followHIM - Alma 39-42 Part 2 • Dr. Adam Miller • August 5-11 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: July 31, 2024Dr. Miller continues to explore Alma’s lesson to Corianton and examines the process of restoration for each Saint through the Atonement of Jesus Christ.TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcas...tBM32ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM32FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM32DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM32PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM32ES YOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/6R7OX0QSTOwALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part II– Dr. Adam Miller03:59 Alma 42:27 - Who will come and partake?07:13 Alma 41:7 - Judging ourselves11:01 Alma 41:10 - No one gets away with evil18:08 Alma 42 - Promises are about the future24:11 Love is a law, not a reward29:22 Alma 42:15 - God wants to bless His children36:36 Dr. Miller shares his experience with the Book of Mormon45:32 End of Part II– Dr. Adam MillerThanks 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 NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Adam Miller, Alma 39 to 42.
A change of heart is also an intellectual understanding, a better understanding of what
good is.
We've been talking about, you have a son on a mission, this, how counterintuitive is that?
I think I'll go on a mission to a different country at my own expense expense have people slam doors at me and stuff like that because it's so good
that's not obvious yeah yeah it's counterintuitive i had to learn that with the temple my wife
would frequently when we were newly married say let's go, say, let's go to the temple. Let's go to the temple.
In my mind, I thought, I don't have time.
I don't have time to go to the temple.
It's something you feel like you are sacrificing your time.
And it's counterintuitive, like you said, Adam, to realize if I spend the time, if I give up my time, if I want to make that time holy, it will actually improve all the other
hours of the day.
Well, an exercise is counterintuitive, isn't it?
I'm going to break my muscles down so that they'll get stronger, right?
The whole weight room thing.
I often joke that there's that sign right in the gym that says no pain no gain all my life i've had a different model which is
no pain good nobody believes that one but yeah yeah it's a little bit like hank was indicating
earlier right it's a little bit like trying to convince your children that no vegetables are going to make you happier.
Yeah.
Your happiness depends to some degree here on your energy levels,
and you're going to get more energy out of those vegetables.
You'll feel better.
You will.
Yeah.
It's counterintuitive.
This discussion reminded me of a Joseph Smith statement,
and now I like it even more because of what he first says.
But I'm thinking about that change of heart,
of helping us understand what good is.
This is from Teachings of the Prophet Joseph Smith, page 51.
The nearer man approaches perfection, the clearer are his views,
and the greater his enjoyments till he has overcome the evils of his life
and lost every desire for sin. And like the ancients, arrives at that point of faith where
he's wrapped in the power and glory of his maker, and is caught up to dwell with him.
But we consider this as a station to which no man ever arrived in a moment. I put that under
my change of heart file, but that first part says the clearer are
his views. Maybe Corianton had to get straightened out up here. It's always a question not just of
heart, but of mind, of the way that they're tangled together. It's useful here, I think,
to see this as being crucial to the very work of restoration.
That our salvation is going to depend here not just on works but on desires
and at the center of the work of restoration
is the work of restoring us to
our true, natural, divinely given desire
for what is good
and the discovery of what that actually is.
And then these desires are what are decisive.
And the whole purpose of law and punishment is to give us that educative pedagogical space
to discover the truth about ourselves and about our desires so that when we are reunited with God,
we recognize him for the thing that we were looking for the whole time rather than fleeing from him.
Reminds me of our t-shirt last year. Love is a law, not a reward.
Yeah, that's counterintuitive. Yeah, you can have love now. Come join me in my work.
Speaking of our desires, look at Alma 42, 27. It's one of the concluding verses therefore oh my son whosoever
will come may come and partake of the waters of life freely and whosoever will not come the same
is not compelled to come but in the last day it shall be restored unto him according to his deeds
but what i'm seeing there is where are your desires? If you want to come, come.
Whosoever may, will come, may come.
My intuition is that at the end of the day,
there are going to be very few people who don't want to come.
