followHIM - Exodus 35-40; Leviticus 1; 4; 16; 19 Part 2 • Dr. Avram Shannon • April 27 - May 3 • Come, Follow Me
Episode Date: April 22, 2026Dr. Avram Shannon continues to unlock the divine logic behind Israel's sacrificial system and the Day of Atonement, dismantling the myth of the angry Old Testament God and revealing why Leviticus... was the book Jesus read and why it is the surprising heartbeat of covenant life today.YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/DlwTDLtYPG0FREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE:00:00 - Part 2 - Dr. Avram Shannon00:07 The sacrificial system03:20 Why does sacrifice create holiness?06:19 What was the Tabernacle made of?17:17 Ritual purity laws: Matter out of place21:22 The Day of Atonement and Five Offerings28:58 Nadab and Abihu–No one is shielded from consequences38:50 Leprosy, skin disease, and purity laws42:17 The Holiness Code: Instructions for becoming like God46:16 Love thy neighbor: The Law Jesus read49:44 The myth of the angry Old Testament God57:29 Covenants and relationships, not transactions57:45 Dr. Shannon’s forthcoming book of the Law of Moses in The Book of Mormon1:04:45 End of Part 2 - Dr. Avram ShannonThanks 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. Shannon, Exodus and Leviticus.
One of the hardest things for us is Latter-day Saints,
and I think it's a problem with broader Christianity anyway,
to see and do is recognize the sacrificial system is a complete religious system.
It brought them closer to Jehovah.
They don't just say, now I know who Jesus is,
and I have to do something with these sacrifices.
The sacrifices are how they met with God.
Back to the sacrament for a second.
We think about Jesus, we remember Jesus.
The bishop stands up there and says,
okay, now for 15 minutes,
we're going to think about Jesus.
Remember what he did for us.
You sit there and you think, no,
the priest kneels down, breaks bread,
blesses bread, we eat it.
There's more than just a mental thing
happening with sacrifices.
We talk about how they all point to the Savior.
They absolutely do,
but they don't necessarily all point to
the mortal ministry and the resurrection,
if that makes sense.
i.e., remembering what President Oaks and President Nelson both repeatedly taught,
Jehovah is the God of the Old Testament.
And the purpose of sacrifices was to reconcile Israel with Jehovah.
It was to make that relationship right.
There's a whole burnt offering that's written one.
there's a trespass offering, peace offering, and then sin offering.
That's the five main offerings.
They do different things.
You do a trespass offering for different reasons than you do a peace offering.
This was their sacrament.
This was their baptism.
This was their endowment.
This was how they interacted with God.
It was through these animal sacrifices.
The whole burnt offering.
That's when we see described in nine.
This one's unique because all.
almost every sacrifice you ate.
The pre-stated portion, the sacrifice ate a portion,
the whole burnt offering, you burned the whole thing.
You took the animal, you flayed it, you cut it in pieces, and you burned it.
Just for the fun of it, I did a little bit of math.
The going rate for a male cow for food is about $2,000.
The whole burnt offering is equipped to be taking a stack of $50 bills,
setting them on fire and saying, that's yours, God.
I don't want it.
This is for you.
Can you imagine taking cash to the bishop?
And he's like, thank you.
And then setting on fire.
That's literally what the whole burnt offering does.
By the way, we have texts from other people around the ancient Israelites
and especially around the Jews later on, and they're flabbergasted by this.
Why are you wasting all this food?
To Belknap's point, it's not a waste.
We're giving it to God.
We're making it holy.
And so part of the intriguing things about Israel religion is we see that seeing things, seeing holiness, does not require you to get anything out of it.
The whole burnt offering is 100% that kind of offering.
Avram, what is it about sacrifice that creates holiness?
Why can it be sit in a hammock and you will become holy?
This lesson today is sacrifice brings forth holiness.
Why?
If we go back to Leviticus 10, Leviticus 19, be therefore holy, because I am holy.
When we're talking about holiness, we're not talking about some kind of ineffable, characteristic.
We're talking about being like God.
That straight to this idea is holiness is being like God.
I think about our dearly beloved President Holland.
He gave this talk.
You're probably familiar with it.
Years ago, missionary work in the Atonement.
In this talk, it's to missionaries.
It was an MTC talk.
We're talking like 25 years ago.
I was a missionary when he gave it.
So it was a long time ago here.
In it, and he asked this question of these missionaries,
It's like, look, guys, we have the gospel of Jesus Christ.
We have the truth.
We have the Holy Ghost.
Why isn't missionary work easy?
Why is it the only problem of missionary work getting hypothermia from being in the font so often?
He says, because salvation is not a cheap experience.
Hmm.
At a certain point, those of us who claim to follow and emulate Jesus have to feel.
feel a little bit about what Jesus felt.
It wasn't easy for him.
