followHIM - Doctrine & Covenants Section 1 Part 2 • Dr. J.B. Haws • January 6 - January 12 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: January 1, 2025Dr. JB Haws continues to examine the Lord's introduction, instruction, and plan to create a kingdom of priests and priestesses and how the Restoration will include the entire earth and how the Lo...rd is one of “fresh starts.”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/7uUi-lzXXWMALL 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 2 - Dr. JB Haws03:18 D&C 1:24-28 - Four promises05:27 Lord speaks in our language08:49 “Come Join with Us” by Elder Uchtdorf12:03 D&C 1:29 - True and living church18:00 Infant church (now a teenager)22:08 D&C 1:26-32 - Seeking wisdom and forgiveness26:53 Jovial, lively, and beautiful29:33 D&C 1:37 - Look for promises31:52 Parable of the Marinade34:39 Dr. Haws shares his feelings about Joseph Smith37:56 Dr. Haws testifies of Jesus Christ42:59 End of Part 2 - 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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. J.B. Haas, Doctrine and Covenants section one.
J.B., as we continue on 20 through 24, we get the, okay, here's why.
Here's our why. This is what the Lord wants to do.
Yes, I think that's right.
20, that every man might speak in the name of God, the Lord, even the Savior of the world.
I hear echoes of what Moses wanted to do, a kingdom of priests,
where this power and authority is distributed as broadly as possible,
where everyone has access to God's power, where everyone can speak in his name,
where the spirit can be poured out.
This fits with that really beautiful universalizing impulse of the restoration. to God's power, where everyone can speak in his name, where the spirit can be poured out.
This fits with that really beautiful universalizing impulse of the restoration,
this vision that everyone can be involved in this, that faith also might increase in the earth,
that my everlasting covenant might be established, that the fullness of my gospel might be proclaimed by the weak and the simple under the ends of the world and before kings and rulers this confidence that they're going to be able to do this and that this is going to extend
broadly to all of them jb wouldn't we say maybe for our listeners at home that feel weak and small
that this could be a little bit of a message to you the lord can use you oh definitely that should
be a take-home message of this section is that, as President Monson put it so well, whom the Lord calls, he qualifies.
This small band of 10 elders meeting in this conference, hearing these words, that these words should resonate and echo with us.
Because every one of us is going to be called to do something that we just feel too weak to do. I'm moved by an image that a general authority reported this, that he came by President Spencer
W. Kimball's office soon after he was the prophet and he was weeping. The general authority asked
President Kimball, you know, President, are you all right? And he said, I'm just such a small man
for such a big job. And this was after decades of being an apostle. As he feels the weight of this,
it is overwhelming. I would say to all of our listeners, you're in good company if you've
felt this way. And if you feel like the world is really hard, knowing the calamity, which should
come upon the inhabitants of the earth, the weight of the world feels heavy. Here is a message from the Lord saying,
grab hold of the restoration. I can use you. Yeah. You know, we've just come through the
come follow me year. We've just been finishing thinking about Moroni. And this also seems to
have some special poignance for Moroni because boy, you could tell at the end of the book of
Ether, the end of the last couple of chapters of small book of mormon moroni felt this you can
sense that he felt the weight of what he was being asked to do in ether 12 he's so worried
are the gentiles going to mock at what i've written i can just sense how inadequate i feel
and that reassurance from the lord is that you know you've done your part let me do my work
i give men weakness that they're humble and my grace is
sufficient if they humble themselves before me weak things can be made strong i hear him saying
the same thing to us i'll do my work you do what i've asked you to do i will do my work through you
yeah that's verse 28 and in as much as they were humble they might be made strong. I love too that the Lord, just in case you forgot
who's writing this preface, he pops in in verse 24. Behold, I am God and have spoken it. These
commandments are of me. They were given unto my servants in their weakness after the manner of
their language that they might come to understand. He just comes right back in and says, just so you know, this is me. Wow. And then those four more promises,
which that one in 28, and as much as they were humble, they might be made strong. Who hasn't felt
like I can't do this when they're given a calling? Who hasn't felt that way?
