Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Romans 1-6 Part 2 • Dr. Adam Miller • Aug 7 - Aug 13
Episode Date: August 2, 2023Dr. Adam Miller continues to discuss grace, merit, and the law as they relate to the gospel of Jesus Christ.00:00 Part II–Dr. Adam Miller00:07 Justification and Sanctification1:06 Looking through a ...telescope backwards03:59 Love is sacrifice05:46 Echoes of Sermon on the Mount in Romans 307:16 The Law of Faith and the Law of Works11:19 We don’t earn God’s love13:30 Loving like God loves17:49 Joining God in his work of love19:21 Romans 2:121:36 Echoes of Matthew 722:56 Righteous judgment24:18 Faith, Law, and a tradition-framing view of baptism28:08 Surrendering self-regard29:53 Scriptural descriptions of baptism32:17 Dying and being born again35:24 Discussions on grace and perfection39:29 The Law of Moses and salvation42:09 Examining our motivations regarding love44:30 Believing Christ and Stephen E. Robinson48:30 Reflections on giving up the Law of Works50:43 Works, the temple, and salvation51:48 Dr. Miller’s final takeaways about Romans55:25 End of Part II–Dr. Adam MillerPlease rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.coYouTube: https://youtu.be/R1eqqsj-iekFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/15G9TTz8yLp0dQyEcBQ8BYThanks to the follow HIM 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
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Continue listening for part two, Dr. Adam Miller, Romans, chapters one through six.
Adam sometimes I hear people in classes talk about justification and sanctification and other big sounding words,
but I like that we're saying justification, putting things right.
Sanctification I think would say making us holy. That's a fair way to put it as we try to
just bewildering array of terms or whatever you put out. Yeah, I think that's good. Sometimes
in contemporary discourse, we like to make strong distinctions between sanctification and justification.
I don't see a strong distinction between those terms in the context of the New Testament itself,
or like, as Latter-day Saints, like we like to make a strong distinction between salvation and exaltation.
That can be useful, but I don't find that distinction at work in the Scriptures.
If we try to read that back into the Scriptures, I think that's often not very helpful,
even if it's a useful distinction for us to make, in cases the same kind of story here I think with that.
I want to read you both a comment made by Elder Bruce Hafein April 2004, General Conference.
The talk is called the Atonement All For All. As he's given the talk, he quotes a Australian convert.
This Australian convert says, my past life was a wilderness of weeds with hardly
a flower strewn among them. But now the weeds have vanished and flowers spring up in their place.
And then Elder Haif in comments, we grow in two ways, removing negative weeds and cultivating
positive flowers. The Savior's grace blesses both parts.
He says, we're not paying a debt.
Our purpose is to become celestial.
So we clear our heartland.
We continually plant, weed, and nourish the seeds
of divine qualities.
Our sweat and discipline stretch us,
and the tree of life can take root in our heart garden,
bearing fruit so sweet that it lightens all our burdens through the joy of his son.
And when the flowers of charity bloom there, we will love others with the power of Christ's own love.
So it seems to be very similar to what you're saying Adam, when you join Christ in his work,
the negative weeds or the suppressing the truth goes away and in His work you are changed.
I think that's right. To put a little additional twist on it, I might add something like,
part of what happens when you are converted is that when you start looking through the telescope in the right direction,
you see that the weeds have flowers too. The weeds also deserve your care and attention as well.
That the life isn't just a bit of roses, but the weeds matter things that we're called the love and care for. And that work of stewardship is the essence of what it means to be like Jesus and to
live in love, finding the thing that we were looking for.
That leads me to think of more of Paul's statements of becoming new creatures.
Those weeds can become new creatures, even, which is miraculous.
I mean, the whole idea of baptism and leaving the old behind and walking in
newness of life.
That's coming, it reminds me of that.
That's a really good way to look at it.
Those weeds can become new creatures
or we see them differently, perhaps.
Yeah, I think it's a combination of both.
We really do become something different in Christ
than we were before.
But it's also the case that what we were before,
we look at in a very different way.
Not with shame.
Yeah, instead of looking at myself with shame and fear and a sense of condemnation, a fearful
looking for the wrath of God, instead of looking at myself that way, I see myself as
God sees me in light of his love, in light of both the good that I am and in light of
the good that I still need.
Paul in one of his letters is going to say, husband's love your wives, even as Christ loved the church,
and gave himself for it.
And here you said that the Savior's atonement
is this ultimate sign of love.
So in the context of marriage, could I say that love is
sacrificing for someone.
Love your wives even as Christ loved the church.
And I think love, what is that?
It's a sacrifice, right?
Suffer for love unconditionally.
Do you feel like I'm in line with what Paul was going for?
Yeah, I think that's right down the middle.
I think that's a bullseye.
There's no quicker way to end a marriage
than to think that your a bullseye. There's no quicker way to end a marriage than to think that
your marriage is about being loved. If you constantly ask yourself, am I being loved the way that I
need to be loved? That your marriage is over. The only thing that can sustain a marriage is the
shared project of asking, how do I love? Because again, love isn't, it isn't even the kind of thing
that you can get. It's the kind of thing that you join and you share, or it's the kind of thing that
disappears in smoke because you thought it was something that it wasn't.
You can't get it.
You can only do it.
I'm really glad I asked that question.
That was wonderful.
John, anything else on Romans 3 before we go to a different passage?
No, not really.