President Holland says,
how could we ever think it's going to be easy for us?
Talk about the ultimate act of sacrifice.
Our Lord and Savior, God himself, nailed to a cross.
We have this great Old Testament background for Christians.
When it comes down to what it means to sacrifice,
it means letting yourself being tortured to death because you love the whole rest of humanity.
I talked with you a few years ago about Moses 7 and about how God weeps.
Our Heavenly Father loves us enough to still be vulnerable with us.
I think the reason that sitting on a beach and sipping pinia coladas is never ever going to work
because that is not how you be like God.
because that is not what God does.
Sacrifice makes us holy because sacrifice makes us like God.
There's also that common saying that God is more interested in our growth than he is in our comfort.
Sitting on a beach with a pinia collata.
Sounds like growth to me, you guys.
It's my kind of growth.
It's worth remembering for these Israelites.
They're in the wilderness.
a little bit of a mosaic here and all these things in wisdom and order.
We talk about symbolism.
And one of the things about symbolism to always remember A, which is the X always equals Y.
Sometimes we say, oh, it's symbolic by which you mean, I don't know what it means.
But then with that also, one of the cool things about what God does with the sacrifices and with you and I is they all have pragmatic purposes.
Think about an agricultural environment.
You think about these animals.
How many male animals do you need?
in a herd.
One or two.
Just a few.
So what do you do with the rest?
Who sacrifice them?
There's a preference for mere animals
because of the symbolism
of Jesus'ism, you know, the first one thing's like that,
there's a preference for male animals
for pragmatic reasons.
And in the same way, the altar of incense
in the holy place,
the smoke represents,
you know, the prayers come up to God,
it represents another veil of protection
for humanity.
but also any of you ever been to a stockyard
and have you been to a slaughterhouse?
Our former colleague
Byron Merrill used to actually take his students
when B.W. used to have a slaughterhouse.
He'd take them there when teaching these chapters
and have them witness a
oh my goodness.
And this was just slaughtering. And I actually when he told me about that,
I'm like, that's experiential learning
before it's time, Byron.
But there's notion that,
It smells.
Blood smells.
Animals smell.
You and I are used to a temple experience that's very, very antiseptic.
Mm-hmm.
Smells like beautiful, clean carpet.
The ancient temple would have been an salt to the senses in that sense.
The insect covers that and makes it sweet.
That's why you add salt, because it transforms burning flesh into meat.
This idea that they are transits.
transforming this.
This part of this beautiful thing about consecration.
The sacrifices transform something like burning flesh and turn it into meat.
They turn it into something wonderful.
I've had callings that I've loved.
Callings I'm not very good at.
I was a ward mission leader once.
I was awful at it.
Just the worst.
But you know what?
I kept trying.
I kept doing it.
God took that sacrifice and made something of it.
He took what I was doing and did more with it than I could do.
The other key part of this, I think, is that, according to Leviticus,
one of the primary purposes of sacrifice is to make atonement.
That's what they do.
They set right the relationship between God and humanity.
And what does that, and this is actually really fun, is blood.
The Viticus 1711 says,
For the life of the flesh is in the blood.
So the ancient years light notion is
What makes the thing alive is that it has blood.
And I have given it upon you the altar
To make atonement for your souls.
For it is the blood
That make the atonement for your soul.
And this is important to think about sacrifice.
You are taking a living thing's life.
You are pouring that life on an altar.
altar so that you can live, so that you can be right with God.
Sacrifice always asks the question, what or who has died so that I can live.
It's so important in thinking through what Leviticus is doing and it undergirds basically
the core of Christian doctrine is in Leviticus.
Jesus Christ
poured out his life
blood
so that we could live
that's why the sacrament
we eat the bread
but we drink the blood
so that we can live
and Leviticus
it says this is why this is working
there's a reason why we do this
it's not because
God thinks killing animals is fun
there's an actual
reason and doctrine
why this works
and how this works
and that actually feeds into a little bit less profoundly in some ways
but to think about the dietary laws.
A funny story about that, my mother was meeting with the missionaries.
They asked throughout the word of wisdom like no tea, no coffee,
do you know smoking?
Do you think you can do that, Sister Shannon?
She said, elders, I keep kosher.
This is nothing.
Kosher is this idea of,
you can't eat these animals, you can't eat these animals,
you can't eat these animals.
But the thing about that is there's actually a logic there as well.
There's a reason behind it.
It's actually easy to see with fish.
Because the kinds of fish that are appropriate to be eaten
are fish that have scales and fish that have fins.
Sharks are out.
Sharks have fins but no scales.
Catfish are out.
Catfish have fins but no scales.
Shellfish, totally out.
Shellfish have neither fins nor scales.
because what Leviticus is saying is it's all about this notion of putting things in order, putting things in their proper categories.
And it's not making a statement, by the way, that these are evil or bad.
