followHIM - Doctrine & Covenants Section 1 Part 1 • Dr. J.B. Haws • January 6 - January 12 • Come Follow Me

Episode Date: January 1, 2025

What can you learn from the preface of a book of scripture? Dr. JB Haws explores the background to Doctrine and Covenants 1, including resources to help aid study in 2025.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish...: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC202ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC202FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC202DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC202PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastDC202ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/NIUXQP_LC3sALL 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 I - Dr. JB Haws00:34 Intro01:06 Hopes for 202502:39 Come, Follow Me Manual04:17 D&C 1 - Preface 07:00 Background to Section 110:07 William McLellin’s account 13:16 Matt 14 parallels15:47 Young members and 10,000 copies18:28 Book of Commandments background25:22 Order of the sections27:36 Joseph Smith Papers website32:36 Resources for 202537:25 Order of sections38:38 “Typology of opposites”40:21 D&C 1:1  - Audience42:45 D&C 1:2-3 - Attention and typology of opposites46:39 D&C 1:16 - Idolatry and Scripture Citation Index50:35 D&C 1:14-17 - Relationships and calamities55:41 D&C 1:19-28 - Weak things of the world58:45 God proves He wrote the section01:02:05  End of Part 1 - Dr. JB HawsThanks 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 TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika : Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Coming up in this episode on Follow Him. A C.S. Lewis quote that just as rings true to me is, we might think that the Lord wanted obedience to a set of rules, whereas He really wants people of a particular sort. That's what I think Doctrine and Covenants 1 is calling us to. Are we becoming people of a particular sort? Is this who we are? Is this who we want to be? Hello, my friends. Welcome to another episode of follow him my name is hank smith and i am your host and i'm here with my co-host john by the way the only true
Starting point is 00:00:35 and living co-host upon the face of the whole earth which with i hank smith am well pleased yes i am living. I can verify. Yep, I'm still alive. He's still hanging on, folks. John, we are also very blessed to have Dr. J.B. Haas with us. He's been with us before, and he is a good friend and an amazing teacher. Welcome, J.B. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:01:02 Thank you. So glad to be here with both of you. This is great. We are going to have a lot of fun. Let me ask both of you, as we are beginning this year's study of the Doctrine and Covenants and church history, as you look down the road and for our listeners, what are you hoping happens? John, let's start with you.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Looking at these revelations and hearing the voice of the Lord, who was it, Hank, that talked about the red letter edition of the Bible and how if you had a red ink edition of the Doctrine and Covenants, the whole thing would be red, you know, almost the whole thing. Yeah. JB, what are you thinking? My mind went almost to the same place as John's. I love that sense of, like Elder Maxwell said, the thundering directness of Sinai, youai, that we're hearing the voice of the Lord all throughout these sections. I also love this line from the introduction to the Doctrine and Covenants that these are real people in real situations getting real answers to prayers. That kind of concrete process of watching revelation happen is all throughout
Starting point is 00:02:00 the Doctrine and Covenants. And that means something for us trying to get revelation in our lives. Beautiful. And speaking of revelation, us trying to get revelation in our lives. Yeah, beautiful. And speaking of revelation, one thing I love is we have the benefit of living long after these revelations and you can see the Lord laying things out a little bit at a time for the prophet and for the rest of the saints. And we see it and we think,
Starting point is 00:02:21 oh, I know what's coming. He begins to even mention Zion. Oh, the cause of Zion, the people of Zion. And you and I are thinking, oh, I know what that's going to eventually turn into, but it's fun to look at it and go, wow, they didn't know. As the Lord gives them a little piece at a time. John and JB, our lesson today is entitled Harken O.E. People. And we're just have one section of the Doctrine and Covenants, Doctrine and Covenants section one. I'm going to read from the Come Follow Me manual.
Starting point is 00:02:51 And then JB, let's hand the reins over to you. John and I are excited to see where we go. Here's how it starts. November 1831. The restored church of Jesus Christ was just a year and a half old. Though growing, it was still a little-known group of believers living in relatively small towns, led by a prophet in his mid-twenties. But God considered these believers to be his servants and his messengers, and he wanted the revelations he had given them to be published to the whole world.
Starting point is 00:03:24 Doctrine and Covenants section 1 is the Lord's preface or introduction to these revelations. It clearly shows that even though the membership of the church was small, there was nothing small about the message God wanted His saints to share. It is a voice of warning for all the inhabitants of the earth, teaching them to repent and establish God's everlasting covenant. The servants carrying this message are the weak and the simple. Sounds like the three of us today.
Starting point is 00:03:52 Yeah. But humble servants are just what God calls for, then and now, to bring his church out of obscurity and out of darkness. What an opener. So JB, with that, how do you want to take on Doctrine and Covenants 1? How do you want to introduce the Doctrine and Covenants to us? Because this is
Starting point is 00:04:13 our very first lesson in the text. Oh, fantastic. I love that opener for the Come Follow Me manual. What a well-written and well-framed, and I think very exciting, drawing us in, hooking us in. Doctrine and Covenants 1 is such a great place to start, not only because it is the preface, but because I think it does some things for the whole Doctrine and Covenants. It's a place where historical context really makes this section come alive. So I think it's worth talking about what's happening and what's the historical story behind this section. The other thing I love about Doctrine and Covenants 1 that I think will be great to talk about is how does it set up, how does it frame the rest of the book, the themes that will help us think about the Doctrine and Covenants throughout our
Starting point is 00:04:56 study of it. Doctrine and Covenants 1 reminds us over and over again how fortunate we are to have prophets, that this is the Lord's pattern, that the Lord works through servants and what a miracle it is to have those. Those are a couple of things that I see in Doctrine and Covenants 1. Yeah. The restoration bursts onto the scene in this section, right, JB? It is not a, hey, let's fade this in. It's big. Yeah. Well said. Do you know what I love about that intro you read is that's so good this is a handful of people in a handful of towns with a 20 year old prophet but you read this section and it's like it's it's big enough for today for 17 million you read it and you think wow it worked
Starting point is 00:05:40 for them it works for us now yeah, JB, almost like a patriarchal blessing where you're going, I'm a very small person. I'm usually pretty young. Someone gets a patriarchal blessing. And here are these great big prophecies, these great big promises. You're almost thinking there's something bigger in mind here than just this small little group. So yeah, JB, let's do a little historical context. Well, I think the first thing we notice when we come to, Doug and I come to section one, we're looking at the section heading, is we notice the date. This section is out of order chronologically.
