Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Revelations 6-14 Part 1 • Dr. Christopher Blythe • Dec 11 - Dec 17
Episode Date: December 6, 2023Have you wondered how to interpret and apply Revelation 6-14? Learn how Jesus has already won the battle against sin and death as you explore this enigmatic passage with seasoned scholar Dr. Christoph...er Blythe.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/vOPd6S3Xf3sInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYPlease rate and review the podcast!00:00 Part 1–Dr. Christopher Blythe00:28 Review of last week’s episode03:29 Angels and Seerstones04:46 Overview of Revelation 6-1407:48 The Lamb and the Throne Room09:41 The Four Horsemen16:01 The Roman Empire and John’s audience17:25 Martyrs 21:53 Seventh Seal25:02 A bittersweet book28:01 144,000 as a symbol30:45 Using the Old Testament (Hebrew Bible) as a key 36:04 Blood washing robes white39:08 John shares a personal story about the Provo Temple 40:37 President Nelson on temple attendance46:07 Great and Terrible49:15 Abinadi and two prophets54:07 Eucatastrophe and Handel’s Messiah59:16 His kingdom to come1:00:32 End of Part I–Dr. Christopher BlytheThanks to the followHIM team:Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignAnnabelle Sorensen: Creative Project ManagerWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my conquering cohost John, by the way. Welcome, John. We are back for another week of Follow Him.
Thank you, Hank. If I could conquer your cold, I would send you something, but you sound great a little bit deeper.
Yes, I do have a cold. I think this is the first time in three years that I've had a cold when we've recorded.
But the show must go on. That's right. John, we are in the book of Revelation again this week.
Last week we were in chapters one through five. We did an introduction with Dr. Frederick and went
through chapters one through five. What did you learn? What I remembered was him talking about how
we have to be careful. And I think he used the word
responsible and how we interpret these. One of the things I remember hearing Richard Draper
talk about was maybe that John the Revolator put these things in code. So we wouldn't mess
with them, you know, called apocalyptic. And so that they would stay. But then it all
puts up to so many interpretations. But I remember that idea of being careful and responsible with it.
Yeah, I really liked towards the end. We did a description of the Savior. If you remember we talked about the lion.
John hears about a lion, but he turns and it's not a lion. It's a lamb. A lamb that had been slain.
What an interesting way to describe the Savior using these beautiful symbols.
John, we're joined today by a wonderful scholar, Dr. Chris Blythe.
We're taking on the next section of Revelation, chapter 6 through 14.
Are you looking forward to anything? What are we going to hear about?
Absolutely. This is a section full of symbols, just like you said, Hank.
And symbols that are designed to reveal.
We're going to talk about
symbols that many Latter-day Saints will know a little bit about. We're going to talk about
the seven seals, the 144,000, the woman in the wilderness, even a figure that sometimes people
call the Antichrist. All of that is wrapped up into this section through it. There's a lot of
powerful passages about how the saints
can follow Christ, even when things get really, really difficult. Fantastic. I am looking forward
to this. John, as I was looking through these chapters, I thought, I definitely need a guide.
It's going to be fun to have Chris with us. He's new to our audience. We haven't had him on follow
him before. So, John, I think we need to learn about it. Absolutely. Dr. Christopher Blithe is an assistant professor in the English department at Brigham Young University. He's a scholar
of American religion with a specialty in Latter-day St. History and Folklore. He got his PhD in American
religious history from Florida State University in 2015. Before that, received a master's screen
history at Utah State University and bachelor's Degrees in Religion from Utah State University and Anthropology from
Texas A&M University. He worked as a historian and documentary editor for the
Joseph Smith papers for a few years. He was also a research associate at the
Neal A Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship at VYU and
co-editor for the Journal of Mormon History. He wrote a book called Terrible
Revolution, Latter-day Saints in the American Apocalypse. It was published by
Oxford University Press and he started a podcast this summer called Angels
and Sear Stones, which Hank we've heard is wonderful. So we're really glad to
have you here.
Dr. Chris.
Oh, thank you so much.
Really appreciate that.
This is gonna be great.
Angels and sear stones.
I just subscribed to the podcast, Chris.
What am I looking forward to when I listen to these episodes?
Every episode is commentary for me and my wife,
but most of the episodes really focused
around dramatized stories from the saints. Each episode is a different theme. You can learn about stories
about Maroni or people who talk to their children as spirits before they're born. And then
we analyze it. Okay. Does that fall under the umbrella of folklore? Absolutely. Folklore
means stories people tell. Stories people tell.
Informal stories that we pass by word of mouth.
Wow.
Chris, has there been a moment in your academic career we went,
okay, that might be the pinnacle.
That might be the best story I've ever heard.
Because anything come to mind?
Our last episode was on stories of the Savior and the temple.
And some of those stories are
word of mouth. We're not getting all these things at general conference. So sometimes
we get them a hundred years later from a descendant. It's really family stories I love, friend.
In this podcast of yours, do you delve into, is this true? Is it not true? Or do you just
say, hey, look, here's the story. If it's a dangerous story, then we might question
it. But for the most part, I just want these stories to sit there. I want people to be
proud of being Latter-day Saints. I want us to delve in and say, Hey, this is our culture.
Stories are really important part of that. Now, that's fantastic. Chris, let's jump into our
lesson today. Revelation 6 all the way through 14. You come highly
recommended by your peers. How do you want to start? What kind of lens are we
going to put on as we go through these chapters? Both of what you and John said
about these chapters are really important. Do we need a guide? Are these symbols
kind of difficult? Joseph claimed he told us that this was a plain book.
Is this supposed to be easy to understand text?
If I can be personal for a second,
I was a 12 year old Episcopelian boy
when I first read these chapters in the book of Revelation.
I feel really blessed to be on here talking about them
because these were the chapters that really made me puzzled
in 1993.
In fact, I wrote a list of questions from them
and I brought them to my priest and I asked him,
what do I do with these 104,000?