The statement it's making is these are things that are in the categories that I want you to be looking for.
Land animals, shoe cud, have clothe and hooves.
pigs have clobin hoves according to leviticus we can get there whatever for that but they don't chew
god they're outside the categories as leviticus frames it actually in leviticus 10 it's before the food
laws it says the priest's job is to make a difference it says between clean and unclean between
holy and unholy and to teach the people how to do that this process of making a difference learning how to
differentiate between these things is again this is divine behavior the verb that that verse in neviticus
10 uses to separate is identical to the verb that god uses when it divides light from darkness
when it divides waters from waters and divides land from land when we make these kinds of
distinctions we are engaging in divine behavior i was talking to one of my jewish friends the other day
I just got off to teaching the evening class
and he was joking about
well at least you can have a cup of coffee to do it
and I said, I'll drink coffee the day you eat bacon
rabbi
Part of the purpose of our food laws
is the same thing
it's to make distinctions
it's to make difference
in some ways do these things matter
sure I mean if you're too much bacon
yes you'll die that's fine
but if you're too much of anything
in some ways yes you'll die
but the experience of saying, oh no, I can't drink that, I don't drink coffee.
The experience of saying, oh, no, I can't drink that, I don't drink tea.
That makes distinction.
That makes division.
So it might not be that there's some scientific reason, some chemical reason, some physical reason necessarily.
It's just that we are setting ourselves apart, even in diet.
Is that fair?
that is fair.
Even though all the ancients drank wine,
although it is worth remembering
that the primary table beverage
is wine mixed with water.
And it's usually like
one part to six parts
or one part to ten parts.
When we're talking about them drinking wine,
they're not drinking a lot of wine
in that sense, but they're drinking enough wine
to kill all the bugs that are in their water.
But that's in some ways
irrelevant to what God is saying,
which is you're mine.
And because you're mine, you do something different.
I think so too.
At least in our day, might cause some conversations.
I had a student just come up to me this week.
He said, well, my brother says that wine's okay
because Jesus drank wine and how is that a problem?
And I said, well, let's just talk about in Jesus' day,
they had different dietary laws.
but in our day, the Lord probably saw what's everybody going to drink?
One of three things, at least.
Alcohol, tea, or coffee.
And that's going to create a lot of conversations for you, right?
When someone offers you this, you're going to go, I don't drink that.
Really?
Why not?
I could just see the Lord going, what should we choose?
Now, those will be good.
That'll create a lot of conversation, a chance for my,
distinct people to tell people why they are.
And then always negative.
For example, I was in graduate school.
I was in a class.
It was on Jerusalem.
It was mostly Jews in the class because of the nature of the program I was in there
at Ohio State.
And this girl had just come back from a study abroad in Turquaya.
She had bought a Turkish coffee maker.
She was going to bring coffee for the whole class.
It was really exciting, whatever, this whole coffee set.
And I said, oh, well, I don't drink.
coffee. And she said, well, I said, it's against my religion. And she was so excited to meet a
Christian with dietary laws. Interesting. Her entire life, you know, I can't either, I'm Jewish.
I can't do that because I'm Jewish. And people say, I can't do that. I'm a lot of days
saying. She actually ended up bringing me orange juice separately because she was so excited about
this notion of dietary law. So it's not even always just, there's a mission thing,
but sometimes there's a connection can be made there by saying, no, I don't do that.
Can I sing you guys a song that I heard on a bus in Israel?
And I can't remember who it was, Hank, just singing about how an Islam, they don't eat pork.
And the Jews don't eat pork.
So it was like a song being sung by a Jew to a Muslim or a Muslim to a Jew.
You don't eat pigs, we don't eat pigs.
Seems it's been that way forever.
And since you don't eat pigs and we don't eat pigs,
why not not eat pigs together
you just fixed all the Middle East problems
it did right there
whatever happened the wars whatever it's all done
I love how Leviticus teaches
in these very embodied ways
even something that seems really weird
just like purity laws
we do this New Testament we do it really badly actually
the first thing we do is we associate ritual and purity with sin
and that's ridiculous
basically every ancient Israelite and therefore New Testament,
every Jew could expect to contract some kind of purity all the time.
Frankly, since women contract with some purity every month,
this is not Sena.
But even you have sexual relations with your wife.
You're both richly and pure.
This is a normal part of life.
Two things with this I want to talk about.
One, this is why it's worth reading Leviticus, by the way, again,
because you may have heard things sometimes in the New Testament.
Jesus and Jairus' daughter, and he touched her, even though she was a dead body,
therefore he was richly impure.
If they'd read Leviticus, they would know that dead bodies can transmit ritual impurity
by overshadowing, which means that everybody in the room was already richly impure.
Oh, really?
You'd have to touch the body to get to ritual impurity.
It's a different kind of it.
So all the mourners, Pid James and John, they already had ritual impurity.