Starting point is 00:06:18 So comes November 1831 and it's Hanks, that great intro that you read. The church is in existence, organized a year and a half earlier. And so we asked the question, maybe first off, why is this section out of order chronologically when so many of the other sections are going to, we're going to follow pretty much a chronological sequence. I think that is the story. This section was given as a revelation to be a preface and the Lord calls it my preface to this book of commandments. That's what makes this section I think special and stand out is that it's place of honor as a revealed preface. The Lord wanted us to encounter this before we study the Doctrine and Covenants.
Starting point is 00:06:59 How's this coming about? What's the setting that brings this together? Joseph Smith has been putting revelations to paper for a couple of years now, starting probably with what we have as Doctrine and Covenants 3 seems to be the first one that he dictated or wrote down or committed to paper. And so we've had now a collection of 60-ish revelations that have been written down. A conference that happens in Hiram, Ohio on November 1st and 2nd, 1831. So Joseph and Emma have been living for a couple of months with John and Elsa Johnson in Hiram, Ohio. And we just have to say, everyone should put on their list of the visit, the Johnson farm in Hiram, Ohio. If you had a church history trip, that is
Starting point is 00:07:40 one of the all-time great church history sites. That home is just remarkable. The conference meets there. Ten elders are coming together. And the high on their agenda, prime on their agenda is, should the revelations be printed? You can think about why that question is probably roiling around in their minds. These revelations are meant for the world. The message is so powerful. But they only have handwritten copies. And maybe you can get a copy if you pass by someone who has a copy,
Starting point is 00:08:11 or if you're in around Joseph Smith and you handwrite something. But the question is, how do we get these more accessible? Now, that also raises some questions in other people's minds. Should they be printed? Are these the kind of things that we want the world to have? Does this put us in a precarious spot with some of the bold claims in the restoration? Are the revelations ready to be printed? Are they in the kind of format that we're going to be happy to show to the world? So all these questions are all about in the minds. One thing I think also too, was that there were some enemies of the church who were making some
Starting point is 00:08:43 claims about the revelations, what was in them, and especially the kind of claims against Joseph Smith's character and the things that the revelations were instructing people to do that simply weren't true or don't show up in the revelations. So perhaps publishing could exonerate the prophet and show that the rumors were false. So all of these things are in the mix. In the conference, they vote to print 10,000 copies of the revelations. That goes so well with what I think John said about this being big enough for the world. I mean, this is double the print run of the Book of Mormon, the initial print run of the Book of Mormon. And you just think about what this says with the membership of the church at the time, how small they are, but what they're thinking about looking forward, we're going to print 10,000 copies of these revelations. They have a big vision.
Starting point is 00:09:29 There we go. Yeah. They really sense that this is meant for the world. And so in this conference, and maybe this is also helpful to think about Doctrine and Covenants 1 is it situates itself chronologically with a couple of other revelations of Doctrine and Covenants. So Doctrine and Covenants 67, the conversation about when the elders are worrying and maybe having some concerns about the language and are the revelations polished enough. Doctrine and Covenants 68, great instruction about whatsoever you speak by the power of the Spirit is the mind of the Lord, the will of the Lord, and is scripture. That comes out from the same conference. Then a testimony that the elders sign, affirming sort of like the testimony
Starting point is 00:10:12 of the three witnesses and the eight witnesses, affirming, putting their testimony to paper, that they sign the divinity of these revelations. Either at this conference or the day after, what we now know as Doctrine and Covenants 133, which was intended as an appendix to the revelations. So we have this flurry of revelations at this conference and the decision to print 10,000 copies. And so the question comes up, and this seems to be the account we have that I think gives the best account is a William McClellan account.
Starting point is 00:10:41 He's remembering this several decades later, but it seems to fit all of the circumstantial evidence that we have, was that some of the elders were writing a preface. They wanted to introduce this book. Then William McClellan says, the elders picked at the pieces and asked Joseph Smith
Starting point is 00:10:59 if he could seek the Lord's revelation for a preface. Then William McClellan gives this great description that Joseph stands by the window and slowly dictates sentence by sentence as Sidney Rigdon writes this down. That's the account of where the preface comes from. And who is William McClellan, JB, for those of us who are pretty new? This is great too, because William McClellan is new on the scene and you can feel his enthusiasm. He is a new convert, a school teacher who encounters missionaries, is so thrilled, comes to Hiram, Ohio to meet Joseph Smith. And also in the same timeframe, he's just had a revelation dictated for him. What we now have is doctrine coming in 66. He's in the mix,
Starting point is 00:11:42 part of this conference, a new convert and going to become one of the original 12 apostles, but feeling the thrill of this. And he plays a role in this because he also, by the accounts, was the one who made the attempts to duplicate a revelation or write a revelation when others were criticizing it.
Starting point is 00:12:02 What we have in Doctrine and Covenants 67 is part of that experiment and lends his voice of testimony to the revelations and the divinity of those. Do you think, JB, that the Lord said, yeah, go ahead, give it a try, write the preface, and that'll help you appreciate what you're going to get? Yeah. I like that reading. And that'll help you appreciate what you're going to get. of affirming the testimony for everyone else involved. I like that reading of saying, as you go through this process and realize how futile that effort is or how difficult it is, that it proved to be an important mark of testimony or confirmation, maybe a way of saying it, another piece of evidence for those who participated and bolstered their willingness to affirm these revelations are
Starting point is 00:13:05 special. There's something different about them. I wonder if that's Nephi too. We went in, tried to get the plates our way and the Lord said, all right, let's try my way. Let's see what happens. I love that backstory in section 67. If I can jump over to New Testament for a minute, you guys all know the story of Matthew 14 of Jesus walking on the water and them seeing him and Peter saying, Lord, if it be thou, bid me come unto thee on the water. And he does it. And then when he saw the wind boisterous, he began to sink. I love the Elder Holland comment about while his eyes were on jesus the wind could
Starting point is 00:13:46 toss his hair the spray could drench his robes but all was well he was coming to christ it was only when he took his eyes off the savior and you go to section 67 and i'd love this okay your eyes have been upon joseph and his language you have known and his imperfections you have known, this also you have known, but look at the revelations. There is no imperfection in them. And then it's this, let me write the preface, and it's, whoa, that message of your eyes are in the wrong place. What are you looking at? Who in the world could have written this? You read section one and you just think, who could speak in the name of God that way?
