Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - "Who is Isaiah and why is he a big deal?": followHIM Favorites
Episode Date: September 1, 2022Hank Smith and John Bytheway answer a question from this week's Come, Follow Me study.Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.f...acebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-her-beauty-rise-piano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, my friends. Welcome to Follow Him Favorites. If you've been following us this year,
you know that we take a specific question from each week's lesson and do a little, you
know, five to ten minute discussion on it. This week's lesson is Isaiah one through twelve and I can just picture some of our listeners
going Isaiah oh no not Isaiah so John the question for this week is who is
Isaiah and why is he so important that we're always talking about it oh what a
great that's well how do we answer that one in just a few minutes Isaiah one of
the greatest Old Testament prophets,
but he was such a poet and a scholar and an advisor to kings. He was great because of where the
Lord put him and when the Lord put him, but he also wrote in such a beautiful way, but it takes
a little bit of effort. And like most things in life, you put in some effort, he will become one of
your favorites. I like to use the analogy of,
hey, if I handed you a Sudoku puzzle book
that I bought at Dollar Tree,
and all of the puzzles were filled in,
you would throw it away.
But when the puzzles are empty and you think,
there's an answer.
There's something here.
I think Jesus' parables help us do that too.
Wait, what does that mean?
And will you read, what does he mean? And will you read it?
What does he mean there?
And the reward of studying Isaiah
is when you start to fill in those puzzles and go,
oh, well, now I get that.
And it becomes one of your favorites.
But where I like to start is the name Isaiah,
if you look it up in the Bible dictionary,
it means you know when you hear
ya at the end of a proper name, what is it, Hank?
Yeah, it's the Jehovah.
So there's a lot of names like that.
And it's kind of fun to look at them like those names that have the name of God in
them. And they liked to do that.
They liked to put the name of God in their name or acknowledge God in their names.
Isaiah means Jehovah is salvation.
Or if we were to put that bumper sticker language, Jesus saves.
What I love about that is especially in the Book of Mormon, when Abinadi shows up before King Noah and the Wicked Priest,
which sounds like a rock band from the 50s, King Noah and, there, there, but he asked them, what are you teaching? And they said the law of Moses and Benedict, I says, well, why don't you keep it? And then he kind of quotes a bunch of the commandments.
And then he says, keep the law of Moses because you were asked to, but salvation comes in Christ. What's Isaiah's name again?
Jehovah is salvation and then he quotes Isaiah 53, which in the book of Mormon is known as Mosiah 14 and tells them Jesus is salvation, Jesus saves. And that's why I love Isaiah because
he reveals the Savior.
340 years before Jesus.
And yet he gives us such detail about Christ so that we would recognize him when he came.
So that's one of the reasons I get excited about Isaiah.
That's fantastic.
I read out of the Bible dictionary.
I usually show my students.
If you read Isaiah in the Bible dictionary, go to the last paragraph.
It says, as one understands these works better, he will understand Isaiah better,
talking about the book Mormon and doctrine and covenants.
As one understands Isaiah better, he more fully comprehends the mission of the
Savior and the meaning of the covenant that was placed upon Abraham.
So if you are one of those people that says, man, I want to get in line with
President Nelson, I'd like to understand the Abrahamic covenant.
I'd like to understand the Savior more. Isaiah is the key. Isaiah is where you have to go.
So what's the big deal with Isaiah? Isaiah is dealing with things from the past,
but a lot of the stuff Isaiah deals with is stuff that we see fulfilled in our day,
especially the gathering of Israel. One of his major topics is the gathering of Israel. So
one of the reasons this book
can be so fun is you can find yourself, you can find yourself in the book, especially
if you plan on serving a mission or if you really like to share the gospel with people.
Wow. You are in the book of Isaiah. He is seeing you and your work happening on the earth
that you're part of this. What did President Nelson call it, John?
The greatest work you could ever be involved in is the gathering of Israel and Heavenly Father
sent you to earth at this time.
That is not an accident.
There's a reason for that.
And Isaiah talks about what we all have to do.
When I wrote my little Isaiah for Airhead's book, I talked about current events and coming
events.
One of the things that you can stumble over, there are 108 different place names in Isaiah.
And if I were to say to you, Hank, Springville, Provo, Lehigh, Pleasant Grove, you know where
they are. But if I start saying all these names like Anathoth and Migron and a carcemish,
you know what it's talking about.
And this is why it's so nice to live in the latter days.
You can find a map.
You can listen to follow him.
You can get out your com follow me manual,
and you can start to put those puzzled pieces together
and finish that Sudoku puzzle.
And then you go, look, I did that.
I now love Isaiah 53 because I can see Christ in there.
He was despised. He was rejected of men.
We hit our faces from him, but when his soul is an offering for sin, he will see his scene.
And we start to put it all together and
it gets exciting to us and becomes one of our favorites.
Yeah, that's fantastic. I've heard it said that Isaiah is one of the best writers in the history of the world if not the best writer in the history of the world
So good that Jesus himself said a
Commandment I give unto you that you search Isaiah
Dilligently as we study Isaiah. Please join us on our full podcast
We're gonna take a part as much as Isaiah as we can the podcast is called follow him
You can get it wherever you get your podcast. We're going to take a part as much advice as we can. The podcast is called Follow Him. You can get it wherever you're a podcast.
We're going to have multiple biblical scholars with us
to help us take this apart, piece at a time.
Who knows?
Maybe a walk away going in or what?
I feel like I understand it, just a little bit better.
And then join us next week for another Follow Him favorites. music