Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Philippians • Professor Lori Denning • Oct 9 - Oct 15
Episode Date: October 4, 2023What does it mean to be a Christian? As Paul writes from prison to the Philippians and Colossians, Professor Lori Denning explores rejoicing despite trials and grace and learning to lean on the Atonem...ent of Jesus Christ.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/YouTube: https://youtu.be/H4SZTPaPh5AFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Professor Lori Denning02:49 Introduction of Professor Lori Denning04:22 Background to Philippians and Colossians09:45 Paul and Joseph Smith11:59 Roman armor and Alexander’s father14:55 Lydia and selling purple18:47 Philippians 1:120:18 Tips for reading Paul’s letters21:44 Philippians 1:3-4, 1123:20 Justice and righteousness27:06 Rejoice amidst trials30:00 Alive in Christ32:51 Community and mourning39:22 Professor Denning shares a personal story of her mission43:13 A song in Philippians 245:36 Chiasmus or “hamburger” poem47:06 Star Wars musical motifs and musical themes51:07 Background to the poem 55:27 The middle and the love of God56:55 Professor Denning shares a personal story about brain surgery1:01:19 Elder Bateman and the Atonement of Jesus Christ1:03:56 Joseph in Egypt and Jesus1:07:35 Philippians 3:13-141:11:07 President Benson’s “Beware of Pride”1:14:47 End of Part I–Professor Lori DenningThanks to the followHIM team: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 DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm
here with the extraordinary John, by the way. Hi, John. Hi, Hank. How are you? Good. We
are back for another week of Follow Him. John, the lesson this week is entitled, I can
do all things through Christ, which strengtheneth me. When you hear that phrase from Paul, what do you think of?
Yeah, I love the title of that.
And I think that sometimes in the self-help world,
they might say, I can do all things and stop right there.
And this is, I can do all things through Christ.
The lot of things that we really can't do by ourselves
and we're confronted with that in the gospel, but with Christ
We can do things we normally couldn't do. So that's what it makes me think about
Yeah, my experience tells me when I'm left to myself it usually doesn't go all that well. Yeah, exactly. I can't do anything
John we are joined by a Bible expert this week
I call her almost Dr.
Laurie Denning because she is still in school for religious studies
in Claremont, which we can talk about here in a second.
Lori, what are we looking forward to in these lessons?
Thanks for asking.
This are some of the best lessons we are going to do
flippians and collotions.
You can pronounce those anyway you want.
And we're going to highlight what it's like to be
a young member or how to live within a community that is not all your own.
So if you're a member of the church and you're saying, I don't feel like I belong, how do I live as a Christian?
How do I live in that community and how do I fit in and how does Christ reflect back through me?
We're going to really say, this sounds like something we probably do a lot of today.
How do I fit in? How am I supposed to be a light to like something we probably do a lot of today.
How do I fit in? How am I supposed to be a light to those people and how do I learn about
Christ and then reflect that back? We're going to land this to two different communities
that live pretty far apart, but the Philippians and the Colossians, the people that live in
Philippi and Colise, and we're going to learn about what it was like for them and how they
were supposed to kind of mediate that crazy jungle that they lived in.
Wow. I'm already getting excited about this. I'm looking forward to it more than I was.
Okay. Well, and just took, you know, little teaser still listen, we're actually going to do some songs.
There are actually, both of these actually have some songs and poetry in them.
I know you're thinking it's just letters, but these would be the musicals,
the West Side Story slash Hamilton of the ancient world.
Wow.
Now even more.
It's great.
This is great.
I know. It doesn't need more prompting.
Of course, you guys, the main focus is going to be the savior.
We're going to learn some of the deepest doctrines,
some of the key items about what it means to be Christ
and what Christ does for us in the redemption and the atonement.
So it's some really key key things
are in the letters we're gonna read today.
Awesome.
John, Lori is new to the podcast.
Why don't you let our listeners know who she is,
where she's from, give us a bio.
This is one of the funnest bios I've ever read.
It's, I'll just read it the way it is.
I don't even have to add fun to my voice
or anything. Lori L. Denning is a scholar and scripture enthusiast pursuing her PhD in ancient
scripture at Claremont Graduate University with a master's degree in theology from Gonzaga University.
She's written three books including the Real Heroes series and teaches at BYU. Lori also appears as a frequent podcast guest
and hosts the video series, The Bible Brief.
Such a dedicated nerd, I'm quoting here.
Lori even sings Biblical Hebrew for fun.
I think that's a preview of what's coming.
A native of San Diego, her adventurous spirit
is seen in her love for dirt bikes, karaoke, and chocolate
with an
identical twin, the cute one she claims, and a mission in Barcelona, Spain, Lori's vibrant
personality and diverse interest shine in everything she does.
That's a fun buy, I haven't had one that.
Yeah, that's exciting.
And dedicated nerd, a scripture nerd who sings biblical Hebrew on her dirt bike while
eating chocolate.
So this is going to be great.
I didn't say to them all at once.
I mean, that would be like the triathlon of nerddom.
Instead, I just like all of those things, not all at once.
We thought maybe we'd give people watching on YouTube instead of just listening,
but yeah, I think it's good.
We promise that, yeah.
We like Bible nerds at follow-up.
We do. Yeah, we've had many of them on. We won Bible nerds at Follow Him. We do.
We've had many of them on.
We won't name them by name, but we've had many of them on the show.
Laurie, let's jump right in.
The manual has a start in Philippians and then moving to Colossians.
Do we need some background before we come into this?
Do you feel like, or should we just jump right in?
I think we do.
I think we're going to need some background.
And I think it helps because I think if we set up what's going on, we can kind of imagine
ourselves in the story.
So let's do two things.
You guys, let's start with flippians.
And then let's kind of set what's going to happen because it's a letter.
So the first thing we know when we get these letters is I always try to think it's like
we're reading someone's mail.
So you're like, I'm only getting one side of the story.
So we're going to do a little bit on what we think they were like, right?
And what we know about them. And we're going to do a little bit on what we think they were like, right?
And what we know about them and we hear some an axe about them.
But I also want to think Paul tells us about what's happening.
He is in prison.
We're going into this period of the letters that he's in prison.
Some people think Rome, I actually think he's in Ephesus, but he's in prison
and he is really suffering at a certain point.
He's like, I'm about done.
I'm not sure if I'm going to be able to survive. And so we think he was in prison at a certain point. He's like, I'm about done, I'm not sure if I'm
going to be able to survive.
And so we think it was in prison for a number of years.
He hears about this community that he had started,
a visitor comes, and they send a donation to him.
Prisons weren't like they were here.
You don't get three hots in a cot.
Anciently, you were in prison, and you were stuck forever.
And so your friends or family had to bring food, bring money.
And so one of the churches that he had started in a city,
Philippi, we'll talk about that.
Second, sense him a donation of food and they bring it to him.
It's like his old branch as a missionary, sends him this donation
that he writes them a letter.
He knows them.
He loves them.
He started the church there. So if you can
just put yourself in the mansion, we're the Philippines. We're living there and our old missionary,
the one that we loved and brought us to the Savior, we find out is in trouble. So we gather a donation,
we send it and we send this letter. And then you're like, I have this little tiny piece of paper
or, you know, papyrus, whatever. And I am going to just pack it. So it's going to be the
super jam pack dense letter of what can I tell them? Not only what can I tell them about how much I
love them, but what can I tell them that's going to help them the most about being members of the
church, being Christians and about the Savior. Okay, this is exciting. I like the idea of reading
someone else's mouth. Although I know today it's a very serious crime. I think it's a felony. So just so everybody knows we're reading someone else's mail here, but don't do that in general.
Don't do that. Don't try this at home.
I'm intrigued with the idea that he's writing from prison and I think if I were writing a letter from prison, that kind of a prison, I think I would say,
dear Philippians, get me out of here.
