Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Doctrine & Covenants 135-136 Part 2 : Dr. S. Michael Wilcox

Episode Date: November 20, 2021

Doctrine & Covenants 135:Dr. S. Michael Wilcox returns to discuss the legacy of Joseph’s life and the teachings of the gospel of Jesus Christ. Joseph Smith’s life testifies of a living and act...ive Savior, and we reflect upon the joys that can come from tragedy. What would be your final message?Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/episodes/Facebook: 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: Sponsor/MarketingLisa Spice: Client Relations, Show Notes/TranscriptsJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Assistant 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to Part 2 of this week's podcast. I believe it was Bertram Russell. I'm going to get it wrong here. Anyway, one of those British thinkers said, history is written in three books. The book of deeds, the book of arts, and the book of words. And it's always fun to have a discussion with people as to which of those they think is most important. And I don't know that you can have an answer to that and elevate one above the other. So the book of deeds, the landing on Norman Deeds, beaches, the valley forges. These are deeds that men did.
Starting point is 00:00:52 Book of arts, Michelangelo's David, never a greater sermon on the dignity of man was portrayed visually than Michelangelo's David, it's in Florence. Thomas Jefferson's the book of words in the Declaration of Independence. So when you start to weigh deeds and art and arts and words, what have had the most impact? And you'll have different people, like I say, some fun to have a discussion, take the ten greatest deeds in history, the ten greatest works of art, and that would be music, Beethoven's Night Symphony, just whatever, and the greatest words. Now, maybe because I'm an English major and like to read a lot, you know where I'm going to vote. I'm going to cast my vote
Starting point is 00:01:58 that it is words that have had the greatest impact and the greatest legacy. The idea is the minds, the deep things of the soul transmitted by written word down through the generations. So Joseph did great deeds. Carthage was a deed. He gave his life. But the greatest influence, I think, what he died for. And what John Taylor is going to indicate in section 135 is that Joseph and Hiram died for words, the words they left us. And he begins section 31, 35 with that idea. We go right to verse 1, the reason for the martyrdom to seal the testimony of this book, meaning the doctrine and covenants. And the book of Mormon, We announce the martyrdom of Joseph Smith the prophet and Hiram Smith the patriarch. Many tells their last words, the day, the time, how many balls they received, a little history. But he starts with, they died for the Book
Starting point is 00:03:21 of Mormon and the doctrine of covenants. Then we go to verse 3. Joseph Smith, the prophet and seer of the Lord, has done more saved Jesus only for the salvation of men in this world than any other man that ever lived in it. That's a very strong statement. I don't know that I would want to debate with somebody about that. It is John Taylor. It is typical writing style of the 19th century. I don't know how literally I want to take it. I don't know how if I want to debate with somebody how literally there's a lot of great people who have done a lot for the salvation of mankind. And Mike, I don't think I just can't see the Lord having a ranking system of, well,
Starting point is 00:04:12 I think it is, it is a tribute. It is a, so we sometimes talk, but if I were going to put a reason behind it to say, I can agree with this, I would say this, Joseph Smith gave us more scripture than any other man that I can think of. The Book of Mormon, translation, the doctrine of covenants, revelation, and the Pearl of Great Price. Now, can you think of anybody? Paul gave us a lot of great epistles Luke we get Luke gave us I think the most something the most beautiful We get an axe Moses gives us the Torah, you know the five first five books Isaiah gives us 66 beautiful chapters. We we get a lot more men, a bridge's great amounts of scripture. But if I had to say in the my world, is I pick up
