Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Revelation 15-22 • Part 1 • Dr. Richard D. Draper • Dec 25 - Dec 31
Episode Date: December 20, 2023How does understanding Jesus Christ’s ultimate victory over sin and death build your faith? Dr. Richard Drapers delves into profound insights into the final chapters of the Book of Revelation. Explo...re the triumphant narrative of Jesus Christ as the Lion and the Lamb.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/new-testament-episodes-41-52/Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/follow-him-a-come-follow-me-podcast/id1545433056YouTube: https://youtu.be/CcsL6euW3O0Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Dr. Richard Draper00:59 Review of Revelation 1-1401:27 Bio of Dr. Richard Draper03:36 Dr. Draper shares his background with Revelation08:26 Zooming out12:05 Seals as a model and limits14:40 Who will survive?16:37 The sealing of the Saints19:01 Final plagues22:50 God’s wrath27:50 Does the Lord get angry or jealous?28:30 Everything in God’s control31:49 Fifth angel pours his vial35:16 Will there be time to prepare?39:57 Armageddon or Megiddo42:30 Divine intervention and many miracles46:11 The Courtesan and the Beast50:24 Babylon and people as commodities54:26 Immorality and idolatry58:34 The Beast 1:01:37 An Interlude1:04:38 Why Babylon falls1:08:20 End of Part 1–Dr. Richard DraperThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with the monumental John by the way as a co-host. Hello, John.
Monumental. My football coach used to call me that.
I went to monument valley and they had pictures of John by the way up everywhere.
John, by the way, up everywhere. John, the reason I bring that up is because we have done something monumental this year.
We have gone through the entire new testament.
It's a wonderful thing.
John, we have over a hundred hours of content going through Matthew, Mark, Luke, John,
Acts, Romans.
What kind of year have you had?
My love for the Bible, which I thought I had before has just increased my appreciation
for the scholars that we have.
The more you learn, the more you discover how much you really don't know.
How much more there is to learn.
I'm grateful and humbled for this year.
It's been awesome.
John, we are on our third lesson in the book of Revelation.
What have you enjoyed so far?
I love that we have keys to understanding Revelation.
I love that we have section 27, section 77.
We have section 88, 133.
The Lord is not giving us a revelation and then leaving us clueless.
He's giving us some clues.
I've appreciated that.
And I think this last section, to me, is one of the artists because there's so many
symbols throughout this one. I'm excited to go through this last part here.
I've been struck as I've been thinking about these lessons by John's portrayal of the Slane
Lamb, Revelation 5, that he introduces our hero of the entire book with this. He hears about a lion,
but he looks. It's a slain lamb. And I've
been thinking about that. That beautiful symbolism can really stay with you.
John, we are joined by someone I know is a good friend of yours. You've already quoted him
in our first two lessons in Revelation. And now we get him in the flesh. So John, introduce Dr. Richard Draper to our listeners.
I'm just so glad he is willing to admit that he knows me,
but I have cassettes of his on Revelation
in my master's program.
I remember him writing ancient Greek on the dry erase board
as if it were English and
Jaws were dropping all over the room. It was so cool. I love Richard Draper.
Richard D Draper is professor emeritus at Brigham Young University who has taught Old Testament, New Testament, Pearl of Great Price, Book of Mormon, and the Book of Revelation.
Brother Draper grew up in Utah Valley, graduated from Pleasant Grove High School.
Right after graduation, he joined the Armed Forces
for a year.
Upon his return, served a mission
to the Central Atlantic States.
He attended BYU, and as soon as he graduated,
was hired by a church educational system,
serving as an institute instructor for the next 20 years.
When he completed his PhD in ancient
history from BYU, he was hired by religious education. He's been a professor of ancient
scripture specializing in prophecy, apocalyptic, and New Testament background. Brother Draper
can read Greek Hebrew, French, and German. So thrilled to have you here. Dr. Brother Richard Draper.
Thank you very much.
I appreciate that, Andrew.
Dr. Ducks and John.
And you haven't lost your knack.
I want you to know that.
In fact, Hank, I wanted Brother Draper to tell a story that I heard him tell about.
How interested he just was at a young age in prophecy.
And how he kept taking New Testament class,
so he could learn about Revelation.
Can you tell that little story?
I was not raised in an active LDS family.
My father was not converted until I was 15,
but I always had a propensity toward the church.
I was a kid that used to go to church on my own.
My dad would much prefer me to go fishing, but
mom was good lady and she encouraged me. And I really liked seminary. It was in my exposure
to the church and the doctrine. The eleventh grade year was the New Testament and the last
two class periods. Brother McCannock got into this wonderful and strange book called
Revelation. And I learned the end, there was this thing called prophecy.
I am by nature, a fairly insecure person, and therefore I like to order my life. In fact, my wife will tell you what I do each
evening, I schedule the next day, and she will also tell you, don't interrupt Richard's schedule, he gets cranky. I like an ordered life, but it's the way I feel secure.
All of a sudden, there's this thing called prophecy that tells you the future.
I decided, wow, this is really good.
So I said to Brother McKenna, where can I learn more about this wonderful book of Revelation?
And he said, well, you're going to college.
I said, he says, go to college and take a new testament.
Yes, the two class, and they will teach it all about revelation.
I went in the army and I went on a mission and I came back and I was enrolled at BYU.
I took Book of Mormon the first year and then it was New Testament.
I did not take the first half to 11.
I took two 12.
Why?
Because there was revelation.
I wanted that. We got to
Jude and a class period. We got to Jude. I was really disappointed. Never touched the book.
Yeah, never, never even got close. That time they had beginning courses and advanced courses
in religion. So I had taken two twelve, the introductory course, about a year and a half later,
I signed up for four, twelve, the advanced course. We got to second Peter. That was it. We said,
then not even as good as Jude, okay? So I was really disappointed. I graduated, went on with my life,
was getting my master's degree out of Arizona State University. I was doing research,
so I had a good thesis advisor. I was doing material on Utah history 1847, 1857, which allowed me to
use BYU's library and also the church archives. But it just so happened, one of the summers I was
up here studying. I found out that they were having graduate studies. They were offering 512, so I was able to manipulate program and I got into 512. Guess what?
Last day we hit Revelation. Did the professor talk about Revelation? No, he said,
I read this paper by one of you students. I'm gonna have him talk about the paper.