What's the tribulation?
What is this angel here?
And at the end of our meeting, he said, Chris,
I don't think this is the most important scripture.
Like I'm not sure she even be in the Bible. They troubled me as a 12-year-old. I met sister
missionaries the next year as a 13-year-old. They gave me a copy of the book of
Mormon. In 1 Nephi, I found that this book was really important. Not only is
Nephi giving us a reading of the book of Revelation in his beautiful vision of his father's dream,
but there's a passage that says,
John's foredained to give this revelation.
I believe the restoration is a guide
to understand the book of Revelation.
And there's four things as we go in
that I think would provide our lens.
Certainly the book itself, but we have
Dr. and Covenant 77. This is Joseph's revelation in 1832 that offers answers to questions he had,
or those that were with him had, particularly about these chapters. We also have the Joseph Smith translation, which gives us a beautiful
explanatory retelling of chapter 12. Certainly we have first Nephi, and we also have Joseph
Sermons, living in the moment we do where Joseph Smith papers are so available. If any of your listeners
go and type revelation or different symbols, 104,000, any of the things are
interesting, you're going to find that Joseph actually spoke a lot about it. This
material meant a lot to him. I want to look through the lens of the restoration
because that's really what brings these chapters open. That's important to
recognize what lens we're bringing to the text. We're not going to look at this
as a new testament scholar, might,
but let's bring the restoration and take a look at it.
That is right. Back in chapter 4, we're in the Throne Room vision. The book of Revelation
is sometimes wrongly called the book of revelations, but that's not really that misleading because
it actually is a series of revelations that John's going to have. And the throne room moment, John's brought there.
He sees the angels around the throne of God.
He sees the Lamb, which is of course the symbol of Christ.
He sees the resurrected saints, beautiful imagery,
and the sort of temple imagery, the Ark of the Covenant
is there.
All those things are the key, because we
don't have those descriptions in chapter six,
but that's where we're at still.
There was this book, the sealed book, seven seals, and the lamb is worthy to open it, and the seals open one at a time.
In chapter six is the book of Revelation that is more influential in art and
popular culture renderings of the last days and so on than these seals. Joseph tells us in section
77 starts out verse 7, what are we to understand by the seven seals with which it was sealed?
We are to understand that the first seal
contains the things of the first thousand years
and the second also of the second thousand years
and so on until the seventh.
We're being shown world history.
This is really important as we think of this,
but I also think Joseph at the end of his life
is speaking about these events
as last days experiences as well.
As we talk about each seal, these are also sort of a second fulfillment in the last days.
We're also going to have situations that are predicted here that are going to come forth
then, which will make sense as we go on since the other chapters actually detail those.
The first seal is the conqueror. This image, we call them the Four
Horsemen. They come one at a time for the first four seals, and the first one is that the
wonderful conquering horsemen, it says, and I saw him behold a white horse, and he that sat
on him, had a bow and a crown was given unto him and he went forth
conquering and to conquer and then the next seal there's a red horse and it's a symbol of warfare
and then the third is a symbol of famine, black horse and then the fourth, it's a pale horse. It's an image of death.
It tells us hell will follow after it.
Pretty scary images of these four horsemen.
There's great art on this.
In fact, I chose one when I did my book,
Terrible Revolution, one of the covers,
is an image that Joseph Smith had in his office
of these four horsemen.
An image that he thought a lot about. The first horse, if we take Joseph
literally and say this is a symbol of the opening of this world, is really kind of mysterious,
something that conquers. I really wrestled with what Bruce Armaconky said about this, but I actually
think it's really insightful. He said that this is a symbol of Enic. My first thought was, wait a second,
the majority of readers of this book don't have access to the Bucamosis that I have.
Is that really an effective symbol for the Lord to use? But just think of this.
Here is a symbol of conquering in the beginning and who is other than John, who's a greater conquer.
And that's Enoch, who actually found a way to show that there's a way to create a society on earth
under Christ that's going to live despite all the temptation and all of the rough things we're
going to read about in the book of Revelation, but actually have that symbol immediately of someone
who conquered. When people think about this figure in art, sometimes it's portrayed as Jesus Christ himself. And I like that. Unicco's course
is symbol of the Savior. The second and third horses, this war and famine, describe
hardships that people faced in the past and of course continue to face. And then
something happens with the fourth horse.
The fourth horseman is a symbol of death.
I mean, this is a scary symbol.
It's a symbol that shows up again in a passage
in the doctrine of covenants that is really mysterious to me
until I understood this.
It's section 61, about the destroyer on the water.
We're told he's riding on the water.
Well, why is he riding?
I've wondered this forever.
Finally, when I was working for the Justice of my Papers, I realized this was a reference
to the destroying angel or to death and how to get around.
According to John, he gets around on a horse. He rides. He became
a symbol of what was going on in the water there. It's important to know that in the Dr.
of Covenants, throughout revelations of our time periods, often drawing on symbols, including
in our most sacred place right at the temple, are drawing on symbols that are first pointed out
here in the book of Revelation. I remember hearing Richard Draper talk about the color white, which we normally think of as
purity. We have the white cloth at the sacrament table and the baptismal clothes and temple clothes
and book of Revelation talks about walking with Jesus in white. He said that to John the Revolator
it could mean victory. I really loved the idea of going to the temple in a victorious
white, maybe like Enic, being conquering the wickedness of the earth, that idea of victory over
temptation through repentance. Does that fit? Oh, absolutely. I really do believe the book of
Revelation is the backdrop to so many symbols in the temple. Remember, we've
already started out in chapter 1 being told that Christ makes us kings and priests, victorious
role both over political situations. We're going to find those are really tough here and religious
situations that we're going to find are really tough at this moment. And then that white robe is given
to those kings and priests later on that we'll talk about
chapter 7.
So yeah, absolutely.
These are those who have overcome.
Hank knows sometimes I see lyrics for hymns in some of these verses.
