followHIM - 1 Samuel 8–10; 13; 15–16 Part 2 • Dr. Geoff Wright • June 8-14 • Come, Follow Me
Episode Date: June 3, 2026Dr. Geoff Wright continues to explore King Saul’s impatience, disobedience, and lack of trust that led to his downfall while God looked past outward appearances to anoint David–illustrated by Dr. ...Wright’s dramatic rescue from a collapsed snow cave by his young son.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT224ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT224FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT224DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT224PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastOT224ESYOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/8ZgjIUlFhJAFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE0:00 - Part 2 - Dr. Geoff Wright0:55 Mason and the gruff stranger on Christmas Eve3:16 Becoming a new creature5:42 Literally sweeping dirt under the rug9:47 Elder Uchtdorf on small errors and staying on course10:50 the miracle FEEL journal13:35 Ellie’s “God is so good to me”14:0 Tithing settlement and full consecration18:46 Why be all in?22:27 Pioneers and bold love24:24 God’s sorrow over Saul and a new king26:46 The Lord looks on the heart28:50 A snow cave and a son digs to his father’s face35:28 The youth are capable 38:27 David as unlikely choice41:14 Jeff’s testimony of Jesus Christ46:51 FREE book48:15 End of Part 2 - Geoff WrightThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika: Portuguese TranscriptsHeather Barlow: Communications DirectorSydney Smith: Social Media, Graphic Design "Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome back to part two with Dr. Jeff Wright, 1 Samuel 8 through 16.
You'll both recognize this from President Uckdorf.
He says, we simply have to stop judging others and replace judgmental thoughts and feelings
with a heart full of love for God and his children.
God is our father.
We are his children.
We are all brothers and sisters.
I don't know exactly how to articulate this point of not judging others with sufficient
eloquence, passion, and persuasion to make it stick.
I can quote scripture.
I can try to expound doctrine.
and I will even quote a bumper sticker I recently saw.
It was attached to the back of a car whose driver appeared to be a little rough around the edges,
but the words on the sticker taught an insightful lesson.
It read, don't judge me because I sin differently than you.
Jeff, I think that's what you're talking about.
The Spirit of God came upon him.
That's great.
And the child does it best, honestly.
I remember one Christmas Eve, my son Mason, he's on a man.
mission now. My son Mason, we were just taking the train. We went up to see the lights, I think,
in Salt Lake, and we were going to bring them back down. We're going to take the train back here to
Utah County. And as we're waiting for the train, there's this gruff-looking guy over there by
himself. It's late on Christmas Eve. And of course, I thought, I don't know what's going on over there.
I was chatting with my wife, and she pointed, she said, look, and there's my four-year-old boy walking over.
Hi. He says, hi, bud.
says, it's Christmas. I know. He said, what do you want for Christmas? You know, I walked over
Mason, and he said, no, no, it's nice to have him to have someone to talk to. I love that your son
did that same thing. He didn't say anything wrong. My wife's grandmother, unbelievable lady,
Virginia, she joined the church later in life. I think she was in her 80s. She was baptized.
When she was baptized, she moved from Toronto to Salt Lake, her and her husband.
who also joined the church.
They bought an apartment across the street from the temple, Salt Lake Temple.
We'd go up and visit her quite often.
And every time we'd visit her, she'd like to go walk the temple grounds.
We'd go down.
There's often panhandlers.
And she had this purse that she would fill up with coins.
And every time we went over there, she would empty out her coins to these people.
And I told her, I said, hey, you know, Virginia, they probably don't need it.
you don't know how they're going to spend it.
They're fine.
There was some article in the news that said they make a lot of money anyway.
So I was trying to explain this all to her.
And I remember her looking at me and she said,
who are you to judge?
I was really taken back and I was taught that lesson from my son with Brian and now
from my grandmother-in-law that she was absolutely right.
Why not show love?
What does it hurt to show love?
In all times, in all places to all people.
I love that.
It was a great lesson.
You're getting it from below and above, Jeff.
You're like, Lord, I'm learning.
I promise you don't.
Yeah, I know.
I'm slow to learn.
Keep sending these teachers.
Those two phrases turned into another man and God gave him another heart.
What I like about it is it doesn't just sound like a slight upgrade.
It's, I can actually, I could make you a whole different person.
I was looking, but I failed to find it.
Doesn't Paul talk about becoming a new creature?
It's not just a little bit better,
but it's like going from caterpillar to butterfly.
I'm going to make you completely new.
If the creator can create you in the first place,
he can create you again differently,
which is kind of amazing to think about.
Maybe he'll create you under heat and pressure too,
which I love that idea.
