followHIM - Exodus 1-6 Part 2 • Dr. Krystal Pierce • Mar. 23-29 • Come, Follow Me
Episode Date: March 18, 2026Dr. Krystal Pierce continues examining Exodus 1-6, revealing how God meets Moses in his self-doubt and demonstrates divine power over both Pharoah and fear.YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/HI8v2xRYxf4ALL EPI...SODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIM.coFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTER https://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE:00:00 Part 2 - Dr. Krystal Pierce02:18 B.H. Roberts’s future05:12 A perfect description of God07:31 Meaning of “pharoah”09:01 Pharoah is going to refuse11:26 God reassures Moses13:13 Moses’s staff and the symbolism of a snake17:14 Skin diseases20:35 Aaron as spokesperson23:29 Anger or rapid breathing?26:14 A miraculous story and a strange visitor31:52 God sends help in the form of other people34:00 Israel is God’s “firstborn”36:23 Covenantal bonds and cutting40:46 Zipporah and “cutting” a covenant43:58 Zipporah helps save her family46:02 Moses and Aaron reunite48:01 Who is Jehovah?50:30 Bricks without straw54:00 Things get worse for Israel56:39 Remember, remember, remember59:29 It is about redemption1:02:59 Crushed, dust, and the Potter1:06:59 Only Jesus can save1:09:17 Four themes and testimony of Jesus Christ1:12:55 End of Part 2 - Dr. Krystal PierceThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsAmelia Kabwika: Portuguese TranscriptsHeather Barlow: Communications DirectorSydney Smith: Social Media, Graphic Design "Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Part 2 with Dr. Crystal Pierce, Exodus 1 through 6.
This was a great plan until now.
I'm coming, I'm going to deliver my people to a land of milk and honey.
Moses is like, this is a great plan.
I love it.
I agree with all of this.
That's why in verse 11, what does he say?
He says, who am I?
His identity, who am I?
An Egyptian who's going to go in there and change things?
Am I a Hebrew?
And I'm going to go in there and save them?
and my Midianite. Why me? I don't even know who I am at this point. How can I do anything?
I've been gone for many years. You don't want me. I promise I'm not your guy.
I love God's answer to him. I'll be with you. You know who you are? You're my son. You're my prophet.
That's who you are. This word, it's translated as certainly in this word, God is saying,
You can't fail because I'm with you.
I'm going to give you a sign.
And the sign is, someday you'll come back to this mountain with all of those people,
and you'll be able to build a sanctuary here and worship me.
He says, that's your sign.
Someday you'll come back.
I really like in verse 12.
He says, when you have brought forth the people out of Egypt?
It's not if.
And John, I love it when you say, when he says, who am I?
He doesn't say, come on, Moses.
Let's work on your self-esteem.
Let's have a self-esteem class.
let's tell you how awesome you are.
He just says, I'll be with you.
And that's the promise that we hear every week at the sacrament table,
that we can have his spirit to be with us.
Love that.
How often we hear that.
You're never, ever alone.
We get some hints here that the reason why Moses failed before
is because he just charged in in his own strength.
Now at this point, God's like, no, I'm with you.
You're going in the strength of the Lord now,
which changes everything.
It's interesting because we look at Moses as a great prophet.
You know, the Jewish community looks at him as the best prophet.
If the prophets need help from God,
like how much do I need help from God?
John, it reminds me of B.H. Roberts.
I don't know how to read.
My favorite stories.
Truman Madsen wrote a biography of B.H. Roberts.
Have you heard this, Crystal?
He saw a newspaper blow by.
He was on a begging twirling.
with some people that his mother had already gone to American,
left him with a convert couple,
the Tovys whose conversion was marginal.
He sees a newspaper blow by,
and he just thinks it's so magical
that these little marks can speak to people.
And it is pretty cool.
He says out loud,
will these marks ever speak to me?
Will I ever read books?
He said he heard a soul voice that said,
I like A-Y-E-I-I and you'll write them too it's the best story he said I sat in silence for a long time
until mother Tovey woke up and we resumed our begging tour finally when he got to Utah a teacher named
Hannah Holbrook there's an elementary school named after her up in Bountiful Utah taught him to
cipher is what Truman Metz and said and he learned to read he finally wrote a comprehensive
history of the church. The cool thing Truman Madsen said is B.H. Roberts had to take over,
if I'm getting the facts right, when his mission president was ill, he became the acting mission
president there. And I think in the southern states, he would send copies of his comprehensive
history to his former missionaries, and he would put his name, and then underneath his name,
he would put, I, and you'll write them too. What a great story.
Love that.
And it's the same Lord doing this.
I will be with you and you should see your future.
It looks really good.
You're going to come back to this moment.
He knows our true potential.
He just has to convince us.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Moses has an interesting question here, Crystal.
He says, okay, when I go to the chill-the-visual and say,
guess who it is, I'm here to save you.
They are going to say,
Okay, who sent you? What do you want me to say?
Moses keeps it real. He's, I need to be able to tell them exactly who sent me.
This is where we get the meaning behind the name Jehovah. He says, this is what you're going to tell him.
I am that I am. What better way to explain who God is than that he exists. He's there.
That's the most basic foundational testimony. I believe God exists. I believe in God.
This is important to Moses if we want to do like a little bit of context here because the Egyptians had over 2,000 gods.
Each one has a name.
And you can think Moses says, they're going to want to know which God this is.
Jehovah answers and says, I am the God, the only God.
Above all of these other Egyptian deities, this is the meaning of my name.
And then he clarifies, he says, the god of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
this is who you're going to tell them that I am.
People translate this in different ways.
Some people say, oh, well, it's a present.
I am.
Some people translate it as I will be in the future.
Then he mentions Abraham as well.
I have existed, I now exist, and I will exist.
Basically saying, I'm infinity, I'm God, I'm everything.
Which is perfect, perfect description of God.
Oh, so good.
I don't know. Maybe I'm reading into Moses, but he's got to be thinking,
do you realize what they're going to say to me when I tell them I'm here to answer their prayers?
They haven't had a prophet in a while.
All of a sudden, he's going to show up and say, God's speaking to me.
First of all, who are you?
Second of all, who is God?
These are legit questions.
He wants to be prepared when he goes back.
He says, first thing you're doing is,
going to gather the elders. These are probably the heads of the families, the households,
the patriarchs. They still had some hierarchy even among them, even while they're in Egypt. And he says,
you need to go talk to them first. He basically says, you're going to give them these code words.
I have surely visited you. Now, these were the same words prophesied by Joseph in Genesis 50.
And they'll believe you. He tells them,
going to believe you. They're going to listen to you, and then you're going to go with them to the king,
and you're going to ask the king for something very specific. This is in verse 18. He says,
you're going to ask him to let you go and worship your God. He says, you're going to ask them to let you
go out into the wilderness, to a holy space, build an altar, sacrifice an animal, and worship your God.