I think that Romans 3, 23 is probably the one verse that we've all heard.
We are all in this same boat, Pharisees and Republicans.
We're all in need.
Yeah, Jew and Gentile, inside or in, outside or in.
That's what he says in verse 29.
He is the God of the Jews only.
Is he not the God of the Gentiles?
Yes, all of them.
He died for all of them.
Picking up where we left off in verse 27, I'm just going to give you the King James here because
actually I think the King James is better than the New English translation on this score. King
James for Romans 3, 27, I'm going to give you 27, 28, and then skip ahead to 31. 27 goes,
28 and then skip ahead to 31. 27 goes, well, where is boasting then? It is excluded by what law of works?
Nay, but by the law of faith. Therefore, we conclude that a man is justified by faith, right? Made right by faith, without the deeds of the law. Do we then, he says, make void the law through faith?
God forbid. Yay, we establish the law. Now, verse 31 there, I think, especially a very strong echo
of the sermon on the Mount where in Matthew 5, 17, Jesus is saying, look, you think that I'm coming to
destroy the law because you've got the law
backwards. I am destroying the backwards version of the law, but that's not the law. Think not that
I'm come to destroy the law, Jesus says, I am not come to destroy but to fulfill. If you understood
what the law was, then you would see that I'm not destroying it, I'm fulfilling it. I'm not creating
some special exceptions to what it demands.
I'm fulfilling what it demands. And what the law demands is that we love our enemies. And I'm loving you.
In that same way, because you positioned yourself as my enemy. The really nice thing I think here
that we get in verse 27 is the way that Paul describes faith not as the opposite of the law, but as the law.
We get the law of faith here compared to what he describes as the law of works.
And what you want is to live under the law of faith, not the law of works.
In the crucial difference between them, he says, he just puts it like this.
The difference between the law of faith and the law of works is that the law of works allows what he calls boasting. The law of faith excludes boasting. What is boasting?
Boasting is claiming that you have earned or deserved something. Boasting treats love as a reward.
This is what the quote-unquote law of works does, right? The law of works is Paul is describing
this as the law upside down. You're looking through the telescope from the wrong direction and you think the love is something
that you can get. There's something that you can earn or deserve. That's not it. Paul says,
what you want on the other hand is what he calls the law of faith. And faith here, right, is not a
kind of band-aid for a problem with the law of works. It's not a kind of end run around what the law demands.
The law of faith is what the law is what God's law demands, right? Faith itself grace itself loves for the enemy itself is
the law. And what you have to do
Paul is saying is that you have to stop living under what was not the law in the first place
saying is that you have to stop living under what was not the law in the first place,
quote unquote, a law of works. You have to give that up and you have to accept what the law actually was, the truth about the law, which is what God has just displayed through Jesus Christ,
that you must love even your enemies. And this is called a law of faith because,
unlike a law of works that's grounded in fear,
the law of faith is going to require you to trust.
It's going to require you to believe number one that God already loves you,
and he's not waiting for you to earn it. And number two, that if you join that work,
you will find the thing that you were looking for in the first place,
even though you went about it,
and the totally backwards upside down way.
That's great. In other translations, he says verse 31 that reads things like,
does this mean that by this faith we do away with the law? No, we are upholding the law.
This is the new American Bible. Are we annuling the law by this faith?
On the contrary, we are supporting the law. He even says in one translation,
do we then, by the means of this faith, abolish the law? No, indeed, we give the law a firmer footing.
So he seems to be saying, if we're going to rely entirely on Christ, does that mean we can forget the law? No, that is the law.
It's relying totally on Christ. Yeah, that's the early right. It'll seem like if you think that the law is about
deciding whether or not somebody deserves love, then loving somebody who doesn't deserve it will
seem like you're destroying the law. Yeah, but that's not it, Jesus says, I loving people who doesn't deserve it will seem like you're destroying the law. Yeah.
But that's not it, Jesus says.
I loving people who are my enemies.
I'm not destroying the law.
I'm in fact doing with the law commands.
Grace is not an end run around what the law requires.
Grace is what the law requires.
The living Bible translation.
Well then, if we are saved by faith, does this mean we no longer need to obey God's laws?
Just the opposite.
In fact, only when we trust Jesus can we truly obey Him.
I like the way that Adam said it better right there.
It's not an end-to-run ground law.
It is the law.
Yeah.
Contemporary English version.
Do we destroy the law by our faith?
Not at all.
We make it even more powerful.
Yeah, right. Instead of limiting love just to friends, you unleash love as a law that includes
everybody. Right. The law becomes universal instead of selective.
So, so far, Adam, let me see if I'm getting at least some of this right. I need to stop thinking of
So far, Adam, let me see if I'm getting at least some of this right.
I need to stop thinking of commandments, laws,
as ways of earning God's love.
That's posting. Yeah.
Instead, I join him in his work of love,
living the law becomes who I am.
You know, it becomes a natural fruit of me joining God in his work. And I'm not even joining God in his work because I want some future reward.
That work is the reward.
Did I understand everything you're teaching today?
To some degree?
That's the promise.
That's liberating.
When I no longer live my life under the cloud of fear and worry about whether I'm going
to get what I want, which is God's love.
But in fact, believe what God asked me to believe, that He loves me, already, and join
Him in that work.
And then I find what I'm looking for in the work itself.
Then I'm liberated.
