Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - The Family: A Proclamation to the World Part 2 : Dr. Jenet Erickson
Episode Date: December 12, 2021Dr. Jenet Erickson returns to examine “The Family: A Proclamation to the World '' and how social science, psychology, and spirituality intersect in this aspirational and inspirational docu...ment that galvanizes Saints to become better stewards in their families, wards, neighborhoods, and communities.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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two of this week's podcast.
John, I would love to have you read this next paragraph if we move on.
Is that something?
I'll do it.
The family is ordained of God.
Marriage between man and woman is essential to his eternal plan.
Children are entitled to birth within the bonds of matrimony
and to be reared by a father and a mother
who honor marital vows with complete fidelity.
Happiness in family life is most likely to be achieved when founded upon the teachings
of the Lord Jesus Christ.
There's just so much that, right, in that most powerful...
No, goodness, yeah.
I... you'll remember when Elder Christoverson quotes Dietrich Bonhofer, one of my heroes,
as writing a letter to his niece, and she's going to be married.
And he says, you think that this love is just between you and your fiance, but it is
a post of responsibility.
And he says to the world that in your marriage, it is a post of responsibility to the world. And when I look at the data,
just write the reality that the breaking of family structure, so children who experienced
divorce or who grew up outside of the bonds of marriage or who born to a single parent,
and just what we see is the risk to them, even after controlling for socioeconomic differences
for controlling for things is twice as likely to have serious challenges in every aspect of development.
So physically, emotionally, psychologically, academically, all of those things.
And so when you look at family structure and it's in social science, right, we're just working with,
you know, meager human means to measure
effects. But there's so much data that shows the power of a nuclear family for children in terms
of providing the greatest likelihood for their thriving, growing up with their mother and their
father who are married, that they'll even say in sociology, it's law-like. It is so consistent that there is just no other institution,
Brad Wilcox, I'm not our BYU Brad Wilcox,
but UVA's no institution reliably connects to parents,
their money, talent, and time to their children,
the way that marriage does.
This is a very vulnerable part of our population.
And we just, we talk about trying to make a family
or a child-centered culture, because some people will say, you know, when we're in a post-marriage
world, the marriage rate has dropped, and people are so much older, we're in kind of a post-marriage
world, we need to just have a child-centered culture. And you just cannot replace marriage
as the institution that secures for children what is essential for
their thriving.
And so when this statement is made, it just shows up so powerfully.
Marriage is essential to the eternal plan and that children are entitled.
These most, the reason we care about marriage is a church.
The reason there was concern about its redefinition with same-sex marriage
isn't because of a rejection of certain people.
It's because we care so deeply about the most vulnerable among us who have no say, right?
They they don't have any say they enter life in that structure that they're born into and they don't get to decide what that is.
And we have a society as a society just we absolutely have an obligation to protect the likelihood
of them growing up in the relationships that will increase their chances for thriving and development.
It sounds like that you're saying the research clearly shows.
It's, yes, it's law-like in nature. As much as you can say, social science research is law-like, right?
It just is profound.
And that's why I love what you're saying here, because I can come from a, here's what
I've learned from the gospel background, but you are saying all of this is backed up
with social science and research.
And the proclamation is restating something
that is well-founded.
When I taught Jacob two and three the other day to my class
and I showed them statistics on outcomes of fatherlessness
and there are so many single moms out there,
just work and so hard and we love you
and support you and sustain you.
And so please
don't look at it that way. You have a village around you in your word family and everything.
The stats on fatherlessness, as you just mentioned, what were the words you said academically,
financially, socially. So this is just saying, most likely to be achieved, you know, and so this is the idea
we're stating again, a mom, a dad, a mom and dad loving one another, loving their children
in a home.
And it's not to say that divorce is an absolute the right thing to do, right?
At some, in some situations, it's my husband, he, his parents divorced when he was just
six and, and they were not members of the church.
He's a convert to the church and he described it so interesting coming to understand what
that gap had created in his life and a deep witness of the Savior's atoning power to heal
all gaps in our lives.
I came from an intact family, but I have needed the Savior as he has needed the Savior. And I think it's just powerful how we learn over and over again.
This is this is a statement from from the handbook, I think as well.
Individual circumstances may prevent parents from rearing their children together.
However, the Lord will bless them as they seek His help and strive to keep their comenets with Him. And I will tell my students many of whom have come from these
structural challenges that were not ideal. Just what gifts that can be as they
care, they have a view of things that is special, right? They understand the
pain that comes when parents are not united. And sometimes that can be the most profound
motivator to help them do things in a way that I may not even think about, right?
To care deeply about doing things in a better way or
what they have learned from those experiences, how it's taught them about the Lord's love. I just
because of Christ
there is no permanent loss.
That's just absolutely true.
Even though we look at this data
and want to appreciate the realities
that for children, this structure of married, father,
and mother is the best setting for their growth
and development.
And as a society, we have to care deeply about that.
We are so grateful for the redeemers,
giving us a chance to grow on earth and redeeming it all, right? Yeah. One of my favorite statements of the Prophet Joseph Smith, when I think about single moms, single dads, just things out of
their control sometimes, he said, all of your losses will be made up to you in the resurrection,
provided you continue
faithful by the vision of the Almighty. I have seen it. How can you deny it? Right? I have seen it.
Yeah. All of your losses will be made up to you. And so Hank, and all of us spend a lot of time,
all three of us here with a lot of young adults, right? And so, yeah, you've come from that, but this is helping you prepare for your trying to put together your ideal,
trying to strive for that and to reach that. So, living such a way to prepare that you have
the best chance for this for you. Yeah. It goes back to what Janet told us earlier, which is,
make sure you pair the family proclamation with the living Christ document. So when you fill the pain of not of having less than the ideal, you can
now turn to the answer, which is the second document that comes just, what, five years later.
Also, I was going to say the word entitled is rarely used. Right? Right. It's often a negative
thing, right? It's a good, good, good, good used. Yes, right. It's often a negative thing, right?
It's a good, good boil entitled.
Yes.
And then here, so I think that when the prophets and the Lord
are going to use this word, we better look carefully
that children are entitled to birth
within the bonds of matrimony.
If someone has an innate right, we better, and it's declared by God, we better be careful with that.