JB, John just brought up verse 24. These commandments, these revelations are of me.
They're given to my servants in their weakness, in their language,
so I can bring them to an understanding.
How do we see that get played out throughout church history,
where the Lord uses people in their weakness and in their language?
How do you bring forth a glorious work through flawed individuals?
Such an important principle for us to chew on. I think this is a verse worth slowing down on.
This, I think, sets forward some really important principles that we can think about as we encounter
church history, is how the Lord works with us. And first off, I find that really reassuring
that the Lord works with us where we are, that he speaks to us in our language. He wants us to
understand. I also think that's helpful for us to think about language and understanding as so much
more than just spoken words, our cultural context, the symbols with which we work and operate,
that the Lord is going to do that.
So I think we're going to see in the Doctrine and Covenants, for example, the Lord using what
Joseph Smith and his associates understood, seer stones, divining rods, that the Lord uses their
cultural understanding and speaks to them in ways that they will understand their cultural language. I think this verse is a really important verse to help us think about
the presentation of the temple endowment that the Lord wants us to understand as we think about
what we know that the brethren have said, the first presidency has said about that there will
be from time to time adjustments in the temple endowment, the presentation presentation because it fits our language and our understanding. And if our language
and understanding changes, the Lord wants us to understand and speaks to us that way.
This is the kind of principle that really helps us as we think about church history and the way
the Lord is working with individuals, different cultures, different times, different understanding, different language.
Why, for example, Joseph Smith felt comfortable revising the Book of Mormon for publication or
revising the revelations because he recognizes that, as Steve Harper said, he's not a divine
fax machine. He's putting into words the crooked, broken prison of language as he described it,
putting into words things that transcend words. So he's trying to always come to a better
understanding and better language. And as he learns more in the Doctrine and Covenants,
he'll revise revelations to reflect that greater understanding. I think this is a beautiful way
of thinking that this is all a process as the Lord's helping us come to understanding
through our weaknesses. Yeah. And I can take you places. One of the best
teachers I've ever had, his name is Sterling Hilton in my doctorate program. And he had to
teach me and our cohort statistics 741. And I remember thinking there is no possible way
that I can comprehend this.
I think of him when I read this because he would listen to us so closely
so he could start to speak our language.
And then you could see him develop almost in his head.
He would develop a step-by-step program saying,
okay, now I know where you are.
I know where I want you to end up.
So I'm going to walk you through this step by step. It not only taught me about statistics,
which he would be disappointed. I never became a statistician, but it taught me about teaching
that you have to meet people where they are, or you'll never get them where you hope they'll be yeah so true i'm thinking back to
something that john said earlier in our conversation especially if we remember where this section sits
in relation to other document section so if we think of verse 24 and have in the back of our
minds section 67 my servant joseph you have known his language you have known there's some concern
about what
might feel like inelegant language or imperfection or coming through Joseph Smith's vernacular.
I think this verse 24 is a reminder. You know, it must be a corollary to that section 67
is this is how I'm working with people. I work through their language and their understanding.
So don't see that as a flaw, see that as a blessing. And then as John said, so well,
the Lord's testimony testimony the revelations
are where the power is look past the language yeah i'm working with people where they are
john we've quoted it how many times on here all the lord has is imperfect people
must be incredibly frustrating, frustrating for him,
but he deals with it.
And so should we.
So should we.
Yeah.
I'm thinking about connection to section 67,
this verse 24,
then president Uchtdorf's 2013 talk,
come join with us where he acknowledged that to be perfectly frank,
there have been times in the history of the church when we've made mistakes.
He realized that same thing about the Lord only has imperfect people to work with.
And then I love that he ends that sermon, that talk, by going to the bread of life sermon
in John 6.
And you think about people, many in the multitude, who just didn't understand what Jesus was
saying about, I am the bread of
life and what does this all this mean and then he says to the disciples will you also go away
and peter says to whom shall we go thou hast the words of eternal life
that to me is the section 67 verse 24 sort of sentiment is that this is coming through
the language the lord is working with us our, but what we see behind all of this is,
these are the words of eternal life.
