in India44:19 Mosiah 24:24-25 - Keep going46:08 Dr. Inouye’s testimony 50:32 End of Part II– Dr. Melissa InouyeThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.comSend us a comment.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Melissa Inouye, Mosiah chapters 18 through 24.
I was thinking about Elder Christopherson again, that talk, why the church? Because that's about
why we form communities of saints. And he said the most wonderful thing in there, he said,
we're not striving to conversion to the church. And I confess I've used that language before,
oh, he was a convert to the church or whatever. But I've used that language before, oh, he was a convert to the church or whatever.
But I've noticed in the Book of Mormon, it is always converted unto the Lord. And I think it's 3 Nephi 28, 23,
where it says they were converted unto the Lord and were united with the Church of Christ. And you see those as
our conversion is to Christ. It's not to the church, to the institution. Our conversion is to Christ, and then we unite with the church.
That's our community of saints.
I'm really grateful he pointed that out.
Ever since then, I've noticed how often the Book of Mormon speaks of converted unto the Lord.
Never converts to the church, but converted to the Lord, then we unite with the church.
I really love verse 30 in chapter 18. It's where it says,
all this was done by the waters of Mormon.
And the forest that was near the waters of Mormon
gave the place of Mormon the waters of Mormon, the forest of Mormon.
How beautiful are they to the eyes of them who there came
to the knowledge of their Redeemer.
So they were
being converted to Christ in that place and because of that beautiful spiritual experience,
the physical place is beautiful to them too.
I love that you introduced that at the beginning. Everyone could probably identify their waters
of Mormon where they came to this knowledge and it's that, what do we call it?
A happy place? Where's your happy place? Maybe not just a laughter place, but a joyous, peaceful place?
You see some of the paintings of the Waters of Mormon and they're absolutely gorgeous,
these beautiful settings. But that's not what it says. It doesn't say that the waters themselves are beautiful
It says that the waters are beautiful because of what happened there. They're beautiful to the people
I know neither of you are affiliated with me when I go off the rails a little bit
But I have a theory that I want to share and it's just that it's just a theory
But the fact that Mormon put his own
name in here, one, two, three, four, five, six times in one verse, makes me think that perhaps
he wants us, when we hear this name Mormon, and it's okay to say that word, right, John?
This isn't the waters of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This is the waters of Mormon that perhaps when we hear that name, he wants us to think of this place.
Here's my theory and both of you can say, Hank, you're off the rails and I'll have to ask Mormon
one day. I have to wonder if the Book of Mormon was named after the waters because of what may happen with the Book of Mormon.
I have a little backup here. This is Joseph B. Worthland. He said,
Just as the land of Mormon became beautifully sacred to those who came to the knowledge of
their Redeemer, so the Book of Mormon becomes divinely sacred to the people who read it and
come to the knowledge of their Redeemer.
How marvelous, he says, that the Book of Mormon, the most powerful instrument upon the face
of the earth today for bringing all who will heed its message to the knowledge of their
Redeemer should bear the name of this hallowed place.
One more paragraph from him.
Whenever you think of the Book of Mormon or hear the name Mormon, I hope you
will remember the sacred significance of a holy place, a place sanctified by the Spirit. I think
it's a fun idea to think that Mormon named his book, the Book of Mormon, after the place rather
than himself. Just a thought, John. I like it. What's the reference for that? I'm sure people
would love to... That's a conference
talk. No, it's a book entitled Heroes of the Book of Mormon. I know that that book, those chapters
were not just conference talks put together, but each of them wrote chapters about a favorite book,
Mormon hero. It was Elder Nelson at the time wrote about Nephi. I'm glad you told me that because that's a beautiful way to think of it.
Thanks.
For me, I can't think about the place without also thinking about the people gathered there too.
So that's just a beautiful way to think about the Book of Mormon as an instrument of gathering.
Whenever I've read this chapter, I've thought of a talk from President Eyring back in October of 2008.
And I always think of this example. I don't know why it hit me.
He talks about hearts being knit together in love.
And he gives an example of how we can do that.
He says, quote,
That leads to another principle of unity. It is to speak well of
each other. For instance, suppose someone asks you what you think of the new bishop,
which is interesting because I, John, Melissa, I have a brand new bishop, Bishop Rich Lewis.
President Eyring says, Realizing that you see others in an imperfect light will make
you more likely to be a little more generous in what you say.
That will help you look for what is best in the bishop's performance and character.