Have a small request. He's not asking for them to leave yet. Ask him.
if we can worship.
We want an extended weekend.
Let us go.
We're going to go for three days.
Which is exactly how the Pharaoh takes it when he hears it.
He's like, you want time off?
No.
That's not going to happen.
Crystal, here they're calling in King of Egypt, but it's still the Pharaoh.
Doesn't Pharaoh mean something about a house?
Pharaoh in Egyptian is Per-A-A-A, which means the great house.
Originally, it referred to actually the palace in the same way we would call them.
the White House. We all know what that means. They called it the Great House, and then eventually
it becomes an actual title much later for the King of Egypt. Crystal, I've never seen this.
Moses quotes Joseph of Egypt, and I wonder if, is this something that the elder's visual might go?
How do you know that? Maybe, yeah. Yeah, it would be a sign for sure. It had been 40 years.
maybe some of them, if they're the elders, the older ones, then they did know who Moses was or his story or things like that.
But maybe some of them didn't too.
But would definitely be interesting that Moses all of a sudden is quoting this.
He's quoting Joseph.
I like moments like that where they don't believe him, they don't believe.
He says, well, here's what he sold me to tell you.
Like, wait.
He said, what?
That's right out of Genesis.
But of course, who knows, he tells them you get together with the elders,
then all of you are going to go to the Pharaoh and ask him for a three-day weekend.
He's going to say no.
He tries to make it very clear to Moses that verse 19, he's not going to let you go.
He says this over and over again.
It's not going to happen.
I think Moses is thinking of other things at this point because he seems to forget this.
The Lord warned him
And even when the pharaoh was like,
Okay, you can go,
but now I'm going to chase after you.
He never really fully let them go.
He says in verse 20,
I'll stretch out my hand and smite Egypt.
He's using an Egyptian symbol here against the Egyptians.
Because we have this thing in Egyptian art called the smiting scene.
Every Pharaoh shows himself
with his hand raised above his head,
with prisoners or captives or foreigners,
and he's got a mace or some sort of weapon,
and he's smiting.
This is definitely meant to be,
the pharaoh is not going to be doing the smiting anymore.
The true power comes from God.
He's the one that is going to be dealing out justice, basically.
He's the one who has power and strength.
And he gives us prophecy, he says,
and actually, by the time you need to leave,
you'll have favor in the side of the Egyptians.
You won't even leave empty-handed.
The Egyptians are going to give you all of this stuff when you leave.
There's some bad translations here.
So this word borrow, the word in Hebrews just ask.
They didn't borrow, they didn't steal, they didn't take,
they asked the Egyptians, will you give us stuff?
And some of the Egyptians were friendly with them
and probably were like, you're leaving.
we love you actually,
take this stuff and go on your journey on your way.
Some of the other Egyptians,
probably more of them,
were like, get out.
We will pay you to leave.
We will pay you so the plagues never happen again.
Please.
Not only will they let you go,
they'll pay you to leave.
What?
Take my gold as long as you never come back
and take those plagues and things with you.
Crystal, John, I noticed
that even though Moses has had this reassurance from God, he still is not super convinced.
This is chapter 4 verse 1. Moses answered and said,
But behold, they will believe me.
They will not believe me.
And they're not going to obey me.
Because I know what they're going to say.
They're going to say, the Lord has not appeared to you.
Here's God reassuring him, and Moses is very human.
Everybody needs faith.
Everybody, the prophets, us,
everybody doubts themselves sometimes and God's trying to help us feel strong and confident. He has our back.
No wonder, I think in chapter four, the Lord gets a little frustrated finally and says,
done with the self-doubt. Go and do what I told you to do.
He does try to work with Moses where Moses is at. Then he says, okay, Moses, I'm going to give you
three miracles you can perform. And if you perform these three miracles,
for the elders, they'll know that these are divine miracles and God is speaking to you and God is
instructing you. You know, Moses says, they're not going to believe me on this. And the Lord
asks him a question. He responds, what's in your hand? Moses looks down and he's a shepherd. He turned
off from the sheep and everything and he's like, oh, it's a rod, but it's a shepherd's crook.
Jehovah says, throw it on the ground. So he does it. He throws it on the ground. It becomes a
serpent and Moses runs away. Moses is so real. He's the one who just did this and he runs away. He's like
a snake. I hope that made the Lord smile, Crystal. I hope the Lord was running away from him.
The Lord, he has a sense of humor. We see it. Sometimes is lost on us because of translation and
culture and things. There might have been a little giggle. There had to be a laugh.
It's interesting because then he says,
pick up the snake by the tail,
which is not how you pick up a snake.
If you've ever seen snake wranglers go for the head,
you secure the head,
you secure the fangs,
you secure the venom.
To me, this shows progression in faith
because Moses does it.
First he's running away,
and now he's back picking it up by the tail,
and it becomes a rod back in his hand.
There's so much symbolism here in terms of ancient Egypt.
These signs are for people who are Egyptian or who have lived in Egypt for hundreds of years.
The shepherd's crook is a symbol of kingship, power, and authority.
The pharaohs hold him.
Mm-hmm, exactly.
So he has the crook and the flail.
The shepherd's crook is the mercy.
So he uses it to pull the people in.
The flail, which is sort of like a whip, is justice.
That's to beat the people when they're bad.
And the king's supposed to be this balance of justice and mercy.
This sign of authority, strength, mercy is now being saying,
who carries the rod now?
Who carries the authority now?
Who has the power now?
And it's the same thing with the serpent.
Of course, there are serpent deities in Egypt,
and there was one specifically tied to the king.
Her name is Wajit.
she is on the crown.
So even if we go back to King Tut,
the Eureus, the cobra, that's Wadgett.
Wadgett protected the king by spitting fire.
She's described as spitting fire venom at the king's enemies
and protecting the king.
It's a symbol of a deity has your back.
So what is this a symbol of?
Who has the divine power now?
Who has God's blessing now?
Who has the authority, kingship?
This specific one would have sent a message, a strong message.
That's so fascinating.
John, don't you love having an expert here?
The sign, the symbol of the snake here, belongs to Jehovah, belongs to Jesus Christ.
It's interesting because we never think snake and Jesus Christ together.
Crystal, this is a discussion for a later time, but is that similar to why Moses describes Satan
as trying to be a serpent in the garden.
He's trying to be divine.
Yeah, and that word for serpent in the garden
means to trick someone, to try and be crafty
and trick somebody and make them think something
that's not true.
So it fits.
This is the stuff that I just get excited about.
Your worlds are coming together here.
Your scripture, your belief in God,
and your Egyptian, your love of Egypt.
All my favorite things.
all together.
That's what happened in Ether
when we did Ether 1 through 5
I remember.
Got a new word today,
Wadjet.
Yes, Wadgett.
Last time was Deshret.
Now it's Wadgett.
Yeah.
Manna is what is it.
This is Wadjet.
Yeah.