This student got up and talked about the five ways of interpreting revelation. I could not have been more disappointed.
I couldn't have been more disappointed. I didn't want to know about collotions. I wasn't really
under Romans. I just wanted a revelation. So now we fast forward to another decade or so.
fast forward to probably another decade or so. I'm now doing my graduate studies in Greek, and we're doing the Coiney semester. That's the Greek that the Bible is up to a
giant and the New Testament of the early church fathers are really in that's the dialect.
Richard Anderson was the instructor. We met together two students. You can do that and go right to it school. He said,
well, what would you like to read? We've got this massive amount of material in
Poinet, and I said, would it be possible to do revelation? And he said, oh, that
would be wonderful. I've been through that book for quite a while. Yeah, that's
due revelation. It won't be quite enough. We'll pick up something else. And did you
say, I've never actually never got there. No, art Bailey, my classmate,
and I spent the summer translating for Revelation, and that witted my appetite even more. And out of that,
they ungruities volumes that I've done. It's been a lot of fun, a lot of work.
There's a, many a teacher out there feeling some guilt. I've done that before too.
teacher out there feeling some guilt. I've done that before too. Well, didn't make it to the end. Yeah. That story. It's interesting and humorous and kind
of sad, but it changed my life because I thought I may have a student who really wants to
spend time in Marone, I tend when I teach book more, that was really helpful. I just laughed
on it every time you took revelation. You never got there. Thank you for he's telling me.
You're welcome.
John, since we're interested in getting to the end, we better get started.
We can't tell that story.
And then not get to the right.
Richard, let me read something from the Come Follow Me manual.
This is the first paragraph for this lesson, which is entitled, he that overcome it,
shall inherit all things.
The book of Revelation powerfully testifies that Jesus Christ is the beginning and the end
of everything.
Of the great sweeping drama of human existence and salvation, He is the Lamb, slain from
the foundations of the world.
He is the King of kings, who brings an end to wickedness, sorrow, and death itself, and
usheres in a new heaven and new
earth.
He is the bright and morning star that shines in the dark sky as a promise that dawn
is coming soon.
And it is coming soon.
He is coming.
Even as he invites us, come unto me, he also comes to us.
I come quickly, he declares, and with hope and faith that has been purified in the fires
of a Latter-day adversity, we answer, even so, come Lord Jesus.
That's Revelation 22, verse 20.
Come Lord Jesus.
With that great introduction, Richard, how do you want to take on these last eight
chapters of the Book of Revelation?
What I would like to do is use a broad brush and a narrow brush.
And by the broad brush, just show starting with chapter 15,
how the pieces fit together.
We're not going to read all this material, but at least I can say,
this is what this section is doing.
This is what this section is doing.
And so on, this is how they couple along the way, but there are just some
points that beg to be stopped and looked at things.
Now, there are some parts that I need to warn the reader.
They may be interested in knowing something about that I may pass over.
If an angel came to me and said, you've been working on Revelation rich for a long time,
is there a part that you would like to know more about? Believe it or not,
it would not be 666 the number of the beast. I feel comfortable that we've pretty well got that
hammered out. I'd like to know about chapter 17 because there is a lot of symbolism there and
there's been a lot of inks spilled over chapter 17. Therefore we get to 17. I'm not going to analyze that much.
What I'm going to do though is I'm going to point or point out what the symbols mean. So we may not
be able to say, okay, who's the five, who's the seven, who's the eighth, but at least we can say
the story is this. This is what John is trying to say as we move through these particular sections. So that's my plan of attack for this one.
Just two points that I'd like to start with.
The first one is not very pleasant when I've been asked to talk on Revelation before
I begin by saying, I've got good news and bad news.
The bad news is what right on schedule. And the good news is we're right on schedule.
And the good news is we're right on schedule.
The bad news, and this is where apocalyptic and prophetic come together, and that is things
are not going to get better.
They're only going to get worse.
That's starting a discussion like this.
You want everything to build to crescendo.
There is power and beauty and everything's going to be okay. And believe it or not, we will get there. We're going to go through
some pretty dark chapters here before we get to the end in doing so. I think it highlights
just how important what Christ is doing and what a magnificent ending he brings to the
faithful. That's one thing I would like to note the second is this,
I'm very often asked which seal do we in?
What we have to understand is apocalyptic
is a model of reality, it is not reality.
Now let me say I get, it's a model of reality,
but it's not the reality.
It's like having a model of, say, a Boeing 747.
You can learn a tremendous amount of a Boeing 747 by studying the model, but to say,
which seal are we in? To me, it's like saying, so which seal am I in in that model? The answer is,
you're not in a seat. It's a model. We are in the last days, okay? You want to know what
seal we're in the last days. We're not in a seal. We're in the last days. The seal is just simply
part of the model to help us keep track chronologically as to where things are going. The Lord has promised
us the NC68 that we will know. We know the signs of the times. That's what he's doing for the
Latter-day Saints. And therefore, the book of Revelation is a wonderful piece to help us feel where we are in the
signs of the times and to be able to keep track of what's going.
I have to throw in a funny story here. There was a missionary who asked Elder Holland very
seriously. He said, are we in the last days? And Elder Holland said, son, I am not the sharpest knife in the drawer,
but even I know the name of the church.
Right?
Right.
And the church of Jesus Christ of God.
Last day, saints, right?
Yeah.
We got it.
We're there.
Okay.
The last point I'd like to make
before we start diving in,
and that is the book of Revelation
is a book of limits.
Now, that's very important as we get into some of these
distrucing scenes.
We've already been through chapters eight and nine,
tremendous distrucing scenes.
The first half of the book really highlights the limits.
Locusts only live for 10 months.
One third of the water's effect of one-third of the earth is affected.
One-third is affected for this. That, and there's always a limit. And the passive voice is extremely
strong. In Greek, they have what is called the divine passive. And that is where you do not
mention God directly. He stands behind the scene. He's in the wings, calling the shots, or he's
directing the things, but he's not on the stage.
The divine passive is used to indicate what God is doing there.
As we take a look at what's going on, we see God operating, but he's operating behind the scenes.
That's up through chapter 14.
Now we move into chapter 15, and we're going to see a shift in that idea.
It's no longer going to be limits.
We are going to destroy whole populations.
The first tab shows the limits the second half.
Oh, no, there's no limits.
The question is why?
And the answer is, the first part of Revelation is the worldview.