The Savior, as your loving judge, will surely do that as He judges your performance and mine.
And then He said something that stood out to me. He said, as you speak generously of people,
He said, as you speak generously of people, you will fill unity with that person and with the person who asked your opinion, not because the bishop in this example is perfect or because
the person asking you shares your generous evaluation.
And then this statement, we always speak of being grateful to the Lord.
I think it's pretty rare we talk about the Lord being grateful
for us, but President Eyring said right here, it will be because the Lord will let you feel
His appreciation because you chose to step away from the possibility of sowing seeds of disunity.
What an interesting thought that the Lord is grateful for you when you choose unity.
That's like Jesus says as you've done it to the least of these you've done it unto me.
Jesus is saying thank you for appreciating me and these different people.
I just wanted to point out verses 32 and 33.
Hank, would you like to read that?
Sure.
This is Mosiah 18 32.
But behold, it came to pass that the king, this is King Noah,
having discovered a movement among the people, sent his servants to watch them.
Therefore, on the day that they were assembling themselves together to hear the word of the Lord,
they were discovered unto the king. And now the king said that Alma was stirring up the people to rebellion
against him therefore he sent his army to destroy them. This just raises for me the specter of
religious freedom that a lot of Latter-day Saints face in parts of the world where Christians are
either not well thought of or where the Latter-day Saints are
viewed by Christians as a kind of satanic cult. For example, in Kenya for a
long period of time before the 1990s, like the late 1980s, there were large
groups of Latter-day Saints throughout the country, but we didn't have
recognition from the government because other Christian groups had gone to the government and said, don't let the Latter-day Saints
become official, they're bad. For a while they could only meet in their homes, they
couldn't have official meetings, they fasted and prayed for the day when they
would be able to get government recognition. And they did this by having a rolling fast so that somewhere in the country someone was fasting at any given time.
They kept it up for about a year and a half. So after a decade of petitions in
February 1991, the Saints finally were able to be officially registered with the
government of Kenya. A rolling fast. Yeah, isn't that
crazy? It was very hardcore. They were super focused as a people. And anything
fasting is a beautiful way to be unified because you feel it so viscerally. Like
everyone's stomachs are growling at the same time. There are many examples of
Latter-day Saints who have to live in situations that are repressive
of their religious participation, often due to misunderstanding as much as to malicious
government persecution, especially if you live in the United States where there are
Latter-day Saint senators and presidential candidates and people who are well-known in
pop culture or something like that.
It's quite a different situation. In many places it's really hard. You know, you could lose your job,
you could lose your business partners. There's quite a high cost to pay for being a Latter-day Saint.
And this scripture bringing to mind the scepter of the king, the kind of political power arrayed
against them, that reminded me of that.
Hank, when we asked that question about how do we help in a global church,
I had no idea what Melissa was going to say.
And what a great answer. Go read these stories, because those stories you're
telling us, I keep thinking of the phrase first
world problems, because when I went to the Philippines
on my mission, I had left with the mindset, yeah, we have these three cars, but they're old and
they're beat up and my Filipino friends didn't have any cars. I just realized I had spent a lot
of my life complaining about my blessings, not complaining about my problems. I'd been complaining about my blessings. When
you hear stories like that, it's so humbling. You feel your heart stretching out to these
members of our faith out there doing their best in those kinds of circumstances. So I'm
excited to go to my gospel library and do that.
So John, one more time, I go to my gospel library app, I click on Church History, and there towards the bottom,
Global Histories, I click on that, and here's an alphabetical list of all these countries
that I could read about.
I could spend a lot of time here.
Yeah, because sometimes we look and we say, wow, those guys in the early days of the church,
they had our time.
Well, it's the early days of the church in some place in the world, in lots of places
in the world right now.
That's sobering and humbling to realize.
I love that.
What Alma says to them at the Waters of Mormon, I was writing, making kind of a bullet pointed
list, coming to the fold of God, I thought that's a group thing.
Being called his people, that's a group thing.
Bear one another's burdens, that's a group thing. Mourning with those that mourn, that's a group thing. Being called His people, that's a group thing. Bear one another's burdens, that's a group thing. Mourning with those that
mourn, that's a group thing. Comforting those who stand in need of comfort,
that's a group thing. I know that oftentimes we look and we love the fact
that Jesus invited the people to come one by one and that baptism happens one
by one and temple blessings happen one by one and temple blessings happen
one by one. But look at how many of these are a group. And then standing as a witness of God,
okay, that sounds like an individual thing. And entering into a covenant to serve God and keep
His commandments, that's an individual thing. But I love that both of them are there. We are
covenanting by ourselves as individuals, but we are part of a group.
