Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Romans 7-16 Part 1 • Dr. Joshua Matson • Aug 14 - Aug 20
Episode Date: August 9, 2023How does being called to be a Saint change your thoughts and behaviors? Dr. Joshua Matson examines how Jewish Christians and non-Jewish Christians learn to become one people in Jesus and explores grac...e, works, and mercy.00:00 Part 1–Dr. Joshua Matson01:40 Introduction of Dr. Joshua Matson04:40 Background to today’s lesson06:45 Emphasizing the good08:01 Mapping Paul’s journey and what’s next10:42 Paul carrying contributions for years12:30 Marriage analogy14:14 The gospel spreads quickly16:30 Paul gives two introductions and reasons for writing17:18 First introduction and call to be Chrisitlike 19:14 Grace and loving kindness21:46 Salutations and thanksgiving22:18 What to do with these teachings22:57 Romans 7 and Jewish law27:34 Romans 7:8 and love31:00 The law of Moses32:32 What should worship look like?35:15 Jesus elevates our focus37:04 The Book of Mormon and the law of Moses38:33 Paul mentions something personal41:13 Who will be redeemed from physical and spiritual death?45:06 Paul before and after Jesus47:08 Where to locate additional Joseph Smith Translation (JST)49:18 Writing is a difficult medium50:01 The Spirit empowers our lives53:31 Sister Nelson on love and marriage56:09 The Spirit’s direction59:17 Being spiritually minded1:02:08 Christian’s true identity1:06:02 End of Part 1–Dr. Joshua MatsonPlease 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name's Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with the incredible John by the way. Hello, John.
I hate good to be back.
Yep. We're back for another week.
John, we've been through the first half of the book of Romans.
And now we're going to take on the second half in your experience with Romans, what are you looking forward to? It's kind of like the second two thirds.
And I feel like we're watching Paul have the same challenge.
We've got Jewish converts who become Christians
and we've got Greek converts who have never been Jews.
And he's trying to get them all together
and figure out how to say, the law of Moses
is fulfilled and the law of the gospel.
And how do I explain that and get everybody united a major
Challenge the more reading this the more I think this yeah, this must have been really hard. So I'm looking forward to seeing how he does it
Absolutely joining us this week is Dr. Josh Matson Josh
What are our listeners have to look forward to here in the second half of Romans?
Well, I think of all the texts that we could talk about that Paul wrote that are equivalent
to our day. Romans is probably the one that I would turn to first. There are so many parallels
that Paul is going to talk about that mirror the challenges and situations of our own day,
that we can learn so many great things to help us become better
Christians by following the teachings of Paul in our day, not just in Paul's day.
Beautiful. I'm really looking forward to this discussion. John, why don't you
introduce Josh to our listeners? They may remember him from last year.
Yes, we've had Dr Joshua Mattson before. We're so glad that you're back today.
I'm really looking forward to this.
Joshua is a PhD in religion from Florida State University with an emphasis in religions of Western antiquity and a minor in American religious history.
He also holds a Master of Arts degree from Trinity Western University in Biblical studies and a Bachelor of Arts degree with University Honors from
Brigham Young University in Ancient Near Eastern Studies. That's awesome. He's
been all over. While completing research for his dissertation on, you ready for
this? Hank, on the status of the Hebrew Bible minor prophets in the late
second temple period, which we call HBMPST.
Josh, he lived with this family in the Holy Land,
was a research associate with the Scripta,
Kumronika, Electronika project at the University of Haifa,
and a Ryan Center for the Study of the Dead Sea Scrolls Scholar
at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
That's amazing. And right now, he is one of the Dead Sea Scrolls Scholar at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. That's amazing.
And right now, he is one of the editors in one of the volumes of the BYU New Testament
commentary series, which is online.
He's from Chabok, Idaho.
He married the former Aaron Barnes together.
There are parents of four children.
He loves books, running, traveling, and sports, and we're just glad that you love follow
him and it would be willing to come back.
Hey, John, Josh, before we get into the material, I just want to give a
quick shout out. My family and I were up hiking in Utah County yesterday.
And as we approached a beautiful waterfall, we were sitting there
gawking at it and loving it. Someone called out my name. And so I turned
around. I didn't know who these people were, but they are big fans of the podcast. And they were happy to run into me. And I was
happy to run into them. So Dave and Julian McMillan, thank you so much for listening and saying
hi out there on the trail. Oh, Hank, and I had a chance to participate in a Navu experience with the cast of the Navu pageant.
And I got taught how to do the motions and everything and run around on the stage.
And I met a wonderful young man named Russell Heaton.
I wanted to give him a shout out too.
So thanks Russell for listening to the podcast.
That's awesome.
We love all of our listeners.
Really, John, I was telling them, McMillans, they were saying, thank you so much for doing
this.
And I'm saying, thank you so much for listening.
So thank you to everyone listening.
And.
Hey, if I can, can I just tell you what I love about this is in Romans, Paul is giving
a shout out to similar people.
So I think we're doing a very biblical activity here is being able to reach out to those
who help move the work forward. So it's kind of fun
to hear this and hear this on previous podcast and think, hey, this is a very biblical thing to do.
Yeah, that's fantastic. We'll keep it up then. Maybe we'll have to do it more, John.
That's what we meant. Yeah, that's that was it. Yeah, we're very biblical. We were being
called like, yeah. Hey, Josh, I want to read a part of the manual and then we'll kind of hand over
the reins to you and go where you want to go.
It says in the manual, as he opened his epistle to the Romans, Paul greeted church members
by calling them beloved of God who are called to be saints.
He remarked that their faith was spoken of throughout the world.
Even though Paul then spent much of his epistle, correcting false ideas, flawed behaviors.
It seems he also wanted to assure these new Christian converts that they truly were saints,
who were beloved of God. His tender counsel blesses all those who struggle to feel God's love,
and for whom becoming a saint may feel out of reach. I know I feel that way a lot of times.
With humble empathy, Paul acknowledged that he felt like a wretched man at times, but the
gospel of Jesus Christ had given him power to overcome sin.
With that power, the Savior's redeeming power, we can overcome evil, both evil in the world
and evil in ourselves with good.
I thought it was a beautiful opening paragraph.
Josh, let's end the reigns over to you.
Where do you want to start, Peter?
Well, I think that statement is so good to hank to give us an understanding is at the beautiful opening paragraph. Josh, let's end the range over to you. Where do you want to start here?
Well, I think that statement is so good, Hank,
to give us an understanding is at the outset,
Paul is talking about the great things
that he's heard about the saints in Rome.