Yeah.
I don't know how you're gonna do it.
Help me, please.
Can you send a file in a cake next time
and not just a snack, you know?
And instead, he wants to edify them,
he wants to teach them, he wants to encourage them,
and kind of gives us an insight into Paul a little bit.
I'm glad both of you were bringing this up that Paul was in prison.
Just at the opening of the Come Follow Me manual, it says Paul wrote his epistles to the
Philippians and the Colossians while he was a prisoner in Rome.
And then John, you mentioned this, but these letters don't have the tone you might expect
from someone in prison.
Paul spoke more about joy, rejoicing, and Thanksgiving,
than he did about afflictions and trials.
Christ is preached, he said,
and I therein do rejoice and will rejoice.
Wow, that just shows us a lot about Paul
and his attitude in great difficulty.
I wish I could have that kind of attitude
in great difficulty.
But don't you think that's unique? If you're the Philippians and you're like, we just
join this little nascent baby church and our leader is in jail. And not only that, but our Savior
was just crucified. Culturally, this would be really tough. It reminds me of the restoration.
Joseph Smith, he's writing from jail and he's writing some of the most inspired,
the most uplifting documents, even while he's suffering. It seems like we're always having to really
live in the world, but not of the world, very similar to Joseph.
I'm glad you said that because I was thinking of the last couple of verses of section 123. Let us
cheerfully do all things that lie in our power.
And then may we stand still,
I mean, cheerful in Liberty Jails.
That's a good comparison.
I know from my study of the Dr. and Covenants
in Church history that Joseph Smith was a big fan of Paul.
Them having parallel moments here is.
Yeah, I think she gives you the kind of empathy
that you don't really want,
is that you're living through similar experiences.
I'd rather miss those, but I can appreciate them,
but how profound that there are these times of struggle.
Now, here's something interesting,
is that Paul isn't like, this is great,
and how wonderful, and it's kind of terrible.
He talks about it, especially in Galatians,
he talks about how bad it was,
where he was nearly at the point of breaking. He even writes at the end of this letter to the
Philippians that he's like, I'm in a centimathy, you know, we'll talk about him a second, but I'm
going to send Tim to you. Well, I'm hoping to make it, but I might die, and it might be really soon.
If you were in prison and in the Roman system, chances are you weren't getting out, and the only
way out is death.
You're waiting, not because they hold you there.
You're waiting for trial.
And then it's trial and execution, typically.
So he's thinking, this might be it for me.
He's living with this really, real burden of suffering
and maybe death.
And just knowing that, I love it, you said there, John,
with the end of section 123,
because it's that diversity,
like, even and then I can rejoice in the saber. I can rejoice in the gospel. And that's just
permeates the letter. But if you don't remember that, then we don't see how is he going to do that.
And here we can see an application right out of the gate. Don't we all have times that life's
going to be pretty tough? And if we don't, we don't, we know, wait a minute, because it's coming. And so we say, wow, here's a letter that could be written today
to me when I'm having a tough time,
when my family's struggling,
when I don't know where my next meal's coming from,
when my job is at risk,
or I'm feeling stress and anxiety and illness,
or whatever it is,
Paul's like, oh, that's a letter for me,
because Paul was doing the same thing.
We think this is a 2000 year old letter
could be written to me today.
Excellent.
What's interesting too, Hank, is we have received
not a few comments from people who are literally in prison
that listen and find some hope and some healing
and thinking of you today and hoping this will help you
and you have something in a way common with Paul, perhaps, of looking for some hope and some help from your
circumstance. I just think that's fascinating. Christ was sent to liberate the captives
and not always physically, but we can be liberated in our souls. If you don't realize
the oppression and sadness that they were living under, especially Paul here,
then I think you don't understand the joy that he's going to talk about.
Laurie, I'm glad we're talking about this because one of our major goals with our podcast is
not only do we want people to be more competent, we want to inform people and teach them,
but we also hope to heal and help those who are struggling. Was it President Iarine who said,
if you treat everyone as though they're going through
the hardest time of their life, half the time,
it'll be right or something like that.
Those of you who are out there who are struggling,
I love that Laurie is speaking to you.
I hope you'll listen here today.
So Laurie, what do we do next?
That was kind of setting us up emotionally.
Let's take a step back and let's talk about
who these people were in a little bit of context. So for those of you who are watching on video, I actually have a
prop so that you can remember, uh, Philippi. So I'm putting on my Roman Centurion's helmet.
So for those of you listening, you can just imagine a beautiful shockingly beautiful woman,
that's me. And I am wearing an literal 16 gauge steel Roman helmet with the red thing on the top and everything.
It looks great, Laurie.
It does be watching on YouTube.
We'll agree with me.
This looks great.
Right.
Yeah, it's pretty impressive.
It weighs.
It actually is really hard on my neck.
It's so heavy.
But that's just to remind you that these were Romans.
Here's the thing I didn't know when I was growing up.
I didn't know when I put like an ends on the end that it's the people that lived there. So instead of filipites, right, we would say
like the limonites, the filipites, they're the filipians. But I get it when they do Rome, Rome,
Romans, Philippi, Philippians, Coliseus, Colossians, right? Ephesians, they lived in Ephesus. See,
where that one's, I guess I didn't put that together. Yeah, because I was like
They weren't the Jerusalem's I didn't get it, but they're just the people that live there
Philippi is actually in like northern Greece. It's named after Alexander the Great's dad Philip
So it's the Philippians and it was actually a place that there was a little civil war that went on after Julius Caesar
If you kind of come up from Turkey and you have like Constantine's noble
and that the Middle-Arys' noble today, whichever time period you're in,
then up along that edge is the city, Philippi.
And there's another one, Niappolis, Berea, and Thessalonica.
So you're going to hear the Thessalonians.
And it's all up in there's little chain.
And then you would go across like a little narrow neck of land
and it jumps over and then just
you're almost across the Adriatic from Rome. So that's this little thoroughfare that people would go
through. So it was a very popular little area that they would go to go to Rome, but it was it was
popular with Romans because of this Civil War. So here's everybody just pause if you don't want to
know nerd stuff for those you can went nerd. Just zoom in for about two more minutes
Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, Cleopatra, that whole story and they had a battle even right here in the city and
They're in Philippi though. They're like, well, what do we do with all these soldiers? These retired Roman soldiers? They get a plot of land when they retire. What should we do with them? Well, we don't want them back in Rome
Because then if there's another uprising, they would just have like a whole army of men ready to go. They put them out somewhere far. So
they this kind of far from Rome and they would settle. So it was this Roman colony and it
was super patriotic, Roman. So they were super Roman. So they don't even really have a synagogue,
right? So they everywhere else has a synagogue where the Jews had spread out over time. They
don't even have one. But if you think super patriotic Romans,
that's what you would have found here.
Okay.
The church actually started by a woman.
I know he's talked about that story
about another little highlight.
On Lydia, we read about them in the end of Acts.
So Lydia was the seller of purple.
She's like the business woman.
I love that.
Even her whole house.
She seems to be like the founding
funding patroness of the church. On his second missionary journey, first one's kind of close,
second one's far, third one's far. Paul had looped up there and started the church with
these super Roman converts. They are super powerhouses in the gospel. They love the gospel,
and they always are giving money back to the poor saints in Jerusalem. They are people
that just seem to get it and Paul loves them. You're going to see that. You're not very Jewish and
you're not very like these other people, but why do you guys get it? I love the Philippians. I'm
always like, yay, I was so happy. In fact, he yells at some of the other guys like you should be
more like the Philippians because they give a gift and you guys aren't even donating or anything to the poor saints.
I just want to say that for somebody who geographically may be hearing Philippi, they may be thinking, I thought Jesus was in Cesarea, Philippi.