The one that comes to mind is all the raid and spotless white.
We will dwell mid truth and light.
And I think about white being victory. It sounds
cool. So NASCAR's the checkered flag, but in revelation, it's victorious white, which I like
that. I think that's wonderful. Thank you.
Chris, let me ask you, if I'm looking at chapter six and I see conquest, war, famine,
and pestilence, it feels to me a little like junior high.
Yeah.
Yeah.
What's your statement about junior high?
I quoted you the other day, Hank.
I just think it's a terrible idea.
Junior high, let's take all the most insecure people in society, put them in the same building
together for six or seven hours.
It's like an emotional hunger game and see who survives. Yeah, who comes out with a self-esteem.
It's an okay for me to think in the history of the earth there has been conquest, war,
famine, poverty, and pestilence, and death. The difficulties of mortal life, and how overwhelming life can be.
When I look at the news and I see conquest, war, disease, death, I'm like, ah, someone
needs to save me from this.
Absolutely.
A lot of Christians want to read these symbols as all last days symbols, but we're going
to find that this is really our moral existence.
John's going to see the fall of Satan. He's going to see the great apostasy. He's going to see all
these things that represent our time here on earth. Yes, let's think of these passages as how
they affect us. And certainly we are facing in the world today all four of these things.
I think of John's original readers too. This has to be all around them.
Living in the Roman Empire, Nick talked a little bit about this last week was living as a Christian in the Roman Empire. You're in the minority. Which leads us to that fifth seal. The fifth seal is,
and I'll read this out loud, it's quite the image. Now remember, we're in the throne room, and this is God's throne room.
I imagine this is really large.
When he'd opened the fifth seal,
I saw under the altar, the Ark of the Covenant,
the souls of them that were slain for the Word of God
and for the testimony which they held.
And they cried with a loud voice saying,
how long O Lord, holy and true,
dust thou not judge and avenge our blood on them
that dwell on the earth. This is an image of these martyrs. Now, we think of them because it's the
fifth seal is these Christian martyrs and the thousand years after Christ they're reigning
a neuro and others who persecuted the early saints, but they're asking they're saying, hey,
when's it time for the second coming? When are we going to have that turn of power?
Right now, the God of this world is Satan.
When can we turn it and have the Savior here?
Well, yeah, that's verse 10.
How long, oh Lord, holy and true, just thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that
dwell on the earth.
Yeah.
That sounds a lot like section 121.
Joseph Smith in Liberty Jail.
Absolutely.
And white robes were given unto every one of them.
And it was said unto them that they should arrest
yet for a little season until their fellow servants also
and their brethren that should be killed as they were
should be fulfilled.
This is a pretty scary image.
It's an expectation of martyrdom. One of the early stories that's associated
with the martyrdom of the Prophet Joseph is that while he was in Carthage Jail, he sent out a
request for the saints to read chapter 6 of the book Revelation. I don't know if that actually
happened. This is a story that circulatedated, that Joseph did this. But nearly Saints associate this passage with Joseph.
Here is the idea that the Lord,
there's going to be a certain number of martyrs,
and they hoped Joseph was going to be the last of these.
It was the final waiting moment,
because that's kind of what the passage is saying.
We're waiting for that last martyr, and then it's time.
We see this idea of martyrdom
show up all over the Book of Mormon, certainly the Dossian Covenants. As the Book of Mormon has a
pattern, people get wicked, secret combinations starts, and what did the secret combinations do?
They kill the prophets, and it's then when they kill the prophets, that's God acts. 3511 happens after an era of
secret combination, but persecution of the prophets. And this is the same point being made here in
Revelation that before God can act, people have to be right-pid andiquity this moment has to occur.
The early saints wrote poetry about this moment. They talked about it a lot.
There's a great poet called the martyr's cry, which refers to this section here, Eliza Arsno wrote
one, probably people prattin others. And this image that we're waiting for what's gonna happen,
martyrdom is really important to the Latter-day Saints. As much as people want to imagine that
Latter-day Saints have a persecution complex,
we really haven't taken advantage of the stories that would make it, so we emphasize persecution.
We might talk about being judged, but we actually have a lot of saints who have been murdered
for their testimony of the gospel, not just Joseph and Hiram, but Joseph standing.
We have about eight or nine that were killed in the American South during the 1800s.
martyrdom is important.
It's not something we talk about in the church except for the experience of Joseph and the
Savior and maybe people in Acts.
But really, we kind of avoid those topics.
That's where John's leading this year, like pay attention.
martyrdom is something that's important and it's important to these people in John's time
because this might be what their life mission is,
the souls under the altar.
But it's something that we overlook,
but to the early saints,
particularly with reading Revelation
and the early saints of our dispensation,
this is something they could really identify with.
In fact, there was an expectation
that there would be a lot of early,
lotter day, St. Markers.
And one of the sermons after Joseph's death is a lot's been paid here
that we won't need to have a lot of martyrs.
But Joseph has this special role.
They imagined that he was the last or at least a really significant answer to this question, who are we
waiting for? We're going to learn that there's more martyrs coming in this chapter. That's
the fifth seal. The sixth seal goes on and talks about something that has not happened,
although in all of these, there's lots of speculation, but these are sort of cosmic events,
right? There's going to be a great earthquake. The sun's going to turn black.
The moon's going to become blood.
And the stars of heaven are going to fall.
And like a fig tree casting its untimely figs
when it's shaken in a mighty wind.
And here we have this moment where people are going
to want to hide, hide themselves in rocks, because they know it's judgment.
I remember the first time I read this, just imagining this scene of people in verse 16,
and they're going to hide in the mountains, and they're going to say to the mountains and rocks,
fall on us and hide us from the face of Him that sits on the throne,
and from the wrath of the Lamb, for the great day of His wrath has come,
and who shall be able to stand. This is such an image that people realize and wait a second.
What are we going to do now? Chapter 7 is going to tell us what happens next.