Starting point is 00:14:26 Because that's not anybody's voice but the Lord's. To read it, like you said, JB, well, I'll give it a try and I'll give it a try. And then you read, Joseph stands by the window, as William McClellan said, and gets this. And it's like, wow. Listen to the authority that's talking here in section one. To me, that's a really cool message of your eyes have been in the wrong place. Now look to me and here we go. I love that Matthew 14 connection, John.
Starting point is 00:14:55 That's really powerful. I think this is something that we see again and again, and maybe that we all have to confront as we think about looking forward to the Doctrine and Covenants. This is in a lot of ways is the Hiram Page moment, the Oliver Cowdery moment. When Doctrine and Covenants 28, we have these situations where there are other claimants for revelation or people who are claiming that they've received the revelations as they learn outside their stewardship. And the thing that I love is again and again, the answer that comes back is there's something different about the revelations that are coming through the prophet
Starting point is 00:15:29 Joseph Smith and they sense it. So that Hiram Page renounces the seer stone. Oliver Cowdery agrees to talk to Hiram Page and to work this out and to disavow those revelations. There was just something different they could tell. I love those repeated moments that we're going to see in the Doctrine and Covenants story. John, I'm sure this is something we're going to bring up over and over, but Joseph Smith in November of 31 is 25. In our world, he's a kid. I have students at BYU who are 25. JB, what's Joseph Smith like at 25? I mean, he's been tutored for quite a while, but when I have read about him, he is not the Joseph Smith of 1843, 1844, you know, those couple of years before he dies. He is still learning here.
Starting point is 00:16:21 Oh, yeah, absolutely. That kind of perspective is always helpful when we think about the Joseph Smith and not just Joseph Smith, but all of his associates. I mean, we are talking about a group of young people who are leading this work and are engaged in this. I think it's also worth saying he's already faced some pretty difficult things. He's already faced some family tragedies, the loss of children. He's already had a lot of displacement in his life, moving around a lot. He's also already started to engage in some very big projects like the building of Zion in Missouri. And so we have sort of two church centers now. He's living in Ohio, but through him, the Lord has called individuals to be building up Zion in the Jackson County, Missouri area. So he's now managing two church centers. He's on the cusp of
Starting point is 00:17:12 some pretty difficult persecution that's going to be happening in Hiram, Ohio. Four months after Doctrine and Covenants 1 comes the March 1832 Tarring and Feathering. He's translating the Bible. That's one of these big projects at the Johnson Farm. And so he's in the middle of that. That's another thing that can help us think about what he's thinking about all of this time, sending out missionaries and saying, we're writing this gospel to the world.
Starting point is 00:17:39 It's big. He's 25 and the work has just really ballooned. Yeah. To me, remembering that makes it come to life in a way where you think, how is this possible? I look back on my 20s and think, I had no idea what I was doing. And yet here he is being used as this instrument. Yeah. Sitting there going, let's do, let say 10 000 copies oh wait wait wait what who do we think we are who does god know we are who does joseph know we are and what's coming to
Starting point is 00:18:14 print 10 000 copies few people in a few towns with a 20 something year old prophet well let's make 10 000 copies that's right jb do they call it the Doctrine and Covenants? Good question. No, the first edition of this book is going to be called the Book of Commandments. Here is kind of a replica. So small pocket size, the idea was that we could be more transportable, easily carried by elders as they're traveling. Now, JB, you are either Andre the Giant or that is a very small book. Will you hold that up again? Is that smaller than your phone?
Starting point is 00:18:53 Definitely smaller than my phone, yes. So pocket-sized. I'm so glad you brought this up, Hank, because I think we shouldn't move too quickly past this title. This is the idea that it's going to be called the book of commandments. And we see that in section one, verse six, my preface under the book of my commandments. And I think it's worth pausing on this because this word gives us a window into the way early
Starting point is 00:19:20 saints thought about these revelations. To me, one of the great stories that brings this to clarity is something that Joseph Knight remembered about an interaction he had with Martin Harris. So as Joseph Knight's remembering this, it's March 1830. The Book of Mormon is hot off the press. Joseph Knight is watching Martin Harris having a conversation with Joseph Smith. Martin Harris, Joseph Knight says, is carrying several copies of this newly printed Book of Mormon. And he's panicked. He said, no one's going to buy them.
Starting point is 00:19:49 There's an intentional boycott. People are just going to reject this. And Martin, of course, he has a big stake in this. His farm is on the line. And he's panicked. And he says to Joseph Smith, no one's going to buy these books. We're in trouble.