There's a couple of Cesareas mentioned and it's hard without a map sometimes. This is the northern Greece, Philippe. Yeah, so think Greece and think it's like a hand, a dangly hand,
and it's kind of up on your wrist of the hand. It's kind of north and they call it Macedonia at
the time. It's up there kind of northern and that's actually where Philippe grew up in that area.
Everybody's named after the same two things. So there's two thousand cities called Alexandria
and then this one they just named after
his dad. That's where you get all these Phillips and the names repeating.
In my old paper scriptures, I'm looking at the map called the missionary journeys of the Apostle
Paul. And I can see these cities that you're talking about. And once again, it hit me. This guy was
all over the place. I think I've done a cruise of that region, but I've never walked it.
Never walked it. Yeah, my sandals. Yeah, can you imagine really, really far, really far.
In fact, this was one of my favorite stories where Paul was with a couple of missionary
companions and he was on the other side. He's over in what we've called Turkey. He was kind
of far. He's on the other side. He's way east. He has a dream where a man says, they keep going
to cities and he doesn't know, this is an ax. And he says, and he doesn't know where he's supposed to teach and they're like no not here no not here no not here so they keep hiking to these next cities.
And then he has a dream of a man comes to him and says we need you come over here that's where he goes and then he goes to Philippi and starts the church there and he doesn't meet a man by the way right he meets a woman. Pretty cool right that the Lord was preparing these people but he passed a bunch of big cities on the way to Philippize.
The Lord hears you, the Lord hears the people that are crying out and want him to find them
and he sent an apostle on foot to find them and now they're going to return the favor and bless
him with a gift money and things to support him in prison and he's going to return the favor and bless him with a gift, money, and things
to support him in prison, and he's going to write him this letter. So all of that does set
up. You're going to see this richness of how much they love each other. Would be like
us living really far afield. And one of the apostles comes for a conference talk or sons
as a letter in our little town. And I just think why you can feel that. You can feel that
that's exactly what they do. Even today, is they love all of us saints
wherever we are sprinkled throughout the world.
And they're gonna send us a special message.
But the Lord hears you, and he sends his messengers to them.
And to us.
John, you might be the only one here
who remembers getting letters in the mail.
There was an excitement there.
When you're far away in the Philippines,
what was it like getting male?
And I'm just getting by the way. I also received mail. No, it took two weeks
Send it would take two weeks to respond. We didn't call home every week
So it was great to get a letter. It was very renewing. You know change your whole day
And you come home and read it again
Yeah, we're doing right good point. Yeah a little boost. Let's read the first. Let's call it paragraph. Let's do Philippians 1 and I just want to do 1 through 11.
Philippians chapter 1, starting in verse 1, Paul and Timothyus, the servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints in Christ Jesus, which are at Philippi with the bishops and deacons. Grace be unto you and peace from God our Father
and from the Lord Jesus Christ.
I thank my God upon every remembrance of you.
Always in every prayer of mine
for you all making requests with joy.
For your fellowship in the gospel
from the first day until now.
Being confident of this very thing
that he which hath begun a good work in you
will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.
Even as it is me for me to think this of you all
because I have you in my heart.
Inasmuch as both in my bonds
and in the defense and confirmation of the gospel,
ye all are partakers of my grace.
For God is my record how greatly I long after you in all the
bowels of Jesus Christ. And this I pray that your love may abound yet more and more in knowledge and
in all judgment. That ye may approve things that are excellent, that ye may be sincere and without
offense, till the day of Christ, being filled with the fruits of righteousness,
which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God.
Wow, that's a way to start a letter.
One thing we remember about Paul is that it's dense.
If you think about letters today, we're not quite so dense the way we write.
Like we do now, we're just chatting.
But they're not like that.
It was hard to write, usually had to pay somebody that was really good good at it and they could like make it fit on a little tiny document. He's
going to just pack it full. One of the things that we always are going to remember with Paul
is that it's maybe not supposed to be understood the first time you read it. It's going to be something
that you might want to sit with. It's a gift that he's giving to them that they can keep reading
and reading and reading and get text from. When we just read that, if you found a few things, fantastic.
If you didn't, fantastic.
It just means you get to read it again.
He starts, hey, it's Paul and Timothyus.
We know him later as Timothy.
Paul and Tim, servants of Jesus Christ, to all the saints.
Now saints was just a word that meant holy ones, the sacred, just like we do today.
So all those who have committed their lives to Christ, all of those, I'm writing to you and you're like, yep, and also those who are bishops and deacons.
Remember the church is just starting. So it's probably people who are serving. They're the overseer,
the guy who's kind of in charge there, the bishop, and also the deacon, the one that's the service guy.
Right out of the gate, we're like, hmm, service. People who are helping the saints, people are helping the new members,
people are helping the new little branch and Philippine.
Then we get our first theme.
Grace, be unto you and peace from God our Father
and from the Lord Jesus Christ.
He's sending you grace.
And I am going to thank God and always in my prayer.
Verse three and verse four,
I thank my God upon every remembrance of you and always in every prayer. Verse three and verse four, I thank my God upon every remembrance of you
and always in every prayer of mine.
He is thinking and praying for them.
And then the rest of the verses,
he is thinking and praying and he is thinking and praying.
And not just a prayer of like,
hey, hoping he is thinking the Lord for them
and he is praying actively for them. An apostle. So there's just love. If you ever
want to see a difference read Galatians, it's pretty much a scolding. But to the Philippians, he's like,
I just love you guys. I've just been praying for you. And I love that idea that the Lord is using that.
And so you're going to see that theme and then jump down to verse 11 and he is going to come back to an interesting
word that the people are going to be filled with the fruits of righteousness. He's praying for them
and he's thankful for them so that they can have something be filled with the fruits of righteousness
which are by Jesus Christ unto the glory and praise of God. This is our theme.
You guys, this is it.
Underline that, 11.
I'm the possible Lord, I am praying and thankful for you
so that you can have something.
You're going to be filled with the fruits of righteousness.
When I read that being filled with the fruits of righteousness,
I think almost that your life is full of all these good things
that you're doing and the other people are doing
by living the gospel, you don't have time to sin
because there's just so many good things happening.
If you were a Christian tree and you had fruit-scrolling,
what would they be if I was an apple tree?
I would have an apple.
If I was a pear tree, I would grow a pear.
If I were a Christian tree, I would have a fruit of righteousness.
I think, Hank, that's what you're saying.
It's like something just pours out of us that shows that we have become that.
What do you think, John?
What kind of fruits of righteousness have you either seen in your life or you think about
with people who are really following the Savior?
I went back to Galatians because the other day in Galatians 5.22 it said
the fruit of the Spirit, capital S spirit, is love, joy, peace, long suffering, gentleness, goodness,
faith, meekness, temperance. Those are all fruits of righteousness. And I love that the idea of the
very best things you could possibly want or imagine are a result of
Christ in your life. On the opposite, the book Mormon says, the devil reward if you know good thing,
but in Christ comes every good thing. So that's a good list.
That's exactly where my mind went too, is that Galatians fruits the spirit that I think when we
become changed. So remember if we're Philippians in this example or just in our own lives, when we become changed. So remember, if we're Philippians in this example, or just in our own lives, when we really
embrace the Savior, it starts to change us.
Things just come out of us that are better.
We're a little more patient than we're a little kinder.
I don't cut off the guy on the freeway like I used to.
I start to be more like him.
Those things like a fruit grow from me and the righteousness.
Now, righteousness is a weird word.
We use it a lot in churchy words. It's one of those weird church words that we use like we all use it
all the time, but we don't use it anywhere else. On Old Testament terms, the idea of righteousness is
justice. And it's that you're making things just, you're setting things right. You're putting how the world is tough. It's not always fair.
