Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Psalms 1-46 -- Part 2 : Dr. Shon Hopkin
Episode Date: August 7, 2022Dr. Shon Hopkin returns and discusses the influence and importance of Psalm 22 in understanding the life, suffering, and triumph of Messiah, Jesus Christ.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes ...(English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks 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/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
You've got Psalm 73, you mentioned verse 23,
thou hast hold in me by my right hand.
Not only are you holding my right hand, but you're holding me, and it reminds me of Nephi,
what does he say in his psalm, will thou encircle me about in the robes of righteousness?
It's just almost like,
God, please hug me. Hold me. I mean, that's almost childlike idea. I just need to be held by God.
Second Nephi 4, Hank, what has just happened? My father died arguably one of his best friends in
the whole world. My brothers, that's not going well.
I feel really alone, my family's broken,
and that's when that song becomes forth,
which is the placement of it makes sense.
And then it's, oh, wretched man that I am.
I'd love to be as wretched as Nephi, but.
And then, are you think this year, trust in the Lord,
I know in whom I have
trusted and that's like the pivot point of the Psalm. I love that.
And just I hope it's okay to be a little bit personal here, but I think there
are those of us who are sitting together talking who have really dealt with some
significant loss over the past few years. Hank, forgive me for being personal, but you
certainly have had to deal with some real loss. I lost my older brother, my best friend
about a year and a half ago. And these are when I need God to hold me by my right hand
and comfort my soul. And life is wonderful and it's rich and it's good. And wow, mortality can be a bear sometimes
and navigating those feelings.
And to have a place I can go that is gonna express that
for me or help me express that is really cathartic.
It's really healing.
That's what I think God wants from our religious worship.
Let me heal you.
I want you to be healthy.
I want you to be mine. I want you to be mine. I want you to be
okay. Even though life is difficult and that's okay too. Come through that and reunite with me on
the other side. Let me offer you my hand, my hand of love. It's almost that come here idea, come
here. All right, let me hold you. All of us are fathers here. How many of us would ever turn away our child who wanted to be held?
Who would matter?
Well, what had happened?
Yes, I'll hold you.
I agree.
Isn't that sweet?
This very innocent sort of in 74-11, don't withdraw your hand.
Give me your hand again.
I think of the father hearing that going, yeah, if a little child reaches out, her hand
or his hand to you,
you don't leave that hand hanging.
That's awesome, Sean.
Thanks for all this.
Just reminds me, and Sean, you know, he grew a lot better than I do, but the idea of
Caffar to cover is also to embrace, right? And that the word that we say so often,
the atonement at one minute,
the atonement of Jesus Christ,
that's the whole outcome to be at one again.
Doesn't that come from Caffar?
That sounds like an embrace, like a whole,
to be at one again.
Absolutely, yep, beautifully said.
And you can look at other languages like Arabic,
the Qafada, and that is all implied. And that very beautiful word that was translated as
atonement, at one month, that comes from the Hebrew Kippur or Qafar or Kippair. It's not a
separateness that God is trying to do. He wants us to bring us all back and be one.
And that was the intercessory prayer of Jesus and John 17
that they may be one as we are one.
We're all gonna be in that embrace,
which is such a wonderful idea to think about.
It's not only the way that all this happens,
but it's the outcome that we all want
is to be at one with God again.
I know I'm stretching things here, Sean, but the day of Yom Kippur, day of atonement,
it could be day of embrace, the day of atonement coming together.
Be reunited, yeah.
Sean, you wrote an article called My God, My God, why has Thou forsaken me, Psalm 22 and
the mission of Christ?
I just want to read a little bit from the introduction of this and then hand it over
to you.
You quote that same verse in the opening paragraph, My God, My God, why has Thou forsaken me
at Psalm 221?
And then a second from Isaiah, surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows.
That's Isaiah 53.
And then you wrote this,
these two statements, one quoted from the Psalms by Christ
as he hung upon the cross,
and the other taken from Isaiah by a benedite
in the book of Mormon are familiar and dear
to all Christians as prophecies
that found their fulfillment in Christ grand,
atoning sacrifice.
Perhaps no Old Testament text as a whole exerted more influence on the New Testament understanding
of Christ's mission than Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53. Psalm 22 was quoted or alluded to at least 11 times
by New Testament authors while Isaiah 53 was used at least 10 times. Indeed, these texts could
be considered the twin pillars of Old Testament prophecy regarding Christ. That is an opening
paragraph. Sean, let's hand it over to you. I want to hear your thoughts on Psalm 22. What
is it done for you? I do love this chapter. And I guess if it's a good opening paragraph,
it's mostly because I'm quoting from those two powerful verses.
But that concept of Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53
as these twin pillars of Old Testament prophecy regarding Christ.
And for most of us as Latter-day Saints,
that's gonna resonate with Isaiah 53.
And with Psalm 22, we're gonna say,
I do not know what you're talking about.
Because Abinadi helps so much for us as Latter-day Saints,
us understand how Christ-centered
Isaiah 53 can be and is, we just gravitate to that.
And it's powerful.
And New Testament authors gravitated to it as well.