Starting point is 00:05:16 in my hands, even if I include the Buddha or Confus, or Muhammad, other great writers of holy writ of scripture. I'm not going to find anybody who's going to give us quite as much as Joseph. So I will take verse three that and say, I'll justify that statement based on that. I don't want to rank and I don't want to, it's a very strong statement. And then he kind of clarifies it. He gives me permission to think that way. And after that first sentence of verse three, in the short space of 20 years, he has brought forth the book of Mormon, we're back to words, which he translated by the gift and power of God, and has been the means of publishing it on two continents,
Starting point is 00:06:16 Europe and North America at the time, has sent the fullness of the everlasting gospel, which it contained to the four quarters of the earth. And then what does he add to the Book of Mormon? Has brought forth the revelations and commandments, which compose this book of doctrine and covenants, and many other wise documents and instructions for the benefit of the children of men. It's words. Pearl Great Price isn't published yet. I mean, it's been published in various periodicals of the time, but it's not been gathered together. Joseph died and Hiram died for words. And the greatest tribute, the greatest way we can remember them and honor them is to study
Starting point is 00:07:11 and search and read and internalize those words that they gave us. And then he talks about some other things, you know, the gathering of thousands of people and building a city. Joseph always wanted to build a community. One of the great things that he died for also was, and that he lived for, was to create, maybe one of his greatest creations, was to create a community, a people, a community, a people like the Torah creates the Jews. Judaism is, there are people, people of the book. There are a religion, but there are also people. And Latter-day Saints, it's a religion, but it's also a people. Now, he comes back in verse 6 after their farewells, after their teaching is how to die, he
Starting point is 00:08:10 comes back to this idea of what were they dying for, and he includes them with other martyrs of religion. And then he says in the middle of verse 6, the reader, because of course that's how we honor Joseph and Hiram. We read, in fact I wish he had changed that word if I could edit the doctrine and covenants, I'd change that word to searcher. We never want to read the scriptures, you always want to search them. The reader, the searcher in every nation will be reminded that the Book of Mormon and this book of doctrine and covenants of the church cost the best blood of the 19th century to bring them forth for the salvation of a ruined world. And he comes back to that same idea of they left us words, wonderful words. In 1838, one of the greatest American minds in the early half of the 19th century was Ralph Waldo, Emerson. This is a brilliant mind. He wrote beautiful things, beautiful prose.
Starting point is 00:09:27 He was a deep thinker. Influences American thought, American letters are love of the natural world. A lot of things come from Emerson. In 1838 in July, I would recommend everybody read it. He gave an address, a speech to the Harvard Divinity School. July, I think it was the 15th, 1838. Joseph is in, you know, far west at this time in the middle of his life. And Emerson describes Joseph Smith. He doesn't know he's describing him. He's longing for something. He's predicting something. He's prophesying something. He is telling these future ministers coming out of Harvard, brilliant young man graduating now, what is spiritually wrong with the world, and what is needed to fix it? And I read as beautiful in a lot of ways.
Starting point is 00:10:39 He's describing what Joseph is going to do in bequeathing to the world beautiful truths and ideas and light and wisdom in words. So let me just give a little because I wish everybody would go out. You can google it. Emerson's 1838 Harvard Divinity speech and read it. You will be amazed at the Divinity School address. So here's a little bit. I don't mind sharing Joseph Smith and the doctrine covenants with Emerson. I don't want to share him with Ford and the Higby's and the laws.