Thankfully, for all of us.
Let me suggest two other things about the flip side, then,
of this moment of judgment.
Alma describes the moment of
salvation as the moment when we are judged not just in light of our works, but in light of our
desires. That's potentially a really powerful redemptive moment as we've been talking about.
But if it doesn't turn out to be a powerful redemptive moment, then something else happens.
The kind of thing that he describes,
I think, in Alma chapter 40, verse 14, this negative moment of judgment. In Alma 40, 14,
Alma says, now this is the state of the souls of the wicked, yea, in darkness, and a state of awful,
fearful looking for the fiery indignation of the wrath of God upon them.
Now, at first glance, that seems pretty terrifying, and I think that's probably not wrong.
But at second glance, I think Alma isn't saying maybe what we expect him to be saying.
Alma isn't saying that the state of the souls of the wicked is to suffer the fiery indignation of the wrath of God. Alma is saying that the state of the
souls of the wicked is to be in a state where you spend your time looking for the fiery indignation
of the wrath of God. That this, in a sense, is what it means to be condemned to hell.
To be condemned to hell is to spend the rest of eternity looking for God to punish you,
expecting at any moment that he's a
kind of traffic cop who will take joy in punishing you retributively for whatever it is that you have
done. It doesn't say here that God executes that wrath. It says that the sinners spend their time
looking for God to execute that wrath. That's who they think God is. And that really is what it
means to be a sinner, is to think that that is who God is, to misunderstand his nature and to misunderstand what he's offering. And that,
I think, is a pretty surprising turn of events here as well in terms of Alma's description of
how this judgment unfolds. You're saying that looking could be like anticipating?
Yeah. What it means to be a sinner is that I spend my time thinking that God is someone who is going to punish me, and I spend my time fearfully looking for that punishment to come, when that's not the work that God's engaged in at all.
Even the verse before, these shall be cast out into outer darkness.
There shall be weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.
And that's because of their own iniquity.
They don't understand who God is.
It's not that God wants them weeping and wailing and gnashing their teeth. That's the result of
not understanding God. Yeah. And I think we might get this even more clearly in Alma 41 verse 7.
Pretty surprisingly, he says this, these are they that are redeemed of the Lord.
Yeah. These are they that are taken out,
that are delivered from the endless night of darkness. And thus they stand or fall for behold,
they are their own judges. A pretty surprising twist here that on the day of judgment,
if I don't stay in the presence of God, if I don't honor
the truth about my desires, it will not be because of something that God judged about me.
It will be because of a judgment or even misjudgment here that I have made about myself.
That is a wonderful twist. It reminds me, if you don't mind, I'm going to share a thought from
a devotional from our friend Brad Wilcox.
His grace is sufficient.
He said, in the past, I had a picture in my mind of what the final judgment would be like.
And it went something like this.
Jesus standing there with a clipboard and Brad standing in the other side of the room,
nervously looking at Jesus.
Jesus checks his clipboard and says, oh, Brad, you missed it by two points.
Brad begs Jesus, please check the essay
question one more time. There have to be two points you can squeeze out of that essay. That's
how I always saw it. But the older I get and the more I understand the wonderful plan of redemption,
the more I realized that in the final judgment, it will not be the unrepentant sinner begging
Jesus, let me stay. No, he will probably be saying,
get me out of here. Knowing Christ's character, I believe that if anyone is going to be begging
on that occasion, it would probably be Jesus begging the sinner, please choose to stay.
Please use my atonement, not just to be cleansed, but to be changed so that you want to stay. I think that
fits pretty well with, I want you here. It's your misjudgment of you. Yeah, I think that's quite
right. It's to me significant that when Alma describes this process of restoration, he says,
your resurrection is going to do two things. When God restores you
in this way to your proper and perfect frame, everyone, he says, will be resurrected,
will receive their body, and everyone will be returned to the presence of God.