Is there describing Christ's life, his sacrifice,
the passion of Christ and his resurrection?
Isaiah 53 shows up again and again.
But guess what? Psalm 22 shows up even slightly more than Isaiah 53 does,
and it is the whole thing is just saturated with imagery
that points the Christian mind to Christ.
And let me just say a word about this, Old Testament prophecy regarding Christ.
It had to have meaning to those who maybe didn't yet fully understand Christ.
And so it can reflect the ancient Israelite suffering and their trauma and their challenges,
but then it also points to the perfect Israelite the great example of what it would mean to be in a covenant relationship with God Jesus Christ.
The Israelite par excellence, we would say, the one who suffers more than all other Israelite, all other covenant people would suffer and the one who triumphs, and
through his triumph we can understand our own experiences and have hope that they're
going to work out.
And so to read these with the lens of Christ, to read Psalm 22, it just sings.
And there's a lot that could be said here.
Let's start with verse one.
My God, my God, why has thou forsaken me?
We're familiar with this line, of course, because Christ says it from the cross.
I did some work with my master's thesis with Don Perry and others help with a
Dead Sea Scrolls fragment that started me with Psalm 22 and then Jack Welch is like,
no, you need to do some more with this.
And this opening line that Christ quotes from the cross,
we think he's expressing forsakenness,
and indeed he is, he's expressing this heart cry,
but he's also quoting the opening line to a song.
So think of that.
If I were to say, come, come, you saints,
then that has its own meaning,
and that would communicate,
but what are all of us gonna hear?
We're gonna hear the message of the song.
The meaning of the words themselves matter, but we are all of us going to hear? We're going to hear the message of the song. The meaning of the words themselves matter,
but we're going to think through,
oh, all is going to be okay.
All is well, all is well.
And I haven't said all as well.
I just said, come, come, come, you saints.
And we're going to think, okay,
continue forward, press forward.
It's all going to work out.
Well, Christ, even as he was expressing his own feelings
and fulfilling this connecting
with this Psalm 22 verse 1, he was also, I believe, comforting those at the cross because
this is going to track through his suffering in very powerful ways and then it ends triumphantly.
So let me just show you some of the ways in which it connects with Christ's ministry.
Let's look at verse 2.
My God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not in the night season and am not silent.
Now, that's parallelism.
He's basically saying I cry in the day and the night, but there have been those, some
of the early Christian fathers said, ah, here's an illusion both to the cross and to Gethsemane where he was at night time.
And that sort of disappears over time, but early on they were they were seeing,
oh, we've got the dual places of suffering, the cross and his anticipation of the
cross and his suffering in Gethsemane. Let's look at verse six.
I am a worm and no man approach of men and despise of the people. So I appreciate Paul Hoskasin's done some great work
with this idea of being a worm.
I'm nothing, I'm lower, I'm despised.
But then the reality that the worm gave the tolea,
gave the purple that was the color of royalty.
And so you have this sort of duality there in that verse that refers really well in points
to Christ.
Sean, let's just make sure for those who don't know what you mean, it's the idea that
a crushed snail could create that purple dye.
That is exactly right.
And it's that, the word that's being used in the Hebrew is that
worm, that snail that produces that die. Thank you, Hank, for making sure I'm communicating well here.
Verse 7, all they that see me laugh me to scorn, they shoot out the hip, they shake the head saying,
he trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him, let him deliver him, seeing he delight in him.
Well, immediately, what do we think of?
They laughed Jesus to scored. There he is on the cross,
and they are saying exactly these things.
In fact, the Gospels are referring back to,
they're actually using the imagery provided by Psalm 22.
There's no question that the Gospel authors saw.
They're tracking through this.
Look at verse.
Verse 8, too.
Yeah.
He trusted on the Lord that he would deliver him.
Let him deliver him, seeing he delighted in him.
Look at verse 14.
I am poured out like water and think of the imagery from John.
The spear goes into his side and then blood mingled with water. All my bones
are out of joint, think of Christ upon the cross. My heart is like wax. It is melted in the midst of my
bowels. My strength is dried up like a pot sure. This is verse 15, my tongue cleaveeth to my jaws.
And what does Christ say from the cross, of course? I thirst. I thirst. One of the things he says, thou hast brought me into the dust of death.
Now here's one that I really love.
Let's skip verse 16 for a moment and we'll come right back to it.
Verse 17, I may tell all my bones so he stretched in this uncomfortable position and maybe
this is happening through hunger as well and thirst, but he's stretched out upon the cross is the imagery
that would point to Christ there. Now let's come back to verse 16. Dogs have compassed
me, and this dogs can be in Israelite reference to Gentiles that he's surrounded by the dogs
or the calavim, the Gentiles. The assembly of the wicked have enclosed me, and then this moment
they pierced my hands and my feet.
I don't know that there is a more Christ-centered moment anywhere in the Old Testament.
We could talk about Isaiah 53, and so, you know, with my apologies to Isaiah, who obviously
gives us some beautiful things that point to Christ. Now, the fascinating thing with this one is that,
and this is why I wrote my Master's thesis on this,
is that this translation actually comes from the Greek Septuagint.
