Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Psalms 102-150 -- Part 2: Michael McLean
Episode Date: August 21, 2022Michael McLean returns to share testimony, song, and the value of worship through music.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-t...estament/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-hWatch more videos of Hank and John at Our Turtle House: https://ourturtlehouse.com/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast.
John, you mentioned tender mercies from Psalm 119 for 77.
Those who are studying with us might be questioning what is up with Psalm 119.
Can you explain what all these symbols and headers are about?
Yes, I can. If you look at Psalm 119 is 176 verses, but it's divided.
And if you look at it, you will see it's divided using Hebrew symbols.
So look at Psalm 119 on page 792 if you're using ancient paper scriptures like I am
And you'll see the symbol and the word I hope I'm saying it right a left which and notice it starts with an A and the next symbol
Just above verse 9 is Beth
There it is. Yeah, this is the Hebrew alphabet. So here's what's fun to know about this
We will talk about this again when we talk about proverbs, but this is called an Acrostic
poem.
And some of you going, oh, cross stitch, I've done cross, no, a cross stick, a cross stick
is like saying Hank, A is for your altruisticness, B is for your benevolence, C is for your
charity, D is for your benevolence, C is for your charity, D is for your
delightfulness, right? And each of these are divided among the consonants I think
it was. Let me see, I have a study Bible that explains it here. Let's see what
it says. This very lengthy poem is an acrostic. For each of the 22 consonants of
the Hebrew alphabet, there are 8 verses beginning with that letter. Within the Psalm, 8 words for God's law occur again and again.
Law, testimonies, promise, precept, statutes, commandments, judgments, and word.
These words elaborate the application of the law of God today, life, and to Israel's destiny. So that's why those little letters are there.
But I just wanna say, some things become so important to us,
just explaining it isn't enough.
We wanna put it into a poem, or into a lyric,
or like, and this is exactly what Michael has been telling us about.
In fact, Hank, you and I remember last year
as we were talking
about section 76 of the doctrine and covenants. That revelation at the John Johnson farm, the
vision of the three degrees of glory, has a poetic version. It meant so much to them. They wrote it
again as a poem. Before when we were setting up microphones and everything, Michael, you mentioned a poem
of Bruce Arma Conkey.
What was that you mentioned?
I believe in Christ has been quoted way more than anything he ever said in conference.
It's the song.
It's the songs that live with us.
That was the impression I got.
Some things are so important.
We're going to work even harder and put it in a poetry form or a lyrical form.
Put it into a song.
And so that kind of means a lot to me that here in this song, this meant a lot to them.
So they designed it to fit with each letter and not just A2Z or whatever the last letter
of the Hebrew alphabet is, but A3Z, it's everything.
Alpha through Omega.
That's awesome, John. There is a verse in here I way through the world. It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world.
It's all the way through the world. It's all the way through the world. path. I have a parable I want to share from James Talmadge but first I want to hear from both of you about the word is a lamp unto my feet. Light is just a
part of all the songs and I so resonate with 105 and the story I just I just
told you about hold on the light will come and a number of other things. I don't
know if everybody's heard the light will come. Can you give us that? This is the English version.
This is what Noah in my musical about the art,
and since we've been doing Old Testament,
this is what Noah, you know,
everybody gets through the crisis and thinks,
oh yeah, yeah, yeah, the storm's over.
Ha, got through that, we're done.
And Noah, who's a little wiser, said, no,
it's going to get hard again.
But we can't forget this moment.
And he sings, the message of this moment is so clear.
And a certain as the rising of the sun.
If your world is filled with darkness doubt or fear, just hold on, hold on.
The light will come.
Because everyone who's ever tried and failed, we stand much taller when the victory is one.
And those who've been in darkness for a while, we kneel much longer when the light has
come. It's a lesson every one of us must learn
that the answers never come without a fight.
And when it seems you've struggled far too long
just hold on, there will be light. Hold on, hold on. The light will come. Hold on. If you
feel trapped inside a never-ending night, you just hold on.
If you've forgotten how it feels to feel the light
and hold on, if you're half crazy thinking maybe
you're the only one who's afraid that light may never,
ever come.
Just hold on, hold on.
The light will come.
Hold on, hold on.
The light will come. You're not alone, even though right now, you're on your own.
You are loved in ways that can't be shown.
Your needs are known, but you're not alone.
When you cry, you're just letting go a heartache deep inside.