Yeah, that when they're most vulnerable, when they're completely helpless, and they have no say in it, as you said,
Janet, and they're entitled to, uh, beared by a father and mother who honor Merrittal Vals. That's the ideal, that's what we're shooting for. And I would just say wrapped in one sentence, happiness and family life is most likely to be achieved
when founded upon the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. That is a lifetime worth of study.
In one sentence, I teach the New Testament. We've gone through the Doctrine and Covenants this year.
There's so many other scriptures. Just the phrase, the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ
is enough to give you, there you go.
You give me a life time effort to study.
Yeah.
I talk to a woman the other day,
her name is Verla Sornson,
and she reads, she's 88,
she reads the entire standard works every year and the book won him twice
every year every year and
That is um she is looking for the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. She said I want to know
I want to know so if anybody out there thinks oh, I
I think I've I know the teachings Lord Jesus Christ pretty well. I think we have a
There's a lot we could go. There's a lot we could do there. So Verla is a shout out to you
Give me her contact info. I have some questions
When I have when I have questions I'll get with her. She reads them every year
Yeah, she's gone through the entire thing 47 times
47 times. Wow. Wow. Hank, I, sorry, Janet, I cut you off. No, I just love that. I love this truth that the
Savior, all after I was 34, we were 34 when we were married and what a miracle to find
each other. And I'll never forget within that first three weeks of marriage when you,
you encounter some struggles, right? Or vulnerabilities and sensitivities and all that I'd studied,
I would think here it all comes down to the truths of the Lord Jesus Christ that those teachings
in the sermon on the Mount, right, of all that he teaches about turning the other cheek and
patience love, but then also honesty and not judging and all of the profound teachings that are
there. I just thought it's all encapsulated there. I were to tell anybody throughout the world what's the best way right to have a
marriage. It's it's stated right here. This this is it is founded upon the
teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ. What a gift. I've told my students we get
married in the temple over an altar, right? And if we are over an altar that
represents sacrifice, usually represents the atonement,
you are there getting, you are declaring to the world, you are basing your marriage on the sacrifice
of Jesus Christ, right? That's where we're going to bond right here. We are going to make our
covenants right here on an altar. And then also the altar means sacrifice that happy marriage is often mean sacrifice and they're built not all about you anymore right.
You were speaking of elder haven John I think he quotes Elder Maxwell is saying what is that sacrifice what is are laying on that altar. And thinking about myself, right?
How marriage and children exposed to us,
the animal in each of us and the hope.
Vistas of.
Yes, yes.
And how the Savior says, I will take it, I will purify it,
I will cleanse it, I will change it
and give it back to you, right?
In a whole way for your
Relationships so that you can have joy in relationships
Jenna, is that why the life of the first child is so different than the life of the last child?
And Hank, we only have been sent to and I think the poor per burned pancakes
These right it takes at least two pancakes to get it right
That's so funny. Yeah, I'm the burnt pan. That's the oldest term, right?
Because I just remember I've learned so much. And by the time we're on baby four and five, John,
you got to baby six. We had we had changed as people. The process of parenting had changed us
entirely. I like our friend Jack Marshall talks about,
with the first baby, if they spit the binky out,
oh, you go rinse it off in the sink
and maybe put some listerine on it,
make sure it's disinfected.
You know, plug it back into baby's mouth.
The last baby it falls in the dog dish.
You don't care as bad as I was.
You know, they've got antibodies, don't worry about it.
You know. You find out they've got antibodies. Don't worry about it.
You know.
You find out these little humans are pretty durable.
Thankfully, very thankfully.
That next part, Hank, maybe do you want to read the happiness
in family life after that part?
Successful marriages, insert.
Successful marriages and families are established
and maintained on principles of faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work, and wholesome recreational activities.
By divine design, fathers are to preside over their families in love and righteousness and responsible to provide the necessities of life and protection for their families. Mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their children.
In these sacred responsibilities,
fathers and mothers are obligated to help one another as equal partners.
If we go back to that beautiful list,
isn't it so profound that it starts with faith?
Faith.
Faith.
We've just been talking about faith. I love that.
Remember faith.
And I love that verse in section 130 where we're taught, right?
There is a law irrevocably to creed, right?
Upon which all blessings are predicated.
And I think I love present Nelson talking about the many laws, right?
That we obey laws and their blessings that come.
But it says a law.
And it's, and it's beautiful to think, what is that one law?
Faith in the Lord Jesus Christ? Every good thing
comes from obedience to that law and with all of our need for healing, with our need for hope and
getting into marriage, right? That it is faith that takes you through that, right? It takes, it's
what carries us through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, whatever Jesus, my friend Wally Goddard, whatever Jesus lays his hands on will live.
And so at that altar with family being formed, it is with Jesus Christ at the foundation.
So of course it starts with faith, right?
Faith is the first principle.
Then you've got prayer and all the data on prayer, it is just, it present, you know, it's
say, I know of no other practice
in his wonderful voice, maybe John could do it.
That will have so salutary and effect upon your lives
as will the practice of kneeling together in prayer.
There's this great scholar, he's not a Latter-day Saint,
Frank Vincham, and he's done his career
looking at these things that people do
kind of in their religious practices
and what they mean for marriage.
And prayer is incredible.
So I mean they'll like, they'll put people in experimental groups.
You pray for three weeks and you don't pray for three weeks.
And it's just really interesting how he'll say what it does is it shifts them from a focus
on their own needs to the needs of the relationship and the behaviors
that will be beneficial.
It builds trust.
It softens conflict resolution.
It facilitates emotional connection.
It's just beautiful to look at what prayer can do for couples and he'll say praying is
an individual.
Maybe your spouse doesn't pray with you, but praying is an individual has powerful effects
praying is a couple has powerful effects and to see in science literally the power of God come into a
relationship through prayer is a is a beautiful thing to witness and
Family prayer. I think
My dad came from a place where and tell his quadruple bypass,
I don't remember him ever saying,
I love you, maybe I could count him on one hand.
We knew he did, we're not damaged,
but in prayer, when everybody had their eyes closed,
he could mutter things about how he loved his kids,
that was so cool, you know, and I can remember, because dad was great on gathering
around the bed, we're having family prayer. And some of my greatest memories as odd as
it sounds is when somebody during family prayer, it just could sound really odd, would start
to laugh. And we could feel the whole bed shaking.
John, we are not the best of favorite memories for you.
We'd look up and we'd see that it was dad
who was cracking up.
I was cracking up.
And it bonded us together in a family bird.
Because now my mom was, oh, you guys.
