followHIM - Doctrine & Covenants 64-66 Part 1 • Dr. Jason Whiting • June 16-22 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: June 11, 2025Why is forgiveness a challenge? Dr. Jason Whiting examines how conflict, fault-finding, and differences–even among the early Saints–are not new challenges. Through the lens of the Doctrine and Cov...enants and human nature, he explores the transformative power of forgiveness and how it builds unity in families, communities, and the Church.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC225ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC225FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC225DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC225PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC225ESYOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/x1OQdYdyWr0FREE 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/followhimpodcast00:00 - Part 1 - Dr. Jason Whiting04:23 Jason Whiting’s bio05:58 Come, Follow Me Manual07:12 Background on the lesson12:11 Can a teacher row a canoe?14:14 Most discussed verses on forgiveness18:11 The doctrine of reciprocity22:21 Why it is difficult to forgive25:05 Fault-finding is misplaced blame29:41 People are missile-seeking targets32:31 The impulse for revenge39:01 Examples of brothers and forgiveness43:31 Using scriptures in our work lives44:01 Physical and emotional safety45:59 Forgiveness in marriage 48:56 Is there a quota on forgiveness?52:52 Personal accountability and leaving it for God53:25 Sister Yee’s talk on forgiveness, abuse, and domestic violence55:21 When it is time to leave a relationship57:40 Temple wedding vs. celestial marriage1:00:02 Perspective and forgiveness1:01:04 Boundaries as a weapon1:06:37 Are we worse at working out differences?1:09:56 Two possible traps in marriage1:12:02 - End of Part I - Dr. Jason WhitingThanks 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 DirectorIride Gonzalez: Social Media, Graphic Design"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Coming up in this episode on Follow Him.
I'll say, how often do you guys apologize after something's happened?
Sometimes people say, hmm, never.
That's always a huge concern if somebody is not saying, you know what, I didn't act in
the right way or I could have handled that better.
I'm sorry I said what I said.
That's what you want to hear.
Because if you don't hear that and there are people who won't go there, then you're probably
not going to be getting much change.
Hello everyone.
Welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith.
I'm your host.
I'm here with my cohost, John, by the way, who is not weary in well doing.
John, I've known you a long time.
I have yet to see you weary in well doing.
I'm just generally weary.
But thank you all the time.
I see you weary in everything else,
except for well-doing.
That's funny.
John, we are joined by Dr. Jason Whiting today
out of BYU.
Jason, thanks for being here.
It's great to be here with both of you.
I've been looking forward to this for a long time.
Jason and I actually met on an airplane months ago.
I'm excited for the audience to meet Jason.
John, when you think of this trip to Missouri
and now we're back, a lot has happened, a lot of drama,
a lot of change on that trip to Missouri.
What do you think Joseph Smith and his associates
are feeling when they get back? When you work together with a lot of change on that trip to Missouri. What do you think Joseph Smith and his associates are feeling
when they get back? When you work together with a lot of people, I just think of these sections as
forgiveness sections. You notice things about people and then you can decide whether to harbor
that or hang on to it, whether to try to let that go. I love the message of how forgiving the Lord
is in these sections. Therefore, you ought to forgive each other. I love the message of how forgiving the Lord is in these sections.
Therefore, you ought to forgive each other. Yeah. As we talked about these last few weeks,
as we get into the Lord's work together, we start to bump up against each other.
Exactly. You get a little human and messy and ornery and snarky a little bit.
Jason, as you've looked at these sections, what do you want to do today? Where do we want to go? That's exactly what you're both talking about. We have
some challenging situations in the relationships that we have with each
other. I actually want to start with an overview quote from President Nelson. He
talks about relationships. This is a talk you're all familiar with. I love this
talk about peacemakers needed. He says, my dear brothers and sisters,
how we treat each other really matters.
How we speak to and about others at home,
at church, at work, and online really matters.
Today, I'm asking us to interact with others
in a higher, holier way.
My hope is that we can talk about forgiveness in some depth
because I think that's a real key to relationships.
It's part of how we treat each other, and it's one of the keys in terms of being Christ-like.
But it's hard.
I'll talk a little bit about that today.
Why forgiveness is such a challenging thing to do at times, but why it's crucial for our
spiritual well-being, for our relational well-being.
I'll talk about how that applies in our relationships
and our families, including at times when they're unhealthy,
when things are not going well or even becoming damaging.
How does forgiveness still apply in those tricky situations?
And we'll talk about how the Savior can help us
with this challenging but important doctrine.
That's fantastic.
John, do you remember last year,
we were with Dr. Rebecca Clark. She said, think about heaven. Heaven is relationships. You don't
think about the clouds or the streets or the food. Well, occasionally maybe you
think about the food. When you think of heaven, you think of relationships. What
makes sense that the Lord's saying, well, if this is going to be heaven, we better
work on this and get it right.
Talking about church history, this has really helped me, Hank, a lot to open my mind to
this idea.
Melissa, in a way, helped us with this.
What you just said, Jason, about what we say about each other really matters, but I never
applied that to living or dead, or maybe we could say it better.
What we say about each other on both sides of the veil really
matters. It's tempting that, well, once somebody's dead, you can say whatever you want. But what if
it's true, Hank, that those relationships are going to endure? What if we're going to meet Joseph?
What if we're going to meet Emma? What if we're going to meet Brigham? Maybe what we say about
them really matters, even right now. Yeah, I love it. Before we can let Jason take the reins and teach, John,
we better tell our audience who he is.
There's many students at BYU who know Dr. Whiting.
Let's introduce him.
Yes, Jason B. Whiting, he has a PhD.
He's a licensed marriage and family therapist
and a professor in the marriage and family therapy program
at Brigham Young University. He researches healthy and unhealthy marriage. He's the author of Love Me True,
Overcoming the Surprising Ways We Deceive in Relationships, as well as other books and
articles on addiction control and quality communication. Jason and his wife April have
been married for almost 30 years. They're the parents of six children, two daughters-in-law, and a son-in-law. In his
free time he enjoys books, being outdoors, playing guitar, oil painting, and
folding huge piles of laundry. That is the right attitude to have because that is a
first-world problem when you have lots of laundry, isn't it? That's true.
Right?
John, do you remember Laundry Nirvana?
I can't remember which guest that was.
Oh, Emily Watts talks about you never get to the point.
Because even as we're talking, someone is out there producing new dirty laundry.
Right.
It's never ending.
Never ending.
Well, Jason, we are so glad you are here as hosts of this program.
John and I both and our entire team feel who we invite on is important.
We're always watching for the hand of the Lord.
Jason and I sat down next to each other and we started chatting, found out we both teach at BYU, made this connection.
I thought, the Lord is in this. I hope the Lord is in this.
Let's get started. I'm going to read from the Come is in this. I hope the Lord is in this. Let's get started.
I'm going to read from the Come Follow Me manual.
Then Jason, I want to see where you want to go with this.
The lesson begins this way.
In the miserable heat of August of 1831, several elders were traveling back to Kirtland from
the land of Zion in Missouri.
The travelers were hot and weary.
The tensions soon turned
into quarrels. It may have seemed like building Zion, a city of love, unity, and peace, was
going to take a long time. I don't know about either of you. That never happens in our family
when everybody gets hot and weary. Quarling, I love it.
