Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah Part 2 • Dr. Joshua Matson • Nov. 28 - Dec. 4
Episode Date: November 23, 2022Dr. Matson continues to explore the Lord’s mission of mercy and deliverance and how the Lord speaks to each person in their language to warn, to love, and to teach.Please rate and review the podcast...!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of Dr. Josh Matsu.
Josh, what did you got for us for Habakkuk?
I think it would be appropriate to start with my story of Habakkuk.
I actually ran into Habakkuk as a 19 year old pre-missionary, getting ready to leave
on my mission, and I was attending a temple session in the Idaho Falls temple for the first time.
And as you walk past the recommend desk into the temple, the doorway that goes into the
chapel above it is a reference to Habakkuk chapter 2, verse 20.
And I remember as a 19 year old looking up and reading the words of Habakkuk 220,
but the Lord is in his holy temple,
let all the earth keep silence before him,
and asking, who is Habakkuk?
Yeah, who is that?
And why was he so important that we're putting his name up
on the wall of the temple in Idaho Falls?
That was my introduction to Habakkuk.
I actually have loved the book ever since,
and we'll
talk about the context of 220 because it's going to make a lot of sense of why that verse is there
and also why it's really impactful for a temple. But the name Habakkuk is the first thing that catches my
eye, and the root for Habakkuk is somewhat unknown, but it's really close to a word that's used frequently in Genesis
to enfold, clasp, or embrace.
Habakkuk has something to do with this idea of embracing
or clasp being or enfolding,
and I found it used in two different ways in Genesis.
The first way is embracing clasp being or embracing
in kinship. And so we see this between particularly
Jacob and Esau, Jacob and his wife, and Jacob and his grandchildren Ephraim and Manasseh.
When Genesis 29 13, Genesis 33, 4, and Genesis 48 10, the same root for the name Habakkuk
is used to describe how Israel interacts with his relationships of others.
And for me, I get excited about the idea of viewing God as one who embraces us in a embrace of
kinship and love. Absolutely. Yeah, that's beautiful. And the fact that each of these references reference Jacob or Israel,
I also love the idea of the people of Israel, us,
the covenant people of Israel, that we do the same thing with everybody who's in our community,
that we have a clasp and embrace, or we unfold any member in a clasp of kinship.
That's the first take that we can take from Habakkuk and it's
very instructive and I love it.
The other one, I think actually fits the text a little bit better.
And that's from Genesis chapter 32 verse 24,
when we get a reference to a clasp in regards to wrestling.
So we get Jacob wrestling with the angel,
and he's gonna clasp or embrace or enfold
in wrestling the angel.
Habakkuk is amazingly fit for this idea of a wrestle
because the entire book, well, at least chapters one and two
are a back and forth between Habakkuk
and Jehovah, between God, as Habakkuk prays and Jehovah response.
He's wrestling with a question, right?
With two questions that God is going to bring to him, and I love this idea that our relationship
with God is a wrestle. And sometimes we approach heaven too obliquely.
We say, Oh, I can't get upset with God.
I can't argue with God.
I can't wrestle with God.
And one thing that I like to tell my students all the time is friends, I think God can handle
it.
If we're frustrated with God or if we don't understand something, I think God can handle it. If we're frustrated with God or if we don't understand something, I think God can handle
it. If we shake our fists sometimes and say, God, why can't I understand this? Or why are
you doing this? And that's what Habakkuk is doing. Is he's coming to God and he's saying,
let's wrestle. Let's wrestle with what I'm struggling with. So I think the name fits perfectly
for what we're about to read in the text of
Habakkuk. Awesome. I love looking at Old Testament names because so often they do seem to indicate
something of their mission. I kept thinking of a clasp or embrace as also Caffard, isn't that
similar? Yeah, and that we're looking more is directly with a hand class because you've got kupa or cuff in the Hebrew,
which actually means hand or fist
Interestingly enough that word is going to be used here in Habakkuk and is gonna give us another level of understanding
As we read through it
But yeah, I love this idea of a wrestle and we can draw the obvious parallels between
Jacob and Genesis or Enis in the book of Mormon.
And this idea of, do we wrestle with God? Do we really want to engage in that wrestle so that we can
truly learn truth directly from the source of truth or Heavenly Father?
You just used the phrase, engage in the wrestle, and Sherry Dew gave a talk up at B-O-U-I-to-ho.
You can go to B-O.U. Idaho's website,
and I think it's called Will You Engage in the Ressel?
And she later wrote a book called Worth the Ressel,
just about that very idea.
If you want to get your answer, you can,
but are you willing to engage in the wrestle?
She says, quote, questions are not just good.
They are vital, because the ensuing spiritual wrestle leads
to answers to knowledge and to revelation and also leads to greater faith.
We can link this talk in our show notes, John.
Just go to follow him.co.
We'll put Sherry's talk there in the show notes because it's a great reference to what
Josh has been talking about.
And it's endorsed by Elder Holland who was at BYU Idaho the next week and actually said,
you should listen to everything sister, do you just taught you? That's great. I love that
prophetic endorsement that that wonderful talk provides for us. And you'll also get extra credit
points in my class. I find if I want my students really wanted to do something I just make it extra credit.
So good. So Habakkuk, we understand his name.
Now, to give a historical setting like Nahum,
we have to do some investigative work
to find out when Habakkuk is written.
Because just like Nahum, all we get about Habakkuk
is the burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see.
And there's some interesting parallels there
that we can draw from,
but the investigative work that we need to do
actually is in verse six.
So in verse six of Habakkuk, for low, I raise up the Chaldeans, that bitter and hasty nation, which shall march through the breadth of the land to possess the dwelling places that are not theirs.
here is a reference to the neo-Babelonians who are going to come and take over stewardship of what we would call the Holy Land from the Assyrians. They're
going to destroy Nine of us in 612 so you can see the natural flow from Nehum to
Habakkuk. We move from the Assyrians to the Babylonians. It's interesting with
verse 6 and then if we would continue in verses seven, eight, nine, this makes it seem aware that Habakkuk is describing that people are
already aware that the Babylonians have destroyed Nineveh and that they are marching across nations,
including the Battle of Carcamish, which takes place in 605 BC, that people are familiar that they're starting to be on the move, but they haven't yet made their way to
the kingdom of Judah and to Jerusalem. So we're kind of in this sweet spot of sometime between
605 BC and the ultimate destruction of Jerusalem in 586, 587 BC. That's lehy time period, right?
in 586, 587 BC. That's lehy time period, right?