I'm set free, Paul says, from all that shame and fear and doubt, and I find myself empowered
in Christ to live a totally different life that sees the world in an entirely different
way, myself included.
Yeah, that's myself included.
I really liked that.
I see myself differently.
Even my past self.
We talked about that.
I see him differently.
Yeah, you see him with love.
Is that past self your enemy? Sure. And lots of ways,
but you see him now with love. Love your enemies. Yeah. And grace and compassion and mercy. Yeah.
That doesn't let you off the hook, of course, from doing what is now needed.
Because you wouldn't actually be joining God in his work. Exactly. Yeah. If you think you're off the hook, then you've
misunderstood what you signed up for in the first place. That's right. You missed the point.
Because the work is the reward. Yeah. Which we continually do, right? Paul points this out again
and again in this letter. We continually miss the point because we try to read all of this as if
it made sense in terms of the law of works, but it doesn't.
It only makes sense if faith and love are themselves laws, not rewards.
It's pretty hard to miss in Matthew 5 if you read it in context that he's talking about loving like God loves.
It seems to me.
I think that's true.
I want to read something from Elder Holland back in October 2017, be therefore perfect eventually is the talk. He's
obviously referring to that verse in the sermon of the mount that we referred to earlier. I believe
that Jesus did not intend his sermon on this subject to be a verbal hammer for battering us about
our shortcomings. Now, I believe he intended it to be a tribute to who and what God the eternal Father is and what we can achieve with him in eternity.
In any case, I am grateful to know that in spite of my imperfections, at least God is perfect,
that at least he is, for example, able to love his enemies.
Because too often, due to the natural man and woman in us, you and I are sometimes that
enemy.
How grateful I am that at least God can
bless those who despitefully use him, because without wanting or intending to, we all despitefully
use him sometimes. I am grateful that God is merciful and a peacemaker because I need mercy,
and the world needs peace. Of course, all we say of the Father's virtues, we also say of his only
we got in the Son who lived and died unto the same perfection.
And then a little bit later in the talk, he quotes Tolstoy, and I've always, I was just
so impressed by this.
He talks about serving and loving everyone.
And he says in that regard, Tolstoy wrote, once of a priest who was criticized by one of
his congregants for not living as resolutely as he should.
The critic concluded that the principles the airing preacher taught must therefore also
be erroneous.
In response to that criticism, the priest says, look at my life now.
And compared to my former life, you will see that I am trying to live out the truth I proclaim.
Enable to live up to the high ideals he taught, the priest admits he is
failed, but he cries, attack me if you wish. I do this myself, but don't attack the path I follow.
If I know the way home, but I'm walking along it drunkenly, is it any less the right way simply
because I am staggering from side to side? Do not gleefully shout, look at him. There he is crawling into a bog.
No, do not gloat, but give your help
to anyone trying to walk the road back to God.
I think that fits really well with what Adam
you're teaching us and Paul is saying here,
we join God in his love and even his cheering on
of others.
Once we catch a vision, God's love for us.
And once we catch a vision of our weaknesses,
not as occasions for condemnation,
but as occasions for additional love and service.
My weaknesses are not calling for condemnation.
God doesn't condemn them. God sees them as an occasion for offering what is needed for the good that the law itself requires for the love that I need to be to be the better word free from shame.
It's the good news. Yeah, it is good news. And it should be. What would you expect from a loving
God? Good news. Yeah. That thing about Tolstoy, you get so fired up about the truth that you
are teaching and you sense it and you get fired up about it and you think that's beautiful
and at the same time you're like, man, I got to live that better.
And I think we've all done that.
You get, oh, this is so true.
I feel it.
I'm going to give this talk on ministering, but boy, am I a lousy ministering brother?
I relish those because they nudge me to do a little better.
And I was thinking too, guys, when we're
talking to young people or families that are out there listening. Oh, I hear our teenagers
are growing up in a world of of likes and views and swiping up. Have you ever seen a young
adult go on mutual? It felt like a punch in the gut. I thought the swipe up swipe down. I prove
you. I don't prove you. Oh, I just I don't like the way you look. Yeah. I thought I think I'd
like the old way of dating better, even though I was horrible at it. Yeah. But how do we help young people
with this love when they are growing up in a world of likes and thumbs up and approvals and this brutal.
they are growing up in a world of likes and thumbs up and approvals and this brutal. But almost all of us are going about it the wrong way.
We want to be loved.
We want to get loved, but you can't get there that way.
You can join love and do it.
You can't get to it if you're using love backwards.
Yeah.
Even when I think that you've taught us, join God in His love and you'll get His love.
And like, wait, you're still seeing it as a reward.
You're still seeing it as something that's in the future that I need to go and earn.
So it's not joining God in His work of love to get love.
It's joining God in His work of love.
And that is what you've been looking for.
Yeah, if I'm John, by the way, and I stand stand up in sacrament meeting and give a talk on ministering,
and I think to myself, I really need to do better
with respect to my ministering.
That's right.
I really do need to do better.
But why?
Do I need to do better so that God will finally love me?
Or do I need to do better because that's how I love other people?
Yeah.
Again, that's the crucial question. I do need to do better because that's how I love other people. Yeah. Again, that's the crucial question.
I do need to do better.
I'm right.
But why?
Yeah.
And the why is crucial.
It really is.
Yeah.
That why is the folkroom on which the gospel itself turns.
Hmm.
This is so fun.
I could do this all day.
Adam, where should we go next?