And I would imagine if we ended it, which chapter 6 there, there's not a lot of hope.
This is a lot of people that are absolutely hopeless. The seventh seal opens.
Remember, this is the beginning of the millennium. And in that, there's a silence in heaven.
People have debated what this silence means. And then there's some last events happening.
But what's really important about chapter seven is this conversation between angels.
chapter 7 is this conversation between angels. And verse 1, it says, And after these things, I saw four angels standing on the four corners of the
earth holding the four winds of the earth, that the winds shall not blow on the
earth, door on the sea, nor in any tree. And I saw another angel ascending from
the east, having the seal of the living God, and he cried with a loud voice to the four angels to whom it was given to hurt the earth in the sea.
Saying, hurt not the earth, neither the sea, nor the trees, till we have sealed the servants of our God in their foreheads.
This is a conversation, here we have four destroying angels, at least symbolic individuals who are positioned there to bring to past God's
judgments. And then a fifth angel shows up. This is a really mysterious passage, but fortunately,
doctrine coming at 77 breaks it down. If we go to verse 8, what are we to understand by the four
angels, spoken of in the seventh chapter in first verse of Revelation?
Answer, we are to understand that they are four angels,
sent forth from God, to whom has given power over the four parts
of the earth, to save life and to destroy.
These are they who have the everlasting gospel
to commit to every nation, kindred, tongue, and people,
having power to shut up the heavens,
to seal up unto life, or to cast down to the regions of darkness.
I like that there's something going on here earlier. They're not just destroying angels. These are they who have the everlasting gospel to commit to every nation, kindred tongue and people.
They're important. We don't know the identity of these four angels, but we do know the identity of this fifth angel. What
are we to understand? The angel is sending from the east, Revelation 7 and verse 2. We
are to understand that the angel is sending from the east is he to whom is given the seal
of the living God over the twelve tribes of Israel, wherefore he cried from the four angels,
having the everlasting gospel saying hurt not the earth until we've sealed the servants of
God in their foreheads. If you go down to the next verse, you'll receive it as the Elias,
who's going to restore all things. This is a special figure that's given a beautiful symbolic
title. I want to talk about those 104,000, but let's jump forward to chapter 10, because we're going to be told that this angel is actually
John.
At the end of chapter 10, John has a special ordinance performed for him in this vision.
Beginning in verse 8, chapter 10, John is going to do something that the prophet Isaiah
has done before.
He's going to be beckon to eat a book. And it's a bitter sweet book, verse eight. And the voice which I heard
from heaven spaken to me again and said, go and take the little book, which is
open the hand of the angel, which stand up upon the sea and upon the earth.
And I went into the angel, sat in to him, give me the little book. And he
sat in to me, take it and eat it up. And it shall make thy belly better.
But it shall be in thy mouth sweet as honey.
And I took the little book out of the angel's hand
and ate it up and it was in my mouth sweet as honey.
And as soon as I eat in it, my belly was bitter.
I wonder if this is John's translation.
Translation, it sounds really great to be immortal,
but it's probably really rough to bear the suffering
of the world as we read about the three-nate fights.
And he said unto me,
that must prophesy again before many peoples
and nations and tongues and kings.
So here John is getting his commission.
It's not just gonna be for your life here on earth.
It's gonna be something you're gonna do again.
Joseph describes this chapter when the divine
describes this chapter in section 77, verse 14, verse 14 is the question what is this little book?
And the answer is we are to understand that it was a mission and an ordinance for him to gather the tribes of Israel.
We hold this as a lius.
I remember right before we were told the lius was a name for that ascending angel from the, who as it is written must come and restore
all things. We don't really understand all of John the Revelators' role, what he's doing,
but there's a moment here that says he's going to be in charge of making sure people are
safe. The righteous are safe during this calamities that's going to happen. So stop the judgment before it happens. Let's take care of those
that the Father needs to do His work during this time. I see that Chris, Dr. Incovenants, section 77, verse 9,
who is the angel in chapter 7, verse 2, this is Elias, which has come to gather together the tribes of
visual and restore all things. And then if you go down, this is what you pointed
out, verse 14, same section, doctrine coming in 77, what's the little book as
eaten by John? This is the ordinance for him to gather the tribes of visual. And it
says it again, this is Elias, who as it is written, must come and restore all
things. Dr. Covenants 77 is the one that ties Revelation 7, 2 to Revelation 10, 9, 10, 10.
Did I get that right?
You have absolutely right.
This is John all of a sudden realizing, well, maybe he doesn't realize that Joseph realizes
that this angel is going to do this great work is none other than John who's watching it unfold
and who, as we know, my Nephi has been set apart to have this revelation himself to bring forth this book that we're reading.
Something happens, he needs a seal to be placed in the heads of his servants.
That's back in 7-3, right?
Yeah, we're jumping back to seventh. Chapter seven of Revelation is going to tell us
that a ceiling has to be placed in the servants of our God and their foreheads. And he hears the
number of them which were sealed. And it's 144,000. It's 12,000 from each tribe of Israel.
This should resonate with us. This is the restoration of the house of Israel in the last days.
People learning that they're Ephraim and that they're Vanessa and so on and so forth.
They're part of this restored house of Israel that the Apostle John is seeing.
104,000 we often talk about this symbolic number. As Latter of these saints were not really hung up on this being a specific
Group of people. I know Nick mentioned the Miller rights and others that have come up with all sorts of interpretations of what the 104,000 are
Joseph gives us some insights on it. I can remember the first
Richard Draper talk I ever saw he said the 104,000
Richard Draper talk I ever saw. He said, 104,000, these are the senior missionaries. We're going to have young missionaries and tell this point. And then because Joseph in
section 77 is going to tell us that these are high priests. Verse 11, what are we to
understand by the ceiling, the 144,000 out of all the tribes, 12,000 out of every
tribe? Says, we are to understand that those who are sealed are high priest, the 144,000 out of all the tribes, 12,000 out of every tribe.