Exactly.
So Habakkuk could very much be one of those contemporaries
with lehy, and everything that we're seeing here
is part of that context that we're familiar with.
I'm so glad you said what you said a second ago,
because I've always thought Caldeans equals
Babylonians, but you called them neo-Babalonians.
So it means they kind of took over.
We do this with the Assyrians as well.
We have the neo-Assyrian Empire and we have the Babylonian Empire.
So the reference to neo-Babalonians is the fact that we have people inhabiting Babylon
well before the rise of the Babylonian Empire.
For scholars in a way to be able to delineate
between people who are inhabiting Babylon,
let's say in the second millennium BC,
and this neo-Babalonean empire that's gonna come
and destroy Nineveh and destroy Jerusalem
and continue to expand as an empire,
they're referred to as the neo-Babalonians
because they're new, that's neo,
so the new Babylonians, because they're closer to our time.
And so that delineates from the older Babylonians
who would have existed prior to that.
It sounds to me, am I reading this right,
that Habakkuk is struggling with the idea
that the Babylonians are gonna be successful.
Yeah, so there's two things,
the outline of Habakkuk is Habakkuk gives two prayers,
one at the beginning of chapter one
and one at the end of chapter one.
So in Habakkuk chapter one versus two through four,
we get Habakkuk's first prayer to God.
And he says this, oh Lord, how long shall I cry, and that will not hear?
Even cry out unto thee of violence, and that will not save.
Why does thou shum me iniquity, and cause me to behold grievance, for spoiling and violence
are before me, and there are that rise up strife and contention. Therefore, the law is slacked
and judgment does never go forth for the wicked death compass about the righteous. Therefore,
wrong judgment precedeth. What Habakkuk is saying in this first prayer is, God, why aren't you listening
to me? I'm constantly praying, and maybe it's not just have a cook. Maybe it's children of Judah
and the people that are living as covenant Israel. But how long are we going to cry and you're
not going to hear? And I can see it on John's face that he already knows exactly the parallel and
in the modern days that we want to go with, right? Yep. It's right there in the footnote.
So this is Joseph Smith's plea in Liberty Jail, oh Lord, where art thou?
And where is the pavilion that covereth thy hiding place?
What I also find fascinating is these same words are in Psalm 13.
While we get them in the doctrine and covenants, and we're familiar with them there, and now
we're being introduced to them here in Habakkuk. When we go to Psalm 13 and we look at verses two and three,
we see the similar language,
how long shall I take counsel in my soul,
having sorrow in my heart daily,
how long shall mine enemy be exalted over me?
Consider and hear me, O Lord, my God,
lighten my eyes, lest I sleep the sleep of death.
Poor guy is struggling.
Habakkuk is perhaps drawing upon
that language of the Psalms and trying to say,
Lord, am I just wasting my time?
Because I think of the numerous people
that I've talked to and that I've interacted with,
who say, Josh, I just don't feel like my prayers leave my bedroom.
I kneel down at the side of my bed and I pray to God
and I feel like it hits the ceiling
and it falls right back down on the floor.
I don't feel like God is listening to my prayers.
And that's Habakkuk.
Habakkuk is just reached the point where he looks
and he goes, God, are you just never gonna to listen to me? Are you never going to answer my prayers and the needs that I have in my life? The
needs that people have. And that's verse four, the word judgment is actually probably better
translated here is justice. It's the Hebrew word mishpah-hah. The law is slacked and justice
does never go forth. Therefore, wrong wrong justice precedeth. Habakkuk's
not just saying, why aren't you listening to me and what I need, but don't you see all
of the injustice that's happening in the world? When are you going to wake up and take care
of us? I can't think of a more connective way to see Habuk, than to think of the millions of people
who prayed the same prayer,
that we see in Joseph and in Habakkuk and in the Psalms.
I'm so glad you brought that up
because that is so many people's question.
As you have said, I just don't seem to get answers.
Isaiah says it in his call in Isaiah 6 when the Lord says,
uh, your mission's not going to go well. Well, how long? Well, until the cities are wasted without
inhabitant, I think Almanami like to say it when they're in prison. How long? It's not, I don't
believe in you anymore. It's, I believe in you, but how long do we have to wait? And probably more places than that. Liberty J1, Psalm 13,
one is beautiful that you quoted, but I'm glad you brought it up because many have that question.
And so just knowing this can know, hey, you're not the only one who has asked this, but hang on.
And what an introduction to the wrestle. The wrestle that we're going to have is a very intimate one.
And people who I've had this conversation with
and even the conversation I've had with myself
is that is a hard-hitting question.
That is high adventure, as we may say.
That's not a 100-level class question.
That's a 900-level class where we're saying,
we really want an answer to this.
That's Habakkuk's first prayer is verses two through four, and then God is going to respond
in verse five. And I love how in the King James text, we see this little paragraph mark in verse five.
That's one thing that can help us keep track of these prayers and the responses from God is, as
we see those paragraph markers, that shows in the ancient Hebrew manuscripts that were
used for Habakkuk or any of the texts in the Old Testament.
There was a break there in the manuscript.
So the oldest versions of Habakkuk said, we need to think of it differently, verse 5 from
verse 4.
We need to change thought.
So that's just helpful as we're
looking through the text. So now God's response is going to be verses five through eleven, because
verse twelve will start a new section. John, as you said, like, have a cook struggling with the fact
that it's the Babylonians that are going to happen, because God's answer to that heartfelt plea
of where are you, why aren't you listening is I will work
a work in your days which you will not believe though it be told you.
There's five.
And we even get language if we went further back that wonder marvelously for I will work
a work in your days which you will not believe though it be told you.
That's just kind of like I'm going to answer your prayer in an way that you did not think it was coming. Is that what that means? Yeah. And it
says, I'm even going to tell you it and you're going to be surprised. And that's
why we need to know the context that this is prior to the Babylonians coming in. And
in an essence, executing justice upon the kingdom of Judah who has abandoned
God. And so that very question, he says, I'm going to do this.