Unlike most of the other epistles that we're going to read
throughout the rest of this year,
Paul had never ministered to these individuals before.
This is kind of a blind contact as it were.
He had heard things,
he knew about what those saints were doing in Rome, and he had never personally met
most of them. And so writing this epistle might seem impersonal at first. It might seem
like he's just writing into the darker, into the void, and hoping something will stick with
these individuals. But he wants to make sure that they know that the good things that they've done
have been recognized by him.
And how important is that in our lives when seeking correction or giving correction
to be able to start off with, hey, I've heard some really good things about what's going on.
What you're doing is really good.
Let's just fine tune some things.
And I'm much more willing when those
that are in authority over me come and say,
Josh, hey, these are things you're doing really well.
Let's work on this.
The manual with Come Follow Me hits right on
that Paul is wanting to emphasize,
you're doing good things.
Don't be discouraged.
Again, as I had said at the outset,
this epistle speaks to us.
We might start to read through here and say, oh, I'm doing so terribly. But we need to go back and
think of those words that we indeed are saints, that God recognizes that we have done great things,
and that we're called to be saints. I love the Greek for that word saints is Agui, and it means holy one or
one set apart. For me, I think too much of the New Orleans saints, when I hear saints
sometimes, thinking of it as you are holy once, you are set apart. That can be helpful
even in the most discouraging times when maybe we're not living up to what we're supposed
to be, but that opportunity is still there.
That's awesome.
So, Josh, give us a little context here.
What's happening in Rome?
We covered a little bit of this last week, but let's hear it from you.
What's happening in Rome?
And what is happening that's leading Paul to give this type of council?
Yeah, so the context we're looking probably in the late 50s AD. So Paul's within the last half
to full decade of his life. This is towards the end of his third mission. One of the cool things
for those who still use the old paper scriptures, you can flip to the back and those pictures that
kept me entertained as a teenager in sacrament meeting. Yeah. You'll see a map of Paul's journeys and missions.
This is towards the end of his third mission,
so that the big mission that's going to take him
throughout most of the Mediterranean
and also likely in Corinth,
which is in modern day Greece,
not too far outside of the city of Athens.
So Paul's there, but he is starting to prepare
for what's next. And what am I going to do next
that the Lord needs me to do? I'm fulfilling this mission. Maybe there's some out there who
have that same question. What's next for me? I'm turning one page in my life. Maybe I'm graduating
high school and I'm just getting ready to start college or just start a mission. Maybe I'm just starting and getting married.
Maybe I'm just getting ready to retire
and I'm wondering what's next.
And that's where Paul's vision is.
Is his vision is what's next
and he's putting his eyes westward.
So he's going from the Mediterranean region
that he knows so well of modern day Greece
and Turkey and the Holy Land.
And he's starting to look further
towards Italy and ultimately towards Spain. And we see this actually in chapter 15. As Paul
is looking about all of these things that he's wanting to do, he says, I want to come to you
in verse 24 of Romans 15. He says, when so ever, I don't know when, but whenever I do, I take my
journey into Spain.
He wants to go to Spain.
He wants to go to the far west and not far west Missouri, but he wants to go into the far
west to preach the gospel to people who haven't heard it before.
The gospel message has been preached now for about 30 years and they're trying to find
new fields that they can go that are ready to harvest. And so he wants to go to Spain, but before he goes to Spain, he says,
I will come to you.
For I trust to see you in my journey and to be brought on my way through the word,
by you.
If first I be somewhat filled with your company.
But now I go on to Jerusalem to minister unto the saints.
And so he knows that he has a mission that he needs to fulfill first.
So he's in Corinth.
He needs to go back to Jerusalem, Y, verse 26, for itath, please them of Macedonia and
a Kia, that's modern day Turkey, to make a certain contribution for the poor saints
which are at Jerusalem.
Here in Romans 1526, Paul talks about the fact that he has gone through Greece
and Turkey, modern-day Greece and Turkey, and he's received contributions for the poor that are
in Jerusalem. That was his original mission that was given to him at the Jerusalem Council in
Acts 1526 and 27. So if we go back to there, we know that that's it.
This is six or seven years later.
I am not very good at keeping my money in my pocket
from six or seven minutes, little on six or seven years.
But Paul has been receiving these contributions
on his mission and he recognizes the sacredness
of the funds that he's received.
He says, I need to go back from Corinth to Jerusalem
to make sure that I deliver those contributions to those to whom they were made. And then I want
to come to you. I want to come to Rome. And then I want to go to Spain. But for the astute student
of these texts, you'll know that that's not how Paul ends up going to Rome. Paul is going to end up going to Rome as it were in chains as a prisoner,
as he appeals to Caesar because of the opposition that he's facing. And so I know that's kind
of a lengthy history lesson of where Paul's been and where he's going, but when we know
that context that he's writing to Roman saints that he doesn't know, the question I always
ask is why is he writing to the Romans? If he's never been there,
if he doesn't know them, like the other epistles, he's talking to friends that he'd converted
and possibly we know from Acts, baptized, why is he writing to these individuals? And we've
said it at the outset, it's because of their faith, but it's also because of a major issue
that is continually causing problems for the moving forward of the work,
the gathering of Israel. And that's trying to bring together those who come from a Jewish background
into Christianity and those who come from a Christian background into Christianity. And Paul says
it best, and maybe this is how we jump into the text from that introduction, is if we go to Roman 7 where our block starts this
week in Come Follow Me, Paul compares what's happening in the church to marriage.
And so this marriage analogy at first, you might sit there and go, wait a second, we're
talking about divorce.
So are the Jews being divorced from Judaism and then becoming Christians and the Gentiles
divorcing?
I don't think that's what Paul's trying to say. I think of it more in light of my own marriage or the marriage
of many of our listeners, how many of us came into a marriage not fully understanding the background
that our spouses had in their lives. I think this is exemplified by a coworker. We were talking recently and they said, I didn't know that in my husband's family,
they always go to Lake Pal on Christmas.
And there's a lot of contention about,
well, do we go to Lake Pal or do we not go to Lake Pal
for Christmas?
Because my family has its own traditions.
And that's what I think Paul is trying to get at
is those who have come into Christianity,
no matter what their background, they're intermingling with people who have different backgrounds
and are coming with different traditions, understandings and knowledge.
And in Rome, that is at the forefront of what's causing the church to stumble is because
people from one background are fighting with those of another background.
And Paul's trying to act as it were as a mediator to be able to say, no, we are all Christians.
We're gonna make this work.