Fortunately, building Zion in Missouri in 1831 or in our hearts,
families, and wards today doesn't require us to be perfect. Instead,
of you it is required to forgive, the Lord said. He requires the heart and a willing mind,
and He requires patience and diligence, for Zion is built on the foundation of small things accomplished by those who do not become weary in well-doing.
Like John, by the way.
I love this interaction.
I feel like we're going to learn a lot today about our relationships with each other.
With that, Jason, how do you want to start this?
Do you want to look at the history first?
Yeah, let me expand a little bit on what you just described there from that summer,
because it was a challenging time. I think it illustrates well what you were just saying,
which is that we have normal human difficult interactions that bring out our immaturities
and our irritabilities. That then leads to some challenging situations. We have to choose what
to do with that. What was happening during this time was,
in the summer of 1831, leading up to that summer,
there had been a conference at Isaac Morley's farm.
Spirits were high, people were fired up.
They were talking about Missouri.
Hey, this is going to be the new Jerusalem.
It's a big deal.
There's going to be a temple there.
Maybe even the Lord is going to come back and meet us there.
There's a lot of excitement.
There are a bunch of elders who are called to go to Missouri.
It's a series of missionaries.
13 different companionships in addition to Joseph Smith and Sidney Rigdon are asked to go.
One of those companionships was Ezra Booth and Isaac Morley.
They were both converts of recent years Ezra Booth had in fact been a minister that caused this stir in his congregation when he said
Hey, I've found this thing and it's the truth
He started really strong but troubles became a thing for him pretty quickly after this strong start starting with
They're asked to go to Missouri and Ezra Booth and Isaac Morley are told
you guys are supposed to walk to Missouri. Joseph and Sydney jump in a cart. They take off. That
right away bothers Ezra Booth. He's like, wait a minute, we're going to walk and we're going to
preach along the way in the heat and the bugs and you guys are getting in a cart. When I read that,
I thought that's like on a mission when the zone leaders take the car and they go to the conference and they say you guys meet us
there but do knock doors along the way. How fair is that? Exactly what you guys
are doing this thing. It's this long tough journey and then they get there
after all this hype. It's really nothing that special. It's a lot of prairie.
There are some converts there but it's not some big
glittering center of Zion. Booth feels like
Joseph has over-promised. They settle in a little bit.
Joseph does receive some more revelations, as has been talked about in
previous weeks. The location of the temple, for example.
They also get a warning that Zion won't be
built up until after much tribulation. It's not gonna happen instantly. Then the
Lord warns them about complaining, which you would think would get their
attention. He says, I'm giving you a commandment to not do things with a
doubtful heart and not be slothful, essentially is what he says. Some stay, some settle in,
but a lot of the others take off,
as you alluded to earlier,
and they're heading out to do some other missionary work.
But it was hard, they were jumping on a river.
If you ever tried to navigate a river on a canoe
with your family members or whatever,
you can see how the irritability might be a thing.
That's not exactly a serene situation
on the Missouri River. So they're having petty arguments. At one point, they're rowing on
a rough river. Oliver Cowdery refuses to row. They almost capsize and then they all disembark
to talk it over. Now here's the quote from the church history book, Saints. It says,
after they set up camp, Joseph, Oliver and Sydney tried to talk to the group and ease tensions, irritated the men called Joseph and Sydney
cowards for getting off the river, mocked the way Oliver paddled his canoe and accused
Joseph of acting like a dictator. The quarrel lasted long into the night.
Wow.
Good times. Not easy, right? Even good people get caught up in petty and stressful and irritable
situations. That's just life. Sometimes we forget as we kind of get the highlights from these
church history events that day to day, there's some pretty tough stuff that happens.
I laugh a little bit at things like this, but to be honest, if you wanted to record situations where I have been that
person, there would be so many to choose from. Where I got a little irrational. Sorry what
I said when I was hungry. John, I've never seen you, Henri, in all of our time together.
We have a family joke about this because we drove to Seattle in our Sequoia. The majority of the passengers were telling me
I was driving too slow.
And...
Classic.
We had to have a rest stop
and have a little family meeting.
Oh man.
I love it.
It makes them okay.
They're like us.
They're doing the best they can. If they write a saint's book about me, there'd be stuff like this in it. It makes them okay. They're like us. They're doing the best they can if they write a saint's book about me
There'd be stuff like this in it. I
Love it
What was it about Oliver's rowing?
Cuz I know he was is like you put the or in upside down all over the big end goes in the water
I mean, I'd love to know
Yeah, what were they making fun of? I don't know
They had their stop at the rest stop moment like you guys did.
We got to stop and talk about this.
So they all got out over the next day or two.
They did chill out a little bit.
They resolved some things and they were doing better.
The Lord even says in section 61, he says, I, the Lord, was angry with you yesterday.
But today, my anger is turned away.
Then he says, in as much as you have humbled yourselves before me,
the blessings of the kingdom are yours. I like that phrase.
Some of them chose to humble themselves. That's a conscious thing to do. It implies agency. Some
did. But some stayed cranky, including Ezra Booth, who at that point leaves his mission and he's
heading home.
The follow-up to that is, after he returns back to Ohio from Missouri, he continues to
criticize Joseph.
He starts to write material in newspapers that's negative about the church.
Eventually, his preaching license is revoked and he leaves the church.
But interestingly enough, his companion, Isaac Morley, takes a different path. He has some struggles.
In section 64, which we'll talk about this a little bit, both of those guys are rebuked by the Lord.
But at some point, Isaac Morley softens. He stops complaining and becomes more valiant.
He, at one point, then gives most of his farm to the church.
He later becomes a bishop, a patriarch, and he goes
west with the saints. Two different paths for those missionary companions.
Now we get to section 64, which the Lord reveals in September. It's after many of them are
back in Ohio. The first few verses, he tells them to receive his will to overcome the world and that he'll have
compassion on them and he says, some have sinned but I have forgiven them and that he
is merciful. Then he reminds them that Joseph holds the keys. Then we get to these which
are the most discussed verses on forgiveness starting in verse 6. He says, there are those
who have sought occasion against Joseph Smith without cause.
I'm going to talk about that phrase, seeking occasion, the sort of choosing to find fault
or to be critical, wanting to be offended almost. Verse seven, he says, he has sinned,
but verily I say unto you, I the Lord forgive sins unto those who confess their sins before me and
ask forgiveness who have not sinned unto death." Joseph did have flaws but he
worked on those with God. Basically I think the Lord is saying it's not your
job to point out and to pick on those flaws. I'm the one that forgives. Then he
gives us a little aside which is really interesting and really important. He says,
my disciples in days of old sought occasion against one another
and forgave not one another in their hearts.
And for this evil, they were afflicted and sorely chastened.
Wherefore I say unto you that ye ought to forgive one another
for he that forgiveth not his brother, his trespasses,
standeth condemned before the Lord,
for there remaineth in him the greater sin I
The Lord will forgive whom I will forgive but of you it is required to forgive all men
We have this really powerful core doctrine about forgiveness
That is at times really challenging
My plan is to talk about this general idea about forgiveness why it's a core doctrine how we work with God for our own forgiveness
But then particularly how it works as we have relationships with other people how we forgive others why it is hard
Why it's a blessing?
Why we sometimes seek occasion or find fault then we'll talk about you know
Why that's a commandment and it's a sin to not forgive. We'll talk about the blessings of forgiveness and how that applies for our
lives. Right now, if I'm a listener and I want to turn this off because I know
the lessons that's coming and I don't want to hear it, I could be Isaac
Morley and I could say, you know what, I'm gonna humble myself and do this or I
could be Ezra Booth and say, nope, I'm not interested. Hopefully everybody
listening is going to be an Isaac Morley here. And how do I humble myself enough to be open?
