Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Mosiah 25-28 Part 2 • Dr. Jenet Erickson • May 27-June 2 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: May 22, 2024Dr. Erickson powerfully teaches Jesus' ability to redeem His people through testimonies and the commandment to remember the Lord’s redemptive power evident in our lives.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEn...glish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM22ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM22FRPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM22PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM22ES YOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/PuFws7lcAyIALL 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/followhimpodcast00:00 Part II–Dr. Jenet Erickson00:07 Mosiah 27 - Political theology of the Book of Mormon01:58 Mosiah 27:8 Alma the Younger as wicked man03:19 Mosiah 27:14-16 The Lord won’t allow His Church to be destroyed06:55 Mosiah 27:22 Go and remember10:13 Conversion and deliverance13:58 Mosiah 27:27-30 - The Lord manifests Himself to all20:59 Soil and Living Water25:16 Mosiah 28 - God redeems His children29:39 Missionaries and faith of their parents30:50 Mosiah 28:3 Motives33:51: Dr. Erickson’s faith and confidence in the Book of Mormon38:36 End of Part II– Dr. Jenet EricksonThanks 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. Jeanette Erickson, Mosiah chapters 25 through 28.
Well, let's go into 27 and here we're going to get this remarkable instruction about what we might call,
I think Joe Spencer calls it the political theology of the Book of Mormon.
Mosiah is going to establish the rule of law in a sense that there will be religious freedom, no persecutions, all will
be equal, each laboring for their own support, abounding in the grace of God. He's going to
recognize that the flourishment of truth and human flourishing cannot happen without establishing
religious freedom. That is true around the world.
It's interesting the data on that how nations that have higher levels of
religious freedom have higher flourishing in a host of things including
economically thriving. There's more entrepreneurship, there's more investment
from companies, there's more growth and stability that allows for that growth.
You have stronger
equality between men and women the more religious freedom there is. There's a lot to be said
for the power of establishing religious freedom and the flourishing of human beings. And certainly
our church stands for that. There's Joseph Smith saying at the core of it all is the need to honor the rights of all in their religious
beliefs and convictions.
The difficulties in Missouri, I think, brought that out of him that it's not just us. We
want the right to worship for everyone.
And it was in the Constitution and it didn't seem like he was like, wait, we
have a right. Yeah. You find him in church history talking about, well, this right is
for everybody in the constitution. That's interesting you brought that up.
We're going to get to the next powerful story, verse eight. Now the sons of Mosiah were numbered
among the unbelievers, the sons of the king, and also one of the sons of Mosiah were numbered among the unbelievers, the
sons of the king, and also one of the sons of Alma was numbered among them. And
he was a wicked and idolatrous man, stealing away the hearts of the people,
causing much dissension. And this is powerful, it helps us understand why
protecting the church is important. Alma, his father, trying to know what it means
to maintain the integrity of the church because it says this was a great hindrance. It gave a
chance for the enemy of God to exercise his power over them. So it's creating vulnerability among
people. How painful to have his own son engaging in that.
It appears like it was secretly.
He may not even been fully aware of all that his son was doing.
Maybe it was because of his new policy.
Yeah, that's so interesting.
It's Gary that he's called a man of many words and much flattery.
Who else gets that description?
Sherem and Korohor.
Yes, and he will
stand before Korahor. It's so interesting. Alma will, towards the very end of his
life, and see, I'm sure, in Korahor who he had been. That's brutal. We're gonna read
in verses 14 through 16. I remember as a child reading this and thinking about
people I loved
and wondering, why doesn't the Lord send an angel to them? He answered Alma, the father's
prayer, and I'm sure his wife, the mother of Alma, why doesn't he answer this family's
prayer? And I think it's helpful 100% to know the Lord is hearing and answering our prayers.
We heard that reiterated in conference
several times in really beautiful ways. But what's happening here is the Lord is not going to allow
His church to be destroyed. So we might see this kind gesture to a father who's praying for his son.
In fact, the Lord is saying, I'm not sure what Alma the Younger is going to do, but I am not going to allow my church to be destroyed.