If you look at the Hebrew, the Maseritic text,
it actually has a yode here instead of a vove, and those are really easy letters to confuse.
In Hebrew, one is just a very short tick, and the other one's a full line, the yode and the vove.
And it changes. In Hebrew, it basically reads, like a lion, they are at my hands and my feet.
It doesn't make a whole lot of sense. It's kaari instead of Kaaru, but then the Greeks have to agent gives they pierced,
and then that's what the King James Version gave.
So it's this big point of debate,
and it came to the point where medieval Jewish Bible
purchasers would open to this verse, and they'd say,
okay, how does that read?
Is that Kaari or Kaaru?
Is that they pierced or not?
And if it was Kaari, then they're like,
okay, that's a good Jewish Bible and I can buy that.
And then vice versa, it sort of becomes this point of debate.
What's supposed to be there?
The really fascinating thing, as I worked on this,
is that there is a small Dead Sea Scrolls fragment
from Nechal Hever, and it has the valve, right?
Qaaru, they pierced my hands and my feet
and seems to support this because where did
the Septuagint translators get that from? Well, Dead Sea Scrolls has the Vov. And you
could see how that would become a point of contention over time that, oh, no, not Kaaru,
Kaari, and we don't know all the textual history of what happened without a pretty fascinating verse that becomes very Christ centered.
They pierced my hands and my feet.
Was that way too nerdy?
Not at all.
That was really fun.
This reminds me of Zechariah 126.
What are those wounds in your hands?
But if you look at the footnote there, take a section 45.
What are those wounds in your hands and in your feet?
Section 45 in the doctrine and covenant.
I want to make that footnote there that his hands and his feet, the Zechariah 12th,
6th reference, is expanded upon in section 45, and it matches that Psalm 226.
They pierce my hands and my feet. And then, of course, when the resurrected Christ
shows up, feel the wounds in my hands and my feet. Now, look at verse 18, they part my
garments among them and cast lots upon my vesture. This is quoted by every single one of the gospel
authors. This shows up in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. It's one of the few things that is quoted all the way through.
And John even makes a point of seeing those as two separate things.
They are parting my garments, but then I have,
there's this other garment or robe that he wears that can't be divided.
And so they don't part that one.
They cast lots on that one.
And he sort of takes the parallelism and says,
it's fulfilled in two different ways.
What they can divide amongst them, they do,
but then there's this thing that can't be divided,
and so they're gonna cast lots for that.
Yes, and for those of you using paper scriptures,
I'm looking at the footnote at Psalm 228
and all of those gospel references, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John,
references from the gospels, all of them are listed there Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John references from the
Gospels, all of them are listed there.
I remember paper scriptures, John.
I remember those.
My grandpa had some of those.
I remember.
I can hold mine up if you want to see it.
There's a fascinating thing here that now happens and we've talked about it a few times,
in lament, Psalms, you move from this expression of forsakeness. And by the way,
I need to say something else, actually, a little tangent here before I move on. And that is that
verse one has actually caused some consternation amongst Christian commentators, saying, now wait,
they sort of debated, what does this mean with the concept of the Trinity? Can God be removed from Himself?
Can God forsake Himself?
And it's actually, they've worked really hard.
Okay, how do we understand what's going on here?
So, actually find a lot of Christian commentary
digging in and dealing with that.
And we, of course, have our own sacred concepts
of what Jesus is going through in the garden on the cross.
And before we conclude here with Psalm 22, I'll maybe just read a couple of powerful statements
connected.
We'll sort of circle back to verse one if that's okay.
So this is the lament section.
And now we move into the plea, the pleading section in verse 19, be not thou far from me, O Lord. And if you think of Nephi's Psalm, where he moves into
a request, don't let me any longer slack at my strength. And there's this plea section,
deliver my soul from the sword, verse 20, verse 21, save me from the lion's mouth for thou hast
heard me. And this hank before we started, you were talking about, is their cross imagery that we should talk about.
And I said, oh, there's actually one little thing Thou hast heard me from the horns of
the unicorns.
Now, unicorns, of course, don't have two horns.
If you watched enough My Little Pony or whatever the case may be, one horn.
But this is not unicorns, of course.
It's oxen.
And the idea of these oxen, if you're thinking of Christian and Christ-centered imagery,
he's stretched out between these horns, and you potentially have some cross imagery that
could be seen here in verse 21.
Now, look at what happens when we move to verse 22, because we've been talking about the Gospels and how gospel
centric Psalm 22 is or how Psalm 22 centric the Gospels are. But all of a sudden, we're
going to start to see a whole new set of connections low and behold with doctrine and with Doctrine and Covenants 138, Joseph F. Smith's great revelation of Christ's descent
into the Spirit world to declare God's name after his atoning sacrifice.
And look now, think of what's going on in these terms as the Psalmist is saying, I will
triumph.
Even though I'm suffering, I know that God will rescue me, but track through
Christ's atoning sacrifice.
And now what's going on here in verse 22?
I will declare thy name unto my brethren in the midst of the congregation, will I praise
thee?
Well, what congregation is this?
