Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - The Family: A Proclamation to the World Part 1 : Dr. Jenet Erickson
Episode Date: December 11, 2021Our attitude toward, “The Family: A Proclamation to the World” is a test for this generation. Dr. Jenet Erickson joins us to discuss gender, the importance of Christlike characteristics, and the i...mportance of familial ideals, and how we often don’t meet them yet, the Atonement covers all of our Heavenly Parents’ children. We discuss how we all belong to the eternal family of God.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodesFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive ProducersDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Rough Video EditorAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsKrystal Roberts: French TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-pianoPlease rate and review the podcast.
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study. I'm Hank Smith and I'm John by the way. We love to learn, we love to laugh,
we want to learn and laugh with you. As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my Mary co-host John by the way. Mary Christmas, John.
Mary Christmas. Hank. Yes. It's the most wonderful time of the year. I feel so joyful and triumphant.
It's also the most stressful time of the year. Oh, come me to our podcast.
Yes.
John, fantastic week this week.
We have a wonderful guest who's with us.
Yes, we do.
And I'm so glad we're taking time on our topic today.
But first, let me introduce Janet Erickson.
She is an associate professor in church history and doctrine in religious
education at Brigham Young University, where she teaches eternal family religion at the
eternal family religion course, as well as the introduction to family process course for
the school of family life.
She received a PhD in family social science from the University of Minnesota.
Is that go-go first? It totally is. Go Go First. Go Go First. Okay. Her research has focused on maternal and child well-being
in the context of work and family life, as well as the distinct contributions of mothers and fathers
in children's development. As a social science research fellow at the Heritage Foundation, wow.
She completed an extensive review of research
on the effects of non-parental care
on children's development for policymakers.
She's a research fellow of both the Wheatley institution
and the Institute for Family Studies
and has been a columnist on family issues
for the Deseret news since
2013. She and her husband Michael had been blessed with two children. We are so delighted
to welcome you, Janet, to our podcast today. Thanks for joining us.
Thank you so much, such an honor to be here. Thanks, John and Hank.
We are just excited to have you with your expertise. John Jenett comes highly recommended by her peers in the church history and
doctrine department. And that was a recent switch, right, Jenett?
Yes, yes, just this fall full-time and religious education.
I had been full-time in the school family life for a few years. And then when we
had children, I left and was part time and now full time in our religious set.
Now John, Janet, this is kind of a, we're going to have to take a different approach here
because we're not looking at a passage of scripture where we can say, okay, what was
Joseph Smith and what were they, what were his contemporaries doing?
We're actually not going that far back.
We're going to go back to 1995.
Now it is the 1900s.
So there might be, there might be some people listening who
are, that is a long time ago, way back in the 1900s.
I love thinking back to when that was given. I remember sitting and listening to President
Hinkley give it. It was the women's broadcast. And it was striking that it was not reserved
to be shared in general conference,
the formal general conference on Saturday and Sunday, but it was the week before to the women.
And I've thought often since then, there's a statement by President Oaks about the power of women
being the voice for the family. And you might have heard President Kimbell talk about the
the role of women in these last days and that they would be a
tremendous power for good, that they would rise up like a sleeping giant, actually.
And I think there's something very significant about women and their
connection to relationship that begins with Mother Eve in her willingness to take
the fruit that a family could be born and that deep connection to the
relational nature of our reality.
There was a reason it was given to the women to bless all the families of the earth.
So I'm grateful for that.
I remember when this happened senior in high school, I was in seminary, it was the beginning
of the school year and they said, wow, you know, the church issued a proclamation.
I'm going, okay, wow, this must be a big deal.
This hasn't happened in a long time.
And I remember not, the most memorable thing for me was the least,
how unmemorable it was.
Yeah.
Because I remember thinking, okay, the most fascinating part
for me honestly was the signatures at the bottom.
I was a senior in high school, my brain wasn't fully developed, but I don't remember being shocked by what was taught.
Maybe we weren't as aware in the church. In fact, I wrote a list of questions that were that I think
were happening at that time to some degree and have certainly increased like this one.
to some degree and have certainly increased, like this one. Does marriage matter?
How important is it?
What about alternatives to marriage, like cohabitation?
Does it matter if people have sexual relations outside of marriage?
Does it matter if marriage is between a man and a woman?
Do children just need caring adults around them?
Do they need a mother and a father?
Are they important? Are children important?
What are children's rights and relationship to parents? What do parents owe children if anything?
What is the most important thing that parents do for children? Do fathers offer something different
than mothers? And what does it? Does it matter? And just seeing how the pioneers would never have asked these
questions that in our generation, these are questions that we have we have grappled with and we
increasingly grappled with. And there's something powerful about that. There's something
powerful about being forced in a sense to ask questions about the deepest truths of eternity.
This reality of an eternal family constructed
of a heavenly father and a heavenly mother and children.
And we've been asked really to deeply think about,
do those things matter.
And someday I think those pioneers will say,
teach us what you learned in that search
that was generated by significant cultural questions
around these deep things that we took for granted.
That's fantastic. I will mention, as I've been preparing this week, I was surprised to see that only five of the 15 men that sign that five are still alive. You have President Nelson, President Oaks,
Elder Eiring, Elder Holland, and President Ballard.
And those other 10 are gone now.
As I was preparing Hank, I end and Janet.
I found a talk from President Oaks in October of 2017.