It's a different kind of thing, and it's important to be able to, this is,
independent of what it is spiritually,
virtually pragmatic level,
when we understand Leviticus better,
makes us better readers in the New Testament.
But even with that,
when you have virtual impurity,
you wash with water,
you're unclean until evening,
and then you're done.
But there's a logic there, too.
This is God teaching them something.
I want you imagine,
this is for Hank, okay?
You're going to be our guinea pig this time.
Okay.
You look at your shoes right now,
they're not so dirty.
You go to your kitchen table,
You take your shoe off and you put it on the table.
And your wife says, what are you doing?
Get that dirty thing off the table.
Yeah.
Are you 12?
It wasn't dirty when it was on your foot.
It became dirty when you put it in the wrong place.
One of the primary ideas of purity laws is matter out of place.
You've got to put things.
things in their right places. This is why some kinds of things by blood, by other bodily substances
can cause it ritual impurity because they belong inside your body. This is why touching certain
things is because it's in the wrong place. Avram, is it that word impurity? We think, oh, sin.
I think part of it is because it actually is a useful category for sin. The Book of Mormon does
all the time, which is unfortunate in some ways.
The bookwormer uses it as a metaphor for sin,
but then we take it back and forget that it's being used as a metaphor
rather than this is what's actually happening.
I've had students say that,
why can't a woman who's just given birth go to the temple?
She didn't do anything wrong.
This is nothing to do with her personal state and righteousness.
This only has to do with, and actually in some ways,
and this is one of those pragmatic things,
there's probably a hygienic aspect that's important there as well.
And again, I can't read God's mind, but there may be something going on with that.
One of things that's so great about this whole thing with Davidicus is that there's logic there.
There's logic in how God is doing things.
There's a theory.
God's laws aren't arbitrary.
Even we don't always understand the logic.
There's something there that's teaching us something.
And the whole point of that always is to make us like God.
I can't imagine bringing that much money or just of my stuff and then just burn it.
At least the bishop takes it and it's going to go to something.
It's going to go to a building.
It's going to go to a publishing something, missionaries.
This is, I'm making it holy by destroying it or burning the whole thing.
On that point, right?
We talk about atone.
One of our readings for this is Come Follow Me is the Day of Atonement in Leviticus 16.
We love it because of Jesus and Atoment and the priest and all this imagery for that.
Let's ignore the fact that actually it's really kind of weird.
There's logic there too, but it's weird because part of it is the scapegoat.
It's actually for a demon who lives in the desert named Azazel.
But that's what the Hebrew says.
There's a demon out there.
You put some sins on this, others on that, and then you go and it goes and eats it and it eats him out in the desert.
So it's actually kind of a strange conception of sin.
It's useful as a symbol in that it reminds us that there are things that we can't take care of ourselves.
Speaking of Day of Atonement, we haven't talked much about this.
Isn't this the most important day to them?
It's the most holy day.
The most important days probably Passover, because that's when God makes Israel.
And you see this actually in Scripture where Day of Atonement doesn't actually get a lot of truck in Scripture.
You don't see much references to the Day of Atonement and the prophets.
You don't see reference in other places.
Passover is everywhere because Passover is the primary saving story.
In fact, actually, even in the Book of Mormon, they'll talk about the Passover event,
the way that we talk about Jesus Christ's redemption and resurrection.
What's interesting about that is actually we then conflate put to again.
together both Passover and atonement, but it is the holiest day of the year. And that's because
this is when God is looking at us. This is the day the high priest does not dress in his.
That's right. He wears just like every other priest. He wears white. This is when God opens his
books. And he looks at us and he says, how are we doing? How are things going? And we look and we
say, well, we're doing okay, or we're doing badly, or we're doing whatever.
And he writes our name down in the book of life and says, you guys are doing okay.
But then the book's closed.
Actually, there's kind of a fun connection, Dr. Convance 128 here, where Joe Smith talks
about the book that God is writing and that our records actually help go into the book that God
writes.
Suddenly we're thinking, oh, these books are open.
what have I done
what do I need to make right
how do I fix this
that act of
atonement the act of reconciliation
happens
as we
turn to God
as we turn
and for the Latter-day Saints
as we turn to Jesus
and say
oh you're right this book is open
please inscribe me for good in it
and here's how I'm changing
to be inscribed for good
because suddenly you're watching
And again, he's always watching, but we act like it.
And the Day of Atomint is symbolically looking and the door is open.
We've got to do this.
We've got to fast.
We've got to be prepared.
It's important in Judaism.
You reconcile things in the past year.
Back to the Temple recommend.
Any unrepented, unconfessed sins, anything you need to take care of.
Day of Atonement, you have to do before that.