But be reference, you laugh right now.
But my poor dad just, he would start laughing,
but he could tell us he loved us in a family prayer
in different ways that was a little harder face to face
because of his own background.
And so I wanna put a plug-in for family prayer too.
You can talk to your kids in prayer
and tell the Lord how much you love them in a family prayer and
and they'll they'll be listening. You know, it is.
John in John 17 the Savior does that in intercessory prayer. He talks about the apostles who are listening
to him pray. He says and he complements them. It's he uses prayer to build the people who are listening
to the prayer. He says, Father, they're not of the world, just like I'm not of the world.
Right.
He's building these.
Oh, and in third Nephi, the joy that filled our hearts when we heard him pray for us
the way they said.
I can't have enough.
He's talking about me right now.
And yeah, we can do that for each other in our families.
You can thank the Lord for my wife's sitting here.
I can thank the Lord for each of my children by name
and have them hear that and feel it.
I love that there's research on that.
That's so cool.
It is awesome research.
It's just really fun to see that.
So when you hear President Iring talk about,
when you pray a family that's praying,
even if they're separated geographically,
they are one in heart.
I don't know how many times I've had students say,
what it meant to them as missionaries,
to know their parents were praying for them,
their family was gathered in prayer for them,
the power that that gave them,
the security, the strength,
and it just is real.
It's real and we see it in the data.
I just say amen to this thing about prayer.
Yeah, thank you. I remember present months and sun saying he was out fishing with him once.
And as they were just sitting there fishing, his present months and looked at his watch and
said, your brother is about to take the bar exam.
Why don't we prayer for him?
And I'll pray and then you go ahead and pray.
He said, that's what I remember about my dad is that he'd use prayer.
It wasn't a, okay, it's time for bed.
Let's pray.
It was okay.
It's in the morning.
Let's pray.
I'm sure they did that, but it was a practical use in life of how we're going to connect
our family and all over the globe.
And John, you've had your kids in France and in Iceland.
Iceland during a pandemic.
And in the can't leave their apartment,
the foreign nation of Tucson.
Tucson.
Yeah.
Hopefully off to Tahiti soon, but yeah.
The prayers, they're still included.
Just this morning for my girl in two swaths,
and I'm thinking too of,
do you remember the elder Neale Maxwell story?
I mean, he's in the front lines in the World War II,
his mother apparently across the planet.
Get out of bed, we gotta get underneath it.
We gotta pray for Neale right now. And he put those time
The time frame together and found that was it a scary time for him. Just I love that there's research on that
That's really interesting. I think it changes us right and brings unity
It it brings miracles. There's no question
But it changes our hearts and the process of praying and that's that that's what enables those family relationships to be strengthened. So.
And who are we praying to our father?
Yes.
Our father.
We're all brothers and sisters. Love it.
Then you have repentance.
And just the research on, on you look at someone like John Gottman, the guru of marriage,
right?
And him talking about what is it that that predicts divorce and what leads to divorce?
And you see these features of blame and defensiveness and this link between shame and the inability
to be accountable for what you're doing, right?
And take responsibility that kind of diffusing your anxiety or diffusing.
And you just think, oh, this is all the research on relationships.
It's coming back to repentance.
These truths about repentance being able to say, I'm sorry and own one's responsibility
for things and to not enter a world of shame that then leads to blame and defensiveness,
but to say, this is what I've done and I apologize and I'm sorry.
And I'm so thankful for a savior who makes this a safe process
for us to grow.
Anyway, it's just all over in family relationships, what repentance means.
Do you know who Kenneth W. Matheson is?
I have a book called Living a Covenant Marriage that was edited by Doug Brindley and Dan
Judd. I just remember underlining
in Kenneth Matheson's chapter, I believe, he said, if I can just get a couple to apologize to each
other, no, my problems are almost solved. If I could get that spirit of repentance in there.
Yes. It's the crux, right? As a marriage counselor, yeah.
Faith for prayer, repentance andx, right? As a marriage counselor, yeah. Faith for prayer, repentance, and forgiveness, right?
Yes.
Forgiveness, yeah.
We've got to get that connect those two.
Yes.
And Frank, he's done work on forgiveness as well.
And that is a really powerful set of data
on the power of forgiveness, which we know from the gospel.
But it isn't that beautiful sequence, right?
There's repentance and forgiveness. And they are,
they depend upon one another, right? That they go together. And respect comes next, which is,
it's almost as if a genitive saying repentance, forgiveness and respect is part of this of not,
not committing that same sin over and over and over without boundaries. Yes, right? That there's a respect there that I correct these problems. Yes. Yes. I you know how President
Hinkley he would talk so much about respect being the foundation of marriage.
If you just the core the core characteristic you need is respect for one another. You think
that description of a of a young man we know right from the early Christian texts, when Adam saw her, he couldn't help but stand. And it was this, it's this feeling of
I am better because of you. But that isn't right when you're bothered and irritated, you might
forget the divinity of the person in front of you that's given their soul to you. And, and so
reminding, I think intentionally, right, Hank?, so Gottman will say, those four horsemen
of the apocalypse of a marriage, right, the four predictors of divorce, and he, it's
incredibly, can predict divorce with 95% accuracy within five years. Like he's just an incredible
science around it. But he would say when there is criticism, contempt, defensiveness, and
stonewalling, stonewalling is when you just walk away, you won't even engage, right?
I can't stand this so much. I'm walking away.
The four horsemen of the apocalypse, apocalypse of the merrily.
Criticism.
Criticism, contempt,
defensiveness,
stonewalling, and
contempt is any, it's that eye rolling right it's it's a it's
mocking defensiveness is saying you're so dumb yeah you did it you did it and
not taking responsibility stonewalling is I can't even sit in here and talk to
you about this because it's and he'll just say right I when he teaches us I'll
think this is what you watch for when you enter and it's and we all can right we
can all enter into that world of criticism just bugged as we you know bug does can be at this person
that we love so much and and and being on guard to respect that person right and and stay away from
care from attributes of that are not respectful. It isn't interesting I think in our marriage we
feel like if everything's okay in the marriage,
we can deal with almost anything else out there in the world because I have this refuge
to go home to.
My marriage is intact.
I crazy about my wife.
I love my wife.
And it's just so nice to have that rock when other things out there are difficult and
finances and pandemics and earthquakes and riots and fires.
But I have this refuge with my wife with our marriage.
It's meant to be that way.