I love what's not in this list.
It doesn't say anything about how many callings you're going to hold or reading lots of books
or becoming a scholar.
And it reminds me of the Savior saying, this is how men will know you're my disciples if
you have love one to another.
And I see that same thing in that list. I
Love that John. We are part of a covenant community. We hear that phrase a lot. Yeah
Melissa that insight of God has abandoned me but no look at all the people around you get all the people
That's I will teach that different forever. I love those moments.
Melissa, I think we could spend the entire time
in Mosiah 18.
This is one of those chapters that honestly
go verse by verse, word by word,
and you can learn so much.
And there's so many chapters like that
in the Book of Mormon, but let's keep going.
19, 20, 21, 22, we have
these people, the people of Limhi, the people of Alma, both falling into terrible situations.
Then you have Limhi's people getting out of bondage with the help of Ammon, who we heard
about earlier in Mormon's flashback technique, and also Alma's people as well. So how do
you want to approach this? Yeah, this is like an action-packed set of chapters. I
have some funny markings from my missionary days in the scripture here in
chapter 19 verse 7. It says, now the king cried out in the anguish of his soul, I
note in the margins, even wicked kings have feelings. This is a very interesting
chapter and you're right there's a lot of losing and a lot of winning. This episode with the
Lamanites and the wives and children is a little interesting. I think are they using human shields
here or are the women just super awesome. I'll read it. There were
many that would not leave their wives and children. This is verse 12. But had
rather stay and perish with them and the rest left their wives and children and
fled. And it came to pass that those who tarried with their wives and children
caused that their fair daughter should stand forth and plead with the Lamanites
that they would not slay them. And it came to pass that the Lamanites had
compassion on them for they were charmed with the beautyamanites that they would not slay them. And it came to pass that the Lamanites had compassion on them,
for they were charmed with the beauty of their women."
I feel like there's something missing here.
I'm sure it wasn't just like the beauty of the women,
it was the guts for these young women to just stand in front of the overtaking attackers
and say, if you want to get to my family, you have to get through me.
That's pretty amazing. You think the men should have stood in front?
What do you think? Yeah, this does seem like a cowardly thing to do.
Maybe they were despassedly outnumbered and they knew that there was no way
they could pull it off, like through actual strength of arms.
We had to have a charm or
maybe just like surprise. I just wonder when those families got back together how much marriage
counseling had to go on. Right. Verse 12, do I think about my family? Do I think about what the
king said? Wow.
I don't know what kind of loyalty they had to the king,
what kind of loyalty they felt to their wives and families,
but I read it like, what?
Leave your wife and children and run?
Yeah.
And they do feel terrible about it after.
Yeah, and they burn the king.
Yeah. Yeah.
It's good to see that sometimes bad people get
punished. King Noah gets his comeuppance here. But then it contrasts with some
other parts of these chapters. When Limhi's people are captive and they're
enslaved basically by the Lamanites. Sometimes good things happen to bad
people and bad things happen to bad people and bad things
happen to good people, but it can be really frustrating when the King Noah's
the world aren't getting their comeuppances and the people who are just
trying to follow Jesus are having such a tough time. Chapter 21 says,
It came to pass that after many days the Lamanites began again to be stirred up
in anger against the Nephites and they began to come into the borders of the land round about.
Now they durst not slay them because the oath which their king had made unto Limhi, but
they would smite them on their cheeks and exercise authority over them, and began to
put heavy burdens on their backs and drive them as they would a dumb ass.
Verse 5, And now the afflictions of the Nephites were great, and there was no way that they
could deliver themselves out of their hands for the Lamanites had
surrounded them on every side." Sometimes it's tough to be in that situation where
you feel like you're just not winning at anything in the world and it says they
try to fight back a couple of times. It doesn't really work and in verse 14 it
says, they did humble
themselves even to the dust subjecting themselves to the yoke of bondage
submitting themselves to be smitten and to be driven to and fro and burdened
according to the desires of their enemies and they did humble themselves
even in the depths of humility and they did cry mightily to God even all the day
long did they cry unto their God that he would deliver them out of their
afflictions.
And this is very interesting.
It says in 15, now the Lord was slow to hear their cry
because of their iniquities.