And then what he does is he foretells, starting in verse six, all the way through verse 11,
is it's a very detailed idea of, I'm going to raise up the Chaldeans or the Neobabelonians.
And what they're going to do is they are going to be terrible and dreadful.
We read in verse seven, their judgment, again, connect that verse to verse four, this
is justice, their justice and their dignity shall proceed of themselves. And they're going
to be swifter than lepers and more fierce than the evening wolves and their horsemen shall
spread themselves. Their horsemen shall come from far and they shall fly as the eagle that
hasten it to eat. They shall come all for violence.
Their faces shall up as the east wind.
Keep in mind that east wind was always terrible
because that's the hot wind that's gonna bring plagues
and is going to bring famine.
And so they're gonna come
and they're gonna be just as impactful as plagues
and or famine in your lives.
And they shall gather the captivity as the sand.
The answer to have a cook's first prayer is,
where's your justice, God, and God saying,
well, the justice is about to come with the Babylonians.
Which is fascinating because the Babylonians aren't exactly the righteous.
Yeah, he's using others, the Babylonians,
as an instrument to accomplish what he wants to do,
even though the Babylonians might not be aware of it,
the Neo-Babalonians.
Exactly.
I'm trying to put myself in Habakkuk's position going,
what?
Well, yeah, you're answering my prayer,
but not with them, please no, not with them.
That's verse five, which you will not believe
though it would be told you.
Yeah. And to be honest, what you've just demonstrated is that we all have the same reaction and
so does Habakkuk.
So now we get to Habakkuk's second prayer that starts in verse 12, and he says,
Wait a second.
Aren't thou not from everlasting, O Lord, my God, mine holy one?
We shall not die.
Oh Lord, thou hast ordained them for judgment
and oh mighty God, thou hast established them for correction.
I actually put a question mark in there.
It seems much more like a question in verse 12.
What the hell?
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
I just want justice, but not this way.
I didn't want this answer.
Yeah.
Then he says, Wait a second, verse 13,
Thou art pure eyes then to behold evil,
and can't not look on iniquity.
Wait a second, Lord, you know about the Babylonians.
How can you not only look upon them,
but utilize them to execute justice?
Wherefore, look us thou upon them that deal treacherously,
and hold us thy tongue when the wicked devour
at the man that is more righteous than he.
So he's saying, aren't we more righteous than the Babylonians?
You want a justice, right?
Yeah, and this parallel is so good with the Book of Mormon
because isn't this what Jacob tells the Nephites?
Aren't they more righteous than you even though you think of yourself more righteous than them?
We're getting that same human tendency of saying,
I'm righteous and they're wicked.
And if God's going to execute justice, God's got to do it,
but he can't do it through them because they're not righteous enough to do that.
Wow.
So, Habakkuk is now back to that struggle.
It's back to that wrestle.
You're saying you're going to do this, but wait, I still need clarification.
I still need to better understand what's going to happen.
And he seeks to get understanding in a way that for me is fascinating.
If we continue reading in verse 14 of Habakkuk chapter one,
and make us men as the fishes of the sea,
as the creeping things that have no ruler over them,
this is direct reference back to Genesis chapter one, verse 26.
So if you remember when God placed man
in the Garden of Eden, and I use the man there as mankind,
because in Genesis 1,
remember God's creating Adam and Eve at the same time.
The ribb stories coming in Genesis 2, but in Genesis 1,
he's making man and woman at the same time,
but look at the wording in verse 26.
And God said, let us make man in our image after our likeness, and let them have dominion
over the fish of the sea, and over the fall of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth,
and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. So God created man in his own image,
in the image of God created he, him, male, and female created he, them. This isn't just a statement of men,
but this is mankind.
This is men and women that we would know
from Genesis chapter one, verses 26 and 27.
You set us up as like covenant people
to be over everything.
Why are you letting the Babylonians come in
and overtake us?
What happened to your promise?
So now we're getting to a new question. The new question
is no longer, God, why aren't you executing justice and why aren't you listening to me? It's now
why are you doing it in this way. He then says they, meaning back to the Babylonians, take up all of
them with the angle. They catch them in their net and gather them in their drag. Therefore,
they rejoice and are glad. So he's using fishermen language.
Fishermen are called anglers. That's cool.
So they, these Babylonians, they're going to take all these people up
that you said are going to be rulers over the earth and over the people.
And then he gets at one of the problems in verse 16.
Therefore, they sacrifice unto their net and burn incense unto their drag because by
them their portion is fat and their meat is plentious.
So he's saying, wait a second, you're going to use these people who worship the items that
they use to conquer other people.
They're worshiping their own hands or the images of their own hands or the work of their
own hands instead the images of their own hands or the work of their own hands instead of God.
And then he ends with this question, shall they therefore empty their net and not spare
continually to slay the nations?
This is fascinating to me that it's so human.
Are you going to hear my prayers?
Yes, I'll answer your prayers.
Not that way.
Yeah, not that way.
It's like Jonah, yes, the series to repent
and they do and he's mad about it. But here in the summary at the beginning of the chapter, he's
troubled that the wicked can be thus employed. There's something that doesn't make sense to him
about that. As we go back to that and we go back to that word, Masa, this idea of a burden,
I think that that's part of it, too.
If we do look at it in this traditional interpretation,
not just prophetic exposition,
but here Habakkuk is having a burden of knowing
that God is utilizing other nations
to bring about His work against Israel.
Covenant Israel, in this sense,
or the nation of Judah.
There's a prophetic burden that comes with that.
And one thing I love about studying Hebrew is when we translate it into English,
it's okay to have these multiple interpretations.
Because the word is trying to act in this way and in that way,
we can have that prophetic exposition in Nehu,
and then we can have this idea of a heavy burden on the shoulders of Habakkuk because of what he knows.
What happens next, Josh, does the Lord answer again?
Yeah.
So this is one of the places where chapter breaks actually do us a disservice,
because verse 1 and chapter 2 actually belongs with the end of the prayer in verse 17,
and it's kind of this in between.
So Habakkuk is just given the prayer.
Now he's going to say something
that's really important for the rest of Habakkuk.