And in that talk, he mentioned he was one of seven that was still left. So since then
Now it's down to the five and and he even talked about the fact that it may may not have
I don't remember his exact words, but may not have seemed so significant at the time
But this is what profits can do they they see their sears. They see far off
That we would need some clarity on
these squits. Those were questions were awesome. I can't wait to go back and write those
down because I think there's such an art to have the right questions. And I love those
questions you started with. As a graduate student, I remember thinking that this document,
as I'm setting all this research, thousands of studies, right, been gathered over family,
it was family structure matter,
what do mothers and fathers do all of that?
And to think within these nine paragraphs
is more social science findings,
the confirmatory findings,
then you could amass, right, in hundreds of studies,
just so condensed,
what we have seen by experience through research
just composed so powerfully in this document.
And at the same time, I think it's important to realize that the proclamation can sometimes
be a source of pain because it holds up an ideal and the truth is all of us fall outside that ideal. We all know the
messiness of family life. I was thinking family life is so filled with messiness because
of this growth process that it induces. Marriage is a profound growth inducing experience.
Children are growth inducing. And then sometimes it can feel like it's used as a baton to say, you don't belong,
right?
Whether it's LGBTQ questions or a divorced family or whatever situations might seem
that they fall outside the ideal, it can feel like we can use the proclamation to as
a weapon instead of what it is, which is a light. And I think I think this
this blazing source of light that it provides for us to guide us, not not to shame us, but to guide
us and to help us understand when we do feel pain, these truths help us understand why there is
pain, why there is pain connected to divorce, why there is pain connected to write the
struggles of family life, whatever those might be. These help us understand that and help us grow
towards that beautiful ideal. It is a great story of redemption. It feels like when we have the
proclamation and the living Christ side by side that this is not a story of perfectionism. I love
elder Christ offers in recent words and conference, but this is the plan, not the story of perfectionism. I love, I love elder Christ offers in recent words in conference, but this is the plan,
not the plan of perfectionism, the plan of redemption and that the redeemer walks beside
us in this journey of family life to help us experience redemption through him as we
walk towards this beautiful ideal of truths given to us.
That's great.
Thank you for bringing that up, Geneta.
I've been studying the gospel of Luke lately in my classes and
You see the Savior going outside what the some had put up as boundaries of who belongs and who doesn't belong and in the gospel of Luke
He just walks right past those boundaries and so these people belong
That you had kicked out that you had pushed away to the fringes. They belong come in come in
We're all part of this big family.
I'm glad you used that word ideal. I wanted to just state something that's right in the
follow him manual. It's on page 215 where Elder Christopherson said, to declare the fundamental
truths relative to marriage and family is not to overlook or diminish the sacrifices
and successes of those for whom the ideal is not a present reality. Everyone has gifts, everyone has
talents, everyone can contribute to the unfolding of the divine plan in each generation and he goes on,
but I'm glad you use that word the the ideal and I in my margin, I put Marona USA, which usually isn't words
we put together, but what I meant by USA is Marona is the ultimate single adult because his greatest
contribution, his greatest work, I think we could say, is while he was a single adult, and our
marital status does not diminish our capacity and our
our gifts to contribute to the world, to the gospel, to the church, you know.
So I like that. Yeah, this is an ideal and it's not a present reality for everybody.
Yeah. John, I was thinking, as you were saying that, that is so beautiful to think of Moroni.
There's this beautiful statement in actually the handbook of instructions. And it says,
around the family, you know, the whole purpose of the gospel being to strengthen the family.
And it says, in this life, many people have limited opportunities for loving family relationships.
That's just reality. No family is free from challenges, pain and sorrow.
Individuals and families exercise faith in the Lord
and strive to live according to the truths
he has revealed concerning the family.
The Savior has promised,
he will bear the burdens of all who come unto him.
And so you think of Moroni walking beside the Savior
in that journey as he comforted him during that time of right outside of that ideal
Yeah
Janet you mentioned that we're gonna study the living Christ or you put them side by side and I'm we're gonna study this next week
I'd like this idea if here's the ideal and here's the Christ when you don't reach the ideal
Right yes, and when because, right? We all need him.
Yeah.
Are we not all beggars?
Are we not all beggars?
Can you imagine what might remind us?
Yeah.
I love that.
Thank you.
You know, the proclamation starts out with all of us
as the family of God.
That is the whole beginnings.
It says, right, this is the plan for all of us.
All human beings are created in the image of God.
Each is a beloved spirit, son or daughter of heavenly parents.
And as such, each has a divine nature and destiny in this heavenly family that we are all
part of.
And I'll think sometimes this, the proclamation is about our heavenly family.
So when we think of the great gathering, it's so beautiful that the teachings
of the proclamation came, right,
in this dispensation of the gathering
and we have President Nelson speaking of the gathering
as we are gathered into temples,
the gathering of Israel into temples
to receive and be endowed with the power
that is part of that familial order of the priesthood
where we join the
eternal family of our heavenly parents, seal to the eternal family of our
heavenly parents, and that's the proclamation is grounded in that truth. Every one
of us belong to a family, beloved sons and daughters of heavenly parents.
So matter who you are, you fall into that category. Yes. We are. Man, that's great.
The family of proclamation to the world, it's not are. I mean, that's great. The family,
a proclamation to the world, it's not just about your family, it's about the big family.
It's a big family. We get very used to calling each other brother and sister, but it's a good
reminder that, no, this is really, this is who we are. We're brothers and sisters in this huge
family. And how differently we could treat each other
if we really took those titles to heart
that we get so used to.
When I was on my mission in the Philippines,
I remember this sister that we found,
I think she was less active at the time.
And we kept calling her sister.
And her two little kids were just giggling in the corner because it's not
so funny because we're like, hey, sister and they just and to me I I kind of stepped back and went, yeah, we say that and we
get really used to it but the kids thought they were just giggling that we kept calling her sister
because we get used to it and maybe this is a good reminder.