One of the things it says is that most of the world is going to survive during
this time, which after 15 we're looking at a specific category of people, those who
all the beasts, where the mark of the beast, promote the way of the beast. In this they
will be destroyed and they will be utterly destroyed from off the face of the earth. So
we need to keep that in mind as we go through this particular section
because it's going to be pretty bleak.
We have to keep in mind that it's targeting a specific group of people
with a very severe warning as to what's going on and what's going to happen to them.
I think that's what we've got by way of introductions.
Let me ask you a quick question, Richard.
And if you're John's first century audience,
are you seeing this as a future day,
or is this a war between good and evil
that's happening right in front of you in the first century?
I would like to say both.
There's no doubt that the primary audience is
the first century Christians.
I mean, they are being hammered during this time. And therefore,
the book is saying to them, hold on, hang on, everything is all right. In fact, let me just simply
say one of those aspects that make Revelation a little difficult to read is there are these
moments where the narrative stops and we have this interlude. The narrative goes on and we have another interlude.
But if you take a look at those interludes, they take place just before things get really nasty and they always look back at what's happening in the church.
For instance, chapter 7 is the largest interlude. And what does chapter 7 say? This is about the ceiling of the saints. Nothing bad's
going to happen until the saints are sealed and things will move forward. We've got a couple
interludes in our section where I'll share where there's this little pause. Okay, I'm going to
instruct the righteous now. All right, having instructed the righteous, let's go back and kill a
few billion people. So there's always this look to reassure the reader that things are going
to be okay for the righteous. But this portion, the message of this portion, till you get
to 2021 and 22, this is the strong warning to the wicked. And John pulls no punches as
to what's going to happen.
Okay. If I'm a first century Christian, I'm hearing my enemies are going to get it.
Yes, exactly right. They feel the hand of those enemies. I mean, the Rome is now moving with an
iron fist. They've already been persecuted by the Jews. From the time of Neural Onward,
by being a Christian as a capital of fence, and so've been now harried I put the dating of revelation of course in the last decade of the first century
So these people have been around a long time and they've been harried for a long time
And they need award of encouragement again as we look it through their lands
Yes, things are going to get bad but from their perspective
It's the enemy who's going to get it at last and then that bolsters their determination to continue to move forward and serve the Lord.
I think you used to phrase on one of the recordings of years I'll listen to.
You just mentioned that God is kind of behind the scenes up until now.
But then you said when he's very overt and you equated that with, he'll make bear his arm,
which is a scriptural phrase we hear.
Sometimes it'll be obvious that he's intervening.
And I love that.
Oh, recognition of God's going to make bear his arm.
And you will see him doing the things he's prophesying of.
Boy, right here is where things are really happening.
Right now God is still behind the scenes.
There's going to come a moment where he's going to walk on the stage.
The Lamb's going to walk on the stage as well. Starting with chapter 15 then, we have, as it says,
and I saw another sign in heaven, great and marvelous, seven angels having the seven last flags
or in them is filled the wrath of God. So here we have the final plex final for two reasons. One,
God. So here we have the final Plegs final for two reasons. One, none will follow these. This is the end of the destruction sequence. Second, and this is what that verse focuses on, is there a final because in them, God's wrath is spent. It's done. He has fulfilled the anger with it, Cineham, and it has been completely satisfied. Verses 2 through 4 are a flash forward, interestingly enough, to the celestial world, where there
is this song of praise for the greatness of God and the result of His greatness, and then
as the nations will come to worship Him, He is going to exercise His muscle, and people
are going to come to recognize just exactly what he is.
Versus 2 through 4 are important because it sets up the righteousness of God for doing the
destroying that's going to go on. He is going to focus on the wicked. It shows his passion to wickedness and what's going to happen because of that. In verses 5 through 8, we see the glory
and power of God being exemplified through the temple. It is interesting, as it says, this is
verse 8 and the temple was filled with smoke from the glory of the Lord and from his power, and no man was able to enter into the temple,
till the seven plagues of the seven angels are fulfilled. The temple, especially on the day of
moment, was that of expiation. If no one can enter the temple, there is going to be no expiation,
and therefore God will be moving forward. This section therefore celebrates the justice,
not the mercy of God.
Here we see what a God of justice does, especially
when that justice comes out in avenging
those of his children who have been hammered away too long.
Two points.
Once the Plegs commence, they are inexorable. They cannot be stopped. Boy, once that first angel
loses his Pleg, things are going to move forward. And the second is God's destruction of the wicked
is fully justified. What he does next is really there. So I'd like to make a little excursus on the idea of God being a God of passion and even a God of anger.
Because a lot of people, it makes them nervous. And especially if we say, well, remember that in that old testament,
where we meet this very passionate God, it is Jehovah. Jehovah is the Lord. The Lord is Jesus. Jesus have a tough side because isn't Jesus always
nice? Those who have heard say Jesus always nice, I wonder if they have a different
rendition of the New Testament than I do. But be that as it may. Just a couple of things.
The idea that God is beyond passion was brought into Christianity in the middle of the
second century onward. Many of the early church others bought into this idea, but
the idea is not biblical. We see throughout the Old Testament particularly, but
even in Jesus as we look at the New Testament, he can get riled and he can get
riled pretty good. It's often mass because anything Jesus says is started by and Jesus said
Never says and Jesus was really peaked and said or something
Anger-leave responded. Yeah, yeah exactly right Peter colors him at one point when Jesus predicts his death and
Boy that is saving really rails on a githy behind, he's saving me.
That knows not what that would do us.
He can be very sharp and so on.
Here's a piece I put together some time ago to explore this idea of the wrath of God.
The relationship protected by the first commandment was a gift.
Jehovah gave himself to Israel.
He said, I will be your God.
Israel showed acceptance of
that gift by obedience. God loves his children. This forms the foundation of his justice. He acts
favorably and justly toward those who know him by heart and attend to his commandments.
Since the presence of God is gift, the commandments are a protection of that gift.
Loving and obeying God is not a case of earning divine favor, but of living in accordance with it.
What Israel is to give God, obedience, goes beyond negative duty to a positive attitude of loyalty to God,
and a recognition of what He has given them in the love offering of Himself.
He warned Israel he would not tolerate disobedience, but he also explained why.
Bowshaw worshiped no other God for the Lord, whose name is Jealous.