From there, it's just a question of whether you stay or go. We often frame our mortal journey
here as a question of whether or not we can make it back
to God. That's not what Alma says. It's not a question of making it back to God. Alma says,
God's going to restore all of you to his presence. The decisive question is whether or not you stay.
Mm-hmm. Do you remember Stephen Robinson, that book he wrote called Believing Christ?
He wrote in the 90s and then wrote a
follow-up called Following Christ. There's one line I remember from that book that was so good,
and that was, the question is not, am I going to make it? The question is, do I want to stay?
I think it's kind of funny in verse 7 that you're delivered from an endless night of darkness.
And it sounds like he knows what section 19 teaches,
that if it's endless, how can you be delivered from it?
It's like Alma suffering endless torment for two days.
You're like, wait a minute.
Yeah.
And section 19 says, well, it's called endless because endless is my name.
I didn't say there'd be no end to the punishment,
but I love they are their own judges, which is so true in life.
You go get a temple recommend.
What's the last question?
Do you consider yourself?
Go to the stake president.
What's the last question?
We are our own judge a lot of times in life.
Yeah. It's in this sense that, as Alma emphasizes, it's impossible to get away with
anything. It's impossible to get away with evil. Or as he famously says, perhaps most famously in
all of these chapters, in Alma chapter 41, verse 10, turns out that wickedness never was happiness.
There's no danger of anyone ever getting away
with evil. To think that you could get away with doing evil is to think that it's only evil because
God punishes you with evil, as if it would have been good if he didn't punish you with evil in
return. But that's not the case at all, Alma says. God doesn't have to punish you with evil in response to your evil, because evil is already evil. Wickedness never was happiness in the first
place. If you've chosen what was evil, if you participated in wickedness, that is its own
punishment. And God doesn't have to add anything to that pie in order for you to have already gotten
what it is that you chose. God's not in the work of punishment here in terms of retribution.
He's only in the work of discipline in terms of an education that we need.
The wickedness being wicked takes care of itself from the start.
Though, again, coming to discover that wickedness never was happiness in the first place
is the very kind of education that we have to undergo in order for us to discover the truth about our own desires.
That is wonderful. It's not like you stole happiness from some sort of evil thing and
you got away with it. Look at me. I got happiness out of evil. It doesn't exist there.
Sometimes we wring our hands about the possibility of people getting away with stuff,
as if wickedness weren't already wickedness, as if wickedness could have been happiness.
But that's impossible in the first place. And to worry about people getting away with wickedness
is the kind of moral relativism that doesn't take seriously the fact that it's not bad because God
punished you with bad for doing it. It's bad just
plain because it was bad in the first place. My dad joined the church when he was 24 and he said
sometimes people would say to him, oh, so before that you got to fill in the blank, you know,
as if wickedness was happiness. That's what he would say. Oh, you mean so wickedness is happiness and I got to do all of that stuff?
He would remind them, I never had a home evening. I never had a youth
conference. This is what we do, right? We mix these categories up.
We get it wrong. We think that what's bad is good and what's good is
bad and it's not because we don't want what's good, but it's because
we're wrong about about
which one is which and to be saved is to be saved from my ignorance about the truth there
doesn't samuel the layman say something about trying to find happiness in iniquity is contrary
to the nature of that righteousness which is in our eternal head or something like that. Yeah, it's impossible to find.
There's no reason for me to punish my child for hurting themselves.
They've already hurt themselves, as if they got happiness out of that.
Right, yeah.
You are, to use a 1970s song, you're looking for love in all the wrong places.
You're looking for happiness in all the wrong places. You're looking for happiness in all the wrong places.
I think this is exactly right.
This would be my reading of what Alma means when he says that part of the work of restoration
is to bring back evil for evil.
I don't think that that means that God is going to do evil to us because we have done
evil. What I think that means here
in light of Alma 41.10, the claim that wickedness never was happiness, what I think that means is
that God is going to bring back the truth about evil, that it was evil from the start and you
can't pretend otherwise. And that's part of what the law of restoration restores. It restores the
truth about what evil actually is, that it never was happiness.