Never the Lord did hear their cries
and began to soften the hearts of the Lamanites.
They began to ease their burdens,
yet the Lord did not see fit to deliver them out of bondage.
This is a kind of interesting point in
the story where the people of Limhi are becoming more and more humble and I
think when you're more humble you're more open to God's power and more
vulnerable to God's mercy. But interesting that it says the Lord was
slow to hear their cry. What do you think that means? Is it kind of like when
you're you tell your kid not to do something cry. What do you think that means? Is it kind of like when you're,
you tell your kid not to do something, they don't do that, it's dangerous, and then the kid does
thing and the kid gets hurt, and then you run over and you're taking care of the kid, but in your
eyes you're saying, I told you so. Perhaps it's that they were in such a sinful place that coming back into tune with the
Lord took so long, they maybe thought it was, oh, God's not hearing our prayers, but perhaps
it was, you've got to get yourself back in a position where you can recognize answers
to prayers.
Mm-hmm. where you can recognize answers to prayers. Slow to hear their cries because
they had been slow to hear him? I don't know, maybe it's like I want to make sure
you get the point because I see in verse 4 and I think read this with your
spiritual ears, there's no way they could deliver themselves. I mean, this is a deliverance story.
And then they get to verse 14.
Oh, we have to ask God to deliver us.
Like deliverance stories of Moses and everything.
Who's the deliverer?
He wants to make sure they know, I'm gonna deliver you.
There is no way out of this on your own.
And I think he wants them to see God is your deliverer.
You know what's fascinating about this?
If you put yourself in Limhi's position,
he has tried to fight his way out of bondage.
He has sent men to go look for Zarahemla.
They've come back telling him Zarahemla has been destroyed.
This has got to be a hopeless moment.
I've exhausted every option. There is no other option and then what a relief it would
be to have Ammon show up and say, you know what, Zarahemla hasn't been destroyed.
This is just my own personal question. In verse 13, it sounds like they've given up.
They humbled themselves to the dust, subjected
themselves to the yoke of bondage, submitting themselves to be smitten, to be
driven to and fro and burdened. And then in verse 14, it sounds like they have
this spark of hope in God because now they're crying to God for
deliverance. This is just my total personal experience. I don't have anything to teach here. I just have this
conundrum as a cancer patient, which is sometimes you just have to accept the
hard things of the world. You have to accept the indignities of disease and the things that are
painful. They're just part of the world. And it seems like my
beautiful friend Kate Holbrook, who was also a guest on this podcast, if anyone
in the world should be saved
because of their good works and the things that they can do in the world, it
should be Kate, you know. But cancer is cancer. The question is, I sometimes
wonder if it's unreasonable to ask God to always deliver us. God would know if what's reasonable or not
reasonable and it's hard to not ask honestly. But I think this is a very kind
of beautiful and human passage because in verse 13 I see something that I
recognize which is they're just trying to grapple with their situation
sometimes
It feels like you just have to live with what you have for a while
it strikes me as a very rich and
true kind of account of these people and their struggles I
Had a friend Chris Clark who was diagnosed with ALS back in 2014-2015.
He ended up passing away in 2020. When I'd see him, he was cheerful. He had his days, of course,
where he was mourning. But if you go all the way to Mosiah 24, verse 15, they did submit cheerfully and with patience to all the will of the
Lord very much Chris Clark esque I remember asking him how are you doing
this and he said something similar to what you just said Melissa he said it
got better when I accepted my path instead of looking at everyone else's path, wishing I had their path, I
just looked ahead and said, this is my path. And he said it wasn't easier, but his
heart calmed. So I think there is something to what you said of accepting.
Accepting this is my situation.
Instead of fighting reality, I radically accept.
That's always balanced with this radical hope, which you just can't get rid of.
I think that it's there and that it's here in the scriptures is very real.
I noticed this little two-word phrase, but I think it only shows up twice in the Book of Mormon.
It says, by degrees.
Mosiah 21.16 says, the Lord did prosper them by degrees.
And then, John, where's the other one? It's in the war chapters, right? Yeah, it's when Lahontai is poisoned by degrees by the servant of Amalekiah.
I guess I saw that too and thought, oh, there's that phrase, by degrees.
By degrees. We have one situation where they're prospered by degrees and the other situation
where he's poisoned by degrees. That's an interesting little parallel that maybe the Lord prospers
us by degrees and the adversary will poison us by degrees. It's a slow process in either
direction.