Starting point is 00:20:04 And then he says this great line. And I think in today's vernacular, we would say, I must have a revelation. I must have some inspiration. But he says, I must have a commandment. I need a commandment. And what he meant was, I need a revelation. Joseph Knight ties this to section 19. What Joseph Smith said was, pay heed to what you've already have, the revelation you've already received, section 19, what Joseph Smith said was pay heed to what you've already have, the revelation you've already received, section 19. But I love that Martin Harris in this moment of need, he says, I need a commandment. I must have a commandment. That's his word for a revelation from the Lord. We see that all over the early Doctrine and Covenants and the early saints kind of language
Starting point is 00:20:40 is that they think of these as commandments. I like to ask myself that question, how would I approach this book differently if I think in terms of commandments, these revelations are commandments. The Lord wants us to do something. These are messages of action. I love that title. I think it's worth us keeping the back of our mind that another equivalent for the word revelation in these sections could be commandment. Almost to hear the Lord saying, I've got big things in mind. Follow me on this. Yeah. I love that insight, JB. It's not, here's a book of some sound advice, take it or leave it. This is a book of commandments. What's the first word, Hank? Harken. It's not just hear this,
Starting point is 00:21:23 hear it and obey it here it comes i also love that martin harris attitude and i think man how could i have more of that that i want a commandment i must have a commandment i want direction it's like are you sure yeah that's right that's right yeah you're gonna get more than you bargained for. Yeah, I need to hear it. I need to have something to have faith in. Let me hold the paper. In response to this conference and this decision to print 10,000 copies, John Whitmer and Oliver Cowdery
Starting point is 00:21:54 take the manuscript copies of the revelations that John Whitmer mostly had been faithfully copying into a manuscript book. And then they travel from Ohio to Missouri, where W.W. Phelps had been called to be the church's printer. Where the press is. That's exactly right. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 00:22:13 That's sort of our last step of moving from handwritten copies of the revelations to printed copies is that they're going to carry the manuscript copies of the revelations to Missouri for W.W. Phelps to print them. These 10,000 copies they decide to print need to be printed from over a thousand miles away in Jackson County. Now, JB, this is a big question to ask, but if I'm new to the church, new to church history, who is in Missouri? Why Missouri? First Vision, New York, Emma Smith,
Starting point is 00:22:48 Pennsylvania, right on the border of New York. I think in my mind as I'm reading, oh, they go to Ohio right there in this section heading. I know they're in Ohio. And then all of a sudden J.B. Hawes brings up, oh yeah, we need to print this all the way out in Missouri. I know this is a lot to ask, but what would you say is a brief background for someone who's kind of new to this? Yeah, excellent question. That is one of the things that makes Doctrine and Covenants 1 both intriguing and interesting, but also requires a little bit of digging into the history because it comes out of order. So there's some of the story that we have to fill in. I think you mentioned it early, Hank, is these hints about Zion we're
Starting point is 00:23:25 going to see coming up in all of these early revelations. As we come to section 28 and then through the early 30s of the Doctrine and Covenants sections, the Lord is calling a group of missionaries to travel from New York to what we now know as the state of Missouri on the edge of what was Indian territory in 1830s United States. And so this group of missionaries led by Oliver Cowdery, I'm going to also include Parley P. Pratt, Peter Whitmer Jr., Ziba Peterson, they are going to travel that really long distance to the border of the Lamanites. They stop in Kirtland, Ohio area. That's where Parley P. Pratt had been living. He had some deep acquaintances there. They meet Sidney Rigdon and Sidney Rigdon's followers. In the matter of a couple of weeks, several hundred people have
Starting point is 00:24:16 joined the church and are baptized. The missionaries that are headed to Missouri continue on. They end up in Independence, Jackson County, Missouri. Sidney Rigdon, who had joined the church in Ohio, goes and meets Joseph Smith. And then Joseph Smith receives a revelation for the New York Saints to gather in Ohio. So that's why they moved to the Kirtland area. Then in the summer of 1831, Joseph Smith makes a trip to Independence, Missouri, and there are several others who are called to live there. Edward Partridge, W.W. Phelps is the printer, and the revelation is that this There's the building up of Zion, Independence, Jackson County, Missouri area. And then the church where Joseph Smith is living and headquartered in the Kirtland, Ohio area. We have these two church centers going because of the projects and the revelation from the Lord to have different people in different places. So those of you who are listening, you feel
Starting point is 00:25:23 pretty new to this. Don't be frustrated if you're a little confused. What JB just talked about, this will play out. In fact, section one, if we actually put it in order, where would it be, JB? Between section 67? Yeah, 67, 67 and 68 happened at the same conference. Yep, exactly right. So we have a lot to learn before we understand the story that you're telling us thoroughly. Yeah. Okay, I think I can pause and say, all right, I might not know all these places and people, but eventually I will as I keep studying. Yeah, definitely.
Starting point is 00:25:58 I think that's a very good way to say it is that there's something about this section that the Lord wants us to see first, but we shouldn't be intimidated that we don't have the story yet because after this section, most of the sections move in chronological order. And as we work through them, we'll pick up that story. And then when we get to 67 to 68, we'll say, oh yeah. Okay. I really like that. I don't like heading into things a little confused, but if I know, hey, eventually you're going to get to know this. Maybe this is a little odd to say, but it's almost like a movie that the opening scene is somewhere in the middle of the movie. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:26:34 And then you've got to go backwards and see the whole story up to that point. So when you see that opening scene in a movie, you're thinking, who are these people? What's happening? I don't know anything about this. Oh, we're going to go back. And by the time we get back to that point, you'll know everything. No, I think it's a good analogy. And I also think that helps not any of us to feel intimidated that we're encountering this kind of midstream, mid-story. Yeah, it's kind of like if you write a book, Hank, or if you write a book, JB, you kind of know what's going to happen. But these are
Starting point is 00:27:04 revelations that are ongoing. I can see how the Lord could write a pre, JB, you kind of know what's going to happen, but these are revelations that are ongoing. I can see how the Lord could write a preface and say, let me go back and tell you what this all is, this book of commandments. I frequently tell my students when they write a paper, don't write your opening two paragraphs until you've written the paper. Because you just don't know what you're going to tell me. So write it, then come back and tell me what you're going to tell me. That's a good way to look at the preface. Let me tell you what I'm about to tell you, because it is so big and grand, this preface. Yeah. As we're thinking about the overall year of studying the Doctrine and Covenants,
Starting point is 00:27:40 I wanted to mention one resource that I think can be a great study aid for the Doctrine and Covenants is the Documents series. What the Joseph Smith Papers editors have done with the Documents series is they've put in chronological order all of the relevant Joseph Smith documents. That means all of the sections of the Doctrine and Covenants, all of the revelations, show up in chronological order. And they have these fantastic, brief, but really thorough historical introductions for every section. Maybe the best way, the easiest way to navigate it is when you click on the documents tab, it shows you year by year. So you'll see 1829, 1830, 1831. You can look at the date in the section heading of the Doctrine and Covenants, click on that year, find the month, and then you
Starting point is 00:28:45 can click on that section. They have in the date of the revelation, and then they have in parentheses the section number in the Doctrine and Covenants. You can click on that. So you can see the earliest transcript of the revelation, which is very cool to see. But then you can click the historical introduction, and it gives beautiful background of what's happening at that time. That might be a great way to get the story. If you want to familiarize yourself, okay, what's happening when this section is being revealed? That Doctrine and Covenants, the document section of the Joseph Smith Papers website is invaluable. Yeah. And these are high resolution photos. I'm zooming in here going, you can go in pretty far. You can look at the ink in the page.