It's a good question. It's hard to do. Let's start with seeking forgiveness from God, because
I think that's one of the ways that we become softer and more forgiving of others is we're
reminded of our own imperfections and our own dependence on being forgiven from our Heavenly Father. In fact, the Come Follow Me manual
starts with a good question. It says, think about a time when the Lord forgave
you. How did you feel? That's great. It's a beautiful doctrine to be forgiven
because we all make mistakes all the time. We always need it. We all have had
that experience where we feel that relief from being forgiven and moving on and starting over.
President Nelson, of course, has said a lot about daily repentance, which is this really great reminder that even though we're flawed, we check in with God and He is there and He's merciful.
He said, Jesus stands with open arms, hoping and willing to heal, forgive, cleanseobling, or more crucial to our individual progression than is a regular daily focus on repentance.
What's this great reminder?
How merciful God is.
He is loving.
He is a supportive parent.
When we have a relationship with Him daily, then we're blessed.
That doctrine from President Nelson has blessed me a lot when I think about daily repentance.
I think about the fact that God is a great friend to me. And when we have a relationship with him daily, then we're blessed.
That doctrine from President Nelson has blessed me a lot.
When I think about daily repentance, instead of just thinking, oh, I've done something
really terrible, I need to repent, it's better to think, oh, it's just another day I need
to check in with God and repent.
That has been a blessing for me.
I know I don't do it great.
In fact, I'm sure I need to repent of not daily repenting, but the effort of doing
that really is helpful, I think for all of us.
It does soften you.
Yeah.
It's a tough world out there.
There's a lot of discouragement.
There's a lot of people who feel down, who feel hard on themselves.
It's a sign of the last days that men's hearts shall fail them.
I'm a therapist, so I work with a lot of people who feel discouraged.
They feel down and they feel like they're not what they ought to be.
I was working with a woman once, this was many years ago.
She was a Christian, she was not a member of our faith, but she said, I go to church
and I read the Bible and I always just focus on the parts that are saying you're less than
the dust of the earth or you're fallen or you're corrupt.
She said, I have a really hard time accepting God's love, that I'm worthy of God's love.
And we talked about it.
I said, that's a great thing to identify.
How can we talk about that in a way that's helpful for you and that you can accept and
receive God's love?
Then she said this interesting thing.
She said, even when I come to therapy,
I do this thing where I only go one time
and then I think, I'm not really deserving of more help.
I said, well, I'm glad you told me that as well
because how can we make this different
and how can we make this a place of safety
and a healing?
It was a good conversation.
Then she never came back.
I was like, wow, that's so sad that she has
that feeling of, I just am down and God doesn't love me and I need to live in that depression.
Even the Old Testament and the Bible, where we sometimes think of God as a pretty strict
and demanding God, there's a lot of doctrine of love and mercy in there. In Nehemiah, there's a quote that says, I'm a God ready to pardon, gracious and merciful.
It's just replete throughout the Old Testament.
God is merciful.
Or even though your sins are as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow.
This is a God who is generous, who is forgiving and who doesn't hold petty grudges.
Of course, the Book of Mormon and the Doctrine and Covenants have a lot of those same scriptures.
As often as my people repent,
will I forgive them their trespasses.
We fall short all the time, but God is really merciful.
He's asking us to be more like He is with each other.
Experiencing His forgiveness,
one, helps you be grateful to God for forgiveness,
but also teaches you how to forgive.
He almost shows you how it's done.
He's just really good at it.
He is the perfect example of it.
He doesn't hold grudges.
He's not petty.
He's not vindictive.
Us, not so much.
We struggle with those things.
Yeah, hang on to things for too long.
That's what I get from these sections.
I forgive, you ought to forgive each other.
The thing that's really helpful to me, I heard it called the doctrine of reciprocity once,
Hank.
Do you remember?
I don't remember who.
The idea of a reciprocal in fractions.
It's right out of the Lord's Prayer.
Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. The Beatitudes blessed are all the merciful,
for they shall obtain mercy.
If I need forgiveness, I need to forgive.
That's motivating to me to withhold harsh judgment
because I want others not to judge me harshly.
Oh man, that's hard.
When I'm feeling humble, which is not very often,
John knows that.
I recognize that he is a better judge
of the situation than I am.
I look at this other person or people
and I think I understand the motive.
I understand what happened.
In this way, he's saying, no,
I understand the person and the motive.
I'm the judge here.
It doesn't happen very often,
but it does happen occasionally where I think,
all right, you obviously understand this more than I do.
I'll take the direction from you rather than vice versa.
I give you the direction.
It's a great point.
I'm actually gonna cite a little psychological study that describes exactly what you just
said, which is how we ascribe motives to the other person that are different than our own
motives.
We're more quick to defend our own motives than we are somebody else's motives, essentially.
Well, I'm excited then, Jason.
What do you want to do now?
Let's talk about the reasons that it is difficult to forgive others.
There's a lot of things, I think, working against us in that regard in our own human
frailties.
For example, the first thing is that relationships are inherently challenging, and that's just
because we all are unique.
Everybody's different.
You're always going to bump up against another person who has different values, opinions, preferences. Not just that,
but everybody has their own blind spots, their own weirdnesses, their biases that they don't even
see. Sometimes we're in a relationship where those line up with our spouse, we can see the world the
same, hopefully, or a great friend or mission companion, but sometimes you bump up against
situations where those don't line up very well. And that just reminds us, it's a challenge, but it's actually
not a problem. It's not a bug of the plan. It's a feature of the plan. It helps us to grow. We're
just different. Yeah, that's okay. I like that you said that it's inherent. You're not broken.
Nope. There's nobody else like you, but that's okay. That's even good because you're going to, through life,
learn to appreciate differences and other perspectives.
Hopefully.
Hopefully.
And related to that, we all are naturally self-centered.
We just see the world from our own perspective,
if that makes sense.
We have the natural man within us.
But that can become exaggerated.
When we become more self-centered, more selfish,
we start to run into problems, particularly from a moral or gospel perspective. In fact, Elder Maxwell said that
selfishness is the detonator that breaks most of the Ten Commandments. In section 56, which I know
we've been looking at, the Lord says to Ezra Thayer, he needs to repent of his pride and of
his selfishness.
There's a lot of public rebukes in the Doctrine and Covenants that I think would be a little tough to swallow.
Joseph Smith said this, let every selfish feeling be not only buried, but annihilated.
That's a pretty high standard.
I think we often work at burying or pushing aside our selfish feelings, but
to actually get rid of them, that's tough.
That's a work of a lifetime.
But again, that's part of what relationships can help us with.
Another thing that we do, we, because we're all different and because we bump into these
annoyances like those guys did on the river, we can get caught up in fault finding.
Everybody has their faults.
We all have them.
If you're in a mode of looking at someone else's faults,
then you're probably going to find them if you are seeking occasion, as the Lord's disciples have all did.
But the problem is, sometimes we do this thing where we are finding fault in a place where it doesn't even exist.
Sometimes, for example, I'm getting annoyed with someone else, but the problem is with me.
It's my issue.
Maybe I'm irritable.
Maybe I'm hungry.
Maybe I'm defensive about something that I did that I shouldn't have done.