Divorce is not an option.
We need to find out how we're going to become
the best that we can become.
Is there any evidence or anything we can point to
to where Paul got this information about the Romans?
Is it from his friends Priscilla and Aquila
who I think lived in Rome, previous?
Yeah, so this is such a great question, Hank. As I think about it this way, as the church is growing,
we don't have leaders who are being set to be able to overwatch what's happening.
A great example of this, we actually see in Thessalonians, because from the evidence in the text,
Paul was only in Thessalonica, probably only three weeks.
And he's preaching the gospel, and he's baptizing,
and then he's forced out of town.
So then the question becomes,
well, what are they on their own?
Exactly.
Words gonna get around, and people are gonna travel through.
Well, not to overuse the phrase,
all roads lead to Rome, but as Christians are traveling,
and as news is traveling,
we don't have a
ton of information about who actually converted most of these Christians. Some of them may
have been displaced from other areas where Christianity had already been preached by
Paul on his previous two missions, and that as the Roman Empire is moving people from
the Holy Land to Italy to Rome as they're moving people from other places.
You've got people who are converted Christians and now they're living in Rome.
You've got Jews all the way starting in the mid-second century BC who are being moved to Rome
because of rebellions or are immigrating to Rome for opportunities.
And then they're hearing about this stuff about Jesus and they're becoming interested in they're hearing
from friends that are coming.
Hey, come to my church service
because we don't have real churches,
we're meeting in houses.
So come and if you love what you hear,
then become Christian.
We don't have a ton of background of where that is,
but because of Christianity's spread,
and Paul's travels and intermingling,
and that long list of individuals
that I hope we'll get a chance to talk about in chapter 16. of Christianity spread and Paul's travels and intermingling, and that long list of individuals that
I hope will get a chance to talk about in chapter 16. Paul is obviously aware of people that are there,
but maybe they're people that he had converted along in the way that are now in Rome and are
trying to do the best in a church that doesn't have an infrastructure to succeed.
I read somewhere also that in Acts chapter 2 at the day of Pentecost, there's visitors
from Rome that have that experience with Peter, a man and brother, and what shall we do
repent and be baptized.
So perhaps there were some who were at the day of Pentecost experience and went back to
Rome.
All right, Josh, what do you want to do next?
So I think if we jump in, one of the things that Paul's going to do is he gives two
introductions to what he's trying to emphasize to the Roman saints. One
introduction is in Romans 1 verses 7 and 8 in the introduction and a second one is
in Romans chapter 15 verses 14 through 33. It's almost like hiding the thesis at the end of the book. At the end, he's going to talk about some of those
Reasons of why he's writing and so I think looking at both of those will help to illustrate
What we'll talk about then is we go through chapters 7 through 16
So looking first at Romans chapter 1 verses 7 and 8
He says this to all that be in Rome, beloved of God, called to be saints,
and we talked about that word meaning holy ones or being set apart, grace to you and
the peace from God, our Father, and the Lord Jesus Christ. Now, here in verse 7, we get
a word that can sometimes be complicated and carry a lot of baggage in religious tradition,
which is this word grace. One of the things from a linguistic
point of view is that the word here in Greek is caeris, and it means loving kindness. This grace
that comes is a loving kindness from our Savior Jesus Christ, and that's going to be so vital as we
read the rest of Romans, because Paul's emphasis to the saints is you need to be more vital as we read the rest of Romans because Paul's emphasis to the
saints is you need to be more like the Savior. Where is your grace or where is
your loving kindness that is intended to be given to others and and there's a
great definition for loving kindness in in one of the linguistic dictionaries
that I use and it says this that Karees means a benefactor
who gives something that cannot be repaid.
Clients repay through faithfulness and good deeds.
The grace, the loving kindness that's being given
by Jesus Christ in this statement
and through his atoning sacrifice,
we can never repay.
But what he expects us to do is to have faithfulness and
to perform good deeds, not necessarily just in our own private lives, but especially in
the lives of our neighbors. So coming to those two great commandments to love God and love
our neighbor, that's what Paul is going to try and emphasize. And we will come back to
that again. And again, come back to that again and again
as we look at chapter 7 through 16,
is where is your loving kindness to your neighbor?
Where is your Harris?
I'm grateful we're talking about this.
I think you're right.
That word grace can be a loaded word
in religious context, right?
Someone's maybe having experience
in an argumentative type way way saved by grace or saved by
works. And so when they see the word grace, they might be turned away, where you're saying don't turn
away from that word. It's actually a word that we can love. It's a word we can incorporate into our
religious vocabulary. Yeah. James will talk about this in James chapter two in his epistle, but
faith and works, I love the analogy that was given in the old
Institute manual that faith and works are like two ores that you're using while rowing a canoe.
You can't just use one because you'll spin in circles.
They both work hand in hand together.
And so being able to understand what that grace is, it's something we can never repay,
we can never work back, but that there is an expectation on our part
To live up to that grace that we've received by being faithful and by doing good works
Another example that I love CS Lewis used in Miraculous Janity on the one I have page 129
He said Christians have often disputed as to whether what leads the Christian home is good actions or faith in Christ. Kind of a works grace thing. I have no right really to speak
on such a difficult question, but it does seem to me like asking which blade in a pair
of scissors is most necessary. I love that one because you need them both. And to have
see us Lewis say that I I think it's wonderful.
I'd never heard that.
Thanks, John.
John, another reason I love what you're saying
is that's the exact problem that Paul is facing
with the Roman saints.
You have the Jewish Christians who are coming
from a very law-heavy Torah-observant lifestyle.
And you've got the Gentile Christians
who actually may be coming from a life where they
were doing things or participating in things and now they're simply recognizing I am freed by
Jesus Christ from those old ways, that old self. And there's a reason why the first few chapters
of Romans are so focused on this idea of law and works, grace and mercy, how do these work together?
One of the hard parts of what we're trying to do today is that the division for Come
Follow Me is right in the middle of Paul's doctrinal exposition on these ideas.
One of the cool things about studying Paul, and we'll see this as we go through all the
epistles through the rest of the year, is Paul's format is very predictable.
He opens with this allutation. He then gives a Thanksgiving to those that he's writing to,
and then he has two parts in the body of every epistle. The first part is the doctrinal
exposition, and then the second part is a corditory or a, therefore, what are you supposed
to do because of what you've just learned?
Chapter 7 finds us right in the middle of that doctrinal discussion,
and then once we get to chapter 12, we'll get to the point where it's now what do you do with it?
How do you live your life with it?