Says we are to understand that those who are sealed are high priest ordained in the holy order of God to administer the everlasting gospel.
For there they who are ordained out of every nation,
can dread tongue in people by the angels to whom has given power over the
nations of the earth to bring as many as will come to the church of the
firstborn.
This clues us in, right?
So the 104,000 are people selected at this time.
They're going to be protected, but they got things to do.
They're high priests.
And they are, I mean, we don't really know exactly how this is working.
But when we describe them as missionaries, I think that's a fun way to gain the concept
of what they're doing.
They're going to go out in the middle of these events that we're going to see.
The events happening that the angels are going to be around about.
And they're going to administer the everlasting gospel just because these last days
events are occurring doesn't mean it's over.
That's going to happen later on next week's episode.
You'll have a scene where it says, may the wicked be wicked still, but this isn't the time.
We're going to have missionaries out there working really,
really hard, and God's specially preparing them.
So they can go to dangerous places and be A-OK,
just like John Wood. They're going to have power to bring as many as will come to the church
of the firstborn. That beautiful title for the Savior.
One tool that Nick gave us last week was to watch for
when John Harkins back to the Old Testament,
as he's writing, if you can pick up on some of these.
Well, there's a couple that I picked up
and I'll let either of you comment if you want to.
The idea of sealing the servants of God in their foreheads
brought me back to Deuteronomy 6
that talks about the frontlets, the Philacteries. You would write the scrolls of scripture and then
attach them to your forehead. And then Ezekiel 9 has something similar where Ezekiel, which is also
apocalyptic literature, this is Ezekiel 9.4, go through the
midst of the city, through the midst of Jerusalem, and set a mark upon the foreheads of the men,
that sigh and that cry for all the abominations that have done in the midst thereof. So it seems,
and again, I'm not can't go much further than this, but it seems that John is is harkening back to some of these old Jewish traditions of showing who you are by what is there between your eyes,
this physical phylactory.
Maybe it's symbolic here, but to the old, old testament Israelites, it was an actual item,
box on your forehead.
I love that.
When scholars describe this or church scholars do, they'll often compare it
to Mark's placed on non-Israelites about people who take whatever God there is and make
a mark about him on their foreheads. Yeah, I love that example of the flackers there.
This is representing who they are. It's right there in their minds and their essence of
who they are is going to have there in their minds and their essence of who they are,
is going to have the name of God written on it. Who's property? That idea of, oh,
absolutely, this is who they are. They're heirs of God. Joseph gets this as he interprets
it to the saints. He doesn't really speak about this much from the time 1832, when we have his
revealed statement about the meaning of the 104, thousand and then after he begins to reveal temple ceremonies in
Navvoo
Joseph begins to reference this passage and he does so on several occasions
We're fortunate to have lots of copies of Joseph's sermons through this period. And I'm just going to read you a couple
quotes from different sermons. Here's one from August 1843. He says in this image,
there's covenant sealed on the foreheads of the parents, secured the children from falling that
they shall all sit upon thrones as one with the Godhead, joint heirs of God with Jesus Christ.
He sees a symbol of this seal in the forehead as literally the ceiling
that's being performed in temples.
February of 1844, he's going to say this as a journal that the selections of
persons to form that number had already commenced.
Wondell Mace is going to say quoting Joseph Smith,
he's going to say, pray that you may live to go into the temple
and be sealed in your forehead.
Another sermon from Joseph, the necessity of the temple
that the servants of God may be sealed in their foreheads,
that the four angels would not be permitted
to destroy the earth till this is done.
We don't need to talk what that means
specifically to the ordinances, but this is temple stuff.
This is how this beautiful, you know, as a kid,
as I was reading this passage, what does that mean?
You know, I imagine an angel showing up
on my bedroom or something.
But a angel did show up at bedroom.
It was Maroni, right?
Right.
The authorities been revealed.
The specific hunter and fork for a thousand
who are selected are going
to be given power and they're pre-stood, but the ordinance that's sealing is something
that I think is going on. It's been revealed. It's something that's occurring already. And
maybe Joseph Misspoke, when he said the 104 of a thousand were already being selected
in his day, but the method of that selecting, that number by which these 104,000
would be selected from, was a current.
It's really important to see that these figures are temple related.
As we read about new names and stones and dressing and whites, John wants us thinking about
the temple.
And certainly, the father does the day as he's revealed how we should be reading these
passages.
Chris, it's also fascinating to me in chapter 7 that the tribes of Israel are listed.
Judah, in verse 5, Ruben, Gad, Asher, Nuftoly, Manassas, Simeon, Zebulon, Benjamin, Joseph.
To me, it seems all encompassing that all of Israel is involved. Except for Dan, which is an interesting
side note. I had a friend who was identified as Dan in his patriarchal blessing and he really hurt
that Dan wasn't listed in this passage. Like, what does that mean? Am I not a good person?
And I think it is meant to be all encompassing. I think this is meant to be that God is restoring his people. Every tribe is counted. That's right. John
and Dan met later and he's like, Hey, I'm sorry. Did I come here? I couldn't remember
how to spell that. Yeah. That's right. I want to just point out verse 14, John, we talked about this last week with the strange symbol of
robes being washed in blood, but being made white.
Yeah, it's interesting that of all the references to blood throughout the scriptures, being stained
with blood. But when we're talking about
the Savior's blood, it's a cleanser, which speaks of his mission as the toning one.
Though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow, though they be red like crimson.
They shall be as wool. John is harkening back to the Lamb from chapter 5, here at the end of chapter 7. Let's go to verse 15.
Therefore, are they before the throne of God and serve him day and night in his temple,
need that siteth on the throne, shall dwell among them. They don't hunger, they don't thirst.
Verse 17, and the Lamb, which is in the midst of the throne, shall feed them. So we're still in the
throne room, or at least we return to the throne
room, and God shall wipe away all the tears from their eyes. Well, there's at least at the end
of chapter 7 there, there's something that has a non-bible scholar. I can at least pick up on that.