And we can feel that.
We can feel that coming through.
And it's almost a bit of a stumbling block.
You have to realize the Lord works with imperfect people.
And once you can grasp that,
there's a whole treasure on the other side,
beautiful treasures on the other side of,
okay, I'll take this in stride. And like you said, JB, that gives me great comfort that
maybe he can use me too. Yeah. If we've ever had that moment where we have felt the Lord
working through us, then that gives the confidence. Yeah. The Lord is working with me too.
Yeah. I can do pretty great things. Of course, if I'm in the Lord's hands.
As we think about the nature of God and our own selves, I think it's so interesting that 25 and
27, I like to contrast these two. So 25, in as much as they erred, it might be made known. 27,
and in as much as they sinned, they might be chastened, they might repent.
This is really important that the Lord is helping us to recognize that there's difference between
errors, simple mistakes, and sinning. And sometimes I think we beat ourselves up too much
just because we've erred. We're human. We've made a mistake. There's no malicious intent.
We weren't rebellious. We weren't sinning. I love that the Lord treats that differently.
He just wants to make it known. He just wants to help us be instructed. He wants us to learn
wisdom. He views that differently. And maybe there's some of us that need to stop beating
ourselves up for feeling that we somehow are unworthy or somehow are rebellious or sinning or
less in the Lord's sight when he recognizes that we're just erring.
He's just helping us learn and gain wisdom.
And I like that those are sort of different verbs and differentiated here,
that those are two different situations.
Yeah, that is great.
And of course, it's the adversary who would want you to take your errors
and think of them as sins.
Yes, that's true.
The great accuser.
That's right.
And even there in verse 27,
they have sinned,
that they'll repent.
Yeah.
They'll repent.
There's room.
There's no hope lost at all.
There is a way forward in either situation,
erring or sinning.
The Lord's got a path forward.
It seems in verse 29, JB and john the lord bears his testimony
of the book of mormon since we just finished that study come follow me study i can feel that verse
more than ever before yeah that book of mormon do you know what phrase leaped off the page at me
this time and i don't know how i'd miss this is at the very end
of 29 that joseph made this power to translate through the mercy of god by the power of god and
i think i've always gone to the power of god but i never really paid attention that it was through
the mercy of god by the power of god you think about how much mercy is represented by the
translation process by the coming forth of the book of Mormon. I mean, I love that that's an evidence
of God's mercy is the Book of Mormon.
And we just studied Moroni 10 with Dr. Sweat
where Moroni invites us to ponder
the mercy of God, right?
From Adam to us.
To the time that you receive these things,
how merciful and then ponder it in your heart yeah
great connection with that word mercy now jb the lord says something in verse 30 that i think is
latter-day saints we have taken and run with he talks about the church to bring it forth out of
obscurity out of darkness the only true and living church upon
the face of the whole earth, which with I, the Lord God, am well, please speaking to the church
collectively, not individually. And we've turned that into the church is true. That's our phrase.
We've trademarked it. The church is true. What do you see as the difference between what we say
the church is true and what the Lord says in verse 30? What a nice setup, Hank. This is something
that we all can think about. I'm really grateful actually that there has been some fantastic
thinking recently about this verse and what it might mean. I'd love to highlight a couple of
those things. I wanted to mention
this book, All Things Are True by Kate Holbrook. Kate was a fantastic historian for the church,
passed away a year ago. And this collection of essays has so many thoughtful things. And one of
these is as good a treatment as I've ever seen on that very question is, what do we mean when we say the
church is true and true in living? She spends an essay on this phrase. This one excerpt, I think,
gets at what she says. It's so worth the read and so many cool stories. I believe that both things
are true. Our church is true and it is living. It is perpetually becoming true.
In this essay, I've explored two of my reasons for that belief, namely that the church teaches
its members to seek and embrace all truth and that it calls us into true relationships
with one another.
Isn't that great?