Starting point is 00:11:23 But I don't mind sharing with Emerson at this moment of sacrifice and gift of his life. He says, it is my duty to say to you that the need has never been greater of new revelation than now. In how many churches, by how many prophets, tell me, is man made sensible that he is an infinite soul. It's one of the great truths of Joseph Smith, he just expanded the concept of mankind, humanity, to immense heights and depths and breadth. That the earth and the heavens are passing into his mind, that he is drinking forever of
Starting point is 00:12:13 the soul of God. Where now sounds the persuasion that by its very melody, it paradises my heart. I love that phrase. There are things in the Pearl of Great Price, in the Book of Mormon, doctrine, Covins. The melody of its words in paradises my heart. And so affirms its own origin in heaven, that I am an eternal being coming from a higher place. Where shall I hear words such as in elder ages drew men to leave all and follow? Think about what those early saints did, the Brigham Young's and the Party Pprats, because Joseph asked him to do it. To leave Father and Mother, house and land, wife and child, where shall I hear these August laws of moral being so pronounced as to fill my ear and I feel ennobled by the offer of my utter most action and passion, which is what Joseph
Starting point is 00:13:29 Smith and God and the Savior and the Restoration ask of us. And we are willing because it ennobles us what he taught, what we read in noblesists to the point of our desire to offer as they offered in Carthage, our uttermost action and passion. Then I skip a little bit here. I don't know how to honor Joseph and hire him much better than with Emerson. I have some others I'll honor them with a little bit if you don't mind. A little bit later he says,
Starting point is 00:14:09 remember in section one, I'll preface this part with this section one. God said, as the doctrine of covenants is being formed, I call Joseph Smith because of calamity. That's the word he used. Remember that because of the calamities that we're going to come upon the earth. And we asked the question, Lord, what calamity were you talking about? War and destruction and yeah, maybe. But I think Emerson says it greater in this desire for God's voice to be heard powerfully on earth again. What greater calamity can fall upon a nation than the loss of worship. Then all things go to decay. Genius leaves the temple to haunt the
Starting point is 00:15:10 Senate or the marketplace. Literature becomes frivolous. Science is cold. The eye of youth not lighted age is without honor. Society lives to trifles, and when men die, we do not mention them. That's the calamity, Joseph. God sent Joseph Smith to try and stop, so that we would not live to trifles, trifles, so that things would not become frivolous. The stationeryness of religion. The assumption that the age of inspiration is past, that the Bible is closed. The fear of degrading the character of Jesus by representing him as a man, a human being, indicate with sufficient clearness, the falsehood of our theology. Now this is an elater day saint saint, right? This is Ralph Waldo Emerson, the greatest thinker,
Starting point is 00:16:19 you could argue that America produced assessing his nation at the very time Joseph is teaching at the very same time at the very same time. Yeah. It is the office, I'm back to Amerson, the office of a true teacher to show us that God is not was that He speaketh, not spake. The true Christianity, a faith like Christ in the infinitude of man, is lost. Few believe in the soul of man. All men go in flocks to this saint or to that poet, avoiding the God who see it in secret. So what a Joseph Smith die for and come to do. He fulfilled the office of a true teacher. He came to show us that God is not was that he speaks, not speak. So I know
Starting point is 00:17:29 you always sometimes, and we know what is Joseph Smith, what does he mean to me? Joseph gave the world, he gave me a God that is present, a present God, a God present in history. He gave us a Christ present in history, not one that lived and died, but that lives as he testifies. He lives in my life, in your life. He gave us a God that is, that not was. And then he says this, we mark with light in the memory. The few interviews we have had in the dreary years of routine and of sim with souls that made our souls wiser. That's what Joseph did for me. That's what he died for. So I could be wiser that spoke what we thought, that told us what we knew, that gave us leave to be what we inley were. To see the divine in all of us. And then he concludes, I look for the hour. The hour was there. For us it was there. I look for the hour when that supreme beauty which ravished the souls of those Eastern men and chiefly of those Hebrews, Eastern meaning the
Starting point is 00:19:28 Middle East. And through their lips spoke oracles to all time, shall speak in the West also. The Hebrew and Greek scriptures contain immortal sentences that have been bred of life to millions, but they are fragmentary, are not shown in their order to the intellect. I look for the new teacher. Capital T capitalizes teacher. That is a wonderful tribute. I don't think Emerson knew he was giving a tribute to Joseph and those words would fit other people. But I can't read the Harvard Divinity address and not just sit down and say, God knew the calamity that was coming, and part of that calamity was loss of spiritual power. And without spiritual power, there is no moral power.
Starting point is 00:20:35 You lose spiritual power, you lose moral power. We see that. And he sent us the new teacher, he sent us Joseph, and the words do everything for Latter-day Saints. And we hope that they'll do in wider and wider circles what they do for us. What an inspired soul for Emerson to have those yearnings, you know? Yeah, Emerson, I mean, he wrote a lot of beautiful, beautiful things.