As you study the epistles, if you can find those divisions,
there's great resources that are available online to be able to see how these epistles are broken down. You can look and see, okay, here's the part where he's
talking about doctrine that helps me to understand why I'm studying what I'm
studying. And then I'm getting to the point where he's saying this is what
you're supposed to do with it. And so you almost see a little bit of that. That
both are important. You have to understand the doctrine. You have to understand
what to do. And he's trying to balance it with both a group of people who are law heavy and a group of people
that are maybe a little more grace heavy because they didn't know anything different except Jesus
in their religious lives. Awesome. All right, I think you've set us up great here, Josh. Let's jump
into chapter 7 and see where Paul takes us. Awesome. So we've made a reference to this a moment ago.
Paul's gonna start, and one of the hard parts
of studying Romans seven through 16 is sometimes he uses
a code names for the people that he's talking about.
And we can see that in verse one.
So starting in Romans seven, one,
no ye not brother in.
Okay, who's this brother in that we're talking to?
For I speak to them
that know the law. If you're not quite familiar with his audience, you won't know that here
he's talking to those who are Jewish Christians. It's kind of like keeping track of a dialogue.
Okay, so he now is addressing Jewish Christians in Rome. And one of the other ways that we
can tell that this is his focus is especially when we get to chapter 8
and 9, he's going to use a ton of Old Testament references. So he's focusing on, now I'm going to
speak specifically to you that know the law, and we need to read chapter 7 through that lens.
We're talking to Jewish Christians who have a loaded background of, we're supposed to follow the law.
The law is our way to salvation. We have to
live the law. We have to do the things of the law. So there's our focus, his question in verse 1,
how that the law have to minion over a man as long as he libous. Now this question's fascinating
to me because it emphasizes the temporal nature of the law. That when you're in life, during your life,
the law is what is over you.
And Paul is then going to give kind of a scene
that nobody really wants to have to face in verse two,
for the woman which hath an husband is bound by law
to her husband so long as he live it.
But if the husband be dead, she is loose
from the law of her husband. We're getting this, this idea
that I'm going to set up what it's like to be a Jewish Christian
by talking about who your spouse is. Referring to the Jewish law
here, the woman was free to be able to marry again after her husband died.
Now Paul knows that this is a complicated situation
because somebody's gonna read that and say,
are you telling me the law is dead?
That's automatically what I thought.
Is he saying, and now the law is dead,
so we can re-marry into this new testament, this new law.
Yeah, and imagine what that would be received as. Yeah. And say, whoa, wait a second, no. I grew up with the law. Yeah, and imagine what that would be received as. Yeah. And say, whoa, wait a second. No, I grew up
with the law. This is everything that I did in my life. Are you saying all of my years with the
law were wasted? Paul then has to say, but I need to give some clarification. So he's not saying that
the law is dead, but that it served a purpose. And that's where he's going to go with it
in verse four of Romans chapter seven.
Wherefore, my brethren, ye also are become dead to the law.
It's not the law that has died.
It's the individual who has died as pertaining to the law.
And that sounds a little convoluted
because you're going, wait a second,
what, how does that relate?
It relates because he says this, by the body of Christ, that ye should be married to another.
So, why are you leaving the law?
You're not leaving the law because the law doesn't have a purpose and that it wasn't good.
You're leaving the law because Christ has now asked you to, because he's given you a new law, a new command, and that that is the
focus of what your life should be now. Your focus is now the new law that Jesus Christ has given,
and because Christ came and died, you're dead to the old law, and you're now expected to follow
the new one. Now, the reason I want to say it that way is because we get a lot of
second Nephi nine feelings in verse seven. So we jump down to Romans 7, 7,
when he says this, what shall we say then, is the loss in or is the law dead?
God forbid. Now the Joseph Smith translation helps us a lot here
where the Greek is more, may it be not,
or may it not be.
An emphatic statement of no,
that's not how it should be.
But I had not known sin but by the law.
For had I not known lust,
except the law had said that shall not covet.
So there in verse seven,
we see that the law is connected
to our knowledge of what is right and what's wrong. And that's going to be reemphasized
in verse eight. John, if you want to go ahead and read verse eight, okay. But sin taking
occasion by the commandment, brought in me all manner of con-cupisence for without the
law sin was dead. Wow. John, good job on that, by the way.
Concupicence.
Concupicence.
I don't know what that is.
Say that 10 times, Senator.
But it ran in Paul, all manner of it, whatever it is.
What's okay?
I get Josh is going to tell us what it is.
And I'm not going to do it from the English standpoint,
because I, I'm not great at King James English either.
But I'll go to the Greek.
The Greek here is tying it back to verse seven, where if I was translating it from the Greek,
I'd say it had wrought in me all manner of covetousness.
So this word is talking about coveting or the coveting for without the law sin was dead.
And if you read this a few times, it gives you a little bit of a headache because you're going, okay, we're talking about law, sin was dead. And if you read this a few times,
it gives you a little bit of a headache
because you're going, okay,
we're talking about law and sin and with the law,
we have sin, but without the law, sin is dead.
What does that mean?
This is a wonderful place to go
to Second Nephi chapter nine, verses 25 and 26.
In the book of Mormon,
we're able to see Jacob's commentary that helps us better understand
what Paul is trying to say to the Roman saints.
So here in 2nd Nephi 9, 25 and 26, we read this, wherefore he has given a law, and where there
is no law given, there is no punishment.
And where there is no punishment, there is no condemnation.
And where there is no condemnation, the mercies of the Holy One of Israel have claimed
upon them because of the atonement for they are delivered by the power of him.
What Paul's trying to say in these verses is that that Jacob told the ancient Nephites,
is if you don't know the law, you are not held accountable by it.
Now for us, as Latter-day Saints, we go, yes, that makes sense.
That's awesome.
But for a Jewish audience, that was hard to get their mind around because the Jews of the
day believed that Torah was universally binding on everyone.
Regardless of who they were, God's law was to be bound on all people, regardless of whether
they knew it or not.
And understanding that opened my mind so much to what Paul is trying to do to get these
saints to love one another.
Because for the Jewish Christians, they had been taught their whole lives that you have to follow the law.
There has to be a law that you have to follow
line by line, word by word, walk by walk.
And now that the Savior's coming and atoning for our sins,
they're having a hard time wondering,
well, what about what do I do?
What is my responsibility then
if the Savior's going to come?
And that's where we go back to that, Carrease from chapter one, is that we cannot repay what the
Savior did. We can't make up a, we couldn't have done what He did, but we can walk faithfully.