In the next verse, it's interesting to think of King Noah and then his son, King Limhi,
and to get hints about his character. In verse 17, there was a great number of women more than there was of men.
Therefore, King Limhi commanded that every man should impart to the support of the widows and their children,
that they might not perish with hunger.
And I'm thinking of the pure religion verse,
James 1.27, pure religion and none defile before God is to visit the widows the fatherless in their affliction what a contrast between oh no
here comes danger run away from your wives and children yeah here's a limb
high I'm commanding you to look around your community and this isn't Alma's
community this is limhi though, and in part
to the widows and the children. What a contrast.
It's interesting that later on in verse 33 of that same chapter 21, it says they wanted
to be baptized, but there was no one who had the authority. And Ammon declined doing this
thing considering himself an unworthy servant. Therefore, they did not at that time form
themselves into a church waiting upon the Spirit of the Lord."
That also reminds me of, again, groups of people who find the church and gather together,
but the circumstances aren't right for them to
form a church yet.
Kind of beautiful. They're waiting upon the Spirit of the Lord.
When you guys think about this
How do you keep the different Ammons straight in your mind in my mind?
I used to call this guy Ammon the Explorer
I heard Eric Huntsman called him Ammon the Scout
Because he kind of knew the way back to Zarahemla and he knew the way to get from Zarahemla to the land of Nephi
This is not
Ammon the son of Mosiah. That one comes later.
Yeah. Can I show you something and ask you both about it? See what it sparks in you?
If you go back all the way to Mosiah chapter seven, King Benjamin has died and his son
Mosiah is now king. And the people of Zeneph, they left 80 years ago.
That's a long time ago for a group of people to have left.
I put it next to chapter 7 verse 1.
All of a sudden, Mosiah is desirous to know about the people that left.
It's been 80 years and then suddenly he starts to think, what
happened to those people? Well, at that exact same time where we are in chapter 21 verse
14, Melissa just pointed out, they did humble themselves even in the depths of humility
and they did cry mightily to God even all the day long they did cry unto their God that he would deliver them out of their afflictions.
I wonder if those two things are tied together that the prayers of these people
sparked an idea in
Mosiah.
What is happening to those people that perhaps were being shown here, the prayers, how they get
answered. It says the Lord was slow to hear their cries. Maybe it was Mosiah. Maybe I
ought to go find out what happened to them. It reminds me of President Kimball. Often
the Lord answers our prayers through others. My grandmother was born in Salt Lake City in the 1930s. At the time,
there weren't a lot of Chinese families in Salt Lake City. But as it happened, even though there
was actually also quite a lot of racism in Salt Lake City at this time, one of their local neighbors,
the Soderbergh family, befriended them, became their family companions. They had a kind of
symbiotic relationship. My grandma's dad was a vegetable farmer and this was
during the Depression so there's no jobs. The Soderborg boys paid for their
missions by working for my great-grandpa in his field. They shared a cow. The
Soderborgs got the cream and half the milk and then the Jew family got the
other milk. My grandma's last name is Jew, J-U. They were really good friends.
They stayed in touch with each other for a long time. It was through them that my
grandmother's family joined the church. And then as that kind of older generation
passed away, we lost track of each other. I just heard stories about them. I didn't know
any actual Soderberghs. One day in I think 2021 at a MHA Mormon History
Association conference in Park City, I was getting my lunch and the volunteer
had a tag that said Joseph Soderbergh. I was like, oh Soderbergh. I said, wow my family
used to know some Soderborgs
and they were a Chinese family and he said, Jiu Jin? You're Jiu Jin's family? It was
the right Soderborg. So I just feel like something brought us together and since then we've been
able to reestablish those connections with the family and it seems quite important, I
guess, for our family history, like a relationship that kind of lasted generations. There's this long
kind of period, but we're not together. But for some reason, you know, during
the pandemic, maybe we're all like, looking for more connection, feeling a
little unmoored, then we were able to find each other. I recently heard Joy Jones speak who was
president of the general primary. She told the story about how during her
presidency she said, okay Lord I'm gonna try this prompting. I really need
direction and so I'm just gonna tell you if I feel a prompting I'm gonna do it.
And then like pretty soon
thereafter she is doing laundry or in the middle of some sort of task when she
has this prompting to call this woman. She's like, okay well maybe I'll finish
my task and then she's like, oh no no no no I'm gonna do it. So she jumps on her
phone she calls the person. The person picks up, sounds very unhappy and says hello. Yeah. Okay. Bye. And she's like well maybe that didn't go so well.