And no evil needs to be added there on top of it because it was already evil in the first place.
The clearer are his views.
Could I tell you guys about an experience I had with Alma 40, 11, and 12?
We had a sister in our ward and her husband called me and said, my wife's about to
pass and she wanted to say goodbye. That's a very poignant moment. My wife and I went over to see
Trish. I said, Trish, can I read you a couple of verses of scripture. I went to Alma 40. Now concerning the state of the soul between
death and the resurrection, behold, it has been made known unto me by an angel, that the spirits
of all men, as soon as they are departed from this mortal body, yea, the spirits of all men,
whether they be good or evil, are taken home to that God who gave them life. And then shall it
come to pass pass that the spirits
of those who are righteous are received into a state of happiness, which is called paradise,
a state of rest, a state of peace, where they shall rest from all their troubles
and from all care and sorrow. I will never forget Trish looked at me and went, I'm ready.
I got to retell that story at her funeral too.
She said, I'm ready.
To be able to say that, I think means she had this understanding of God and what this was all about. And I just thought those verses, I always want to have those in my back pocket.
We have a hospital in our stake boundary and we go there a lot to give blessings.
And sometimes the people that we go to see have not been active at all.
But those verses can give a lot of hope.
As I read these chapters and I read about the punishment of the sinner, you might say that they are judging themselves. I'm reading
Alma 40 verse 26, for they are unclean and no unclean thing can inherit the kingdom of God.
They see themselves that way. Yeah. And this is partly a product of the way that if I think that
my salvation is about deserving or not deserving God's love,
instead of joining in God's work of love,
then I'm going to always end up judging myself to be insufficient in deserving it.
Then I'll never find it, and I will be my own judge here,
and I will condemn myself to not deserving love.
But the problem won't be that I failed to
deserve it. The problem will be that I failed to understand that love was a law and not a reward
that you deserve or don't. That looking for the fiery indignation, it's not coming. That's how
I view God. They drink the dregs of a bitter cup. That sounds very similar.
Yeah, it's their cup.
That's what it says.
They're consigned to partake of the fruits of their labors.
It's not the punisher will hand you a cup.
It's you made this, now you got to eat it.
In October of 2016, Elder Quentin L. Cook, he said,
Alma 42 contains some of the most magnificent doctrine
on the atonement in all scripture. Alma helped Corianton understand that it is not an injustice
that the sinner should be consigned to a state of misery, but he noted that starting with Adam,
a merciful God had provided a space for repentance, because without repentance,
the great plan of salvation would have been frustrated.
Alma also established that God's plan
is a plan of happiness.
Alma's teachings are most instructive.
For behold, justice exerciseth all his demands,
and also mercy claimeth all which is her own.
And there's a footnote that says,
notice justice is male and mercy's female.
I don't know what to do with that.
And thus, none but the truly penitent are saved.
Still quoting, seen in their true light, the glorious blessings of repentance and adherence
to the Savior's teachings are monumentally important.
It is not unfair to be clear, as Alma was with Corianton, about the consequences of
sinful choices and lack of repentance.
It has often been declared, sooner or later, everybody has to sit down to a banquet of
consequences. And it sounds like, and drink the drigs of a better cup that comes with the banquet
for free at the end of Alma 40 verse 26 there. Adam, I read in chapter 42, verse 22
and 23 that God sees us not to be God and mercy claimeth the penitent. Mercy comes because of
the atonement. What, I think that's right.
To be penitent is to discover that my evil actions were evil and that they now require
me to repent, which is to respond to my evil with the good that I now need in order to
become good again.
And that's precisely what comes into view here as we begin to undergo this process of
restoration that the atonement itself enacts mercy claims me because i allow it to yeah mercy's always
trying to claim me it's just a question of whether i will allow it to claim me or not
adam you wrote a book called an early resurrection I think that's life in Christ before you die.