This idea of it's true and living and it's the livingness part
of it, it's becoming perpetually more true. The thing that I love that she settles in on is that
one of the ways that it's true is that it embraces all truth. Maybe that sentiment here are a couple
of well-known Joseph Smith quotes. One of the grand fundamental principles of Mormonism,
he said this in July 1843,
is to receive truth, let it come from where it may.
And he also said in January of 1843,
we don't ask any people to throw away any good that they have got.
We only ask them to come and get more.
To think more expansively is to think about the church embracing
all truth. That's one of the things that makes it true and living is that we're looking for truth
anywhere. So we have a 1978 statement by the first presidency based upon ancient and modern
revelation. The first presidency said, the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints gladly teaches
and declares the Christian doctrine that all men and women are brothers and sisters,
but is literal children's spirit of an eternal father.
And the great religious leaders of the world,
such as Muhammad, Confucius, and the Reformers,
as well as philosophers including Socrates, Plato, and others,
received a portion of God's light.
Moral truths were given to them by God to enlighten whole nations
and to bring a higher level of understanding to individuals. Maybe one more in this vein. Here is Elder Ezetath Benson
quoting Elder Orson F. Whitney. So we have this kind of double apostolic witness. So here's Elder
Benson first. God, the father of us all, uses the men of the earth, especially good men, to
accomplish his purposes. It has been true in the past. It is true today. It will be
true in the future. And then he quotes Elder Whitney, perhaps the Lord needs such men on the
outside of his church to help it along. They are among its auxiliaries and can do more good for the
cause where the Lord has placed them than anywhere else. Hence, some are drawn into the fold and
receive a testimony of the truth while others remain unconverted. The beauties and glories of
the gospel being veiled temporarily
from their view for a wise purpose. The Lord will open their eyes in his own due time. God is using
more than one people for the accomplishment of his great and marvelous work. The Latter-day
Saints cannot do it all. It is too vast, too arduous for any one people. We have no quarrel
with the Gentiles. So this is Elder Whitney in the 1920s,
using Gentiles as people who aren't Latter-day Saints. They are our partners in a certain sense.
Back to the way you set that up so nicely, Hank, is I think that we're starting to sense this is
to not focus or to incorrectly appropriate the exclusiveness of this verse, but to say instead,
there are ways to think about the true and living church in the sense that we're embracing all truth,
living because of revelation, and that we should see God's working through good people all around
the world, and they are our partners to accomplish his work. Lorenzo Snow said, and I'll probably
bring this up a couple of times this year, John, that when we started in New York, he said we were just an infant. We had to grow and learn. And that's
what living things do. They grow, they learn, they change, they adapt. They have to adjust things
from time to time. I'm a living thing. All of us are living things. You probably look back on your
past and go, Ooh, that's some things I would have done differently had I known what I know now.
I would love to hear in a testimony meeting a little more of the church is true and living.
There's something that we miss if we forget that word.
And I think we have to be careful when we have those two words together, the only true,
then it sounds like every other church, therefore, is untrue.
I love what you said, JB.
Bring all the good that you have and let us see if we can add to it.
One of my best friends in high school was just a rock-solid Presbyterian.
Great family.
He was a good kid.
That helped me so much.
And you have truth too.
And bring it here and let us see if we can add to it.
I like that way of putting it.
I've been able to travel to Israel and have made some friends of Jews and Muslims and thought,
these are fantastic, God-fearing people.
Yes.
Wonderful souls.
And what did you say from that first presidency statement?
Moral truths were given to them by God to enlighten them.
Yeah, certainly that God is speaking and revealing and working through them.
If we think about how exciting this whole Doctrine and Covenants year is
and what we have to look forward to,
you can think about how expansive
the revelations are going to be
in terms of human potential,
this life and the next.
We're going to start to get a completely different view
of salvation history and possibilities.
This true and living church
has a really important responsibility.
And part of it is back in
verse 22, one of the reasons why the Lord called Joseph Smith, that mine everlasting covenant might
be established, that the fullness of my gospel might be proclaimed. The church has a significant
responsibility as this true and living church, and it's expansive and big enough for the whole
human family when we think of that in those terms.