Starting point is 00:21:13 And I've read quite a bit of Emerson. You know, I'll give you another one, just you don't need me to praise Joseph Smith in section 135. I can get it from those who aren't members of the church who who were thinkers, brilliant people. So I gave you Amerson. I know he's not specifically talking about Joseph Smith, but he's talking about the need that Joseph Smith will strive to fill to new new revered. To fill. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:46 He'll spend his whole life trying to fill. And for a believing member of the church, what Joseph does fulfill, Joseph does what Emerson yearns for, hopes for, longs for. So now if I were to pick a modern, the modern Emerson mind, another brilliant, brilliant man, literary scholar, America's preeminent, why it would be Harold Bloom. Harold Bloom wrote one of the greatest books on Shakespeare, for instance. And he wrote a book called The American Religion.
Starting point is 00:22:30 And he talks about a number of religions that he says really resonate with America and arose out of the American experience. The Southern Baptist, he does a lot about them. But he spins on a number of chapters on Joseph Smith. So here's a man who studied a lot. He was Jewish. He doesn't join the church, but he objectively is looking at Joseph having read and studied his life. is looking at Joseph having read and studied his life. So here's his assessment, again, just a little bit. I do not qualify to pass on the rest of the Mormon creed. I'm not going to talk about what I agree or disagree with
Starting point is 00:23:21 with the Mormon beliefs. But I also do not find it possible to doubt that Joseph Smith was an authentic prophet. Where in all of American history can we find this match? The prophet Joseph has proved again that economic and social forces do not determine human destiny, religious history like literary or any cultural history is made by genius, by the mystery of rare human personality. And Joseph was a rare personality. If you don't want to accept him as a prophet, he certainly doesn't give us the opportunity of accepting him as a fraud or a charismatic or a deceiver. He
Starting point is 00:24:15 just doesn't give you that choice with what he wrote. He was an authentic religious genius. I'm reading from another chapter by Bloom, and surpassed all Americans in religious genius. Before or since in the possession and the expression of what could be called the religion making imagination, I've always believed that there is a gift. We have talked about the gifts of the Spirit, that one of the gifts of the Spirit, that one of the most unique and powerful is the gift of religion.
Starting point is 00:24:53 Some people are just gifted. You've been able to draw on revelation and cultural things and and cultural things and their own soul and the needs of humanity and an understanding and to create through a combination of all those things, the programs, the ordinances, the expressions of doctrine that can define a people. And Jesus had the gift of religion, I would say. Moses had the gift of religion. Muhammad had the gift of religion. The Buddha had the gift of religion.
Starting point is 00:25:38 Confucius had the gift of religion. They just had an ability of giving men words and ideas that changed the world profoundly. I'm back to Bloom, I'll quit with Bloom on this. If one decides that Joseph Smith was no prophet, let alone King of the Kingdom of God, then one's dominant emotion towards him must be wonder, not derision. You don't accept him as a prophet. And Bloom is saying, I'm not going to join the Mormon Church. But my attitude to Joseph Smith is one of absolute wonder. I myself can think of not another American except for Emerson, interesting that he includes Emerson, who so moves and alters my imagination, lifts my thinking, causes me to ponder.
Starting point is 00:26:47 So rich and varied a personality, so vital a spark of divinity is almost beyond the limits of the human. As normally we can screw those limits to one who does not believe in him, okay, in terms of, I'm not going to join the LDS church. He's Jewish, okay? He would make a similar assessment about Jesus. You know, I just a very open that he says, to one who does not believe in him, but who has studied him intensely, Smith becomes almost a total mythology in himself. The creator of a whole world view is what Harold Bloom is saying. I can give my love a Joseph. I love him profoundly.