But a few days later the woman contacts her and says why did you call me like at
that time? And she said well I just felt that maybe I should reach out. And the
woman then explained that she had been thinking on that very day of killing
herself.
She was really depressed.
She was thinking of killing herself.
And she had just vowed to God, unless some sort of miracle happens, this is it.
I'm going to be gone by the time my husband comes home.
And then the phone rang and it was Joy Jones checking up on her.
She said that she was kind of angry in the moment,
that like, was this the miracle? But just because President Jones was willing to be receptive
and willing to act at that moment, then her call could come right when her friend was wondering,
does God care about me? Does anyone care?
Does God care about me? Does anyone care?
Hmm.
Very similar to this Limhais people. There's nobody out there who can help us.
And so they pray and here they show up.
It might take a while.
What do they do with him? They put him in prison.
Yeah.
Because they don't know who he is.
They don't know who he is, so they toss him in jail.
That's what happens when you try to serve people and go help them.
They take you and throw you in jail.
So Melissa, Limhi and his people get back to Zarahemla,
but we have another group of people who are in the land of Helum.
This is Alma and his people, the ones who used to be at the waters of Mormon.
They're in their own terrible situation.
What do you see as useful in Alma's situation?
I feel bad for them because here they are
trying to live their covenant community
and the wicked priests and the Lamanites
happen to come across them.
You're like, oh, think of worst case scenario,
and it happens.
They get to this beautiful place.
It even has, how do they describe it?
A land, even a very beautiful and pleasant land,
a land of pure water.
Sounds dreamy.
Yeah, and then this crummy person named Amulon shows up
through his various machinations eventually
and the people of Alma are also put into bondage.
It says in chapter 24, verse 8 and 9, it came to pass that Amulon began to exercise authority
over Alma and his brethren and began to persecute him and cause his children to pursue their
children for Amulon knew,
al-Mahdi, that he had been one of the king's priests and that it was he that had believed
the words of Abinadi and was driven out before the king, and therefore was wrought with him,
for he was subject to King Laman. Yet he exercised authority over them and put tasks upon them
and put taskmasters over them. Verse 10, And it came to pass it's so great were their afflictions they began to cry mightily to God.
It's a quick story which has a lot of 180s. They find this beautiful place and then
they encounter the bad guy of King Noah's priests and then they are put into bondage again.
I think this is very famous. We talk about this a lot.
Verse 24, 14 through 15.
It says that God helped them by making them strong and lightening their burdens.
Now someone will read verse 14 through 15.
Okay, Mosiah 24, 14.
And I will also ease the burdens which are put upon your shoulders,
that even you cannot feel them upon your backs, even
while you are in bondage. And this will I do, that ye may stand as witnesses for me
hereafter, and that ye may know of a surety that I, the Lord God, do visit my people in
their afflictions."
And fifteen.
And now it came to pass that the burdens which were laid upon Elma and his brethren were
made light,
and the Lord did strengthen them that they could bear up their burdens with ease,
and they did submit cheerfully and with patience to all the will of the Lord."
That's very impressive that in the middle of such a difficult situation,
they were able to see themselves as still being in God's hands and able to accept that.
These are two chapters I frequently refer to when someone asks,
why, why I was trying so hard to be good? Why does this happen to me?
Section 121, 122, 123 to come to mind, but Mosiah 23 and 24, I put in that same category. It's not
like Amulon and the Lamanites were looking for these people. They were lost and just
happened. You would think the Lord hates me, right? There's no other possible explanation.
Why did it have to be Amulon? Yeah. The word that I have circled in
verse 15 is all, because usually I'm pretty good with some of the will of the Lord.
Hank, when you mentioned cheerfully, they had to submit to all the will of the Lord. So here's
Joseph Smith, Liberty Jail. I think it could be the last verse in 1.23 where he
says, Therefore, beloved brother, let us cheerfully do all things that lie in our power. There's
that cheerfully. And then may we stand still with the utmost assurance to see the salvation
of God and for His arm to be revealed. And I love this idea of you do what you can do
and then that's all you can do.
You wait for the Lord's arm to be revealed. But as we've read here, sometimes He waits.
I'm okay in submitting to some of the will of the Lord, you know?
Did submit cheerfully and with patience.
That's also really hard.
Melissa, let's say there's someone listening who is struggling that it's,
you know what, I was trying to live a good life and I got hit with incredible suffering.