And someone struggling and you are setting it right. That's righteousness might be someone
who's having a bad day. You are setting it right by helping them have a better day. It
might be giving them money because they are poor, but by no fault of their own. They
are like setting that right. You are putting them in right
relationship with the Lord where they have distanced themselves through sin,
righteousness and justice is setting things right the way that the Lord would in his kingdom.
So help people set things right. That's being righteous. Not just like I hope I checked that box and
did that thing I was supposed to do, but I look around into the world and I now see it as
the kingdom of God. This new world that Christ has brought. Starting now and it's to come
still, but this new world, this new kingdom of God, this Zion that we're trying to build,
I am helping change things. I am setting things right.
I like it. It's of rightness or making it right.
Righteousness and justice are the same word.
You think of that. I'm setting things right.
I'm making it just and fair.
Even when it always hasn't been, I can set it right just like God would.
You're saying, I'm hoping that that's what you're going to get.
That's what you're gonna get.
That's what you should start to live.
Like, hey, dear Philippians, hey, dear Laurie,
here dear Hank John, hey you listening.
I am praying and thankful so that you can start to see
that in your own life.
I love it.
All right, the next section I just wanna touch on
kind of his theme, 12 through 18 in chapter one, he's just gonna say basically, dear family, the next section I just want to touch on kind of his theme 12, 3, 18 in chapter 1.
He's just going to say basically, dear family, the king is being announced. The new king,
Jesus Christ, right? Not the Roman ruler, not the president of your country, not the prime minister,
the new Jesus that you follow. He's being announced. And I want you to start to think differently.
Now that you're part of this new community, the saints, I want you to think differently. Now that you're part of this new community, the saints, I want you to
think differently. We're going to set aside that other stuff. So he's kind of setting them up to
think differently. That's what I kind of think for that next section. But let's jump to 18 to 26
to say how that's going to work because we're setting up this next big leap into this poem, this big idea about Jesus Christ.
Paul realizes where we are when we're struggling,
when things are challenging,
and yet we're trying to live this new life
of righteousness and justice and being saints.
So 18, he says, what then?
Notwithstanding, every way, whether it pretense
or in truth, Christ is preached,
and I therein do rejoice. Yay. And
we'll rejoice. He's just saying, well, even though challenging things are different in
our lives, he's saying, what am I supposed to do with that? Even if you're suffering,
even if things are tough, rejoice. And that should cause us a little bit of pause. Wait
a minute, Paul, when things are really really tough You want me to like woohoo?
Is that kind of discounting my struggles and he's like, well hold on
Let's keep reading and see what he says about that. So he's saying even when I'm struggling you should rejoice
And he says okay, and here's this next verse 19
For I know that this shall turn to my salvation through your prayer and the supply of the spirit
of Jesus Christ.
He turns it on its head a little bit.
Even though things are tough in your life, he's saying, I know this shall turn to salvation
through your prayer.
That even though tough things are going to happen, this can work out to your benefit.
This can work to help save you, change you, and really
through prayer. And how is it? It's the spirit of Jesus Christ. And this is one of the
only references, by the way, of the spirit and all of Philippians. I think what he's saying
here is that even when we're crushed and in despair in our lives, we can still say, I'm wrestling
with these things. Now, don't forget, Paul wrestled really with these. He was not like a guy that was like not suffering.
He talks about it a lot.
Second Corinthians one, I was nearly giving up you guys.
Here's a guy that suffered.
And he's saying, what do you do when you're in that?
He says, in Lori Ease, I shall turn it to salvation.
How through the spirit of Jesus Christ.
Now, we might not know how that works yet.
He's going to tell us that in a second, you're like something's gonna change. I can't take suffering out of your life
But somehow through the spirit of Jesus Christ it can become something more something more positive
He says that's really my hope and I know that I could be ashamed
I could be in these tough situations like prison. That's kind of shameful and they're living in a society when shame and honors a big deal.
Yeah, you say, and I know it's going to seem like that, but look, we can work it out.
Let's go to 21.
For to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain.
Huh?
What?
If I live, that's great because I get to preach.
He's going to talk about this at length, but I get to preach about Jesus Christ.
If I die, I'm gonna be with Jesus Christ.
So no matter where we are in our lives, we can have him.
The God's word translation of that verse,
Christ means everything to me in this life.
And when I die, I'll have even more.
I don't like that.
I do like those other translations. He says it in 23 and I'm going to read the NSRV,
the new Rabbi standard version. He says, I am hard pressed between the two, meaning life and death.
My desire is to depart, to be with Christ for that is far better, verse 24. But to remain in the
flesh is more necessary for you. Well, I'm really torn. If I leave, I would be with Christ.
But if I stay, that would be better for you,
because I could keep on preaching,
and I could keep on teaching Jesus.
I'm really torn.
I don't know what's better.
Do I die and go with Jesus, or do I stay and preach about Jesus?
Tough call.
Tough call.
Here's something though that I think is super critical for us.
A lot of times, we are called to more of,
we're ministers, we're
ministering brothers, we're ministering sisters, we have family members, other
people that we try to help. Ministers, big word for help. And I think what we do
a lot of times is we erase the idea that people are suffering and we think, well,
if you're living a good life, you should just not have any suffering. Or that if
you aren't suffering, you should just bounce right back. And he's not saying that at all. What he's saying is we acknowledge that they're suffering
and we sit and we hold ourselves with that suffering. We kind of say, I feel the sorrow,
but our hope, our hope in the Savior helps us through the struggle. So we don't say, oh I'm
sorry, you're feeling like that Hank or John, you'll bounce right back.
I know that you know, you had a big struggle. What we say instead is, I hear your brother. I hear you.
And that's just like Jesus. And that's just like me. And you know what? He's going to make it better through the journey, better through the journey.
Verse 25, and I'm still in the new revised standard. Since I'm convinced of this,
he says, well, actually, I should remain because I can help you out. And then he turns it on his head.
Verse 25, since I'm convinced of this, then I'm going to stay. I know that I will remain and
continue with all of you for your progress and joy and faith. 26, so that by my presence against
with you, your boast might haveound in Christ Jesus because of me.
I'm realizing that maybe I'm here for you and maybe you can feel the same thing I'm feeling.
Maybe I'm suffering so that I can help you out. He's a cool guy. What do you guys think?
Do we sometimes kind of erase that someone's suffering? We kind of just go,
oh, you'll just bounce right back because you're a member of the church. You should just not feel
that way. Yeah, I'm going back to Old Testament in my mind when Job's friends,
their greatest moment was when they just came and sat with Job and didn't say a word.
And as soon as they opened their mouths and tried to explain it all, everything went south.
But when they just knew your suffering, we're just going to sit with you.
And we won't try to explain it. we won't try to make sense of it,
we won't try to blame anybody, we'll just sit with you.
I think you're right, there's times when it's just so nice to know that
somebody else knows what you're going through. Maybe that's important not to
to pass it off so quick, oh you'll get over it, that maybe sounds too
too quick. You say no and he he's going to talk about this suffering pretty
having a second, but I like what you said, just sit with your
friends, just sit there like jobinous buddies. Don't have anything to
say, but we'll be with you.
Yeah, mourn with those that mourn. Doesn't say cheer up those that
mourn. They're trying to explain it with those that mourn. Or
especially tell them they sinned. And that's why this is
happening. I mean, that's's that's a joke again. You must have deserved it. This
community of Jesus followers, the community that we are all in is for everyone
who's listening today. We're with you. We're mourning with you. We might not know
exactly what you're feeling, but we all feel that way. And when I'm feeling bad,
I can reach out and feel like,
I know that there's this big community behind me
that's got my back.
And they are suffering kind of with me.
And they're praying with me.
And how powerful is that?
There's this community across the whole world,
this network of people that are saying,
I am mourning with you.