Thanks, John.
Jeff, let's keep going.
What's our next chapter?
We don't hit every chapter in First Samuel.
If we did, we'd be here a long time.
We're into chapter 13.
This is kind of Saul's first major failure as a king,
where he kind of reveals his impatience and lack of trust in God.
So he had received this new heart.
He had changed, and now he has this impatience.
He gets caught up a little bit in his leadership role,
maybe some pride starts seeping in.
He has this war, and he asked his son to go lead Israel, and the situation looks pretty overwhelming,
and there's some fear, and Israel starts panicking, and they start hiding in caves and wells and rocks,
it says.
Some even escape across the Jordan River.
People are losing courage when things are getting hard.
I think there's some parallels to our lives, of course, with that.
Then I think it really gets interesting here, so Saul gets impatient.
Samuel says, hey, Saul, wait seven days, and then I'll be there and we'll have the appropriate sacrifice.
But Saul kind of panics because troops are running off.
He's like, okay, well, why don't I just do it?
What difference does it make if I don't have the authority?
I'm not the prophet.
That's okay.
I know how to do it.
I've seen it done a million times.
Saul chooses to control the situation rather than be obedient.
Then we read a key verse in 13 to 14.
That has done foolishly a foolish thing.
that was not kept the commandment of the Lord, my God, which he commanded thee.
And he gives that warning.
Now, the kingdom shall not continue.
It's so interesting that he calls him out and he said, hey, you didn't listen to me.
This reminds me of a silly story.
In Vancouver, it rains a lot.
I loved basketball growing up.
We had a pretty tall garage, and my dad put a basketball hoop up in the garage.
but because it rains, he also put down carpet to kind of absorb the water dripping off the cars when you pull in.
My job was to keep the garage clean, sweep it up.
It was just a kid and I was pretty lazy or thought of it.
I knew a better way.
Here's the broom.
Here's the dust pan.
Sweep it up, put it in the garbage can.
Instead, I just did what the cartoons taught me.
I'd lift up the carpet and sweep it under the carpet.
I just kept doing that.
Week after week after week.
And it's great.
Yeah, I mean, you don't see it.
It's out of sight, out of mind.
But little mounds started forming.
So this is like my analogy of this mound on my basketball court,
made my dribbling really good or bad on.
It depends how you look at it.
But what's interesting is I know my dad saw the mound.
He saw it getting bigger and bigger.
He also knew that I knew where to put the dirt, but I didn't do it.
And so it's an interesting thing.
And eventually I came inside and my dad's like,
why aren't you playing basketball?
And I said, the floor isn't flat.
I made the floor not flat.
That has done a foolish thing.
I was the fool.
And he said, oh, that's interesting.
Why do you think that's the case?
Maybe you should go fix that.
He knew, but he let it play out.
And then I had to go fix the error that I made.
This is another perfect example.
Saul did something foolish.
God said, hey, you did something foolish.
Could he have changed, right?
Could have this been a pivotal moment to change to repentance?
And he chose the latter.
You know, he did not choose to repent at this moment right away.
You know what's interesting about this too is Saul says,
what have you done?
And it immediately goes to, it was them.
I saw the people were scattered from me.
And the Philistines, it was them.
and I forced myself.
I had no other choice than to make this foolish decision.
And I've done that same thing countless times in my life.
Why'd you do that?
Someone else's fault.
It was them.
I had no choice.
Samuel says, oh, you have done foolishly.
My wife frequently uses this when teaching our kids.
She says, don't defend a poor decision.
If it's a poor decision, it's a poor decision.
let's admit it and move forward because it's the same way I think my children take after
their father, which is it wasn't my fault.
These kind of stories scare me because it sounds like he's trying to do the right thing.
He just did the right thing the wrong way, you know?
Jeff, I love your story.
Your dad's going, man, this is, I'm going to let these consequences play out because he could
have stepped in.
What are you doing?
And I was like, Saul, I blamed it on the floor.
Yeah, the floor is just not level, you know.
It's not my fault.
He'd let it play out, you know.
That's a perfect analogy for life.
We think, I'm fine.
Look at this.
It's working out.
They told me, this wouldn't work out.
Look, it's working out just fine until it doesn't.
Yeah, I think it's interesting in that verse 12.
It's almost like he did two things wrong.
He didn't follow God's counsel, and he knew it.
It's one thing to be disobedient, but to know that you're being disobedient.
That's what puts him over the edge.
That's why he starts blaming others, right?
He tries to defer.
My kids do it all the time.
It was not me.
It was not my fault.
I was going to bring up the parable of the talents where the guy, you know,
doesn't do anything with the talent, and he blames the Lord.