Wadjet.
These are signs that aren't
supposed to produce faith.
These are signs that
Jehovah is giving to
Moses to let
the elders of Israel know, he's a prophet, a true messenger.
Moses anticipating the elders saying,
you're not a prophet of Jehovah.
So he's saying, all right, here's a couple things you can use to let them know that I did call it.
You know, if snakes represent this deity,
it also shows that Jehovah and Moses have power over this Egyptian goddess, too.
That's really what the plagues are about.
All of these Egyptian gods are represented by each plague.
They're nothing compared to Jehovah in his power.
The Battle of the Gods.
The plagues are against the gods of Egypt.
They're not just random.
Let's try frogs.
Each plague represents an Egyptian deity,
and most of them are creator deities.
Hi-ho, Kermit thee plague here.
And they are everywhere.
They're in the oven, they're in the chamber, they're everywhere.
You're hip deep in frogs.
Crystal, what's the next miracle?
What's the next sign?
Okay, so the next sign, he says,
put your hand into your robe.
And when he pulls it out, he sees that it is leprous as snow.
This word lepris, we think of Hansen's disease,
a very specific form of skin disease when we think of leprosy.
But this covered all types of skin.
diseases. Some of them, when they'd get really bad, the skin would turn white and flake off. That's
what's this white as snow. It's the worst type of skin disease you can get. What's interesting about
this is they believed at this time that when you had some sort of typically a physical ailment,
it's because God gave it to you as a punishment. They believed this in Egypt, all over the
ancient Near East. And the only way you would get rid of it is if God took
it away. This is definitely supposed to send a message that this is divine. This sign, giving leprosy,
healing leprosy, instantly God is involved. God is giving Moses this power. Only God could do
something like this. I'm looking in the other translations and quite a few don't use lepros.
They use diseased. Yeah. And that makes a little more sense. And it shall come to pass if they will
not believe thee, neither harken to the voice of the first sign, that they will believe the voice
of the latter sign. So here's two. Just in case the whole snake thing doesn't impress them,
try the hand trick. Yeah, they're progressively supposed to be more miraculous. When we get to verse
nine, he says, so the last sign, the biggest sign is taking water from the Nile and pouring it on
the land, and then it becomes blood upon the land. Kind of hinting at future plagues.
Shadowing, yeah.
This again is control over nature.
Of course, the Nile was represented by an Egyptian god.
His name was Hoppe.
This is saying, and Hopi is blue.
So it's this idea of Hopi doesn't control the Nile, the Egyptian gods, Pharaoh doesn't,
Jehovah does.
And Jehovah's in charge of what happens with nature and creation.
So to us, these are miracles, but to them they'd speak even louder,
given their environment being in Egypt.
Exactly. These are meant for people who are Egyptian or have lived in Egypt for hundreds of years.
They would recognize all of these as a different type of power than they had ever seen before.
Yeah.
Crystal, is it okay if I laugh at the next part where he's given him these three miracles?
And then Moses says, I don't think this is going to work.
the Lord finally gets frustrated, it seems.
He really does.
It's almost like Moses is like,
all that's great and everything,
but I'm not good at speaking.
It doesn't matter if I can do miracles.
I'm not eloquent.
I'm slow of speech.
I have a slow tongue.
In the Joseph Smith translation,
he tells us,
because Moses keeps saying this over and over and over again,
that he puts in stammering lips.
And some people believe that Moses,
had an actual speech impediment, some sort of speech impediment. What he's asking here is possibly
cure my speech impediment. Heal me, cure me. You just gave me leprosy and cured it. Let's do this
because I am not confident in the way I speak. Now, some people do think that maybe this is more of,
I haven't been in Egypt for 40 years. My Egyptian is rusty. My Hebrew is a little rusty too,
because we do think the Midianites spoke their own dialect, their own Semitic language.
How am I supposed to talk to Pharaoh and Egyptian or Hebrew to the children of Israel?
He sounds like he's not confident about his speech at all.
I love the Lord just says, well, you just go.
Verse 12.
He's like, I'm done.
He says, who made your mouth?
Who's the creator?
You're speaking to the creator.
I'll be with your mouth.
I'll tell you what to say.
You don't have to worry about that.
Don't worry about that.
Just go and do it.
Listen to the contemporary English version.
Does this not sound like almost anyone who has to speak?
I've never been a good speaker.
I wasn't one before you spoke to me, and I'm not one now.
I can never think of what to say.
I think we've all felt that at some point.
Every time I stand up in front of my students,
please, Lord, help me know what to say and not have stammering lips and be eloquent.
know what they need, I worry about it too.
We're probably projecting onto the Lord here, but I just like the idea that
Moses keeps coming up with reasons why this isn't going to work.
And I do think this is kind of the height of this identity thing, because by telling him in
verse 12, I will be with thy mouth and teach thee what to say, he's saying, you are a prophet.
This is how we define prophets in the Old Testament. They speak the words of God. They speak. They speak.
on behalf of God. So Moses says, I can't do it. I'm not eloquent. I don't know Egyptian. I don't know
Hebrew. I can't speak. Who am I? What am I doing? And God says, you're a prophet. And I'm with you.
And you're a child of God. And you're a child of the covenant. You can do it. And all those other things.
Those are secondary. We'll figure those out. All that matters is that I'm with you.
Crystal, I don't know exactly how to read the next verse.
Is him saying still objecting?
Yes, this is a bad translation.
He basically says, I'll go if you make me, but if there's anyone else you can send, please send them.
That's basically what he's saying.
Please send someone else, but if you can't find any other person on the earth to send, then I'll go.
And that's why verse 14, it says, the anger of the Lord was kindled.
He's like, I literally just told you I'll be with you and I'll tell you what to say and you're still doubting yourself.
It's interesting because this word anger here in Hebrew, it actually is the same word as nose or face.
And it means rapid breathing.
Like you're trying to stay calm and patient.
You're trying to not lose it.
And I think of God is he's being patient.
And he gives him an act of mercy.
He says, what about Aaron?
Aaron is confident in his speech.
He'll be happy to see you.
I love this.
They haven't seen each other for 40 years.
He's like, okay.
It's great, though, because he doesn't say,
so I'll tell Aaron what to say.
He doesn't say that.
He says, what we're going to do is,
I'm going to tell you what to say,
and then you're going to tell Aaron what to say,
and then Aaron's going to tell the children of Israel.
Sending Aaron is so merciful.
It's almost training Moses to become,
confident and a prophet himself because eventually
God goes straight through Moses. God tells Moses and Moses
tells the children. He doesn't need Aaron anymore as the intermediary
the sort of in between. He knows at this point
this is what Moses needs. Moses didn't need his speech
whether it was an impediment or language healed, cured.
He knew Moses needed some support, some help through Aaron.
And that would get him to the speech.
the point where he felt like he was good enough to be able to do it.
Man, I'm following this exchange. It seems so human.