It is literally true, right? This is a fact. Yeah. I wanted to just mention too. At the beginning,
right, we hear that marriage between a man and a woman is ordained of God and that family
is central to the creator's plan for the eternal destiny of his children. I was thinking about what it was like to sit in general conference and hear Elder Christopherson talk about the four pillars of the plan of salvation.
And growing up, right, I'd heard President Elder Mkongi's words referred to lots. I'd,
of course, all throughout scripture when the plan of salvation is taught, it has three core things
it has the creation, the fall and the atonement everywhere.
And here Elder Christ offers and said, there are four pillars. And the fourth is the family.
And he describes, right, the family is, it supplies the best setting for God's plan to thrive.
It's the setting for the birth of children. And the environment for the learning and preparation they will need for successful mortal life and eternal life in the
world to come and how core to have the family be the setting for our physical
birth and our spiritual rebirth. We could not have the plan, the creation, the fall
and the atonement are all based in the truth of the family. And the central role of the family,
our biological families are mortal families
in which we grow and prepare for eternal life.
So I thought he has just done something absolutely remarkable.
He is not new, right, but just clearly stated.
This is a stool of four lakes, the plan of
salvation rests on all four of these, the family being central to that. I just heard sister
Beck, this is a sweet experience. I was just with her a little while ago and I told her that we talk
about her talk in our class on the proclamation and we talk about a talk where she said, we must
teach the youth of the church that the family is central to the plan of salvation.
And she said, the creation provided the setting
for a family to live and the family to grow,
the eternal family of God to go.
The fall was that decision for the family to enter mortality
for children to be born.
The atonement, its whole purpose is for us to be sealed
to the eternal family of God and for families to be united eternally.
And so the entire plan is about family. It starts with family. The reason there is a plan is because we are children of loving heavenly parents who want to bring us home to them and enable us to become like them. The fall enabled us to come into a setting
where families can be born, the atonement,
the whole purpose of Christ's work is to seal us back
to the family of God and enable us to become
the kind of people that are like our Heavenly parents
that can have that level of intimate relationship,
it can have that level of closeness
and deep capacity for joy and family life.
So she said to me, as I was telling
her that, she said, Janet, that talk was given to me by revelation. And she just teared
up. She said, I, I will never forget the middle of the night being awakened and given that
talk. Where's that talk again? I've got to write that. It's given to the youth of the church
and will give it was given to the CES, all the
instructors of religious education throughout the church.
Was it the CES symposium or something?
Yes, 2006.
2006.
I remember it was in the little theater of the conference center.
I was there.
I remember being there.
She said something so simple, but it really changed me.
She said, if something is anti-family, it is anti-Christ. I remember being there and she said something so simple, but it really changed me. She said, if something is anti-family, it is anti-Christ.
I remember that and it's never left me from that moment.
What I like what you said here in that first paragraph,
Janet, the family essential to the creator's plan
for the eternal destiny of his children.
One of the theories out there was that maybe God
just made the world like a clock. I can't
remember which philosopher this was. And then just kind of step back to see what would happen,
kind of disinterested, you know, instead of intensely interested. Just yesterday with
my class, we referenced the vision that Enic had where he saw God weeping and how he is not unaffected by us, he's
involved and wants to be in our eternal destiny.
And I like just restating that.
This is about his family.
He's involved.
He wants our eternal destiny as part of his plan right there in the first paragraph.
Well, let's pick up on paragraph two as
we were talking about this our Heavenly Father was thinking there's something so
magnificent in the proclamation where it talks about our Heavenly Mother and our
Heavenly Parents that we are sons and daughters in their image and then it says
gender is an essential characteristic of individual pre-mortal, mortal, and
eternal identity and purpose.
We know that life comes from to the union of male and female, God, the mother, God, the father,
and elder-porter, elder-bruse-porter, who love to talk about the proclamation. He once said,
the differences between men and women are not simply biological, they are woven into the fabric of the universe,
a vital foundational element of eternal life
and divine nature.
And cultures all throughout time, right,
have whether it's Yin and Yang or whatever,
different metaphors or images that capture this reality,
that this male female is woven into the fabric of the universe,
that it is the essence of life.
You have life created only through the complimentary union
of these two.
Of course, we live at a time
that experiences challenges around gender.
I'll talk to my students about how for a long time,
when we talked about male and female,
it was the same as man and woman.
You would use them interchangeably.
And then in about the 1960s, there was a recognition that we should talk about gender as different
from sex, from biological sex, from chromosomal makeup.
We should talk about gender, which is our social understanding of what it means to be a man
or woman.
It's what are the expectations of what it looks like to be a woman, what are the expectations
of what it looks like to be a man, how do they act, what colors do they wear, what preferences
do they have, that kind of, and so appreciating the social understanding of gender, of sex.
And that was important, right, because you have cultural ideas that can be distortions
of that idea of male and female.
You couldn't, right?
So we get caught up in different ideas about all,
restrictions about what a woman needs to do
or be like or what a man needs to do or be like
that are conformities that are unhealthy.
I love the story of Charlie Bird who is right, was cosmol BYU,
and experience his same sex attraction, what I identify as gay,
and he describes as a young man, very faithful,
a lot of the same, but describes as a young man being in church.
And he knew he was different, which is so often what an individual
who experiences LGBTQ questions, they'll just feel different.
And it was painful for him and he stopped going to young men.
He would go to sacramenting, but it was uncomfortable.
He was made fun of and felt different.
His sister follows him one Sunday to figure out where he's going after sacramenting.
And he just tells her, I'm different.
And she says tells her, I'm different.