So let's take a look at Romans chapter 2, verses 1.
Here we get a really nice description, I think, that extends through most of the chapter, but
as nicely summarized in the opening verse, a really nice description of the kind of trap
that is centers we fall into when we suppress the truth and treat love as a reward. Paul describes the trap like this.
And Romans chapter 2 verse 1 he says, therefore you are without excuse, whoever you are,
when you judge someone else. For on whatever grounds you judge another, you condemn yourself,
because you who judge practice the same things. The most predictable result that follows from treating the law as a reward,
is something that you could earn or deserve. The most predictable result is condemnation.
Yeah. You start out by trying to earn or deserve love to make yourself more lovable than other
people, right, so that you can deserve more love than other people, which leads to your
drawing that kind of initial distinction between insiders and outsiders, between friends and enemies,
between people who deserve love and people who don't deserve love, which means that that very
gesture has from the start compromised God's commandment to love everyone. You've just drawn a line in the sand that kind of guts this very substance of the law
itself by treating it as something that only some people earn or deserve.
You start out condemning other people.
The inevitable end result of that though, Paul points out is that you will yourself end
up condemning.
Because it turns out love isn't the kind of thing you can successfully
deserve. And if you condemn other people to not deserving it, you will end up condemning
yourself to not deserving it. And you will fall prey to that same judgment. And that's
a trap. That's the very trap of a sinful way of seeing the world, is that everything
will get darker and smaller and farther away.
And that includes you because it's impossible to succeed, to succeed at the task that
you set yourself up of earning love.
The earning love, you know, hamster whale, you're never going to get there.
Yeah, and this is also a clear echo again, right, of Matthew chapter 7 of the sermon on
the Mount, which Jesus is talking about judgment, where he says, judge not, for with what judgment
you judge, you will be judged. If I'm using the law to judge how to love, then that's how the law
will be applied to me. If I'm using the law to judge who to love, then that's how I will end
up applying the law to myself. Again, if I try to live under the law of works, I will condemn myself
to living under that law. But if I trust God and live under a law of faith, then I try to live under the law of works, I will condemn myself to living under that law.
But if I trust God and live under a law of faith, then I will be liberated by and live under that law.
What a fascinating insight here. Matthew chapter 7, Judge Navi, be not judged. For with that judgment, e. Judge, e. Shall be judged. And I've always thought that phrase meant by God. With that judgment,
e. Judge, e. Shall be judged by God. But that's not what, you shall be judged by God, but that's not
what he says. For with what judgment you judge, you shall be judged. It's what you're showing me
here, I was by you. You'll judge yourself because you judge everyone else on that standard. You're
going to end up judging yourself on that standard and you're going to be condemned as well.
If you use the law to condemn, you will be condemned by that law. That's inevitable. If you believe God and use the law to love, then that's what the law will
be used for. You have joined that project. You will be judged the same way. Yeah, you'll be included.
These verses may be the most famous instance of the Joseph Smith translation amending the New
Testament text as well, right? Where we get this strong addition in the Joseph Smith
translation that re-renders these verses by drawing a distinction between two versions of judgment,
wherein the Joseph Smith translation is said something like, judge not unrighteous judgment,
but judge righteous judgment. So that instead of forbidding judgment period, Jesus draws a distinction between
two different ways of judging, a way of judging that condemns, a way of judging that loves, so that
we get again here two different versions of the law. A law of works that's about boasting, or a
law of faith that's about loving even your enemy. You have to use the law to judge how to love,
but you must never, ever use the law to decide who to love.
My one form is right, just judgment that fulfills the law because it loves even the enemy.
The other is a form of unrighteous judgment that ends up not just condemning other people, but you.
That's good use the law for how to judge not who to judge.
Yeah, you have to judge how to love not judge who to love.
Yeah, that's another t-shirt right there. Yeah, put that on the inside. I guess we can take it off.
That's great. Keep that part close to your heart.
In chapter four, we get a nice case study in the difference between the law of faith versus
the law of works, and Paul uses Abraham as a case study.
Abraham never boasts, he never has any reason to boast, he doesn't use the law to boast,
he just uses the law as a way of being faithful to God's promise to him and his promise to
God to join in the work of love.
In chapter 6, we get Paul's famous and decisive and tradition-framing description of baptism
as the work of undergoing our own death early. So in chapter 6, we get a nice description,
I think, of how you pass from one kind of
law to the other.
How do you achieve this transition?
How do you pass from living under a law of works to finally believing in and living under
a law of faith in Christ so that the law can be fulfilled?
If we pick up in verse 3 in chapter 6, Paul says this, don't you know that as many as
were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death.
Therefore, we've been buried with him through baptism into death
in order that just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father,
so too may we live a new life.
For if we have become united with him in the likeness of his death,
we will certainly also be united in the likeness of his resurrection. We know that our old man was crucified with him and the likeness of his death, we will certainly also be united in the likeness of his resurrection.
We know that our old man was crucified with him so that the body of sin would no longer
dominate us, so that we would no longer be enslaved to sin, for someone who has died
has been freed from sin.
All attend to baptism this coming Saturday, and then in our classic born and baptismal services,
right, especially for children,
we tend to emphasize the imagery of baptism
as being about cleansing,
where baptism is about being washed clean of your sins,
which is, I think appropriate imagery for eight year olds,
but that's not a specially scriptural imagery.
And it's certainly not the image that Paul uses.
Paul never talks about baptism washing you clean from your sins.