I see this miraculous burning bush. I come over. Moses, you're my son.
I don't think so. I don't think I'm your guy. I will be with you. I'm going to help you.
What am I supposed to say? Here's this cool thing that Joseph of Egypt said.
Give them that.
And then they're not going to believe me.
All right, here's some miracles.
Let's give you that.
I don't think I can talk very well.
Who do you think made man's mouth?
Please send someone else.
This is an exchange that a lot of us have had with the Lord.
Is there anyone else that can do it?
Yeah.
There's a line in the Come Follow Me lesson manual that says,
God gives power to people he calls to do his work. President Benson used to say whom God calls,
God qualifies. That's what the Lord is telling you over and over. And finally says, we'll take your
brother with you. Yeah, the Lord knows he can do it. Moses doesn't believe he can do it. To me,
this is such an act of mercy. Sometimes God answers our prayers, not through taking away the hardship
or directly answering it, but he sends people to answer our prayers.
He works through people.
This is the way God speaks to me.
This is the way God answers my prayers.
This resonates with me, that he sends people.
The strangest thing happened 10 years ago in my life.
I know it was 10 years ago because my son was a newborn, and now he's 10.
I was going through a major transition in my life at that point,
having to choose between two paths. Both paths were good. It was one of those ones where, you know,
I was making choices about my career, my future, and I felt God telling me to go down one path to make one
choice, and he was being very clear about it. But I felt other people and society, my friends,
had other advice and had thought maybe this other path was the proper way to go.
I was struggling, taking that leap of faith, going against what everybody else was saying,
into what I felt like God was telling me to do.
In the middle of all of this, we were up late one night.
It was like one or two in the morning,
as parents are when they have a newborn in the house pretty late.
And we heard a knock on the door.
George goes down, he looks.
I'm like, who is it? What is it?
And he says, there's a girl out there crying.
And he's like, what do we do?
And I was like, let her in, open the door, like, get her inside, you know?
because that's my instincts, right, are immediately like crying girl.
So it opened the door and there's this young girl there.
I mean, she's like 19 or 20.
She's sobbing.
Never seen her before.
Had no idea who she was.
We invited her in.
It came and sat with her on the couch.
She said that she had graduated from high school and she had met this guy falling in love with him.
And he had convinced her to run away with him, move out of her house.
And he had promised her all these things.
things will get married, we're going to do all these things. And in the process, she had kind of
had a falling out with her family because they felt like she was making the wrong decision.
She had been with him for a few months and had realized she had made the wrong decision. They would
never get married. He wasn't going to keep these promises. And she felt lost and hopeless.
And she didn't know what to do. She felt like she couldn't reach out to her family because they
wouldn't accept her back in. She said she was driving around.
that night, just sobbing, crying, trying to decide what to do. And she heard a voice say,
go to that house right now, knock on the door, ask for help. And it was our house. I sat with her
for quite a while talking and saying, you know, call your mom, you know, call your mom, call your
parents. You never know what will happen if you don't try. And eventually I asked her, do you want a
blessing? And she said yes. Called George. George called the bishop.
I'm sure he was like, who, what is going on?
But he comes over, straight over.
They give her a blessing.
She didn't really want us to know her name or specifics about her.
After the blessing, she looked up and she said,
I know what I need to do.
I'm going to call my mom and she was gone out the door.
Thank you.
Bye.
Never saw her again.
Sometimes even when I think back on it, I'm like,
was she an angel or a real person?
Like, who was it?
that the thing is, is later when I was thinking about this, I started to realize that
she was sent to me, not necessarily for her and her situation, but for me to show me what a leap of
faith is. If this young girl who was 19 and felt like she wasn't keeping her covenants
could listen to God and immediately stop and knock on a stranger's door at two
in the morning, I could take it a leap of faith. I could see what God wanted for me and do what he said,
do what he told me to do, and make that decision, and block out what everybody else was saying.
Now in hindsight, look back and it was the right decision, and it was incredible. I don't know what
happened to her, but I know what happened to me. This is one of those examples to me, just like
Moses and Aaron, where God sent somebody, because I didn't have the confidence to make that
decision to take that leap. But that girl who came out of nowhere and disappeared taught me that.
It changed everything for me. This just reminded me of it. Wow. President Kimball might say,
God does notice us and he watches over us, but it is usually through another person that he meets
our needs. And that's a cool story, Crystal. I know. I thought if she can do it, I can do it.
God knows who you are, Crystal. That's so cool.
He had been sending me this message, and this happens to me so often.
He tells me what to do, and I doubt myself.
I'm not sure.
And then somebody else comes along and makes it very clear what I'm supposed to do.
In our day, we could liken this to a mission companion.
I can't do this.
Well, that's why I'm going to give you a companion.
Yeah, and that's Aaron.
You do the thinking.
Aaron will do the talking.
All right, you guys go together.
I think every parent has reached this point that the Lord gets to,
which is, all right.
What do you need to go?
If you're that scared, here, I'll give you Aaron.
He'll help you get underway.
Let's just get going.
And it gives Moses enough confidence to go,
because he goes right back to Jethro and he says,
I got to get back to my brothers.
He uses the term brothers again.
He's getting back into this.
I got to get back to my people.
I'm going to save my people.
And I got to get back to my brother
because he's going to be the one to really help me.
And he packs up his wife and his sons and they head towards Egypt.
It's funny because the Lord reminds him again in verse 21.
He says, by the way, I've already mentioned this.
But when you ask Pharaoh, he's not going to let you go.
It's interesting because it says, I will harden his heart.
I think we immediately are like, whoa, wait a minute, whoa, God doesn't go around hardening people's hearts.
The commentaries grapple with this.
and they try all kinds of language gymnastics to make this work.
And what do we have?
We have the Joseph Smith translation.
JST.
He says Pharaoh will harden his heart.
He makes it very clear we're talking about Pharaoh.
Thank you to Joseph Smith.
Thank you to that prophet who is teaching us about this prophet here.
It's incredible.
Now, what a blessing to not have to grapple with that.
It makes sense. He does this so many times throughout all of these. He clarifies, he adds. Some of that's from his own hard work and knowledge and studying of Hebrew. And a lot of that is from revelation from God, having God help him better understand these passages. It's incredible.
Crystal, you're reminding us of that because you said Moses is going to seem to forget this part.
Yeah, he forgets. He says, this is exactly what you're going to say to Pharaoh.
this is in verse 22. We get the, thus saith the Lord, which is a mark of a prophet. When a prophet
says, thus saith the Lord, it's almost like God says, quote, Israel is my son, even my firstborn.
Let my son go that he may serve, worship, sacrifice for me. And if thou refuse, then your son,
your firstborn will be killed. That went intense pretty quickly.
Yeah, you don't let him go.
If you look at this, it says firstborn, then he says son and then firstborn, this means there's a covenantal relationship here.
When we covenant with Heavenly Father, we covenant with the Savior, there's a relationship.