Janet wanted to ask you about respect for children. This is one that I've
has been I find fascinating and I've had to learn over the years that just because someone is a
child does not mean
you can disrespect them, talk to them the way you would never talk to anyone else, right?
Just because they're your child and I find myself sometimes falling into that trap of your my child
and I would never talk to another child this way. Yes, yes, but I would talk to my own child that way. It
seems disrespectful. Yes. I
That has been very painful about myself and something to face in myself It's I've been thinking a lot about section 121 and what we learn all throughout the doctrine
Covenant's I was just hearing Barb Gardner talk about this
But where power comes from the Lord is teaching us all throughout the doctrine
Covenant's about what his power is like and how it's used
He's wanting to endow with power and what that power and then in section 121 he says,
no power or influence except through these beautiful virtues, right? Patients long-suffering meekness,
gentleness, love and fain, kindness, pure knowledge. And Hank, I read it and I think I cannot have
influence in the lives of these people who I care so deeply about,
unless it is through God's way. And when I speak disrespectfully, which I do, right, and repent of,
try to repent of, but when I do, I am not drawing on the source of true power and influence. He's teaching
us about parenting, right? That's what he's teaching us and how we
influence one another is based in his way. And when we don't do it that way, we're outside of that
source of power. Well, thank you. It is respect. John, you will laugh at this. I have a distinct
memory of my daughter who is now 17 as a six-year-old. she was six, and we were having a discussion in which I was being
disrespectful to her, and she put her hands on her hips,
I remember, and she said,
how come you sound so nice on your talks?
And I remember that moment up.
Hey, how come you sound so nice on those CDs?
I have my talks quoted back to me all the time too,
because I got a big mouth, it's got me in trouble.
But Janet, what you said,
because we're talking about repentance
and we kind of focused on marriage,
but I found there such power in repenting to my kids.
You guys, I lost it there when the house was like this
or sorry about that.
And I think that's an element of respect repenting to my kids for that they see, look,
guys, I'm in the same boat.
We're all trying to live the gospel and I fall down to.
I wonder if every parent has had those moments where the child is now asleep, sitting by
their bed just saying, I'm so sorry.
Right.
I'm so sorry.
Look at you.
You're so sweet and wonderful.
And look what I did.
Isn't there a great story from Elder Hall and they really are when they're asleep.
They're so cute when they're asleep.
They said he got after his child.
Now a general authority.
Yeah.
Yeah. I got after him.
Yeah, so I remember this story.
So what did he say, John, later on, he had a dream.
And the Lord said, you should never
say, I would never dream that way.
Yeah.
Didn't he mention the look that he got from Pat?
Yes.
Yes.
I mean, that's the dagger.
You're just like, oh, no, I got to fix my marriage and my kids.
So grateful for this plan of redemption
and not the plan of perfection in family.
Wait, I wrote that down.
That is so good.
I need that.
It's a redemption.
Right.
And you think that is what family,
we've never been in families before.
We've never been parents before.
We've never been married before.
We haven't had this emotional experience before.
And we need redemption and how bonding it is to apologize. I tell my kids that this is my
first time as a father and I tell them all you guys I am I do this is my first pandemic am I doing
this right you know and that's great. That next set is is love And I think we've highlighted if, you know, if here's President Kimble of two people,
love the Lord more than their own lives, and then love each other more than their own lives,
working together in total harmony with the gospel program as their basic structure.
They are sure to have this great happiness.
This, I think, general conference theme of loving the Lord with all our hearts might mine and strengthen,
loving our neighbors ourselves.
And it's such a theme.
Ah, such a theme.
And it's not, it's something we intentionally choose, right?
I don't always feel those feelings.
I don't always feel like saying, I love you.
And what a beautiful thing that this is agency based. The Lord is talking about an
agency based love. You can love is a verb love is a verb. Yes. Thankfully. Love is repentance. Love is a
verb. Yeah, there's no falling in love falling out of love. Like we had nothing to do with it.
Yes. Like I just it just happened to me versus I choose to love. Yes. Do you know Hank? I'm glad you said that because when I've tried to talk to young adults
about what does it mean to fall in love? Most of our education has come from songs on the radio
and TV shows, which is like the worst possible database imaginable. And so I researched this because
like Janet, I was 33 the day I got married and I was like,
what the heck is wrong with me?
And I'm reading and I found these beautiful statements by President Benson, by President
Kimball.
And when I boiled it down, I felt like you find someone that you respect and admire.
And that's lasting.
And so I'm so glad respect is in there because I, to this day, respect and admire. And that's lasting. And so I'm so glad respect is in there because I to this day
respect and admire my wife and feelings of love can go up and down. And I'm thankful I still have
them. But respect and admiration is what I tell my young adults and my kids now to look for.
Someone you respect and admire who makes you want to be a better person and that they can respect and admire you.
When that's mutual, that's just awesome.
Jason Carroll, who's such a wonderful scholar in love and marriage.
He'll say, he'll talk about the fruits and the roots mixed up.
Love is the fruit of loving, right? Of that agency based, it's the fruit of actions
and what you've described there, respect that it breeds that love. So when we talk about
falling in love, it really is choosing who you're going to choose to love every day. And
that's an important choice, right? You want someone you want to choose to love every day. And that's an important choice, right? You want someone you want to choose to love
every day. But it's, but it is going to be a choice to love. And I think, Henke, you say, for
children as well, like choosing to act in love. That next part is compassion. I love Brunei Brown.
She'll say the, the way you get rid of shame, the way you get, but is compassion. Compassion is the connection empathy,
is the way to repentance kind of a path of that.
And then we get to work.
And I had the privilege of working with Kathleen Bar
who was a scholar on family work.
And when we say family work,
we're literally talking about dishes, laundry,
all those things that
are part of family life that right are just dismissed as being this entropic, have to
redo over and over and over again.
And what in the world is this all about, right?
And her scholarship on this, she would start with that scripture of Adam and Eve being
cursed, she'll be the ground for thy say. For thy.
Yeah.
And it's role in family life.
So she has this list, she'd say, family work gives us endless opportunities to recognize
and fill the needs of others.
It is an endless opportunity to enact love.
So we just talked about love and just doing the dishes and caring for one another and doing
that kind of work together is an endless call to enact love. The second thing she say is it leaves us, it's the kind of work you can do
with your hands and talk at the same time and connect. And all the conversations that are possible
because your your hands, your mind is free in this kind of mindless work that family life has made
up so much of. And how many important conversations happen over laundry and over dishes and over over that right gardening and that are important.