Does he blame Samuel?
He says, you didn't show up.
I started without you.
So I did nothing.
I knew you were a hard grader, so I didn't do any homework.
We've already mentioned President Uchtdorf, but I think in his talk about being off course by a small degree about that, he said the Prophet Samuel recognized a critical weakness in Saul's character.
When pressured by outside influences, Saul did not have the self-discipline to stay on course, trust the Lord and his prophets, and follow the pattern God had established.
Saul's failure to hold fast to the Council of the Prophet just a little longer may seem minor, but even small errors over time can make.
a dramatic difference in our lives.
Man, I worry about trying to do the right thing and going a little bit off.
What's interesting, I think, there, is he gives an anecdote.
He says, because Samuel calls the people together, and then he, thus says the Lord, the God,
I'm just reading out of here, I brought Israel out of Egypt.
I delivered you from the hand of the Egypt.
So he goes down this line of examples like,
I've done it before, why don't you trust me? That's another call to remember. We've had so many miracles in our lives, and all through the scriptures, they have these examples, yet people still have a hard time trusting. We talk about if someone leaves the church or loses faith or whatever, they let go of the rod, the reason they let go is they've forgotten something. They forgot the miracles. We had a missionary reporting last year.
from their mission. I loved what they said they did on their mission. They talked about a miracle
journal. They said, I wasn't very good at journaling, but I ended up writing almost every day
the miracles I saw. And I thought, that is so brilliant to identify those miracles that happen.
And then I think the next step, which this missionary said that he was going to do, is, I want to use
this. I want to keep this the rest of my life where I can reflect on
seeing God's hand in my life. Because as we do that, I think it's easier to have trust,
to have confidence, to face the battles that come, just like the Philistines or the Israelites
are battling them. And they could have said, well, God's delivered us before. Let's have some faith.
Yeah, let's move forward. John, I was really touched a few weeks back. I've been thinking about
ever since you said it. You have a feel journal. Hit that one more time for those who weren't
listening. Yeah, it's a Google Doc so that I can access it wherever I have Wi-Fi. The feel is an
acronym for feelings, experiences, evidences, and logic or reason. I was going to call it just a reason,
but that would have spelled fear. So it's logic or reason. Sometimes you have an exalted or a wonderful
or powerful feeling. So boy, record it. Sometimes it's an experience that happens over years or
months, record it. Sometimes it's an evidence you learn about, as we often do in the scriptures
that are fun or other evidences, and sometimes there's things that just make sense. I mean,
think of how much sense it makes. Love God and love your neighbor. Imagine that world.
I want to live there where everybody loves God and loves and neighbors. As Jeff just reminded us,
that's a great idea. The Miracle Journal, President Iring, I think it was, said a journal is to
document the hand of the Lord in your life. That's what a miracle journal is. Then do what King Benjamin
said, keep it before your eyes so that you don't forget. You remind yourself of, wait, the Lord's
been with us before. So many times he'll be with us again. It's exactly what you were talking about,
yeah. I have to do a little shout out here to my student. Her name's Ellie Johnson. I had this conversation
with her just today. She said, you know, on the 4,000th time,
You've told me to have a record of my experiences with God.
She said, I finally decided to do it.
It takes me a while to learn.
She said, Brother Smith, it's only been, you know, a couple of weeks.
And I have 150 of these.
And they're not long entries.
There are a couple sentences.
She looked at me and she said, God is so good to me.
And I said, Ellie, and when you take him seriously, he's going to give you more.
When you write them down, it's something he teaches often.
Be faithful over a few things.
I will give you many things.
She just bore testimony to me of something I finally convinced her to do.
It was fantastic.
The way she looked at me and she had tears in her eyes, God is so good to me.
That is a life-changing, small and simple thing.
I agree.
Well, as she move on?
Let's keep going.
Where do we go next?
Let's go to Chapter 15, if you don't mind.
mine. You're hurting my heart here. I like Saul. I know. Don't do this. Yeah, this is his biggest
act of disobedience to this moment. And it's sad, because this is the moment that God rejects him as
king. Even though God tells Saul to completely destroy the Malachites, he disobeys. This is kind of
a clear test of obedience, and he failed it. What's interesting is he tried to pass it off that he
was doing it for the right reasons. And then we get to that key verse in 22, to obey is better than
sacrifice. This has serious consequences in his life, this rejection that happens. When we were first
married, we were living in California, as I mentioned. It was our first year there, and it was
tithing declaration time. We go in, and we didn't have kids at the time. We were both working. We were
the richest we've ever been.
But we were saving for our future.