That means we have promises and they have promises.
When the covenant is broken, which is what he's saying here, if you don't let them worship, the covenant is broken, there's justice coming.
and they're not going to die.
You might think, well, the Lord's being a little over the top here.
Well, he made a covenant with Abraham.
He made a promise to Abraham that this family was going to bless all the families of the earth.
Not doing this would be God not fulfilling his part of the covenant.
There's covenantal mercy and there's covenantal justice.
The justice is going to fall on the Pharaoh because he's the one who is affecting all of these
covenantal promises, posterity, prosperity, priesthood. They're not allowed to worship. They're not allowed
to sacrifice. They're not allowed to go to Canaan. He says, you go warn the Pharaoh. This is a problem.
Yeah. It reminds me, John, I bet you can reference this. The Lord says, you might as well stretch
forth your puny arm and stop the Missouri River. Missouri. And it's decreed course.
than to...
It's to the revelations
coming down on the heads
of the Latter-day Saints.
Yeah.
To hinder the Almighty
from pouring down
knowledge from heaven
upon the heads of the Latter-day Saints.
So he's like,
don't try to stop this.
What happens?
Is he going to do it?
Like, is he actually going to do this?
Okay, you want me to walk into Pharaoh?
Like, okay.
And it's interesting, because this is a heavy moment.
He's like, this is what you're going to say.
And all of a sudden,
we get verse 24 where it says Moses is traveling the Lord met him and sought to kill him
and you're like now wait what we don't think of the Lord hardening hearts or killing people
we tend not to think of it in that way the Joseph Smith translation makes it clear it says
his hand was about to fall upon him to kill him but it gives us a reason so in the
Joseph Smith translation it says because he had not circumcised his son
We are meant to tie this situation with exactly what Jehovah just said.
Covenantal bonds keeping the commandments.
And of course, under the Abrahamic covenant, circumcision was a token of the covenant.
Moses, for some reason, hadn't circumcised his son.
He had broken the covenantal bond.
We see, it's actually, that's what this word, the word kill here.
in Hebrew, it usually signifies a covenantal breach or a sin.
So he's basically saying,
Moses, how can we expect you to go and talk about the covenant
and say justice is coming?
When you haven't kept your covenant,
you've got to take care of yourself first
before you can start to help other people.
You've got to live the covenant before you can teach it.
Exactly.
Putting it this way is really,
hard. But it's interesting because this idea of circumcision, it's related to the word, the Hebrew
word, to make a covenant. The word is to cut, to cut a covenant. Formally, it's to cut in stone.
It's formal, binding, legal, cut in stone. That's why we see every token of the covenant has
something to do with cutting or bleeding, cut or blood. Even this word to kill, this is another cut
word. You didn't keep your cut covenants by cutting circumcision, you'll be cut. There's all of this
symbolism here. That's why we have animal sacrifice. This is why we have circumcision. This is why we have
some people when they keep or fulfill a covenant. We'll see this in the Old Testament. They cut their
hair. There's all kinds of cutting. It's why we have the Passover with the blood. Even when Jesus says the
law of animal sacrifices fulfilled. He says there's a new law of sacrifice. It's still cutting.
Think about a broken heart and a contrite spirit. It's still a cut heart and a cut spirit.
It still continues. So there's so much symbolism here. He says, if you cut this covenant,
but you're not following the covenant, there's justice. There's a cutting. There's a justice here.
Of course, all of it is covered by the atonement of Jesus Christ, all of it.
All the cuttings, the blood, the sacrifice, everything was meant to point to him, always.
His sacrifice, his cutting, being cut, his bleeding from every pore, him being on the cross, all of those things covered all of these other cuttings, all of these other things.
It's beautiful how it just all ties together like that.
They probably learned this from Jethro.
do you think?
Yeah.
And he wasn't living it.
Yeah, he didn't, for some reason, and we're not sure why, he didn't circumcise one of his sons.
There are different theories, like he was preoccupied with other things, like speaking to God in the fiery bush and traveling to Egypt and becoming a prophet, that he kind of forgot about his most basic covenants he had already made.
Sometimes we get distracted, preoccupied, and we forget our very basic foundational covenants, you know, that we've made commandments and things like that.
Wow.
I don't know if I'm going to teach this part to the 12 and 13 year olds when I get there.
I hope it's the other teacher that week, gospel doctrine.
We're not under the law of circumcision anymore.
But the principle is still there that you have to.
to live the gospel before you can teach the gospel,
and that his wife helps him live the gospel.
Sipora's like, let me take the reins here or the knife.
It's fascinating because Moses could have just done it.
Moses could have been like, I'm the prophet, I'm the father, I'm doing this,
but it's Zippora who sticks in.
She takes a flint.
This is a flint knife.
These were much more hygienic, sharper, more readily available.
She uses that to circumcise her son.
She steps in.
It's the same reason when they said that when they make a covenant,
he says, put your hand under my thigh.
The idea is like posterity.
Yep, it goes back to creation.
You know, and this is why she calls him a bloody husband,
which sounds awful or like you're swearing or something in another country.
It's basically she's saying your covenant is restored.
your covenantal relationship is restored.
Through Zipporah, through the actions of this woman.
In verse 26, it says, so he let him go.
This is so Jehovah let Moses go.
Joseph Smith gives us that too.
In the translation, he makes it very clear.
Because of Ziphorah's quick thinking, quick action,
she is able to basically save Moses,
restore that covenantal relationship for him.
So he becomes, once again, a husband of the cutting,
a husband of blood.
The footnote says, there is some covenant significance in this, also verse 26, like you just said.
Yeah.
Crystal, so he let him go, that's going to be the same language they use with Pharaoh.
Yeah.
If you keep the covenant, you'll be delivered.
That's the promise.
If you don't, then justice comes.
Yeah, it's a lesson here of live this privately and you'll be let go.
Okay, now go do that same thing.
publicly. You're going to go talk to Pharaoh, keep your covenants. Maybe the Lord really wasn't
trying to kill him, but teach him. Yeah, it's justice. When we sin, we spiritually die. We're
spiritually killed when we sin. We are separated from God even more and more. And the only way to
overcome that is to restore that relationship through repentance, through the atonement.
I think this is the lesson here. And I love it. Zipur is the one who steps in.
and helps him. Moses has all of this support, so much support as he goes through this.
I think that this is an absolutely true principle. One, we have to live what we teach. There's no power
in trying to teach principles you don't live. And two, your spouse can help you live what you teach.
No one would know the intimate parts of your life like your spouse. I can say that in my life.
I try to teach the gospel and I try to live what I teach
and my wonderful wife Sarah helps me live what I teach.
There's a great story here even though it's a little bit told in an odd way.
Yeah, and I love that Zippora's name means little bird,
but she is not a little bird.
I think in her mind she's like,
I'm going to save my husband, I'm going to save my child,
and I will do whatever it takes to help my family and step in and save them.