Because if the book's open and they're not repented of, they're going to be there when the book's
close. I get everything fixed. This really nice connection between our own notions of approaching God
and saying, okay, am I right? How does this work? Because again, we repent all the time,
but the sacraments a little bit different. In the same way, Jews repent all the time,
for the day of atonement's a little bit different. I've always wondered that. I have a friend in Israel.
Can I say his name's Jaya? He said, I don't go to synagogue much. And I said, when do you go? And he said,
Yom Kippur, I want all my sins forgiven.
God's watching.
Yeah.
I don't know if Yair will ever hear this, Johnny.
Yeah, if he texts me, he's like, I heard you on the show.
So that's chapters one through seven, this sacrificial system.
On that I want to add into the sacrificial system, the whole burnt offering with that
teaches, each one does teach you something different.
So in chapter four, you have the sin offering.
Terrible translation, I'm sorry.
But the reason they do that is because the word for sin is chata,
and the word for this offering is chattat.
It's an offering.
I translated as purification offering.
Because this is the sacrifice.
It's placed on the altar to purify the altar.
This is the offering you do for inadvertent sin.
There's stuff we do that's an act.
of open rebellion, where we say, you know what, I know that's wrong.
I'm going to do that anyway, God.
The Khatat is not for that.
The purification is an offering is not for that.
This is the offering for what if you've done something wrong and you become aware of it.
How do you work?
What do you do with that?
Well, I think that's really interesting for us in terms of thinking through things is if you go to the book of Mormon.
And King Benjamin is one of those places.
I mentioned earlier that atonement appears in the book of Mormon in temple contexts.
One of those contexts is in Benjamin's speech there in the book of Mosiah,
and especially when the angel is revealing to Benjamin.
Chapter 3.
And in 311, he started talking about this, and he says,
for behold, and also his blood, Jesus, atoneth for the sins of those who have fallen by a transgression of
Adam, who have died not knowing the will of God concerning them, or who have ignorantly sinned.
This is a direct reference to the purification offering.
You read back in Mosiah 2, they've been offering saccharges of the temple, everybody in Benjamin's
audience would have known that.
They said, oh, that's what this is.
then what he says is that the reason then this works is because Jesus Christ has already covered it.
So this purification offering then is a specific pointing to what Jesus has already done or will do for them.
It's this really fun connection and a really important connection.
I'll sometimes joke that there's no Jesus-shaped whole in the law of Moses.
By which I mean it was designed to point them to Jehovah.
and not always to point them to the redemption per se,
the incarnation, the immortal ministry,
part of what Benjamin and Abinidad I do is say,
yes, but let me make one for you
and show you where that fits.
Let me plug Jesus right into that hole.
A lot of what you see there in Mosaic 3
is the angel saying,
here's this and here's how Jesus fits into it.
It's powerful stuff.
The Book of Mormon presumes and understands
the law of Moses' background in it.
That's fantastic.
Avram, I never thought I would say that I found the first seven chapters of Voviticus.
Pretty interesting.
I'm excited about this.
Now, you said the next section, it starts with chapter eight.
That's right.
This is eight through ten.
It's kind of a mini section where it's about Aaron and his family.
This is where we get the kosher laws.
This is where we get him being set apart.
It's also where we get this weird.
story in chapter 10 where this is the one narrative in Leviticus and it's a weird narrative.
Two of Aaron's sons take their fire pans, I think censors what KJV has, and they offer
strange fire before God.
And they get killed.
Nadat and Abahu are their names.
Aaron has four sons, Nadat, Abahu, Ithamar, and Ezia Eliezer.
They get killed for this.
It's this injuring story because part of it is one of the things that's intriguing about
the Vitticus.
We saw this a little bit in Exodus 35.
It's this notion of priesthood.
But as Latter-day Saints, we have a very specific idea of what priesthood is.
We're not wrong.
God's power, all this stuff.
But that's not always what's operative in the ancient world.
We trace ourselves back to Aaron as erroneic priests.
We talked about the priests at the altar,
we're talking about the priests at the sacrament table.
There's absolutely continuity.
But there's also a difference there in that priests are primarily, of course,
going to be associated with the temple,
which is, I think, still something we could actually talk about more in this church,
this idea that the temple is fundamentally a priestly place,
and that it's a place for priesthood.
And, of course, President Nelson and President Oaks,
that actually men and women both receive priesthood in the temple and received priesthood power.
Thinking about that, but also this recognition that part of what the story teaches,
it's very keeping with Leviticus, but maybe a little trickier for us in the modern age,
is a reminder that nobody is insulated.
By which I mean being Aaron's sons, being Moses' nephews, do not
protect Nadab and Abahou from breaking the commandments and from the consequences.
And that's a hard lesson.
It's not a nice lesson.
It's an important one.
We talked about this idea of temple recommends cherubim,
this idea of being part of the truth of God's kingdom,
is we come in at God's permission.
Because he loves us so much,
He says, yeah, come on in.