She'll say watching children a wise mom child at dinner struggling she could tell so she
wisely calls a child to work beside her pulls the chair up at the sink and they'd ask
dinner what's bothering you he wouldn't say it six-year-old boy wouldn't say what was bothering him but they're
beside her at the sink with hierarchy dissolved because you are standing beside
one another in this work together how his heart was opened to ask the question
he'd been worried about and so it family work has this way of dissolving
boundaries because we're all doing it together
and there's nobody better or worse or higher or lower, right?
And that that opens conversation.
Even the smallest child can make a contribution.
My little sister Sally, she'd wake up late.
Her job was to set the table,
and I remember saying, getting up late one day
and saying, no one could eat if I didn't set the table.
And just that feeling of of I matter so much.
And I know I matter because my because I have a job to do, you know, these tasks to do.
She would just say, it has the power.
These are daily rituals of family love and belonging.
You know you're in a family if your names are written up to do vacuuming because the
guest name isn't written up there, right?
You know you belong and and that it's this, this power to
transform us spiritually as we work to serve one another physically. So I, I think I just feel so
grateful for her view, even though it's not always fun. I can just say at my house, I'll have those
beautiful truths in my mind and think, this is not fun working alongside each other trying to get
this child to participate or trying to write, but somehow having a view for the potential that it can
have in our family life is a blessing. I'm thinking of sitting in primary singing those
songs that they were trying to convince me of something that was counterintuitive when we're
helping we're happy and we're seeing as we go for we love to help but I'm like no no and I'm helping
I'm not that happy this is not true I see what you're trying to do here
primary teacher but aren't you so grateful it ends with wholesome recreational
activities I think that the data on that is just incredible they'll talk about
this experience of flow that happens between
people when they're engaged in something that's physically a little bit demanding and also meaningful
in terms of, you know, a goal that they're completing together and there's this bonding that happens.
And it can be as simple as all the things you probably naturally dancing in the kitchen and laughing and telling jokes and all of that
relieving from the burden of everyday kind of life that this lifting us to re-creation,
to being re-created together, renewed together.
So I love that.
That's fantastic.
Yeah, just going out for that Sunday bike ride or.
Yes.
Oh, I ask my kids, you know, you can spend a boat load of for on Christmas presents, but then you ask them, what was your favorite part?
Oh, it's when you sat down and played a game with me.
You know, it wasn't the bike.
It was, it was a little bit of time.
That general authority who describes right, taking their family on a big trip, I think it was a church history trip of of time. That general authority who describes right taking their family
on a big trip, I think it was a church history trip of some kind. It was yeah. And at the end,
as the sun is their lane, it's laying down, looking at the stars, you know, and this the sun talking
about, it was time with you, dad, that bent everything. I love that John, not not the trip, not the
big events, but these that are the recreating of our relationships.
The moment we just chatted.
Yes.
I just did something together and talked.
Hank, you went ahead and read that beautiful part about fathers asked to preside over their families of love and righteousness and mothers.
And it and it lists those three piece preside, provide, protect.
And I think the data on this is so interesting.
In that when you look at,
there's, I can just quote a couple of powerful things,
but when you think about what the role of father's
in providing, sometimes we diminish that
because there can be this, right?
A woman can provide as well and earn money
and has many opportunities to do that because there can be this, right? A woman can provide as well and earn money and has many opportunities to do that today.
We surpassed, right, women having more jobs than men in January of 2019 in the United States.
And, but when we look where, where children thrive and the, and the effects of poverty and
children's well-being and the effects of single parenthood with relationship to poverty and children's well-being,
you just cannot overestimate the significant work of fathers in providing. It is so powerful and
important. And I think for women, so often I've done lots of data on what women's preferences are
in terms of work. And you'll find out that women that have the greatest amount of choice,
meaning they're married to someone who is providing.
They are not the primary provider.
Their choice is not typically to work full time.
Some do and enjoy that, but they want to be able to be free to care for their children
and prioritize the needs of their children where they feel irreplaceable.
And that providing that a father and a husband does is incredibly, incredibly beneficial to mothers and children.
So I think we can underestimate that.
And you're speaking from research right now.
Yes, yes.
Yeah.
Then there's protection.
And there's something very interesting
about the role of fathers in protecting.
Just by their sheer size, their voice, their presence in that family, and researchers will
describe it.
It's like they signal to, they just signal to potential predators.
This child is going to be protected.
You were talking about fatherlessness, John.
And one of the interesting data points is what father's presence
in the life of a daughter means in terms of her sexual trajectory.
And some will say his presence literally sets the sexual trajectory of her life,
meaning her likelihood of engaging in relationships that would be destructive to her,
too early or with people that would not be good.
And it's like he signals,
right, and gives her it's like she walks out of the door even if he's not there that dad's not
there, right, beside her, with a sense of what she should expect from the men who are around her.
And and a sense that I am protected by a father who monitors, cares, and watches over me.
They just men are very important in signaling that that protection. It's really beautiful.
And then of course we have that presiding. And I love tackling presiding because presiding is a
tricky word, right? We get this notion of president, and he's like, there's one that makes the decisions.
I think we can get a sense from the church
that what it means to preside is that he is the ultimate,
right, decision maker, the bishop, or the stake president.
And the truth is, in marriage, it's a partnership of equals.
There is no president.
When you kneel at the altar, you kneel as equals.
There's that beautiful triangle, right?
Christ in the center, and you are equal. And the authority is outside both of you. It lies in
God, right? And so there's some powerful statements. A husband and wife are equal. This is from
the handbook. One should not dominate the other. Their decisions should be made in unity and love
with full participation of both. Adam and Eve set an example for husbands
and wives. I think right there from the beginning you have Eve seeking greater light knowledge.
She protects the fruit and she comes to Adam, she explains why, and he harkens to her.
And then in a sense, she is dependent on him offering those beautiful ordinances of salvation
through his priesthood keys that allow her access to eternal life.
And so you see this beautiful interdependence.
She enables life, procreation, the creation of life.
He enables access to eternal life through sacred ordinances and covenants.
And so in some ways it's these beautiful interdependent
equals that Adam and Eve show off this rib,
this rib metaphor, they are equal side by side, right?
And perfect complementarity and equality in their relationship,
harkening to one another, coming to a decision together.