And we went in with the bishop.
He said, are you full tithe pairs?
And we said, yes, we're full tithe pairs.
We were happy to say that.
He followed it up with an interesting question.
We said, okay, well, are you fully consecrated in all your financial offerings?
And I was taken off guard by that.
we kind of looked at each other
and we said, yeah, I think we are.
Yes, we'll answer yes.
The answer is yes.
And then he said, I don't think you are.
I was like, wait, who's this guy calling me out?
How does he know?
I said, okay, thanks.
And we left.
We went home and I had a hard heart.
I became like Saul.
And I said to Leah, who's that guy?
That he could tell us that we're not fully consecrated.
I mean, pay my tithing, paying some fast offerings.
And she didn't say anything at first, which was good for her.
And then kind of the next day, she noticed I was still kind of bugged, a little stewing on it.
And then she said something that was pretty powerful to me.
And she said, you know when you asked who's this guy?
And I said, yeah.
She said, guess what?
He's your bishop.
He's our bishop.
He has some insight that we don't have.
Whoa, okay.
Now I'm being taught by the bishop and my wife.
Thought about it.
And then it was interesting.
I came across a quote by President Maxwell.
And I don't have it front of me.
I'm not going to quote exactly.
But the idea is you consecrate until it hurts.
He was telling it at the end of his life.
He was dealing with cancer or something.
And I was thinking about that.
I was like, what does that mean?
I don't think it means to have pain, but it means to sacrifice and to concentrate, to give,
to build the kingdom of God however you can, where you recognize that you're giving.
You're not just writing a check or like we used to do.
So that next month, we used to fill out, you know, tithing envelopes and put your fast offerings and so forth in it.
My wife reminded me, she said, hey, our bishop represents the Lord.
We need to consecrate.
and that was a great call to grow, to change.
Here we have this idea to obey is better than sacrifice.
It's not just writing the check, right?
Anybody could sacrifice some money,
but obedience to a church leader,
I'm not saying blindly follow,
but recognize that, you know, in this case,
this bishop was receiving some inspiration
and we were a young couple and we were both working
and sure we were saving for our future,
but we needed to learn that lesson early in our marriage
that really the law of consecration
that we had covenanted to make,
we need to live more fully.
And I think that was the invitation.
Yeah.
Wow.
I would have responded the same way.
Wait, what?
Saul does react that way.
He's defensive.
He's, well, here's all the reasons.
Yeah, the people did this.
So did it work out, Jeff?
What's happened since then?
I mean, obviously you still remember.
Yeah, it was a great lesson.
And I think here's the deal.
We make covenants.
As a kid, some Disney movie probably taught us
a promise is a promise or whatever.
I put my arm to the square,
if you want to use that as a symbol,
and I'm all in.
I've had too many moments in my life
that I can't deny God's divine hand.
I'm all in. I know men are not perfect, our leaders or whoever, but that's not the point. The point is,
I made a covenant. Turns out that the other side of the covenant, we have so much to gain. God has
promised us so much that it's a privilege to be all in. Some people look at Pascal's wager as like
the algorithm for justifying being in the church or to making a commitment to.
to something because you get more out of it.
But the truth is, like, internally, I am, I hope that I am a better man, a better husband,
a better disciple because of my commitments and my covenants.
I know my family's been blessed.
I look at all the people that have invested in my kids' lives, teaching them good principles,
and to be responsible and kind and being Christian, why wouldn't I be all in?
The church is beautifully designed.
it teaches us the gospel better than anywhere else
to have these promises that come out of covenants,
I love it.
I'm grateful for it.
And I testify that it's changed me
and that it's true.
That's beautiful.
I love that story.
I love the direction that it went.
Who is that man?
Who does he think he is?
I loved it.
Leah, that's our bishop.
He thinks he's the bishop.
In the manual it says, in 1 Samuel 15, you'll read about a commandment from the Lord that Saul did not obey because he thought he had a good reason.
To learn from Saul's choices, look at verse 22 and replace the words sacrifice and fat of rams with things that seem good, but are not as important as hearing and obeying the Lord.
That to me would be an excellent exercise.
Samuel said, hath the Lord as great delight in, and then fill in all the things we'd rather do than be obedient.
Delight in, fill in the blank, as in obeying the voice of the Lord, behold to obey is better than,
and then you put those back in there. That's a great little replacement application of verse 22.
It cuts me to the heart because I do this same thing where I think, well, I'm not going to be obedient.
But there's a good reason I'm not obedient.
But here's my justification.
Verse 22 says,
I don't know if the Lord delights in that as much as he just delights in obedient.