You brought that up about spouses because I know it's the same for me with George.
We're so different from each other that we fill in the gaps for each other.
We're puzzle pieces that he's laid back and he's chill and he takes giant leaps of faith so giant.
I'm like scared for him, you know, and he believes it's going to work out.
And it does.
And for me, I'm like, it'll work out if I have a spreadsheet and a 20-step plan.
but we work together, we balance each other out in that way.
I love that Moses and Zippora, they balance each other out too.
I think it was Elder Maxwell that talked about marry someone with compensating competencies.
That's good.
You're strong where I'm weak and vice versa.
And if your wife has a sharp flint, Moses fled.
And Moses fled.
She just acts. I love it.
Moses is, he's the one who wants the instructions and confidence and she just jumps into it.
Let's do it.
That's so great.
I usually say if I'm doing something wrong, the Lord will tell me or he'll tell my wife.
That's usually how it goes.
Usually not going to tell someone in my ward.
He's usually going to tell me or he's going to tell my wife.
Something needs to change.
Now he's ready, Crystal.
Man, this has been a lot of tutoring and a lot of mentoring.
Yeah, a lot of training.
Back and forth with God, yeah.
If Moses is the best, and this is what he goes through, we got to go through some things, too, to get to where our full potential is.
And we kind of think at this point, Sappora and the kids go back.
It's time for them to go back.
Baby's just been circumcised.
They need to take care of that.
But Moses goes on.
Aaron is told to go and meet him. And I love it. It says when they meet together, they're so excited. It's been 40 years since these brothers have seen each other. Maybe even Aaron is like, is Moses dead? And Moses is like, is Aaron still alive? They see each other. And it says they kiss. And this kiss many times when we see this in Hebrew, it signals a restored relationship. Esau and Jacob kiss when they see each other. David and Absalom kiss when they see each other.
It's a like, we're back together.
We're inseparable.
We are going to do this together.
Almost representative, again, of a covenantal relationship.
Moses tells Aaron.
I wonder if Aaron's like, what?
Can you imagine telling this story?
And then he said this and I said that.
And then he said, throw the serpent on the ground.
Aaron's going.
I think Aaron's like, last time I saw you, you had killed an Egyptian and left.
Yeah.
Now he's like, you're a prophet?
What happened?
What's going on?
But he believes him.
He accepts him.
He says, let's go.
Verse 29, it says, they go to the elders, and they do the signs.
In verse 31, it says, the people believed.
The people believed.
Moses is probably like, success.
Finally, finally, my people believe me.
They accept me.
This is going to work out great.
And that takes us into chapter five.
They get to Pharaoh.
They do the thus saith.
Say, here we're going to tell you.
The Lord God of Israel says,
Let my people go so that they can hold a feast,
a sacrifice, worship in the wilderness.
Exactly what the Lord told him to say.
And Pharaoh's answer,
Who?
Who is Jehovah?
You just said Jehovah.
Who?
Why would I obey him?
I don't know who Jehovah is.
And you can imagine Moses is like, oh no.
Yeah.
But for Pharaoh, it's a legitimate question.
He's like, I know 2,000 Egyptian gods, and I just went through him.
I don't recognize that name, Jehovah.
Who is that?
But the Pharaoh is eventually going to regret asking that.
Because Jehovah's like, you want to know who I am?
I will show you exactly who.
I am. They try to explain to him. He's the God of the Hebrews. He met with us. He's like, I just told you he's
the God of Israel. He is the God of the Hebrews. Please let us go. We need to fulfill our covenantal obligations
through worship and sacrifice. Or justice is coming. He warns the Pharaoh. Justice is coming because
if you're keeping us from these things, pestilence, the sword, all sorts of things could happen,
which Pharaoh should understand because they also believed if you didn't keep your gods happy,
they would send wars and diseases and all sorts of things.
But Pharaoh's still like, I don't know who you're talking about.
Who is this?
Because the Egyptians also believed that the Pharaoh was part divine.
The Pharaoh is probably thinking, no, no, no, I'm a god.
Typically throughout Egyptian history, the Pharaoh represented the god Horus on Earth.
and then after the Pharaoh died, he became deified fully divine.
They would build temples to these kings, to these pharaohs, and they'd go in them and worship them.
But some Egyptian kings, and a great example of this is Ramsey's II,
decided they wanted to be worshipped in life.
So they deified themselves fully into gods while they're alive.
Ramsey's liked himself so much.
He built so many temples where people could worship him.
He even built a temple, and there are scenes in the temple,
of himself worshipping himself as a god.
This is how strongly they felt.
He liked himself a lot.
I can see the Pharaoh is also like,
no, no, no, no, no.
There's no God stronger than me.
There's no God stronger than the Egyptian god of Pharaoh.
And that's why he's saying, who is this?
He has no power.
And he tells him to get back to work.
He basically accuses Moses and Aaron of trying to ask for a time.
off for the children of Israel. He's like, you're just lazy. And there are so many of them. Can you
imagine how that would affect our workforce? If I just let them go and take three days into the
wilderness, all the sacrifices and then three days, that's a week off. I'm not going to do that.
This is an excuse, he says. And so Pharaoh says, you know what, if you have so much time to
ask for time off, you feel so far ahead of your work, well, we're going to be. You're going to
give you some more work. We're going to actually double your work. He goes to the taskmasters,
and the taskmasters are the Egyptians who are in charge of the work crews in verse six. They're officers,
and the officers are actually some of the Hebrew people. The word here for officer, it's related to
the word for scribe. And so these are the ones of the children of Israel who are recording what's
being accomplished in terms of the work. They're keeping track of how many bricks are made, how many
days and he says, okay, then we'll just tell the officers and the taskmasters, they don't get
straw deliveries anymore. They have to go find their own straw, their own binding agents. If they
have so much time to ask for a vacation, we'll give them more work to do. I'll give you something
to cry about. It's in this verse 8. It says, the tail of the bricks. This is an odd translation for saying
the quota. He says the quota won't change. Even though now you have to go find all your own straw,
which means going to the fields, cutting the straw, chopping it up, taking it back to the brickmaking
site, and then starting the brick making process. It doubles their time. But he says you should
make the same amount. And then in verse 9, he says, maybe then they will not regard vain words,
saying Moses and Aaron, maybe they won't believe Moses and Aaron anymore if we make life even worse for them.
They'll think Moses is a liar and a fraud because God told him to do this and he wasn't successful.
So how could Moses not be a liar?
He's definitely trying to sow some discord among the people for sure.
Moses is a little like Nephi.
Okay, that did not go.
That did not go as plan.
Poor Moses.
I don't know.
The poor guy, he has his ups and downs.
And even though God told him,
this isn't going to work.
Pharaoh will never let you go.
Moses seems to have forgotten that completely.
So the Pharaoh ends up doing it.
He says to the people, in verse 10,
it's interesting.