And when we know that's what we're supposed to do, we have an elevated expectation to live it.
That with the law, we know what sin is, and so the expectation is, is we have to live it. That with the law, we know what sin is, and so the expectation is, is we have to live
symphry because we know what the law is.
But for those who don't know the law, the atonement makes up that difference because you can't
hold them accountable for something they didn't know.
It took me years to figure out that when we're talking about those that don't know the law if I were to say that in today's context of TV shows
It would sound like oh somebody who went to law school criminal law whatever
We're talking about the law of Moses when we say the law and then you use the phrase Josh great synonym
You're bound to the Torah even if you don't know it. So the Torah is
Law the law the law It's the law of Moses. So it was so helpful for me to realize that when we talk about the law and the
Prophets were talking about parts of the Old Testament, the law, first five books, and the prophets, the prophetic books, and the Old Testament.
So when Jesus says things like on these two, hang all the law and the prophets, he's talking about books.
Yes. And one of the hard parts with Hebrew is the word for law generally is Torah. And
then the word for the law, Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy is Torah. So
sometimes when I teach, I say, we're talking about law, little T, and that's the just law in general.
And then when we're talking about the law,
capital T, that's Genesis through Deuteronomy.
But in there is this is the way that one is supposed to walk.
This is the way in which one is supposed to live.
I can't even imagine what it would be like
for some of these Jewish Christians to come
into Christianity and say, now what?
What do I do?
What does my worship look like?
How do I show my devotion to God?
And so I have sympathy for them because they are trying to do the best with what they have.
They don't have a leader that's there to guide them every step of the way.
And they're saying, no, no, no, these things were good. In my life, when I followed the
law, look at these blessings that I received. The Gentile Christian is looking and saying,
well, so you're saying I have to follow your law, but in Christianity, that law is not
there. And so you're getting that friction. And so that's why Paul is trying to specifically say
to those Jewish Christians, you know the law.
You lived the law, but the law is not what binds us
to God any longer.
It's the atonement of Jesus Christ.
And so you need to be loving kindness.
So you need to show loving kindness and grace
to those Gentile Christians who aren't coming
from that same background.
So Josh, as we've read through these first eight verses of chapter seven,
it can be really confusing. I'm using Bible Hub here trying to get other takes on this because
it seems like you said it can get a little convoluted. So would I be correct in saying that Paul is
telling these Roman saints, the law basically told us what was right and what was wrong. It
delineated what was right and what was wrong. And so it told us when we were sinning and when we
were not sinning, Christ does more than that. He says, now we are verse six. We're serving in the
newness of spirit and not in the oldness of the letter. So Christ has maybe changed why I don't sin,
why I live the commandments.
Yeah, and it's your motivation and Hank,
I wanna make you feel better.
Okay.
You are not the only one that looks at these texts
and goes, wow, this is heavy.
And the reason I can say that is,
is one of the most extensive Joseph Smith translations
that we have for
the entire Bible is Romans chapter 7.
And so I think maybe even helping, and for our audience who is read and our listeners
are looking through this and going, I'm never going to make sense of this.
Joseph Smith is going to try and help us out with these very verses.
And so being able to see that Joseph
Smith saw this and said, Heavenly Father, I need to help the saints better understand this.
Let's look at those same two verses that we just did, verses seven and eight, and how
the Joseph Smith translation actually helps us. So here he says, what shall we say then,
is the Law sin? God forbid. May I had not known sin but by the law
for had I not known lust except the law had said
that shall not covet.
But sin taking occasion by the commandment
brought in me all manner of concupisence
for without the law sin was dead.
So he kept the word.
So he's gonna keep a lot of that,
but the explanation that's gonna follow. So going to the Joseph Smith translation, a lot of the first few
verses are the same. But look at what Joseph Smith does to try and clarify this in verses 14,
15, and 16 of the Joseph Smith translation. So Joseph Smith translation of Romans 7,
starting in verse 14, for we know that the commandment is spiritual,
but when I was under the law,
I was yet carnal, sold, under sin.
Verse 15, but now I am spiritual,
for that which I am commanded to do I do,
and that which I am commanded not to allow, I allow not,
and then verse 16, for what I know is not right,
I would not do, for that which is sin, I hate.
And so the law was helpful because it helped us to be able to know what we should and shouldn't
do. But it was carnal because, going back to verse 1, it was temporal. It was just
how do we live in this life? How do I live my day-day life? When Jesus Christ came, he came to elevate our focus from a
temporal focus to a spiritual focus. And now the laws are about spirituality. What am I doing to
become? I think of Lingey Robbins' amazing general conference talk, what manner of men and women
ought to be? We often have to do lists, but we rarely have to become lists.
That is what Paul is trying to say here, is the law was a to-do,
but Jesus came to help us to be something better than what we are in our temporal state.
Wow, that's really good.
One of the things I feel like in the Book of Mormon, they never lost sight of what the law of Moses was.
They always saw it as pointing to Christ and it seems like
except for Sharon.
He's the only one that argued otherwise, but when you look at ainadai's amazing sermon, his tell him what I just told him,
two verses at the end of Mosaic 16,
because he came and asked the wicked priest,
what are you teaching?
They said the law of Moses.
Well, why don't you keep it any lecture
to him on what the law is?
So this is verse 14 of Mosaic 16.
Therefore, if he teach the law of Moses,
also teach it is a shadow of those things which are to come.
And then the next verse teach them that redemption comeeth through Christ the Lord, who is the
very eternal Father, amen.
And I just think, man, I've been it, I just summed it up right there.
This is what Robert Millet says, my favorite definition of the law of Moses.
Law of Moses is a grand prophecy of Christ.
And I think he's talking a lot about the sacrifices,
because we can see that in those.
But then, Abidadai gets it.
That Christ hasn't come yet in Abidadai's time,
but redemption comes through Christ.
So, yeah, keep the law of Moses,
because we've been asked to, or strive to keep it,
but never lose sight that redemption
comes salvation comes because of the Atonement of Jesus Christ.
Yeah, and John, I love that you've did that because there's two more things in chapter 7 that I think
really will help us understand the audience that Paul is trying to write to.
In verse 9, in Romans 7, Paul says something autobiographical, which sometimes if we read
too quickly, we might miss. But in verse 9, he says, for I was alive without the law once.
But when the commandment came, sin revived and I died, some commentators on this verse think
that maybe Paul's gusto and grill fire to be faithful.
We think about Paul's experiences as solvers,
persecuting the saints.
We can go to Philippians where Paul says,
I was circumcised on the eighth day.