It relates to this really interesting verse in section 64 verse 16, where the Lord says,
back to our companionship, Ezra Booth and Isaac Morley, he says, they condemned for
evil that thing in
which there was no evil.
That's a really interesting verse to me because I see it happen a lot.
They were finding faults or problems with Joseph in which there weren't really any faults
or problems to be found.
It was their issue.
It reminded me of this other verse which I like, section 121 verse 17.
The Lord says, but those who cry transgression do it because they are the servants of sin
and are the children of disobedience themselves.
Oftentimes, people who are doing the wrong thing are crying transgression about somebody
else.
They're finding faults sometimes as a way to justify themselves or just to be picky. Wow. Such an insightful thing to
say that maybe I'm sure that there's an evil there and the Lord's saying there's
not. It's your issue. It's not the other person's thing. You are just in this mode
of seeking occasion or fault-finding. Again, people get in that mode sometimes when they're being cranky or judgy
or defending their own misbehavior or whatever.
I had this situation once where I was meeting with a woman for marriage therapy,
this woman and her husband.
She said, I've come to really dread come follow me.
And I said, whoa, what do you mean?
Like that seems sort of blasphemous even. What are you talking about? You dread come follow me." And I said, Whoa, what do you mean? Like, that seems sort of
blasphemous even. What are you talking about? You dread, come follow me. She said, let me
explain. I'm not a morning person. I have a job. So I'm scrambling in the morning to get ready.
But my husband insists that we do it his way at his time in the morning. When I'm not there,
when he thinks I should be, he starts sighing.
He's rolling his eyes. He's tapping his fingernails. Even when I sit down to talk about Come Follow
Me and read the scriptures together, he shifts into this pious, moralizing, your insights are not as
valuable as my insights. Like, really a problem. That's not what Come Follow Me is about.
But for him, he's in this mode of condemning for evil that thing in which there's no evil.
He's judging her based on her style or her preference or her insights.
Pretty unhealthy stuff.
Wow.
He's judging for evil.
That which is not evil.
I wonder how often we do that with our children.
Right. They're just sometimes kids.
We in our own immaturity think they're being evil.
They're just being four years old or a teenager
or whatever they're being.
You know, that's just what happens.
Oh, man.
I'm loving this.
John, aren't you?
I love when a guest says, OK, here's what the Lord said.
Here's what these people are dealing with.
Let's talk about you.
Let's talk about your life.
It's very practical. I love that the Savior said, yeah, this has happened before. My disciples
in days of old sought occasion. I think of that phrase, Jason, that you brought up a
couple of times, they sought occasion. I mean, sought is the past tense of seek.
You're looking for it, but you're actually going out there saying,
I'm going to find something wrong with this. I'm going to find something wrong with you so I can
hold it over your head and I'm going to keep holding it over your head. I like that the Savior
says, yeah, you guys have the same problem. My disciples did this too. Now we can read it and
we can go, yeah, we did this too. In 2025, we're doing it too.
Pete You know, where else I see people seek occasion or look for faults is online. I don't
want to get too far off in the weeds on that. But if you've ever read an article about the church,
for example, and you read the comments afterwards, people are seeking occasion.
They start with an agenda and they go to cherry pick out,
look for a reason to be offended.
Of course, it happens with social issues or political issues.
There's another phrase that comes to mind here,
which is from the Book of Mormon, which is stirring up anger.
People want to stir up anger, particularly in those venues, because it works.
People become outraged.
It goes viral. It gets attention.
People have this motivation to become offended, to cherry pick out problems.
It can happen in marriages as well.
When they become unhealthy, people start to fault find or look for reasons to be offended.
Terry Warner, who was a philosophy professor at BYU, said some people are like
missile-seeking targets. See what he did there? They're looking for reasons to take shots to be
offended. Elder Maxwell also used a similar analogy. He said some people go around covered in boils
when they bump up against something. They're enraged with pain. They have these things to
get offended by or to be upset by, where there really wasn't
a problem.
Sometimes it's just differences.
People have differences, people have different views, people have different opinions about
a variety of issues, whether it's how to study your scriptures or whether it's about a social
issue.
President Nelson has spoken about this too.
He said, I'm greatly concerned that so many people seem to believe that it is completely acceptable to condemn, malign and vilify anyone who does not agree with them.
It's so easy
to do that if you're looking to do that because we all have differences, but it doesn't help.
That's another reason why we need these commandments to forgive, to let go of things,
because there will be bumps.
Now, I've noticed online, Jason, that anonymity can make it even worse.
Makes it a lot worse.
People say things they would never say in person, people will do things online that
they would not say in person.
Yeah, it doesn't help.
No one knows it's me.
John, can you help me with this verse where the Lord says, every idle word that men shall speak, they'll give an account thereof?
Matthew 12, 36, I think, which is the second scariest verse in the standard works, in my opinion.
Every single thing you've said. Why don't we talk about that?
Every idle word that men shall speak or text or post an idle word
it's not well not the words you gave in a talk because you prepared that but the
idle words that slipped out. Whoo that's scary. It won't be anonymous then won't it?
That wasn't me that was somebody no actually I know who the account belongs
to. Jason can I ask you a question?
You're probably going to go here, but one of the most difficult things
I think for me and maybe for others is this idea that there remaineth
in me the greater sin.
I'm going, I'm not the one who did this.
I'm not the one who offended.
Now I'm worse because I won't forgive.
I am going to go there in some detail when we get to talk about the atonement, how that
is relevant, how we sometimes deny the atonement when we deny someone else, you know, when
we deny forgiveness.
Maybe that's the greater sin.
But you're right. That's a tough doctrine in some circumstances.
Yeah, especially on something not so-and-so ate my food,
my roommate ate my food.
Someone really injured me or my family
and you're telling me this is the greater sin?
Well, let's keep talking about why it's hard.
I study anger and I study aggression and escalation
and even abuse.
One of the things you see as people become unhealthy
and as they escalate is, when I'm hurting, I want
to lash out, find the cause of that pain.
What that means is that turns into an accusation.
That can sometimes stir this impulse of revenge, which is kind of a misguided sense of justice.
If I'm hurting, I'm going to make you hurt too.
I've interviewed people who have been very clear about that being their
motivation, which is a scary thing to get into, especially in an intimate
relationship when people start hurting.
But you can see how that becomes cyclical because if I get my feelings hurt
and then I lash out and I hurt your feelings, then it becomes this attack
defense and I for an eye and a tooth for a tooth and everybody's blind and
toothless. There's a lot of damages is done.
I often ask couples that I'll say, tell me about what happens when you argue.
People will describe I get escalated and our tone gets worse.
When that happens, I'll say, do you come away from those escalated exchanges feeling like
that was really great and it was really constructive and you feel closer together.
Of course, they say, no, we feel terrible.
When things escalate, it becomes damaging.
But back to President Nelson, he says, anger never persuades, hostility builds no one,
contention never leads to inspired solutions.
It's just, again, another human impulse that we have when we're speaking from our own pain or acting from it,
we sometimes get in this mode of wanting
to cause someone else pain.
And that can then generate this back and forth war.
Another piece which makes this challenging
is that we struggle sometimes to take accountability
for our behavior.
That's harder than it is to look at your contribution
to the problem.
I can see your flaws.
I can see where you overreacted,
but I don't necessarily wanna take a look at mine.
It's hard, back to that phrase of humbling ourselves.
That's not easy to do.