And she says to him, Charlie, Jesus made flowers.
And then she describes how the traits that he has that are his gifts are the same ones that the Savior had.
And so she says to him, the question you should be asking is not whether or not this characteristic is male or right masculine
whether or not is Christ like and
teaches him a whole new understanding of what gender means and we we just have the gift in the Lord Jesus Christ
It's thank you for referencing he
He breaks open some of those problematic gender stereotypes by the way that he was.
He calls himself, he refers himself as a mother, right, as a hen gathering her chickens.
He gives himself characteristics that we would associate with femininity to teach us what
a true man is like.
And so I appreciate that.
And then at the same time, I'll tell those students,
the proclamation does something very powerful for us at a time when gender today has moved
from social understanding of gender to psychological, meaning whatever I feel is what defines my
gender. It grounds us in biology because President Oaks has been really clear in
saying that when the reference to gender is made in the proclamation, it is
referring to biological sex at birth. And so the proclamation, it takes the
confusion. If you just, if we were left with just psychological understanding of
what it meant to be,
whatever we felt, then there would be non-ending, right, kind of ways of being, ways of understanding
oneself. And the proclamation just pulls us back into a grounded place to understand our
responsibilities, our stewardship, where we will find joy. And certainly, there
can be experiences that feel dysphoric from that, right? The individuals can feel like
I don't feel like what I think I should feel. And yet, the Lord tells us, there is gender.
You have gender. It's important to your path eternally, and it will bring you
meaning and joy as you understand it. And then it grounds us in the role of biology and understanding
ourselves in the body that our bodies matter, that the soul is made up of the body and the spirit,
and that this biological founding to our gender is important in the plan. That doesn't
answer all the questions, right? It doesn't answer all of the issues that might bring up,
but it helps ground us in seeking and appreciating the role of biological gender in this eternal
plan.
I thought, you know, equate that with Nephi is what is forward.
I thought it was a good way to say we're trying to move toward Christ and he is our true North.
John, I love that Christ word and answer to these questions around gender.
It is so powerful. I think when we think about gender, we in mortality, we have probably shadows of what
eternal gender looks like.
But we don't know all that that is.
And I think the Redeemer's plan is to help us understand that, right?
Help us that pointed to Christ, we can understand what that eternal gender means, recognizing
that mortality is not the source of that eternal
gender, it likely contains shadows of it, right? We don't see perfectly what that eternal
gender looks like, but keeping our hope in Jesus Christ, Christ Word will teach us, right?
He can reveal to us what that means. It reminds me of this statement in the
Proclamation, I'm moving maybe too far ahead, but it does say
happiness in family life is most likely to be achieved when founded upon the teachings of the Lord Jesus
Christ, our true North Christ word. Sorry to jump ahead though there. No Hank, I don't know if
if there's any more powerful place, you know, in that the new Proclamation on the Restoration,
there's a statement that says, this church is founded upon the cornerstone
of the living Christ.
And I have often thought if we said this family,
this life is founded on the cornerstone
of the Lord Jesus Christ, that's what he's teaching us.
My life founded on Jesus Christ, my family,
founded on the Lord Jesus Christ.
And this church founded on the Lord Jesus Christ, my family founded on the Lord Jesus Christ. And this church founded on the Lord Jesus Christ.
I'll never forget of sitting amidst a group of religious
representatives, people from different faiths.
And as I was talking about the plan of salvation, we'd all just been asked to share
some. And all of a sudden, before I was going to present, I thought, I'm the only one
here who knows that I will be resurrected as a woman, and that I existed as a woman before, and that
I have a mother in heaven who has a body, and I am in her image, our belief just at once
dignifies half the human race, right? It establishes the reality that we as women are gender matters, that it is divine, that we are embodied
as our, our queenly heavenly mother.
And it establishes that beautiful maternal relationship that we have that is eternal.
You know, you walk by the primary and they're in their singing, I am a child of God and
not even knowing what theological dynamite that is, that it's not a metaphor, that it's really a
father and mother in heaven. And I think we're unique in that. I don't know everything about all of
the different denominations and beliefs, but the idea that God is an exalted man and mother in heaven and exalted woman is, I think, unique to us, isn't it?
And wouldn't Satan want to make that kind of fuzzy?
Yes, so much.
John, it means everything to literally come from them
to literally have that eternal relationship,
of child and mother and father, daughter and son.
The next part that we get to the proclamation talks
about how spirit, sons, and daughters
knew and worshiped God as their eternal father
and accepted his plan with that eternal divine destiny
as errors of eternal life is the most glorious story
to think that's my destiny, right?
That's the plan, each of us.
And that's the work of families. Families play such a central role in enabling that process. We depend unlike all the other species on the earth.
Human beings are born totally dependent for a long period of their life. They've got to be fed, clothed, cared for, and nourished, and nurtured, and that reality means so much that our physical
setting for birth has so much to do with this developmental process that enables us to
experience spiritual rebirth.
That's what Elder Christopherson is talking about.
This is the setting for physical birth and preparation for spiritual rebirth.
If you ever see it, almost any other animal born within a couple of hours,
they're able to run away from predators, right?
Yes.
In a little infant, little human infant.
Yes.
It's gonna be a long time.
Not so much.
Yes, a long time.
It's gonna be a while.
Okay, this beautiful next part is the divine plan of happiness enables
family relationships to be perpetuated beyond the grave sacred ordinances and
covenants available in Holy temples make it possible for individuals to return
to the presence of God and live in families eternally. There it is kind of just
that whole first section is you are part of an eternal family. This is your divine
destiny. I've given
everything, right? The Lord saying, I've given everything possible to enable
you to experience joy in eternal life and families. Remember, President Eiring,
President Hall and saying, it wouldn't be heaven if Pat weren't here. It wouldn't
be heaven for me. President Eiring, talking about what would a child, if you
ask them, what would they want more than anything? I want to be with my mom and
dad. I want to be with my family. That that's what eternal life is and in those relationships.