He's going to say in verse 13, Alma, arise and stand forth.
Why persecutest thou the church of God?
For the Lord has said, This is my church, and I will establish it, and nothing shall overthrow it. Of yourself later he's going to say
you may choose of yourself to destroy yourself but you will not destroy the church. And I think that
there's a lot to be said about trusting in God. His will will be done. We can trust him and if
it's not our will we can know it is his will and it will be okay, but his will will be done.
Now don't you love that he's going to say to him, verse 15, can ye dispute the power
of God?
And we're going to hear the sons of Mosiah say the same thing.
What else could do such a thing except the power of God?
So in verse 20, and they rehearsed unto his father all that had happened and his father
rejoiced for he knew it was the power of God. Nothing else could do this. I've walked out of
my lessons before thinking that this angel is going to appear and go seek no more to destroy
the church of God. Right. I'm like, I'm trying to teach. But we can have that feeling, right? And just to know God will not allow us to destroy his Church.
Are you amazed that Alma the father gathers all the people together? I remember when I was younger,
reading about this man and recognizing how humiliating if he were in a place of using his son to validate himself in any way, which is
the place that I can often be in. It's natural for parents. My children are a reflection of me,
my skills, my capacities. Their goodness is an evidence of my goodness and their failure. It's
so human of us as parents to be like their failure is an indication of my failure. It can be shameful to see your own children
struggle and then you'll often hear that feeling of I have failed. There's a feeling that parents
might have I somehow failed. I didn't do because look at this child they're an indication of my
failure and Alma he is not in that place. I love it. He gathers everybody together. He's totally unafraid for the whole world to see.
This is my son who has been going about as the vilest of sinners. All I want you to see is the hand of God in this person's life, in my son's life.
It's inspiring to me. Not unlike the prodigal, the father of the prodigal son, right? He says, here's my son. He was dead and is alive again. He was lost, was found. There's that
beautiful purity in his yearning for them to see the hand of God in his son's
life. John, do you mind reading verse 22? Mosiah 27, 22. And he caused that the
priests should assemble themselves together, and they
be into fast, and to pray to the Lord their God, that he would open the mouth of Alma,
that he might speak, and also that his limbs might receive their strength, that the eyes
of the people might be open to see and know of the goodness and glory of God.
So beautiful, because sometimes we can be in that space of God this child's suffering or they're doing wrong or they have done wrong and this is shameful
and Alma's in a space of saying this is an evidence of the goodness and glory of
God not my own not this child's goodness not somehow that I was more successful
but this is God who is manifesting himself here in the life of this son. As some people read this appearance of the angel, there may be parents out there who are saying,
hey, could I order one of these for one of my kids? They're looking at the footnotes and,
oh yeah, if you would like this kind of divine intervention, see appendix B.
And there's an order form back there. How high in the Richter scale can I go? I want thunder.
Let's do a 9.2 on the Richter.
And when I read verse 15, Janet, you mentioned this, it's just the angels, I don't, it sounds
like it's having some fun with them.
So, huh?
Can you dispute the power of God?
Huh?
You see me standing here before you?
Does my voice shake the earth?
And then, behold, I am sent from God. What are you
going to do now? And I'm imagining, I was thinking about going on a mission. Yeah, good idea.
I love the little sermon in the sentence in verse 16, go and remember. Oh, that's good.
Go and remember. Remember the captivity of thy fathers in the land of Helam.
They had to get delivered out of there and here you are.
I would love to believe that angel is a benedai who's watching over that family.
I don't, there's nothing that indicates that.
I've never heard anybody say it, but wouldn't that be cool?
No.
If the angel was a benedai, we'll have to ask him one day.
He's just like your father. Yeah. Yeah. No, when the angel was a benedi, we'll have to ask him one day.
He's just like your father.
Yeah.
Yeah.
John, we're going to come back to that expression you pulled out.