The Lord and His saincer together, they he's cleansed them and they are doing His work.
This is such an important parallel from what's going out there, going on outside,
where there's really peace in the throne room. This is a place where God is wiping away the
tears from his saint's eyes. And we're going to see eventually, next week, that's when the
millennium comes, this is something God is going to do for all of the saints, wiping the tears
from their eyes, removing suffering. As we read the
book of Revelation, particularly as we read the next two chapters, it's some hard reading. These are
verses that really focus on what the tribulations going to be like about things that are going to
happen, earthquakes, persecutions, terrible diseases. The reason I like the end of chapter seven is perhaps I don't know what all these chapters
mean to John's original first century audience.
As Chris is pointing out, here's the lens of the restoration on these chapters.
But for me personally, as I'm just reading through the book of Revelation, that speaks
to me the end of chapter seven.
These are they which came out of great tribulation,
washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the lamb.
They serve God in his temple.
God dwells among them. That's verse 15.
They don't hunger. They don't thirst.
The lamb, which is in midst of the throne, feeds them and leads them into the
fountains of living waters and God wipes away the tears from their eyes. I don't know what the 1st century saints would have felt with this,
but I can feel the power of that. While I'm in the middle of tribulation and difficulty and pain,
there are places like the temple that I can go to and have that peace, where I feel fed by the Lord. I feel my tears being wiped away.
I was a young single adult.
Can I need some answers?
And I went up to the Provo Temple
and I don't remember why, but it was closed.
Somebody in that little parking booth there
said, well, why don't you just go around the back
on the grounds?
And I did.
The way the Provo Temple is designed, you go back there. I could just hear the back on the grounds? And I did. And the way the provost temples designed you go back there,
that I could just hear the sounds of the city
and everything just go, I just completely disappear.
It reminded me of recently when President Ballard spoke
about if you can't go, just go to the grounds.
It's sacred ground.
And you can have a revelatory experience
on the grounds if you want.
Also, Chris and Hank, when I saw God show wipe away altiers from their eyes in verse 17,
and these which shall come out of great tribulation, just letting us know, it's going to be hard,
but there's hope. There's something wonderful at the end. God show wipe away altiers from their eyes.
I was like, wait a minute, I thought that was at the end of the book of Revelation. And I
saw the footnote. And yeah, it is. And listen to this in Revelation 214. And God,
which is pretty amazing, God Himself, God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.
And there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying. Neither shall there be
any more pain for the former things are passed away.
For the moms and dads out there trying to teach this, you can always focus on this hope and good
things to come. That beautiful verse, Revelation 214.
President Nelson said just recently, 2021, General Conference, he says, if you don't yet love to attend the temple, go more often,
not less.
Let the Lord through His Spirit teach and inspire you there.
I promise you that over time, the temple will become a place of safety, solace, and
revelation.
And then I feel like this quote fits Revelation 7 so well, whenever any kind of upheaval occurs
in your life, which sounds like the Four Horsemen, conquest and war and poverty and famine and
disease, death, whenever any kind of upheaval occurs in your life, the safest place to be
spiritually is living inside your temple covenants.
As you are true to your covenants made in the temple,
you will be strengthened by his power.
Doesn't that sound like verse 17?
The Lamb, which is in the midst of the throne,
shall feed them and lead them
onto living fountains of waters.
And God shall wipe away the tears from their eyes.
When spiritual earthquakes occur,
says President Nelson,
you will be able to stand strong
because your spiritual foundation is solid and immovable.
I don't know what the first century audience heard,
but to me, the end of chapter seven says,
have you been to the temple lately?
Have you made your appointment and gone in?
I think that's really powerful.
I lost my mother this summer.
My parents weren't members of the church,
and I can't imagine a greater sorrow
that I've experienced.
I'm still experiencing.
But the temple does.
It makes me feel closer to the Lord.
I know by keeping those covenants,
I was able to feel his presence in this moment
that everything wasn't going well.
And I think finding that
in the temple is a wonderful thing we can do. It's a thing he wants for us. Revelation
reminds us that. But the temple also brings a solace through its ordinances, including
work for the dead that it means a lot to me. As I think about wiping away tears right
now, those are the tears that I am grateful that he helps me wipe away,
and one day will completely, literally wipe away because of the ordinances of the temple.
That's awesome, Chris. It sounds like chapter 7. We've sealed the servants of God in their foreheds.
Now it seems to me, as I've read, this is where things get really dark. Is that right? Chapters eight and nine.
Yeah, we're going to have some angels with different judgments that they're going to
pour out on the earth, which is it gets a little dark there.
If someone says the book of Revelation is scary, they're probably talking about these
couple chapters.
Something that I think is important when we read revelations, one of the criticisms
of apocalyptic literature. Sometimes people imagine that the reason these stories are told or
these descriptions are given is because we're supposed to rejoice in the suffering of our fellow men.
And I don't think there could be anything less true.
Section 109 of the doctrine of covenants
is Joseph's dedication of the Kirtland Temple.
And it has a verse there that I'd like to read.
Section 109 gives us a lot of wonderful material
just like in temple dedications today,
the prayers about the building,
but it's also about the world.
It's about all sorts of things.
We're meeting together to pray with the prophet
or one of those he's selected to dedicate the building.
What I love in 109 is it's really the answer to this.
There have been people that read the book of Revelation
and think, this sounds great.
Let's get those bad guys. What Joseph says,
he says, he's praying similar to that prayer we saw in section 6, how long O Lord,
deliver thou O Jehovah, we beseech thee thy servants from their hands, those untruth generation,
he talks about, and cleanse them from their blood. But then in 43 it says, oh Lord, we didn't
light not in the destruction of our fellow men. Their souls are precious before the, but thy word must
be fulfilled. Help thy servants to say with thy grace assisting them, thy will it be done,
oh Lord, and not ours. And then he goes on and talks about this judgment that we're reading about
here.