Starting point is 00:29:26 There's another thing that brings the story to life. You're seeing these handwritten revelations being put to the paper. The first times they were put in English, you are looking at it. That's right, yeah. And JB, I love your initials, by the way. JB, what did we hear in our master's program over and over again? Go to original sources. Go to original sources.
Starting point is 00:29:51 And what are we looking at? The source document. Right on. They have source notes for every document. So it'll tell you, is this the original? Is this a copy of the original in almost every case that Joseph Smith paper letters have worked to find the earliest known existing copy of these revelations, which is fantastic. And I've noticed JB, maybe you already mentioned this, but I've got the original document on this
Starting point is 00:30:16 side. And then on the right-hand side, I actually get the words. So if I can't quite read it. Right. Exactly. Wow. This is fun. My wife does not allow me on the joseph smith papers website because i get lost i disappear for hours i know yeah yeah it is so good the other thing talking about not being able to read it uh jb will you hold up that book of commandments again did they not have eye problems back there i see the church history movies and they're singing out of hymn books that are that small and i'm like tiny little or eye problems a 21st century thing how did they read that stuff benjamin franklin's bifocals i guess
Starting point is 00:30:59 all right jb that's a wonderful resource i hope everyone will take advantage of the Joseph Smith Papers website. And JB, this isn't a small project, the JSP. Yeah, this I think will go down in history as one of the monumental projects that the church's history department has ever done and will ever do. And it's been two decades and more in the making. One other tab we should mention is that they have a glossary of people and places. You can just look up anyone involved in Joseph Smith's life, mention in the papers, mention the Doctrine and Covenants, it's alphabetical. And it becomes this really nice encyclopedic quick reference for identifying
Starting point is 00:31:43 people and places. That's another great tab on the Joseph Smith Papers. And there is a lot of them. That's right. This isn't a short list. This is wonderful. J.B., John, there will be critics of the church who say the church hides things. The Joseph Smith Papers is as transparent as you can possibly be. Here is every single document we have of Joseph Smith, high resolution photos. Go ahead and take a look for yourself. I love the phrase, you don't need to protect the truth. It's like a lion. Just let it out of its cage. It will protect itself. That's Joseph Smith. Be open and transparent. You will see who he really is. Since we're talking about resources here, both of you, even on my gospel library app,
Starting point is 00:32:42 I have the book of saints, which is JB. Maybe you can speak to that. I have revelations in context. I have podcasts, Joseph Smith papers, podcast saints podcast. I think I could spend every waking minute this year studying these revelations and the history. And we hope everyone does. I mean, that's... Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:06 Yeah. JB, tell us about Saints. Yeah, Saints is a can't miss. A lot of listeners have probably encountered it. It's a brand new four volume official history of the church that is all the things that you would expect a history of the church to have. It things that you would expect a history of the
Starting point is 00:33:25 church to have. It partakes of those wonderful characteristics that you talked about the Joseph Smith Papers, Hank. It's open, transparent, dealing with everything in the church's history, but in a way that is so gripping, the narrative style. It's written very much in story form, focusing on characters and important moments in church history. It's a page turner. The other great thing is they've got it in audio book form, so you can listen to it. It's a great way to encounter the historical story behind the Doctrine and Covenants. And Saints Volume 1 covers the years of Joseph Smith's ministry, essentially. The Volumes 2, 3, and 4 come all the way through the present.
Starting point is 00:34:03 The Saints footnotes take you to so many places. And so it's a great place to start. And then whatever subject you want to dig into deeper, you can find it in the footnotes. The apparatus behind saints is really, really helpful. That kind of research apparatus. And I'll just say to all of our listeners, this is a sacrifice. When we first started, John, come follow me. I thought, okay, you know, I can dedicate some time to come follow me. I can dedicate a couple minutes every evening. But if you really, really want to come through this year with something special at the end, you do need to take some time to do this. There's some things you might have to set aside. You might have to set aside talk radio.
Starting point is 00:34:48 You might have to set aside a little bit of sports, not much, but a little bit of sports. Whatever you might say, I'm going to make my car, my come follow me time. I'm going to make my laundry room, some come follow me time. My walks, my running. I have a friend, Ryan eakins who listened to our
Starting point is 00:35:06 podcast and other gospel oriented works why he snowboards we've got the tools here but i hope everyone listening will think you know what i'm going to dedicate some time to really understanding the church and come to love, love these people. And I think we could use the word invest some time. I like that, John. And speaking of investment, John, we actually haven't asked JB yet about his background. You can get a full bio of JB on our website or come to our Instagram, Facebook pages. You can get those. But JB, just give us a brief background
Starting point is 00:35:46 on your investment into history. I just can't ever go anywhere without mentioning my hometown. And so I was trying to think of a way to bring that in. And Hank, you just offered me that chance. I grew up in Hooper, Utah. Hooper, Utah. Which is this beautiful beachfront community
Starting point is 00:36:02 on the shores of the Great Salt Lake west of Ogden. Hooper was originally called Muskrat Springs in Pioneer Times, Utah. So that's where I just think, you know, when you live in a place that you find out the name of the town was Muskrat Springs, you think, I want to know more about history. That had to be where it started. We'll have to say this. Those of you who are on YouTube, come onto YouTube if you're from Hooper and leave JB a message. We'll make sure he gets all of those. I did a fireside out there once
Starting point is 00:36:35 and I think every other person asked me if I knew JB Hawes. I did my PhD in American history at the University of Utah and great experience there. Such great mentors and colleagues and fellow students. I love history. I love the story of the church. I love the story of the church in its social and cultural contexts and how we see the ongoing restoration. Beautiful. We should also mention that there is a wonderful woman listening. Her name is Laura. Laura, we are grateful for you. I don't think we'd have JB Haas if it weren't for Laura. Amen to that.