And you could say, well, for the ancient Israelites, he's come through his trial, and
now he's promising, you've saved me, and I'm gonna bear witness to you.
But think of Christ then entering into the spirit world,
and there's a whole assembly as the language
that Joseph Smith used of those waiting to receive him,
and he bears witness in and amongst that assembly.
Look how beautifully that tracks through.
That's doctrine of governance 138 verse 18,
while this vast multitude waited and conversed,
rejoicing in the hour of their deliverance from the chains of death,
the Son of God appeared declaring liberty to the captives who had been faithful.
It's a perfect fit.
And look at how restoration scripture in ways that I'm not sure if who's seen this before,
when I was studying this and writing this article, this hit me. And maybe, you know, if I got the
idea from someone else, I will ask apologies publicly right now. Joseph Smith is revealing decades
after Joseph Smith, the descent into the spiritual,, what this means, and Psalm 22 tracks that through.
He says, I'm going to be saved.
And then he shows up.
And there's this multitude that's waiting for him.
Now let's just keep reading it.
What does he say to them?
Ye that fear the Lord, praise him.
All ye the seed of Jacob glorify him and fear him.
All ye the seed of Israel.
He has not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted.
Neither have he hid his face from him. But when he cried unto him, all you the seed of Israel, he has not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted, neither have he hid his face from him, but when he cried unto him, he heard.
He heard Jesus' cry of forsakeness from the cross.
He's heard your cry.
Those of you who have waited in bondage in the spirit world, waiting to be delivered and
Christ has atoned and he has conquered death, and you can be free from the prison. Verse 25,
My praise shall be of thee in the great congregation. Hang, I'm so glad you read that. I will pay my
vows before them that fear him. The meek shall even be satisfied. Those that are waiting longing for
the great redemption that will be worked through in Christ and then Christ shows up. The meek shall eat and be satisfied. Hear that little illusion, by the way, as well that Christ is going to
allude back in the Beatitudes. The meek shall inherit the earth. The meek shall eat and
be satisfied. They shall praise the Lord that seek Him. Your heart shall live forever.
All the ends of the world shall remember and turn unto the Lord and all the kindreds
of the nation shall worship before thee. Look at what the psalmist is doing.
This is not just one person.
This is clearly he's referring to something much larger than that.
That's big.
All of the ends of the earth are going to know this.
And if we read it through the lens of Doctrine and Covenants 138,
throughout time and space, all will know this message that Christ is going to declare
to those in spirit prison.
Let's just finish, verses 29 through 31, and they that be fat upon earth shall eat
and worship all they that go down to the dust that die, shall bow before him,
none can keep alive his own soul. Every tongue will confess and every knee will bow.
A seed shall serve him.
And now I want you to think of this moment in Isaiah 53
where he talks about the seed that is preserved
and a benedite does a lot with that and look low and behold,
here's that same theme showing up of Christ's seed.
It shall be accounted to the Lord for generation.
They shall come and shall declare his righteousness
unto a people that shall be born, that he hath done this." Well, I don't know if I've done that very well,
but the Psalm just sings, and it sings Jesus Christ and the great redeeming work that he performed,
that happened in a specific time and a place but had impact across time and space and has blessed all.
Across the veil, yeah.
Sean, I want to add just a second witness
to what you've given us here.
Our friend, all three of us, our friend is Dr. John Hilton,
the third, he's so great, they made three of them.
He wrote a book called, Considering the Cross.
He quotes you here on page 152, Sean.
He talks about Psalm 22 and the crucifixion. I think everyone should pick up this book, considering
the cross. He says, recognizing the relationship between Psalm 22 and the Savior's death helps us
see that the details of the crucifixion were known from the beginning.
For me, he says, this is John, the final part of Psalm 22 is the most powerful.
Although it is not quoted in the crucifixion accounts, both Jesus and Matthew may have
expected their audience to recall what Psalm 22 says at the end.
It ends in triumph.
All the ends of the earth shall remember
and turn unto the Lord.
So Sean, I'm hearing from you
and I'm reading Dr. Hilton's book,
is there a chance then that when the Savior
from the cross says, my God, my God,
why has Thou forsaken me?
He is in a way telling His disciples, I'm winning.
This is gonna end well.
Isn't that beautiful as the Savior is
expressing His own feeling so that we can know that He understands our own feelings of first
sakeness when we feel them. Even as He is giving us that sense that I see you, I know you, I meet you
where you are, He is also saying, and in the midst of your suffering, I will triumph and you will triumph.
So those at the cross, he's trying to help them understand.
This was foreknown.
This was told hundreds of years before nothing has gone wrong here.
And I will triumph.
In fact, what am I going to do?
I'm going to descend into the spirit world and I will offer salvation to all the ends
of the earth throughout time and
space. That's what is going on here. This is not the end. This is the beginning and
who's going to know it? All of the ends of the earth will know it. So thank you for that
little prompting because I absolutely believe and I, you know, I could be wrong. But if
you quote the first line of a hymn to those that knew their Bible, to me, there's
very little doubt that that's what he's doing.
Yeah.
And you said that.
You start with come, come, you saints.