I don't even know you, but brother, sister, I feel it. And it wouldn't be great
if every word, every stake felt this way. And this is what we could have. It is. And it's something
that I think he's encouraging us to gain. Those are those fruits of righteousness that he's talking
about. I am so thankful and I'm prayerful. And these are the things that it's time for us to learn.
I'm writing you this letter. I'm talking you today on the podcast
so that you can say you can still work on it. This is what it's like to be a member of the Church
of Jesus Christ the lottery saints. This is what you're being called to do. You guys, there's no
big heavy theology of some like what is it like in the pre-mortal and some complicated thing.
Paul's got this right down to the ground. This is just
application. He's saying, you guys love each other, serve each other. And then he's
going to go, oh, and you know, actually what that's about, Jesus Christ. This is
big theology. The big theology is the fruits of righteousness is loving
each other, mourning with those who mourn, and understanding where we are, and serving.
Be a minister.
Verse 27,
you may stand fast in one spirit
with one mind,
striving together
for the faith of the gospel.
What you just said,
Hank, reminds me of when you see one spirit,
one mind,
striving together,
just that sense of Zion
where I'll trying to get to,
which is such an aspirational thing.
And we just keep trying. Yeah, he's going to build on that idea. So we're still in Philippians 1,
27, Hank, will you read again the second half of 27 where it's like, I know that you're standing
firm. Sure. Right in the middle of 27, that whether I come and see you or else be absent, I may hear
of your affairs that you stand fast in one spirit with one mind striving together for
the faith of the gospel and in nothing terrified by your adversaries, which is to them an evident
token of perdition, but to you of salvation and that of God.
He basically says, look, I know you're standing firm in one spirit.
And this means together, I know you're that you're standing firm in one spirit,
a striving side by side with one mind for the faith of the gospel.
And you're not frightened by all those adversaries and those guys that are opposing you.
You're not frightened by that, he says.
And he says, for them, those guys on the outside,
this is evidence of their destruction, but of your salvation and its God's doing.
I think of a little house, like a little church, and you're in the little church, and you're like,
I'm feeling all protected in my little church, and you've got these outside forces that press against
us. Those outside forces could be big issues in the world. So you've got
poverty, you've got racism, there's a fire in some place, there's just things going on and it's just
pressing in on our little community. And then he says, you're not worried about those things because
instead, it's a member we're thinking differently. Instead what we're doing is we're pushing out,
we're all unified, our little church together.
It's not just me, it's not just Hank, it's not just John,
it's all of us together.
And we are reflecting back out into the world.
Verse 28, you're not frightened by these adversaries at all.
And for them, this is evidence of their destruction,
but your salvation, while you might feel the most depressed.
Remember, this is a little tiny church.
This is a little tiny group.
And who hasn't felt like as a member,
as a Christ follower that you're like,
man, I feel like I'm on a little island sometimes.
I'm the only one that thinks like this,
and I'm only on this try and,
and the world's telling me how bad things are
and how everything in your like,
but I stand together in unity,
and I'm not worried about those guys outside.
My little house is secure.
And in fact, I'm pushing back out into the world. I am pushing it back out. And it's my
salvation that I can go and help them too. He's flipping it on their head. Don't like power
down into a little house. You push out, you push out. And this is God's doing. This isn't
even you. This is how it works. This is what it's like to be a follower of the Savior.
He's going to enable us. Since we're all having the same struggle, he says, I'm sorry to hear you're still having the same thing,
but no, I'm in the same boat. And that's what that struggle means that the struggle is pushing out into the world.
There's a moment in Nephi's vision where he sees something similar, I think. This is first Nephi 14 verse 12.
Nephi's vision, where he sees something similar, I think. This is 1 Nephi 14 verse 12.
And it came to pass that, I, this is Nephi, beheld the Church of the Lamb of God, and its numbers were few because of the wickedness and abominations of the world. Then he adds in verse 14,
I beheld the power of the Lamb of God that it descended upon the saints of the Church of the Lamb
upon the covenant people of the Lord. They were armed with righteousness
and with the power of God in great glory. They've got all these forces pressing on them,
but look at them pressing out. I like how you describe that. I love that story. It reminds me, Hank,
of one of my own personal stories. I served a mission in northern Spain. Northern Spain is like a
lot of Europe where the church doesn't very big. In fact, we met in my apartment,
but we didn't even have much of a chapel there.
It just come from a group to a branch.
So we had just gone to a branch.
So there were very few of us.
You're a twig, you're a twig still.
You're a twig, we were.
Not quite yet a branch, but just a stick.
And we were very proud twig, you know?
There were like just four of us missionaries there.
Some great strong members, but very small.
We had just one thing after another happened to us.
We had rocks thrown at us, my companion at night, and people would yell at us like, go home
and a couple days later, we were walking home.
It was really quite late because you'd stay late in Spain because of the heat.
We're walking home.
And I'm walking up this hill and I just, well, I was remember that the street lamp
was above us in a steep hill.
So I'm walking up the sidewalk
and I'm looking at my feet because I'm like
trudging up the hill and my companions
have used the paces ahead me.
Car goes by and they're yelling at us, of course.
And I feel this and I'm like, oh, and on my chest,
I was like, oh, I was really sure of pain.
And I'm like, oh, I'm having like a heart attack.
And I pull my hand away from my chest
and in that light from the street lamp, it's mustard.
And I immediately realized what's happened.
They had thrown a sandwich at me from the moving car.
And you guys, it's gonna make me so sad.
It made me cry.
And I'm not much of a cryer. Excuse me sad. It made me cry. And I'm not much for cry.
Excuse me, but it, it made me cry. Like here I was, just trying to share the gospel.
And these silly hooligans drove by and threw a sandwich at me so much that it hurt, but it hurt my soul.
I'm just trying here. We just had the rock strung and now I'm having this started us. I could feel what they were feeling in that moment in these letters where it's we're
just few a number and we're trying so hard to just share something.
And man, it's hard.
It really just broke my heart that people didn't want to hear the message and they took it out on me personally.
And it was just a sandwich. I mean, I wasn't in jail and I didn't have anybody really hurt me,
but obviously even here 30 years later, it still affects me. It's hard. My little companion
looks around like, what's wrong with you? And just took me in her arms and was like, you're morning, it's okay. And we went home. The story doesn't end.
A week later, they were doing a fireworks thing where they just
have like tons of fire like local fireworks, not in the sky. And
they burn furniture and all these crazy things, the Kings
birthday. And they let her skirt on fire. So we didn't stay in
that city anymore. They actually pulled us out of that city.
But you know, we're few and far in number.
I think sometimes we think that we're bigger than we are,
but the saints feel the power of the community
throughout the world that's like, that's okay.
I'm on a dining.
We're behind you.
We're behind we're few in numbers.
And we're pressing in on you, but it'll work out okay.
Oddly, that was one of my favorite areas, even though how hard it was,
the people were so strong there.
If this hearing you, Monresa, Spain love you,
they were some of my favorite people and became a real strong branch.
And now there's a temple as you know going into Barcelona.
Miracles happened.
Laurie, I think I mentioned it on the podcast before,
but my daughter served in France and one day her note said dad someone spit on me today.
Man, when you're the dad that really touches you, thank you for sharing that, that brought back that memory for, for maybe a lot of people out there listening that had things like that happen. But looking ahead to Philippians 2, I looked at some other translations and some of them are all indented in an
poetic form, which tells me Paul's going to quote something or sing something that's
a little bit different and you look excited. So what happens in in Philippians 2?