But he says this,
I will stand upon my watch and set me upon the tower
and will watch to see what he will say unto me
and what I shall answer when I am reproofed.
He ends with the question,
but he says, I know I'm called to be a prophet, to be a watchman on the tower, Ezekiel 3, 17
language, and I will do what God has asked me to do. I will watch as God has asked me to watch.
And even in this case, I will even stand reproved if God wants to reprove me. It's like, I know I'm gonna get approved,
but I still wanna know what he's gonna say.
Yeah, he's not gonna love what I just said.
So I'm waiting patiently to hear the answer.
And with this, I just think one of my favorite things
that I'm sure both of you do the same thing in your classes.
I love in the Bible dictionary, the discussion about prayer.
And I know it's frequently discussed in classrooms,
but when we look at where we are in Habakkuk
and we take a pause for a second,
and we go to what it says about prayer
in the Bible dictionary,
I think we find something very impactful
in the second to last paragraph.
As soon as we learn the true relationship
in which we stand toward God,
namely God is our father and we are His children,
then at once prayer becomes natural and instinctive on our part.
Many of the so-called difficulties about prayer arise from forgetting this relationship.
Prayer is the act by which the will of the Father and the will of the child are brought into correspondence with each other.
The object of prayer is not to change the will of God,
but to secure for ourselves and for others blessings
that God is already willing to grant,
but are the made conditional on our asking for them.
Blessings require some work or effort on our part, Russell,
before we can obtain them.
Prayer is a form of work and is an appointed means
for obtaining the highest of all blessings.
That's great stuff. Yeah, that fits this book exactly. There's a verse and the King James English is a little hard for me to understand
But the way it says it we all know James 1.5
We're not sitting here without James 1.5
But James 4.2 says he have not because he asked not. And that sounds like that.
You just had to ask what you just read there.
Yeah, and Habakkuk is, I think, coming to that.
He starts with this indignation and says,
no, like, why aren't you doing justice, God?
And then he says, wait a second,
that's not how I would do it.
But now I understand better that your ways
are better than my ways.
And I am willing to submit my will to your will.
And I am willing to understand that what you are doing is with a grander perspective than what I would do if I was in your shoes.
In an essence, he gives that willing to submit in verse 1. And it gets lost because you transfer chapters.
And sometimes when we read chapter 1 on a Wednesday and then on Thursday, we start chapter
2, we forget how it's tied into that prayer that Habakkuk is praying to God.
And the Lord answers him again.
Yeah.
And this is a great place because not very many places in Scripture do we get what comes
next in verse 2. This is a great place because not very many places in Scripture do we get what comes next
and verse two, and the Lord answered me and said, right the vision and make it plain
upon the tables, that He may run that readeth it.
And going back to what we talked about prophetic exposition and Nahum, look at what the Lord
says.
So right the vision, right what you see, and make it plain upon tables. So you use your language to
help make it more understandable so that he may run that readeth it.
Great. The prophet's got to use his own mind to take this revelation, put it into words
that people can use. And not just use but do. It's not enough just to know. We could
quote all of Habakkuk,
but if it doesn't cause us to run
or to start to move forward along the covenant path,
Habakkuk is a book that's intended to be a book of action.
And then we get this next part.
So the Lord hasn't quite answered yet.
He's saying, okay, you stood up and you said,
you're gonna be the prophet that I need you to be.
I need you to write what you're about to see.
I need you to make it more understandable. But then he says this fascinating
line in verse three, the Lord says to have a cook, for the vision is yet for an appointed time.
But at the end, it shall speak and not lie, though it tarry, wait for it, because it will surely come.
It will not tarry. I underlined, though, wait for it.
I just thought that's awesome.
It's the Lord saying, wait for it.
It's coming.
All of these how longs will be answered eventually.
Just wait for it.
It won't, Terry, it'll come.
And I love going back to these commentaries,
as we had said at the beginning,
one of the best preserved commentaries
from the Dead Sea Scrolls is actually a commentary
on the book of Habakkuk.
And I think this is an appropriate time to insert
what we see right here.
So after he says, write these things down and see them.
It's interesting how the Kumbhron community interpreted it.
They said, this refers to the fact that God told Habakkuk
to write down what is going to happen
to the generation to come.
But when that period would be complete, he did not make known to him.
When it says so that with ease someone can read it, this refers to the teacher of righteousness
to whom God made known all the mysterious revelations of his servants, the prophets. In an essence, the cum-
ron community saying, what Habakkuk saw was going to be understood by them who experienced
what he's trying to describe. In his own day, he's probably not going to understand why he's
saying what he's saying. As interesting as that part is, they then go on for still the prophecy
is for a specific period,
it testifies of the time and does not deceive.
Their interpretation of this says,
this means that the last days will be long,
much longer than the prophets had said
for God's revelations are truly mysterious.
It's easy for us to say,
well, the Babylonians are gonna come in the next 20 years
and wipe out Judah and Jerusalem, that's going to fulfill everything.
Even the Kumron community is saying, wait a second, yes, that happened, but in the latter
days, God is going to stretch out the time.
And we can't be prideful in thinking we know that this is exactly done.
We need to continue to ponder it and look for this in our own lives.
And I think that makes the connection between antiquity and today
that we can say, as I read these texts,
how can it be fulfilled in my life
as I'm striving to live the gospel as best I can?
Verse four in that context, then, is,
behold, his soul which is lifted up is not upright in him,
but the just shall live by his faith."
So that's the answer, but now God's actually going to answer the prayer. So he's saying,
here's what you need to do, have a cook, get ready. And he's going to answer it by pronouncing
five woes upon his people. We see the word wo in verse six, in verse nine, in verse 12,, inverse 15, and inverse 19.
These five woes we can then separate and say,
here are the actions that are going to cause justice
to come upon the people of Israel.
Wow, that's the dreaded five-woeer, John.
That's as woe as you go, isn't it?
There's a lot of woes here.
So what are the woes, Josh? What do the woes mean?
It means that these are things that God doesn't like? Yeah, and this is God's approach at saying,
this is what I'm noticing that you're doing. Even though verse 5 doesn't have a woe, it really ties
into verse 6. So if we start in verse 6 where the woe comes in, woe to him that increaseeth that which is not his.
The idea here is user-y or interest.