And since Alma has been talking about resurrection, I thought I might bring a couple of thoughts
in from that book and have you maybe tie them together with what we've been talking about
here.
I loved this part of the book.
Promises are a certain way of looking forward.
When I promised myself to my wife, I didn't just bind myself to her in the present.
I gave her my future.
Without waiting for that future to arrive, without waiting to see what sorrows or joys would come, I promised.
Dressed in white, we knelt at the altar in the temple and joined hands.
We were terribly young.
Oh, I remember.
The mirror set face to face reflected endless futures at which we couldn't guess. Still, I loved her. I gave her all those futures as a
gift. And we kissed. Now promised to each other and sealed by a holy ordinance, we live as though
those futures had already come. Now in a very real way, our futures are given as gifts
in the present. And now we're empowered by those promises to love each other in the present.
And then you wrote a little later in the book, my job is to live right now as if I had already
passed through death's veil and into the presence of God. My job is to live my promised
redemption in the present tense. The reason I thought of those was the very end of Alma's
speaking to Corianton, let the mercy and long-suffering of God have full sway in your
heart. And now you are called to preach the word unto this people. I saw that same commitment
to live this entire message now. The process of restoration is modeled for us as Alma sees it by
resurrection. But I think as the Book of Mormon also emphasizes again and again,
perhaps uniquely in relationship to our other
scripture, this is not a process that we have to wait for. The process of restoration is a process
that God is anxious to get going here and now. In some very real sense, the process of my
resurrection is something that God is anxious to get started right here, right now, in this life.
And especially if it's the case that the only obstacle here is not God but me,
then there is no reason that I can't begin to experience my redemption now by participating
with God in his work here and now. In the same way that wickedness never was happiness and never could be,
it's also true that righteousness always was happiness and always will be. And that's as
true now as it would be at any future date when I might find myself back in the presence of God.
Corey Anton can move forward in that way, having promised his future to God, just like his father
had. Yeah, exactly. Especially insofar as he takes up the work of ministry and joins God in the work
of restoration. There's not something else right here. It's not the case that the work of restoration
will get you to some other promised end. The work of restoration and your invitation to participate in it
is the thing that's on offer. It is what you're looking for.
Adam, last time we were together, we talked about the book of Romans,
and I would encourage all of our listeners, if you haven't heard those episodes, please go back.
We can link them in our show notes, followhim.co, because it was so fun to get all the feedback that we did from those episodes.
It was fun to see it that way?
For my part, I think that's very much what's at stake in this whole conversation.
Corianton thinks that love is a kind of reward that he could succeed at earning or have failed at earning.
And at the moment, he thinks he's failed at earning it. And Alma's entire project here is to explain to him how restoration works.
That restoration is not about God now giving him the evil that he deserves because he's done evil,
but that the whole project of restoration as modeled by resurrection is to take what was bad and turn it into what is
good, to take what was corrupted and make it incorruptible. And that that is what God is
offering. And all Corianton needs to do to find what he's looking for here is to return to the
ministry and participate in the work that God invited him to join in the first place.
He sought for love in, as John said, all the wrong places.
Yeah. Or at least the wrong time and the wrong way.
Yeah. All three of us are parents. And many of our listeners, of course, are moms and dads.
How do we help our children flip that prevalent message of God wants to punish you. How have you done it as a father? Because it can be so damaging,
at least I've seen it in my own children, to do something that is wrong against the rules,
against the commandments, and now I see myself as not as valuable. least knowing you adam that's not what you would want my child to
think so how do i help them not think that i don't know that i'm much of an example for how to
actually do this in practice but in theory at least which is what i specialize in as a philosopher. The thing that you can't do as a parent is to indicate in any way
that your love for that child depends on their being what you want them to be.