So the taskmasters and the officers,
they say,
thus saith Pharaoh.
This is mocking.
Moses, thus saith our God, Pharaoh.
And they're not able to keep up clearly, and they get beaten for it.
The officers end up going back to the pharaoh and say,
why are you beating us?
Somebody hasn't delivered the straw.
Your people aren't delivering the straw.
And the pharaoh says, actually, somebody came in here and asked if you could have some time off.
So you could go and do these sacrifices.
And since you have all this extra time, then we're going to give you extra work.
Then they know, oh, it was Moses and Aaron who came in.
And what do they do?
They go to confront them.
Verse 20.
They go to confront Aaron and Moses.
They're upset.
They are really upset.
They say, the Lord, look upon you and judge.
I hate that.
Calling down judgment on them.
This word savor, this is stink.
He's like, you have.
made us stinky in the eyes of the pharaoh.
We are the worst smell to them ever.
You can think of Moses probably being like,
wait, didn't the Lord tell me that by the time we leave,
the Egyptians will have favor and give us stuff?
Now this is the opposite.
Here's the contemporary English version of verse 21.
Then the men said,
we hope the Lord will punish both of you for making the
and his officials hate us.
Now they even have an excuse to kill us.
Thanks a lot.
Thanks for the help.
Oh man, that backfired.
Now everything's worse, even worse than it was.
And that's like 22 and 23.
Moses returned to the Lord and said,
Wherefore hast thou so evil and treated this people?
Why is it that thou hast sent me since I came to Pharaoh to speak in thy name,
he's done evil to this people?
neither hast thou deliver thy people at all.
Moses is like, I told you it wouldn't work.
Yeah, he's like, things are way worse than they ever were before.
This word evil here is sometimes translated as breaking.
It's almost like Moses is accusing Jehovah of breaking the covenant,
of not keeping the covenant.
You're not keeping up your side here.
You promised all of these different things.
There's no delivery.
Things are even worse than before.
How many times have we felt that way?
Yeah.
God just seems to wait until the last minute.
The Lord had told him this several times this was going to happen.
It's the same for us.
God says, I want you to do this.
And you're like, hey, I think I can do it.
And he's like, it's going to be really hard and awful.
You might fail four times along the way.
Okay, got it.
And then the first time you fail, well, what happened?
You promised me this would work.
I think we do the same thing.
We forget sometimes.
I don't think everybody listening can probably identify a moment in their life where they said,
I did what you said.
My life got worse.
Yeah, definitely.
And sometimes over and over and over.
And it kind of makes you question, did I hear it right?
Am I doing what I'm supposed to?
And I think that's Satan kind of creeping in, making you doubt yourself.
making you doubt what you're hearing.
I think this is why in the scriptures,
it says,
remember, remember, remember, remember, remember,
because we need to remember
that he warns us, it's going to be hard.
You will fail.
That's okay.
Keep going.
I think we could all sit in our Exodus 523 moments.
And notice the Lord doesn't get mad at him.
He seems pretty patient with him.
Yeah, the Lord's like, it's time.
It is time for Pharaoh.
to truly learn who Jehovah is.
And it's interesting because he says,
it's sort of hard with the translation here,
but the first strong hand is from Jehovah.
He'll see it's that smiting again.
The smiting is going to be from Jehovah.
The second strong hand is this idea.
He's like, Pharaoh's going to want you to go so badly,
he's going to push you out with a strong hand.
That's how this is actually going to work.
And this is what he's trying to tell Moses is going to happen.
and he says, I am Jehovah.
I love it. He keeps telling him.
This is who I am. This is what I do.
Then we get a confusing verse in verse 3.
He says, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, they didn't know me by Jehovah.
Once again, the commentaries go nuts over this because the name Jehovah shows up twice in Genesis.
People are like trying to, oh, what is this?
Of course they knew the name.
Or they didn't know the name.
They knew him by this, title.
but not his name. They knew the name. They didn't know what it meant. Again, if we turn to the Joseph Smith
translation, clears it up. It's sort of like a rhetorical question. It actually says, didn't they know me by
that name? And was not my name known unto them? And the footnote ends with the question work.
President Oaks has said, oh, they knew the name of God. They absolutely knew for sure.
I love it. It's cleared up again. We don't have to fight with this. It makes sense to us.
He says, I established my covenant with them. I have heard. Is this the same place, Crystal? I have heard. I have seen.
Yeah, we get the, I remember the covenant. I've heard. I remember. I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians.
This is actually the word deliver. It's the same word we've been seeing. It would be helpful if it,
actually said deliver.
Yeah, the footnote says Hebrew deliver.
Footnote 6C.
This is the whole point.
We are meant to get from this that this physical deliverance from bondage and captivity
is meant to teach us about spiritual deliverance from sin and spiritual death.
It's about redemption.
I circled all of the I pronouns and it's just red Pocodots.
The Lord's going to do this.
He's going to use Moses and Aaron, but I'm going to do it.
Yeah, I love it.
He's like, it's time to get you out.
Pharaoh was given a chance to use his agency.
Now what Jehovah does next is just.
Yep.
Yeah, here it comes.
And he was warned so many times, which is what the Lord does.
Moses asks, I think I counted like six times for them just to go worship.
not even to let him go.
Just let us go worship.
He asked six times, and he says, if you don't, justice and judgment is coming.
The Pharaoh's been warned.
It's not like he had never heard this.
He's aware.
Yeah, and not only does he not let him go, he makes it harder for them, so they'll never be able to worship.
Jehovah.
You're exactly right, Christelie asked the question, who is Jehovah that I should obey his voice?
Like, you're about to find out.
We're getting towards the end and it gets a little bit weird here in a minute.
Okay.
Maybe not weirder than before, but there are some beautiful verses here in seven and eight.
He says, I will take you to me for a people.
I love this.
You are my people.
I am your God.
This is a covenantal relationship.
And this is sort of preemptive of this mosaic covenant that they're going to enter into in the future.
And these were things that were promised to Abraham, right? He will be your God. You will be his people. You will be together. There's this subtext here. Jehovah is also saying that I'm going to be your leader, your ruler, your guide, your instructor, your lawgiver, the pharaoh, you are not his people. You don't belong to the pharaoh. You belong to me. From now on, if we can get you out and you're going to build that sanctuary,
that tabernacle. I'm going to give you new laws to follow. I'm going to protect you. I'm going to
help you. And it's this beautiful promise of what a covenantal relationship is. You covenant with him,
you're his people. I love in verse 8 it says that he swore, that like God swore. And in Hebrew,
this is lifted up the hand. Like, God takes an oath here. He makes a promise. It's a binding promise.
made this promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and it's your heritage. Then Joseph Smith tells us at the
end here, it's not I am the Lord, but I the Lord will do it. I promise. When the Lord says he's going to do
something, he does it. It's beautiful, these verses. When we get to verse 9, it's so sad because he goes to
the children of Israel. They didn't listen because of anguish of spirit and cruel bondage. They've given up
hope. I don't even think that they look at Moses and say, we don't believe you. I think they've
given up. They're not sure anything good is going to happen. Anguish of spirit. Yeah, in Hebrew,
it's literally shortness of breath. They can't breathe. They're being crushed by their
burdens so much that they can barely breathe, almost like they're barely alive. So it makes sense
sometimes when we see this in their reaction. We get to points in our life too when we feel like we can't
breathe and we feel like nothing can pull us out. Nothing can deliver us and help us. This is the
moment where things change. They're at their lowest really at this point. Everything can only look up
from there. I think of the enabling power of the atonement. Elder Bednar has talked about.