He is a Jealous God, that is Exodus 3414. Jehovah says, thou shalt not bow down
myself to idols, nor serve them for I, the Lord thy God, and the jealous God,
visiting theiquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth
generations of them that hate me, and showing mercy unto thousands of them,
love me and keep my commandments, 6 of this 25 through 6.
Moses confirms the same thing, saying,
for the Lord thy God is a consuming fire, even a jealous odd,
neuteronomy 424.
Joshua, as Israel moves into the Promised Land, put it this way,
he cannot serve the Lord in sin. For he is
and holy God, he is a jealous God. He will not forgive your transgressions nor your sins.
If he forsake the Lord and serves James God, then he will turn to do your hurt and consume
you. After that, he has done you good. That's Joshua 24, 19 and 20. The Hebrew word translated jealousy is khana. It can be translated
in tense zeal or strong ador. It is the emotion that is released when a valued object is threatened,
harmed or destroyed. We all feel jealousy.
We've all felt that as a common word.
God also has that same thing,
that it is magnified because we're talking about his children.
He has some real feelings about his children.
Think about your own children, your own friends.
Yeah, you would respond the same way.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, exactly right.
Judgments of God are not blind and personal and mechanically operated forces.
They reflect neither karma nor fate.
The judgment of God is the judgment of the absolute and totally personal creator
whose judgment operates within the context of his love and his hate, is graced toward
his people and his wrath toward his enemies, because when all is said and done, justice
will prevail. Throughout the Scriptures, we see the self-destructive nature of wickedness,
but God cannot allow such self-destruction to act as an impersonal nemesis, an independent,
self-operating moral law sweeping away all in its path.
To do so would allow the powers of evil to carry all the inhabitants of the earth down
with them into utter ruin.
Evil must be allowed to combine its nefarious forces against the Savior's
people, and then be forced back in utter defeat through faith, trust, and the loyalty of the
Lord's people, and through God's cana is jealousy. In some, God's jealousy is a two-edged sword that cuts both ways. It acts to protect his people,
but it also acts to destroy and punish the enemy.
In chapter 15, then, we see this idea
beginning to move forward.
When we talk about God's jealousy or God's anger,
I think oftentimes we come into the scriptures
with an idea of God and that God's Jesus is always nice.
And then when we read a scripture where it doesn't seem
to fit, we maybe skip it.
What are it down?
Explain it away.
Instead of just letting the scriptures themselves
inform us instead of us informing them. Work through it and learn
from it. Let it inform your view. When Jesus is upset, how does he handle it? Isn't there a lesson
there for us? When we get upset, how does he handle it? Because he is always in control. I mean,
just stop and think for a minute. He cleanses the temple. That's not a spontaneous act.
Bies a bunch of leather thongs and makes a whip out of them.
I mean, this is premeditated. He's not going to go out there by himself.
And by the way, remember, this is a country kid. Do you think he knows how to use a whip?
We never talk about that.
He could probably flick a fly off the air of a donkey.
He is well prepared, well protected with that whip.
I'll tell you, but it's premeditated.
He knows what he's doing and he's going to go through the whole thing.
He doesn't flip out.
It's a careful thought through.
Yeah, exactly right.
His castigation of the Pharisees when he calls them hypocrites.
Matthew 23.
Yes, exactly.
The word hypocrite, in English, it's a pretty strong word.
The word that Jesus uses, hebo-cretez,
translates the Hebrew chanaf.
And chanaf means godless or apostate.
He isn't just calling them hypocrites.
He is going to the root and that is you are a bunch of apostates.
That's another book I probably talk for another time. All right, so chapter 16 reveals what will happen
when the Lord's power is unleashed. In 15, it's coming, chapter 16, the thing that I would like to
note is even though suffering is going to amount, everything is under God's control. Verses 1 through
3, again, it's not partial, it's total destruction. The weight comes down very heavy on these people as
the angels move. In fact, what we do here is we're returning to chapters 8 and 9. We're just
repositioning the camera in 8 and 9. It looks to the world and what's
going to happen to the world. And let me tell you that's pretty scary. You've already been through
that one. Here now we're going to position angles and what happens to those who are not he,
the really wicked ones of the earth. The focus here are on those who created the society that's
going to bring about the end. I really like this statement.
This is from Homer Haley in his book Revelation, page 328. He says, these are the ones who created
the society. In such a society, morals decline to the lowest level, the family collapses. Schools bring anarchy and rebellion. Business ethics are forgotten.
Entertainment becomes base and sorted.
The printing press exudes smut and filth
until the hole is strangled in its own death blood
and suffocates in its own stench.
And that's really strong.
It just really says the danger that is here. And we can say, well,
no wonder God's upset with what's going on here. Verses four and five, again, go back to show
that God is justified. In fact, one of the things that's interesting as we read this thing is how
hard these people are. They will not repent. Notice verse 11, and they blaspheme the God of heaven because of their
veins and their source and repented not of their deeds. Blaspheme, of course, means to re-bile or to
rile on, but the root, what's underneath the idea of blasphemy, is a willingness to spin lies, to bring down the character
rather in order to have sympathy for oneself.
These people rather than repent are trying to get people to say, you cannot worship these
beings. Notice how mean he is to us. This is not a good kind person, even as their world
is falling apart. They're not repenting.
They're still trying to get people to come to their cause.
Very often Luke 11, 17 is our recall.
Where Jesus talks about the kingdom divided,
a number of people, not a lot, say, well, Satan's kingdom is divided.
But that's not the point that Jesus makes there.
His point is that Satan's kingdom is not divided.
I do not cast out a devil's by build the pub. A kingdom that is divided cannot stand what he's doing right.
There is he saying that devil's kingdom is not divided. He has machinery and it works.
Here in chapter 16, and the fifth angel poured out his vial upon the seat of the beast, and his kingdom was full of darkness, and they nod their tongues for pain.
This is where Satan, at last, loses control of his kingdom.
So far, he has been able to orchestrate everything it's going on,
and thereby create a tremendous amount of horror and bloodshed.
Everything has been going his way, especially here in these last days.
Things are good, but it comes to an end.
Satan's kingdom is built on pride.
Satan's kingdom is built on commutmanship, one upmanship and so on.
Therefore, if too much pressure is applied to it, it fractures.