Starting point is 00:27:40 All that he has done for me, for all of us who believe and love him and have read his words. Think of the characters he gave us. Just go through the book of Mormon that Nephys, that Lehighenus praying in the woods, Benjamin on his tower, the stripling warriors, kept them around with his flag, Alma the Younger, Jesus with the children, the brother Jared with his lit stones and his barges, the weeping God of Enic, just the characters, the stories, the personalities that he gave us. Think of the phrases that he gave us. Think of the phrases that he gave us. Worlds without number have I created. I wrote some down. This is my work and my glory. Men are that they might have joy. Men should be anxiously engaged in a
Starting point is 00:28:41 good cause. The worth of souls is great in the sight of God. When you are in the service of your fellow beings, you are only in the service of your God. Wickedness never was happiness. The glory of God is intelligence. I, the Lord, am bound when you do what I say. Let virtue garnish thy thoughts unceasingly. All these things shall give the experience. There must needs be opposition in all things and on and on and on. You can find those kind of phrases on every page, every chapter. Pretty much, of the book of Mormon, the Doctrine and Covenants,
Starting point is 00:29:27 and the Perlegate Price. When people have a little faith crisis, a little anxiety about Joseph, I usually say to him, go open your triple combination and just read what you once underlined. And I think you'll start to feel faith and a calmness in the words. So if John Taylor believes, no man did more than Jesus, which again, there's a lot of people who've done a lot of things for mankind. But in the words that he gave us, in the scriptural power of those words, in his insistence that God is a present God, he's a now God, he's not a yesterday God, that he speaks,
Starting point is 00:30:28 justifies somewhat John Taylor's assessment of Joseph. I have a favorite paragraph in preach my gospel. I think it's on page 41, 40 or 41. And it's just a couple of paragraphs. I don't know who wrote these, but they're just beautiful that throughout history, God has had a pattern of reaching out to his children through a prophet. And man has had a pattern of rejecting them. he even sent his son and incredibly they rejected him. And then the next paragraph says, consider our evidence that God has once again reached out to a prophet. The prophet's name is Joseph Smith and the evidence is the Book of Mormon.
Starting point is 00:31:18 And I just, what you've just talked about, that beautiful list you gave, look at the evidence. Where did these words come from? The phrases that you gave Well, I'm a lover of words Sam and English major I've read a lot and Joseph not everything, you know, there are times I I'm an editor in my brain and there are times I'm reading the Bible, you know, I'm reading all the Book of Mormon and I'll say, Lord, I could fix
Starting point is 00:31:56 this verse for you. But I am amazed. You know, you've taught college students. I've taught college students for four decades, brilliant, brilliant students. And Joseph was not educated. He was educated on the Bible, which was a really good education in the 1800s. He didn't go to school, what sometimes we say out of third grade education. That doesn't mean he went to three years of school. They were working on the farm. He would maybe go a few winter months. So I've taught brilliant college students. I don't think I've ever met one who could begin to produce the ideas of which I just crabbed a few, you know, that you can find on page after page. He was he was not perfect. I probably have squeezed my sponge of love for section 135 and what we want.
Starting point is 00:33:07 That's what we want. Yeah, what Joseph Smith died for and how he taught us, how to die, which is what I always think about when I come here. William Butler Yeats was an Irish poet. They're difficult after admit, but in there was a uprising in Ireland in 19, Easter of 1916 where the Irish were trying to throw off a British rule and gain independence and it failed and the leaders of it were executed. And it troubled Yates somewhat. And so he wrote a poem called Easter 1916.
Starting point is 00:33:49 And the ending and one of the phrases that he uses as a refrain throughout much of that poem always brings me to Carthage II. I thought about it when I was in Carthage this last time. Just these few little lines Yates wrote, we know their dreams. We know their dreams enough to know they dreamed and are dead. dreamed and are dead. What were Joseph's dreams? How much more would he have liked to sat? We know their dreams enough to know they dreamed and are dead because they dreamed, because they wanted to try and make the world a better place. And what if excess of love be wildered them till they died, yates, rights?