There was a study done by a psychologist
named Roy Baumeister where he asked people,
think of a time you made someone else angry.
And then he said, think of a time someone made you angry.
And he had people describe those instances.
What happened was the descriptions were very different.
In theory, you would think it would be the same because it's all about anger.
But of course, it's not. When I make someone angry, this is the typical story.
I had a good reason to do what I did. And it wasn't that bad.
They overreacted, they'll get over it.
But when someone made me angry,
well, they didn't have a good reason.
They were just being mean.
I am highly offended.
I'm not just gonna let that go.
The psychologists, they said,
the biases are built into the roles.
Like that's just what humans do.
We kind of describe things
to support
our respective positions.
Accountability is difficult.
Again, President Nelson spoke to this
in that same peacemaker's talk,
which is so packed with good stuff.
He said, at this point, you may be thinking
that this message would really help someone you know.
And he got a big laugh.
Because it is easy to be like, yeah,
you need to do this. But he said, perhaps you are hoping that it will help him or her
to be nicer to you. I hope it will. But I also hope that you will look deeply into your
heart to become a peacemaker.
I will be merciful unto you, the Lord says in verse four. I'll bet that Jason probably more than me and
more than you Hank have participated in marriage conferences, but I know we all have. We often
joke about how many of you wanted to be here, how many of you were dragged here by your spouse.
One of the reasons they don't want to come is what? Because they're going to be told all the stuff
they're doing wrong.
Here's President Nelson saying,
I'll bet you can all think of somebody
who really needs this talk.
Listen up you people, you really need this,
as if to say, I don't, but you all do.
Our bishop asked the entire ward after that
to read it again.
What was that? 2022?
Just a few years ago, yeah, there's a lot packed in there.
I've listened to that many times and each time I'm just impressed with how much good stuff is in there.
I've had people come and they've been reading marriage books, but they're reading them in order to point out what their spouse needs to do.
And that's less helpful when they're hauling them into therapy.
I just happened to leave a post-it on page 24 for you.
That's exactly what happened.
Jason, I want to make a t-shirt of that.
Accountability is hard.
Dr. Jason Whiting, why is it so hard?
It's humbling.
We all have our weaknesses.
It's sometimes a little painful and embarrassing
to admit those weaknesses. In fact, when you think about addiction recovery groups or even
abuse recovery groups, they start with breaking through denial, taking accountability. Because
when somebody, for example, is in the throngs of addiction,
it's easy to make a lot of excuses and say,
well, I'm minimizing this or I'm hiding this or I'm embarrassed about it.
And it is. I mean, we all have our weaknesses and our embarrassments.
I would just say even talking to God sometimes can be that humbling experience.
If we don't do it, if we're not accountable, we don't change.
If we don't repent, we don't change.
If we minimize, there are people who I talk to in relationships, I'll say, you know, how
often do you guys apologize after something's happened? Sometimes people
say, never. That's always a huge concern if somebody is not saying, you know what,
I didn't act in the right way or I could have handled that better. I'm sorry, I
said what I said. That's what you want to hear. Because if you don't hear that and there are people who won't go there, then you're probably not going to be getting much
change. John, I know this has never happened to you, but there's been times in my prayers where
I've avoided certain topics where the Holy Ghost says, why don't we talk about this? And I'll say,
well, we need to bless the missionaries first. Why don't we talk about this? Well, maybe tomorrow we can talk about that. You're right, being accountable is difficult, but
it's freeing, wouldn't you say, Jason? Of course, that's how change and progress
happens. It's another reason why repentance is, there's a sense of peace
and relief when God forgives and when we forgive each other. That's how we grow. In
fact, that's what I'll talk about here for the next few minutes in terms of some
family examples. When we're accountable and when we repent and when we forgive, good things
happen.
What are some good examples from the scriptures related to forgiveness? Several examples came
to mind. As I was thinking about these, I realized all of them are about brothers. Here's
the first one. Joseph in Egypt gets chucked in a pit. The brothers decide about these, I realized all of them are about brothers. Here's the first one.
Joseph in Egypt gets chucked into pit. The brothers decide, actually, I think we can make some money.
They sell him.
I mean, it's a pretty huge betrayal that these brothers did to this brother.
I mean, we're talking serious family problems here.
Joseph suffers a lot because of it.
I mean, he has some tough stuff that he goes through.
Ultimately though, there's reunification.
He forgives his brothers.
He says, I see God's hand in it. That's pretty impressive.
He forgives. There's hopefully growth and reconciliation.
There's another example, the prodigal son.
The son wastes his inheritance in riotous living.
Ultimately, that is not a fulfilling lifestyle.
He comes to himself,
he returns to the family. The father rushes out in this Christ-like figure and embraces
him and is so happy that the son who was lost is now found. Now, he could have said, you
are no son of mine, you are not coming back. He could have said, do you have any idea how
much your mother and I have suffered because of your choices?
A lot of families say things like that. He didn't do it. He forgave him. It was the brother who had
the struggle and was like, you're having a celebration and killing the fatted calf for him.
And he did all that stuff. That's a little more typical of what a family member might do. He had
to work on that. They are all brothers, aren't they? Here's another one.
Joseph Smith and William Smith.
William was kind of a hothead.
I know this was a different era and there was more bluntness and rebuke,
that kind of relationships, but things were tense at times between Joseph and
William and one day things boiled over in a meeting where William was chastised.
William attacked his brother.
He attacked Joseph and he heard him.
This is the quote, it says, Joseph was left bruised and wounded, unable to sit
down or rise up without help, and grieved beyond expression at the
wickedness of his brother. But within a day or two, William writes
him. He says, I feel sorry for what I have done,
and humbly ask your forgiveness. I feel ashamed,
and I feel as though all the confessions that I could make verbally
or by writing would not be sufficient to atone for the transgression." To his
credit, he feels remorse. He's apologizing. I mean that's important.
Joseph, to his credit, writes him back and says, in your letter you have asked my
forgiveness which I readily grant. Impressive, even from a pretty difficult fight,
a pretty intense situation.
Last story, and this one illustrates
not just forgiveness in a tough family situation,
but also making some choices about separation,
choosing safety, this is Nephi and his brothers.
In fact, I will just say,
one of the ways my testimony is strengthened
when I read the Book of Mormon is,
when I read these family stories,
I'm saying that is so on target with what families do, even in the subtleties as far as what they say,
how they accuse each other, how they work through things. It's a very human process.
I just read those things. I say, wow, that is exactly what families do. These are interesting stories.
We all know the stories, right?
The brothers had been difficult.
They had beat up Nephi with a stick.
At one point, they're trying to beat him up again.
They're trying to lay hands on him.
Some of the wives talk Laman and Lemuel down.
They calm him down.
They then feel bad and they ask for Nephi's forgiveness.
And he says, I did frankly forgive them
all that they had done.
And I did exhort them that they would pray unto the Lord their God for forgiveness. Impressive.
He could have fought back. He could have resented. He was large in stature. He was probably a
physical young guy. He could have gotten into it, but he didn't. He forgave them. But here's
the piece that I think is quite interesting. Later, it does get worse. Nephi even says something to the
effect like, I'll spare you the details, but suffice it to say they did seek to take away
my life. Like it was really serious domestic violence kind of stuff. There is a separation.
Nephi and his family and the extended family, they go their own way. And that's relevant
because of all these family stories, which show reconciliation, they show growth, they
show forgiveness.
They also show at times, at least in Nephi's case, where there had to be some boundaries
set.