And it is in chapter 16 16 where we see that capturing. And Satan,
he is unleashed his fury, and now it's even going to get outside his hands. I mean, it is really
going to move. Richard, am I seeing in chapter 16 one, the Lord's vengeance, but two, that
can almost say they brought this on themselves. You built this monster, and now it's eating you.
they brought this on themselves. You built this monster and now it's eating you. Oh, and I like that, especially. Yeah, it's eating you. You build it. And now it's turned on you.
Satan has worked so hard to build so much misery and so much destruction. And to get all of these
people under, see if to bind them with cords and to keep them here and so on. And guess what?
They get away from him. He can't do it.
Because Satan in the hands going to lose everything.
And here's where we see, in chapter 16,
is where we see that losing control.
Verse 12, the Euphrates dries up.
This lays the nature of the work for the great battle.
Essentially, the Euphrates drying up
represents all inhibitors being taken off. The Lord is just simply
moved back. The power is going to come and we see the power of the lies that Satan's going to
send forth. We see in verses 13 and 14 the frogs are right coming out of the mouth of the dragon
of the beast and a false prophet. These represent satanic influences that are going forth unopposed with great power.
Listen to this from Dr. Covenant's 93 that explains, in a non-apocalyptic way, what's going
on, I am holding back my spirit, that is, God's restraining power, from the inhabitants
of the earth.
I have sworn in my wrath and decreed wars upon the face of the earth, and the wicked shall
slay the wicked, and fear shall come upon every man, and the saints themselves shall hardly
escape.
So a little warning right there, but then in 15, we get an interlude.
Alright, so everything's moving along.
And then, all of a sudden, we find,
they hold I come as a thief, blessed,
and see that watch as they keep the disturbance,
blessed, they walk naked, and they see a shame,
and then we get right back to the destruction scenarios
right there.
I believe that that little aside of the saints
is now, look, you must be prepared.
You cannot delay your preparation.
You must be prepared for the time is short.
Many of you are so young, you probably likely do not have the same feeling toward the fall of
the Berlin Wall and the breakup of the Soviet Union as people might, you. We are the ones who used
to duck on our desk to practice what would happen if we got it by a nuclear bomb. We were scared
of those kind of things, all righty?
That was elementary school.
Oh yeah, when the Berlin Wall fell, oh my goodness,
that was really something.
What is interesting is if you start six months before
and just take a look at what the pundits are saying,
nobody sought.
That is what's amazing.
Here we have the collapse of the Soviet Union and as you read the newspapers and articles and everything,
not one of them says it's cracking, it's going to come down. Nobody knew what was going to happen. But for you and for me,
let's do something much more closer. The housing bust of 2008, who saw that coming, and all of a sudden, bam, there it is. Therefore, I believe we need to
tie verse 15 then to the parable of the Ten Virgins. Matthew 25, five virgins wise, five foolish,
there's not going to be time to repair. So let me read another piece that I wrote.
Closely, a connected with this thought is the phrase repeated twice near the end of the book.
The hold I come quickly, verses 7 through 12.
The Lord is not telling the early Christians to expect him at any moment.
Rather, the phrase characterizes a dynamic quality of time.
The Lord is saying that he is coming in the pressing, urgent time, the time bearing
within it a majorless spiritual hastening that moves to Kishendo upon the humanity, unmoved,
unrepentant and unprepared.
In some, that Christ comes quickly, can very well mean he comes too quickly for an unprepared
and sleeping humanity.
That the time is near may mean that it is short, that it is actually too short considering
the slowness and the laziness of human souls.
Verse 15 to me speaks volumes. Saints, be prepared, don't delay. I'm telling you what's gonna happen here.
Be prepared.
Verse 16 tells us what to prepare for.
Armageddon.
That's a word that's been loaded for a very, very long time.
You're standing in the grocery store aisle and there's the magazines. Armageddon is here, right? Cover of all those tabloids. Exactly right. Yeah.
We have heard the metaphor throughout the New Testament of coming as a thief in
the night, and we've also heard the metaphor of a woman in travail. Now, I would
like to believe that for the wicked, he comes as a thief in the night without
warning and for the righteous, if we're watching, like verse 15 says, and we see signs,
it's more like a woman in travail, because she has known for months what's coming.
Is that fair to say maybe the thief in the night is for some and a woman in travail
is for others or are they both just full metaphors for the same thing.
What do you think? I like the way you're connecting. She knows. She is pregnant. She has an
approximate time of that when that's coming as well. One of the things that the doctrine
covenant does right from chapter one, the preface, knowing what's going to happen,
I the Lord give you these things. And then we have, it's 106, that it is the wicked who are asleep.
But unto you, I want you to be the children of light, and that day shall not overtake you as a thief.
The saints, if they are prepared, will know and therefore can be ready for when it comes.
I don't know that we'll know the literal dare at the hour, that the figure of dare an hour, oh yes, we keep our eye on the
prophet, on the 12 apostles, the Lord's not going to abandon us.
And it's really nice that the Lord didn't have to tell us anything. He could have just said,
I'm not telling you when I'm coming, but look how he gives the saints all these clues and things to watch for.
And in a way, it kind of can build our testimonies to say, yep, this was supposed to happen.
Yep, it's getting intense here, but this is nothing that we haven't been told would
be happening.
We're right on schedule.
Man, how do we know we're right on schedule?
Because we've been told what's going on there.
Just a comment then on verse 16, the place of battle is called in the Hebrew tone Armageddon. The problem is there
is no Hebrew word Armageddon. This is Greek. So how do we say Armageddon in Hebrew?
You can't. I mean, some say it's Har Megito, the mountain of Megito, but there is no
Mount Megito. There's a Mount Carmel, that there is no Mount Maguito. Maguito is actually Hill, it's a stronghold.
They're guarding the path of the Jizreal Valley. That makes a little hard. If we
look at various ways to translate the phrase, we can have destroying mountain,
but also mountain of assembly, even, believe it or not, desirable
city. Therefore, it could point to the north of Israel, or it could point to Jerusalem itself,
but the whole area is going to be affected. It's not one. However, since we're talking
about a mountain, there is a mountain in Jerusalem that may be the target of attack.
Let me just read two scriptures that I find quite telling.
Here's the first one, Dnc2436.
It is ordained that in Zion and in their stakes and in Jerusalem,
those places which I've annoyed it for refuge,
shall be the places for the
baptisms of your dead. Now the reason this particular verse is important is
because I've heard people say, well, the Jews are going to get their temple up.