And if you'll remember in the law of Moses, the Jews were prohibited from charging interest on one another
or getting rich off of one another.
As a means of taking advantage of one because of their situation, the references
to that are Deuteronomy 20, 19, Exodus 22, 25, Leviticus 25, 35. These are each commandments
given by God to tell the Israelites that they're not supposed to get rich off of their brothers
and sisters. You may be reading this and saying, Josh, wait a second, you said verse five has to do with verse six.
Well, verse five says,
because he transgresseth by wine,
he is a proud man, neither keepeth at home,
who enlargeeth his desires as hell,
and is as death and cannot be satisfied,
but gathereth unto him all nations
and heapeth upon him all people.
Now, in my scriptures, I've circled the word wine
because the word wine is not in our oldest manuscripts
of Habakkuk.
The word wine here is spelled with three Hebrew letters,
a HET, a YOD, and a NUNE,
and the difference between the word wine and the word wealth is a vov instead of a yod
in between the hay and the noon.
In the dead see scrolls, they actually have wealth.
So instead of wine, we should read verse 5 to say, yay, also because he transgresseth
by wealth.
Interesting.
And it's the wealth that causes him to be proud,
not the wine, but the wealth.
And it keepeth him at home and he enlarges his desires.
He can't get enough of it.
He needs to accumulate more wealth and more wealth
and will never be satisfied.
Verse six and verse five actually go together really well.
But if you don't know that the word
wine there is a mis-translation through history, you might think, what does wine have to do
with?
That's a great connection.
And how often do we try to do that?
Try to make money off of other people's difficult situations?
And I think the Lord knew what he was talking about in the law of Moses when he's saying, this is not how you are to accumulate possessions and wealth,
is off the backs of your brothers and sisters.
Not a Zion way to do things.
Yeah.
And John, I love your reference because of Moses 7, 18,
there was no poor among them.
What does poor have to do with building Zion?
It's because of the fact that we often talk about consecration,
but we also need to give the idea that Habakkuk is giving us
that we're not trying to build wealth off of our brothers and sisters.
The next one in verse 9 is woe to him that covetedeth,
an evil covetedness to his house.
This actually connects again with what we have,
a better translation of coveted
here is a translation that I read that actually changes the word to fraudulent prophets.
So woe to him that gets fraudulent prophets. An evil covetness is to his house. He may
set his nest on high and he may be delivered from the power of evil. Now that word power comes back to what we talked about.
I told you that we'd come back to this grasp, the Kippur.
The word there is cup or fist or reach or hand.
So what this individual is doing is he's trying to en masse
enough profit to protect himself from the powers of evil, saying, if I get rich enough,
evil cannot impact me.
It seems like a backwards way of thinking, but okay.
And Habakkuk is saying this is a false hope that you will not be able to ever run away
from evil if you're participating in these abilities of gaining prophets.
Verse 10 then makes more sense when it says,
thou hast consulted shame to thy house.
Another word for consulted there,
if you look at the footnotes on 10, is devised or schemed.
So thou hast schemed shame to thy house by cutting off many people
and hast sinned against thy soul.
The idea here is that you're not going to get away with
this. The more people that you fraud out of money, and this is one of those times where I remember
talking about the outer darkness or celestial kingdom with my students. And I say this is reserve
for people who are horror mongers and who love to make a lie and people who make fraud and telemarketers
and all of those. Only half joking, but that's what this idea here is that if you're going to try
and defraud people out of their money, then you're going to sin against your soul. And I think that
there's an innate belief within all people that if they participate in those activities, they know that they're taking advantage of someone.
And that their soul is bearing testimony to them
that they should not do what they're doing.
And that that idea that they're sinning against their own soul,
I love the definition of sin.
To him that knows to do good and do it that not.
To him it is sin, that one.
Yeah, James.
Yes. It's in the book of James, I think. know to do good and do it that not to him it is sin. That one. Yeah, James.
It's in the book of James, I think.
That idea of the fact that sinning is openly rebelling
and knowing what you're doing is wrong.
And that's what he's saying here is,
is that if you're fraudulating people out of this,
that's the case.
I don't know how much comfort that brings to the person
who's being frauded, but at least God is being aware.
And we're going back to that justice.
Is there not justice for these people and the justice is there?
The last note that I might make on just this, whoa, is verse 11 is fascinating to me, because
it says, for the stone shall cry out of the wall and the beam out of the timber shall answer
it. And I can't help but think of the Savior on Palm Sunday when people are telling him,
hey, you need to keep these crowds down. You're going to get this attention of Rome that And I can't help but think of the savior on Palm Sunday when people are telling him,
hey, you need to keep these crowds down.
You're gonna get this attention of Rome that we don't want.
And he says that if they should hold their peace,
the stones shall cry out.
The stone shall cry out of the wall.
Wow.
I think we get a great connection there
with what the savior was trying to teach,
is that even what we may call
inanimate objects are going to bear testimony against those who are wicked, but also bear testimony
of truth to those who are righteous. Yeah, it's like if these walls could talk, let's keep going
through these woes. We can move a little faster. I think these are fairly straightforward. In verse 12,
we get the next woe from 12 and 13,
woe unto him that buildeth a town with blood,
this idea of political arrogance.
I'm gonna build a town on the blood of the people
and establish a city out of iniquity.
There's numerous examples from the ancient world
and even our modern world of people who build great names
to themselves,
but on the backs of innocent individuals.
The Lord of hosts that the people shall labor
in the very fire and the people shall worry themselves
from the vanity.
The phrase Lord of hosts, this is Jehovah,
the God of Sabaoth, the hosts or the armies of heaven.
He's aware and your city cannot stand against him.
Verse 14 really doesn't fit, and some people actually think that verse 14 actually belonged
in chapter 3 and not here, but I think that there's actually something instructive here
of the Lord then saying, for the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of
the Lord as the waters cover the sea, that all the world, no matter where you're at, is going to know
the glory, the cavaud, that presence of Jehovah,
that divine presence that existed over the tabernacle
and that led the children of Israel in the wilderness.
All the world will know about it.
Yeah, you can build a town on blood
and establish a city by aniquity,
but it's still on the earth, which is the Lord's.
Right.
And one day, everybody will know.
I will know.