Not only does he remember that deliverance, but he is going to preach and testify that
it's going to be the cornerstone of his testimony, his conversion process, I think, from Alma. And I remember somebody in Old Testament year saying that the one event that is
talked about the most in the Old Testament and a lot of the new is the
Exodus, is that deliverance. Now they have their own deliverance story. Maybe in
church history we can think of the pioneers like that too, and we can
remember that journey and those pioneers who stood as a witness of God Maybe in church history we can think of the pioneers like that too, and we can remember
that journey.
Those pioneers who stood as a witness of God thereafter, they were told to do here.
Oh, there's one other thing I think is kind of cool.
In the manual for individuals and families, there's my favorite little Walter Raine painting.
It's kind of small, but the four sons of Mosiah are carrying Alma, who's unconscious, to mom and dad.
And mom's going, oh no, and dad's going, all right.
And you can see the different reactions in the painting.
That is so interesting.
You're recognizing that deliverance may yet come, meaning the angel is not the one who
creates the conversion that converts Alma.
He's given a choice by what he
experiences. But then for all of us who are still yearning for people to come back, for people to
know the truth. I was really touched reading Joseph Grinney, who works with people who have left
prison and are seeking a way out through that the The other side is what it's called, that remarkable institution in Salt Lake that facilitates people coming out of addiction. He has seen
so many beautiful and also hard stories. People will be changing and then they'll go back.
And you could wonder, when is this going to happen? And I love how he wrote recently, the primary godly creative capacity God is training me for
is measured by how long I can hold a vision of righteous longings
while no evidence yet exists for their fulfillment.
And that we become like God as we hold that place,
hold on to the truth and the assurance that God hears and answers prayers,
that He will do His work in the lives of those we love, and we hold on to it even when we don't see
yet any evidence for the fulfillment of that. That's how we grow into how God is.
Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, in a book called, However Long and Hard the Road,
he said, we learn that there is majestic undeniable power in the love and prayer of a parent.
The angel who appeared to Alma and the sons of Mosiah did not come in response to any righteousness on their part,
though their souls were still precious in the sight of God.
He came in response to the prayers of a faithful parent.
And to save the church as you said
But I'd love that the angel says for this purpose have I come and what is this purpose in verse 14?
Alma who is thy father has prayed with much faith concerning thee. Wow
And he will hear the prayers of every parent
Even if it's answered in a different way from an angel appearing. A different sequence that you might think, but yeah, you can take that verse and say,
this was saved for me. Yeah, we don't want any parent out there to think,
oh, I just don't have enough faith, because we don't know how long Alma has been praying.
How long he prayed, how many sleepless nights, we don't know.
Yeah, could be years, right Jenny? You said he could be an adult here, Alma the Younger.
He could have been in his 40s.
I mean, he had 20 years after that.
That suggests he wasn't a teenager.
It was so beautiful to hear Susan Porter
in this most recent general conference, Sister Porter,
talk about her father.
And I could hear the yearnings of this child wanting her dad
to join the church and have their family sealed. You could hear the heart of of this child wanting her dad to join the church and have their family sealed.
You hear the heart of this child all through her life.
And he dies. He didn't come into the church before he died.
President Nelson's parents did. President Hunter's parents did. Elder Bednar's.
All these people who've experienced something like that, and yet they came in before the end, and her dad dies.
And then it was so beautiful to think of this child who'd prayed for so long within six
days of his passing.
He is ready to have those blessings given.
So you think, we cannot know when, but we can know for sure he hears those prayers. God will bring about miracles in lives that we can't even anticipate all the ways that he will bring about those miracles.
I love what Sherry Dew said that the gospel reaches across the street, across the world, and across the veil.
There is no end. There's no barrier in that sense.
I want to take us to this story of deliverance, this powerful message of deliverance.
Alma is going to say, let's see his testimony.
Verse 24, he stands up and bids them to be of comfort.
I'm okay. And then he says, behold, I am born of the Spirit.
And then he tells us the words of the Lord that
every person will need to be changed. Every one of us, not just Alma, the violist of sinners,
every one of us will need to be born again and become new creatures. And then he's going to
testify, I am born of God. The end of verse 28 and verse nine, my soul has been redeemed.