You can't structure your relationship to them as if your love was a reward that they could earn
or not, which means that maybe the one basic essential non-negotiable
thing that i have to be capable of doing as a parent is that i have to be capable of
disconnecting my love for that child from what i want from that child I have to be able to uncouple here
my care and concern for them
from my expectations
about what they should or shouldn't be,
such that I become capable of constantly seeing
and adapting to what they actually need from me
rather than trying to force them into
the box of what I want them to be. If I try to force them into the box of what I want them to
be, if I try to use them to satisfy my own desires for their lives, I will trap us both.
And the love that could have sustained us will become impossible.
Sometimes what we talk about maybe is more of a belief than a practice.
We try to practice it, but I've tried to share with my kids that Heavenly Father has different ways of saying,
I love you, and one of them is, I love you, and one of them is I love you and one of them is thou shalt not. That thou
shalt not is going to protect you from so much hurt heartache and sorrow or as Adam taught us
today to use the words of Alma it will be for your good. Every commandment has love behind it. It's going to protect you from some pretty bad consequences. I remember reading
Elizabeth Smart's book that helped her through those months of horrific captivity that she
remembered how often her mother told her, I love you no matter what, and how that sustained her.
She wasn't doing anything wrong, but a lot of people react to that kind of thing that happened to Elizabeth Smart as if they did something wrong.
She didn't.
But that assurance that my mother loves me was one of the things that helped her through that.
Adam, I'm going to quote another book called Letters to a Young Mormon by
Adam Miller. I thought of it when Alma says at the very end of this letter to Corianton,
don't endeavor to excuse yourself. Don't deny the justice of God. Almost as if he's saying,
don't hide from this anymore. And you wrote, when God knocks, don't creep to the door and look through the peephole to see if he looks like you thought he would.
Rush to the door and throw it open.
Loved that idea.
Is that what you see Alma trying to express to Corianne?
And I could be absolutely wrong here, but you don't need to hide from him.
He wants to bless you.
That's a strong parallel. As Alma diagnoses it, Corianton's main difficulty here may be
in the fact that he's hamstrung by some expectations about who or what God is
that don't allow him now to accept the good that's being offered and to
himself do the good that needs to be done in response to his own mistakes. And it's easy,
so easy to get trapped in these expectations that, as we said a moment ago, are all structured around our false assumption that love is something that
you have to deserve, and that the whole point of all of this is to figure out whether or not we
deserve it, when really the only thing that's ever been at stake is whether or not we would
be willing to participate in it. There's a wonderful verse in Alma 42, verse 15, that we
haven't talked about yet.
He says,
Now the plan of mercy could not be brought about except an atonement should be made.
Therefore God himself atoneth for the sins of the world to bring about the plan of mercy.
I want to come back to this talk you brought up from Elder Kieron.
God's intent is to bring you home.
It seems in verse 15, it matches what Elder Kieron says here.
God does not put up roadblocks and barriers.
He removes them.
God himself atoneth for the sins of the world.
He does not keep you out. He welcomes you in.
And then this, his entire ministry was a living declaration of this intent.
Can you show us, Adam, or talk about how the Savior's ministry is a declaration of his intent to remove roadblocks?
Yeah.
Of course, at the heart of his ministry is the work of atonement itself.
The work of atonement is, I think as Alma describes it here, the work of restoration.
Part of that work of restoration involves justice and punishment as a good that we need,
and part of that work of restoration manifests as mercy then, as a good in response to our evil,
as an invitation to rejoin in response to our evil. And the atonement is really the hinge
on which all of that work turns. As God exemplifies what it means to respond to corruption within
corruption, to respond to what is bad with what is good by restoring what is bad to what is good,
Jesus's mortal ministry exemplifies these same traits. Jesus went about doing good.
Jesus went about commanding us to love our enemies. Jesus, before healing someone,
never asked if they did or didn't deserve it. He asked if they were or weren't willing to
participate in it by way of their faith. That's the pattern. That's what it looks like to join him in this
work of restoration. We have many listeners out there, Adam, who don't see themselves as good.