Paul talks about baptism as a way of undergoing your death early,
of expediting your death so that you can die before you even leave this world.
So you can get your death over with and start a new life in Christ.
You were buried in the water with Christ and then were resurrected up out of the water with Christ.
And this he describes, this is the passage.
This is how you move from one law to the next.
You have to do the thing that you were afraid to do
in the first place.
You have to let yourself die.
You have to stop being worried about yourself
and you have to care about other people.
You have to let your own identity pass away, and you have to take up somebody else's identity
as your own.
Here, Jesus, specifically, you put down your name, you take up his name, and now you're
going to live in his likeness.
And to the degree that we live in his likeness, we will do what he does, which is love, his
enemies, and we will find the thing that we were looking for in the first place, which was love.
But it's hard, it's scary, right? Which is why it's all about faith, it's all about trust.
You have to do this thing that you were terrified to do, which was to die, to let yourself go.
But that's what love requires. If you want your marriage to succeed, to come back to Hank's example from earlier.
You have to do the thing that terrifies you.
You have to stop worrying about whether or not you're loved and give yourself entirely
over to the project of loving you, to let yourself die.
That's how you cross the gap.
That's how you manage the passage from one way of life to the other.
You make this promise that you're not going to judge who to love, you're only going to judge how to love.
Yeah, it's a natural question to ask what this looks like as a practical matter, this business
of surrendering self-regard, this business of dying to my own worries and my own self-concerns.
Does that mean that we end up letting other people walk
all over us? Does this mean that we allow ourselves to be abused? Does this mean that
we stick with damaging relationships? It means, I think, that we do what's good. This
is what love demands. Love demands that we do the thing that's good. We do what's
good for us. We do what's good for the other person. And allowing ourselves to be abused
is not good for us, and it's not good for the abuser. To love someone else is to do what's
good regardless of the cost. In those kinds of scenarios, right, what love requires is
that we don't allow the abuse to take place because it's not good. Yeah. That's excellent. I'm glad you said that I noticed
There are just a few places where
We can find things like our sins washed away
Even in the article of faith baptism by immersion for the remission of sins
But boy I found in the book moreman
remission of sins comes by fire and by the Holy Ghost.
It's more receiving the Holy Ghost is the cleanser,
not the water and the font.
And then maybe Joseph Smith talked about half a baptism,
a few are baptized, but not receiving the Holy Ghost.
And I can see that maybe they're all under one umbrella.
I like that idea because I feel like,
scripturally speaking, it's more the Holy Ghost is a purifying cleanser as the symbol than the water in which we are immersed.
Would you say that?
Like in Scripture, we get these really nice descriptions of baptism as a kind of death.
You know, we get these really nice descriptions of the Holy Ghost as
cleansing us through fire. I think that's more scripturally accurate. Though again, I don't have any objection to
describing baptism as kind of cleansing, but that is not a very
scriptural way of of talking for whatever that's worth.
I like that you said that it's useful for eight year olds. I
don't know how to explain this to my, you know, one of my eight
year olds in the two. You're going to die. Yeah. So I like
the you're saying, Hey, that's fine.
Even the born again thing, when I was eight years old, I didn't know that I was surrounded
by amniotic fluid before I was born.
The baptism symbol was kind of, huh, to me.
And I see it much more clearly now that part.
But Adam, thank you for the idea of an early death, because I know you have a book
about early resurrection too, but early death is saying that the old sinful man is going
to die, which is like the way Paul is describing it. Now I can have a new, a newness of life.
Yeah. Baptism of fire is a nice description too, because on the one hand, right, like fire is nice. It's warm. It's comforting.
On the other hand, it's painful. It's a baptism of fire. And to commit yourself to the work of love,
is to commit yourself to living in those everlasting burnings, which is what God's presence
is like. And it's a kind of everlasting burning that simultaneously like the tree, it's like Moses is bush.
You have to live like Moses is bush, where you are constantly on fire and being consumed and constantly being renewed by God at the same time.
That's kind of a hard way to live, but it's also the end of the day, the only liberating way to live.
I've read verse 6 in the past, I think, in a flawed way, knowing this that our old man is crucified
with him. And I always tell myself, that's what I have to do to the natural man, right? I need to
whitenuckle it and just destroy this tendency when through our discussion today, I think I'm seeing
that's a natural result of joining God in His work is My old self withers
That my old ideas about earning God's love
Condemning others that withers away when I join him in his work of love
Is that a better way of seeing that person? I think so I'll put a really nice twist on this image in the next chapter
Right in Roman 7 this image of dying and being born again,
where Paul says, look, this passage from living under
the law of works, to living under the law of faith,
is a lot like what happens when a woman's husband dies.
You're the woman, you were married to the law of works,
your husband dies, so that you're no longer bound to them, right? You're no longer bound
to that law. And what you do in the gospel is that you get remarried, except this time you're
getting married to Jesus and you're getting married for love. It's this kind of beautiful image of
the law of works itself is what dies. Paul says, and then you remarry here in good faith,
Jesus in the law of faith and conversions
like that.
And you move from living under the rule of one law to living under the rule of another.
So the law is done away with, per se, it's your view of the law.
Yeah, the law of works, which is backwards law, it dies.
And you stop living as if love were something that you could get or deserve.
Wonderful. The last verse in our reading assignment today, Romans 6, 23, for the wages of sin is death,
but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
There's a kind of a parallel verse in the book of Mormon, but I can't resist.