Yeah, you're right. It's a song. I know just totally changed gears. I love this poem. If you had
like a poetry book of best hymns or best poems about the Savior, this has got to be one of them
at the top of the list. And you're right. In our King James version, you can't really see its
poetry. No, this is my favorite part. If you think of a poem now, you do foresee that like
indented formatting thing that we do in especially in English to show that it's a poem. But in King
James, it doesn't do that. So it's hard to see. But if you look at another
translation, you'll see that it's a poem. Often I used to skip the poems. I don't
know about you guys, but those of you who are also Lord of the Rings fans, if you
ever read Lord of the Rings in the Hobbit, they're always like breaking out into
song. And I used to just skip past the song
and then just get back to the story.
And now I realize that the song was like the story.
One ring to rule them all, one ring to find them.
The core thing is kind of in the poem.
Luri, is the entire chapter a poem?
Is that your saying or is there's a poem in the chapter?
Yeah, 6 through 11 is a poem.
So we're in Philippians 2 and Paul's going to continue talking about what it means to be
kind of this saint.
And then he's going to use this poem to highlight it.
So think of it like this.
How many conference talks have you heard it were then they quote a hymn?
Right?
I stand the one based.
That's exactly what he's doing.
Taking a hymn.
We don't know that he wrote it.
It might have been one of the oldest hymns
that we ever have, Christ hymns,
sometimes called the Christ hymn.
He's quoting it, is writing the letter.
He doesn't reference it,
so it's probably one of those like,
yeah, I stand all amazed and they're like,
oh, I know that, that's a hymn, right?
Yeah, they know that.
He's assuming they know this song.
I think when we say poem, if you're like me,
when you're young, a poem rhymes.
There once was a member named Philip, yeah.
It's words of a hymn or something.
It might not rhyme, but to them it was a poem because they had probably heard it put to music.
Is that fair?
Yeah, our poems have meter and rhyme, like, right?
The way they rhyme is they rhyme in ideas.
Like chiasmas or something.
Yeah, and actually this is a chiasmas.
So let's talk about that for a second.
A chiasmas is a kind of poem.
It comes from the Greek letter chai, which is an X.
So I'm making an X with my hands.
X marks the spot.
So the part in the middle is the like key point.
Another good analogy for those of us
who aren't Greek speakers, it's a hamburger
poem. So there are two buns and the buns are kind of the same and then there are two slices
of cheese and the cheese kind of the same and then there's the meat in the middle. The poem is
the meat in the middle but there are going to be parallels. There's going to be bun bun,
cheese cheese, meat. No pun intended there, meat in the middle. I really there meat in the middle. I really I really like meat in the
middle. So it's made it and we meet there. We meet in the middle. That's right. It's
gonna do just exactly that. That's what a chiasmos is. It comes from that X but that
hamburger poem. So they're these parallel ideas and then like bun bun cheese cheese.
And then in the middle is like the highlight. If you took a highlighter and you circled it,
it would be that section that it's trying to highlight
to say, this is really the point, is this prayer.
Even in your chapters, it's a little hard to see.
So I'm gonna just do a spoiler.
But the spoiler is, verse eight,
that is the meat in the middle.
That is the points of this chapter. So we're
going to get to it, but just to start with it, it says, and we're talking about Jesus,
he humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death, even death on across.
So that's the main point, that's the center point of the poem, and then he's going to kind of
build up to that. But let's do one other thing before we
jump into this because this is a little bit heavy. Poems are actually like super dense. They're like
really dense ideas. One thing that we're really used to in our culture is movie scores. Like we all
know movie scores. So we're like, hey, I know a movie score. And when we hear what's called a
light motif or a motif, a little bit of music, we know that that's a character or a symbol.
And these poems work the same way.
Let me give you an example.
If you heard... Bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum bum Oh, it's all like an emotional scene. Do you know who it is? Luke or a Jedi.
Yeah, it's a Jedi theme. It's actually called the, they use it for the force.
So anytime they feel the force, it's like that song comes on.
Kinda like Vader has his own song.
Dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun,
the Imperial March, they play it and you're like,
the bad guys here or the good guys here,
or there's the theme or an idea.
Well, that's what happens in biblical poetry as well
is they're these themes.
You start to get to recognize them.
And the biggest theme of all is the theme of the cross.
You're gonna see sacrifice, the atonement,
the cross, sacrifice, the atonement, the cross,
over and over again, and it builds, and it builds,
and it builds, and it layers, and it and it builds and it layers and it layers.
And then it puts other ideas on it and other concepts, it adds just like our score,
sometimes it's slow and sometimes it's fast and sometimes it's the whole orchestra and sometimes
it's a blaring horn and sometimes it's joky and you're like it's the same theme but it builds on
these ideas. Poetry works exactly the same way. And the other way
that it also works is it touches us. Because it's in something that rhymes or it's something
else, it sticks with us. Do you have a hymn that you're like, I, if I really want to get close
to the spirit, it's one of my go-to's.
Mine is, and it's partly because there's a beautiful arrangement of it. I used to hear
when I was a kid. My mom was in the tab choir, but it's all my father. There was a beautiful
arrangement with French horns. And ever since then, that's just been my favorite.
Yeah, I love what you did there, though, John. I think that's why music is so powerful.
It's associative. You said, because there was a beautiful arrangement and they were in
the choir, you're making these associations,
not just with the music and not just with the song,
but what it means to you.
That's exactly what these things should do to us too.
They're like a hyperlink, right?
On a Wikipedia page where you click on
and it takes you to all the other hyperlinks.
So you read about the cross
or you read about these experiences
and you're like, that reminds me of all those other ones.
I like abide with me to see even tide.
And that's because I really like Luke 24,
abide with us, just toward evening.
That's beautiful.
Do you have an association with it too?
Yeah.
That's what Paul is so brilliant about here
is that he's gonna teach us more about the savior
and he's gonna tie it in with this poem.
Just like Luke Skywalker's theme or just like any of these, he's going to tie it in with this poem. Just like Luke Skywalker's theme or just
like any of these, he's going to tie it out as something that we're like, we have heard about
these ideas over and over again, about the sacrifice of the savior and we're going to learn about him
and it's deep and it's rich and there's just a lot to unpack. But if we really get to the bottom
of it, it's a him and it should touch us in our hearts and it should tie into those hymns. If you're not sure what this hymn means, pick your favorite
sacrament hymn and replace it. And chances are it's the same thing.
You're getting the same idea.
Should we read it and see what it says?
Yeah, let me set up one other idea.
We talked about it being a chiasmos or a hamburger has this point in the
middle with Jesus on the cross,
but it's actually two big chunks.
It's kind of the top of the burger and the bottom of the burger.
And there's a word right in the middle that we're going to hit, which is really therefore.
It's going to hit therefore or where for in verse 9, where for.
And it's the point at which it switches.
Okay.
Basically going to say, all the stuff at the top is equal to all the stuff at the bottom,
or because of the stuff at the top, the stuff at the bottom is going to be true. It's kind of like
an equal sign. Now here's the setting. This isn't just about the Savior. Paul is using the story
about the Savior and about his atoning sacrifice to teach us about times when we struggle.
has a toning sacrifice to teach us about times when we struggle. What do we do when we struggle? Well, let's look to him. So that's what we're going to do. So let's go to, I'm in Philippians 2,
6 through 11's our poem. And remember verse 8 is that key verse, right? Verse 9's the hinge,
therefore let's try it then with a different translation. Now, the reason I want to use
a different translation is because it's really dense material
ready and the King James language just makes it denser.
I needed to be a little less dense.
So, John, would you mind reading for us Philippians 2 and we're going to do 6 through 11.
What version are you reading for us?
Well, I could do the NIV, the new international version.
That's perfect.
Okay.
So, starting in verse six, Philippians 2,
who, being in very nature, God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
but made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant, being made in human likeness,
and being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death,
in appearance as a man, he humbled himself and became obedient to death, even death on a cross. Therefore, God exalted him to the highest plain and gave him the name that is above every name,
that at the name of Jesus, every knee should bow in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father.