We talked about the next 12 verses 15 through 17
and this idea of drunkenness and sexual promiscuity.
And then the last one verse 19,
we get a woe unto him that saith to wood awake
and to the dumbstone arise.
Here's the idolatry that is present throughout that sayeth to wood awake and to the dumbstone arise.
Here's the idolatry that is present throughout
the ancient world, including Israel.
I remember talking to an archeologist,
and I said, what's the most common thing outside
of pottery that we find in Jerusalem in the surrounding area?
And I was blown away by the response
that one of the things that we find most in Jerusalem
are idols.
Wow.
And for us, it's easy to put distance
between us and idols.
We go, oh, I don't build an idol
and put it in my bedroom or go to some temple.
But in an essence, this is anything
that we put our trust in that's not God.
And for us, it may even be Golden Silver
just not in the form of a small statue.
President Kimball kind of did that thing about.
So it might be surprised to think that the boat,
the vacation, I can't remember all the things he said
that that could be idol worship,
because like you said, it's anything that's not God
that you're giving your reliance in devotion to.
Yeah.
So God saying, here's your last woe, if you're adulterous.
And then verse 20, we already talked
about it in its presence in the Idaho Falls temple, but the Lord is in his holy temple, let all the
earth keep silence before him. The end of his response to Habakkuk to me is awe-inspiring, because
all of the earth includes Habakkuk. God is in an essence saying, Habakkuk, you have now received your answer,
and it would be inappropriate for you
to continue to be angry with me
because I am in my holy temple
and I have given you my answer.
I answered your prayer.
So let all the earth keep silence.
That includes you, Habakkuk. Is that what you mean?
Yeah.
Just think this is such an instructive story for you and I
because we can wrestle with the Lord.
But when the Lord gives us an answer,
it's inappropriate for us to continue to rail
and say God is not answering our prayers.
When we know that we've received an answer,
it's time for us to keep silence
before him. What's fascinating to me in this sense is that in the Dead Sea Scrolls and the
commentary on Habakkuk, it actually ends with verse 20. And there's plenty of space on the scroll
where they could have continued into chapter 3. But Habakkuk chapter 2 verse 20 is the last verse that's on the commentary of this.
And I love what they say in regards to this last verse.
In the Peshire Habakkuk, it says,
that this refers to all the Gentiles
who have worshiped stone and wood.
In the day of judgment,
God will exterminate all those who worship false gods,
as well as the wicked from the earth.
The silence is not people choosing to be silent,
but that God eventually will silence all of those who are going against Him,
and He will stand alone in His temple,
and will have silenced all the other gods and all the other voices.
Eventually, all of the tumult and all of the naysayers about God,
eventually they will be silenced by the God of Israel.
I can see that. The Lord is not an idol. He's in his temple.
So, chapter three then is Habakkuk responding, but responding with praise?
Yeah, Habakkuk chapter three is this just enigma in the Old Testament.
Because if we read the first verse, a prayer of Habakkuk and the prophet upon Shigionath,
what a great word.
What that word is, at least most scholars have come to the conclusion, that's the melody.
So what Habakkuk is actually giving us is he's giving us a song.
So he's just prayed, he's just had this experience, this wrestle with God, and now Habakkuk
is going to sing a song.
I think I feel a song coming on, okay.
The melody of that song is this shig and off, but Habakkuk is now going to give us a song.
And you see the language.
If you look at verse three, right in the middle, we get that word, Selah.
And if you remember from the Psalms, remember we had Selah, Selah, Selah, Selah.
We're now singing a song.
And Habakkuk is going to give this song, which is his way of taking everything that
he just learned from the Lord and making it so that the people can understand and they
can run with it.
Yeah, they can remember it too.
If you think how, I mean, you can hear a song that you haven't heard in 10, 15 years
and all of a sudden you know all the words again.
So it makes it easier to remember.
Exactly.
And the way it's written poetically in ancient Israel, they would have been able to recall
this as well.
We see this and we can get some great insights.
A lot of it is just recirculating what we've seen is that God is displeased with the world
and will eventually destroy it, whether by the hands of the Neobabelonians or others, but also the fact
that we need to rejoice. And if we skip forward to verse 13, and I know that's missing a lot of
other things, but I think with that context, it gives people a good chance to understand. But
verse 13 and Abukuk chapter three, that when is forth for the salvation of thy people, even for
salvation with thine anointed,
that what is the head out of the house of the wicked by discovering the foundation upon
unto the neck, say, law?
And Habakkuk is sitting here and he's saying God is going to work for the salvation of his
people, and especially for his anointed.
And that's any covenant member of Israel who is participating actively in
what God has commanded for them to do. And that anointing for us in a modern context takes
on even more relevance as we think about the ordinances of the temple.
Oh yeah, I'm an anointed. I'm reading now. This is great stuff. It does sound like a Psalm. Even like 18, I will rejoice in the
Lord. I will join the God of my salvation. The Lord God has my strength. Sounds like one of our
hymns. Yeah. And I mean, as we conclude, Habakkuk, I think this is a good place. I loved what you
discussed with Aaron Shade and his discussion with Hosea and Joel,
and how he was talking about the idea that when we walk with God,
God is helping us to walk.
I love here that God will make me to walk upon mine high places,
and that idea of high places is the presence of God and exalted places like temples.
And God is gonna make me walk in his presence.
He's gonna teach me how to walk Holog to go in his places.
And that's where he ends it.
He says, God is going to teach me.