And yet there's an interdependence in that he depends
on her for this life to come.
And she depends on him for the ordinances of salvation. And he presides in offering
those ordinances of salvation to his family, blessings, and baptism, and confirmation, and ordination. And she offers life, right? This continuation of life.
Beautiful. I think the word preside can be threatening to women.
Yeah, because of unrighteous dominion.
And there are men who have used priesthood
to say, I'm in charge and have been bad about it.
Have been widely inappropriate.
Traditions that way, right?
But John, I think women are asking,
so when President Eiring says what it means to nurture is he actually says you are the primary gospel teacher in the home.
That was 2019. And I was like, did he just say that?
Wow.
I think we've assumed some responsibilities that way that may not be right.
So in the handbook, it says presiding in the family is the responsibility to help lead
family members back to dwell in God's presence.
This is done by serving and teaching with gentleness, meekness, and pure love following
the example of Jesus Christ.
Presiding in the family includes leading family members in regular prayer, gospel study,
and other aspects of worship. So it is highlighting fathers as presiders and ensuring these things happen. That's from the
handbook of instruction. Then it says, mothers are primarily responsible for the nurture of their
children. To nurture means to nourish, teach, and support following the example of the Savior.
So in both cases, it says following the example of Jesus Christ.
In unity with her husband, a mother helps her family learn gospel truths
and develop faith in Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.
Together, they foster an environment of love in the family.
So in the handbook, it does distinguish, right,
fathers being helping lead family members in prayer and gospel.
Interesting.
Yeah.
And, but it talks about them both being nurtures in gospel instruction, right?
Helping learn gospel truths.
So they're both primary gospel teachers in a sense.
And he's given that, that special responsibility of ensuring that these structural pieces
are in place, the family prayer and family scripture study and, right, other aspects of worship.
So I'm really glad to hear that reference from the handbook, but that question still comes up.
We can't get our husbands to take the lead. And, and I have always felt like,
even if I just say, everybody, come downstairs, we're, we're doing my wife is so appreciative.
Even if I'm just sending the message,
this matters to me, family prayer matters to me
and that she wants the kids to see,
that family prayer matters to dad
and family home evening matters to dad.
It feels like women are, they tend to feel they're doing
so much to orchestrate family life.
They feel so responsible, right?
Getting children, it sign up for the activities and homework and lunches and whatever else.
And to have, to have him say, I am going to make sure this happens.
And I'm going to do it in a way that is with love and weakness and gentleness, right?
I'm going to call us to that lifts
a burden. I do believe that. And maybe, maybe the question is how we decide those things,
because the challenge, it's interesting that the preeminent principle here is equal partnerships.
We have these stewardship, but the preeminent principle, the overarching principle is equal partnership.
And so if it ever feels like in his presiding, there's some inequality, you botched it like that.
You write, and I think that has to do with deciding together. And so maybe it's as simple as deciding
together, just saying as a husband, wife, it would right? If you did this, this is how I feel.
If you took and deciding that process together,
so you feel like you bet.
We've been equals in making the decisions.
And if she decides, actually I want to do the calling
for family prayer, whatever,
if that's what seems to be best for their family
because you're gone or for whatever else,
we've worked that out together.
So it wasn't one person deciding.
It was us making decisions about how we do family things together.
Who's helping with the dishes?
Who's who's earning?
Who's right?
All those things are kind of brought out into the open as we want to create this
equal partnership in collaborating around this family together.
This is what's hard for a woman is she'll feel like, I, we want to have this
happen. And I actually feel
Bad like I'm overstepping to call the family for prayer and so when present iron says you don't need to feel like you're behind him in
Being the primary gospel instructor. You're responsible for that and so then she feels like okay
I'd love it if you did this but I'm gonna make sure this happens and I'm not gonna feel bad right about
About making sure this happens. Nor should I. Yes
The good thing that's happened to all of this discussion is the the phrase in here that's so important is they do this as equal partners
It equal partnership is the preeminent and overarching principle
partnership is the preeminent and overarching principle, nurturing and presiding or subservient to equal partnership. That's just the truth. And so these stewardship's equally sacred,
equally important. Here's President Ballard, do not involve any false ideas about domination
or subordination. Each stewardship is essential for the spiritual progression of all family
members, parents, and children alike. I mean, we've talked about presiding and providing and protecting, but you to underestimate the influence
of a mother. I'm going along in research and I get to this statement. There's hundreds of studies.
I get to the statement that says, maternal sensitivity, and that that's a measure of maternal
responsiveness, maternal engagement. It's not being a perfect mother, it's, but it's someone who's responding to emotions
and not being intrusive too much.
That kind of thing.
It's the strongest, most consistent predictor of a child's cognitive social and emotional
development.
And John, you know how much fathers mean, but literally from the birth of that infant and even in utero, this we can
now watch neurobiological data allows us to watch the brain grow of that infant. And now
researchers will say that growth happens from within a relationship. It can only happen
from within a relationship. And it's a mother's body, mind and heart literally growing the body, mind and heart
of that infant. And you can watch how her right brain, which is the emotion side of the brain,
the moral side of the brain, the relational side of the brain is doubling in size in that first year.
And it's literally her right brain to that infants right brain is having this incredible
communication process. It is so interesting. It is so amazing. And it's not the language side of
the brain. It's not flashcards and teaching them words and all that. It's literally from heart to
heart. This language of love, these authors out of Berkeley will say through the language of love,
the two of them have a common
language years before speech, where that brain is literally growing. And then Dad,
Dad's influence steps in really powerfully in that 18-month to two-year period where you see
his relationship with that infant having a really, that toddler now, having a very important
impact. And so they kind of in sequence play
very significant roles that are complimentary in the development of that of that from the
foundations of life. So you just when when a prophet says presently, K, she leaves a stamp
on the development. She awakens the light of Christ within that, that is literally what is happening in in neurological development.
So we can't diminish right what she means in the nurturing of life. And I think women have a
sense for that. They have a sense of how significant that relationship is. And it's not an
diminished men. In fact, if you could just for me, I'll think this watching the
complementary between men and women, you'll hear this, when a woman has an infant,
she's holding that infant, she coos and cuddles. What does a man do with the same infant?
He tickles and tosses that infant. And both of them are experiencing this flood of
oxytocin, which is the bonding hormone, right?
My husband who'd never been around a baby,
he's an only child, he has no young cousins,
he'd never seen anything like that.