When I see living there in verse 30, I think of Article of Faith 9, right? All that God has
revealed, now reveals, we believe he will yet reveal. There is more to come. I have yet to see
Article of Faith 9 rescinded where President Nelson might say, well, that's it. All the great and important things are out.
We're just going to do good and trivial from here on out.
No, it's great and important things are yet to come.
And I think it was President Nelson, wasn't it, gave us that phrase, a continuous restoration.
This is an ongoing thing.
And that's Article of Faith 9 right there.
Since you're mentioning President
Nelson, this was his first general conference as president of the church. So April, 2018,
revelation for the church, revelation for our lives. This was like a bolt of lightning when he
said, I urge you to stretch beyond your current spiritual ability to receive personal revelation
for the Lord has promised that if thou shalt seek
thou shalt receive revelation upon revelation in like manner what will your seeking open for you
what wisdom do you lack and then he said this line that we've heard in kind of various forms
when we think about article of faith 9 what's to come our savior and redeemer Jesus Christ will
perform some of his mightiest works between now and when he comes
again we will see miraculous indications that god the father and his son jesus christ preside over
this church in majesty and glory and then the line is i think rings to a lot of us but in coming days
it will not be possible to survive spiritually without the guiding, directing, comforting, and constant influence of the Holy Ghost.
So true and living, yes, a lot to come.
And go back to verse 26, in as much as they sought wisdom, they might be instructed.
I mean, that's James 1.5.
If any of you lack wisdom, I'm willing to give that to you if you will seek it.
I was talking with one of my students.
Her name is Hannah.
She was stewing over, what do I do? I'm about to graduate from BYU. What do I do next? Do I take this job here, this job there? Am I going to end up moving away from a lot of young men in the
church where I could meet a lot of them? And I hope it was the Holy Ghost. It isn't something
that I thought about before, but I said, it's kind of like what you said there, John, if they're seeking wisdom.
I said, what if you were to bring a note up on your phone, because your phone's always with you,
and you were to open a note that just said, what do I do, Lord? The invitation, I'm seeking wisdom.
Tell me and I'll write it down. I'm ready to put it in
my phone. John, JB, don't you think I need to seek wisdom? I need to show the Holy Ghost. I'm ready.
I'm ready. Here's a clean slate of paper or phone that I'm ready to receive and type out on.
President Nelson, word that just hit me so powerfully was this idea of
stretch. I urge you to stretch. Stretching is you're tapping into muscles that maybe you don't
use as much and you're not being complacent. You're pushing yourself beyond that you gain more.
And that really hit me. Sometimes we can get very comfortable in our religious habits,
but I hear President Nelson saying, what could you do more? What flexibility, what new heights, what new things
could you do if you stretched a little bit more? What could the Lord give you if you were seeking
it? That idea from President Nelson about stretching, it reminds me of Elder Uchtdorf
talking about, are you living beneath your privileges privileges it's like the lord wants to give you
more if you will seek it i love that jb as we move on here there's a great little sequence in 31 and
32 where the lord says look i cannot look upon sin with the least degree of allowance there's a high bar standard here. However, nevertheless, repentance, you can, will be forgiven, shall be forgiven.
I love the way it's punctuated.
I love the fact that verse 31 doesn't end in a period.
There's something more to come.
We cannot read these two clauses independently.
We've got to have them linked.
That's what the punctuation seems to say to me. So that he wants that to be in the same breath for us to remember, again,
about the nature of God, what he wants from us. Just that reassurance that we can be forgiven.
And that's going to be a doctrine that comes 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, the idol Lord remember them no more. I mean, it's just this
beautiful, complete totality of forgiveness and fresh starts.
JB, I had never noticed that's a semicolon there. Thank you for that. Oh, that's good.
I just marked that. This is one sentence, not two.
It seems, both of you, that Joseph Smith learned this lesson.
Here is November of 1831.
And he said this in June of 42.