We focus so much on the redeeming, but the enabling power gives us the strength from God
to be able to not maybe even pull ourselves out of these things, but to survive.
them. Isn't crushed the same as contrite?
It means crushed like pottery that's been trampled and turned into dust.
The broken heart is a shattered heart and the contrite spirit. It shows up in Psalms. So we can
actually look at the Hebrew and learn more about the Book of Mormon. The crushed spirit means
crushed into dust. And it basically means there's no way to take that thing that's been broken
and crushed and put it back together. There's no way any human being can take those things and put it
back together. So what do we do? We give it to him. We give it to the Savior. That's the sacrifice. We hand it to
him and we say, put me back together, please. Rebuild me so I'm stronger than I was before. Here's all my
broken parts. Help me come back. You're at a point where he's the only one who can do it. I'm sure
both of you remember October 2013 Elder Holland's talk like a broken vessel.
Elder Holland says,
the Apostle Peter wrote that the disciples of Jesus Christ are to have compassion one of another.
In that spirit, I wish to speak to those who suffer from some form of mental illness or emotional disorder.
He then started to talk about depression, major depressive disorder.
He says it's an affliction so severe that it significantly restricts a person's ability to function.
That sounds like verse 9.
He says, this dark night of the mind and spirit is more than just discouragement.
I have seen it come to an absolutely angelic man when his beloved spouse of 50 years passed away.
I have seen it in new mothers with what is euphemistically labeled as after baby blues,
postpartum depression. I have seen it strike anxious students, military veterans, and grandmothers
worried about the well-being of their grown children. He says, I have seen it in young fathers,
trying to provide for their families. In that regard, I once terrifyingly sawed in myself.
At one point in our married life, when financial fears collided with staggering fatigue,
I took a psychic blow that was as unanticipated.
as it was real. With the grace of God and the love of my family, I kept functioning and kept,
even after all these years, I continue to feel a deep sympathy for others, more chronically
or deeply afflicted with such gloom than I was. Then he finished. Whatever your struggle,
my brothers and sisters, mental or emotional or physical or otherwise, do not vote against
the preciousness of life by ending it. Trust in God. Hold on in His love.
know that one day the dawn will break brightly and all shadows of mortality will flee.
Though we may feel we are like a broken vessel, as the psalmist says,
we must remember that vessel is in the hands of the divine potter.
Moses has lost some hope here too.
We see that in the next verses.
He says, they won't listen to me.
Why would Pharaoh listen?
And then he calls himself as having uncircumcised lips, basically lips
that are covered, lips that can't perform their function, lips that are not able to speak.
This is used sometimes for ears that can't hear as well. It's hard. They're at this point
where this is a turning, this is a change. This is where Jehovah can come in and deliver them
and save them. And that's the message here. Only through Jesus Christ can we be saved.
Crystal, lead us into next week.
What's about to happen?
Sounds like the tension's building.
It's funny because all of a sudden it just breaks off here.
Then we get a long list of names.
Of course.
But this is meant to set us up.
Huge things are coming.
Covenants are going to be fulfilled.
Deliverance is nigh.
This is meant to remind all of the people and all of us,
it's happening now. It's time. It's happening. It's meant to tell us there's four generations.
They trace the Levites because they are showing authority of Moses and Aaron. They're setting up the
Levite priesthood here. That's kind of like the purpose of all of this. And then the last three
verses are like, okay, now back to the story. Here's the story. It's just this cliffhanger.
the children of Israel at their lowest,
Moses is kind of at his lowest,
what's going to happen next?
We know that deliverance is coming,
covenantal promises are coming,
and everything changes in the next few chapters.
We have people who feel that anguish of spirit
and cruel bondage.
So if we have somebody listening,
what should we say to them?
It's coming.
Next week on Follow Him.
Yeah.
Stay tuned.
There's hope smiling brightly before us,
and we know that deliverance is nigh.
Boy, the Lord waits until the last minute sometimes.
If we go all the way back to our four themes,
all of those themes can be tied into this idea of hope,
hope for the future.
Our first theme was, who is Jehovah?
What does he do?
What does he care about?
Well, clearly, we've been told he cares about us.
He loves us.
He sees you. He knows you. He hears you. He works on a different time frame than we do.
I mean, we've gone through six chapters of posterity and oppression. Those are our lives too.
The second was covenants. Does he keep covenants? Absolutely. We see this 100%. And a huge part of that is don't give up hope.
Don't give up. It's coming. Those promises, those blessings, they are coming. It just might take some
time. And then we have deliverance from bondage. That's perfect. You will be delivered someday.
Redemption is coming. And that last one about identity, we saw Moses struggle with all of these things.
And if the only thing you take away from these chapters is that you are a child of God, you're a child of
the covenant, and you're a disciple of Jesus Christ, that's the foundation of everything that can keep
us going and keep trying. Yeah, I love it. I hope anyone's sitting in.
In their Exodus chapters 1 through 6, if you'll just keep turning the page,
hold on the Red Sea parts.
Yeah, the Exodus, it's the story of our life.
And we're trying to get to the promised land.
We're trying to get back home to Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ.
Exodus teaches us we're going to have ups and downs, but we'll make it.
And he sends prophets who don't think they can be prophets.
Yeah.
He's sending help.
He sends help.
I love it.
Crystal, thank you so much for your time today.
Just so everybody knows who's listening out there,
I get to talk to Crystal just on a one-on-one basis in the hallway,
and she's as good as you think she is.
Oh, that's so kind.
Thank you.
Well, with that, we want to thank Dr. Crystal Pierce for joining us again on Follow Him.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorensen,
our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen.
In every episode, we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week because we know that deliverance is nigh on Follow Him.
As a thank you to our wonderful listeners, we'd love to gift you the digital version of our book, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament.
It offers short, meaningful insights drawn from our past Old Testament episodes.
Visit followhim.com.
That's followhim.com.
to download your free copy today, and you'll also find the link to purchase the print edition.
Thank you for being part of our Follow Him family.
Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew.
David Perry, Lisa Spice, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra,
Heather Barlow, Amelia Kubica, Sidney Smith, and Annabelle Sorensen.
Whatever questions or problems you have,
The answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to Him. Follow Him.