Habakkuk's wrestle turns into a song of jubilant praise and joy
that what he learned is that God is actually fighting for justice
and is listening to his people's prayers and that we simply need to trust in him and rejoice in him
so that we can have joy. That's interesting. Josh, I look at chapter 1 verse 2,
oh Lord, how long shall I cry and now we'll not hear." And then you get to the end and he says,
I heard, that's verse 16, I heard, the Lord is my strength. What's happened between the beginning
and the end is this wrestle that has turned out with him saying, God is really there. He does
hear our prayers. He does answer our prayers. Might not be in the way we think, but he does answer
our prayers and he does see the injustice that's happening on the earth and he will do something about it. Absolutely. I love that book
ant. We see the progress of a prophet. Yeah. And for me, that's really invigorating. It's really
encouraging that if I have struggles, if I think that God's not listening to my prayers,
if I continue to wrestle, I eventually will hear him. All right, we are two-thirds of the way done, but Zefania, it's three chapters. How is it different
than are there two books? From the very beginning, we actually see Zefania is different than
Nehu and Habakkuk, because it starts with the word of the Lord which came unto Zefania, the son of
Kushi, the son of Gedalia, and the son of Amaraya, the son of his Kaya,
in the days of Josiah, the son of Ammon, King of Judah. Unlike the other ones where we had to go dig,
to find context, we don't have to dig very hard here. We've got an exact reference. The
superscription here sets the prophet as prophesying in Judah between 640 and 609 BC.
as prophesying in Judah between 640 and 609 BC. Chapter one appears to give us parallel
with Second Kings chapter 22.
So if we want to reference this back
into the narrative of Israelite history,
we can go back to Second Kings 22.
However, one thing that's interesting about Zef and Ia
is it appears the text is being written
and given prior to Josiah's reforms in 622 BC,
because we don't have a lot of reference towards the idea that the reforms are happening,
and according to verses 213, which if we read 2 verse 13, it says,
and he will stretch out his hand against the North and destroy a Syria,
and will make Nineveh
a desolation and a dry like a wilderness.
Well we've already talked about Nineveh and Syria being destroyed back in Nehum.
So Zef and Ia actually probably would be a better place between Nehum and Habakkuk chronologically
speaking.
Oh wow.
Because Nineveh is still in power and Josiah hasn't quite
reformed yet and that's going to happen in 622. So if I was King of the minor
prophets, I would move Zephaniah to be more chronologically fit between Nehum and
Habakkuk. Well, you can be follow him, King of the minor prophet. We will give you
that title. I don't know. You've had some good people
on that I think know the text better than I do. So we'll wrestle for it. How about that?
What's the essence of this book? So unlike the other two books where we've had kind of
a back and forth or we've had clear delineations with what's happening in the text, Zeff and
Ia could probably be read as one single chapter. We could just start
right at the beginning of Zef and Ia and continue reading on, and it would just continue to flow
as one general text. There are some key moments in Zef and Ia. So in verses two through nine
of chapter one, we get this announcement of doom that's about to come upon the people, particularly the people
of Judah. There's this announcement of doom that's going to come. And then, verses 10 through
18, then describe what that doom is going to be. We get anticipation of doom and announcement,
and then we're going to see exactly what's going to happen. And that's chapter one.
Chapter two, verses one through four
is probably where we wanna be the most
because that's where the prophet Zephaniah says,
you have one last chance to repent.
Here's your last chance.
Please, please, listen and take your chance to repent.
And then once we get to verses five through 15
in Zephaniah chapter two,
it's prophecies about how the other nations are going to be destroyed.
Chapter three versus one through thirteen sets up this city that has puffed itself up and pride.
Again, we can go back to our very first question.
Am I part of this city? We don't know for sure what city it is.
But chapter three versus one through thirteen is that there's this great city that's puffed
up that is going to be destroyed by God. Lots of woes there again with chapter three verse one.
Woe to her that is filthy and polluted to the oppressing city. Some people will actually call
this the woe against the oppressive city because we don't get any other insights into what the
oppressive city is from verse one to verse 13. So any city that's being oppressive city because we don't get any other insights into what the oppressive city is from verse 1 to verse 13
So any city that's being oppressive this is what God is going to tell you is going to happen and then verses 14 through 20 and in
Zephaniah chapter 3 is a song of rejoicing for Jerusalem is
That Jerusalem the city of peace. So we're getting this juxtaposition between this oppressing city
and Jerusalem city of peace that we're going to have two differing outcomes as we move closer and
closer to the day of the Lord or this coming of the Son of Man. Which city do we want to take up
residency in? Do we want to be part of the city of oppression
or do we want to be part of the city of peace?
And Zeffani is really trying to just set it out there
and say, you choose.
Which one do you want to be a part of?
Here's a no-brainer, which one do you choose?
Ha, ha, ha.
Yeah, and I love the description.
The filthy and polluted versus the city where God is.
He will save. He will rejoice
over thee with joy. He will rest in his love. He will joy over thee with singing,
Lehigh like, which one do you want? You want misery and death or do you want happiness and eternal life?
Which one do you want? Liberty and eternal life. Oh, that's tough.
If we take everything that we've talked about today and as we talk about what we've studied,
If we take everything that we've talked about today, and as we talk about what we've studied,
as we take this as kind of a progressive read from Nahum through Habakkuk to Zefania, what better place to end after all of these woes and destructions than this idea of singing
as members of the city of Jerusalem or the city of peace. And even themes that we saw in the earlier texts are going to come up.
For example, verse 15 and Zephaniah chapter 3, the Lord have taken away thy judgments. He
hath cast out thine enemy. The king of Israel, even the Lord, is in the midst of the
thou shalt not see evil anymore. We had Habakkuk who said, wait a second, I'm seeing evil things
in my life. If we go to Habakkuk chapter one, verse three.
Why just thou show me iniquity
and cause me to behold grievance this?
Now we're saying we're not gonna see that anymore
once we get to the city.
And it's really love how these were put together
with come follow me because they're leading us
towards where we want to inhabit.
And after reading all of these cities
and all of these nations being destroyed and all
of these woes, what better way to end our week of reading than to see all of these great
blessings and especially the blessing that God is in the midst of those who are part
of this city.
It's a beautiful way to finish.
It's nice that these three books were together and it finishes in such a positive note.
The manual says, you might compare these verses to the experiences
described in 3rd Nephi 17, and ponder how Jesus Christ feels about His people including you.
I love that verse 19, Zephaniah 319, I will undo all that afflict me. I will gather her that was
driven out. I will get them praise and fame in every land. So It reminds me of the Lord saying, I can do my own work.