Within just days of us, that night,
we bring her home for the hospital,
he's doing calisthenics with her,
and I'm like, what are you doing with her?
Right?
And then for me to study, he's having a flood of oxytocin,
which is this bonding hormone,
he's forming a bond with her, I am. And the same hormone in each of us elicits different behavior. In me, it elicits
cooling and cuddling, a wrapping around. In him, it elicits stimulation, excitement, openness to
the outside world. And you just see that all across development. You see, fathers, mothers will
hold, they'll hold, they'll have a child and they'll be
talking to the red ball that's in front of them. And they'll describe it. The mom will say it's red.
It's a ball. Dad takes it, bops them on the head with it or bops them on the belly with it.
The same ball. And both of them have this remarkable complimentary way of influencing the domains
of development, their social development, their cognitive development,
their emotional development, in distinct and absolutely foundational fundamental ways.
And it's not really who's working or earning the money.
It's not, I mean, we think about that kind of roles, but all this power that's happening
just in their physiological makeup that invites them to interact in ways that allow for development to be whole.
Dads, you'll watch to a parent's behind a child helping them with a math test, right? They're
having a little test. And the mom will step in. Remember how to do this? Remember how you
add these questions together? She does that. He's sitting beside the same child and says,
you can do it. You got this. And you know how it doesn't, doesn't step in. And so you'll see, right, some scholars, Andrew, to say, would say, you watch dads,
he'll say to that child, put your own backpack on. Get, make your own lunch, right? And the
mom's like, what kind of sandwich do you want? And the dad will say, make it, wait, make
it. You know how to make it. And she said at first, it looked like, oh, dads are just,
what are they selfish, right? You know, diseng disengaged and and then saying nurturing involves two core fundamental processes. It's holding close and
it's letting go and dads are particularly adept at facilitating the growth
needed for independence. He'll say you can do it go higher go higher up that tree.
She's saying get down here. He's saying go higher I'm underneath. I'll catch you.
And so
encouraging risk taking from a place of safety is what he's doing. Creating a foundation of security
and identity is what she's doing. And both are really core to healthy development. You see a
dad, one last example, my husband, he would hold the baby and he'd hold her like a football.
He'd never seen, like he'd never watched anybody hold the baby.
But as soon as he gets laid on in church, he's holding her like a football.
And I'm like, what are you holding her like that for?
Right?
And you see that all the time.
Men will tend to hold that baby looking outward at the world.
And she's wrapping that infant.
And it's emblematic of what their influence is,
because dads, John, as you noted, right,
fatherlessness has so much to do with academic achievement.
It's the biggest predictor of college graduation.
It's incarceration rates, right,
are related to presence of a father.
It's how that child relates to the outside world.
And that mother is building this core.
And I'm just saying it roughly, right?
But their complementary capacity to influence development
as emblematic and even the way they're holding that child
is just remarkable.
So we need them.
We need them both, you know, in their uniqueness.
I love this. It's so interesting and so true.
Okay, we end the proclamation, you know, with needing to
necessitate adaptation, individual adaptation, and that
extended families play a role when support is needed. And I
think that's the whole family of God, you know, ward
families, aunts and uncles, cousins.
I love sister.
I remember hearing once a sister back, share a story,
but just how influential the men in the in the relationship of the family who,
who'd had a father leave, how important those bishops and young men leaders were,
their presence in their lives.
bishops and young men leaders were their presence in their lives. And you just can't, who can say what the influence of of intact families is on those who aren't in intact in-tack families,
even if they're not biologically related, just the power of that example and home and connection.
You know, some of the things I've heard recently is the young adults are asking
You know, why do we need a church again? And I think you just answered some of that
Interesting how much my students will talk about leaders and and how they were or coaches or teachers
And they'll say what I saw them as a father what they were like as a father what they were like as a husband
So it's the power
comes in strengthening their relationships, interesting, right? Their capacity to have
those kind of happy relationships. That's where you really want to be an influence, right?
Is helping them know what these beautiful relationships can be like so that they have
the opportunity to establish those in their own lives. The one thing I was gonna say is this would be a great plug
for everyone who wants to hear more about preside
is our episode 31 with Dr. Barbara Morgan Gardner.
Oh, that's one.
So we went through section 84 with her.
If you haven't heard that, if you're listening
to this podcast saying, I'd love to hear more about this, go back into our podcast and go to section
Episode 31 on section 84 and listen to those because she did a spectacular job of teaching us about
men and women and presiding and priesthood. It was it was spectacular. Absolutely. Thank you for mentioning that. She just yes
understands is so deeply from a scriptural standpoint. Yes
mentioning that. She just, yes, understands is so deeply from a scriptural standpoint. Yes.
There's that we warn that individuals who violate covenants of chastity, who abuse spouse or offspring,
or who fail to fulfill family responsibilities will one day stand accountable before God.
I think that paragraph just really sobering, right, for all of us who are struggling to be what we want to be in family life, probably growing in that way. And then those who intentionally right participate in destructive
acts, just it's a very serious thing. These souls that are given to us, these vulnerable souls that
are given to us. That's interesting. Jenna, it also doesn't say those who don't live perfectly, right?
It doesn't say that. We warn that individuals who are not perfect parents will stand accountable
for it. It's violating covenants and abuse. I've always loved that the Book of Mormon
starts out with a dysfunctional family. And if that sounds too strong, hey, let's kill Nephi.
No, let's kill, oh, I'm sorry, ischmeldie.
Let's kill dad and Nephi.
Then we'll all feel better.
And Soraya's going, what are you doing, Lee?
I'm writing all this down.
What are family problems?
Who are you gonna send that to?
Every nation, Kendra, tongue and people.
Right.
And to me, it gives me comfort
that the Book of Mormon starts with a family
that had their own ups and downs, their own problems, and that children as different as they
are described can come from the same parents. And it's not a perfect family, right? Hank,
as you were just saying. Right. But he does put a strong boundary up on violating
covenants using family members. That's a very firm boundary for the Lord. It's a
sobering, important boundary that is not going to be shied away from. Yes. We have to take it very
seriously, right, Hank? It's interesting around the world when we look at cultures and we see
really strong traditions that can be very diminutive and destructive to women.