The next part and Hank, maybe do We declare that God's commandment for his children to multiply and replenish the earth remains
in force. We further declare that God has commanded that the sacred powers of procreation are to be
employed only between man and woman, lawfully wedded as husband and wife. That paragraph has a whole lot. I wanted to stop for just a second about this idea of
children. There's this interesting account of the founder of Harvard's sociology program. There were two
co-founder, Sirokin and then Karl Zimmerman. And Karl Zimmerman ended up writing a book where he
looked across civilizations, ancient Egypt,
Babylon, starting with Syria, Babylon, Greece, Rome, the European empires, and he's looking at the
rise and fall of nations. And his question as a sociologist was, what was the role of families,
like what was their place across this rise and fall? And one thing that he just was so striking is that at the peak of their creativity and progress,
and you know, all of them had this cycle of rising and falling. The family was so central, and it
was a particular way of viewing the family. It was an orientation to the development of children
within families. So he would say that at all civilizations at their peak and of
creativity and progress, the orientation of society was to the nurturing of
children within families. That there's something powerful when a society is
oriented around the development of children that facilitates the best in that
society. And it's made me think a lot about what
is it that children do for us?
What is it that this looking towards nurturing life
in families, having children, bearing children?
What is it that it does for us?
And you can just see, right?
If you just looked at, first of all,
what it means to the GDP, like we really depend on life
to sustain economies.
There's no question.
So just kind of those goods that enable survival
are really around children.
How are policies are changed?
How we think about alcohol laws and movie ratings
and just all the things that are shaped by concern
for the most vulnerable and then it betters us.
We see data that it's in having children that parents return to church, right?
They'll leave religion and in having a child,
they want to go back because they want,
they remember, they want what was better
for their children, they want that setting.
So it just invites better.
So Serokin, who was with Zimmerman,
Zimmerman says his powerful thing,
he says, whatever may be the virtues of age,
they cannot compensate for the vitality, vigor, courage,
daring, elasticity, and creativity of the young.
A nation largely composed of middle-aged or elderly people
and feebles itself, physically, mentally, and socially, and moves toward the end of
its creative mission and leadership. That's Harvard's founder of the Sociology Program. But he's just
saying he's commenting on our culture, right, of dramatic decreases in fertility rates and other
things, and what it says about a society that is not looking to the future and the nurturing and development of
children and what it means to its own stability, creativity, generativity, productivity. So children do a lot,
do a lot for us. Yeah.
Wow, that's it. And you wouldn't even, you wouldn't even think of that. Yeah,'t even think of that. Yeah, but do try to think of a world of,
that's so funny, think of a world
where everybody's middle aged are seeing you.
Yes.
And people's itself.
Yeah, people are leaving their blinkers on
all over the freeway.
Well, that's interesting though,
as we focus on raising these young people, it brings
out the best in all the adult.
Yes, yes.
He, I loved and I, and you referenced before we even started this podcast, you referenced,
you know, what it meant to have children.
And how they bring out the exposure to yourself in the most powerful ways.
I've got this great quote about that, but I
was just thinking there's something so remarkable about the marriage, Serochun calls it the
Marriage Family School, that this cultivation in children, he'll say it stimulates married persons
to release and develop their best creative impulses. For sure, the mission of molding their own
is as a nobling as the creation of a masterpiece in the arts or sciences. So you just think
Elder Hales once gave a talk and he spoke to the women he just said, we often think about
children as a trap for development. That's kind of the cultural right? Your life ends in the nurturing of the young. And I believe strongly that women need to
develop their gifts and talents, their capacities, their education. I believe
so strongly in that. And that may mean, right? That may mean doing things
simultaneously, education as well as children or some contributions community wise or professionally as well as children.
But we cannot diminish the power of development that comes in the nurturing of children.
So Elder Hale just says,
Motherhood and I would add, Fatherhood is the ideal opportunity for lifelong learning.
It is exponential, not linear.
Just think of the learning process of a mother throughout the lifetime of her children
because the needs are so varied and far reaching.
In the process of ruining her children,
a mother studies child development, nutrition,
healthcare, physiology, psychology, nursing,
medical research, and educational tutoring
in many diverse fields, math, science, geography,
literature, English, and foreign languages.
She develops gifts and music, English, and foreign languages. She develops gifts, and music, athletics, dance, and public speaking.
The learning examples could continue endlessly, and thinking about what children can bring out
in us because we care so deeply about their growth and development.
That's incredible. That's a huge takeaway that I've never thought of because by far the the most I've worked
pushing myself to become better is is in my marriage and
In being a parent right not not in my career or my church calling even though those bring out good things I think in me
By far being a parent and being a husband have pushed me to try to be
Something better. I've try to be something better.
I've had to relearn algebra. I thought I was done. When your child is sick or injured or hurting,
you and you've gone through that, you would trade places with them so quickly. Just give this to me,
you know, and helping them through suffering is quite an experience. As I'm sure you both know,
and I'm sure our Heavenly Father knows, and thinking about God's will love the world he gave
has only been gotten sun, and whoa, and the suffering that happened there, those all contribute to,
those all contribute to, you know, being a parent. I love that whole thing, especially going through school all over again with your kids. As they go to school and parent teach your conferences, I think I learned this once.