Yeah. Wow. And what that work is, I love, Zeff and I actually kind of shows his hand a little bit
in Zeff and I, chapter one, verse seven, because we're going to get to that piece and we're going to
get to that. But verse seven, again, we're going to draw on that Habakkuk language, hold thy peace
at the presence of the Lord God. There's Habakkuk two, twenty again peace at the presence of the Lord God. There's Habakkuk 220 again. For the day of the Lord is at hand. For the Lord hath prepared a sacrifice,
he hath bid his guests. This most recent general conference, I think, of Elder Bednar's discussion of
the parable of the wedding feast in Matthew 22, one through 14. Zephani is saying that exact same thing
is that at the end of days,
God is going to hold a sacrifice, a feast,
and he has bid his guest to come.
Zephani is gonna go on and talk about these woes
and the doom and destruction,
but he's ultimately saying,
wait, don't worry about that part of it.
God's gonna give you, is gonna invite you to be a guest as part of his sacrifice,
and we're going to read that, and we're going to talk about that at the very end.
So don't get too depressed by the doom and gloom in what I'm about to say, because the
end will come.
And a way to apply that to us, we have been bitten to feast at the Lord's tail.
So it reminds me of this quote from Elder
Holland, October 1997. Wow, we're quoting Elder Holland from the 1990s today. He had filled the
hungry with good things as the name of the talk. He says, now, if you feel too spiritually maimed
to come to the feast, please realize that the church is not a monastery for perfect people,
though all of us ought to be striving on the road to Godliness. No, at least one aspect of the church is more like a hospital,
or an aid station, provided for those who are ill and want to get well, where one can get an
infusion of spiritual nutrition and a supply of sustaining water in order to keep on climbing.
We've been bitten to the feast, and even if you feel spiritually maimed, well, it's not a monastery.
It's more like a hospital for those who are ill.
Beautiful.
I think taking that and that idea of come and be a part, right, is the language of Zefania 2.
Gather yourselves together, yay, gather together, o'nation not desired.
Before the decree, bring forth, before the day passes, the chaff, before the fierce anger of the Lord come upon you,
before the day of the Lord's anger come upon you,
seek ye the Lord, all ye meek of the earth,
which have wrought his judgment.
Again, you can read justice there.
Seek righteousness, seek meekness.
It may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lord's anger.
Again, I love this idea of the simple folk,
the tender, the meek folk of Ephraim,
like if we're willing to be humble,
to be able to come to the Lord.
Yeah, I hear that repent before it's too late.
You still have time.
Take advantage of the time that you have, right?
Before the decree, before the day of the Lord's anger
come upon you.
You still have time.
Josh, this has been a fantastic day. I've got notes all over.
John, do you have notes all over in now in
Nehom and Habakkuk where my pages used to be blank?
I've now got colors and notes.
Exactly.
Notes where I'd never had a note before.
This has been a great day.
I think our listeners, Josh,
should be interested in your journey as a Bible scholar
and a believing Latter-day saint.
What's that journey been like for you?
Well, it actually started humorously.
Hank, at the beginning,
you talked about hearing John, by the way,
for the first time when you were 12.
I was about 12 years old
and I was watching the history channel on a Sunday. Our family rule was no football until after church. The only two things we could watch before
church were church movies or the history channel because it had churchy stuff on it. I remember
vividly watching the history channel and a biblical scholar was being interviewed and talking about
the event we talked about earlier, the parting of the red sea by God for the children of Israel to leave Egypt. And this scholar presented what is very
popular among scholars' discussions today that there was in a parting of the sea. It didn't
actually happen. And here's all of our evidence for why that's the case. And my 12-year-old self-started
yelling at the television.
My mother came down and asked,
Josh, what's going on?
At least how I remember it.
She may be listening and thinking,
I don't remember that, Josh,
but as I remember it, she said,
Josh, why are you yelling at your brother?
And I said, because he's lying,
and she thought I was talking about my little brother,
but I was talking about my brother on the television.
And I remember vividly just committing in my heart
and saying, you know what?
I want to have all the credentials that that man has.
And I want to have the opportunity
to use my education to help people grow in faith
and not diminish faith.
I, in an essence, wanted to read all the books
and get the degrees and the titles, not because
those mean a lot to me, but because I know there are people out there who find comfort
in knowing that somebody can get an education and can get letters before or after their name
and still have faith, that they can still believe.
I think if we don't ingest what we've just talked about,
and we don't really think about this idea of humility and meekness and putting ourselves
before God, if we lift ourselves up like these ancient cities and these ancient people,
if we think we know more than God, then we set ourselves up for the same type of spiritual destruction that awaited them.
Throughout my journey, my intention has been to want to be a source of faith.
And people can say, hey, I've got questions about Habakkuk,
and which plague of the revelations is that? And be able to say, hey, let's look at this from
a perspective of faith. And I can tell you
what those who are approaching it from a perspective of doubt are thinking and saying. And I want you
to be aware of what they're saying. But they don't have to be right. Galaureship constantly changes.
That's one of the challenges. The predominant theories of today are going to be the outdated theories of 20 years from now.
But the one thing that doesn't go out of vogue is the truth that comes from the source of
all truth, our Savior Jesus Christ. I know that there are things that are absolutely true.
For me as the teenager and as a young adult, I looked up to people who had put the work in to really know these things,
but also people who were willing to say, I'm humble enough to know that God knows more
than I do.
If there's one thing that I've come to know more surely throughout my life, it's the
fact that the restoration of the gospel of Jesus Christ is a real event, and that the restored gospel of Jesus Christ on the earth is a means by which God is bringing salvation to his children.
I love the idea of being part of the gathering of Israel as President Nelson is encouraging us all to be a part of. There's no greater work in the world.
And I view what I get to do and what I've studied and what I try to do on a daily basis
as a means of gathering Israel. And that's the ultimate purpose of the restoration is to gather
Israel on both sides of the veil. And I have seen how studying the Bible, coming to become
proficient in its languages and in the language of scholarship.
How that helps gather Israel.
I get excited about the fact that gaining an education is encouraged by the restoration,
but it's also part of building the restoration for all of God's children to come unto Him.
Beautiful. Thanks, Josh. What a great day.
What a great day. Never thought I would be excited about some of these minor
Prophets who are not minor any longer.
We want to thank Dr. Josh Madsen for being with us today. What a treat. We want to thank our executive producers
Steve and Shannon Sorenson and our sponsors, David and Verla Sorenson.
We hope you'll join us next week. We have another episode coming up of Follow Him.
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.
and EL Kuwadra. Thank you to our amazing production team.