28 and verse 9, my soul has been redeemed. And then I love this verse 30. I rejected my redeemer
and denied that which had been spoken of by our fathers. But now that they may foresee that he will come and that he remembereth every creature of his creating, he will make himself manifest
unto all. So, Alma's saying he has done that for me. I rejected him and he has made himself manifest unto all." So, Alma's saying, he has done that for me. I rejected him and he has
made himself manifest to me. And then he's going to say, it's not just me, it's all. Every me shall
bow and every tongue confess before him at the last day when all shall stand to be judged of him.
Then shall they confess that he is God. Every single one of us is going to ultimately know who this God is. And we
may choose to reject him. I don't know that very many are going to choose to reject him in the end,
but all of us will know. Alma is then going to testify of that beautiful truth. I love that if
we go to Alma 36, somebody will do this later, wonderfully
guide us through this. But here's this pattern that we opened with at the beginning where you see
the words Alma 36. He's going to start that chiasmus that's so beautiful that Jack Welch
brought to light as a young missionary in Germany. We're going to see these words, captivity, bondage.
None could deliver but Christ. Trust, deliverance, born of God. There's the series. And then he's
going to end that story where he's telling Helaman, his son, about his conversion experience. He's
going back to what we're reading. He's retelling it in greater detail. And he's going to start with that list in that order,
and he's going to end in exactly that list. He's going to end with born of God, deliverance,
trust, none could deliver but Christ, bondage and captivity. So that beautiful chiastic
structure where it's A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and then G, F ends in the
other order. But when we think about that language, if we went back to Abinadi's words, way back that Abinadi says
to his father, we're going to see in Abinadi's words that he prophesies bondage, captivity. This a Mosiah 11 verses 21 and 23 he's gonna say there will be
bondage, captivity, none shall deliver them except it be the Lord the Almighty
God. Abinadi is gonna say those words Alma in Mosiah 24 with his people is
going to say exactly the same thing they had been in bondage and he had delivered
them and none could deliver except it were the Lord, their
God, those same words. And John, as you pointed out in Mosiah 25, we're going to hear Alma say that the people should
remember that it was the Lord who had delivered them. Then we're going to hear the angel say to Alma, you need to
remember that the Lord delivered them out of bondage.
And then we're going to hear in Alma 36, Alma tell that whole thing in his story.
I was captive.
I was in bondage.
None could deliver but Christ.
I put my trust in him.
He delivered me and I was born of him." Alma, his father, is going to talk about
it in terms of a physical redemption, physical deliverance. He were brought out
of physical bondage. And what we're going to see is the movement from that physical
bondage story into the most deeply personal redemption spiritually that is ultimately going to be expressed in I was born of God, I was changed,
became a new person. We're going to see him tell that story in Alma 36. He's going to do the same
thing in Alma chapter 5. He's going to talk about have you remembered their captivity? Have you
remembered the need to be changed and born of God and to put your
trust in God and in it that song of redeeming love that comes that then
brings hope and is born of faith so charity faith and hope it's going to be
grounded in that message of captivity deliverance none could deliver but Christ
he delivered me and I am born of him. I couldn't help
but think, well, what does this have to do with all of us? I may not see myself as the vilest of
sinners. Am I in captivity? Do I experience bondage? Alma's going to reference, as you
mentioned already, he's going to reference in Alma 36, this whole story of the Exodus, that most oft repeated story. That's the story of deliverance. Again, do I need deliverance?
I think of all the moments every day when the burdens of the ego, if they will, the fears or the
temptations or the anxieties, the worry about, am I being noticed? This is uncomfortable.
Life is uncomfortable. And all the moments throughout every day when we need deliverance
from a Redeemer and He promises us He will do that. He will do it and the deliverance will take the form of that doctrine of Christ change
as we are born of him through the process of faith, repentance, renewing that covenant,
experiencing the power of the spirit and becoming changed. And we will all know ultimate and full
deliverance. Having been reborn through putting our trust in the deliverer, Christ,
gets remarkable how Mormon does this for us. Here it is in Mosiah, Abinadi's words. Here
it is in Alma's words. Here it is in Alma the Younger's words. Here it is, these same
powerful expressions of deliverance from bondage through Christ, and none could do it for any of us but Christ himself.