There seems to be a view out there that only if I just do a little bit more, work harder, if I can get rid of every single sin in my life, that then I measured up.
From your point of view, let's speak directly to that person just for a minute. You're so good at
at least for me in these interviews of making me feel like, wait, wait, I am enough. It's not about
earning my place. It's about participating in God's work.
Yeah, maybe I could speak in the first person here.
I don't deserve to be loved.
I'm not good enough for that.
But my journey in the gospel has largely been a journey of discovering my failure to deserve
love isn't because I didn't measure up in all the ways that would have qualified me to deserve that love, but because I had failed to complete the right project
by deserving love, but that I had been doing the wrong thing the whole time.
Extraordinarily liberating to put down the burden of doing something that cannot be done,
and to discover instead that the very thing that I was looking for the whole time, that love, was already right here, freely and wholly available in the invitation to love other
people, friends, family, enemies included, maybe especially when that enemy seemed to
be myself.
I feel like so often in these discussions, we get down to a better understanding of the nature of God.
Is he the traffic cop? Is he the university professor that's trying to see how many he can flunk?
Or is he a perfect loving Heavenly Father who wants relentlessly to get all his children back?
When we assign the wrong kind of character to God
based on imperfect worldly examples,
that's where the trouble starts.
And I'm really glad you started with Elder Kieron
and that story,
because that helps us for Elder Kieron to say,
you're looking at God wrong.
That's not what he's like.
I hesitate to add to God's mission statement.
However, I have restated this is my work and my glory to bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man.
As to say something like, this is my work and my glory to help my children choose to be exalted.
I will not force it.
What does Alma say?
Whosoever will not come, the same is not compelled to come. Because righteousness isn't righteousness unless it is chosen. Exaltation
isn't exaltation. How can you be like God when he is not forced? If I were to force you, it's no
longer by definition what God does, what he is. Adam, before we let you go, as you can tell,
I don't want you to leave. One way I know I'm feeling the spirit is I do not want it to end.
And I'm sure there's many listeners out there who feel the same way. Tell us about the Book of
Mormon as a whole. Adam, you are a voracious reader and I may have to look behind you to see that reading is a gift that you have and you've developed.
Yet, here's this Book of Mormon that I know you love.
Could you speak to what the Book of Mormon has done for you, specific, maybe even specific portions of it that you want to highlight? Because one of my favorite parts of our program is taking someone like yourself, who is, in my opinion, I'm sure many others, one of the best thinkers in the church, especially one of the best philosophers in the church, right there next to Joe Spencer. Can you tell us about the Book of Mormon and your
experiences with it? Well, I mentioned at the outset that I don't really have a lot of interest
in the Book of Mormon as a historical relic of any kind. My interest in the Book of Mormon is
almost exclusively framed in terms of my experience of the book as alive, living, an experience of the book in terms
of what it can do here and now and going forward of all the power that it encompasses, all the
power that it can express, especially in terms of its ability to open doors to an experience of God. If I love the Book of Mormon, which I do,
it's because the Book of Mormon has introduced me to God.
More than any other book in all of my life that I have ever read,
this book has deeply and undeniably introduced me to God. Two things I think have become obvious to me about
Book of Mormon over the years, the more time that I've spent with it, the more carefully I've read
it, is that number one, as a people, I don't know that we've even started to read the Book of Mormon.
We've hardly ever given it a chance to speak in its own voice,
to tell us what it wants to say, rather than our imposing on it what we expect it to say.
To that degree, we've really hamstrung the book's ability to accomplish its own mission
of introducing us to Jesus Christ. But I've also found over the years that even the weakest effort on my part to engage with
the book, to read it, to study it, to understand it, to spend time with it, will be rewarded with
not just an understanding of the book, but with a first-person, present-tense experience of God,
of His love and of His power of redemption. That's what the book promises.