But the fact is, we don't get a force our way into God's kingdom.
With that, we don't get to tell God what to do.
You and I, you and I broadly, I don't know what you on specifically, but certainly me, specifically,
always wants to tell God what to do, to say, this is how I think my life should go.
This is what I think is the best part of what we can do.
Actually, one of my favorite verses in Doctrine Covenants.
There's Dr. Covenants I, one.
He says, what I have spoken and I have spoken.
I excuse him about myself.
My voice or my verse of my service, it is the same.
And we do that verse.
We always focus on the latter half.
Oh, this is about prophets and prophetic teachings.
That's great.
That is absolutely part of this.
But I love the first part where God says,
what I have spoken, I have spoken, and I excuse not myself.
I don't have to explain myself to you.
Sometimes I will, because I love you, but frankly, I'm in charge here.
In some ways, these two sons had decided that they knew better to do it than God had done it.
It's a weird story within that, but I think the principle here of, oh, okay, God, you're right.
You don't need to explain yourself to me.
You are in charge of this.
I had experience once.
Actually, it was many years ago, actually now at this point.
I'm getting old.
It was when I first went up for hire at BYU,
when I first put my application in.
And I did not get hired that year.
And again, it's fine.
You know, these things didn't happen.
And I had a friend.
We were in grad school together.
He got a job.
I remember sitting in a state conference and saying,
God, this isn't fair.
Why?
This isn't fair.
This is one of the strongest spiritual revelations I've ever had in some ways.
And God said, you're right, Avram.
It's not fair.
And I'm like, oh, okay, sure.
And then it was funny because at the state conference,
and the state president started talking about the things that were happening in the steak,
about a mother with like three kids under four who had cancer
and was going to die in the next three months
about poverty, about sickness, about accidents.
Then after the sake president finished,
I got again, God said,
do you really want it to be fair, Offram?
And I said, no, God, I'm good.
We're fine. This is great. I'm okay with this.
My trials are just great, father.
The story about the family, again,
And Leviticus cares deeply about Aaron and his family, Aaron and his children.
But part of the story teaches us is that doesn't insulate you from A, needing to heat the commandments, and B, from any kind of hardship.
That story, even though it's weird, it fits in this whole broad narrative about Leviticus and about holiness.
And in some ways, it's kind of the hard side of holiness in that sense.
I wrote, don't play with fire next to my...
This is where that came from.
So it sounds like it was something unauthorized.
They didn't respect Jehovah.
The word strange there actually means foreign.
Okay.
Everywhere the KJV says strange, it means foreign.
It doesn't mean strange like weird.
Whether that's an Egyptian style, whether that's something from the Midian,
a strange fire, a foreign fire.
not properly Israelite.
And so they did something wrong.
The other part of this, by the way,
and this is intriguing in terms of internally,
it also teaches that priests are held to a higher standard.
The priesthood here is that there's more that they're required to do than other people.
Aaron's not allowed to mourn his sons.
He's not allowed to tear his clothes.
He held his peace, right?
He held his peace.
For God will not be mocked is what that sounds like.
I know. It really does.
I saw that too.
Very much so.
For our modern age, certainly for me and for my children even,
it's a harder lesson for us to listen to God's authority.
We love the loving God who holds us,
but the loving God who corrects us is a lot harder.
For me, personally, that's a sobering lesson.
This is how we learn to enter into the presence of God.
God uses a teaching moment.
That's verse 10.
This is not the point, but it's similar. They're not insulated from having to follow the letter of the law,
but it's similar that some of the most, in my view, righteous people have amazing trials.
President Oaks losing his father when he was young. President Oaks losing his wife, President Nelson, losing his first wife.
They're not insulated from the trials. I had somebody.
one of my awards once.
They were very well-meaning.
Like, you know, the gospel Jesus Christ makes things easy.
Makes our life's easy.
And like, does it?
Makes things easier to deal with, but actually easier?
I don't know that it does.
You can say sin makes life hard.
Okay, in that sense, yes.
Yeah, none of this is easy.
It may be easier, but life is just hard all the way around.
My kids make fun of me because, and probably correctly,
but from when they're very small, they're babies,
I'll comfort them.
I'm like, you know, I know, I know.
Life's hard.
And then you die.
It's like a bumper sticker.
Dad.
Exactly.
But I actually find that to honestly be incredibly, incredibly comforting.
That sometimes you just need to sit out and say, you know what?
This is just hard.
And then it's over and it's whatever, right?
that we don't have to imagine that somehow there's some kind of special thing in life that makes everything easier for us.
Yeah.
My mother-in-law used to say when we had twin babies, which you've done, Avram, she said,
sometimes when you can't take it anymore, go out on the porch, sit down, and tell the Lord you're done.
And then get up and go back in and keep going.
Okay.
We have some examples of scripture of that.