I mean, I know of someone who's been a single adult all her life, never married, but is them a
world-class anti, you know, that is an aunt to and gets involved in their lives and helps
them and nurtures them as well as she, in her place where she is.
John, you and I both know I was single a long time.
I think you were too.
And I think it's remarkable how what a special role you can have
in your family, what an important role, all of these individuals, these relationships that we
have sharing, the nurturing of life. I need the village of everyone who helps me with my children so
much. And we depend on one another in that work of nurturing all together.
You know, it was so cool to have my son Andrew come home from Iceland.
And suddenly it wasn't just mom and dad saying, let's do scriptures.
It was Andrew.
All right, who's in charge?
Okay, I want you and his younger is going looking at their older brother going,
wow, Andrew loves this. And it was like, I just felt this relief. Like, look, we're all
in this together. And look now they're helping and teaching each other. And I shouldn't
just say Andrew, my daughter Ashley, too, same thing coming home from a mission and being
so fired up, all helping us with each other
in a family setting.
You want to take home evening tonight?
Okay, great.
I'll just buy the pizza.
You take over.
Hank, I have to go back to.
I love your just comment about like this, Michael Noback, he says, the raising of children
brings us each breath taking vistas of our inadequacy.
And I think he captures that. I mean, this incredibly brilliant Catholic scholar who's just saying,
here, this brings me breath taking vistas of my inadequacy. And then he says this,
my bonds to them hold me back from many sorts of opportunities. You get that as a single person. There's some freedom that's very different, right?
And yet, he says, these do not feel like bonds. They are, I know, my liberation. They force me to be a
different sort of human being in a way in which I want and need to be forced. And I think even if
we're not mothers and fathers, whenever we are given to the development
of others, that is goodness, that is Godhood, then we become a different kind of person.
We are, we become who we want to become in that process.
Well, that is just beautiful. I remember that, especially that first baby. We had little Madeline and the doctors told us she was on the scale, you know,
you go in and she's on the 107th percentile for her head size. You're thinking, well, we're great
parents, right? But she was always on the very, very bottom off the chart on the other side.
And it was called failure to thrive. And so every time we took her in, you know, she's still in the failure to thrive zone
and we're going, oh,
and I remember one time she got dehydrated
and they said, we just got to get her drinking.
You just got to do anything you can to get her drinking.
Here she is, you know, just a tiny,
kind of a newborn tiny little thing
and you're just holding her.
And I remember I had a little dropper, right?
My little, and I would get a little,
like not even an eighth of a teaspoon,
and I'm giving her a little drop, hoping it stays down, right?
Just a little at a time here.
I am doing this for hours, right?
And it's such a, it's a fond memory now, which is odd,
but it was just me and her, you know, Sarah was able
to get some sleep, and I've got my little dropper,
when I'm trying to get, you know.
Trying to keep you know.
Trying to keep her growing.
Oh, yeah, just get a couple of teaspoons to get her to keep her down and she'd lick her,
you know, lips or whatever and then occasionally spit it all back up and we start all over again
right.
And who would you do that for?
I remember getting up right over and over again with our baby and thinking, who would
I do this for?
And yet I cannot stop myself.
Literally every part of me has to respond, right?
Serokin calls out, he'll say, that fountain head
of unselfish care and spontaneous help
is the foundation of moral life.
It's just that this sacrifice, it begins at home
in the cradle of the helpless baby
that we learn the art of selflessness of giving right for the life of another
It's a it's a special relationship
John when you reference the the Lord weeping in
Inek right and and thinking I've watched my parents right that that my mom will say to have a child is to have a heart
Walking outside of your body all the rest of your life. You, you care so
deeply for their well-being when they suffer, you suffer. It is a very atonement like experience
and and just what the Lord is teaching us in this process is such a gift. It's why we need them so
much. We need those relationships so much. And you know what? I was so grateful this year.
For a long time, there's been commentary. Oh, kids make you less happy and because you'd see like in the marital happiness when we're looking as sociologists or psychologists,
you'd see this dip after people have kids like marital happiness goes down and you get it because you're two a.m. in the morning and you're wondering are we even married anymore?
Like where are you right in this story?
And and yet it's so beautiful that consistently people would say,
but children are meaning.
They're the essence of meaning.
And so 2021, guess what happens?
The data shows something entirely different.
It says, children mean greater happiness.
We knew that was true for fathers.
We knew it was true for mothers to some degree,
but more meaningful lives, less lonely,
deeper and more connections, happier.
Parents find childcare to be much more exhausting and much more meaningful lives, less lonely, deeper and more connections, happier. Parents find child care to be
more much more exhausting and much more meaningful than their professional activities. They write
parenting as their greatest joy and believe the rewards of watching children grow are worth the cost.
It doesn't come without cost. It brings tremendous meaning and now we can we see that happiness measure
right. It's people with children that are less lonely,
experiencing greater happiness.
They're a gift.
I'm so glad you mentioned that because you do feel
the hard parts, but you feel the joy too.
So my 15 year old was playing his last football game
and he got in for two plays.
His last game.
Yeah, in the second play, he is a defensive back and he is covering his guy and he goes
up and one handed intercepts the ball and falls down with it.
And there was this crazy man in the stand. Timothy.
Timothy. And then I realized it was me. And, uh,
who is that? And everyone's looking crazy, man, yelling his name. And, uh,
and it was, I was just beyond. It was so fun to see and see his teammates jumping around him and look to make me emotional.
Just, that's my boy, you know, and I think hopefully there's heavenly experiences that are
like that.