It's kind of like somebody today maybe saying,
I was baptized at midnight on my eighth birthday.
The very second I could be baptized, I was baptized.
That's how zealous I was.
But some people wonder, did Paul maybe fall away
from Judaism for a while?
As Paul is getting ingrained in the world,
was there a time that he felt alive without the law once,
that he stepped away from it?
But then when the commandment came,
sin revived and I died.
I realized that I needed to sacrifice
the only thing I can sacrifice to God, which is my will to follow his commandments. And
so maybe Paul is really sympathetic for those that are his Jewish Christian audience in
these verses, because he said, I know what it's like to go without the law for a while,
and then to come back and to try and figure this out.
And I think this is something for all of us that if there are times in our lives where
we have lost commitment or maybe fallen away, that Paul is another example of many, many
people who have felt a revival to come back.
It's never too late.
It's never too late to say, no, I'm going to recommit.
And the adversary tries to tell us, no, no, no, like you've made your decision. It's over.
But Paul here, I think, is being vulnerable for a second and saying, no, there are times where I
haven't been fully committed. And I know what that did to me. And so I want to be understanding to you as well.
Wow.
I love the idea that obviously there are many off ramps
of the covenant path, but there are also many on ramps.
They're always open.
And if you've gotten on, get back on.
And I love how my GPS never says,
you idiot my GPS, just says recalculating.
Go fix this and get back on.
And I love that.
So that's one point I didn't want us to miss here in chapter 7.
The other point which may come back to what John was saying a little bit ago about what
the law of Moses was supposed to point forward to.
Well, it's in verse 24 because as
Latter-day Saints, we might find something that this resonates with. Paul writes,
oh, wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? Paul
is asking this question, who's going to redeem me from both physical and
spiritual death? The law is temporal. It's only meant for my life, but what does
that mean for me when this life is over? And then verse 25, I think God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God,
but with the flesh the law of sin. And so he sets up and says, I know the natural man is an enemy to God.
I know I'm wretched. I know that I have a propensity to want to sin.
But I myself am going to serve God. This is Paul's Joshua moment.
As for me in my house, we will serve the Lord. He's saying,
my body wants to serve sin, but I'm going to serve this.
Now, I would be remiss for those who know me if I didn't recognize the Dead Sea Scrolls
contribution to what this is helping us understand.
Verse 25, this idea of the flesh and the law of sin, we get an idea of what this would have
meant to a Jewish audience in one of the Dead Sea Scrolls called the Community Rule.
So in the Community Rule, we have an idea of what Paul is talking about here in verse
25. So this is one QS, column 11, lines
nine through 15, but they read, as for me, to evil humanity and the counsel of perverse
flesh, do I belong? My transgressions, evil sins and corrupt heart belong to the counsel
of wormy rot and those who walk in darkness. Surely a man's way is not his own. Neither can any person
firm his own step. Surely justification is of God by his power is the way made perfect. All that
shall be he forenose, all that is his plans established, apart from him is nothing done. As for me, if I stumble, God's loving kindness forever shall save me.
If through sin of the flesh I fall, my justification will be by the righteousness of God which endures
for all time.
Though my affliction break out, he shall draw my soul back from the pit and firm my step
on the way through his love he has brought me near by his loving kindness.
Shall he provide my justification? I don't know about you, but to me, that sounds like scripture.
That is, again, the community rule that was written sometime between 150 BC. So we're talking
150 or 100 years. I wonder if Paul has a text like that in mind
Because he talks about I'm wretched and I have this but God will justify me and he's then going to say
It's not by me that this is justified
God can't just forgive sin. He had to send his only begotten son to a tone for us
These Jewish texts are saying well God's going to do this.
It's in his plan, but what was his plan?
His plan was to send Jesus Christ to suffer, bleed,
and die and be resurrected so that we could find
that justification.
Great stuff.
I really like where we went.
You know, when you read this and you hear Paul just saying,
oh, I know that to do the right thing and then I don't, I mean, I don't think
we can assume too much that he was always messing up.
You know what I mean?
Because when I read a wretched man that I am from Nephi, I'm like, I would like to be that wretched.
Yeah.
I'd also like to be large in stature, but that ain't happening.
So, I wonder if we can overthink that as he talks about wrestling
with the flesh, because we all do. We mess up, but I don't think it was a really bad and consistent
habit of messing up. Let me read something that Dr. Robert O' Millett, a guest on the program we've
had, his book called Becoming New. It's a commentary on Paul. And this is what he says on page 38,
to commentary on Paul. And this is what he says on page 38, the title of this paragraph is Paul before and after Christ. Chapter 7 of Romans has resulted in more misunderstanding
about Paul and about the human race in general than almost any other chapter of scripture.
A cursory reading will cause most persons unfamiliar with the Pauline epistles to shake
their heads and wonder how in the world the Apostle Paul managed to garner so much attention through the years, as well as how he could
possibly have been so admired and respected by Christians to the centuries. As it reads in the
King James version or for that matter most any other translation, we see poor old pitiful Paul,
a weak, simpering, and pathetic excuse of a man whose life is completely out of control.
A man who never does what he should do and always seems to be doing what he shouldn't.
And you can kind of get that impression for some of those verses.
Next paragraph, my late colleague Robert J. Matthews wrote, quote, as rendered in the KJV,
Paul is sinful, carnal, and wicked, even after years in the apostleship, and knows not how
to do good, or even what is good.
The JST re-words the passage in such a way as to show the difference between Paul's life
for under the law of Moses and his life after he found and obeyed the gospel of Christ.
In the Joseph Smith translation, Paul explains that when he was living under the
law of Moses, he was carnal, or through the gospel, including receiving its covenants
and ordinances, he has become spiritual. Most important, the Joseph Smith translation
states that it is only in Christ that he learned how to be a good man, and that through the
assistance of Christ, Paul subdues the sin within him. Hmm.
That's so good.
I think that works really well right after reading the JST and showing our little struggle
of being able to really make heads or tails out of what's going on.
As I was looking to this, I noticed that footnote 5A in chapter 7 says, JST, Romans 7,
5 through 27 appendix. And then I know this footnote 15A, JST
Romans 7. It's like, no, really, go to the JST. It's in there twice, telling us three the same
verses. It's like, no, really, you got to see this. So that's an important addition.
Yeah. Some people might not even know where to find that Joseph Smith translation. It's back, if you're your old paper copy, it's back after the Bible dictionary before the maps.