I heard a comedian say, the wages of sin is death, but after taxes are taken out, it's
just kind of a tired feeling.
Have to take out that. That's great. It's what it feels like to be a sinner.
You feel constantly worn out because the thing that you're trying to do is impossible.
You can't help but feel despair when you try to earn love because it can't be done.
You can't get there from there. Yeah, you've traded the truth of God for a lie, and the lie is going to exhaust you.
Yeah, it's exhausting to be a sinner. It's literally exhausting.
To be under that mindset of, I'm never going to earn it. I'm never going to get there.
There's a paragraph in the manual I wanted to read and get Adam's thoughts on it.
It's under the heading grace. In the manual, they
do a Romans one through six overview and they just talk about the law, circumcision,
unsurcondcision, justification, and then this paragraph on grace. You wrote that book,
original grace. So let me read this and I'd love to get your take. Grace is divine help, strength,
given through the bounteous mercy and love of Jesus Christ.
Through grace, all people will be resurrected to receive immortality.
In addition, grace is an enabling power that allows men and women to lay hold on eternal
life and exaltation after they have expended their own best efforts.
We do not earn grace through our efforts, rather it is grace that gives us strength and
assistance to do good works that we
otherwise would not be able to maintain. And then it asks us as you read Romans, record what you learn
about the Savior's grace. I like that because it's a bit of a paradigm shift for some, I think, to say
grace is the strength that gets me there instead of grace is the reward once I get there.
Yeah, amen. Amen to everything you just said. And as I noted at the beginning, right,
that there are all different ways of talking about this. Paul's way of talking about these things
is just one way of talking about them. And there are different ways to talk about grace, and there
are different ways to talk about its relationship to works. I think Paul is a very powerful way to do it,
but it's not the only way to talk about these things. Though I think it's certainly the heart of what you read there is lines right up with what we were describing
with Jesus Christ, that grace isn't something different from works.
Grace is itself a work. It's the work that I join God in doing. It's the work of loving.
And if I think that I can join that work without doing the work, then again God in doing is the work of loving. And if I think that I can join
that work without doing the work, then again, I misunderstood what the thing was that
I wanted in the first place. God forbid Paul says, you can't do it. To join God in the
work is to do the work. And there's no getting around that.
Yeah. I think that both we as Latter-day Saints and in the Christian tradition, Bodle,
we tend to get grace wrong in very predictable ways.
We tend to think about grace the way that a sinner would think about grace.
And the way that a sinner would think about grace is something that you earn or deserve,
or something that you don't earn or deserve.
Whereas at the end of the day, it's something that you participate in,
or something that you don't participate in.
It's a different question altogether. It's something that you believe in or something that you don't participate in. Right? It's a different question altogether.
It's something that you, it's something that you believe in and trust,
as Paul says, or something that you don't.
John, you've talked about this before about the order Morone I give.
Come unto Christ and be perfected in Him.
Not be perfect.
The sequence and come unto Christ.
So is it come unto Christ, join in His work
that will create in you a new life?
The perfection describes the love, not my worthiness for being loved. That's what it means to be
perfect, I think, in Christ rather than in myself. If I'm perfect in myself, that's the claim that
I deserve to be loved. If I'm perfect in Christ, that means together we have joined in doing perfectly loves work.
There's two different things entirely.
Two different goals. You can describe that same thing as the difference between
loving perfectly versus the kind of fantasy of perfectionism.
Perfectionism is how sinners think about the world where you try to be perfect and thus be perfectly lovable.
That's perfectionism.
There's no such commandment to be perfect in that way, and trying to do that prevents you
from doing what you are commanded to do. Perfectionism is a powerful form of disobedience.
It is. And it's all-encompassing, right? Takes over your life, but you no longer have
even the notion of going out and loving and doing the work of love because you're so consumed in this.
I've got to perfect myself. I've got to earn this.
It inevitably leads as Paul pointed out in chapter two, it inevitably leads to condemnation.
You only use the law to condemn instead of using the law to love. And then that includes you.
And it's a hard, hard, exhausting way to live.
I would never say the gospel is easy, but I think it's easier than what you've been
talking about, trying to be lovable and earn love and think that I'm trying to get God
to love me.
Everything we've talked about today, it just leads me to want to jump ahead to one of these things that Paul says that is just so
poetic and beautiful
When he asks the question in Romans 8 who shall separate us from the love of Christ and then he just gives this list
You know shall tribulation or distress or persecution famine nakedness parallel or sword
I am persuaded skipping down either death depth nor life, nor angels,
nor principalities, nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor
depth, nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is
in Christ Jesus our Lord.
That's a beautifully crafted thought.
I feel like everything we've done is leading up to where Paul can say that.
Yeah, I'd like to make this a little more applicable
to just latter day's state life today.
So I'm gonna read a paragraph from the manual
and ask you both a question.
Some of the Jewish Christians in Rome
apparently still believed that the rights
and rituals of the law of Moses brought apparently still believed that the rights and rituals
of the law of Moses brought salvation.
This may seem like a problem that doesn't apply anymore since we don't live by the
law of Moses, but as you read Paul's writings, think about your own efforts to live the
gospel.
Are your outward performances taking the sacrament, attending the temple, and we could make
that list really long, all the things we do as Latter-day Saints.
Are they deepening your conversion and strengthening your faith in Christ?