Starting point is 00:34:50 Their dreams were motivated by their love, and then he ends, all changed, changed utterly. A terrible beauty is born. And I feel that way at Carthage. Something changed, all changed, changed utterly. And then that oxymoron, that terrible beauty, a terrible beauty is born. It was terrible what happened at Carthage. Two men were murdered, brutally, violently, for the most unjust reasons based on prejudice, hate, bigotry, intolerance, bigotry intolerance. And yet for you and I, something beautiful also grew out of the terrible tragedy of Carthage. And I think John Taylor was trying to capture that emotion of everything's changed. Joseph changed things. Something beautiful came out of Carthage, and something terrible came out of Carthage. And John Taylor would know because he was there.
Starting point is 00:36:14 He would know that emotion of the beauty of Carthage and the terribleness of Carthage. and the terribleness of Carthage. We go to Carthage as a spot of pilgrimage. It is a beautiful place. It's a place of love and sacrifice and devotion. It's a warm, wonderful, loving emotions, satan emotions come to us when we visit Carthage and think of Carthage. Same thing with the cross, with Calvary. A terrible beauty was born on the day Jesus died. A terrible thing, but a beautiful thing.
Starting point is 00:37:03 When good men die in the way Jesus, Joseph did, Martin Luther King died. Abraham Lincoln, they were all what John Tedder might call green trees. When he says, if the fire can scare the green tree, Lincoln's a green tree. Martin Luther King's a green tree. Joseph was a green tree. Jesus, a green tree. I can think of a dozen other green trees living. You take the green trees out and you leave the world to the dead trees. And problems will.
Starting point is 00:37:50 But the world has a pretty good record of setting fire to the green trees. Mike, before we get to your last portion that you have for us, I've noticed that a lot of this is about Joseph, yet Hyrum is included. How important in your experience of reading about Joseph and Hyrum, how important is Hyrum to Joseph? Enough to be included here in his, basically, a memorial revelation. Yeah, and this great final statement of belief, our faith is anchored in family. Faith and family for a Latter-day Saint are light and truth. They're just interchangeable. We have elevated, as I said, family and eternal love
Starting point is 00:38:47 as the highest ordinance of our faith. And what's so wonderful about that is that when we look at the first family of the church, we have this example in many ways. God, Joseph's role would be difficult. And so what did he give him? He gave him this wonderful supportive family. Lucy Max Smith, the Joseph Smith senior and Alvin in the early days, and Emma, the intimate people that surrounded Joseph Smith were marvelous, wonderful. He had great friends too, the Oliver's and the Martin Harris's and the William W. Felps and the Brigham Youngs and the Hebris E. Kimbles and not all of those stayed quite as true. You know, Joseph says, only Brighen and Heber of the first Gorm of the Twelve Apostles. But that family were wonderful. And I mean, it's hard to say, well, single out higher him above Lucy Max Smith, you know, or Emma. Hiram was, I think, a calming influence on Joseph. He was
Starting point is 00:40:16 somebody he could always rely on. I think Hiram was God's gift to Joseph and Hiram got to go with his brother. There's a moment in history, if we do a little bit of the history, when the bodies of Joseph and Hiram come back to Navu and Lucy Maxisim, and she says, my God, my God, why I still forsaken this family. And God answers her. I've taken them to myself that they might have rest. I think it is Joseph and Hyrum and the relationship, not just at Carthage, but all through their lives,
Starting point is 00:40:56 is God saying, this is what family should be like. This is what I'm hoping family will be like that you will support one another the way this family supported to one another. Great things come out of family. And we have a foundational family that shows us. That's beautiful. Something, by way of example, certainly a hyrum. Hank, certainly a hyrum. Hank, a couple of things I had been doing some reading and had Oliver Cowdry not left for a time. He might have been there, I guess, this kind of president and co-president of the church, is that sound right? Yeah. But hyrum, I found right. Yeah. But Hyrum, I remember bringing this up before, Joseph's name means, is it he who adds? Someone who adds and Hyrum means my brother is exalted.