Starting point is 00:37:10 Yeah, she's my wife. My wife is an amazing person, incredible person. JB, we've had you here for a little while. I'm excited. I have some background. I now have some resources. Should we jump into this section itself? Oh, yes. One thing I think about when I think about these little historical replicas,
Starting point is 00:37:29 so here's the Book of Commandments, and then in 1835, the Doctrine and Covenants, so you can see the size difference. So the first edition of the Doctrine and Covenants. One thing that I think maybe will help us think about section one and its importance is that the orders of the sections in various editions of the book of commandments, then the doctrine of covenants has changed a lot. Sometimes they group them thematically. Now we've gone to mostly a chronological sequence, but there's been one constant. Section one has always been first. I think we can see why as the Lord designates it as his preface, but I think the responsiveness of the leaders as they
Starting point is 00:38:05 printed these additions, keeping that constantly first matters. It prompts in us, the question is, what is it that the Lord wants us to see before we encounter the revelations? What is it that he wants us to understand about what we're going to read? So what are some of the themes that section one lays out that are going to help guide us through the rest of the revelations? I think that's a really productive way to come at section one and noticing some of those things. A lens almost. Here's your lens. This is the way you're going to view this. Right. One of those is what Steve Harper, one of our great colleagues at BYU called typology of opposites. I'll mention
Starting point is 00:38:47 Steve Harper's book, Making Sense of the Doctrine and Covenants, which is a top-notch commentary, takes section by section and provides great background and some really great things to think about. And in his reflections on section one, Steve notes that section one sets out what he calls a typology of opposites. And if you think about this section, we encounter things like Babylon and Zion. We encounter things like the righteous and the rebellious. So it sets up this, what Steve calls a type and an anti-type or these contrasts between entities, between people, between mindsets. That's going to play out through the Doctrine and Covenants is to think about choices, Zion versus Babylon, righteousness versus rebelliousness. That can serve a couple of
Starting point is 00:39:39 purposes. One of those is that I think it highlights that the Doctrine and Covenants is a book where agency plays a significant role and it wants to emphasize our agency, our role, our free will. We have choices to make. These choices are really before us. This typology of opposites sets that out. The revelations are going to highlight the choices that are before us. I have written in my notes here, I don't know who said it, but section one, the Lord declares war on Satan. Now you get to pick your side. Wow. Yeah. That's good. Let's jump into the section.
Starting point is 00:40:20 Hank, do you want to read verse one? Absolutely. This is pretty cool. Our first verse of the year. Here we go. Yes. Hearken, O ye people of my church, saith the voice of him who dwells on high
Starting point is 00:40:32 and whose eyes are upon all men. Yea, verily I say, hearken ye people from afar and ye that are upon the islands of the sea, listen together. I think right from the get-go, if we think about a preface setting the thematic tone, laying out, framing what we're going to see, I think there couldn't be a better place to start that these messages are universal. We're hearing from the voice of the Lord, his messages for everyone.
Starting point is 00:41:00 He wants to reach the islands of the sea. He wants to reach everyone. His eyes are upon all of us. And I think that's reassuring, encouraging, fantastic. Yeah. It tells you what he has in mind. This isn't just for 1500 people in Ohio and Missouri. Yeah, definitely. Can you imagine those who were trying to write their own preface? Hearken, O ye people of my church, saith the voice of... Who would dare say something like that? And it lets you know, no, this was dictated from somewhere else. This was not somebody coming up with something.
Starting point is 00:41:38 Yeah. To my church, and by the way, to the entire planet. The Isles of the Sea, listen together. I remember President Eyring beginning a talk by reading this verse once. I was sitting in the Marriott Center. I will never forget it. Listen together.
Starting point is 00:41:57 It was a great moment. So that's a great verse. I'm thinking of something that Richard Bushman said, see if I can paraphrase it, that in his biography of Joseph Smith, Rough Stone Rolling, he was talking about section three, the first revelation that Joseph Smith put to paper,
Starting point is 00:42:11 but he had such a great insight that the voice in these revelations is independent of Joseph Smith, above and beyond Joseph Smith. We just see that over and over again, that this is coming from outside of Joseph Smith. And so sometimes when the revelations rebuke joseph smith he includes it because he is just recording or dictating or putting words to
Starting point is 00:42:33 the inspiration that's coming from heaven and it's independent and above him then we come to this verse two a phrase this time around really hit me maybe in a way that I hadn't quite noticed this before. For verily the voice of the Lord is unto all men, and there is none to escape, and there is no eye that shall not see, neither ear that shall not hear. And then here's the phrase that hit me this time, neither heart that shall not be penetrated.