It's really important to remember that our role is to share the gospel. Our role is to
never delight in the destruction of our fellow being. We're hoping that people repent.
We're hoping that people change. The Book of Revelation is the story of a world that's fallen
and how it's going to be redeemed. And that does mean, as we read on here,
that wicked governments are going to collapse, just like Daniel prophesied and Daniel 7,
all the thrones will fall. The world's going to get messy, and the reason it gets messy is so the
Savior can return and redeem it. Other things have to fall that a new situation
can be brought about.
That's really the key to apocalyptic literature.
Different people are gonna read it
and recognize different settings
and say, oh, this is that government room
in this case, toppling,
so that the Savior can come back
and bring forth a new room or a new Jerusalem, a redeemed
people.
When the Savior comes, the only way to contrast it is to talk about how awful and terrible
it is without him.
It's a great and terrible, great and terrible.
We're used to pointing that out in Isaiah.
We have these prophecies that come, the distractions and then the blessings.
And the book of Revelation functions really the same way. For most of our conversation today,
we're having God's work. God is preparing that great things can come even though distractions have
to happen. He's going to prepare John, he's going to prepare the honey and for a thousand. And then
we have to talk about some of the hardships that can occur. As we finish the book
or Revelation, we're going to see that contrast that these great things are going to be brought about,
particularly those last two chapters where the Savior himself, the Peruja, he's there with his people.
Let's jump to chapter 11. Here is a scene that is a beautiful type of certainly the Savior's life story told this way. Here we have
persecution of two witnesses of two prophets, messengers who are serving in Jerusalem.
We don't know the identity of these two great prophets, but the Lord tells us in section 77,
Dr. and Covenants, this time we're in verse 15, he says, what is it to be
understood by the two witnesses in the 11th chapter of Revelation? Answer,
they are two prophets that are to be raised up to the Jewish nation in the last
days at the time of the restoration
and to prophesy to the Jews after they are gathered
and have built the city of Jerusalem
and the land of their fathers.
So important to remember, the book of Mormon makes this clear
that the events of the last days have two main theaters,
two main capitals eventually,
the old Jerusalem and the New Jerusalem, the New
World and the Old World. And in this we're being told, here we are, Joseph explaining to
his American listeners. And we're focused on the Book of Mormon, right? We're focused
in 1832. We want to find where the New Jerusalem is going to be built. We're really focused
there. And now he's pulling us and saying, look, this section here isn't about us, might be us as witnesses. But this
is about the Jewish nation in the last days. This is before Orson Hyde gets sent over
to dedicate the Holy Land. We're already learning that things are going to occur there.
And this is a powerful chapter in chapter 11, these two witnesses, here it says,
I will give power unto my two witnesses, and they shall prophesy a thousand two hundred and three
score days, three and a half years, clove and sackcloth. These are the two olive trees and the two
candlesticks standing before the God of the earth. And if any man will hurt them, fire,
proceed out of their mouth and devour their enemies. And if any man will hurt them, he
must in this manner be killed. All right, this is a different sort of missionary work.
I think of the prophet of Benadaya, I have to give my message. This is what I'm doing.
You don't have power to hurt me until I've given my testimony. And this is what they're experiencing there.
They're facing a real persecution.
Eventually in the story, they're allowed to be killed
for seven.
And when they shall finish their testimony,
the beast that ascended out of the bottled spit
shall make war against them
and shall overcome them and kill them.
And their dead bodies shall lie in the street of the great city, which spiritually is called Sodom in Egypt, where our Lord was crucified. And people
are rejoicing. They're so excited that they're able to kill these two prophets that have caused
them a lot of trouble. And now we have a moment of triumph where two men who are bearing their testimony to witnesses, there is their resurrection.
They are literally brought back to life.
After three days and a half,
the spirit of life from God entered into them
and they stood upon their feet
and great fear fell upon them which saw them
and they had a great voice from heaven
saying unto them, come up hither
and they ascended up to heaven in a cloud
and their enemies be held them. I think this is the fulfillment of that prayer, the last martyrs
because now wrath is going to come. Now is the moment. The same hour, there's this incredible
earthquake in heaven. They know what's really happening, not what we're seeing on earth.
And in heaven, the seven angels sounded and there were great voices in heaven saying,
the kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms are Lord and of his Christ, and he shall
reign forever and ever.
This is the taking the power back, the great revolutionary, which is Jesus Christ restoring
the earth like it was before.
This is that turning point. It's very powerful.
Chris, I'm tying this back to chapter 6 when we were talking about those who had been slain
because of their testimonies and they're asking this question, how long oh Lord
until you avenge our blood on them that dwell in the earth and
He said rest a little season. So that was Revelation 6, 10, and 11.
And now you're tying that to chapter 11 when it's now time to avenge the blood of them.
Their brethren has to be called and brought there too. So these two are the last. Can you just
imagine this? That two martyrs go three days. Their bodies are defiled and then they're resurrected
in the presence of all their persecutors.
And I think that people are very aware
that they've done something wrong at this point.
Things are gonna change.
A lot of John's visions, they jump back and forth.
Just like Nephi, he's seeing a moment in history
kind of an overview. This is the sixth seal,
the seventh seal. People saying, let the mountains fall in us. Now we're turned back there in this
moment. We had kind of an overview and then we're digging deep again. We're zooming in again. The
temple of God was open in heaven and there was seen in his temple, the archivist testament,
and there were lightings and voices and thundering in earthquake in Great Hale.
And that's the end of a vision, at least a major component of a vision.
I can see a lot, again, of Old Testament references in chapter 11, verse 4, the two candlesticks,
the two olive trees.
That's Zechariah.