I've had students before that. I've never even seen this. Speaking of that JST, John,
I think everyone should go read this. And listen to these last two verses. It ends with chapter 7
and more of a positive tone than it ends in the KJV.
It's now 26. He's added a couple of verses here. And if I subdue not the sin, which is in me,
but with the flesh served the laws of sin, oh, wretched man that I am. Who shall deliver me from the
body of this death? I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord, that so with the mind, I myself serve the law of God.
It's just a little bit of a change that makes it,
I think, a significant difference.
Well, that's great.
There is a verse there that helped me a lot
when I was a single adult.
I fulfilled all my eligibility as a young single adult
and went into a single adult.
The last half of verse 18, for To Will is present with me. I want to do the right thing, but how to perform that which is good, I find not. I think that's...
Oh yeah.
I know what I'm supposed to do, but I'm incompetent sometimes at doing what I'm supposed to do.
They thought that was helpful.
To will, I wanna do it, how to do it?
I don't know yet.
Yeah, it's almost like he's saying,
the desire to do good is right there,
but I just don't have the ability right now.
Yeah.
This is so good because again, coming back to the audience,
Paul's coming down hard and trying to correct years
and years of training.
And so to be able to say, I know your hearts.
I know that you're good people.
I've heard nothing but good about you.
Please do not take this as me simply saying, you're a wretched.
I'm the wretched one, but I know your hearts that you want to do this.
Just like me.
And so please, please, please know that I'm riding.
And it's so hard in that medium. Paul couldn't just jump on the internet, couldn't just go
on FaceTime or anything like that to talk to these people. He's got to convey
everything in writing. Any chance that you we can see where he's trying to say,
hey, I'm reassuring you, I'm like you, I know this, I've been where you are. I'm
here to support you. It's so important because he's trying to build
unity in what seems to be an impossible situation.
Yeah, and it's really nice to see a leader do that. I think that's really nice to see a leader
be a little vulnerable in saying, hey, I haven't always done the right things. That's same
with parenting. With Nephi, O'Retched man that I am, that's one of his greatest moments.
You wouldn't say to Nephi, come on,
Nephi don't have low self esteem.
I mean, no, he was in a great place right there.
And then he goes on with, but I know in whom I have trusted,
my God has been my support and gives that,
that psalm of Nephi and second Nephi for.
So I'm with you, hey, I'm glad Nephi said,
O wretched man, that I am,
because it makes us all go,
we're gonna have moments where we're like,
but then we know in who we have trusted
and we move forward, good stuff.
Speaking of moving forward, Josh,
what do you wanna do next?
We've now kind of set the tone
with this idea of the laws no longer binding upon Christians. And now when
we get to chapter 8, I've actually written in my scriptures under chapter 8, life is empowered by
the Holy Spirit. And so as we're going through kind of a theme of the next part of this chapter,
is how does the Spirit then empower our lives? Because the question, Paul is, again, trying to project
what questions people are going to ask
when they're reading this epistle.
They're gonna get to the end of this and ask,
okay, so what am I supposed to do then?
If I'm not supposed to follow the law,
what is the expectation that I'm supposed to have?
And so here comes chapter eight.
And again, these divisions are arbitrary.
They weren't in the original manuscripts.
So this is just a continuation of the thought.
But chapter 8, he says, there is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ
Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit.
So this is a little bit of a rebuke to those Jewish Christians.
There is no condemnation to those Gentile Christians who aren't following
the law.
Know that that's the case.
They're walking after the Spirit.
Well, what does that look like, verse two?
For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus have made me free from the law of sin and
death.
So it's the fact that Jesus Christ has given the law of the Spirit of life.
What is it that the spirit, that promised spirit
that came on the day of Pentecost?
What is it teaching us to do?
Are we following it in the back of my mind?
I will never forget President Nelson's statement.
In a coming day, it will be impossible
to survive spiritually without the guiding
and directing help of the spirit.
That is what Paul is trying to say.
As is now your expectation is you are to live by the spirit.
And there are laws that the spirit is going to dictate.
And sometimes it's just going to be you and the spirit that knows what that law looks
like.
But it's going to be there and you need to follow it.
And so we need to be empowered to live according to the Spirit
and the Spirit is what's going to guide and direct us.
Interestingly enough, the word there is penuma in Greek,
which is the same word that we see in the Old Testament
as the Spirit that is over the earth during creation.
And so tying that back to the Spirit of life,
the breath of life that God gives to Adam and Eve when they're created.
That's the very essence of life. It's supposed to be directed by the spirit.
And to give commentary to that, one of my favorite talks that was ever given by Sister Nelson.
So this is January 2017, her discussion, love and marriage. And so she goes through, and I use this with my seminary students all the time when I teach
intimacy because she teaches it so well.
So the word here that spirit of life is the Greek word penuma that is used throughout
the Old Testament, Greek translation, as the spirit of life.
It's the spirit that's over the creation in Genesis 1, 2.
It's connected to this idea of the breath of life
that's given to Adam and Eve in the creation.
It's what was supposed to dictate their lives.
And as I read this verse, I see Paul trying to say,
you need to live in a way that the spirit is always present.
And whenever I think of this, I can't help but want to teach
Sister Wendy Nelson's discussion
on the importance of the Holy Ghost. She's talking about intimacy, but she will broaden it out to
everyone's in life. She goes for true marital intimacy. The Holy Ghost needs to be involved.
It is simply not possible to kind of have the intimate experiences outside of marriage that you
can have within because the Spirit will not be present.
Elder Parley P. Pratt taught that the Holy Ghost has the ability to increase in large,
expand and purify all the natural passions and affections.
Just imagine he can purify your feelings.
Therefore, anything that invites the Spirit into your life and into the life of your spouse
and your marriage will increase your ability to experience marital intimacy. It really is as simple and as profound as that. On the other
hand, anything that offends the spirit will decrease your ability to be one with your
spouse. Things such as anger, lust, unforgiveness, contention, immorality, and unrepentant sin
will reduce your attempt for marital intimacy to be something that is nothing more than a sexual
experience.
Now, while Sister Nelson is putting that within the realms of marital intimacy, I think
we can connect it to Paul that it's anything in our lives.
If there is anything we're doing in our lives or we're trying to do without the Spirit,
it's not going to be as successful as if we tried to do it with the Spirit. And a lot of what we're going to read in chapter 8
is all about receiving that Spirit.
How do we avoid the things that will drive the Spirit away
and how do we accept and receive the Spirit into our lives
and live after the direction that we receive from?