So tomorrow there'll be sunshine and sky and love close by, but you're not alone. And I know that it's not easy.
And I know that it won't last.
Because one who loves you more than me, he's sending his blessings fast.
You're not alone.
Say it one more time.
I'm not alone.
And even when it's hard, sometimes it's hard.
To find the words, your prayers are always heard.
You're not alone. The lesson of this moment is clear and as certain as the rising of the sun,
if your world is filled with darkness, doubt or fear, just hold on, hold on.
Light will come.
Light will come. I'm feeling that light. I'm grateful to have been blessed after spending so many years
in aching and gurning.
I'm feeling the light and, you know, it's, it's embarrassing to me to confess that it's,
I'm a little presumptuous, I think,
that here are the great words in the holy scriptures.
And I'm writing songs about them as if,
well, maybe this is worthy.
Maybe this take on light,
or this feeling about tender mercies or coming up on 127, I read that thing about an excerpt that God builds the house.
And I thought, oh, here's the song. I know it's a little pretentious. And it's a little self-serving. Oh, look at me. I wrote a song about the Scriptures. These are my songs.
David was fine, but he's been dead a long time. But you know, it's the way I'm allowed
to witness of those truths. I'm not a seminary teacher, I'm not an institute, I don't have a PhD,
I listen to your podcast and try to figure stuff out because I just not that bright in so many ways.
your stuff out because I just not that right in so many ways. I hope that the songs
throw the focus to where it's supposed to be which is not about the song, not about the scripture, not about the quote, not about the talk, it's about the source of all the things we're trying to
witness. It's got to come through and be focused on that. And if I've been lucky enough to have any of my songs,
or any of the things that I've written,
to have music with it, point not to me
as much as people in show business
want to have their egos fluffed up.
Every songwriter wants to be a Billy Joel
or Paul McCartney, we want that.
But if somehow I can, before I'm gone, Every songwriter wants to be a Billy Joel or Paul McCartney, we want that.
But if somehow I can, before I'm gone, I want to get past that.
The reason I did my little, all things Michael McClaim.com website that I spent two years
with my son is I wanted every thought, every song, every musical, every book, and I have 22 new songs that nobody's ever heard
that I wrote during the pandemic, that if I get to live a little longer, I'd like to get those
through. But my great hope is that people won't say, gosh, that mic I'm acclaimed. You know, 50 years,
she's still writing pretty good songs. No, my hope is they'll say, I haven't thought that before.
No, my hope is they'll say, I hadn't thought that before. Wow, what a cool idea.
My heart is not going to kind of sing that.
And I'm sure that's what you were about.
I'm sure that's what your podcast is about.
And I'm so grateful that President Nelson said,
here, here, you know how profound that is to a songwriter?
Hear him
Hear him in the language and in the hope and in the melodies
You find a way to hear him and the harder I try to listen the more I realize
He has a melody for every soul.
He has a brilliant insight for every academician. He has a perfect quote from a scripture to those
who studied the scriptures and he is in all of it. And my praise, my new song of praise is,
And my praise, my new song of praise is, wow, another place you are that I didn't know. That's my heart.
It's beautiful.
John, what did you want to add to the, the word is a lamp into my feet and a light into
my path?
So many thoughts about that.
One of them, oddly, Lee Hystereen.
We all know, oh yeah, that's the rod of iron, the tree of life. But how does it start?
I was in a dark and dreary wilderness and I wandered for many hours and
Michael's talked about something we might compare to that. I was in a dark and dreary wilderness. I
for many hours and then he prayed according to the multitude of his tender mercies, I think he says,
look at the order, I prayed, I beheld.
The only thing I can imagine is,
as soon as he prayed, the Lord turned the lights on,
because suddenly he can see.
And you look at that verse,
thy word is a lamp unto my feet.
Suddenly the light came, right?
And I could see where I was going. The gospel lights the
path and then we know, here's who I am, who's why I'm here. Stephen Covey wrote
that Albert Einstein was asked, once if you could ask God anything, what would you
ask him? And Albert Einstein said, well, I'd ask him how he created the universe.
And then he changed his mind. He said, no, no, no, no, wait, I would ask him why he created
the universe.
Because then I would know the meaning of my life.
There's the lamp until your feet.
This is the path.
This is who you are.
This is where you're going.
And this is why you're here.
This is the covenant path, President Nelson might say.
I remember another favorite verse of mine coming up in Proverbs,
ponder the path of thy feet.