Jenna, I'm looking at this paragraph. Husband and wife have a solemn responsibility to love
and care for each other and for their children. Parents have a sacred duty to rear their children,
love and righteousness. Further down, husbands and wives will be held accountable before God
for the discharge of these obligations. And it seems like such a sacrifice in that paragraph,
right? That this is duty and obligation and, you know, but what I'm hearing from you is you're saying these are commandments,
but they end up, yes, sacrifices that end up becoming investments. Yes, and blessings to us.
Right, pay dividends. Yes. Oh, Hank, I love that. I'm glad he tied that together. I have this
wonderful colleague. He was, he talked me one time about this idea and he just quoted section 132 and he
said, look at what the Lord teaches us about children. He promises us glory, right? And what is the glory of God? Children are the continuation
of the seeds. They are the glory of God. They are the way God glorifies Himself. And then we're
taught, except you abide my law, you cannot attain to this glory. So cultures that are biting by law, what's that, what,
what that means is the capacity to bring children into the into this earth in families that are
nurturing and the growth and development of that society. It's this beautiful, right? What we see
in 4th and 5th is they were given in marriage and you just see this growth and development of a
culture rising to its fullest in this orientation
to development of children within families, marriages, and that is abiding by law and it
is God's glory eternally.
So we need them.
Hank, I don't want to skip the part that you also talked about.
You also read about, we declare the means by which mortal life to be created is created to be
divinely appointed that the sacred powers of procreation. I as a as a graduate
student, I I was at the Heritage Foundation, I had been asked to read a book
that was talking about some of the implications of the sexual revolution.
When we talk about sexual revolution, it was essentially this idea that that
people should be free to express themselves sexually just as individuals outside of whatever kind of constraints and in some ways
It was it was women reacting to a reality that men had been able to have sexual relationships outside of marriage without any implications for them
It was labeled liberating, right and yet I was reading what had happened
I was reading about what had happened to the sexualization of women, reading about what had happened
with out of what locked child bearing rates,
going from 6% to 41% now,
you know, nearing 50% and in some demographics,
more than 50%, 73% in some low income demographics.
And what that had meant to women, to children,
and it was deeply painful.
And I went into this mentor that I had and I said, this is hard.
He was Catholic and he said, when Eve took the fruit, she took both sides of the fruit,
we are learning about what this precious instruction about, about where we use sexual powers.
Being within balance, God has set why that is so important,
why that matters because we've seen the fruits
of when that does not happen.
And so when you think about women,
what's happened to women because of that,
call it rapes on college campuses,
just all of the tragic consequences
when that beautiful sexual power is used outside of those
bounds, what it has meant for women and children.
And men, there's an author recently who published a book called Cheap Sex.
It's kind of a hard title, but he's a fantastic scholar.
And he was just looking at the languishing of men.
We have a time when men are not obtaining college degrees at the same
rate as women. There's a big growing gap that's starting the 80s and has grown, just kept growing
with women more likely to obtain college degrees. And also working age men who aren't working,
it's like you have this massive increase in just men not attaining, not achieving, not.
and in just men not attaining, not achieving, not. And he was describing what it meant to have a time period,
prior to this when a woman would say,
I'm not going to engage sexually with you
until you are marriageable,
which meant you're gonna be able to provide for me
and you're gonna be able to be a certain kind of person
that I'm going to want to entrust my life
and the children who come from that life to.
And when that breaking apart of sex and marriage and children happened with the sexual revolution
where they were literally broken into pieces, these three cores that had been bound together
are tossed apart.
Then you have a languishing of men.
You have, he would say men have languished.
There isn't the structure that invites their best development.
It's why when men are married, they earn more, they save more, they are less risky in their
behaviors.
There's just a purpose to their life that is part of that beautiful structure.
And John, as you describe that love for that child, you do anything.
You develop anything.
You'd work as hard as you could to provide for them.
You'd sacrifice and grow.
And that is protected.
We haven't appreciated enough how that's protected by the structure where sexuality happens.
That when it's reserved for marriage, it invites better.
It invites growth, it protects both children,
women and men.
Yeah, I've told my students that in New Testament times,
you'd have an arranged marriage and you have about a year.
And if there's no house prepared, there's no marriage.
Wow. there's no house prepared, there's no marriage. But this young man has to create a home
for his new family to live in,
or else the marriage does not happen.
And that prompts the best in you, right?
Yes, yes.
So move forward.
It incentivizes you.
One of my heroes in this world is Elder Bruce C. Haifan. He gave a talk at the
World Congress on Families in 1999. I was there. Remember this. Oh, what? Yes. Oh my goodness.
Yes. I heard he got multiple standing ovation in the talk. One of the things he said, which was like, was where you were
going. And I'm going to roughly paraphrase something about the women's liberation movement
had in fact liberated men from responsibility. Yes. And the, hey, if we want to be as sexually promiscuous as the men are, that didn't help anybody.
Yes.
Yes.
And anyway, that talk, I think you could Google World Congress on Families in 1990.
Was it Geneva?
It was in Switzerland.
It was in Geneva, yep.
And Elder Haython's talk is, and he's, I think, a family law attorney, right?
Yes, that's right.
The moral force of women, the moral power of women.
Yeah.
An amazing talk to go back and read, but I was struck with that idea that the sexual
revolution instead of the best outcome, men should be more responsible, should not,
you know, instead,
trying to say, let's all be promiscuous,
that was even worse, you know.
I thought it was a fascinating observation
that Elder Haithen made.
Yes, it wasn't liberating, right?
That it's interesting in that there's a wave of feminism
part of the 1960s in England.
You might see it, right, Mary Poppins, votes for women. And one of the 1960s in England, you might see it right, Mary Poppins, votes for women.
And one of the models was votes for women, chastity for men.