It is one evidence that men are unacquainted with the principle of godliness
to behold the contraction of feeling and lack of
charity. The power and glory of godliness is spread out on a broad principle to throw
out the mantle of charity. God does not look on sin with allowance. But when men have sinned,
there must be allowance made for them. And then both of you will recognize this.
The nearer we get to our heavenly father, the more we are disposed to look with compassion
on perishing souls, to take them upon our shoulders, cast their sins behind our back.
If you would have God have mercy on you, have mercy on one another. Beautiful language. That is gold. Can I add a Heber C.
Kimball quote that I think lines up with this? When we're thinking about what does the Doctrine
and Covenants, and especially Doctrine and Covenants 1, teach us about the nature of God?
President Heber C. Kimball said this in 1857, I am perfectly satisfied that my Father and my God is a cheerful, pleasant, lively, and good-natured being.
Why? Because I am cheerful, pleasant, lively, and good-natured when I have His Spirit.
That is one reason why I know.
And another is, the Lord said through Joseph Smith,
I delight in a glad heart and a cheerful countenance.
That arises from the perfection of His attributes.
He is a jovial, lively person and a beautiful man. I think we just feel the
nature of this loving, incredibly loving, all-compassionate Father. And when we start
to come closer to him, we start to feel full of that, just as Joseph Smith described.
Yesterday, I showed that to my students. He is a jovial, lively person and a beautiful man. When have you ever
heard God described that way? Again, we're not just learning God is real, but what is he like?
Yeah, that's right.
I was in the same room once with Elder Quentin L. Cook. He was so jovial and lively and smiley
and happy. And then it dawned on me, this is Heber C. Kimball's relative.
I thought, oh, look at him living what Heber C. Kimball had just said.
That was a great moment.
That's great, John.
Because we're thinking about, again, what we learn about God.
I just want to highlight these in verse 34 and 35.
Oh, inhabitants of the earth, 34, I, the Lord, am willing to make these things known unto all flesh. Why? For I am no
respecter of persons and will that all men shall know these things. And when we're thinking about
talking about God's universal, all-encompassing compassion
he wants to reach everyone and he thinks of all of us in the same way no respective persons his
love is unbounded for every one of us and john i'm so glad you brought up elder kieran and just
keep coming back to that relentless pursuit of us yeah A proactive God who is after us.
That's right.
JB, as we wrap up this section one,
the Lord gives us a bit of a pep talk.
Like, okay,
now that we're wrapping up this preface,
he says,
search these commandments,
these sections of the doctrine covenants,
we would call them.
It's not read them. It's search them. They are true and faithful. What you read is true.
As we are moving forward through this Come Follow Me year, JB, going through these revelations,
what would you say to us? What would you say to a listener saying okay the doctor in covenants is a little bit more difficult to understand you have to know some history do i really want to put in
this time these verses can be motivating pep talk great great way of thinking of this i think it can
be helpful maybe to say i would look for what verse 37 says I'm going to find.
I'm going to look for prophecies and promises. That's a really interesting way to navigate
these sections is to say there are prophecies and promises in there. I'm going to look for them.
One comes to my mind, and this is Doctrine and Covenants 19. I just love this promise.
And the Doctrine and Covenants is chock full of promises.
Here's one.
This is verse 23.
Learn of me, listen to my words,
walk in the meekness of my spirit,
and you shall have peace in me.
So we hear the Lord saying,
the prophecies and promises shall all be fulfilled.
Well, I find that promise and I want that fulfilled.
If we're constantly on the lookout for prophecies and promises shall all be fulfilled. Well, I find that promise and I want that fulfilled. If we're constantly on the lookout for prophecies and promises, then we feel the confidence that
the Lord's words will be fulfilled in our own lives and we can experience things like peace
in Him or forgiveness for our sins or guidance or the Holy Ghost speaking to our heart and mind.
Think of all these classic Doctrine and Coven comments passages, if we think of those as prophecies and promises,
we can have the confidence the Lord keeps his word.
They're going to be fulfilled.