So why or when or how do we forget that?
Because I've had conversations with people who, in fact, I just had one last week with
saying, I have attended the temple weekly, weekly, weekly, but she lost her faith.
And she wanted to prove to me that she was doing all the right things to maintain her faith.
She's going through a faith crisis.
She's saying, I've read all the manuals, attended the temple weekly.
I've gone to church.
I can quote to you, the journal discourse.
All these things she told me she was doing and it seemed like those became an end in themselves, but comment on this then. Are your outward performances,
such as the sacrament or ten in the temple, we could add a lot to that list of things
we do? Are they deepening your conversion and strengthening your faith in Christ? Why
does this happen? Why does the gospel become a gospel of checklists sometimes to us?
Because that's an exhausting way to live filling in all the
All the boxes of I baked bread for the
For the widows. I served at the canary and then to do that day in day out day in day out and then you think you're earning a reward
Maybe we all have a little law of Moses in our spiritual DNA or something or just the formulas of the world. If I do this, this, this, then this happens.
That works in math class. What do they call the doctrine of retribution? I think that went over
into the New Testament to the point that as we've talked about Hank, hey, who did sin? This man or his parents that he was born blind, we want a
cause and effect type of a thing. The way you asked the question was, are those
deepening our conversion? Well, are those a fruits of our conversion? The
conversion should be our focus. We're trying to be converted to Christ, right? And
then maybe those things become more
of a fruit of our conversion instead of a formula.
Yeah, I think again, it's the decisive question is why we do what we do. It's exhausting
to check off all those boxes on the checklist if I'm checking those boxes to earn love.
Yeah, because I believe I can't, I'm not lovable unless I do those.
Yeah.
But if I'm checking those boxes because I love other people, it's not, it's not exhausting
in the same way, right?
In fact, it's profoundly empowering and vigorating and livening.
It quickens.
It fills you with a power that's not your own with the love that you couldn't command in your own name.
It connects you to God in a way that brings you back to life, literally, and the very it's tempting to read Paul and to think that when he's talking about the law, he's just talking about the
law of Moses, which means he's not talking about something that applies to us.
Now everything I've said today assumes that that's not the case.
Everything I've said today assumes that the things that Paul has to say about the law.
Love Moses, those things applied just as much to me
as they do to versentiary Jews
who are attempting to live now as Christians.
I think that's true not just broadly generally,
I think that's true in the text of Romans as well.
In Romans chapter two, when Paul gives us
a whole bunch of examples of the kinds of things
that are involved in keeping the law,
he doesn't give ritual examples. He doesn't give ritual examples.
He doesn't give examples that have to do with sacrifices or ritual requirements of a law of Moses or purity laws.
All of the examples that Paul gives of the law of Moses in chapter 2, for instance, all of those are moral examples.
They have to do with stealing or murdering or adultery or all things that still apply to us. And he's pretty consistent about this, Paul, is that whenever he talks about the law and keeping the law or living under the law,
he uses these moral examples that still apply.
It's part and parcel of the way that the main issue he has in mind
has to do with how in general we think about God's law, regardless of the details, whether I'm thinking about it as a means to
earning love or whether I'm thinking about it as a means to enacting love. I wanted to quote a story told by Stephen Robinson.
We mentioned him earlier today.
It's a BYU speech given called Believing Christ.
He wrote a book with the same name.
He says, sometimes the weight of the demand for perfection drives us to despair.
Sometimes we fail to believe that most choice portion of the gospel that says he can change
us and bring us into his kingdom.
Let me share an experience that happened about 10 years ago.
My wife and I were living in Pennsylvania.
Things were going pretty well.
I'd been promoted.
It was a good year for us.
I'm trying year for Janet, his wife.
That year she had our fourth child graduated from college, passed the CPA exam and was made
Relief Society president. We had temper recommends. We had family evening and I was in the
Bishop's Brick. I thought we were headed for LDS Yupi Hood. Then one night the lights went out.
Something happened to my wife that I can only describe as dying spiritually.
She wouldn't talk about it, she wouldn't tell me what was wrong. That was the worst part.
For a couple of weeks she did not wish to participate in spiritual things. She asked
to be released from her callings and she would not open up and tell me what was wrong.
Finally, after about two weeks, one night I made her mad and it came out. She said,
all right, you want to know what's wrong? I'll tell you what's wrong.
I can't do it anymore.
I can't lift it.
I can't get up at 5.30 in the morning and bake bread
and sew clothes and help my kids with their homework
and do my own homework and do my release society stuff
and get my genealogy done and write the congressman
and go to the PTA meetings and write the missionaries.
And she just started naming one brick after another
that had been laid on her, explaining all the things she could not do. She said, I don't have the talent
that Sister Moral has. I can't do what Sister Childs does. I try not to yell at the kids,
but I lose control. And I do. I'm not perfect. I'm just not perfect. And I'm never going
to be perfect. I'm not going to make it to the celestial kingdom and I finally admitted that to myself.
You and the kids can go but I can't lift it.
I'm not Molly Mormon and I'm never going to be perfect.
So I've given up.
Why break my back?
He said, we started to talk and it was a long night.
He said, I've asked her about her testimony and she said, I've tried and tried.