I'm going to go to the mountains on Sunday.
I can fill the spirit more than going to church.
And as the Lord a great delight in going to the mountains,
as in obeying the voice of the Lord,
behold, to obey is better than going to the mountains.
We know about the pioneers,
all the things they were depositing along the way.
They thought it was important.
They thought they would need it, but really, in the end, they didn't.
Eventually, they were pulling hand carts, and they couldn't take what wagons were taken,
and they only had their essentials.
A lot of times when it comes down to obedience, it is like the essentials.
What are these big ticket things that, well, you look at your temple covenants.
You've made five covenants in there.
Maybe some of these procedure things don't matter as much,
but those things that you covenanted to in the temple are really,
what make a big difference.
To John's point is,
you're all in or you're not.
Are you jumping in the pool
or are you just dip in your toe?
I don't know.
There is some stuff that I really like,
well, it's not going to work out in the end.
You've got to be all in.
I remember Elder Hale saying,
standing holy places, it's both feet.
I like to say, burn the boats behind you.
I'm here.
Stay by the tree of life
and don't go spend the weekend
in the Great and Spacious and come back.
Elder Maxwell talked about weekend trips to Babylon or something.
Samuel says the same thing.
Eventually, Samuel basically comes out and says to Saul,
hey, stop it.
Stop the lying.
You are disobedient.
That's enough.
Don't compound it by placing Blaine or trying to justify.
And I think sometimes we do have to be bold.
I am appreciative.
As much as I hate it when someone calls me out and says,
you know, like, that's something.
right way to do it. It's important that we are bold and so remind people, you made a promise.
Let's do what we were asked to do. There is a love coming from Samuel to Saul. I'm telling
this, I love you. I'm going to show you where the lines are. And you can tell that Samuel loves
Saul. He's invested in him. He's invested. Yeah, that's a huge point. And I think God is too.
God says, I regret. He uses the word regret. And then in this translation that I've been studying from, a synonym that's placed in there is, I'm sad. I'm sad what happened to Saul. And I love that we learn that kind of compassion out of the scriptures. I'm sad. This is really too bad what happened. When we're disobedient, yeah, I think God is sad. With our children, man, I wish they didn't make that choice. That really makes me sad.
It doesn't say that God stops loving, but he is disappointed.
Verse 35 is pretty touching.
Samuel came no more to see Saul until the day of his death.
Nevertheless, Samuel mourned for Saul.
I love that, yeah.
So am I correct in thinking?
Samuel is kind of like the prophet, Saul is the political leader, the king, but they interact a lot.
It's kind of like Alma and Mosaic.
Mosiah is King Mosaic.
Alma's over the church.
And it's that kind of relationship where they talk and consult.
Yeah.
Sounds like Samuel's been a mentor to Saul.
He truly wants to see him succeed.
And he mourns when things go wrong.
Yeah.
It's hard to see that.
Jeff, you talked about that young man earlier.
It sounds like I'm worried about him.
I think Samuel would probably say the same thing.
I'm worried about Saul.
That is a nice transition to the next chapter
because he had a hard time moving on from Saul a little bit.
God directions and says,
okay, it's time to choose a new king.
Oh, boy, I vests a lot in Saul,
and it just didn't turn out in the end.
Are you sure we should do this?
Should we not go back to judges or something?
You know, maybe he had these kind of conflicts,
but then he had to follow the promptings again.
That's an interesting moment in his life.
And we don't know exactly if there was years or months or what, but we do know that David goes in tutelage.
Should we go into chapter 16 then?
Yeah, let's do it.
You know, I focus so much on Saul, David, and Solomon that you forget Samuel.
I was watching all this going, and the Lord's saying, I told you so.
I told you kings were not a good idea.
I wish you would have listened.
Well, we get to chapter 16.
God chooses and prepares people based on their heart, not their outward appearance.
Right away in verse 7, for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart.
God sends Samuel to Bethlehem. He says, hey, stop mourning about Saul. It's time to move on.
So he sends him to Jesse's family to annoy a new king. Jesse lines up his sons, gets the seven in there,
David's out with the sheep.
God rejects the older son saying,
no, that's not the right one.
Even though the first was big and strong,
kind of looking like Saul maybe,
God's looking for the character.
He really values character and not the parents.
Then eventually the youngest son comes in
after tending the sheep,
and God tell Samuel, yeah, this is the one.
So Samuel annoys David.
God chooses someone unexpected and often overlooked,
going back to that kind of,
to intro, that question I asked you guys. What's important is he equips the people that he chooses,
and we know that scripture and doctrine and covenants. Eventually, you know, David enters Saul's service.