Even this, you see, after this whole thing in the Lick is 10, Moses is like, what are you doing to my brother?
And God's like, look here.
And then it says, Moses was content.
That God says, no, he can still do this.
Moses says, okay, God, that's enough.
He was content.
That's verse 20.
Then there's more dietary laws.
12 through about 16 is mostly purity laws.
It's leprosy laws.
laws after childbirth.
One thing I do want to say, in Leviticus, actually in the entire Old Testament and most
in the New Testament, leprosy never refers to what you think of as leprosy.
It is not Hansen's disease.
The Hebrew word is Tsarat.
It's a wide variety of skin diseases, psoriasis, really bad eczema.
And you know it's not Hansen disease because it can be healed.
And there are rules for what do you do when it goes away.
And of course, Hansen's disease never goes away.
It just kills you.
Because as a Jewish concept, as a biblical concept,
it's this whole panoply of diseases.
It could be one of those.
Yeah, because you read this, you think, wow, leprosy is super common.
The Lord really wants to talk about it,
but it's any sort of skin disease, wide variety.
It's stuff that causes ritual impurity.
The shoes on the counter.
Exactly.
It's a kind of skin disease that makes things difficult.
That's why he looks at and he says, okay, is it this kind of skin disease, is that kind of skin disease?
Which are these that actually qualify in these categories?
These purity laws, they have different ways of transmitting, and there's a logic to it,
and it's very much God's way of putting things in their proper places.
Interesting.
I loved that example of putting your shoes on the table.
That makes sense.
Don't bring that in here.
They're animals.
They're called schreitz, like mice and lizards and stuff.
They're impure, again, because there's a little bit of ickiness.
that then feeds into how this works in terms of what God is teaching us about ourselves.
Again, it's a symbol in terms of, yes, that's gross, and here's what you can mean with that for some of this stuff.
Some of it's broad purity things.
And for most things, the solution is just washing with water.
There's hygiene things in the law of Moses that were very practical and should have.
If people had done them, really would have helped with infection and everything else.
This, I think, is part of the genius of God's laws.
because God sees and knows and does more than we do,
either of the purpose, something like the Word of Wisdom,
something like the diet laws,
even if the primary purpose is to teach us to separate ourselves,
the primary purpose is to do that,
it doesn't mean it's not good for you to not do these things.
There's a good consequence in there, perhaps, yeah.
Same with washing your hands.
Same thing with, like, again,
the woman who was separated because of after,
giving birth, richly and pure.
We used to have this thing where women would, as babies, there's a recovery time that we,
in the modern age, don't talk about.
We expect women just bounce back right afterwards.
Giving birth is hard on the body.
And there's stuff that happens afterwards that needs to be taken care of.
Even though it's framed virtual purity, it actually provides a useful benefit there.
there's this intriguing thing within that
that teaches something about separation
but also says maybe take some time
and rest a little bit
and let the woman recover
there's some misogy in the law too
because it's an ancient law code
but God of course is not
and he's there saying
let me find ways to help you guys help each other
I like that
let me help you help each other
Avram what do you want to do next
1726 is
called the Holiness Code
It's an entire self-contained law code.
One of the things we see actually in the Old Testament broadly is we have this broad law of Moses.
Within it, there are sort of these sub-collections.
There's a covenant code in Exodus.
There's a monistic code.
And here this is the holiness code.
The whole thing is about how do we be holy?
In some ways, I like to think of it as a handbook of instructions.
the basis for Latter-day Saint religion and practice is the doctrine and covenants.
Dr. Covenants 20, the Constitution of the Church, when we say, where are we getting this from?
We're getting from Doctrine and Covenants.
But of course, the church in 2026 doesn't look like the church in 1830.
In terms of priest organization, in terms of hierarchies, Joseph Smith never went to a sacrament meeting.
because there weren't any in his entire lifetime, right?
But we can say our church is built on doctrine and covenants.
That is the basis of revelation for our religion,
even though what we're doing is building off of extrapolating from,
and we see that happening with the law.
Moses received the law from Mount Sinai.
But we see places where they're building from, extrapolating from,
It looks like we see different people, different crimes extrapolating,
that an editor like Mormon has put together for us.
It's kind of like having instructions from 1969 and from 2013 and from 26
all together in the same volume.
This explains, for example, Exodus 20 has a slavery law that says,
if you have an Israelite slave, after seven years, you let them go free.
Deuteronomy has a slavery law that says, if you have an Israelite slave,
after seven years, let them go free, and you give them stuff.
You give them gifts to set them up in life after you freed them.
The Vitis 25, our holiness code here, has a slavery law that says you can't make Israelite slaves.
All three of those are clearly built around the same idea,
but they're building it in different ways because they appear to be
different incantations of God's law in different times and different places.
Because, of course, there are two reasons to make laws.
One reason to make a law is because somebody's doing it and you want it to stop.