It's pretty dense. There's a lot going on.
Let's start it right out.
Who being in the very nature of God
did not consider a quality with God
something to be used for his advantage?
That one's a little bit, I think, easier to understand.
We're talking about Jesus Christ.
Who had all power?
Who was able, was the creator of the world?
Who could have called down, even says it, right? the creator of the world who could have called down,
even says it, right?
And the gospel's like, could it get called down legions of angels?
Don't you think that I could have done that thing?
And he says in this him, but he didn't use it to his advantage.
Instead he does something surprising.
He does something different.
Someone who's in power that didn't just live the
high life, take advantage of it. I was born to greatness. He's the first born. He could have
just lived like a king and he doesn't do that. He does something remarkably and radically different.
And he, what is it he does? Verse seven, he made himself nothing by taking the very nature of a servant, a servant.
He's God.
He's God.
Jehovah.
He could have just done anything wanted.
And he takes the least, the least of servant.
Now, I don't know about you, but servants in the ancient world probably not really well
respected.
The word here sometimes is even a slave. It wasn't like, oh, well, that's okay. The word here sometimes is even a slave.
It wasn't like, ooh, well, that's okay.
It's okay if you were a slave.
It's not like that.
It's like, he took the worst.
Could have done everything and he didn't.
And in fact, he did the opposite.
He became a servant to all.
And then he says, being made in human lightness
and being found in a parent says a man, he
humbled himself by becoming obedient to death.
He's not obedient because death is telling him what to do.
He's obedient to his father's will.
He's obedient all the way.
He could have said, well, that was close.
You get the idea.
I'm God after all.
I don't have to do all this.
He did the opposite. I'm God after all. I don't have to do all this. He did the opposite.
He becomes a servant, he becomes a median, all the way to death. You can kind of feel it,
even death on a cross. And that's the middle point, right? That's the middle point. That's the
middle point. Let's talk about that. Crisis called the Christ, him. Let me make why are we learning
about this? Why, what does this teach us about the love of God?
Why did Jesus do this? I'm reminded of the idea he descended below all things so that he could
Rise above all things and maybe that wherefore is that focal point right there. This is the heart of
His performing the atonement perhaps. I think you're exactly right. I'm reading the hymn in the contemporary English version
and it says, this is starting verse seven,
instead he gave up everything and became a slave
when he became like one of us.
And that takes me to Al-Masabin.
He will take upon them their infirmities,
their sicknesses, their pains, and why? Why would
he do it? So he can know in the flesh how to sucker his people. I've got to become
like you so I can truly understand you and help you.
How powerful is that that God, all powerful Christ, can come down and do that so that he could love us.
Better, yeah.
Better.
So I can love you more.
That's a lot of love.
I don't know very many people that I'd say, I really want to love you more.
So let me experience every bad thing you've ever experienced.
I just, that's a lot.
Yeah.
I think I've had the most profound experience, personal
experience of understanding the Savior with this idea, not that
he came to just free me from my sins or not that I could have
faith in him, but the idea that he descended below them all so
he could understand me when I was in my darkest time. I've had
some dark times. I don't share the time. I've had some dark times.
I don't share the story.
So I hope it's okay,
but quite a few years ago,
I was diagnosed with a really weird brain condition
and it caused me to have to severe chronic pain.
I had hydracephalus,
a form of hydracephalus,
water on the brain,
but as an adult,
and it has similar symptoms to having a brain tumor.
I started to have really bad vision
and all kinds of other things, but really intense pain headaches. It just went on for weeks and weeks
and then months and months, so they did an MRI, they did all that and they could see that it was a
problem from an accident I had had as a kid. So it was a brain structural thing. I started just
have all these problems and the pain grew and grew and grew and grew and there was no relief not for one minute.
I got harder and harder and harder. And about nine months in to this little adventure,
I was on my last legs, you guys. My parents hadn't seen me for quite a while. They knew I was sick,
but you know, I was an adult. They lived out of state and they came to see me and they're like,
you don't look like you. They took me back to their neurologist and they said, we got to do something.
And they said, well, the only thing we can really do is this really risky brain surgery.
I know.
Let's sign up for brain surgery.
I was at the point where I was like, I don't think I can keep going on like this.
So yeah, I'll take anything I've got.
And I was at a really, really suffering.
The pain was overwhelming. And it never ceased, never not for a second. I couldn't see a way out.
I didn't know what I was supposed to do. And I always thought I'd be real strong. Like, when I had
a, if I have a really hard thing, I'd be a really great person. No, I was miserable. I was just suffering.
We made a brain surgeon, happens to be one of two, just happens to be here locally. And he says,
yep, you got the thing. And so we'll do this risky nine hour brain surgery. And we'll put in a
device and we'll put a plate in your brain and all this, it'll be great. And it was really scary.
And so I was, I was on the kerney and I was waiting to be wheeled into surgery.
I mean, I've got that little hat on,
and I'm laying there, and I'm still suffering,
I'm just feeling so bad, and I'm scared.
More than anything, I'm scared.
I'm scared of two things.
What if it doesn't work?
And then the other, well, if it doesn't work,
I hope I don't wake up.
And as I sat there being so scared,
my dad took my hands and he said,
Lori, let Christ have this.
This is the atonement.
This is what it's for.
And you guys in that moment I
knew him in a way that I will never know the Savior in another way. I
knew he was there with me in that moment. I knew that no matter what happened, whether I woke up or not,
he suffered that kind of suffering for me.
And that was the moment at which I knew, the Savior, I knew him. The Him saying that very thing,
that it's at that moment when the Savior has descended below it all,
so that He could be with me during my darkest moment where I had no hope.
I know that He's the Christ.
I know that Jesus is the Christ.
I know Jesus is the Christ.
Is this Him powerful?
Yeah, because His atonement is powerful and it's really real.
He really did those things so that He could help me and you
and everybody else.
I know that in a way that I didn't know before.
Thank you for sharing that.
Laurie, your story reminds me of a quote from Elder Meryl J. Bateman, says back in 2005
the November enzyme, speaking, you know, it's a conference edition.
Elder Bateman said this, for many years, I thought of the Savior's experience in the
garden and on the cross as places where a large
mass of sin was heaped upon him.
Through the words of prophets, however, my view has changed.
Instead of an impersonal mass of sin, there was a long line of people.
He goes on to say, the atonement was an intimate personal experience in which Jesus came to know how to help
each of us. He learned about your weaknesses. He experienced your pains and sufferings. I testify
that he knows us, but more than that, more than just knowing us, he knows how to help us if we come
to him in faith. Amen. One of the places that Elder Bateman talked about was going to Abinadi in Isaiah, where Isaiah,
when his soul will be made an offering for sin, he shall see his seed.
And maybe as Elder Bateman said, that was not just a mass of all sin, but an individual
thing.
That would be the travail of his soul when we would
become children of Christ. He would see his seed. It's a powerful, beautiful thought. Thanks for
sharing that. I love the idea that it's so personal. That was a cool quote. And he knows them so that
he can help them. He would see his seed. And there would be joy. Yeah. On that, I think the power of this poem, if we can go back to it, how it affects us naturally,
is that we return back to what that means for Christ. And that's that hinge verse there on
nine. Therefore, that's it. This is like boom, the hinge. Therefore, God exalted him to the highest
place and gave him the name that is above every name.
And that is the name of Jesus and every knee should bow and heaven and an earth and under the earth and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God, the Father.
It isn't that the suffering and the trial is just a nothing.
It's that becomes something that
exalts us. It changes us. It changed him. The suffering that you're going through,
you remember what the letter is about, when you're suffering and you're going
through trials, it's the same thing that Christ went through and it will make
you like him. It's something that the Lord can use. So instead of being born and something
really great and being the king, it's the opposite. It's being the servant and then is what
brings us up. So that's suffering that you're going through is kind of good news because it teaches
us to be like him and the Lord can use it for a benefit. I think of Joseph and his brothers in Genesis
where they thought that they were gonna cast them out
and kill them and then they sell them as a slave
and then he goes to Egypt.