It's like, where are you going?
What's your path?
And so feet are always kind of scripturally, I think, indicating a direction, a path that
you're on.
So thy word is a lamp to my feet.
That sounds like the word of the Lord, the Scriptures, right?
They hear him as Michael was talking.
By word, as a lamp to my feet.
The one last thing that I just love about this
is some of the greatest teachings ever have come
from Gacha questions, from people with not the best motives.
So here's a benedite, and they're trying to stump
and with an Isaiah verse, hey, what does this mean?
How beautiful upon the mountains are the feet of them that publish with good tidings of good and that Benadai
Are you priests have pretend to teach this people and he's using them to 10 commands and everything but he
Eventually answers the question and talks about the prophets and how beautiful
Upon the feet of their mountains and then the thing I love about a Benadai is he to the future. And those who are still proclaiming the gospel, how beautiful are their feet and how beautiful
are the feet of those who will her after, publish peace.
And it's I think of all these missionaries that are out.
And all of us who are trying to publish good tidings of good and it started with the question
about feet. Okay, now I know who I am and where I'm supposed to go and the way is lit before me.
So that's huge.
Yeah, to me, that's an impressive, what you and Michael will say is that the light is
part of the gospel.
It's frequently used as a representation of the Savior, right?
John called him the light, capital L. I wanted to share this parable that Elder Talmudge shared. It's a simple parable. He calls
it the parable of the two lamps. He relates an experience he had with a lamp vendor. Apparently,
this lamp salesman wanted to sell Elder Talmudge a brighter lamp, but Elder Talmudge was confident he already had the best lamp available.
So he was shocked to see just how superior the vendor's lamp was. All he had to do was turn on his lamp.
Its light made bright the remotest corner of my room. In its brilliant blaze my own little lamp burned a weak pale yellow. Until that moment of convincing
demonstration, I had never known the dim obscurity in which I had lived and labored, studied
and struggled. And he said that, of course, he purchases the lamp. This comes from a BYU Idaho
devotional by Stephen Hunsaker. He adds this, how foolish we would be to smuggly conclude that there are neither questions yet to be asked,
nor light yet to be received. How foolish we would be, in other words, to decline the offer of a
brighter lamp, the offer of greater light. I love this idea, John and Michael. The word is a lamp unto my feet.
Please make it brighter, right?
Please give me more.
And what does the doctrine covenant say that,
he who can tell you if in God,
John, you could finish this for me.
A section 50 verse 24,
and that light growth brighter and brighter
until the perfect day.
One of the, my favorite verses,
I just came from a little speaking assignment,
some wonderful leaders in a girls camp
And I just was trying to express to them
Can you imagine if every teenager on the planet?
Could stand up once twice a week and say as the young men do I'm a beloved son of God
And he has a work for me to do
Whereas the young women do I am a beloved daughter of heavenly parents
with an eternal nature and divine destiny
and to be able to actually know who they are
and what path they're on.
You imagine what a different world we would have
if everybody could stand and say,
this is who I am, this is what I believe,
this is what I will do, this is what I will not do.
What a light by word is unto my feet.
It just illuminates everything like you said.
What did Jesus say? He that follows me shall not walk in darkness.
But shall have the light of life. Michael, you mentioned earlier. I thought of a song that I didn't realize was
my effort to not only reflect the whole idea of having the Lord help me build my house,
but the lyrics seem to matter. I really want to share this one. A lot of the songs are about praise
and a lot of the songs are lamentations,
and a lot of the songs of David are just,
please forgive me, I kind of missed the point.
They're all different kinds of songs.
I love it because there are songs that are kind of commitments to Jesus.
Well, here's mine.
Four, 127.
I took a snapshot of my life, but the exposure was all wrong.
I couldn't see a thing developing.
I had spent that way too long.
So I have come with a request, though part of me thinks I'm insane, but I'm determined
to see this thing through and I will not complain.
It's the best part. my life and turn it into something better. Choose any way you will. Take this shack,
break down the walls and build a palace up on a high ur hill
I thought I knew where I should go
I tried to get there all alone
I took the easy roads and now I know that I'm lost
And I'm all alone and on my own
So take my life and turn it into something useful.
Don't stop until you're done.
Take these eyes, make them see a clearer vision
of what I can become on those days when I think I'm dying.
I'll trust in you and I'll keep on trying.
If you picked this road, I'll take it and with you by my guide I know I can make it.