Starting point is 00:43:07 There was something intimate about that last phrase, something that just caught me a little differently than eyes not seeing, ears not hearing, but that every heart shall be penetrated. I think that's both a realization of where things are going to end up. So this is certainly an apocalyptic revelation. It's a revelation that's talking about end times. It's talking about wrapping up scenes. It's pointing us towards the culmination of the Lord's work. But I love that idea that every heart will be penetrated. This is, I think, leads us to those,
Starting point is 00:43:38 every knee will bow, every tongue will confess that Jesus is the Christ. That hearts will be penetrated too. That there will be a feeling that accompanies this. That every heart will be reached in some way. That struck me as really powerful. If anything else, this will get your attention. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:56 I studied the call of Isaiah. Let's go to the Old Testament for a second. The call of Isaiah that is repeated in every one of the gospels and the book of Acts. And what's the idea that lest they see with their eyes, hear with their ears, understand with their heart and be converted and be healed. Eye, ear, heart there again. In a positive way, understand and be healed. The lord's saying every heart is going to be penetrated that stands out yeah thank you john and then maybe as we come to verse three this might be another place to settle back into what steve harper we mentioned before about the typology
Starting point is 00:44:37 of offices it starts with and the rebellious shall be pierced with much sorrow this is hard we feel the feelings of this still thinking of this idea of hearts and feelings and pierced with much sorrow. This is hard. We feel the feelings of this, still thinking of this idea of hearts and feelings and pierced with sorrow and rebelliousness leads to that. One thing that strikes me about this typology of opposites and the way that Doctrine and Covenants sets this up is, in some ways it doesn't feel totally applicable to real life situations. It's hard to group people into one of two camps. It's hard to group people into rebellious or disciples. Individuals are a little more complex than that. If we're not in either or, if people just aren't either or, and it's not easy to group,
Starting point is 00:45:19 one question we might ask ourselves is, why does the Lord teach this way? Why bring up these typology of opposites? Why talk in stark terms? One possibility that I might propose is that it's not good for looking at others. It's not good. I mean, this is not prompting us that we should be judging others and putting people in these categories. But what it can do is it can ask us to think about our own hearts. The typology of opposites has more of an instructive value for us as individuals because we're not in a place, it's not our job to judge, categorize others, but we can look at our own hearts and say, if I'm honest with myself, I can confront that question. Am I in the rebellious camp or am I a disciple? Am I
Starting point is 00:46:02 hearkening? Am I not? Am I headed towards Zion or am I not? And maybe this opposite, the value is in having us do some introspection in ourselves and say, where's my heart? Not that I'm classifying others, but maybe I should classify my own thoughts, intents, desires, my heart. That's great. I'm reminded of matthew 26 22 the lord is it i yeah you read this and say does the shoe fit here am i rebellious or are there certain things i'm rebellious about maybe little things that's great if we're jumping ahead john what you're just saying this verse 16 i think that there's a connection here. I just really love this in terms of asking ourselves questions. One question we could ask,
Starting point is 00:46:51 what does obedience look like in Doctrine and Covenants 1? We're thinking about if this is a call to action, if it's a call to do something, and if it's setting up these opposites, gives us a choice, what does obedience look like well here's verse 16 they seek not the lord to establish his righteousness but every man walketh in his own way and after the image of his own god whose image is in the likeness of the world and whose substance is that of an idol which which waxeth old and shall perish in Babylon, even Babylon the great, which shall fall. That prompts the same question that John, that you raised is in what ways am I walking my own way? Are there idols that are holding my attention? Obedience looks like being able to reject that, to give up those idols, to
Starting point is 00:47:39 not seek after the image of the world. That's a verse that really calls those questions to my mind. You could reverse it. You could say, to be obedient is to seek the Lord, to establish his righteousness, to not walk in your own way, but walk after God. Don't seek after the world or idols and don't go after Babylon. Don't go after the world. I think of our listeners who are thinking, how can I be happier? How can I make my life better? That's one way, and we can all do it,
Starting point is 00:48:13 is say, in what ways am I really seeking the Lord? Am I trying to establish His righteousness? I think it was Brigham Young who asked another apostle, whose kingdom are you trying to build? The Lord's are your own. This is such a powerful section for prompting those kinds of questions. I love how you sort of reversed that, Hank, to say, what does obedience look like? It looks like doing these things. A C.S. Lewis quote that just as rings true to me is, we might think that the Lord wanted obedience to a set of rules, whereas he really wants people of a particular sort. That's what I think Doctrine
Starting point is 00:48:52 and Covenants 1 is calling us to. Are we becoming people of a particular sort? Is this who we are? Is this who we want to be? One other little tidbit that's kind of got my mind going is, there's a great website that everyone should know about, scriptures.byu.edu. It's called the Scripture Citation Index, and I'm sure it's come up a lot on your show. Stephen Little and Richard Galbraith put this together. You can see every time that a verse has been cited in general conference. You can go to Doctrine and Covenants 1, and you can see how many times verses have been cited. Verse 16 is on the list of the most cited verses from section one. It's been cited 55 times. So I think there's something that our church leaders are coming back to this verse
Starting point is 00:49:36 again and again as one of the standout verses from section one is this idea of walking in our own way, seeking after the Lord. There's something to be thought of in that. Maybe if we back up a couple of verses, the other thing that I find really interesting about section one is like so many of these kind of sections of prophetic warning, I think the Lord is often more descriptive and predictive than he is prescriptive. So in other words, he's saying, these are the things that are just going to naturally happen. If you choose this path, this is what is going to follow. We read a verse like verse 13, and the anger of the Lord is
Starting point is 00:50:16 kindled. I think that can sound maybe harsher or maybe give us the wrong impression of the nature of God. Whereas I think what this might be saying is this might actually just be a description of the consequences that happen when we make choices. So in other words, verse 14, the arm of the Lord shall be revealed in the day cometh that they who will not hear the word of the Lord, neither the voice of his servants, neither forgive heed to the words of the prophets and apostles, shall be cut off from among the people. And that's just the natural consequences of the choices that we're making. For they have strayed from mine ordinances and have broken my everlasting covenant. One thing that I've loved about President Nelson is this reminder helping us to see that
Starting point is 00:51:00 covenants are all about relationship. What these verses in section one are saying is, if you choose not to be in a relationship with me, then this is what's going to happen. I'm not that covenants are all about relationship. What these verses in section one are saying is, if you choose not to be in a relationship with me, then this is what's going to happen. I'm not going to force you. I'm not a God of compulsion. I won't force you into a relationship. And if you choose not to be in a relationship, then I'll allow that choice, but you'll be cut off. Here are the consequences. And I'm predicting rather than prescribing or cursing, because this is just naturally what's going to happen if you choose not to be in a relationship. Two things there. Whenever I see will not in the scriptures, I like to ask, what's the difference between will not and cannot? It's not those who can't hear the voice of the Lord. It's those who refuse to hear. I am choosing not to hear that.