And then even there, he's thrown in jail
and then the person in jail even forgets him.
I mean, his story just goes from bad to worse
to bad to worse.
And this guy doesn't really deserve any of that.
And then finally, someone remembers them.
I remember that he was in jail.
And then he has raced up and he becomes like the vice-region,
like he's the super-encharged guy of all of Egypt.
Who knew? Jesus knew.
He sends the family down there,
and it says in chapter 50 to his brothers,
you guys meant it for evil, but God put it to good.
You tried to do all this to me, but it was for good.
And that's what the Savior can do for all of our suffering.
He can say something that was so troublesome, he can put it to our good.
It's not saying that suffering is good, but even the suffering, even those things that
are trying can become something good.
I've always thought about that story, Laurie.
I thought in the past, why
doesn't the Lord just put Joseph in Egypt instead of making him go through all of those
difficult things? But I've wondered when his brother show up, had he just been placed
in Egypt and not struggled, would he be the person that he was, the forgiver that he was had he not suffered so much. So not only does the Lord
put us in the right place, but he can also use our difficulties and trials to make us the right
person in the right place. I think that's exactly right that the Lord gives us those struggles to make us the best
that we can be if we do it consecrated to the Lord, not just struggle.
It makes Joseph the best Joseph, if we do it in Christ.
If you dedicate it to him, if you consecrate it to him, it teaches us something we become
better.
At least, it feels a little bit cold-comfort,
like, well, I was hoping to just avoid those trials.
But instead, what he's teaching is those trials
are important for us, and they make us more like him
and the whole purpose of our existence
is not to avoid the struggles,
but to have him with us on our side,
with us, understanding us intimately and uniquely
when we go through them.
It makes Joseph a stronger type of Christ too because of that time. And back in Philippians 119,
I know this, Paul's imprisonment, everything shall turn to my salvation. That idea of all things
work together for good for them that love God kind of shows up in different
stories and in different phrases all over the place, doesn't it? That God can take those times,
He doesn't cause all of them, sometimes we cause them, but He can take those and make it for our good.
Yeah, and that's really powerful. Thank you, John. I'd like that, that thread, like that theme is
just kind of threading
through all of these verses, right? All these chapters, all these different. So many stories throughout,
yeah. Let's look at the rest of Philippians. We're just going to mention a few of the key things
that we won't be able to dig into, but that you should come back to. Philippians 3, 13 and 40.
It says, brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended, which I think means I have not reached my goal yet.
Brother and I count not myself to have apprehended, but this one thing I do,
forgetting those things which are behind,
which I think he means things he's been through, and reaching forth under those things which are before,
before meaning in the future, before me coming up.
And those things which are before, before meaning in the future, before me, coming up, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus, Paul
being almost a motivational speaker right there.
I'm going to finish this race.
I have a goal and I'm going to reach it.
I know who I am, I know what I want, and I'm going to get it. I know who I am. I know what I want and I'm going to get it.
I like the high calling. It's a high calling. This isn't just a putty little race. This is the race.
And I am pressing for it. I'm going to end dirty the end and I'm going to make it. And I'm going to bust
through the tape at the end. All right, John, your turn. Well, the kid in primary that said,
what kind of gun did Paul have in this teacher said?
I don't think Paul had a gun.
Yes, he did.
It says, we believe in the ammunition of Paul
when they were working on the articles of faith.
And sometimes we don't even know what was the
ammunition of Paul.
That's Philippians 4.8.
The exactly the wrong way to look at, for example,
the new F.S.Y. guide is, what will God permit? Instead,
a better way is what would God prefer as someone said on our podcast recently. And look at what
this is saying to look at. Whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever
things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are good report? If they're being a virtue, if they're being a praise, think on these things. And our article of faith says we
seek after these things. Instead of just the don't, this kind of has the do. What should I focus on?
What should I look for in life? The things that are honest, pure, just lovely of good report,
praiseworthy. I like that too. That reminds me of Martha and Mary, where she has chosen the better part.
You just get to pick anything that you know that the Lord wants you to follow.
Just don't have to tell you everything. It's a good thing.
Let's look at the end of Philippians chapter 3. Paul is talking about those who are
enemies to the cross of Christ. And he said, whose end is destruction. And then this phrase, whose God is their belly,
basically who worship their stomachs.
And I have been guilty of that before,
almost as if my belly is my God saying, feed me, right?
Yes, Master, I will do whatever you want me to do.
Almost a John chapter six moment,
I come to Christ
because I want to be physically fed. I want to be satisfied physically. And Paul is saying,
that's not what it's about. Whose God is their belly. Put that in vinyl in the kitchen.
Yeah. One of the things I always appreciate is how much Paul calls out his friends. He's always like, hey, I love you guys.
And he remembers them so fondly.
And he always remembers to call them out.
So we have some of the best names that we only get in these letters where we don't know these people,
but we know that they're out there being the people that they are and growing the kingdom of God,
growing Zion. And that's
just like all of us. We're all just kind of little people. He would have written to each
of you. Thanks, Paul.
Laurie, what you just said reminds me of a moment in the Beware of Pride talk, that famous
talk for 1989, President Benson, Beware of Pride. He's talking about all these things that
are prideful, fault-finding, gossiping,
backbiting, murmuring, living beyond our means, envying, coveting. And then he said something
that just caught my attention, pride with holding gratitude and praise that might lift another.
With holding gratitude and praise that might lift another. Paul takes these opportunities
to praise people, to lift them. When I read through this talk, I thought, how often do
I withhold compliments or praise that might really be a benefit to someone else? I just
don't say it. I think of it, but I don't say it.
That beware of pride talk. I'd like to think how many times have you thought something kind about somebody, but it doesn't
get that extra couple of inches and come out of your mouth?
What's that old poem?
I've wept in the night for the shortness of sight when two someone's need.
I was blind, but I've never has yet felt the tinge of regret for being a little too
kind.
You think that nice thing about somebody, just let
it come out. And here's Paul in prison thanking them for taking care of him.
I think those are powerful things that we can do. And that's always a reminder to me that
the gospel of Jesus Christ is this doing that we can share this out and be this light.
It's not that God's light just shares
into us, but we reflect it out. So we're like a mirror outwards, just sharing those kind
words, even helping somebody suffering morning with those who mourn. That's that's powerful
and it's something that I can do.
I've always loved this little thought in Philippians 411. it's a little thought, but it's so huge. How hard to do.
I've learned, Paul says, from prison, in whatsoever state I am therewith to be content.
I think there are entire floors in skyscrapers on Madison Avenue trying to persuade us that we
should be discontent, that there is some product or service that we don't have,
content that there is some product or service that we don't have. We need it so bad that we should not be content. I remember reading a book years ago called
Final High Priest. I can only remember one line in that book and it was this young
adult talking to his grandma who said to him giving him advice, marry someone who knows how to be content.
I don't know why I remember that line,
but being content is very hard to do.
And here's Paul saying, I've learned to be content
and having it come from that place.
That verse just speaks to me and tells me,
I'm not there yet.
No, John, that's funny that you say that.
Those floors of Madison Avenue,
because I remember taking a marketing class
and they said, a billboard is meant to create a problem.
You didn't know you had and solve it.
You know, I didn't know I had that problem
until I looked in the mirror.
But I'm so glad I can pay money to get it resolved.
Right.
That's that other old saying that they want to persuade you
to spend money you don't have to buy stuff you don't need to impress people you don't
like. Whatsoever state I am in there with the B content. That's great, John. Please join
us for part two of this podcast.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.