Please take my life and make it one that is worth living.
Don't stop until you're through.
Take this life, the one that I am freely giving, I give it all. I give it all, I give it all to you.
I give it all to you. I like it, except the Lord built the house.
It's like you're saying, help me build this because you're a better builder than I am.
Men and women who turn their lives over to God said, President Benson, we'll find out
he can make a lot more out of their lives. They're like him. Yeah.
Except the Lord build the house.
They labor in vain that build it.
This is 127 except the Lord keep the city.
The Watchman Waketh but in vain.
I like those verse form five are kind of fun.
It arrows are it's like children like arrows.
Verse five.
Happy as the man that hath his quiver full of them.
Yeah.
Children are an inheritance of the Lord.
Especially if they'll help you do the dishes and it's really fun.
I'm going to gather my little arrows together tonight and say, Camille, your little arrows
for me.
Let me hug ya.
When my daughter was three, I thought, how am I going to teach her the gospel when there's
so many things I believe I can't explain?
I believe Jesus came to earth, died on the cross three days later, was resurrected.
Believe it, can't explain it.
I believe he went into the garden of Gethsemane and somehow took on the pains and the sins
of the universe.
Believe it, can't explain it.
If I can't explain so much of the stuff that I believe in,
what can I give my three-year-old?
Well, this will not surprise you.
This was my primary song.
I said, if you don't get anything else,
try to get this and it goes,
you know I believe in you.
Even though I can't explain it.
Please help me to understand all that you've done.
Why you're the son of our father above, but most of all, teach me to love.
You know I believe in you, but it's been so long since you lived here.
Someday when you come to stay, we'll still be friends.
Because we've been such friends from the start,
Lord, I love you with all of my heart. La la la la la la la la la la la la la la.
You know I believe in you,
and love you with all of my heart.
So wonder Beethoven said music can change the world. It seems to me when I read the Psalms Michael that the writer here is trying to just say
something over and over, trying to get a feeling across.
Isn't that right?
That in music, I want to communicate a feeling that's in my heart to others. I'm looking at Psalm 136. Oh, give thanks to the Lord.
Verse 1 and 2 start that way. So does verse 3. Oh, give thanks to the Lord of
the Lord for his mercy, his said and dureth for forever. The Michael is a songwriter.
How do we get into the heart and soul of the writer of the Psalms?
You can sense that there's a yearning in there for a feeling to come across, right?
As I said earlier, wouldn't it be great if David sang him to us?
And would listen it would go, geez,
they liked that and when you were around, that was your, you know,
what if they were hip-hop? What if the, you were hip hop? What if the message that spoke to people, then what if the palms were basically what
rap palms are?
I mean, it was a kind of a rhythm.
What if it was more the rhythm of it that moved people, or like it's a guy who grew up
on the tab choir, we think so much, this is what is reference, this is what is meaningful. And I remember when I was working on my
oratorio about the Garden of Gethsemitii, I got a lot of pushback because why are you
making up an allegorical oratorio, handle just took the scriptures and made the
music spectacular. Handles music, there is no better music than what Handle wrote from those scriptures.
Well, that's not my gift. I've reciefected. I'm reverent. It's great. But if I'm going to present
whatever Heavenly Father's gave me that's unique and present that to the world,
it's kind of represented in what I'm doing here. Oh, this is the way Michael sees the garden.
This is the way Michael understands Christmas with the Forgotten Carols. Oh, this is the way Michael sees the garden. This is the way Michael
understands Christmas with the forgotten carols. Oh, this is the way Michael sees relationships with
his kids in this song. And so I've been just exploring it so long and I think the only way
you get into the heart of it is if the person gets the privilege,
not of just reading it, but of feeling it.
You can tell from this, I don't sing great.
I gotta tell you this really fast.
This is an amazing revelation to me.
When I was working on the arc, the musical
from which hold on the light will come came,
I was on Broadway in a room with 400 people
and Stephen Schwartz, the guy who wrote Wicked
and God's spell and Prince of Egypt and my hero.
And he had been mentoring young people writing shows and he had written a show about Noah's
Ark called Children of Eden.
Second act was about that.
And here I was getting mentored with this musical Kevin Kelly and I wrote about
the art. And one night, this is so glad I was young. One night he said, here's what we're going to
do to different tonight. We're going to do dueling pianos, dueling pianos with Stephen Schwarz. And he
says, Mike, here's what we do.
We'll be in the room in front of everybody.