Starting point is 00:51:46 Like you said, here's the natural consequence. That idea of don't think of a covenant like a contract. You do this, I do this, we sign, we stick it on the shelf. A covenant is an ongoing relationship where I am weak and the Savior is strong, I benefit because of that relationship. I have access to his strength when I am weak. And I love that idea of a relationship because then you get the idea of loyalty in a relationship. Yeah, yeah. And not just some contract you throw on the shelf that, okay, you do this and I do this. We've heard that more recently,
Starting point is 00:52:30 that idea of make sure you're thinking of your covenant as a relationship, not just a contract. Thanks for saying that. Oh, thank you for that. Really nice putting a point on it too. Maybe while we're in this section of verses, if we ask ourselves one question, well, what does obedience look like? How do we see the lord framing obedience in section one another framing principle i think is going to help us as we come to the doctrine of covenants is what do we learn about the nature of god from section one and that's going to be something we're going to see just weave its way through the doctrine of covenants verse 17 we start seeing some really interesting and telling and beautiful things about the nature of God. Wherefore, I, the Lord, knowing the calamity which should come upon the inhabitants of the earth,
Starting point is 00:53:21 called upon my servant, Joseph Smith, Jr. I remember an electric moment. John, I think this was in our class with Richard Bennett, a great BYU professor and historian. He called this the proactivity of God. Normally, we think about the first vision experience, for example, of that Joseph Smith approaches the Lord and the Lord responds. But that's not how it's framed in verse 17. Knowing the calamity which should come, the Lord says, I call upon my servant, Joseph Smith, so that he was proactive. He was reaching out. And we think, what do we see in Joseph Smith's story that shows that proactivity? Well, how about his reaction when he reads James 1.5? The Lord, you can just sense he's calling to him through that verse, other experiences in his
Starting point is 00:54:02 life with his family, so that the Lord is the one doing the initial calling, the reaching out. I love that indication that we have a proactive God who calls on us, allows us to respond, but he's calling, he's proactive. I'm thinking of Elder Kieron's phrase, he is in relentless pursuit of you. Oh man, so well said. And then I also love the sense that the Lord seeing calamities and that he's provided a way to overcome all these calamities. And it starts with calling his servants and then the revelations that come and all of the things that are going to follow from that. Then we just have this great litany of results that what happened because joseph smith was called and what's going to come out of the restoration you know what i love about what you
Starting point is 00:54:51 just said jb that proactivity of the lord i feel like yes the restoration the first vision yes there is a god and he is real and then it seems so much that comes afterwards is what kind of being is God? And there were some different ideas out there. All of this tells us, oh, this is what he's like. He is relentlessly pursuing us. He is proactive, knowing what's going to come. I called upon my servant, Joseph Smith, and we learned such wonderful things about his nature as this book of commandments doctrine covenants unfolds yeah here here I think this has just given us a great glimpse into those
Starting point is 00:55:33 things and the kind of things that can give us confidence and instill in us hope and then it talks about us in verse 19 the the weak things of the world. My son got some barbells and I know that I am one of the weak things of the world. And notice in verses one through six, we have who he's talking to. Then seven through 10, what he's talking about. And now we're moving into the why, why we're doing this. I know what's about to happen. I called Joseph Smith. Here's what can happen for you. If you listen, if you pay attention, here's all the good things that can happen in your life. Is that kind of a decent way to outline it?
Starting point is 00:56:26 I think that's a really nice outline. Yeah. Underscoring this is that idea that the Lord is calling servants. If you're an honest Bible reader, we just have to confront this. This is the way the Lord works is his pattern is to call prophets, to call his servants, and then to speak to the world. Who he's speaking to, what and why, that's, and then to speak to the world. Who he's speaking to, what, and why, that's a nice way to break down the section. I want to help you. I want to save you. I have this numbered 10 promises, starting in verse 19 and ending in verse 28. The weak things of the world shall come forth and break down the
Starting point is 00:57:05 mighty and strong ones two that man should not counsel his fellow man neither trust in the arm of the lord three that every man might speak in the name of god the lord even the savior of the world four that faith might increase in the earth it's kind of fun to see this that proactive god listing here's what i want Here's what's possible. And this could be a good chance also, JB, to really talk about, I mean, this is the first time, if you're reading the Doctrine and Covenants for the first time,
Starting point is 00:57:33 that you get this name. I called Joseph Smith Jr. JB, in your studies of Joseph Smith, which I'm thinking have been pretty extensive, what have you found? Such a profound question, but what a beautiful one. I am so struck with Joseph Smith's courage in responding to the revelations. His sense of his own weakness, his own humanity, but the confidence that he drew from knowing that he was on the Lord's errand that gave him a fearlessness that always impresses me.
Starting point is 00:58:17 And I'm also impressed that as we're going to see in this Doctrine and Covenants in Church History year that when things were difficult, they faced some horrific challenges that instead of dampening his enthusiasm or instead of causing him to pull back, he thought bigger. He was emboldened and he was still open to responding to the Lord's command to do more projects, to expand his thinking. He was indomitable. The great quote that George A. Smith is the one who transmits this to us about being in the lowest pit of Nova Scotia and having the Rocky Mountains piled on top of him, that he would come out on top. There was something indomitable and buoyant about him. And I think that probably disposition and personality was
Starting point is 00:58:58 part of that. But more than that, I think it was the confidence of knowing that he was on the Lord's errand and that the Lord had called him. He just had that absolute faith that the Lord could make him what he wanted him to be. And he calls him and all of us in verse 19, the weak things of the world. It's kind of a hard thing to hear when you're Joseph Smith or any of us, and the Lord says, I chose you so everyone would know it was me. I took the one that you would never think could do something like this. It reminds me of the Old Testament. Here's Abraham, just this guy, Abraham and Sarah, just this immigrant and his wife. Look at Mary in Nazareth, just a teenager in a tiny little town. And then you have it here again, a teenage boy. I called him this weak thing and he's going to do
Starting point is 00:59:54 something great. When you put it that way, it made me think of the Gideon story in Judges, where the Lord sort of intentionally diminishes gideon's army just so there would be no way of mistaking this on their own power that you just cannot look at this and say that i have trusted in the arm of flesh and we've turned out well part of the testimony is there's only one way to explain it and it's the miracle that the lord is behind it i think too of the context if we think back at the historical context, so imagine we've got this conference happening in November 1831 when this preface comes out and there are just 10 elders. I mean, the conference is 10 elders. They're going to be charged to go out and spread this message. And you can imagine how weak they have felt that you can just hear this
Starting point is 01:00:42 preface speaking to them in their immediate circumstances of they're feeling their own weakness and reminding them, this is what I've always done. This is what the Lord's saying. I've always done this. And you're going to be able to do this too as weak things. Coming up in part two of this episode. Just that reassurance that we can be forgiven. And that's going to be a doctrine come to steam that we're just going to see over and over and over how often the Lord is promising and reassuring forgiveness. And his Isaiah 1, scarlet things can be made white as snow, or section 58, I the Lord remember them no more.
Starting point is 01:01:20 I mean, it's just this beautiful, complete totality of forgiveness and fresh starts.

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