Beautiful.
That's awesome.
So, JB, we are coming to the end of our section one here.
What else do you want our listeners to see
before we let you go?
A couple of things.
One thing, you asked a great question earlier, Hank, about what do we see about Joseph Smith
or what can we know about Joseph Smith?
One thing that I think section one sets out as clearly as anywhere, but we're going to
see this again and again, is that Joseph Smith was drenched in the scriptures.
He was drenched in the language of the Bible.
That can be a good example for us.
He had just grown up with the Bible being the air he breathed. And the Lord worked through him
because of that. Section one has so many great allusions to the Bible, so many great Bible
phrases that pop in there. Verses 16 to 19 is an area where just Bible phrase after
Bible phrase after Bible phrase that's linked together. And you can look at the footnotes and
see where those Bible phrases come. What I think that might tell us is Joseph Smith lived the
principle that the Lord introduces in Doctrine and Covenants 84, 85. If we treasure up in our
minds the words of life, we'll know what to say in the very hour.
The Lord could use Joseph Smith's familiarity with the scriptures to teach him. And the more I think
we become drenched in the scriptures, the more the Lord can use that to teach us. I love Joseph
Smith's example of what scriptural literacy can do in making us open to revelation.
John calls it the principle of marinade.
The parable of the marinade.
Regardless of your original intention, you will eventually become what you surround yourself with.
We wrote the talk around that, but yeah, that's great, JB.
He was immersed in the language of the Lord there.
Just becomes who he is, becomes his vocabulary.
Yeah.
That's right. We'll see that all through the Doctrine and Covenants and these great touch points with other scriptures, especially the Bible, that intertextuality.
My colleague Rosalind Welch at the Maxwell Institute calls them hyperlinks, little embedded things that connect us with other scriptures.
Isn't that a great analogy?
Yeah.
That might lead into the one other thing
that I think might be worth touching on.
And that's in verse 39.
For behold and lo, the Lord is God
and the spirit beareth record.
And the record is true
and the truth abideth forever and ever.
Amen.
Embedded in this is the promise
that we're going to get confirmation.
The Spirit will bear record to us that this is true. So I think about a talk that President
J. Reuben Clark gave back in the 50s when he asked the question is, when are the words of
church leaders entitled to the designation of Scripture? We remember that right at the same
time as section one, we have section 68 being revealed at the same conference. And that's verse three and four when it says, whatsoever they speak when moved upon by the
spirit shall be the mind of the Lord, the will of the Lord, the word of the Lord shall
be scripture.
So we get that sense that anything the Lord's servants are saying when they're moved upon
by the spirit is scripture.
And then J. Reuben Clark, back in his talk in the 50s said, how do we know what they're
speaking is moved upon by the spirit?
And then he
says, I have given this some thought, and the answer that I've come to is, we'll know that
they were moved upon by the Spirit when we ourselves are moved upon by the Spirit. And he
talks about how that shifts the responsibility to us to be living in such a way that we are in tune
with the Spirit and that we get the confirmation that
whether by the voice of my servants or by my own mouth, it is the same because the spirit
gives us that confirmation and the Lord will give us our own witnesses.
So I love that promise coming at the end of this section.
I have a role to play in this. JB, this has been phenomenal, as I knew it would be. You've been with us, I think,
a few times before. The book of James, I remember we just had so much fun with.
But this, JB, is your bread and butter, history and the restoration. You've been studying it,
and I hate to date you here, but you've been studying and teaching it for 30 years, I think.
And it's been a full-time gig, JB.
You have read and studied and taught,
read and studied and taught.
And it's a blessing, honestly,
that the three of us have
that not every member of the church can have
to make this our daily walk.
So JB, if I'm a listener at home
and either I'm new to the church,
I just don't have time to study all of
this. And I've got people online saying, oh, Joseph Smith is a terrible person. Here is J.B.
Hawes, as good as they come, who has studied this in depth. So J.B., what would you tell someone in
that situation? How do you feel about the restoration and about the prophet? Thanks for this chance to get to reflect on that and to get to speak to that.