I'll talk about the songs I wrote about Noah's Ark,
how I came to him, I'll sing him.
Then you talk about the songs you wrote about Noah's Ark
and you sing him.
And of course, during this I realized
why he was genius, academy award-winning
God, human, Stephen Schwartz, and I was a
high-counselor in Heber. So anyway, but I'm going through this, and I had this
moment where I talked about hold on the light will come, and I played it like I
just played it for you. And then in between the moments, people were having
wine and cheese, and this was not an LDS crab, but just people in showbiz.
Theater people and a guy comes up to me and he says, uh,
I'm gonna talk to you and he pulled me aside. He said, you know what's saying, don't do you?
I said, well, no, I'm really not a singer. I said, but tonight was not about, because they would
bring in great Broadway legends to sing all of our songs. But tonight was not about, they said, no, you really don't sing.
And I said, and I really heard you the first time.
I get it.
And he said, yeah, I've been listening to all these, some of the Broadway's greatest singers
sing these songs for these new musicals.
And then he whispers to me.
This was life changer for me. He said,
so could you explain to me what I was feeling when you sang the song
that I haven't been feeling when real singers sang the song? And that was, a light boat went off in my head. If it's true, if
you work hard enough, one of the things Stephen Schwartz taught me is just because you want
to do a really cool thing about good ideas and you have great intentions, the bar is higher.
You can't get away with it. I got a great intention. You have to like my song. No, you have to learn how to write great songs.
You can't just say, but I meant to make the world happy and loop.
And if you're a Mormon, and you're trying to keep kids on the straight and arrow and keep
the covenants, try to write a song with celestial in it.
I mean, there's not a lot of rhymes that are going down with that.
But here's the thing.
And I finally gave up on fighting it.
If the song speaks truth, if I write a song and I can put it on the altar so that I could be
altered and others may be altered by it. And then it's like brother of Jared, I put the songs,
I put the stones out there and say, this is the best I could do. There may be another way.
But Heavenly Father, will you touch the song?
Not because I'm so cool, but if this could help somebody, including me, I tried a lot of
other things, as I think Brother of Jared did.
I tried other plans.
I tried windows.
I had this great idea.
No, here's the best I could do.
These are just stones by a not that great songwriter,
but I've put them on an altar and I said, your turn. Touch them. And what's been so tender to me
is he's touched them. Me clinically depressed, challenged, unhealthy, filled with faith crisis, families with all
kinds of anxiety, all kinds of problems, all kinds of heartache, if he'll help my songs
maybe speak to somebody.
He'll touch anybody who's willing to put the stones out there, I think, if he'll touch
your podcast to have it reach all the people it reaches
and goes beyond, he can help the guy that's sitting there right now listening to this saying,
oh, but he's not going to touch mine because we keep telling ourselves if you know they talk about
the light on the path, what if you're me? What if you're begging for some light?
You have made films seen by hundreds of millions of people
in several languages all over the world
and you have a crisis in your family
and you beg God for the light.
And it's dark.
No, no.
Hey, I gave the great prayer.
I gave my all. I made my new covenant.
Get me through next week,
nothing, nothing.
And I make a covenant with him in a prayer that says,
okay, I will trust you.
It's been two years of darkness.
I will show up and shut up.
I will keep the promises I no longer feel.
Just get me through.
And as I'm saying this prayer, I think,
well, this is a great prayer.
Light's going to show up maybe five weeks from now and I'll give a great talk on the podcast
about the Psalm and the light in my path showed up because I said my prayer seven more years.
And thinking, what did I do? You know, I'm going to the temple with my wife every week on Pantyte.
What could I possibly have done to make you mad at me?
Why won't just a little more light?
And all I'm promising is, I'll keep the promises my heart no longer feels for nine years.
And if there's somebody out there who cares the song about say your prayers and the light to your path will get you going and you think it must be me
The reason God has not revealed the light is because the word which is Jesus doesn't want to walk with me and unlike me for some reason I haven't even figured out
And I am here to bear witness whether you keep it in or not.
I want to speak to that guy.
I want to speak to his heart, and I want to tell him that he has never not been with you.
You feel the abandonment because there are lessons you can't learn any other way.
He is in and all through things.