We all know that we're going to make this chorus swell, all as well, all as well.
We know that's where it's going to end up.
And so that's what you're saying.
He starts with this, those who knew Psalm 22, whatever was back then,
knew how this was going into.
That is really great stuff.
What if I were to say to you, John,
oh, how lovely was the morning?
You're not going to say, oh, he's,
oh, he's talking about the morning.
No, he's talking about a theophany.
He's talking about Joseph Smith.
This isn't just a weather forecast.
Right.
I know what you're saying.
Although the people around, the Romans around, they would not have known what he was saying. I love that. The three of us are sitting here talking
today because of a day that started with oh, how lovely was the morning. That's a great example.
Yeah. Pretty cool to think about that. A teenage boy said a prayer and the three of us are
sitting here. And it reminds me too, I just want to mention
a benedite quotes Isaiah 53, that's Mosiah 14, which you mentioned. And he talks about this suffering servant that we believe is Christ being cut off out of the land of the living and who
will declare his generation. And then a benedite explained that He's going to see his seed, the travail of his soul. He will see his seed and look at that verse 30,
a seed shall serve him.
It shall be accounted unto the Lord for a generation.
There is that generation that he's gonna have.
Never tied this to that before,
but you've really blessed my life today.
Sean, thank you.
John, and I gotta tell you,
it's so fun to read the scriptures together with those who
rejoice in the power of the word. It's just very satisfying.
It's just almost like Psalm 22. I'm trying to express this. For me, it was like reaching
through the other standard works and just touching it. Section 138, Matthew and John,
and you're just seeing this. John, you love that verse where the Lord says, all expounded.
Yeah, where Jesus expounded all things in one.
The first time I had heard that idea was from Robert Millett that when he expounded all
things in one and you're like, whoa, whoa, whoa, what?
He did what?
Where do you get tickets to that?
And that's what we are all trying to do.
In our church, we don't have just one book.
We've got four.
We're trying to put them all together
and see them all as one.
And Sean did that.
Let's just do a moment of speculation here
on the road to Emmaus.
Can you imagine Jesus saying,
hey, let's read, remember what Jesus said on the cross,
my God, my God, wise, let's just read that.
Let's think about that Psalm together
and them going, oh, wow, we totally missed
what was going on there.
And I don't know if Jesus quoted Psalm 22 or not,
but certainly the gospel authors did,
they certainly saw it.
And I like that idea of Jesus saying,
hey, let's just take Psalm 22.
One, I really wish, yeah, for example, I really wish Abinadi.
He did such a great service for us as Latter-day Saints
with Isaiah 53.
We needed healam and or somebody like that.
Hey, let me read Psalm 22, but they, of course,
the Nephi prophets, they really liked their Isaiah,
which is great.
So, I love that idea, Sean.
Jesus is like Psalm 22 maybe. How about we start there?
Look at that one. We've got a long walk ahead of us. I would love us to just put this back in its
place. So to speak as Christians, as Latter-day Saints, it's crucial place that doctrine,
covenants 138, this is unique restoration scripture connects with it so beautifully and powerfully. I mean, it's a puzzle piece that where it slides perfectly into place
In those verses that to me was what a wonderful connection section 138
So let me just read if I could because it's beautiful. It's poignant a few
Latter-day saint comments about this cry of forsakeness.
And they all interpret it and I fully agree, this is what it means to me, as a real historical
cry, Jesus is really saying this from the cross.
So elder aroused a snow.
It was necessary that the father should thus measurably forsake his son, leaving him to
his enemies, otherwise they never could have fulfilled what had been prophesied concerning him.
The most poignant one that I think we're most familiar with, Elder Holland also does some
beautiful things here.
But first, Elder Melvin Ballard, in that hour, I think I can see our dear father behind the
veil looking upon these dying struggles until even he could not endure it any longer.
And so he bowed his head and hid in some part of his universe, his great heart almost
breaking for the love that he had for his son.
Now I've got friends and colleagues who don't love everything, can God really hide in the
corner of a universe?
What would he do that?
I love this statement by Elder Bell.
I find it very poignant and powerful.
I really love what Elder Holland does here where he says,
the father watches through the night with his son. And so think of the way I like to think of it.
When you have a child that just has to go through something difficult and they have to do it,
you can't take that away from them. They have to walk through that difficult thing.
And they have to know that they've had the strength to do it.
Maybe it's rare these moments where you let them experience, but you are there.
You are watching. You are loving. You are cheering them on.
You are aching with them.
And so Elder Holland's affirmation, God doesn't leave us alone, but it does feel like we're alone at times.
And that is part of this divine process as well.
I really appreciate that approach.
That's really good.
I just can't get over verse 30.
This is Abinadi who shall declare his generation.
He was cut off out of the land of the living as A53.
But he'll see his seed and look at verse 30 as seed.
He'll serve him and he'll be accounted unto the Lord for a generation. Pull it all together, and I'm
really glad, John, that you went and read that from Abinadi for us so that you
could help us make that connection. It's really great. Those two words, a seed
and a generation, and I'm curious, the Lord is not in all caps there in verse 30. Well, as we look at the Hebrew there, John, it is Adonai, is what is there, not Jehovah,
but the Lord.