Man, that's really good, Janet.
Had to underline verse 30, He remembereth every creature.
He had this beautiful description of the soil that we create that allows access to the living water,
where we pull out the weeds.
And you may be wondering, well, goodness, have I made the right soil? I yell at them, the Spirit's
not in the home. We didn't do scripture study. We didn't do all of these things. And he ends with,
watch the Lord Jesus Christ perform his miracles. John, as you were referencing what Alma's answer
is, when the Lord says to him as he's worried about,
what about these people and what do I do? And he says, we go back to that verse.
It is I that hath created them. It is I that granteth him that believeth, and in my name are
they called. They shall know me. They shall know that I am the Lord their God." His father is bearing that testimony and Alma the son is bearing that testimony.
Every knee will bend and know. President Uchtdorf is inviting us to
you do what you can do and you are not the Redeemer. He will do his work and you watch
as he brings forth his miracles. Sarah and I, many, many eons ago, we were walking out of the Jordan River temple
and we were walking back to our car. She said something so odd.
She said, do you think that Adam and Eve felt really dumb when they found out
that they had been naked the entire time. And I was, what?
And she said, wouldn't you feel, oh my goodness,
what was I?
So embarrassed, ashamed, right?
Yeah, I did that and I did that and I did that.
And oh, had I known.
And I said, Sarah, this is a funny thing
that you're telling me.
I don't know why you're telling it to me. And she said, Sarah, this is a funny thing that you're telling me. I don't know why you're telling it to me.
And she said, it really changed me.
She said, it is not fair to judge yesterday's mistakes with today's knowledge.
You've learned something now that you probably didn't realize then.
It's not fair for you to take what you know now and judge you of 10, 20, 30 years ago.
Yeah. Why is Sarah? Because it's so beautiful that the Lord then says to them, Satan's saying,
look at you're naked, run, quick hide. How shameful that you're so imperfect that you have weakness.
And the Lord says, come, come, I will cover you. And he closed them right in something far better than what
they had tried to create, which atonement word, kefar. When I first became a mom, it was so
striking to me. I was set up for failure. I'm completely set up for failure is how it felt.
I'm still immature. I'm still developing as a person. And I have these very dependent souls who are going to be shaped by me, who are going to be shaped by my lack of development.
And it felt like I was going back to Adam and Eve, where they're between thisemer. What did you think? This whole thing was about
your learning and growth, and it's a story not of perfection. It never was. It was always a story
of redemption for parents and children in their struggle. I'm learning about God. I'm learning to
have faith in His redeeming power. I am growing in the ways
I need to grow through the very thing that seems so wrong to me is the catalyst for my own coming to
know and trust the Redeemer. And God, he does this so beautifully. He's bringing about their redemption
and he's bringing about my redemption in the same story, even though my ego's like, but I wanted to do it perfectly.
Wasn't I expected to do it perfectly?
And we'll hit ourselves against the wall.
If we think this is the story of perfection, it has always been a story of redemption.
The whole thing for parents and children.
I'm going to ask Jamie Nielsen, our wonderful social media manager, to create that meme,
Jennet, what you just said. It was never a plan of perfection. It has always been a plan
of redemption. Almost melted there.
Thank goodness, right? Thank God. This is a story of redemption. Well, do you know what we get to end with? We get Mosiah 28 and these
incredible men, the vilest of sinners, want to do the hardest thing imaginable.
They want to go to a people who have hated them and there's been so much
danger and battle and warfare and threat, and they want to go share the
gospel of Jesus Christ. And they can't bear but do it. They can't keep themselves back.
And not only do they want to go do that, they're denying their right as princes, inheritors
of the throne, who could have had such a life. So beautiful that that belief in Christ is such a catalyst to further saving work.
We have to be part, the more converted we are, we can't help but want to be part of his saving work.