And there is just no question that there are patterns that abuse and diminish and do not see women as
equals. And so when we see cultures rejecting marriage, they are rejecting a distortion of what marriage is intended to be. What are
heavenly parents' embody, which is a perfect equality, a beautiful complementarity, a
oneness, and that is the vision the world needs of marriage. It does not need a vision of
traditional problematic, gendered ways of dividing and oppressing.
It needs a vision that God has given us, our heavenly parents, of equality.
So we have to take very seriously when women are by nature, they are physically less strong,
they are less sexually overtly driven.
And so they are vulnerable.
They are vulnerable to the size and
kind of physical power and
potential abuses of men.
And so just by nature.
And that's what the beautiful teachings of priesthood, right?
This is what this looks like.
This is what priesthood power looks like.
Both men and women are in doubt of priesthood power.
And the keys that men hold teach them
this pattern of service and kindness and respect and an honoring and anything, anything that
is outside of that is not of God.
There's a lot to work on in the world in terms of understanding equality.
I'll tell my students, generation is that is tasked with this
beautiful task of understanding equality between men and women in ways that
has not been understood before and and it will bring great power into the
church and into families and I think it starts with women knowing more who we
are and the power that we have been in doubt with and what God would call us to do. And then you get this ending statement that says,
we warn that the disintegration of the family will bring upon individuals,
communities, and nations, calamities.
And it describes calamities foretold by ancient and modern prophets.
I think when Carl Zimmerman's looking at the rise
and fall of nations, the rise and fall
of all the great empires and he's saying this hinges
on the disintegration of the role of the family
in society and to take very seriously its core central role
in the thriving of individuals, of families and communities.
This, that we depend on families
as the foundations, right? That's why it says it's the fundamental unit of society.
I looked up the definition of calamity and if you don't use that word very often,
you might not hear the gravity of it, it's a disastrous event marked by great loss and lasting distress,
a state of deep distress or misery caused by major misfortune or loss.
Just so, just so work clear on what a calamity is.
Just one comment, there was a writer, she's marvelous, Mary Eberstadt Catholic writer.
She described during the really intense difficulties, the writing and very intense
difficulties during July, July of 2020, right when we're in the heart of these
very big challenges. And it was interesting to have her insights on
pottery, this the fatherland, the father of a home and the father of
nation. And the role of these protective institutions and when they're not in place
so
fatherlessness
leads to chaos. That's what you see John in that data right fatherlessness is it it's and it's an untethering
The grounding in the relationships that lead to health and civility and strength.
And so she was just commenting, we have lost God.
We have lost the sense of fatherhood in a nation.
And we have lost our fathers in this tremendous culture of increased fatherlessness.
And what you will have is you will have chaos, people searching for something to look to, something to find.
And the destructiveness to society, we can throw that out, but it's a very powerful comment about the relationship of families
in keeping cohesive, structured ways of relating the civility of society. We see the
fruits of it. Would it be correct to say that in your experience, the proclamation, the family
proclamation is, though not answering every question that any human being can have in
their own experience, they need to have that personal relationship
with God. But in general, it seems like the family proclamation is backed by social science
across the board. Yeah. Unending to be honest, it's really remarkable. Yep. For sure. And I think
that's because it is experience, right? When we talk about social science research, all it is is gathering experience, experiences,
real experiences and immortality.
And so we will see evidence of the laws of God, play out, of course we will.
But never to be used as a weapon.
I like to what you said in the beginning, this proclamation as a weapon, it was never
intended to be used as a weapon.
It's a light. It's an ideal.
Yeah.
Jenna, this has just been a spectacular day for us.
I think our listeners would be interested in your experience as a, a social
scientist, a PhD, and yet a very faithful member of the church.
What do you, can you walk us through that?
Your experience is your journey.
How that's, you know, what's your experience been
with your education and your faith?
I appreciate you asking that Hank,
and it makes me think of an experience.
I was sitting in graduate school.
I was sitting amongst wonderful, wonderful fellow students,
none of whom shared my faith.
And I had been sometimes told, well, you've been protected.
You haven't known things because you've been kept away from certain ideas.
You've had less academic freedom because of your religious upbringing.
And these religious truths you've been taught about the family had sometimes had people
say that. And I will religious truths you've been taught about the family. I'd sometimes had people say
that. And I will never forget
sitting there. And into my mind
came a lesson that I had
instruction I'd been received
as a nursing student at BYU
about the eye. And the eye
can see only with light.
It requires light to
discern shadows and shapes
and colors. And as I sat there,
I was filled with gratitude for the blazing source of light that the gospel Jesus Christ was
in my life with those two foundational teachings. The gospel of the Savior who redeems us and the
family proclamation to the world. President Oaks puts those together and the light that allowed me to see, to
discern shadows, to discern shapes, to discern what I could not have seen
without that blazing source of light. And I don't know how I would express
gratitude enough for prophets of God, for a redeemer who
loves us, who sends messengers to communicate truths, for the purpose of enabling us to
experience love, his love, and to experience love together in the relationships that matter the most. And when we don't, to redeem us so that we
can have that eternally. And I just think the proclamation is just a profound gift, I think I said
before in that nine paragraphs, the distillation of literally thousands of social science studies into succinct statements is just could only be divine.
And I am so grateful for it and bear witness of it with all my heart.
And with my mind as well, that has been exposed to studies about that, that it is true.
And we can see it as a blazing source of light to guide us. And with the Savior
walking beside us, enable us to receive those beautiful blessings eternally of deep relationships,
of fulfillment, like our Heavenly Parents experience. And I leave that testimony in the name
of Jesus Christ, amen. Amen. What a great day. John, by the way, what a great day.
Absolutely. Yeah, I'm so good.
I will see the this document differently from here on out.
I think a lot of our listeners will as well.
We need to thank Dr. Janet Erickson.
Thank you so much for being here.
Thank you to all of our listeners. There's now hundreds
of thousands of you out there and we are grateful for each one of you. Our brothers and sisters.
Our brothers and sisters in this big family. Thank you to our executive producers,
Steve and Shannon Sorenson and our incredible production crew. We have Will Staten, we have Kyle Nelson, Lisa Spice,
Jamie Nielsen and the incredible, wonderful,
beautiful David Perry, because it's his birthday.
So we had to kind of give him a wonderful shout out.
We hope that all of you will join us
on our next episode of Follow Him.
We'll join us on our next episode of Follow Him. [♪ Music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, music playing in background, see oh, follow him dot co. There's even transcripts there, John in French, Portuguese and Spanish. And
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