I cannot keep all the commandments all
of the time. And then he said, who would have thought after eight years of marriage, after
all the lessons we've given and heard, after all we've read and done in the church, Janet
was still trying to save herself. She knew why Jesus is a coach, cheerleader, an advisor
and a teacher. She knew why he's an example, the head of the church, the elder brother,
or even God. She knew all of that, but she did not understand why he's called
Savior. Janet was trying to save herself with Jesus as an advisor. Brothers and sisters,
we can't. No one can. No one is perfect. He then quotes Ether and he says,
of course, we fail at the celestial level. That's why we need a Savior. And we are
commanded to approach
God and call upon Him so that we may receive according to our desires. He goes on to say,
I've learned this lesson in my life. My family has learned this lesson in our collective life.
Jesus Christ is the Son of God. He is the Savior of the world. He is our individual Savior.
If we will enter into that glorious covenant relationship with him,
which I think Adam would describe is joining him in his work and hold nothing back and
Then have faith and trust and his ability to do for us what we cannot accomplish. I
Said I bear testimony him. I love him. I love his gospel dearly. That to me is
Maybe an all-too-frequent story of, I can't do it anymore.
And I add, I think you've really, really given us the answer here. Can I ask you to give it again?
So we're clear to anybody listening that that is not the effective way to look at the gospel.
The natural result of that, you're going to end up exhausted, tired, and probably I can't do it anymore.
I give up.
It's a really powerful story.
I remember vividly, crystal clear.
The moment I first read that story and brother Robinson's in the book, and believe in Christ,
and I'm really grateful to Sister Robinson
for letting him share it.
And I think it's been really powerful for a lot of people.
For me, I think the really important thing about that story is to recognize that that moment
of despair that's described so powerfully there for Sister Robinson is not an optional moment.
Discovering that you cannot do it.
Discovering that love cannot be earned and deserved.
Abandoning that project, giving up on that project, finding yourself hopeless in the face of that project.
Right? That is death. That is the passage.
That is how you move from living under the law of works to living under the law of faith.
Now, it's a dangerous moment.
It's a dangerous moment when you discover that the law of works is impossible.
Because if you think that's all there is to the gospel, then you think that the gospel
is over.
It's also potentially in a necessary moment, a potentially redemptive moment, because that is the
passageway to discovering what the gospel of Jesus Christ actually is. As the passage to
discovering the love of faith, and what you discovered that you were trying to answer the wrong
question the whole time, that you were trying to obey a commandment that God never gave, and that you
were trying to find love in a way that's impossible to do. And it opens the door then to being safe, to being redeemed, to being resurrected, to
finding a new life in Christ.
You can't get to that new life without dying first to the old law.
And that's a difficult and painful thing.
But it's also potentially liberating, redemptive.
I think Sister Robinson would be the first to testify to the fact that on the far side of that despair is the love and life and hope that you were looking for.
So good. What I'm really hoping for this podcast is it's healing. It's healing for people to go, you're right. Oh, I feel so much better. Jesus was right the whole time. You know, when I had that conversation with my
Evangelical minister friend and we we were friendly and everything he asked me if you never go to the temple again
Could you go to heaven and what came spewing out of my mouth? I don't know would pass correlation
I just remember saying I go to the temple because I love the Lord and I think he wants me there,
but the temple isn't called the Savior. The fact that I went on a mission is not called the Savior.
The fact that I keep the commandments are not the Savior. Jesus is the Savior. He's the only Savior.
He's the only one with that name and title and that kind of helped me to hear my own self describe that that
Jesus Christ is my savior and he is my only savior
Maybe the things I do I maybe I'm trying to show I love him
Maybe my motives aren't perfect every time, but I'm trying to get to that place where I just want to honor my
Savior who loves me even when I'm an idiot.
Now, I want to join him in his work.
Dr. Miller, before we let you go, tell us anything else that you feel like our listeners
could really benefit from, especially from these chapters.
Here I think is what I'd really like people to come away with from specialing with Paul's pistols, especially Romans.
I'm not a sinner because I failed to earn God's love through my
obedience. I'm a sinner because I've been trying to obey a
commandment that God never gave and wasting my life in an
effort to earn that love. Trying to obey a commandment that God
has never given is what
prevents me from obeying the commandment he actually gave from actually being
obedient. Trying to be loved rather than loving is what's trapped me in the
first place. And discovering this as Paul describes it and as I've experienced
it is liberating. The revelation is liberating, to discover that love, that grace is a law.
The law, loving your enemies, is the law that God Himself follows, and not an exception to the law,
right? Not a loophole or a backup plan to be resorted to when we failed to be lovable.
That's redemptive. It's empowering. It's in liveening. It's a whole new kind of life.
That the life lived in the presence of God here and now, not just in the hope of something later.
And that I think that's not just Paul's message, that is, in many ways, the essence of the gospel of Jesus Christ itself. It's the good news.
Adam, it's been such a blessing to have you with us today.
So grateful for your time.
Thank you.
I love being with you.
I'm grateful for the work that you guys do
and I'm glad it reaches so many people.
Yeah.
We want to have you back.
I was really looking forward to Romans.
You can't just read it quickly,
like you can read other things.
I really had to slow down and I still came away going,
I hope somebody can come and explain what this means.
So it's a blessing for me to be here. Thanks both of you and
Thanks sorenson family for just letting me sit here and take a bunch of notes. What a blessing. Yeah a lot of people are gonna feel that same way
We want to thank Dr. Adam Miller for being with us today. What a treat. We want to thank our executive
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remember our founder, Steve Swanson. We hope you'll join us next week. We're going to do the second
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