Is that interesting?
They realized the best, the most powerful place is within those bonds of marriage, sexual
relationships, and rights for women to own property and vote as well.
That's the strongest kind of dynamic that we can have for women.
And it's true.
The safest place for women and children is within the bonds of marriage.
That doesn't mean every marriage is right, is that way.
But when we look across broad swaths of sociologically,
the greatest likelihood of her being protected from other forms of abuse
is within marriage and children as well.
That gift of that instruction, though, I just think the sacred powers of procreation, and it also tells us how beautiful that they are divinely appointed,
that sexual relations are intended to bring tremendous joy, connection, relationship, growth, development to couples.
They are divinely appointed. Brigham Young brought that up when the great evils of the world, one of the great evils
was labeled polygamy, and they were trying to, you know, throw these men in jail in Utah
and he said, how many men in Congress have their mistresses, right?
And, you see, that's okay, but-
And that's okay. But, too.
And that's okay.
You're creating laws of the great evil over here of polygamy when you have the most
promiscuous life of all.
And it's just he called out their hypocrisy, the blatant hypocrisy of what they were trying
to say.
Let me throw out a name that probably most of our listeners
will not remember, but do you remember
Elder Mark E. Peterson,
Cormor the 12th?
He, 1969, so before you were both born,
but I was around, and I don't remember this from conference,
but I love short, powerful quotations,
because then I can memorize them
with my limited brain capacity.
But Marky Peterson said humanity will rise or fall
through its attitude toward the law of chastity.
Wow, yes.
And we're seeing that here,
in that last paragraph four,
employed only between men and women
lawfully wedded as husband and wife.
Yeah, Janet, as you were bringing this up,
I just thought, the damage done by unchaste men
on this planet has been just astronomical.
Yeah.
Gohri, Jacob, chapter two and three in the Book of Mormon,
right?
Really, let's the husbands and fathers have it in those two chapters. He says, you're beginning to labor and sin in the book Mormon, right? Really lets the husbands and fathers have it
in those two chapters.
He says you're beginning to labor and sin in your thoughts.
Maybe some had turned thoughts into behavior,
but he really lays it.
It's those are powerful chapters.
And very, I mean, if the book Mormon was written for our day,
that was a good one to save for us.
Jacob, two and three.
Oh, I referenced to the tender hearts, right? Of the women and children.
Oh, so you've come up here. Yeah, you've come up here to hear the pleasing word of God,
which he left the wounded soul. I'm so sorry. I have to enlarge the wounds of those who
are already wounded. It's just, I do want to say, I think as we talk about the challenges around sexuality, right?
And Hank, as you highlighted, right, this, what, what damage is done, that, that we can develop a lot of anxiety
and fear around sexuality and not realize that right in here in this same paragraph, the, the Lord is
teaching us, right, the power and gift of sexuality within those bonds.
We have these statements from Elder Holland, such an act of love between a man and a woman is,
or certainly was ordained to be a symbol of total union, union of their hearts, their hopes,
their lives, their love, their family, their future, their everything.
Sexual intimacy is not only a symbolic union between a man and a woman,
it is the uniting of the uniting of their very souls, but a symbolic of a union between mortals and deity.
And they are in mortality one of the ultimate expressions of our divine nature and potential,
and a way of strengthening emotional and spiritual bonds between husband and wife.
The adversary would want to taint sexuality, would want us to fear it, would want us to
feel anxious about it, would want us to not talk about it, would want us to keep
us in the dark. And I think the Lord is saying, pull this powerful gift into the
light, teach about it so that it can be what it's intended to be in marriage.
And there's growth around that, right? We, there's growth for couples
in understanding the gift of sexuality and marriage, the complementarity between men and women,
the uniqueness that that pressures growth and development and and it is intended to be what
Elder Hall and so powerfully describes. This symbol of total union hearts hopes dreams, this gift
of divine sexuality, pleasure in its most beautiful form given to us by God
within these beautiful bonds. And when it is outside of that, right, it's it's destruction
to the very core, the souls who would be so blessed by its beautiful use.
Thank you so much for saying that. Yeah, we could do a better job. Absolutely. All of us good in teaching our youth.
Not so much bad, bad, bad, but timing, timing, timing. Yeah. And I think President Monson said that. Not because it's bad. It's because it's so good that you're to wait, to
Alma, to Shiblon, bridal your passions. You didn't say destroy your passions. Bridal them,
and I love to emphasize with the teenagers,
bridal your passions, comma, that you may be filled with love. Yes. It's not, you've got to
squelch that, but just like you said, timing. John, I've often told my students that it's about,
it's like drinking orange juice and brushing your teeth. They're both good. You just have to get them in the right order, right?
You're gonna have a bad experience.
You drink orange juice after you brush your teeth
and it's not as good.
So sexuality and marriage,
if they come in the right order
are both wonderful experiences.
Well, I love the,
Janet, the words you use.
Boy, I mean, I wanna go back and read on the transcript what you've, some of these beautiful ways, you've you use, boy, I mean, I want to go back and read on the transcript what
you've, the some of these beautiful ways you've put these phrases together, how bonding
and beautiful it is.
And I think you are quoting from, is it elder Holland's talk of soul, symbols, and sacraments?
Is that the talk?
That's the talk, John, such a powerful talk.
He gave a shorter version in general conference called personal purity, but they were one and
the same.
It is something we need to teach our young people, is just that when we see a TV show or
a movie that shut that off, it's not the procreative act that is the problem.
It's when, where, how it's being cheapened, degraded,
commercialized, sold like a product. You know, that's the issue.
Yes. Captured so powerfully.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
podcast.