And they're going to work a remarkable miracle, miracles we will see for hundreds of years yet
be manifest in this remarkable decision to leave all that they had and go help save others.
And before they leave, at the end of Mosiah 27, it says,
they went about zealously striving to repair the injuries which they had done.
I go, Mormon, that was good editing right there. Look at verse 37, because he is going to say what the wicked priests asked
Abinadi. They tried to stump him with this Isaiah verse. And verse 37, how blessed are
they? They did publish peace, they did publish good tidings of good, and they did declare
unto the people that the Lord reigneth. So here comes Abinadi again, because that's the
question that they asked the wicked priest. I think, wow, wow Mormon that was elegant how you stuck that in there. That was
and don't you think he loved it? I mean he loves saying here's this wicked priest that heard those
words is converted by that has a son who is as wicked as can be who is converted by Christ
and now all of these are going to publish peace.
There is the story of redemption. What they couldn't have known would be possible, the most magnificent story possible.
And Abinadi, after he reads Mosiah 14, which is Isaiah 53, he explains it in Mosiah 15, and he says, who are they?
Well, he says, these are they who have published peace. I'm not using the exact words.
There are those who will hereafter publish peace. And here's Abinadi prophesying almost about the four sons of Mosiah. Yeah, so beautiful. It's almost as if these four sons thought we have a
better kingdom to build than our own. Yes, they trade it. And you see their father, it's such an incredible decision because not only does it change the
whole future and prepare for the Savior's return, that work had to be done for him to
come.
But then you also recognize that because they refuse the kingdom, Mosiah cannot pass it
on and the entire political structure will change to allow the flourishing of the
church, the design of God from the beginning.
And it could have been Mosiah's like, boys, were you listening when we had the records
of Zennephret and the records of Alma? Do you know what it took to get those people?
You want to go back there?
I'm sure there's many Nephites we find out later who say, that's crazy.
They're going to reflect on it later in Elmer.
And some said, no, let's kill him.
It's so scary that King Mosiah is this can't be right.
I mean, he has to go before the Lord to say, what do you think about this?
And I love how the answer he receives from the Lord
is in verse seven, and the Lord said unto Mosiah,
let them go up, for many shall believe on their words
and they shall have eternal life.
And I will deliver thy sons out of the hands
of the Lamanites.
You can hear the prayer of Jacob and the prayer of Enos
and all of this earnestness.
How do we help them
know the truth? How do we bring Lehi's and Saraiya's descendants back? And you
see here it is and they must have rejoiced to see these young men make
this choice to go do that, to start that great work. We've been talking about
parents so much I automatically thought of parents' private suffering of sending a child on a mission. Yeah, pretty soon I'll have one son in Uruguay and one son in
West Virginia. I say, okay Lord, take care of them. Yes, what an act of faith of
parents, there's no question. I didn't, I hadn't thought about it until myself
because our children are 14 and 11. But when we were in Madagascar recently
visiting my brother, his family was serving a mission there, I thought, oh my goodness,
what if my Peter were called to serve here? And all of a sudden I could just hear what an act of
faith it is for parents to entrust their children literally to the hands of God with no ability to control what they will experience or the hunger,
whatever kinds of things. I can't talk about this. John, you gotta walk me through it when it happens.
My oldest daughter Ashley, I'll never forget the email, dad, somebody spit on me today. Like, oh my god. Yeah. Let them go up. Yeah, let them go up because you know how much it will mean.
In verse three, it talks about their motives, the thought that any human soul should perish, even the very thoughts that any soul should endure endless torment, it caused them to quake and tremble. When I read endless torment, I think of forever, but go backwards and it says in Mosiah 27-29,
my soul was wracked, this is after he wakes up, my soul was wracked with eternal torment.
So I put my margin, how can you have eternal torment for three days?
And what's the answer to that? What's the answer?
Don't we hear in section 19, It's his way of helping us change.
Right. It's not, I didn't say that eternal torment would have no end. I said it was endless torment
because endless is my name. It's this void. What? Section 19 was enormous to share that. So,
that's fun that he uses that line. I was wracked with eternal torment. How long? Three days.