I mean, it's one thing for John and I to say,
yeah, this is what you got to do,
but you are in a rough spot.
What would you say to someone on their commute?
Or I have a friend who told me he's recovering from a stroke,
and so he listens to the podcast
as he has to learn how to walk again.
Holy cow. What do we say? Is there anything we can say?
I think we can just say, yeah, that's a big deal, a big task. Yeah. This story does turn out pretty
well in terms of divine intervention. Just a few verses down on
verse 17. Right away God says, okay I'm going to deliver you out of bondage and
then in verse 19, in the morning the Lord caused a deep sleep to come upon the
Lamanites, yea and all their taskmasters were in a profound sleep. That's super
awesome because it looks like they didn't get them drunk or slip
sleeping pills into their morning tea. That's like a real out-of-the-blue sort
of miracle. It still goes well. I always remember the talk the elder
Holland gave recently. It was the second general conference during the pandemic and he said,
for every Lehi and Nephi who are saved from fire by their faith,
we have an Abinadi who dies and fire for his and for every person who's healed instantly,
we have someone else who's got to wander in the wilderness for 40 years.
Elijah who called down fire from heaven, he had to go a period of time where he was
fed by a raven, which is not a lot of food.
The point of Elder Holland's talk was to be that we can feel abandoned when we're in these
difficult straits and there's no parting of the Red Sea,
there's no 21st century crickets and 21st century seagulls, as Elder Holland put it.
But he says we can know that God has our best interests at heart and that prayers
will be answered though not necessarily on the time scale that we want them to.
I just find his acknowledgement of that really comforting.
Again, it feels to me like a kind of witnessing.
We can see in the scriptures how some things go well for people and they get out of their bondage
through this cool miracle, and at other times they stay there a lot longer than they would have liked to. That's what's so wonderful about the scriptures is that
they don't always present us with an ideal world. There are so many mistakes
that people in the scriptures make. They say that at the very beginning of the
Book of Mormon, the title page of the Book of Mormons, and the preface says, you
know, if there's mistakes it's on us, it's on people, not on God. But it's
also beautiful because in the scriptures you can find people like Job or like the people of Al-Mahir
who did really hard things for longer than they would have liked. Back in Liberty Jail,
the son of man hath descended below them all that lesson lesson, O man." Elder Holland, he said, it is significant that it is the wounded Christ who comes to
us and is evidence that bad things happen even to the pure and the perfect.
Yeah, the worst things happened to the most pure and the most perfect.
Yeah.
Elder Holland, in that same talk you referenced, Melissa, says this path to holiness and happiness
here and hereafter is a long and rocky one.
It takes time and, and I like this word, tenacity to walk it.
There's power in thinking, I can do this.
This will not beat me.
I will keep going.
Yeah, it's, it's impressive. And that's why also from a historian's point of view, it's so important that people write their own
histories. I mean, what we're reading here, a primary source for this was someone's history, someone's personal account of
what happened, which was there in the records, which was then edited and summarized by Mormon, the editor.
We have to remember that we are the primary sources for the next sacred set of scriptures.
Our life experiences and the things that we go through are sacred in the same way that
the experiences of the people that we read about in these pages are sacred, because the
scriptures are a record of God's dealings and relationships with people. When we write
about that and how we navigate that relationship with God, it's really
important. When we are reading, for example, Abinadi's amazing sermon, who
wrote that down? It was Alma. I don't think it had been it. I was in a position to write it down.
It says that he rehearsed things that had been it I had taught. Somehow he remembered that masterful sermon and the quoting of Isaiah and everything and wrote it down.
I got to do better in my journal, I'm thinking to myself right now. Especially you're talking to a historian here, John.
Do you have any stories about caste system in India?
My colleague, Tonalyn Ford, who coined the term, it's always 1830s somewhere in the church, is the one to talk to about that.
She has written a paper where she talked about marriages. It's quite common for Indian Latter-day Saints to have arranged
marriages. For example, a young woman will go on a mission. When she comes home, her
family will have arranged a marriage for her to a nice Latter-day Saint man.