And as best I can tell in my experience, that is exactly what the book has delivered.
Corey Enten gives us some great hope here, Adam, that your point of view can change,
that you can see God clearly, at least from indications later on in the book. Alma 48 says that Captain Moroni,
we know that Mormon really likes, he describes him as like unto Ammon, like the other sons of
Mosiah and also Alma and his sons. And then in chapter 49, 49 verse 30, that the word of God was preached among the people, declared unto them by Helaman and Shiblon and Corianton.
There's a hopeful part, and I think for every listener, at least for me, you're helping me and the book is helping me see this can happen for me. Yeah, I would hope that it's obvious that this letter Alma writes to Corianton is itself a powerfully hopeful letter.
Even in its account of justice and punishment, it is an extraordinarily hopeful account of the good news of the gospel of Jesus Christ.
Corianton's good evidence that that hope is justified. And his own father, Alma, may be even better evidence of the fact that this hope in Christ is justified,
regardless of what we think we've done or how far we think we have drifted from God.
God is relentless in his pursuit of us, and his purposes fail not.
And his purpose is to restore us.
And he will.
In our last episode, when we talked to Jack Welch, he mentioned that the word plan appears 10 times in Alma's letter to Corianton.
And it's so fun to see what's taught there because it's called plan of happiness and
plan of redemption and plan of mercy and plan of salvation.
There's God being relentless. He has this plan.
As you said, he fails not. Adam, thank you for spending your time with us.
It's always a pleasure to join you. Grateful that you have me.
We love having you on Follow Him. As we close this episode, I like to give our listeners something to do that I've
listened to this. I've loved it. It's filled my heart. It's expanded my mind. It's opened up new
things that I've never seen before. And now I guess I'm a practical person. How do I set down
anchor? What would you say if I said, okay, what do I do, Adam? What do I do?
Let me offer a fun little exercise listeners could do by way of scripture study with the
Book of Mormon. This was something that I did the other day preparing for a seminar
that I'll participate in starting next week on 2 Nephi chapter 2, trying to help myself become more familiar with the text and its details.
It's an interesting historical curiosity that when Joseph Smith dictated the text of the Book of Mormon,
he did not dictate punctuation, and it was left to the printer to supply the punctuation. So the punctuation is
non-canonical, technically. Here's a fun exercise you can try as a Latter-day Saint. You can copy
and paste the text of a chapter that you're interested in into a document, strip out all of its punctuation, and then you do the exercise of resupplying
what a punctuation should structure that reading of the text and see what happens,
see where it takes you. I love that. I love it too. I love it too I love it too
we hope everyone listening will
will take a little time
you might see things you've never seen before
you will see many things that you have never seen before
well with that
we want to thank Dr. Adam Miller
for joining us today
so fun
we've talked about Job
we've talked about Romans
now we've talked about Alma and Corianton. Anyone who's new to our podcast, go back and listen to all of those previous episodes. They're so fun. You'll hear similar things to what you've heard today that will help you see in new ways. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorenson, our sponsors, David and Verla
Sorenson, and every episode, we remember our founder, Steve Sorenson. We hope you'll join us
next week. Looks like we're picking up the war chapters on Follow Him. Before you skip to the
next episode, I have some important information. This episode's transcript and show notes are available on our website, followhim.co.
That's followhim.co.
On our website, you'll also find our two free books, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old
Testament and Finding Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
Both books are full of short and powerful quotes and insights from all our episodes
from the Old and New Testament.
The digital copies of these books are absolutely free.
You can watch the podcast on YouTube.
Also, our Facebook and Instagram accounts
have videos and extras you won't find anywhere else.
If you'd like to know how you can help us,
if you could subscribe to, rate, review,
and comment on the podcast,
that will make us easier to find.
Of course, none of this could happen
without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Jamie Nilsen, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra, and Annabelle Sorenson.
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to Him. Follow Him.