You can have eternal torment for three days.
John, I love that you highlighted that this is torment that's not endless. We might think
eternal means, but that is defined by God. But I love how they couldn't bear to think of people
suffering without knowing the goodness and the redemption of God.
Not that they assumed they're going to be damned forever,
but wanted them to be drawn into the light and goodness of God.
Couldn't bear for them to experience that suffering.
That's beautiful love for our brothers and sisters.
They wanted to help their cousins.
Mm-hmm.
Guy probably had a pie chart of motives for going on a mission, right?
Right.
My brother's a man.
We all do.
My dad went, I'm supposed to go.
I want to go.
They get more refined as you're out, but I love what it says in verse 32.
They've been traveling roundabout through all the land, publishing to all the people
the things which they had heard and seen." Elder Brent H. Nielsen
in General Conference, remember that talk? A record of what I have heard and seen. And I hope we don't
limit the idea of a testimony to the feeling because sometimes you can see the fruits of it,
as Jesus would say. Know them by their fruits. What have you heard and seen? In Acts chapter 4, Peter and
John said, we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard. Sometimes it's fun to make a
list. Elder Nelson, when he began his talk, he mentioned that one of the requirements from
graduating with seminary was to name all 15 temples, to be able to identify them. This will tell you how old I am. My flip
chart that I had in the Philippines had 16 temples on it, and I could identify them by
looking. And he said, I couldn't do that today. There's 335, and these are things we have
seen and heard in our lifetimes, which is miraculous. You could identify the 15 temples in Utah, maybe.
How many are there?
There's exactly 15.
I just looked it up.
Jenna, as we wrap up, I have a couple of questions.
One would be, here you are.
You are very well educated, very well spoken.
And you, deep in your heart,
want this to get into the hearts of your students. Why do you put so much confidence in this
book? That's quite a thing. I mean, when you think I'm impacting these young people, hopefully
for the rest of their lives, and I'm putting my confidence in the teachings of this book.
How would you answer that?
Why are you so convinced this is going to be a blessing to them?
What a miracle it is, as President Hinckley would say, to literally heft in our hands
the manifestation of God's love.
That he literally, in the Book of Mormon breaks through heaven
into earth and manifests his hand to say, I will redeem my people.
I will gather Israel.
I will answer the prayers of the prophets of the past, the husbands and wives and men
and women and prophets.
I will restore my children. We literally
get to carry the emblem of the covenant in our hands. When Enos talks about, he's writing this
record and you'd see they keep passing on generation to generation, each generation getting one closer
to the fulfillment of the covenant. We hold it in a sense, the emblem of the covenant.
What is the covenant? It is that made that President Nelson teaches so beautifully before
we even came to this earth that they, our heavenly parents, would send a redeemer and
he would fulfill his redeeming work. It's not trust in the book per se. It's not trust in myself as a teacher.
It's trust that he is the way, the truth, and the life,
and he will fulfill his promise.
When we accepted him before this life,
when we accepted that he would do that,
when we put our trust in him,
it was well-placed trust in the most virtuous being imaginable, a being of pure love,
and he did it. There's no reason to fear or doubt. It was done. It is finished. He did the will of
his father and it is finished. Whatever place they are, we are in the journey. I'm so much in need of
being reborn and experiencing that full process of becoming new in Christ
wherever we are in it.
He has done all that is needed and it is assured for us.
I think it's that trust in Him, that placement of Him.
I just made another note.
Well-placed trust.
Where do you place your trust?
Where's the best place you can put your
trust? Wow. Now, Janet, our listeners all over the world, we're going to hear from them on
YouTube. I think they're going, yes, thank you for being with us. Thanks for spending time with us.
Oh, it's such a privilege. We're all so grateful for you. Thank you for doing this work.
We're all so grateful for you. Thank you for doing this work. We love having you on Follow Him. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen,
our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, and we always remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week. We're going to continue in the Book of Mormon on Follow Him. Before you skip to the next episode, I have some important information.
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