This is just such a beautiful reminder of the two great commandments for me. We all know the first
great commandment, love God. And then the second great commandment, I heard another translation of it,
and I really love this. We've been taught, second great commandant, love it.
love your neighbor as you love yourself, basically.
But this other way I was taught it was,
love your neighbor as God loves them and or as God sees them.
That really changed the Second Great Commandment.
It's an invitation to look at people as God sees them, as God loves them.
For me, it just changed my interactions with people,
especially teaching.
When a student comes in and you try and
see them as God does, echoing back to that first question I asked at the beginning. One of my favorite
types of movies that I had to be converted to are when kids overpower adults. So if you think about it,
there's lots of examples, Harry Potter, Chronicles of Narnia, Percy Jackson. The adults are
bigger, yet the kids perform in an unbelievable way. This happened in my own life. My son, Isaac,
He's my oldest. He was born on Christmas Day, December 25th. That's not the most exciting day to be born on, perhaps. And so we changed his birthday to January 25th. We celebrate it in January. And so a tradition that we had is from an early age, I would take him into the back country in the winter, and we'd build a snow cave and we'd sleep in it. We did this from a young age, and it just became something that we both loved to do at the end of January. We had done it for a couple of years.
And then when he was 11 turning 12, we decided to go up and do it again, his tradition would hold.
And it was a great year.
It was a year of tons of snow.
And so he came home from school, and he had drawn up a plan of what the snow cave should look like.
And it was going to have a seat and benches and cup holders.
And it was just going to be this great, great snow cave.
And I looked at it.
I'm like, yeah, let's build it.
This is going to be amazing.
We would go up in the evening, we'd get dinner together first,
then we'd go in snow shoes with sleds pulling gear,
and we'd go up behind Brighton into the backcountry.
My wife knew kind of where we were going,
but not the precise location necessarily.
We were hiking in, and the snow was deep.
Even with snow shoes were sinking in pretty deep in our snow boots.
Eventually we get to a location that we thought would be good,
and we start piling some.
snow. He's 11 turning 12. I'm shoveling and just piling snow and what you do, you pile it high,
10 feet in there, and then you get on top of it, you stamp it down, you pile it again, you pile it again.
We piled until maybe about 10 o'clock in night, maybe 9, it's time to start digging.
And so how we would do it is we would both start tunneling in from opposite sides to expedite the clearing out process.
I'm digging through, and the spirit comes to me, and it says, don't do this.
I was like, don't do this. We've been doing this for years, and I love doing this. I'm doing this.
So I keep digging. The spirit says clearly to me, and I don't feel the spirit strongly like this, hardly ever.
it says don't do this.
And I thought, okay, well, maybe this is just me being a dad, being a little paranoid.
I call Isaac over and I'm like, Isaac, hey, do you remember the rules when we're building?
And he's like, yeah, dad, never two people in the snow cave at one time while we're building until we sure it's safe.
If something happens, cover your face to get a pocket of air, those types of things.
I'm like, okay, cool, I feel better.
All right, let's finish this up.
So we keep digging, and what's happening is the snow is settling.
It was so much powder, and it wasn't compacted.
We didn't give it good rest time.
We weren't going to be able to build the Shangri-Lave snow caves, right?
It's going to more be a tunnel this year.
And so I told him, I'm like, hey, buddy, we're just going to have to do a tunnel.
Let's block up your sides.
We block up his side, and so it's time for me to go in and just kind of verify.
And so I go in, what you do, you take your glove,
and you smooth the ceiling so it doesn't have drip points.
I'm in there, he's outside the cave,
and I'm smoothing out to get the drip points.
All of a sudden, the whole thing collapses on me,
and it hits my hand to my face,
and my other arm is pinned behind my back.
It collapses my lungs and breaks these ribs,
and I am immobilized.
It was like being stuck in cement.
the only thing I could move were these fingers right by my eye and nose.
So I pulled the snow out of my eye and out of my nose,
and that's all I could move.
I could just barely move my fingers.
Immediately I was trying to breathe.
I couldn't breathe because I'm compressed by this 12 feet of snow that we'd pack down,
and I thought, okay, I'm in trouble.
So immediately I start saying a prayer in my head,
and I say, God, send Isaac to the road.
He's 11 and 12, and I was thinking, okay, we hiked in about a mile.
If he sprints through the snow, he could probably get to the road in 15 minutes,
flag someone down coming up late, 15 minutes, and then 15 minutes back.
That's 45 minutes.
I had about this much of air.
If I breathe, if I kind of relax myself, I should be able to live.
to survive.
God send him to the road.