But it clearly referring to this salvific figure.
Posterity will serve him.
Future generations will be told about the Lord.
And by the way, how satisfying is it to be part of that company?
Here we are, three of us sitting together talking about
the greatest and truest narrative that has ever been told
and seeing it so beautifully in Psalm 22.
And here we are, some of a very small portion of those future generations
that have been told about the Lord through Psalm 22 and through the Gospels and through the restoration of the Gospel.
That's pretty satisfying. You talked about tying all things together in one and it's fun to be a part of that.
Sean, it's almost as if in my head I'm seeing two puzzle pieces, Psalm 22 and Isaiah 53, and you're looking at him going, I need a connection between these two
and we're yelling out, it's Mozaya 14 and 15.
Right, that can slide in.
Right between those two and make a connection
that you will be forever grateful for.
And then maybe another one with section 138
of the doctrine of covenants that will fit perfectly
in this puzzle.
You have Psalm 22, you have Isaiah 53.
Let us give you Mozosaia 14 and 15 and
doctrine in Covenants 138 and show you the complete puzzle. That's exciting to me.
I just love that some of the greatest things we've got came out of such circumstances
with Abinadi at the threat of his life. And Joseph F. Smith in terrible circumstances, Christ in terrible circumstances.
They're asking Abinadi trying to stump him with an Isaiah verse about how beautiful upon
the mountains.
And he's like, what are you teaching these people, lov Moses?
He's like, why don't you keep it?
But then he says, but salvation comes in Christ.
How could you have missed this?
And he reads Isaiah 53 to him, right?
How could you have missed this?
The redemption comeeth because of Christ
at the end of Moses I-16,
and then out of that came Abinadi explaining
after Moses I-14, Moses I-15.
This is how will he see his seed?
And I love when he says,
he does a past present future thing,
have been it I does, how beautiful upon the mountains
have been their feet, how beautiful the mountains are
their feet, and then he talks to our future missionaries
and how beautiful upon the mountains will be their feet.
And he does a past present future,
and he answers their question, but in the middle,
he gives him this amazing thing.
Look what you've just tied together in beautiful ways that I don't think I've seen before.
Psalm 22, Isaiah 53.
So there's Hebrew Bible, there's Old Testament, the gospel authors that are tying that
story together.
Book of Mormon, doctrine and covenants, restoration, scripture, later day prophets, speaking
of seeing eye to eye across time and space.
I don't know if that could be more beautifully done than what we called these two twin pillars
of Old Testament prophecy. God be thanked for a benedite. Would we have seen this without it?
Right. Oh, I love the book of Mormon. Good. This ladies' gentleman is our idea of a good time.
Just like now.
I have to go meet at J. Dogg's and make it complete.
We'd rather do this than Disneyland.
It's a lot cheaper.
Sean, I don't want you to leave without doing Psalm 23
because I know how much you love it.
Thank you so much.
Here's something fascinating.
If Psalm 22 has not been appreciated enough and we
would want it to be appreciated significantly more by all of us, let's turn the page here
as a Psalm that has spoken over and over and over again to those in need. And John, you and
I were talking about this a little bit before and I'd love to hear
some of the thoughts again that you were sharing about Psalm 23.
Well, first of all, I didn't understand until I saw a couple of documentaries about the King James
Bible, just that translating it, it's one thing to get the meaning of, it translated from Hebrid
English, it's another thing to make it beautiful. Psalm 23 is beautiful.
I'm looking at the living Bible translation, and I love it. I use it, but listen to how different,
because the Lord is my shepherd. I have everything I need. He lets me rest in the metal grass and
leads me beside the quiet streams. He gives me new strength. He helps me do it honors him the most.
beside the quiet streams. He gives me new strength. He helps me do it honors him the most.
And the meaning's there. And like I said, I love that. But listen to it in Psalms. It's it's poetry. I shall not want. I didn't get that when I was a kid. It means I won't lack anything.
The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want. He make it to me to lie down in green pastures. He
leadeth me beside the still waters. He
restored my soul. And I didn't realize that until I was watching some documentary and they
started reading that and going, this is not only is it the meaning, but it's beautiful.
I was reading a book by sister Chieko Okazaki, who was the general release society president. I want to say in the late 80s, I think.
And she told a story, and I love our veterans, because my dad was one. And she told a story about
a man named Captain James Ray, who was shot down in an F-105 thunder chief, went to the Hanoi Hilton. I wanted to find this. I had to go on eBay to find a copy
of the January 96 guideposts. But I did. Guideposts is a magazine my grandma used to read.
Remind our listeners what the Hanoi Hilton is. Thank you. The Hanoi Hilton was nicknamed
sarcastically. It was a terrible, you know, prison camp in Vietnam, where a lot of Americans were kept
there in that prison who had been shot down and so forth.
And this Captain James Ray was there, just the most interesting thing happened after being
tortured and everything.
It was thrown on the floor in this tiny room.
The guards going back and forth, they could only talk when the guards couldn't hear that they were talking or they would be punished.