Jews don't do baptism for the dead. There's only one religious system that
does temple the baptism for the dead, so we know who whose temple it is. Then this one from section 133, verse 13,
that them who obdu'dia flee unto Jerusalem, unto the mountains of the Lord's house,
very interesting pieces. Therefore, I would suggest that the objective of Satan's minions could be
the destruction of the temple. That's what they want because it would show
that they have then overpowered Jehovah. The house of the Lord is no longer the holy place to Lord. It
is now in ruins, but it ain't going to happen. And the reason it ain't going to happen is because
there's going to be some divine intervention. Now one of the things we see in chapters 8, 9, and 16
is that destruction is mortal.
And John, you wrote up the idea of the Lord moving
into history, moving on stage, and so on.
This is a Heliment 116.
And let's just apply it to what's going on here.
Now, listen to this.
It's really interesting.
The whole earth was smitten
even among the Lamanites as well as among the Nephites, so that they were smitten that they
did perish by the thousands in the more wicked parts of the land. I find that fascinating. See,
it's modeled and everybody's going to feel the same pressure. And one of the things we find out is that in Zion and interstakes, those places that I have
appointed for refuge are going to be the places for the baptisms of your debts. The Lord is going
to prepare away for the saints to be able to somehow escape this. I'm going to come back to that.
We're going to end with that discussion. Here is where we see the Lord moving directly.
We're going to see miracles.
One of the Vecta Moses and miracles of Old Testament proportions and so on.
Moving on, I get so excited about this material.
It's just beautiful.
Verses 7 through 12 shows the final plague.
Now, this is the fall, the world, the cities divided into three parts.
If the islands flee away, everything is made new.
Getting into this, let me read the following.
The imagery is designed to emphasize both the depth and the breadth of destruction that
is going to occur.
Here's a non-apocalyptic description,
so you can take a look at what's happening in 16, and then we can pull back and say, okay, now,
this is the model. What does the reality tell us? And so this is from DNC 133, 21 through 25.
And he shall utter his voice out of Zion, and he shall speak from Jerusalem, and his voice shall
be heard among all the people, and it shall be a voice as the voice of many waters, and as the voice
of great thunder which shall break down the mountains, and the valleys shall not be found. He shall command
the great deep, and it shall be driven back to the North countries. The island shall become one land, the land of Jerusalem, and the land of Zion shall be
turned back into their own place, and the earth shall be like it was in the days before
it was divided, and the Lord, even the Savior shall stand in the midst of His people, and shall
reign over all flesh.
Pretty powerful.
There's our scripture that relates to those verses.
The reality though, is all of this destruction
is actually preparing the earth for the millennial reign.
So we're just gonna rearrange some things
so that when Jesus comes, the geography
is going to be ready for him to work.
Even so, what's interesting here is the minions of Babylon still are not going to repent, but rather they curse God.
They are so hard-hearted, it's amazing. So the question we ask is, how can people become so hard? And now we turn to chapter 17 that answers the question. Here we look at the culprits who bring on the unmitigated horror, verses 1 and 2 introduce
lackeys. And there came one of the seven angels which had the seven vials and talked with me,
saying unto me, come, either I will show the the judgment of the great horror that sit upon the
many waters and with whom the kings of the earth
That committed fornication and the inhabitants of the earth have been made drunk with the wine of her fornication
He's carried away sees the woman and he also sees her steed
He sees the seductive courtesan and the mount that she rides
Care we take a look symbolically of those destructive forces that have brought the horror of chapter 15 into being.
We find it's a two-part being. It is the courtesan who rides the beast. She can be equated with the false profitor, the Lamb with two horns.
The monster that comes out of the earth, she is the propaganda minister. She's the one who gives the philosophy or the
false theology that promises salvation. Follow me, I will give you salvation. This is what
makes her so seductive as she promises that a person can do whatever he or she wants and
get away with it. That salvation is free and so on. The image of the end is this two-part person. So the woman the court
isn't provides the muscle and the beast, the powers and the organization that supply the muscle.
Versus three through six describe her. She is rich, cocky, and immoral. And she has a title. Verse five,
her title is Mystery Babylon the Great, the mother of our
let's and abominations.
The earth, as you're aware, ancient Greek does not space between words and it has no
punctuation marks.
And therefore, we can reinterpret some of these things.
This particular one, I would interpret a desk and upon her head, a named written mystery, namely Babylon, the great, what
the text is saying is, I'm going to reveal to you the mystery.
I'm going to show you what she really is this mystery.
And it has to be disclosed.
I remember Mysterion, the Dreadquard, doesn't mean something, the tale of the murder and
so on.
But rather, it is that which human reason cannot come
to understand, therefore it has to be revealed. The world cannot see what she is, so John
has explained the mystery. Now we're going to tell you what she really is and what she's
really all about here are titles.
Hugh Nibbli notes, Babylon like Zion is a type. If Zion is wherever the celestial order prevails, Babylon
is the accumulation of worldly powers where writ happens. Through the ages that power has actually
accumulated in such world centers as ancient Babylon. Indeed, Babylon is nothing but the inverse
image of Zion. As Zion is God's kingdom on the earth, Abel and his Satan's inner place by his rules. But do not picture this earthly
counterpart of hell. That's the end of Nibbli's quote. Now, I'm picking up with
myself. Do not picture this earthly counterpart of hell as C. S. Lewis says,
as one of those sorted dens of crime that Dickens so loved to paint, it is not
done only in concentration camps or labor camps.
In those we see its final result, but it is conceived and ordered, moved, second,
mined, and carried, incline, carpeted, warmed, and welded offices like quiet men with white collars and cut fingernails,
and smooth, shaving cheeks who never afterays their voices.
That's from the screw tape letters.
I think that's just a beautiful description.
So Babylon promotes the greatest kind of immorality.
God created people to be ultimate.
And God said, only people are to be loved.
Everything else is to be used. From the doctrine of Covenant, I've given things
to gladden the eyes for sale, for smell, for raiment, for house, everything. And I
want you to use them up. Now, I don't want you to rape the earth. You take care of
the earth. But I've given you all of this, I want you to enjoy it. But I do not
want you to love it. Only people are to be loved. The Babylon turns all that upside down, and therefore it
causes people to love things instead of people and worse, to use people in order to get things.
to use people in order to get things. Let's go over to chapter 18.
We'll come back that I just want to notice
what is it the Babylon's got?
Okay, what's out there?