They get married. I did hear again from Pana Lynn that the church in India works really hard to be
a castless space. For example, a branch president, someone who is from the
Dalit or the so-called untouchable class might be called to be the stake
president, or someone who's in the Brahmin class might make a particular
point of cleaning the bathrooms when it's time to
clean the church because you know that's something usually not done by people of
that caste. The churches in India tend to be based on caste. So if you're a certain
caste you go to this Methodist church, if you're another caste you go to that
Baptist church. Our church is quite counter-cultural that way. It was the first time that I had a problem with
cultural accommodation. You know, I say the history of Christianity in China and
it usually works out that the groups that are best able to adapt Christianity
to local religious practices, those are the ones that succeed. But here, I'm like, do I really want our church to
adapt to the caste system? That doesn't feel right. I don't think that really fits the gospel,
but it is tricky because it is seen as a kind of cultural insensitivity. Which is interesting.
Yeah, that is fascinating.
Melissa, as we finish up these chapters, anything else for a member who's
listening and saying, how can I be more like Melissa and take on my trials and difficulties with tenacity and with faith.
And you said before, this doesn't always look like a big smiley face.
That's not what this is.
Mm-hmm.
Well, I was struck by the second to last verse of Mosiah 24.
They've been delivered, they snuck past
the sleeping guards, they got into a place, the Lamanites were chasing them
but God said don't worry I'll stop them that the Lamanites were chasing you and
you're gonna be all good. So they're golden. And 24 it says, and it came to
pass but they departed out of
the valley and took their journey into the wilderness. So I like that as a
little spatial reminder that even when we finished one chapter in our lives we
have to keep on going and we're always going into the wilderness. We don't know
everything. We don't have a map for how our life
is going to go or a map for what's going to happen in the world. There's a lot of wilderness, I guess,
in life. There's these valleys which can be good for some things. It was a beautiful place. Too bad
it became in bondage there. But then it came time to leave the valley. So I guess what I'm just saying is
yeah, the wilderness is cool and beautiful. I love hiking in the wilderness, but as anyone
knows who spends time there, things can really go wrong. But without being willing to go into places
where things can actually go wrong, then we'll never
experience the beauty of the world or the beauty of humanity or the beauty of
a life in the spirit. That's ultimately what we signed up for when we came was
to have the agency to live in this magnificent world where all sorts of things can happen.
I love the Book of Mormon because of the teachings that it gives me about what it means to live in
community. My whole life, the church community, my family community have been the things that have
kind of made me who I am. And I love our particular spin on what it means to be baptized and to follow Christ,
which is in the Book of Mormon, in these chapters that we read today.
I think it's so transformative that we are able to become a covenant people
and make those covenants vertically and horizontally with each other.
And I love
the Church because of the opportunities that it's given me to discover my
limitations and ways in which I am uncharitable and ways in which I'm
ignorant. As the more I learn from my fellow Latter-day Saints, including the
wonderful people in my ward and also including the people whose stories I now
work with on a daily basis. I just learned that for some reason the Spirit
is speaking to people all over the world. For some reason the Spirit is leading
people into the church. For some reason we can feel these incredible connections amongst each other, amongst ourselves. And I think it's
so unique and beautiful. You know, I was thinking, Melissa, of you and your challenges that you're
going through right now and to hear your testimony and spirit through all of that is really amazing.
Thank you. Oh, it's been so fun to talk about the scriptures with you.
Thanks for having me. Every one of our listeners, well, absolutely blessed by
this. We'd love to know where you're listening from since Melissa is a
scholar, global church. Come on to YouTube and tell us where you're
listening from. I think all three of us would love to hear from all of you,
wherever you are, from Provo to Madagascar.
Let us know where you are.
With that, we want to thank Dr. Melissa Inouye for being with us today.
It has been an inspiring joy to have her here.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Swanson, our sponsors, David and Verla Swanson.
And every episode, we remember our founder, Steve Swanson.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We're gonna continue in the Book of Mosiah on Follow Him.
Before you skip to the next episode,
I have some important information.
This episode's transcript and show notes
are available on our website, followhim.co.
That's followhim.co. On our website, FollowHim.co.
On our website, you'll also find our two books, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament and Finding Jesus Christ in the New Testament. Both books are full of short and powerful quotes and
insights from all our episodes from the Old and New Testaments. The digital copies of these books
are absolutely free. You can watch the podcast on YouTube.
Also, our Facebook and Instagram accounts have videos and extras you won't find anywhere else.
If you'd like to know how you can help us, if you could subscribe to, rate, review, and comment on the podcast, that will make us easier to find.
Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nilsen, Will Stoughton,
Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra, and Annabel Sorensen.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings
of Jesus Christ. Turn to Him. Follow Him.