I was in a Q&A recently.
I was watching a therapist give answers to questions.
He didn't use the scriptures at all.
It wasn't a religious meeting.
You take away those scriptures where you can teach these lessons.
It's difficult.
It's a difficult thing because when I get asked a question, I automatically think you just did Jason of well
Let's look at this example in the scriptures. Let's look at this example in the scriptures. They're just so useful that way
That was fun to walk through that. I'm sure there's dozens more
many more
Jason I'm glad you brought this issue up.
That idea of safety, does forgiving mean I'm going to subject myself to further abuse?
Well, of course it doesn't.
I love that Nephi gets to a point where, you know what, we gotta go.
We have to leave this situation.
I can forgive, also know that I have to leave this situation.
I think, I'm glad you're here because
I'd love to hear you talk about that, where that decision has to be made. I can forgive,
but I can't stay.
That's exactly right. Let's talk a little bit about that. Let's first talk about in
more typical situations, then we'll talk about in less safe or dangerous situations. In more
typical situations, through forgiveness,
we learn to be less selfish.
Remember Joseph Smith talked about
how we need to annihilate our selfishness?
One of the ways we do that is just by offering each other
forgiveness and grace.
As I said earlier, we all have differences.
A lot of those differences aren't going to go away,
whether that's how I handle money
versus how my wife handles
money.
I was thinking about this the other day, I thought of a funny thing, which is my wife
and I have a difference in how soon we think a dairy product has gone bad.
I think it has a little more life in it.
She's like, no, we got to get rid of that.
I'll say, no, I think it's okay.
I think we're still okay with this yogurt or this cheese or whatever.
I don't mean a silly example, but that's just a classic difference. So even in healthy relationships, we learn to be cool with
that. Couples over time, again, in healthy relationships learn to give each other grace.
They say, that's just his style, that's her style, and it's not a big deal. In less healthy
situations, people resent it and they sweep it under the rug but don't really and it becomes worse.
But I will say, even from a secular perspective, I have colleagues who study forgiveness, but
it always helps.
Again, not even from a religious perspective, but it is linked to greater marital satisfaction
and relationship longevity.
Couples who have higher levels of forgiveness in their relationship.
It's also linked to lower levels of conflict
and higher levels of emotional closeness. Couples just give each other a break. They let go.
They allow differences. That relates to this idea of being accepting, being flexible, which
is again, a maturity issue. Some things are never going to be solved. You're never going
to change your spouse's personality or the way that they leave their socks on the floor or their style when you go to a party.
We just all have different styles.
And that's just how it is.
There's some quotes here from Marjorie Pay Hinckley, Gordon B Hinckley's wife.
She said, early on, I realized it would be better if we worked harder at getting accustomed
to one another than constantly trying to change each other, which I discovered was impossible.
There must be a little give and take and a great deal of flexibility to make a happy
home.
I love that quote.
Let's just get accustomed to each other than trying to change each other.
She's not talking about heavy duty, serious issues.
She's just talking about the garden variety differences that sometimes couples get hung
up on and they start to make big issues when they're not. It's just that maturity of saying, you or
you, I'm me, together we allow each other to be who we are.
There's one more quote. Even good people wrestle with this. This is from Wendy Watson Nelson.
Wendy Watson, she was a marriage family therapist. She was actually my professor back in the
90s. I really learned a lot from her. She knows a lot about relationships, a really good person.
Russell M. Nelson, we all know, he's a really good person.
They got married later in life.
Two great people ready to get married.
But she says that this is from President Nelson's biography by Sherry Do.
Sister Nelson says,
The beginning of our marriage was more difficult and required more from me and more turning
to the Lord than anything in my life. Those struggles turned me even more to the Lord, which in turn strengthened our marriage was more difficult and required more from me and more turning to the Lord than anything in my life.
Those struggles turned me even more to the Lord, which in turn strengthened our marriage.
To create the kind of marriage we wanted required a lot of work, sacrifice, forgiveness, and
prayer from both of us in the beginning as we intertwined our lives to become one, and
it was worth it."
That's a great reminder that, of course, their situation was unique and probably really complicated, but good people still work at and adjust to and pray and forgive
and have some sacrifice. That's just what relationships are.
My wife loves cats. I do not like cats. We compromised and we have three cats.
Nice.
Teenagers say to you, what?
Oh yeah, teenagers say, that's not a compromise.
I usually say, you're not married.
Like, what did you call it?
Like a garden variety type of issue.
I'm not going to change my wife's love of animals.
So I might as well become accustomed to it.
It's okay. It's okay. We change my wife's love of animals. So I might as well become accustomed to it.
It's okay.
It's okay.
We have a pot-bellied pig.
We have a lot of strange animals running around this house,
including four teenage boys.
We have a lot of them.
This idea of growing and becoming more Christ-like
through forgiveness is one of the reasons
God asks us to forgive repeatedly.
70 times seven.
It implies that there's not a quota.
Sometimes people do say,
well, I've already given you three strikes and you're out.
But I think in typical relationships,
we just work on things and we grow and we improve.
And I will say,
it's easier to forgive when people are humble
and when they are repentant, if they're
asking for forgiveness, if they're saying they're sorry, if they're trying. And research
actually confirms that too, that it's easier to forgive when I can see that you understand
my pain, that you understand why this is hurtful to me, that you've shown empathy, you're showing that you're going to try harder. It builds trust. In the best cases, both
people are working on things and they're improving. That's what helps relationships
grow. However, if only one person is doing that, you have a different situation.
That does happen sometimes where maybe there's not remorse. Maybe there is aggression and things become damaging.
Only one person is saying, I'm working on it and how can I be better?
And they're trying and the other person is not doing that.
They're continuing to say, well, I don't need to change.
You need to change.
That's not a good situation.
There are varying degrees of these problems from mild to moderate to pretty severe.
How does forgiveness apply in those situations?
Let me start with a quote from Elder Holland, back to John's question.
It is important for some of you living in real anguish to note what he did not say,
meaning the Savior.
He did not say, You are not allowed to feel true pain or real sorrow from the shattering
experiences you have had at the hand of another.
Nor did he say, in order to forgive fully, you have to re-enter a toxic relationship
or return to an abusive, destructive circumstance.
Forgiveness is not being forced to continue to feel pain or be blamed for your own mistreatment.
Unfortunately, some people who are manipulative or abusive will twist this doctrine. They will say, well
you have to forgive me. They'll say the greater sin is on you if you don't. They
will say God has forgiven me, why can't you? That's not a sign of repentance and
it's not a healthy sign when somebody is misusing forgiveness
like that. President Nelson has emphasized that as well. This was in one of President
Nelson's Easter messages. He said, forgiving others does not mean condoning sinful or criminal
behavior and it certainly does not mean staying in abusive situations. Having said that, we
can talk a little more about what forgiveness is and what it isn't.
It's easier to forgive someone when they're accountable and they're apologetic.
But it's not dependent on that.
Because if it were, a lot of people would be left helpless to forgive
because the other person isn't necessarily being accountable.
In fact, I was just talking to a woman about a week and a half ago who's in a toxic relationship.
It's quite manipulative.
It's quite psychologically abusive.
It's really ugly.
This is a professional sharp woman who she says, I know better, but I can't
bring myself to get out of the situation until he admits that he is doing this to
me, until he's being accountable, until he's apologizing.
I said, I understand that impulse that you want justice, but I don't know if he's going
to be willing or able to do that.