Verse 6 seems to me a little bit like Elijah,
the power to shut heaven. It won't rain. It seems like a little bit of Moses in verse 6,
power over the waters to turn them to blood, smite the earth with plagues, and then the
bottomless pit, Daniel chapter 7. Again, to really understand the book of Revelation,
I'm seeing, man, I really got
to understand my Old Testament that he's harkening back to some of these stories that I think
his readers would automatically pick up on, but those of us who don't spend a lot of time
in the Old Testament, we might miss.
There are some Christians who see these similarities and they think, you know what, this must be the prophet Elijah returning.
One of these two figures, because they see those similarities, say, may not how we view it.
These are prophets like Moses and like Elijah.
Even though I don't know what all these symbols exactly mean, as we've gone through them,
is it fair to say so far, and either of you can comment on this, please do. That so far, John is saying things are really terrible and difficult for the righteous. God is
blessing them along the way. Things get even darker and more difficult for the righteous
chapters 8, 9, and 10. Chapter 11 is kind of this culminating martyrdom. And now we're
going to turn it around.
Yes.
Seems like a really good movie where things are going well
and then they go really dark.
And then you think they're gonna go well,
but they go even darker, and then comes the moment
where Gandalf comes over the hill, right,
and saves the day.
I love that.
Jair Tolkien calls this the you catastrophe, the positive catastrophe,
which his examples gand off doing that, but also the savior, things get really,
really dark. And then the light breaks forth. And we're hinted in that exactly in
that verse that said, the seven angel sounds, the kingdom of this world are
become the kingdoms of our Lord. We had a tradition in our family.
We need to start it up again of going to the Handel's Messiah, Singin, where everybody brings
their own music.
And there's the Utah Symphony and the Utah Symphony chorus, but then sometimes the conductor
turns around and invites the whole audience and the chorus to sing together.
I had done that a couple of years and just thought,
why is this so powerful?
I kept noticing in the musical score scripture references.
So the next time I brought my Bible and was following along,
it's can't help but verse 15 are the lyrics
of the hallelujah chorus.
The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms
of our Lord and of his Christ and of his Christ and he shall reign forever and ever and
he shall reign forever and ever and he shall reign and he shall reign in everybody in
the whole building is just singing this. Nobody's performing for anybody at this point. That part is in the
Halleluja course and at the very end the coolest thing happened. You stand for the Halleluja
course anyway. That's the tradition as you stand for that. Everyone is clapping for the
conductor and he has the orchestra stand up and we clap for the orchestra and then he looks
at the chorus away. I'll clap for the chorus and then he looks at the chorus and we all clap for
the chorus and then he kind of points to the audience and the chorus kind of claps
for the audience like oh bless their hearts they did the best they could.
And then the coolest thing happened when the conductor picked up the score of Handel's Messiah and held it up. And the place went crazy
for George Frederick Handel and Hallelujah chorus. I'll never forget that moment
of this really inspired music of the conductor holding up the score. Thank you
George Frederick Handel for this. And I was just really touched when it just hit me. Oh, the reason this is so powerful, all of the lyrics are scripture.
That was why. So that's my little story about Revelation 1115. That's the Hallelujah
Course right there. That's a great story, John. And as you sang it, I realized that was true
that it is in the Hallelujah Course, but I didn't know that, that's very powerful.
Yeah.
Oh, I have to tell you something funny along with that.
At the very end of the hallelujah chorus forever
and ever and ever and ever,
Alaluyah, Alaluyah.
Alaluyah, Alaluyah.
And then there's a firmata.
John, you're given us all,
you're given us all concerts.
All concerts, right.
And then there's a firmata and you all have to wait.
And one time my father-in-law
came in too early. I'll have to find out. Oh, they're in the whole place is silent. And he's so
funny because he tells people, yes, I soloed with the Utah Symphony. So we all learned, watch the conductor during the Firmata, but
Chris, before we get to chapter 12, I can see and maybe you guys can just
chide me here, but I can see a little bit of human gratification from the first century saints.
Rome's gonna get it. We're gonna get them and and God's gonna get them and there's a little
bit of that in the last days too. Like, oh, I'm so tired of sin and evil and on the earth,
and it's gonna get it.
Isn't that a little bit what John's after?
I don't speak German,
but there's this word, I was at Shodan Freuda.
It's taking pleasure at someone else's suffering.
This makes me feel good.
I think people, at least the way they read it,
could walk away feeling
that. It's a test in the text. It's like reading Psalms and there's moments where
they're applauding the suffering of people. I like what Joseph is telling us that we
should never delight in the suffering of our fellow men. It reminded me too of when you
read that verse from section 109 of the
dedicated prayer, their souls are precious. That phrase was almas phrase when they were about to
go teach the Zoramites. And when he begins his prayer, he's like, how long do we have to be
hold such gross wickedness? And by the end of the prayer, he kind of softens and he says, behold, O Lord, their souls are precious
and many of them are our brother.
And maybe softens during the prayer,
but he uses that same phrase,
their souls are precious, all souls are precious,
which reminded me of that.
Let's not say,
when are you gonna get the bad guy?
When are you gonna make him suffer?
But the prayer of God's kingdom coming, I think is really the undergirding of this
that we're hoping the world is unjust. And as Latter as Saints, we don't need to wait for like a
corrupt world to come in. We recognize it's already has a lot of problems. We're not waiting for more. God's going to fix this. Joseph says that for 6,000 years mankind has their
efforts to build a kingdom, to build peace on earth. We're ultimately not going to be able to do it.
And so for the 7,000 years, it's the Savior Himself that takes the reins. I want that.
And I know we all want that. Unfortunately, it leads some darkness.
Yeah. Instead of seeing in chapter 11 verse 15,
the kingdoms of this world are becoming
the kingdoms of the Lord.
It's not the destruction, for say,
that we're looking forward to those kingdoms,
but the coming of the kingdom of Christ.
We're not excited about the demolishing the old house.
We want the new one.
That is the repeated prayer in the Lord's prayer,
thy kingdom come and here it is. Keep that in mind, thy kingdom come, and here it is.
Keep that in mind, thy kingdom come, because this is what we're about to read.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you