And the only voice in your head that says, well, you're not hearing it is because you're not worthy,
does not come from God. That comes from an adversary who wants to tell you, you're not worthy,
you're not good enough, it's not okay if you didn't get everything perfect, it is the voice that right now in your heart is. He speaks
as the scriptures are shared with you that says, I am in it all with you. I am the light. The word,
the light, that's me, and I'm not going anywhere. And when I learned that, when my moment of being born again interestingly enough came with a download of songs from my father
in heaven that answered nine years of darkness in a language that only I understood and then I realized,
oh my gosh, that's when the my praises changed for forever. Beautiful.
Psalm 136 has one phrase that is said over and over and over.
For his mercy in Dorith forever.
Verse 1, verse 2, for his mercy in Dorith forever.
Verse 3, for his mercy in Dorith forever.
I could keep going all the way through 26 verses.
For his mercy in dureth forever.
Am I getting that message?
I've heard you talk about getting perfection
and coming to Christ in the right order, John.
Be a closing lines of Maroni, a command of Christ,
and be perfected in him.
And the sequence of that is not come into Christ,
but make sure you're perfect before you come. I'm not good enough to come. I got to perfect
myself or something like that. No, no, no, be perfected in him. Yeah, that sequence.
Sister Chieco Ocasacio, she wrote a book called Lighting Up on page 176, she said,
Jesus is not waiting for us to be perfect.
And I just love that opening line because that would be a long wait, right?
It's like that old Chinese proverb, he who waits for roast duck to fly into mouth must wait a very long time.
You've never heard that one.
Jesus is not waiting for us to be perfect. Perfect people
don't need a savior. He came to save us in our imperfections. He is the Lord of the living and
the living make mistakes. He's not embarrassed by us, angry at us, or shocked. He wants us in our
brokenness, in our in happiness, in our guilt, and our grief.
And do you know I love about that, Hank? It always reminds me of the prodigal son,
as soon as he turned from a great distance, his father ran to him.
Right? His father saw him and ran. He'll take us where we're at.
And so I like that sequence. Come into Christ. Just come.
I've often found John and Michael that people need multiple witnesses that God is merciful
for some reason. We just, for some reason, we don't believe it. So I have some witnesses
here. This is Elder Gong. We may for a time lose our way. God lovingly assures us, no matter where we are or what we have done, there
is no point of no return. He waits, ready to embrace us. This is Elder Renland. Even if
we have been a conscious, deliberate sinner, or have repeatedly faced failure and disappointment,
the moment we decide to try again, the atonement of Christ can help us, Elder Cook.
It is never too late to make the Savior's Atonement the foundation of our faith and
lives.
Elder Uptorf, no matter how often or how far we fall, the light of Christ ever burns brightly.
And even in the deepest night, if we butt step toward him, his light will consume the shadows and reignite our souls. One
more. I know you're I know this is multiple witnesses, but we need this.
President Ballard, everyone loses his or her way at some point to some degree.
It is the atoning sacrifice of the Savior that can return us home.
Psalm 136 is for His mercy and durith forever.
This isn't a message we should ever stop preaching.
That God is merciful.
We need to tell our children and our grandchildren.
God is merciful because too often it's, I'm not good enough.
I don't do things right. God doesn't want anything to do with me when that is
simply not true. God wants everything to do with you. Yeah, second is it section 64 I the Lord forgive sins. I just love
underlying that and can I add one more again? Alma 33 16
Can I add one more? In Alma 33, 16,
that word angry O Lord with His people
because they will not understand
the immerses which thou hast bestowed upon them
because of thy son.
And notice, they will not understand.
What's the difference between will not and cannot?
I know it's there, I just refuse.
I refuse.
I can't forgive myself, maybe.
They will not understand Imercies.
And I've always loved that verse that, no, it's not just about everybody else. That's about you, too.
I had a heart attack a year ago, and the first song that came to me after I recovered from my heart
attack, this is so great. This is a tiny short song, but it ties in exactly John with what you were talking about. This is why the Heavenly Father sent me.
God said, Love your enemy, I cried for help. My heart had frozen up on me and it won't melt. I fought the inner demon since I was just a child. I've been
kicking and I've been screaming because things so differently and not be afraid
To find a way to love him, to change the way I've fought relentlessly, but now my heart is teaching me that I can love myself.
I think today I can obey and finally love myself.
That's beautiful.
That is fantastic.
Michael fits exactly with what we were talking about there.
Psalm 136 for his mercy and dureth forever.
Dureth forever.
Michael, John, I feel like we're just in our episode today, we're just feeling the spirit
of the Psalms. I was interested in where the name of the lesson in the manual came from this week.