So grateful for the platform you two are providing and the way your voices are allowing so many
good things to be amplified.
This restoration is everything that we think it is and we hope it is and we want it to be. And that the work
that Joseph Smith put into motion is rolling forward in miraculous ways. The class I teach
the most at BYU is called the Modern Church. It's 20th and 21st century church history. So it kind
of brings things up to the modern day. I cannot leave that classroom any day without feeling the miracle that is going on and that
the Lord is doing his work and that miracles are continuing. As Brigham Young said so well,
Joseph Smith left the key, which is the key of revelation, and that that has been tapped into
again and again and again, and that this is the church of Jesus Christ. Richard Bushman, whom I admire so much,
and a historian who I think exemplifies all of this,
he wrote a letter to a member of the church
who reached out to Richard
after Richard had written Rough Stone Rolling,
the biography of Joseph Smith.
And then Richard Bushman published this.
He made it into a kind of open letter.
And he closes with this line,
after all these years of studying Joseph's life, I believe now more than ever.
That's what I would say to all of us is that a fearlessness to say that studying more church history,
I think only deepens our wonder and our marveling and seeing God's hand. As Patrick Mason, a good friend
of mine said, don't study church history too little and to dive into it. And the more you get into it
and the more we study, the more marvelous and wondrous it's going to become. In my own way,
I'll say the same thing. The more I've studied, I believe now more than ever. It has the restoration.
It has things that both fire up the mind and settle the heart.
That's why I think it's the gospel of Jesus Christ in its fullness.
Beautifully put.
Yeah.
Coming off the Book of Mormon year,
I am struck by the miraculous divine nature of this work. The more I study the Doctrine and
Covenants, the more I study the Book of Mormon, I think I could not be any more impressed. And yet
someone shows me something and I think... And you're more impressed.
I'm more impressed.
JB used the word marvelous and the phrase that came to mind is one the scriptures use about this.
This is a marvelous work and a wonder.
Being part of the latter days and watching it unfold, how did we get to be here right now, guys?
How did our students get to be here right now?
Our listeners, all of us.
Our listeners, look at what we're all involved in.
What did you say, JB?
Fires up the mind and settles the heart.
Awesome.
So well said.
This is the Lord.
This is the Jesus Christ of the New Testament. And we do not back down off of that.
I excuse not myself.
That's right.
That's right.
This is him.
You're here.
Yeah.
JB, thank you for spending your time with us. I know as director of the Neil A. Maxwell Institute over at BYU, you got a pretty busy gig over there, but we're grateful for your time.
Oh, so glad to be with you both, Hank and John. It's always a pleasure. It's remarkable.
Yeah. We love having JB Hawes here and we at Follow Him are fans.
Aren't we, John, of JB Hawes?
Love you, brother.
I'm a fan back.
And if you want to hear more from JB and what his team over at the Maxwell Institute are doing, JB, where would we go?
Great.
You can find us online at mi.byu.edu.
That's maxwellinstitute.byu.edu.
Since you gave me a chance to give a little bit of a plug,
Maxwell Institute just released last month a series of books called
Themes in the Doctrine and Covenants.
There's seven books.
They're brief.
And each one deals with a different theme
that weaves its way through the Doctrine and Covenants.
So there's some great stuff.
Agency, Revelation, Law, Family history, redeeming the dead, divine aid, seeing, and then
time. So there are some great themes in the Doctrine and Covenants and those little books
have just come out from the Maxwell Institute. Oh, please. mi.byu.edu. Go support JB and his
team over there. I'm looking at a picture of him right now. I'm going to go order mine as soon as we're done recording here. Thank you, JB. With that,
we want to thank Dr. JB Hawes for being with us today, all the way from Hooper, Utah. One more
shout out for Hooper, Utah. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorenson, our sponsors, David and Verla Sorenson.
And if you've listened to us at all, you know that every episode we remember our founder, Steve Sorenson.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We are going to talk First Vision on Follow Him.
Thank you for joining us on today's episode.
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