Verse 12, she has merchandise of gold and silver
and precious stones and pearls.
So there's your jewelry business.
Fine linen and purple and silk and scarlet.
There's your clotheers and all fine wood and all manner of vessels of ivory and all manner of vessels of most precious wood grass and iron and marble.
There's your housing industry, cinnamon and odors and ointments and frankincense. There's your perfume and cosmetics industry.
industry, wine and oil and fine flour and wheat and beasts and sheep. There's your food industry and horses and chariots. There's your transportation industry and then this one and slaves and
souls of men. That last can be also read as people as chattel. So she sells people. What she does is she plays by Satan's rules.
If we go over to the Pearl of Great Price, Moses 5, we find out that Satan swears unto
Cain that he would do according to Cain's commands.
And he says, and all these things were done in secret.
And Cain said, truly, I am Mayan, the master of the great secret, that I am Mayhan the master of the Great Secret that I may murder and get gain, wherefore,
Cain was called Master Mayhan and he glory in his wickedness. The secret that Satan caught Cain
was how to turn life, especially human life into property. That is the great secret. People are viewed not as assets, but as commodities. And there's something that
can be bought, sold, used up, and discarded. Boy, you can imagine how God would fill about that when
people do that to his children, his love, John. Yeah. Let's talk about this for just one second
Richard. If that's okay, I have frequently, frequently told my students exactly what you're saying here that people
are not objects.
When I go to my garage and pick up a hammer, I don't think about that hammer's past or
its future.
I'm just going to use this hammer and when I use it, I'll throw it away and buy a new
one because it is an object.
But how terrible to treat a human being
as an object, to not worry about its past or its future, where it came from and where he or she is
going. That is the basis of the entire pornography industry is people are objects. People are objects
to be used and moved on to the next thing. Babylon is
everywhere. That's the point. Anyplace where somebody is willing to turn
human life for profit. A couple of times we've already encountered, I believe in
the book for Revelation, they will make merchandise of you. Isn't that a phrase
that we've seen last couple of weeks that you will be bought and sold. I was
teaching some of the latter chapters
in the book Mormon the other day when Marona, I takes over for his father, Mormon in Mormon chapter
eight and says, I speak unto you as if you were present yet you're not, but Jesus Christ has
shown you unto me and I know you're doing. And as my class is he going to say, you guys are great, you're awesome, you're doing so well. No, that's not what he says. That's right.
Speaking of turning people into this verse comes about five verses later, Mormon 839,
why do ye adorn yourselves with that which hath no life?
And yet suffer the hungry and the needy and the naked and the sick and the afflicted.
If I could add three words
to the book of Mormon, I might put right here, who have life to pass by you and notice them not.
And like Hank was saying, you're treating things like people and you're treating people like
things. And that sounds like what we're getting at here in the list you read.
Yes. Slaves and souls of men at the end of verse 13.
I wanted to read this to both of you as we've just been talking about this woman of chapter
17, this immoral woman who in my mind she represents both sexual immorality, idolatry.
I think Stephen Robson called those the twin abominations of the of the Old Testament.
This is from Kristen Jensen, a advocate against the pornography industry.
She says, people were created to be loved.
Things were created to be used.
The reason why the world is in chaos is because things are being loved and people are being used.
Richard, that's exactly what you said.
Using people as things underlies the degradation of pornography. The objectification of people is one of the major emotional and psychological harms of pornography use. Why is it so bad to
objectify human beings? Because when people become things in our mind, they're no longer subject
to moral
or ethical boundaries. I can kick a rock, throw it against a wall, crush it with a sledgehammer,
and I don't feel bad about it. The rock isn't alive or sentient. There seems to be no
end to the hurtful, violent, and repulsive ways that human beings can be used when they
are portrayed as objects. She goes on a little bit later and says,
objectification takes away human qualities
and adds the qualities in an object.
They don't speak, have feelings or make choices,
so people are less likely to relate to,
understand or be sensitive toward the person being shown.
When humans begin to objectify other humans,
we lose part of our humanity and diminish our
divinity to love and care for others. She talks about a young girl who became
involved in viewing pornography and then came to her parents about it and she
said a big part of this young girl's therapy consisted of rehumanizing the
people, seeing people as someone's daughter or son, someone's niece or cousin,
someone's best friend.
Pornography is damaging in so many ways, but decreasing our humanity, our empathy for
another's pain and our ability to love may be the worst.
One way to help our children is to teach them that people have feelings and that people
don't want to be treated unkindly or used.
I think that draws me to doctrine covenants, right? On the worth of souls is great in the sight of God.
Not the worth of things is great in the sight of God. It's the worth of souls. Some of us treat our cars or our phones better than
our children or our spouse. And Richard, I just love what you've done here. This woman of chapter 17,
isn't she almost Satan's economy? Babylon's economy? Yeah. Everything's for sale.
Babylon, by the time John is writing this, is no longer the cultural commercial center that it was during Babylonian captivity.
Yeah, five, six hundred years before. It remains as a symbol of that, and that's why he's using that word.
Yes. His Jewish audience are very attuned to the Old Testament, and the enemy in the Old Testament is Babylon. Babylon is the one that got the Jews.
They were in captivity to Babylon.
And therefore they have a horror against Babylon because they know what she is capable of.
And therefore this imagery, even though Babylon the city has long passed its prime, nonetheless
for the Jews, it was a powerful, powerful symbol.
Wonderful. And it still is powerful powerful symbol. Wonderful.
And it still is today.
Oh yeah.
We sing it all the time.
Oh Babylon, oh Babylon, we bid thee farewell.
What's the other one?
Babylon, the great is falling.
If you're ever bored, read the Bible dictionary definition of Babylon and read the
three hundred and thirty-five foot tall walls and the hanging gardens and the.
What was the story? Was it...
It was like President Kimmel or somebody went there to just see Babylon and he said,
well, I saw what was left of it. There was some way.
Yes, that's it.
We've got moms and dads out there trying to have come follow me with their children.
I'm anticipating kids going, mom, what's fornication, mom, what's a horror, mom, what's...
I'm glad that we're
talking about this because we could just say this is a time when people are treating other
people like things. That could answer that if you wanted to simplify it for moms and dads.