The lesson is entitled, let everything that hath breath praise the Lord, and that is actually the
last verse of the Psalms. The parting thought from the Psalms is let everything
that hath breath praise the Lord, praise ye the Lord. I feel like we've done that a little bit
today, Michael. And thinking about how we've talked about the light so much and the light that's
in and all through things and that guides our path and and how we praise it.
Think of this as my praise song about the source of that light.
I believe there's a light and it shines in everyone and I believe it's the light of the world.
And I believe there's a voice that whispers there's a choice, and our joy will come from choosing
what is right. And are we seeking His light that shines in one and all and lifts us when we fall?
And it answers when we call.
I believe there's a voice that whispers there's a choice, and her joy will come from choosing
what is right, and all we see King is light that shines in one and all, and lips is when
we fall. And are we seeking His light that shines in one and all?
And lips is when we fall, and answers when we call.
It's the Savior's light I'm singing of.
He is the light, the truth and the love.
Celebrate the light on its shines in everyone.
We're celebrating the light of the world.
And we all can rejoice when a heart makes the choice to reflect the joy and keep
it shining bright by celebrating the light.
And our joy will burn so bright when we follow his light. So bright.
When we follow his light.
Celebrating the light. Absolutely wonderful. When you tap into the spirit of the Psalms with songs themselves.
Hank, I think I've told you this, but in our stake we have a Spanish branch, a Portuguese branch, and we actually have an Alzheimer's branch, a memory center. We have a branch presidency there when I was on the high council.
I'd have a chance to go speak there. Sometimes they're just looking for speakers and the fun part is,
and you'll love this Michael, they'll say, is there any chance you could sing instead of speak?
Because something happens to those folks when you start using music. There's a part of them that
wakes up and they'll start singing with you,
songs that they knew in their childhood.
So I get up there and try to give a talk,
but usually I'd grab one of my kids,
take my Malcolm McLean guitar and say,
let's just sing, I'm a child of God for him today,
and they start singing with you.
Their spouses just love it when their spouse kind of wakes up,
comes back a little bit and it's
it's magical what music can do that way and I've I've seen it happen it's
pretty cool. My dad had Alzheimer's and lived with us and we went through all of
that ordeal and at the end he started saying I'm sorry I don't know your name
yeah look at me and then it's a but I'm pretty sure I like you, I don't know your name. Yeah. Look at me and then it's say,
but I'm pretty sure I like you.
And I said, okay, Dad, I'll take that.
And his final hours, this is a really sweet memory
that I hadn't thought of till now about songs.
My dad was on morphine.
He would wake up that given morphine,
and of course with these Alzheimer's, he didn't know where he was,
so he would panic.
It was just really sad. And my mother had died a year earlier, but he was in this facility, and I called my
son, Jeff, the singer who was doing legally blonde, national tour of legally blonde. And
I said, grandpa's gone. And of course, he gets on the plane and he comes and this is the thing that got me.
He came and sat with us and when my father would wake up terrified, I mean, you can't bear
to see your dad that scare.
Not in order he was and ready for his next injection of morphine.
My son would sing acapella, his favorite hymns. Like you said, John, something happens
to the... He calmed down. The agony was not the same. You know, years ago Truman Madsen invited
Jeff and I to go with him to Liberty Jail when he was showing some of his former missionaries,
given a tour of that period. And of course, we loved him and the way he talked about the
Prophet Joseph.
But when we were in Carthage Jail, after two days of Truman,
telling the great Truman stories, he turns to Jeff and said,
could you sing seven verses a capella of a poor,
way-faring man of grief so that we can kind of set the tone before
I bear my witness about what happened.
And there's my kid, like he did with my dad, singing just a voice, those songs and those
messages in that way, and to think that the Prophet Joseph, knowing that the
ed was coming, would say, could you sing to me? The comfort and the power, like
you said with those, I don't care who you are, could you sing to me? We grow up
with our mother singing melodies to us, singing lullabies to us. It's one of the great gifts for Sean.
When you tap into the spirit of the Psalms
with songs themselves,
I think we've gotten to the purpose
of why these were recorded for us.
Before we let him go, John,
we need to have Michael play
and sing some of these songs that we all know so well.
Oh, here's one speaking of teachers.
I had a Sunday school class of 15-year-olds,
and we were teaching the scriptures,
and I woke up one morning in a panic at five o'clock,
because the lesson that day was about how the good shepherd
leaves the 90 and 9
to go after the lost soul.