Starting point is 00:41:56 Oh, that's an amazing, that's a problem. Yeah, amazing to think of why Joseph and Hyrum there together. Mike, I want to ask you one more question, and that's verse six. He calls them martyrs of religion, and they're clashed in this group. We would talk about, I know you love William Tindale, a martyr of religion.
Starting point is 00:42:19 Yeah, he, they're what we can call, and we've referred referred to it the green trees of history, you know, that sometimes are scayed by the fires of intolerance and hate and Yeah, William Tindale's one of my most beloved People certainly a green tree green tree means full of life. You know, I think the metaphor, the image of it is a beautiful image that John Taylor is grabbing, a full of life, so much to give, fruitful, and the world to you call whatever fire, the fire of hate, the fires of prejudice, intolerance, the fires of prejudice intolerances. We've burned a lot of green trees. And if you can burn people better, that good. What's the world going to do when you don't have the green trees to try and make life better? It becomes a tender box. It's the green trees that have saved man, the greenest tree of all Jesus of Nazareth, right?
Starting point is 00:43:31 But yeah, Tendil, did you want to ask a specific thing? Well, just the martyrs of the Reformation and how the Lord talks about their blood, he sees their blood. He sees their blood. And just being now in that category, they will be clashed among the martyrs of religion. Just think of putting them in the category with some pretty incredible people from history. Yeah, they are. I've said, because I get to travel a lot, God's been really kind. He probably felt I needed it to open my mind and my eyes up and not think so narrowly as
Starting point is 00:44:17 we often attempted to do. And I think having read and traveled and seen a lot of different voices that he speaks with. Not all prophets and apostles, philosophers and sages and playwrights and poets and artists and musicians. In the lives of beautiful people who have lived and enriched and enhanced the very idea of what humanity is, he shows his hand. As I said, Joseph taught us God as a present God and he's always been present and having studied and read and thought about all those people, Joseph is very comfortable in their company. I can't see him walking into a meeting in heaven with whether you want to put some of the
Starting point is 00:45:46 meeting in heaven with whether you want to put some of the, you know, with the, the Francis of Assisi's and the Joan of Arcs and the Confucius and the Buddhism and the Moses's and the Paul's and the William Tendales and and them turning and saying, what are you doing here? Okay, you know, Belong in this company, he fits very comfortably in what he gave to man and in his efforts to lift man to a higher state to be better people. He's comfortable. I don't think the Socrates would say, you don't belong here. Okay, plate or a stoddle, we could go on. You know, the great conversation of the ages between people who are always asking themselves the question, what is the best way to live? What is the best way to live? What is the good person? How does that person live? How do they think? How do they interact? And that's a dialogue that's been going on
Starting point is 00:46:54 for a long, long time by a lot of wonderful men and women. Joseph is very comfortable. I don't sense that he doesn't belong in that great dialogue. Flood? Yes. Things that he did at the end of his life, I'm sure he would have said, I wish I hadn't done. But as he wrote to Emma, I've done the best I could. And God can't ask any more out of anybody than that we do the very best we can. And then when our time comes, the readiness is all. And I think Joseph was ready. You know, Roosevelt was a remarkable, a remarkable man. And great men always have critics.
Starting point is 00:47:57 You said earlier, the greatest man of all, Jesus, people saw enough fault in him to kill him and in the most painful way. The great men and great women, the great thinkers, the great doers, the movers, the healers of the world, the givers will always have critics. And so Roosevelt, he was in Paris at the Sorbonne, and he gave a talk. He was, he was a Zafters presidency. One of the most famous people in the world, one of the most admired people in the world.