I don't know how long it was,
but
after a few minutes,
two little hands
burrowed
and hit me right in the face.
He clears some snow
out of my eyes and out of my mouth.
He's screaming,
Dad, you found me.
I'm like, can you get
this?
arm out. Can you pull my arm out? He pulls my arm out and I'm like, Isaac, careful, don't collapse
this on both of us. So he pulls my arm and he just slowly pulls me, rescues me, saves my life
by pulling me out of a tunnel that he burrowed. He didn't burrow above me to the left or to the
right or below. He burrowed right to my face.
He pulls me out of this cave.
We embrace, I fall on my knees together.
We say a prayer, thanking God.
And I tell you this story for several reasons.
There's one obvious one there, but we were just about to go sleeping in this,
what would have been a tomb.
If you've ever slept in a snow cave, you're in a mummy bag.
Your hands are inside the mummy bag and you're looking up at the ceiling.
that cave was coming down no matter what we would have both been entombed and the worst nightmare would be suffocating knowing your son was suffocating next to you so the first lesson is i didn't listen to the spirit but god still prevailed i didn't listen but god has a plan it was fine for it to happen to me knowing that
my son could still rescue me. That's an important lesson that I needed to learn. Lesson number two,
how in the world did a 11-year-old boy who is small of stature at the time, how could he dig right to my
face? How could he make a tunnel? My thought was, go to the road, get an adult to come rescue me.
God's thought was this boy.
So the third thing is sometimes we wonder how the atonement or how miracles work.
Why, you know, in this story, why didn't the cave collapse on him?
How did he know where to go?
Our natural eyes will pick the bigger person, not realizing God has angels that buoy up these younger
people that might not look like they can do it.
The angels guided him that day to find me to rescue me.
The story is not about me.
I'm not trying to say that,
but there are three really powerful lessons
where God looks at the heart.
This is one of those stories where
it testifies to me that
God is aware of us. He loves us.
His plan is perfect.
The youth of our day are capable.
They can do this.
They were saved.
I firmly believe they can manage the temptation, the hardship of this life, and do it with even a smile.
Because the end of the story is also beautiful.
We didn't go home that night.
I asked my son, What do you want to do?
He said, well, we're here.
Why would we leave?
We went and found another place to camp.
and we stayed. He wasn't shook up by it. And I think these youth can do it. They can face the temptations of this world and do it with confidence, knowing that God has picked them and saved them, just as he picked and saved David to rescue the Israelites from a king who had made some mistakes. And I love that. I love David being young and overlooked, but being the one who brought salvation initially to Israel.
That's an incredible moment.
And what a lesson.
The fact that you thought he needs to go find someone who can actually do this.
Here's Samuel's looking for this next king and he's like, well, that's got to be my guy.
And the Lord says, no, that's not him.
How could you refuse him?
Look, he's like how great he looks.
That's not my guy.
And to have these little 11-year-old hands.
hands that were guided to know right where you needed to breathe.
And I love your testimony of that.
The Lord knows exactly the world he sent these young people to.
He knows it's a lot different than my 1970s world as a teenager.
They can do it.
I love the testimony of that because I believe it too.
They're different.
I think they can do it.
I know they were saying all that stuff to us,
but I look at this generation and I go,
no, they're different.
John, a few years ago, you did a talk on let no man despise thy youth.
You taught me what that verse means.
Yeah, I thought, King James English, better be careful when you're young
because people might remember all the stuff you did.
Then I read some different translations, as Jeff has done today.
And it was not that.
It was more like, don't let others look down on you because of your age.
which is a totally different message.
It was don't worry about your age,
worry about your calling,
worry about your duty, you can do it.
When Paul says that to Timothy,
you can do this.
Don't let people look at your youthfulness.
That doesn't disqualify you,
because I've got you.
Yeah, this is a different translation, same verse.
First Timothy 412,
different translation,
and I just think of Jeff's story here.
You are young,
but don't let anyone treat you as if you are not important.
Be an example to show the believers how they should live.
Show them by what you say,
by the way you live,
by your love,
by your faith,
and by your pure life.
Can you imagine Isaac outside that snow cave saying,
what do I do? What do I do?
I got to do this.
The Lord is guiding me.
And our youth have that power in them.
And we can treat them that.
way. You know what to do. You know how to follow the spirit. You can do this. Man, Jeff,
that is beautiful. I got to breathe here for a second. I was holding my breath as I'm listening.
Yeah. And of course, he's like, I can't think of any reason to go home. Well, I've got a couple
broken ribs that could probably use going home. How old's Isaac now? Yeah, he's home from a mission and
married and he's got a wonderful wife and Madeline and they're both doing well. She's a nurse and
he's at school. He has gone quick though. He's 21 and already moved on through all that stuff.