Oh, I really like that. Back to our story then versus eight through 13 described the beast. Is this chapter 17 still Richard? Yes,
uh-huh. The various people, rulers, etc. that are going to be part of her kingdom. It mentions to
the seven mountains. This is in verse nine. The seven heads are the seven mountains on which the
woman's siteth. And therefore a lot of people speculated that might be Rome.
And Rome is the equivalent of Babylon, but I don't object to that idea, but the seven mountains could'd you like? No, this is the one that I like to know the most about. But for me, what I see John
doing here is just simply showing us Christ trans-temporal kingdoms that are going to have
effect through this entire time. These various symbols show thatus 14 through 18 hold a surprise because it
witnesses the destruction of Jerusalem. What is interesting is who destroys
her verse 16 in the Ten Horns, which saw saws upon the Beats these shall hate
the poor and shall make her desolate and make it and shall eat her flesh and burn
her with fire. Boy, talk about going down cannibalism.
These people really ate her.
But of course, these people who are full of hate.
Anyway, these are nasty people who've been betrayed.
She promised them that they would have everything.
And now everything is being taken away from in their anger.
They turn around and they mutilate her. She is going
down and she is going down hard. Richard is this evil turning on evil. Remember Satan has lost
in chapter 16, he's lost his kingdom. He could no longer keep it and therefore it is now getting
out of hand. This is where the whole thing implodes. The verse 14 here is important because it shows that
God is actually the one who's driving everything that is going on during this period, which then brings
us to chapter 18, which is an account of the total destruction of Babylon. Chapter 18 is composed of two pieces by angels. What's interesting is both of these
are Kant songs. They follow Old Testament Kant songs. They really get at Babylon why
she is destroyed and the power behind her seduction. Verse 4 is we have another interlude. And I
heard another voice from heaven crying, come out of her, my people, that ye do not purate,
of her sins,
and that ye receive not her plagues.
Again, this little aside,
where there's an appeal to the reader,
the saints,
to come out,
lever,
and why?
John's writings reveal a very unpleasant scenario.
The courtesan is first threatened
by the prospect of hunger
and famine. Following John's model, there is good reason for nature disallows crops either
to be planted or grown. Reflect on chapter 8, disallows crops either to be planted or to
grow. Huge economic downturns cause hyperinflation and monetary collapse.
People lose billions in wealth.
Further, supply lines are disrupted and foodstuffs do not flow as a result.
Global hunger and famine follow.
Conditions are different now than they were 75 to 100 years ago.
Then many people lived on the land and could therefore e-catalibbing.
But that is not the case today. Many dwell in huge megalopolises and must rely
wholly on the local stores for their goods. But what happens when there are no goods?
In addition, what happens when the restraining forces of society, the police force, can no longer operate. What happens when untamed and unholy people are left to run free?
Riots and losing have happened at the best of times.
What will happen in the worst?
The image is horrible beyond imagination, but the end result will be Babylon's rising
smoke and the ashes of the bodies of all those who will not
flee from her. So she's coming down hard. Verses 6-8 tell the saints you ought to have no mercy on her.
She brought this on herself. Therefore she deserves everything she gets. Verses 9- 19 are the response of her lovers to her fall.
She's got seven sets of lovers, not one of them, come to a rescue, even attempt to come
to a rescue.
They all stand afar off, and they lament because she's falling, but they're not going to
lift a finger in order to help her.
King's merchants and sea traders all lament.
Each has a special reason for sorrow, the kings lament because they have lost their mistress.
She who provided them with direction, force, power, finances, and great satisfaction.
The merchants weep and mourn because they have suddenly lost their markets, and their overstocked
wares have become worthless.
Finally, the sailors cast dust on their heads, and weep and well because they have suddenly
lost the bazaars that fed the insatiable appetite of Babylon's acolytes, and because these shipments
are now worthless.
Verses 20-24 are the great rejoicing of the righteous over the fall of Babylon.
It should be noted that it was not because, and this is an important point,
let me, um, riches are not the problem.
So it should be noted that it was not because Babylon possessed great wealth
that God moved against her.
It was because of her profligate use of it,
coupled with the arrogance it brought,
because she trusted in it and put
full faith in the security, a set that it was supposed to bring, she practiced an acute
form of idolatry. It was this practice which she refused to abandon that raised God's
eye, resulting in her quick, painful demise. Thus for all the power, strength, and
solidity she evidenced, her amazingly rapid fall demonstrates how fragile and
powerless she was all along. One of the real ironies in this thing is all of that
wealth, all of the goods that the merchants had and so on have now become worthless, but they are
worse than worthless because they're now stuck with them, and they either have to harbor them,
or they have to pay to have them shipped off and removed. They really get hit by the fall of Babylon.
I was looking at the last verse. Inher was found the blood of the prophets and of saints,
and of all that were slain upon the earth.
So there's a little bit of penalty adversity.
I mean, coming here, and it also kind of tells us we won't completely escape.
Some of the tribulation is at an assumption I can make, seeing that.
It's not even an assumption.
There's twice in the book of Revelation, you've covered both of these already, where it
says, look, here is the patience of the saints.
Those who are destined to prison are going to go to prison, but be patient.
Know that by and large, the corporate church is going to get through.
I will move with power, and therefore, even individuals will be protected.
But we're going through a painful period. Just know we're going to go through a painful period.
I really was touched by verse four. I heard a voice from heaven. So before Babylon falls,
there's the call to the people. You can get out of there.
Come out of her, my people, that you be not partakers of her sins, that you receive not of her sins that you receive not of her plagues. I would not be grateful to my heritage if I didn't
mention it. And I think my uncle, Greg McDonough, up in Salt Lake, would get after me if I didn't mention
my great, great grandfather, Richard Smith, who wrote the hymn, Israel Israel God is calling. I mean,
you can almost hear it in the background of these chapters. Israel, Israel, God is calling, calling the from lands of woe.
Babylon, the great is falling.
God shall all her towers or throw.
So what should you do?
Right, John?
Come, design, come to Zion, over and over.
Israel, Israel, can't sell linger, still in errors, gloomy ways, come to Zion.
So I really appreciate that.
But here this woman wouldn't, Nephi color the great and spacious building.
Richard, it's coming down.
This entire economy is coming down and you can get out before it comes down.
What did Nephi say?
Great was the fall thereof.
I think that's what you're mentioning here, aren't you Richard? You're saying,
Yes.
This whole thing is coming down.
Yeah, it's going to come down. It's going to come down fast, fast.
So we better be prepared.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
podcast.