Starting point is 00:48:40 And he said this that I think of, again, not just Joseph, but many people in history, but I'll apply it to Joseph Smith here at the end. It is not the critic who counts. I think of all the critics of Joseph Smith that you can get online and in 30 seconds, you can access all the critiques of Joseph Smith that you could read in a lifetime. But then you could do that for almost any great person. It is not the critic who counts. Roosevelt said, it is not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles,
Starting point is 00:49:29 the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, whose strides valiantly, whose heirs, who come short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming. We really need to really remember that when we assess and judge anyone in history who is trying to do good things. We need to remember that about everybody from Joseph Smith to Russell Am Nelson in her own faith because there is no effort without error and shortcoming, but who does actually strive to do the deeds who knows great enthusiasm, the great devotions who spends himself in a worthy cause.
Starting point is 00:50:27 And that's Joseph. That's a description of so many people, but it certainly fits Joseph Smith to a T. He knew great enthusiasm, great devotions. He spent himself in a worthy cause. He came short again and again, we're at the end of the doctrine of covenants. And God's forgiven him over and over again. You can't read the doctrine covenant and say, Joseph didn't have his shortcomings. But he strove in a noble, what worthy cause and he left the world a better place. He certainly left me a better person. And I'm grateful to him. And one day I hope I'll die as he did. I hope I'll die calm as a summer morning, innocent, conscious void of offense towards God and all men wanting to do a little
Starting point is 00:51:28 bit more good. And I would say, if I can die that way, I will have a great deal to thank Joseph Smith for my ability to be able to pass from this life to the other life that same way. I am whatever good is in me, owes in large measure to all that Joseph and taught me, all that Jesus taught me, all that these wonderful scriptures from Esther and Ruth to the Stryplain Warriors and kept the Maronae and all these wonderful people. If I die with a conscience void of offense and calm, it'll be because of those people that I do it. And I'm grateful for. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:30 As his written here, he lived great and he died great in the eyes of God and his people. I think it was Elder Maxwell. Didn't Elder Maxwell say he lived his life in crescendo? That ring of bell? Yeah, it does ring of bell. It sounds like Elder Maxwell. And I love too that all the traits you just listed,
Starting point is 00:52:52 I think one of them that I love and I hope is important. I see it in Hank, I try to have it in myself as a native cherry temperament. I love that phrase. I'm a happy guyery temperament. I love that phrase. I'm a happy guy, you know? Yeah, I'm a pretty happy guy. He did teach us how to live. He really did.
Starting point is 00:53:14 I love Section 127. I'm sure you talked about that. And I love Section 128 that minimize the negatives, minimize the trials. I don't want to see. I don't think Joseph's missing himself is a victim. I think victimization is almost a fad in the modern world. Too many people see themselves as victims and it be littles those who truly are. Good point in that position. Joseph Smith could certainly have seen himself in that light, but what does he say? It's a small thing. Small part of my life was all this opposition,
Starting point is 00:53:52 small part of my life. And the voice we hear in the gospel is one of joy. I think he heard that voice of joy. I think he heard that voice and he would want us to hear it and we do hear it. We hear it in the gospel. We hear it in the words he left us in the words he died for. It's still going. Mike, it has been such a pleasure, John, right to have Dr. Wilcox with us. This world is going to open up and he's going to start traveling again and we don't know if we're gonna get him back. We hope we will. Well, I'd love to. I will see. Meanwhile, I have some Emerson to look up. Yes, that was beautiful. 1838 Harvard Divinity School. I'm gonna I show Google presently. There's a lot. Yeah, there's other things in it that he says that matches for me what
Starting point is 00:54:48 Joseph Smith does. I just picked the idea that we need a new teacher. Beautiful. Yeah. We want to thank Dr. Mike Wilcox for being with us today. It's been just absolutely wonderful. I loved what you did with this section and John and I, just like we've said before, this section is now changed for us. Totally changed for me. Yeah. We want to thank all of you for listening and staying with us. We're grateful for your
Starting point is 00:55:16 support. Thank you to our executive producers, Steve and Shannon Sorenson. We love you both. And we have an amazing production crew. David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nelson, Will Stoten, and Kyle Nelson. And we hope that you will join us on our next episode of Follow Him. Thank you.

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