But he heard a voice that said, hey buddy, and what's your name?
And the other man there's name was Bob Purcell.
It's so interesting to me that of all the questions he could have asked him,
it wasn't the World Series, it wasn't the Super Bowl. He said, do you know any scriptures?" And he said, I know the Lord's
prayer and the voice whispering underneath said, everybody knows that. Do you know that 23rd
Psalm? And only a little, I began whispering it, he said, he repeated each line after me.
A little later, he whispered back the entire psalm.
Other prisoners joined in, sharing verses they knew.
Through these contacts, a fellowship grew among us.
One night, he said that I heard tapping and I didn't know what it was and it took him a while to recognize,
hey, that's
Morse code.
I, W, I, L, L, he started scratching it on the floor.
Psalm 121, I will lift up my eyes onto the hills from once cometh my help.
Do you imagine hearing this in prison? And these guys
encouraging each other with the Psalms. Isn't that something? He said that as
they move to different cells, one of my favorite parts of this, he said my first
cellmate was Larry Chesley, a Mormon from Idaho. And he said, though we had a
few differences in our belief, our
combination of the dominators were the Bible and Jesus Christ. And we were able to
share and write down a great deal of scripture. One of my favorite parts of this is
that they as more prisoners came and they got moved around, they organized a
Christmas party from memory. They recited as best they could look to. They went out of
decree from Caesar Augustus, then all the world should be taxed, told the Christmas story,
and he said, acquire these guys are in prison pajamas, beards, they can't shave,
emaciated, sickly, they sang a little town of Bethlehem.
John, remind me, wasn't that story in your Christmas book?
I put it in there.
I thought that that was a Christmas story to me
when they got together and recited Luke 2
and sang a little town of Bethlehem and things.
The thing that James Ray said about,
they gave us a Bible, but then they took it.
But we had the scriptures written in our hearts
and could still find joy from that. So yeah, I wrote a little book called Born This Happy Morning,
which is one of my favorite lines from a song ever. Yay, Lord, we greet the born this happy
more, what a happy morning. And he says, we noticed our interrogator, one of these officers peeking in and watching with what's going on. Look,
and he said that night after months of asking, they brought us a Bible. The first one we had seen,
that was their Christmas present. I mean, for them, that he brought them a Bible.
They would share verses that they remembered on precious pieces of toilet paper
and hide them behind bricks in the latrine so that when others could go, they could pull
those out and get some encouragement. This is what I love because they let them have
this Bible for a while, and then they came and took it. James Ray says, from that we learned a most important lesson. Bible verses on paper aren't
one Iota as useful as scriptures burned into your mind where you can draw on them for guidance and
comfort. Isn't that great? Of all the things that they could have been strengthened by, it was by
the Psalms, listen to this, I'll read it as if you were in a prison camp. The Lord is my shepherd,
I shall not want. He makeeth me to lie down in green pastures. He leadeth me beside the still waters.
He restoreeth my soul. He leadeth me in the paths of righteousness for his name's sake. Ye, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
I will fear no evil, for thou art with me.
Thy rot, thy staff, they comfort me, thou prepares
to table before me in the presence of mine enemies.
Thou anointest my head with oil, my cup, runthover. Surely goodness and mercy shall
follow me all the days of my life, and I will dwell in the house of the Lord forever.
That story changed it for me, reading it as a prisoner in a hopeless situation,
it for me, reading it as a prisoner in a hopeless situation could read that Psalm and get some some hope. That is powerful. So how beautiful is it that we
just read Psalm 22 and it's triumphal ending where then the name of the Savior
is being declared in the congregation.
It's Psalm 22, 22.
And then turn the page, so to speak.
And is there anything that's read more often
than Psalm 23?
Go to a funeral.
And your chances are pretty high
that someone will be expressing
this comforting message found in 23.
And where does the power come from?
It comes from that which is testified of in Psalm 22.
And so this is what I love about being a Christian
about believing in Christ is that he comforts me,
he meets me, he understands sorrow,
and he gives me hope that I will triumph after all things.
And that 22 and 23 are next to each other.
And by the way, we could continue that.
24 is this sort of temple
who's gonna send into the hill of the Lord, 24,
or who shall stand in his holy place.
This is how Hank started everything.
He that hath clean hands and a pure heart.
And Don Perry does a really nice thing
with verse six
of Psalm 24, if you wanna just turn the page there.
This is the generation of them that seek him,
that seek thy face, say la.
And say la, by the way, you'll see that a lot,
and we're not exactly sure what that means,
there's debate about what it means,
but it seems to be some sort of a musical notation,
like pause the music or sort of continue,
now move into this musical rendition, that kind of thing. But Don Perry has noted that the Hebrew
there for generation, if it's just pointed a little bit differently and the vowels weren't
pointed clearly, they weren't pointed at all. So it could be generation, this is the generation of
those that seek his face, or it could be this is the circle of those that seek him.
That there is a group gathering together in prayer
that is seeking after the Lord.
And that's the Lord that's revealed in Psalm 22
and who comforts us in Psalm 23.
And John, not to embarrass you
and you're feeling emotional with Psalm 23,
but we need this.