Jeff, I've known you a long time. Always been very impressed with you, your intelligence,
your attitude, your kindness, and your willingness to serve. Here you are,
PhD, working at BYU. You've been to some good schools.
You've gotten a few degrees and you know your way around.
You can make your own snowskies.
I think our listeners would be interested in, why do you believe?
Yeah, I love that question, Hank.
Hopefully through this kind of discussion we've shared today,
you feel a little bit of my testimony and the burning my heart.
Why do I believe a couple students a few years ago,
inevitably because they're at that age and dating,
they want to know,
how'd you know that your wife was the one?
I thought about that and I said,
well, I loved her, well, but how'd you know?
Some people have a list.
My list was, okay, well, she needs to like the outdoors
because I love the outdoors.
I love blackberry pies.
That'd be cool if she could make a blackberry pie.
You know, you need to be attracted to them,
carry a conversation.
But how'd you know?
Like those are checklists.
things they would ask me, eventually it comes down to this. It's something that I feel.
When you talk about the gospel, how do you know? You could logic yourself into the church.
You could logic yourself out of the church. But ultimately, what it comes down to is what do you feel?
I feel, and I have felt for a long time, that the gospel of Jesus Christ, that the Church of
Jesus Christ's Laudity Saints is true. And I can logic it by saying, well, it doesn't teach me anything
inappropriate, but it's beyond that. It's something that I feel. I remember I had a buddy one time
and said, I can't believe you have faith to believe. That's crazy. There's a God. There's an afterlife.
Like, how do you know? Like, that's unbelievable. You have that kind of faith. And I said,
actually, I think it's more unbelievable that you don't believe. In fact, this is why I said to him,
you have more faith than I do. Your faith is unbelievable. You believe that no one is in charge,
that we're here by chance, that everything is by accident. That's crazy faith to me. I have faith that
there's purpose, that there's reason, that there's harmony. It seems like I have less faith than you.
And he looked at me and he smiled and he said, that's interesting. Your question, Hank, is,
why do I believe? Well, it's something I feel. I just have gratitude to have this knowledge that we have
a loving Heavenly Father who sent his son. We have a Savior. And why is that all in place? Because
He wants us back. That we're here to become more like him. And that we're preparing for this amazing
chapter to our life with him, with our families, with all these friends. Life is about experiences
and growth and making friends. And that excites me. I'm grateful for that perspective.
Without the Church of Jesus Christ, I wouldn't have that perspective and that faith.
I only have gratitude. Why do I believe? Because I feel it. I know it. And it's amazing.
Thanks, Jeff. Your stories today have been
It's moving.
I remember the movie called The Rookie, where, is it, Dennis Quaid, says to a, you know what we
get to do today, we get to play baseball.
I love that.
Hank, you know what we get to do today?
We get to talk about the gospel.
I can't believe we get to do this.
Me too.
It's so fun.
I know, Jeff, what you're talking about with feeling, because I felt it often.
doing this show where I'm in the scriptures, I'm with people I love, and I'm learning.
That feeling, I don't want it to end. It's uplifting. It's powerful. We hope our listeners
feel that same way. You know, at the end of an episode like this, they think, wow, that was good.
That was delicious to me. Jeff, thank you for your time. And please thank Leah. And please,
will you thank Isaac on behalf of all of our listeners that we have, Jeff, here?
If I ever go snow camping, I'm inviting Isaac.
Yeah. That moment of those two little hands.
Beautiful. Yeah. Powerful.
Yeah, it's very powerful.
Thank you for inviting me. I was apprehensive, you know, because I'm a nobody. What do I know?
But to reflect on one's testimony. And interestingly, I didn't know you could feel the spirit during a podcast.
What you're doing is meaningful. I don't think I fully appreciated that until this opportunity.
It's just great to immerse ourselves in the gospel.
Thank you.
It is.
Well, with that, we want to thank Dr. Jeff Wright for spending his time with us today.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen,
and every episode we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
He would have loved this.
I'm sure he does.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We're going to continue the story of the Kings on Follow.
As a thank you to our wonderful listeners, we'd love to gift you the digital version of our book,
Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament.
It offers short, meaningful insights drawn from our past Old Testament episodes.
Visit followhim.com, that's followhim.
CO, to download your free copy today, and you'll also find the link to purchase the print edition.
Thank you for being part of our Follow Him family.
Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra, Heather Barlow, Amelia Kubuika, Sydney Smith, and Annabelle Sorensen.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to him. Follow him.