Some are too caught up in their own denial and their own defense mechanisms.
That's a sad situation, but in that situation, if somebody's waiting for that, it may or
may not happen.
It also doesn't mean to forgive someone
doesn't excuse what they've done, if that makes sense.
It doesn't mean it was okay.
This is where it starts to become this issue
of having faith and trust in God,
because he's the one that is the judge.
We can leave it to him.
We can forgive, get out of a bad situation.
We can forgive and set boundaries.
Forgiveness is about healing and letting go.
It's not necessarily about holding the other person accountable.
That is something that God will take care of.
It's not easy.
I don't want to give that impression that you make this decision and you forgive and
then you're good to go.
It's a challenging process. That's the main point here too, is that it's
probably going to take a lot of help from heaven. We have to talk to our Heavenly
Father, we have to work with the Savior and His Atonement. This relates to this
really great talk that's referred to in the Come Follow Me material for this week
from Sister Yi, from Christian Yi. It's Beauty for Ashes. It's a really powerful talk. She shares a story of her own
struggles growing up in a home that she said was filled with some difficult and unhealthy
circumstances. She refers specifically to her father. She talks a lot about the work
that it took, and she quotes President Nelson here about how the Savior can help.
Here's President Nelson's quote.
Through His infinite atonement, you can forgive those who have hurt you and who may never accept responsibility for their cruelty to you.
It is usually easy to forgive one who sincerely and humbly seeks your forgiveness,
but the Savior will grant you the ability to forgive anyone who has mistreated you in any way, then their hurtful
acts can no longer canker your soul."
And she continues, this is her comment now, she says, the Lord requires us to forgive
for our own good, but he does not ask us to do it without his help, his love, his understanding.
Through our covenants with the Lord,
we can each receive the strengthening power, guidance,
and the help we need to both forgive and to be forgiven.
Please know that forgiving someone does not mean
that you put yourself in a position
where you will continue to be hurt.
We can work toward forgiving someone
and still feel prompted by the Spirit to stay away from them.
Thank you, Jason.
I thought Sister Yi was incredibly courageous to talk about that.
There were probably thousands who were so grateful that she did.
Sometimes there's the idea, I have to stay at the risk of my own safety.
Do you ever encounter that?
A lot. Sometimes people feel like because they have entered into a marriage, for example,
and made a covenant, made a commitment, that they have to stay regardless. I would say when I
interviewed at BYU for the job here at BYU, one of the things that happens is you talk to a general
authority about the job. I told this general authority that I study abuse and domestic violence.
We talked about this idea that sometimes in the church people either suffer in
silence not knowing that things are as unhealthy as they are or that they feel
like they are trapped and they have to stay because they made a commitment or
they made a covenant in the temple. He said people don't realize that when
abuse is happening, when things have gotten that
damaging, that that no longer is a celestial relationship.
That's not a covenant relationship.
People have broken covenants at that point.
I will have that conversation with people at times.
One of the things I will talk about is, I'm a father of children who are married.
I wouldn't want my child to stay in a situation where it was damaging to their dignity, to their spirituality, to their psyche.
I don't think our Heavenly Father expects us to stay in damaging situations just because we made a commitment at one point
that one person now no longer is keeping that commitment to honor and to cherish and to love.
I think it's a complex situation
and that every case is different,
but as Sister Ye said and as President Nelson said
and as Elder Holland said,
forgiveness is about healing and letting go of.
It's not about being forced to stay in a bad situation.
Now, when someone says,
you gotta be more Christ-like and forgive me,
I don't think they've read the New Testament.
There are plenty of times where Christ forgives someone,
but has some pretty firm boundaries.
Like Nazareth. Remember the city of Nazareth, John?
This is his hometown.
The attempts to murder him,
at least to what we know, he never goes back.
Never went back again.
He never went back. He refused to speak to Herod.
He let Peter know when he had crossed a line a couple of times.
The idea that Jesus doesn't have boundaries is not based in Scripture.
I like to mention to the young adults, there's kind of a difference, I think,
between a temple
wedding and a celestial marriage.
You can get married in the temple, then your life is working toward a celestial marriage.
Yeah.
In best case scenarios, both people are working towards that type of celestial relationship.
They are apologizing and they're growing and they're repenting and they're trying to listen
to each other.
In other unhealthy situations, one or both are not.
They are not taking accountability or they're saying or doing things that are damaging or
they're saying the other person needs to change, but they're not going to change.
In fact, that is a divorce predictor is this idea of not accepting influence from the other person needs to change, but they're not going to change. In fact, that is a divorce predictor, is this idea of not accepting influence from the other person.
You see it all the time in abusive relationships. You see people saying, well, I don't really
care that your mom is coming over. I'm not changing my plans. Or I don't really care
that you want to go to that restaurant. I don't want to go. That's this idea that instead
of compromise and being open, working things back and forth, whether it's around money or housework or intimacy.
If one person's saying, it's not my problem, it's your problem, I'm not changing,
that's not a healthy sign.
It's also related to this idea of defensiveness or blame,
back to the importance of humility and accountability.
It takes some difficult deliberation. Each case is
different. There's not a blanket recommendation for what to do in difficult circumstances,
but at times people need to protect themselves.
Well, I love this verse where the Lord says, I the Lord will forgive whom I will forgive." It lets us know he's got better visibility, he knows how to
read hearts, he sees the whole situation, he's saying, don't worry about my part of this. Of you
it's required to forgive all men. I will forgive whom I will forgive. He knows what he's doing.
I like that we can trust that.
It's impossible for me to forgive this person.
You might say, that's right. It's impossible for you to do it, but with God, all things are possible.
It may require that.
It may require the only way you're going to be able to forgive is with God's help.
As you said earlier, Jason.
Yeah.
I like how you said God has a different perspective than we do.
Sometimes, in fact, a lot of times,
people do hurtful things because they themselves
have had their own hurtful, damaging experiences.
God can take that into account.
He can sort through that in a way that we probably can't.
I will say that sometimes is a factor
in letting go of and forgiving. For example,
when I'm talking to somebody about a parent who was difficult when they were young, we have the
conversation about, well, what was your mother's or father's life like growing up? What were the
challenges that they faced? It kind of helps put it into a little different perspective and might
help them let go of some things. It doesn't excuse
the things that happen. It doesn't take away the damage, but it can help someone soften
a little bit and say, you know what, they had their own abuse history. I'm going to
let God sort through that with them. And I'm going to ask God to help me to let go of those
things as part of my forgiveness, even if there's boundaries set.
Jason, I have a question that I'm not sure if there is an answer,
but I would love to hear your thoughts.
I know we want to spend more time in section 64, but I'm fascinated by this.
We talked about there's some times where people are people, we adjust, we accommodate.
And we talked about sometimes there's a time to set a boundary and say,
that's not okay, I'm going to remove myself from this situation
Is there a time where we can get those two mixed up?
We've talked about the one where we think this is an abusive situation
There's probably a time to set a firm boundary
Is there a time that sometimes it goes the opposite direction where I'm setting boundaries in places?
Where I need to be a little
more accommodating. I bring it up for this reason. I post on Instagram
frequently about boundaries. I think they're important. I know I'm gonna get
two responses. One is thank you so much, this needs to be talked about more. The
other is something like this. My daughter has cut me and my husband
completely out of her life.
We have no contact with our grandchildren.
She calls it boundaries.
Can you comment on that?