We need a God who meets us where we are.
And may I just testify, give my sense of this, as you're reading this with come follow
me, seek diligently, these scriptures might save your life someday, knowing them and
loving them, they may come a time
where you are just ashes, so to speak, emotionally.
And you just aren't strong enough to know where to go, to get comfort and to get help.
And the Psalms may be that which gets you through the dark hours of the night, which we're given by an ancient Israelite,
who I love for the depth of soul that is expressed here
and for this witness of God and God's mercy.
And I hope you find something that will be that tether for you
if the time comes when you desperately need a tether.
You may find it right here in these week's readings.
Well said. Sure will.
When I read Psalm 23, I hear Nephi.
Or I should say, when I read Nephi, I hear Psalm 23. I mean, some of this language just seems to sneak into the way Nephi talks.
Now, there's no way of knowing Sean's told us when to know when these are written. So, you know, did Nephi have access to this? It sure seems like it to
me. Listen to Psalm 23 verse 2, he make it to me to lie down in green pastures. Doesn't
that sound like Nephi saying the Lihona let us to the more fertile parts of the wilderness?
In fact, the next phrase is he leadeth me beside the still waters.
Nephi had the ocean water stilled for him. He restores my soul. He leads me in the path of righteousness.
That's second Nephi 4, where Nephi himself says, oh Lord, without not shut the gates of
thy righteousness before me, that I may walk in the path of the low valley.
Here in verse four, ye, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
no evil. And Nephi says, why do I fear because of my enemies? Psalm 23.5 says,
thou prepares the table before me in the presence of mine enemies. I just feel like Nephi has
done what you said, Sean. He's read it so closely.
I think it saved his life in his darkest moment.
You need to write an article on it.
That's fascinating.
Isn't that?
I just was as I was reading.
I was like, man, Nephi's a no wonder he's a solmist.
He probably had a memorized.
I second John's little ping there, by the way.
I totally agree.
Sean, what a fantastic day going through these first
Psalms. Wow, I've just been so touched. I think our listeners would be interested in your
journey as an old Testament scholar and a believing Latter-day Saint. How have those come together
for you? And tell us your feelings about the Old Testament. I just love to get you talking about the Old Testament.
So honestly, it's a great question.
I think that today has really modeled
why I care about the Hebrew Bible,
why I care about the Old Testament so much.
And I have to say, I think it was early on
learning just how much Joseph Smith loved Hebrew
and how much he loved and gained
inspiration and revelation from reading the Old Testament, that also pointed me in that
direction.
But to see the great interconnectedness of the teachings of the prophets over time is so
deeply satisfying. And it's only available if we actually study that,
which is ancient to see how it creates this reservoir
of imagery and prophecy and teachings and concepts
that then connect with modern day prophets
and how they sort of connect, as I've said,
probably too many times now across time and space,
how beautiful is it to see those messages
interweave and support each other and for a latter-day saint reader to recognize
God is God and the God of the Hebrew Bible is the God of the restoration and
is the God of the restoration and they are one.
And President Nelson, what a prophetic voice he has as someone who is giving us what we need right now
and over and over and over again,
uses things from the Old Testament,
from Old Testament prophets to help us understand
why what we're doing today is so important.
And so to go back and understand the foundations.
And I hope that I, along with all of us, somebody from the church office building told me there
was actually a time this year when the Old Testament got more hits on the internet, on
the church's website than the Book of Mormon. And you might think that's a travesty, but
I think yay. People are reading the Old Testament.
Because if you read the Old Testament,
then you understand the Book of Mormon.
If you understand the Book of Mormon,
you understand the Old Testament,
and it all folds together into this grand witness
of what God has been trying to accomplish
from the beginning to the end.
And even though there's differences in the ancient world,
and we don't want to minimize those to see the grand unity of the message is something that Joseph Smith cared
very much about and that really resonates in my soul as someone who believes deeply in the
ministry and the mission of the Savior Jesus Christ. Awesome. We loved having you here, Sean.
Thank you for being here. John, by the way. Yeah. How do having you here, Sean. Thank you for being here.
John, by the way.
Yeah.
How do we get this lucky again?
Do you remember how we?
Well, I was honestly sitting here thinking
that I'm blessed to be here.
This is the kind of stuff that gets me fired up
and I'm so grateful for my wife
because when I go tell her, she'll be excited about this.
Look at this Psalm 22.
And so thank you, Sean.
It's been a good day.
Been a very good day.
You are dear friends.
And I driving over here, I just thought, wow,
they are gluttonous for punishment.
That's what this is all about.
They have really taken good people need to suffer to heart.
This is a joy for me.
Thank you.
If that's what suffering is, I'll take it. This isn't the last time we've seen Sean Hopkins on follow him. So Sean, just we'll say goodbye for now.
Just for now. Very good. Look forward to next time. We want to thank you for joining us today. We want to thank our executive producers Steve and Shannon Swanson and our sponsors David and Verla Sorenson. And we hope all of you will come back next week.
We're going to take on some more Psalms on 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 VL Kuwadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.
and BL Kuwadra.
Thank you to our amazing production team.