The reason that the Spirit can direct us verse 3
and again we cannot divorce ourselves from
this eternal and essential truth. Verse 3 in chapter 8 of Romans, for what the law could not do in
that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own son in the likeness of sinful flesh and
force in, condemns sin in the flesh. So why can we live after the Spirit? Why can the Spirit quicken our lives and help us
through the Atonement of Jesus Christ? The Holy Ghost is not doing anything independent of the
Savior's atoning sacrifice. It's amplifying it. And so our lives should be lived in a way
in which the Spirit is guiding and directing us to be able to do many great things. And a great
summary of this would be verse 6, which reads a little bit differently than
what we see later in the book of Mormon.
But Romans 8.6 for to be carnally minded as death, but to be spiritually minded is life and
peace.
And so we do have that cross-reference in the book of Mormon where it's to be, carnally
minded as death, but to be spiritually minded is life eternal.
So we get a little bit of a difference
in what Paul is writing here,
but that's the whole essence of what Paul is trying
to get these Jewish Christian and Gentile Christians
to understand is you need to be spiritually minded.
You need to have your eye set on the glory of God
rather than focusing just on worldly
and temporal things. I loved what you said about having the spirit and the Holy Ghost
in guiding us and the Atonement of Jesus Christ are being connected. And this is what Brigham
Young said. This is Journal of Discourses, Volume 12104. There is no doubt if a person lives according
to the revelations given to God's people,
he may have the spirit of the Lord to signify to him his will and to guide and to direct him
in the discharge of his duties, in his temporal as well as his spiritual exercises.
I am satisfied, however, that in this respect, we live far beneath our privileges.
that in this respect, we live far beneath our privileges. So good.
So when you're talking about being spiritually minded,
you mean the Holy Ghost can really help us with everything we have to do?
Yeah, we'd love to.
And isn't that what happened to the sacrament table?
We can always have his spirit to be with us.
But of Brigham Young says, we're living beneath our privileges.
What makes me want to,
I get to step it up, I got to be more spiritually minded like Paul sent here.
Excellent. I really like this discussion because if you two are anything like me,
I know when I've lost the spirit. And that hopefully doesn't happen often, but I can see that
to be carnally minded or to be driven by your emotions or by your
Apatites and passions is not gonna end well and never ends well
But if you're guided by the spirit in your in control of those things leads to life and peace and he says the carnal mind is
Emnity against God in verse 7 which sounds a lot like King Benjamin the natural man
Is an enemy to God
because it hurts God's children.
Yeah, and Hank, I think one of the other steps
that we can move that discussion to
is that keep in mind our context.
There's contention between Jewish Christians
and Gentile Christians,
and it's because they are being carnally minded.
They're focused right here
and now. We see this in the news, we see this in discussions of, our world today is pretty
divided. Why not turn to Paul's words and say, okay, we may be divided over different
issues. We may be divided over different questions. But Jesus Christ can unify us just like
he unified them.
We can find that.
And one of those first steps is for myself to look introspectively and say that I am being
carnally minded about this subject and I can become better.
I love what Paul says in verse 9 of Romans 8, but you are not in the flesh.
You're holy ones.
You're set apart.
You're holy ones, you're set apart, you're saints, but in the Spirit,
and if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you. Now, if any man have not the Spirit of Christ,
he is none of his. So if we are acting outside of that Spirit, we're not acting for Christ, but
verse 10, and if Christ be in you, the body is dead because of sin, but the Spirit is life because of righteousness.
And so we're seeing this emphasis that we need to be those who seek to welcome the Spirit
and to especially welcome the Savior into our lives.
And what are His great commandments?
Love God.
Love our neighbor.
And that's what overcomes this carnality that is evident in all of us.
It's really fun to see it in the context of Paul trying to get these groups together. I'm so glad
you're doing that because it's giving me a lot of, huh? Type of, yeah. Oh, I get it.
The connection between the Holy Ghost and the Atonement, I don't think is something that's as understood
among church members as it could be.
Then Elder Henry B. Eiring said,
this is a BYU speech given way back in 1989.
Do you guys remember the 1900s?
I was there, I bet.
You probably were.
He says, you can invite the Holy Ghost's companionship in your life.
You can know when he is there and when he withdraws.
This is the product that really is profound to me.
When he is your companion, you can have confidence.
The atonement is working in your life.
That's something that for a long time, I didn't connect to the Holy Ghost's companionship,
is that's an indication that the Savior's atonement is changing your nature, as Paul would
say here, changing you from carnally minded to spiritually minded.
So with all of this discussion about receiving the Spirit and trying to be able to say that's the new rallying direction that we're going to receive, I love what Paul's going to do here in verses 15, 16, and 17 of Romans 8.
He starts for you, not receive the Spirit of Bondage again to fear. Now, look at how he's playing the Spirit of Life and of Peace and of joy that comes from God with the spirit
of bondage and fear that comes from the adversary.
He is really setting up this dichotomy.
But he then says, but ye have received the spirit of adoption whereby we cry, Abba,
Father.
Paul is trying to tell these Christian saints in Rome, when you accepted Christ, you were
adopted into a family that is together.
And while you might have some quarrels with your siblings
that have a little bit different views than you do,
we are family and we have the same God.
And so that spirit, bear witness in verse 16
with our spirit and we are children of God.
So Paul is trying to emphasize what the true identity
is of these Christians. It doesn't matter if you're Gentile Christian, it doesn't matter if you're
a Jewish Christian. You are a Christian. Drop the precedent. Drop for whoever you were before
and focus on this. In our day, President Nelson is trying to get us to do the same. What is our identity?
First and foremost, it's our divine identity as children of God, children of the covenant
that we are individuals who have put God first.
And so being able to recognize that Paul is saying the same thing about identity that President
Nelson is saying about identity today shows that we have a connection with these ancient saints.
But we've been adopted by God and we are his children
and we have his spirit with us.
We're joint heirs, we're children of God, we are a family.
It seems to be something that he's saying,
you've got a unite to these Roman saints.
And ultimately isn't that the purpose of Zion.
I sometimes get frustrated with my students when we talk about the second coming and they
look at me and say, Brother Matt, how bad does the world have to get before Jesus comes
back?
And I turn that around and say, can I ask you a question, how good do we need to get before
Jesus comes back?
And one of those things is to understand our identity and understand that we're all in
this together.
That we as saints need to join Armin, Armin, build the kingdom in preparation for that.
Because it's by doing that, verse 17, and if children then heirs, heirs of God and
joint heirs with Christ.
And if it so be that we suffer with him, that we may be also glorified together.
If we want the King to come, we better build the kingdom for Him to come too.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
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