Have you seen that?
Yes, that is such a good question.
I've seen the exact thing that you're describing, which is there is a time and place for setting
boundaries.
There's a lot to be said for safety.
That's a carefully considered issue
when people choose to do that.
However, I hear the same stories that you just mentioned.
I've had people come see me saying,
my children have cut me off.
I can't see them or the grandchildren.
Obviously every case is different.
You have to be sensitive to that.
Because sometimes things are very damaging.
Having said that, I hear a lot of circumstances where I think that to me sounds like a case
where there could be reconciliation and discussion and interaction, where there could be forgiveness
and a relationship, even if maybe some boundaries need to be set.
To cut off from a family relationship is a huge step.
I have read articles and have heard stories from colleagues about this very
issue where I think sometimes people are overstating or over-setting boundaries
or not forgiving, even when there could be healthy relationships or at
least functional relationships.
One of the things that happens, you know, we talked about these phrases of seeking occasions.
One of the things that's a little bit problematic about our current online culture is if somebody is
seeking occasion or seeking flaws within their own family, they take that case to the world and
they say, I have been abused and this has happened.
Other people are likely to pile on and say, that sounds terrible.
I don't think that's the place to adjudicate your family problems because we said earlier,
people are going to pile on and they're going to see what they, the case they've been presented
with.
They're not going to see the whole situation.
Sometimes people claim abuse. That's kind of a loaded term.
I will say as somebody who studies abuse,
it's not always easy to disentangle.
Some things we know, physical abuse, sexual aggression,
but psychological abuse is sometimes psychological abuse,
and sometimes it's just differences.
Sometimes people are saying,
you're abusing me when really they're having some differences
or maybe they're being held accountable for something
that they don't want to be accountable for.
Sometimes people are not forgiving situations
where forgiveness could apply
and relationships could still be functional and be just fine.
I think of that phrase of seeking occasion.
I also think of the phrase of seeking occasion. I also think of
the phrase of stirring up anger because people do that when they post online. They're justifying their own behaviors by saying, look how terrible this thing is. And other people will pile on.
But there's also another Book of Mormon phrase that might be relevant here, which is,
they refused to be comforted. Sometimes people are not open to forgiveness or reconciliation or comfort that could happen in a healthy conversation.
They're going to hang on to their grudges and they're going to nurture those and they're going to use those or weaponize those.
I certainly don't want to be judgmental because there are situations where I think people have cut off from quite dangerous and ugly situations,
but I think there's also plenty others
that are bumpy and difficult,
but certainly could be worked through.
You just don't know the situation.
I get a comment on Instagram.
I obviously have no idea what's going on.
Man, I think if you've got a person
who wants to be in your life,
who wants to bless your life, it's hard.
It's really hard.
There are professional resources.
There's a lot of family therapists out there.
There are places that conversations I think could take place in a safe
space to work through.
If somebody has hard feelings or somebody felt like something was done,
families are imperfect.
Things are done and said, and feelings are hurt and fights happen.
I'm not trying to minimize any of that, but I will also say part of learning to be Christ-like in who we are is learning
to forgive and work through stuff when it's possible. When people want to, back to that
issue of if people are wanting to have a relationship, if they're wanting to work on it, that's a
good sign. Even pretty difficult things can be forgiven in that circumstance.
And I work with people who have struggled with addictions or betrayals or affairs. Forgiveness
can still happen depending on where people are at with those situations. Jason, do you think that
somehow we have created, at least in the last, I don't know, 50, 100 years, 50 years, a generation of people who are,
I don't want to say too offended,
but did our grandparents, were they able to work out
their differences better than we are?
Because I can't go online and get all the justification I need
to cut off a family member.
Am I too sensitive?
That's a great question.
Yes, at some level, for
some of the reasons I've said before, which is that it's easy to get our reasons justified,
like you said online, it's easy to go and say, can you believe this thing happened?
And everyone says, no, I can't believe that thing happened. We do it in our political
discussions, it sells, it works. It also is sort of validating. I mentioned earlier that
quote from Terry Warner, he has some discussions about forgiveness where he has talked about
how even professional groups or sometimes therapy can reinforce this idea that you have
been victimized and you should be indignant and you should be angry. Again, that's a tricky
balance because people genuinely are victimized at times.
That's fair to say.
People have terrible traumas and victimizations.
That is of course true and I never want to minimize that.
But it's also true that sometimes then people lean into, how do I say that, the victimized,
angry, retaliatory role instead of saying, I've been hurt, now I need to find healing,
I need to move on and I even need to forgive and choose healthier boundaries. That's different
than I'm going to go talk to other people about how horrible men are or how horrible relationships
are or families are or grandparents are or families are, or grandparents are, or whatever
it is.
People can get into that kind of mindset.
I mean, there's mother blame.
People shift into a negative victim mindset.
You have to have that conversation with yourself and with God and with those that you know
and trust to sort through those things because those are difficult conversations.
There's genuine victims, but it's also true that from the victimized position, people
can do some bad things in return.
People almost always, when they're hurting others, say that they're the victim.
So it makes our jobs tricky, but that's the reality of it.
You said earlier, my job isn't necessarily to change my spouse or anybody else. Maybe I'm trying to use my
boundaries to get them to change. Something that they don't need to change.
Yeah, maybe. But there's better ways to ask for change. Earlier, you know, we were talking about
Sister Hinckley and others who say it's better to be flexible. That is true. But it doesn't mean
that you can't have conversations and say, Hey, when you said that thing, that hurt my feelings.
Or when I did this big job and cleaned the house,
then you trashed the kitchen, that bothered me.
You can have those conversations.
You can ask for understanding and even apologies.
But that's different than becoming aggressive or setting boundaries
and saying, I'm never talking to you again because you did that thing.
Wow. Well, thanks for that.
That's a sensitive topic.
I mean, we're getting into relationships
with the most intimate parts of people's lives.
And here we are trying to be helpful.
Some people on the day they get married, they say,
I want my spouse to stay just the way they are right now.
The other one's thinking,
okay, now I can mold them into what I really want. I love that we have the
opportunity to have a covenant marriage, to have God be part of it. With that
covenant relationship, we can grow and improve together. I love the way the
gospel gives us that God is part of our marriage.
I love that doctrine.
It's essential.
Like our relationships are not an impediment
that those bumps and those differences,
that is what it's all about.
You think about the kids you have.
It's interesting, you look around at your kids
or your siblings and you say,
boy, we all have very different personalities.
I don't know if I would choose to hang out with this person if we just met at a party, but they're my
sibling or they're my kids. So of course we're family. We work that out. It's kind of great.
We have those challenging situations that lead to growth. They're not always easy, but
it's part of becoming more like the savior is, who has all these virtues of kindness and
patience and mercy. We, in our better moments, learn those things. A lot of that learning
happens in family situations.
Coming up in part two of this episode.
This wasn't that long ago. I said, of all the things you've done to change to get to
this better place, because it wasn't looking good ago. I said, of all the things you've done to change to get to this better place, because
it wasn't looking good and people were saying, you guys got to get divorced, but here you
are doing better.
Everything isn't perfect, but you guys are doing way better.
I said, what has made the biggest change for you?
Immediately, he said, the gospel of Jesus Christ.
And I said, really, tell me more about that.
And he said, my relationship with the Savior, he got a little emotional, this helped me to soften and to see things that I was doing in ways
that I was being hurtful that I didn't see before because I was still just in my own
pain.