And I thought, wait a second,
this is a message that Jesus is gonna leave
the ones who showed up to church
to go find the inactive guy that's out there.
And I said, this is not gonna work for the,
I had a class that was so faithful that
they resided the 14th article of faith, which is we believe in meetings.
We hope for meetings, we've been doer-grinning meetings, we have to be able to endure all meetings.
If there are excuses for meetings, we seek after.
I mean, these kids never missed a meeting.
These are the most faithful kids in the world.
And I thought, how does this relate to them?
It's almost as if we're saying, if you want a lot of attention from Jesus, go get drunk and leave. And then
we're going to go find you, because then you'll be precious in his, I mean, I didn't know what to do. And of
course, I turned then to my language,
and it turns out that the song was the lesson.
So what I did, I didn't live that far.
I live in a big log house with a cool grand piano.
So I drove the van over to the church.
I loaded all the kids.
I said, revving church at the piano in my house today.
Come, and I also picked up some chocolate milk. And so if I
got a donut and a chocolate milk, we're going to be fine. So I bring my little class and I said,
this is the lesson. You don't have to talk about it. If you don't want to, you don't have to
editorialize on it. You don't have to pontificate it. You don't have to do anything. But listen,
eat your donuts and chocolate cake and I'll take it back to church. This was my lesson.
I am one of the ninety and nine. I'm not perfect, but basically I'm doing fine. I have not
lost my way. I'm not going gonna stray. I'm just one of the
ninety and nine and I'm here in the heart of the fold. I'm not mindless but I try to
do like I'm told I'm not tempted to run or become the last one. I'm just here in the heart of the fold, so why is my shepherd coming this way towards
me?
He's holding his arms out, and he's calling my name.
Yes, he's calling my name, but how can this be?
You see, I'm just one of the 99.
I've stumbled and fallen, but I've kept in line.
I'm not one he must seek.
I'm not that unique.
I'm just one of the 99.
So why is my shepherd treating me like a lost lamb?
He's searching to find me, and he's holding me now.
Yes, he's holding me now, and he's teaching me who I am. So why am I feeling like I'm the only one here?
It's like I'm his favorite. He takes me aside and he sweetly confides
these remarkable words in my ear.
He says, you're one of the 99.
Have you any idea how brightly you shine?
You are safe in this fold and it's time you were told, old.
Sorry, but I know where you've been, so I know where you'll be.
Because all your life, you've been following me.
You are more than just one of those sands of the sea or just one of the nighting at nine. No kids, you are mine.
You are mine.
You are mine.
Yes, you're mine.
You're sure mine.
Guess I'm one of the 90 and nine.
Absolutely wonderful. What? A day with Michael McLeanLean John we have been so blessed today.
Well thank you so much for having me. I'm kind of empty now and for a guy who's hoping that
kidney, that transplant can't come too soon but I want you to know that I have a couple hours
a day that I am kind of functional and I was
energized by just being around you partly out of respect for you and partly
out of love for what you're doing but I just told Heavenly Fathers I was
driving here I said help me be present enough to not pick a song that I want to
sing but a song that you would have me sing. Help me somehow navigate my way through these insights
that these wonderful gospel scholars that are fun
and wonderful and spiritual, that'll be there,
and help me not fall apart.
Help me just get through to the end.
And for me, this is it now, I am done.
And I'm gonna kind of get home and take an app for a couple of days.
I want you to know.
And I hope this community, I hope you feel how deeply I mean this.
I love you.
I love your uniqueness.
I love the way you see things.
I love the way you study things.
I love the way you see things. I love the way you study things.
I love the way you interpret things.
I love the willingness that you are to know how to quote.
I just think you're great.
And you've been placed in my life, and it's a blessing to me.
And I'm sure many others, but I just, and you don't need this validation.
I know, but I just want you to know, so no matter what my future may hold,
that you know, my friend, my my future may hold, that you know,
my friend, my songwriter, buddy, Michael McClang, really, really loves me.
Amen.
We love you, too, Michael.
We love you, too.
We are praying for you, and we know all of our listeners will say a prayer for you.
Absolutely.
Absolutely. Yep. That the transplant will go well.
We want to thank Michael McClain for being with us today.
We want to thank our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Sorenson.
We want to thank our sponsors, David and Verla Sorenson.
We hope you'll join us next week as we come back with another episode of Follow Him. you