That's one reason to make a law.
The other reason to make a law is to say, this is something that we believe in that matters
to us.
And you see that in some of our commandments.
You see that in some things where, in Doctrine Covenants, especially, right?
You guys are doing this bad.
you do better at this.
And they're clearly commandments for God
as like, this is the kind of people I want you to be.
So don't do that.
It's never actually been a problem.
Just don't do that.
So whatever becomes a problem.
That's important.
And in some ways,
a law of the laws and holiness code feel like that to me,
demarcating what it means to be an Israelite.
And so it's certain behaviors,
certain foreign practices are forbidden,
magical practices, divination practices.
Don't eat blood.
Because blood is where life.
is. This is why Jews, by the way,
don't eat blood in their meat.
Coture meat,
you slaughter it, but you slit
their throat, as quickly as possibly can,
and you hang it till all the blood
drains out. Because
if you eat something's blood,
you're eating its life. And it says,
we don't need to eat the life. It's respect
for the life. This has been
very, like, enlightening.
And it does help me think of the New
Testament, which I teach
more often than the old. Oh, that makes
since that plays into a story about Jesus.
Like into the very beginning of this,
Leviticus is the book.
When they're talking about the law of Moses,
they mean all of it,
but they start with Leviticus.
Leviticus is the single,
most important book in Jewish thinking.
Okay.
So this is the book Jesus read.
This is the book Jesus read.
This is the book he thought from,
and it's the book his opponents read.
And of course, to our famous verse,
part of being like God is being good to eat other people, being willing to treat people the way that God treats them.
Which of course is why.
He says, look, guys, don't avenge your bear a grudge and love your neighbor like you.
Leviticus 1918, when Jesus is looking for places to teach, I always bring this up when we talk about in this church, we talk about, oh, we don't live in Moses anymore.
And I'm like, well, we don't offer certain animal sacrifices anymore.
And we don't live certain purity laws anymore.
But there are absolutely parts of the law of Moses that we still 100% absolutely live.
I don't even like the distinction between higher and lower law.
I don't think it's useful.
Because if we talk about, well, what's the higher law?
Well, the higher law is to love God with all your heart.
straight out of Deuteronomy.
And the higher law is to love your neighbor, like yourself,
straight out of Leviticus.
This idea that somehow we're dividing up...
Now, we can talk about higher and more knowledge of Jesus.
We can about ordinances.
Maybe there's something higher law, lower law, in terms of ordinances.
Because, of course, the tabernacle on there for the temple
was basically exclusively erronic ordinances.
In our temples, we perform both erotic and Melchizedic ordinances.
So there may be something in that.
But in terms of what God actually wants to do and what the law's purpose is,
the law of Moses, it's God's highest law.
In the sense of love God, love your neighbor,
is straight out of the law of Moses.
It's straight out of Deuteronomy.
It's straight out of Leviticus.
That's a great insight.
I like that.
something I encourage our listeners, ask yourself,
if I were to do this, would I be a better person?
Would this help me to be a better follower of Jesus?
And the answer is yes, then do it.
Then it's a good idea.
1911, don't steal, don't lie.
This is Leviticus is a version of Ten Commandments.
1913, don't steal from people, don't rob.
Don't take the wages of somebody that's hired.
Avin says, don't even wait to pay them.
If you hire them to a job and they finished your job,
don't sit on that money.
That's their money.
Right?
So you know you treat employees.
Don't curse the disabled or differently abled.
Those who have difficulties,
they're not there for you to make fun of.
Don't gossip.
All these things we read in Liddick 19
are really, really important behaviors for us
to being like how God wants us to be.
A tailbearer.
Yeah.
I was going to ask you how you feel about the myth that, oh, the Old Testament God, he's angry.
And the New Testament God, oh, he's so kind.
And then you read, Leviticus 19, love thy neighbor as thyself.
Don't steal.
Don't lie.
Don't gossip.
A couple of things.
on some levels the myth is rooted in occasionally anti-Semitic ways of talking about things
the Old Testament's the Jewish book, the New Testament's the Christian,
sometimes it falls into that and respects to previous things.
So we need to be always very careful about that.
Oh, the Old Testament's an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.
And it does say that.
But as I've argued before, and I'll continue to argue, it's a lot about limits.
It's only an eye for an eye, only a tooth for a tooth.
for a tooth. If I get in a fight with John and John punches out my tooth, I can't then gouge out his
eye. Yeah, that's not what it's worse. It needs to be the same one too. Right. Even in my Jesus Christ
in a Bible class, I'll do this. I'll say, okay, give me some words to describe the God of the Old
Testament. And they'll say harsh and unforgiving. I'll say, okay. Now give me some words to describe
Jesus. And they'll say loving and forgiving and approachable.
And then I'll, because I'm that kind of guy, put up a quote from President Nelson or President Oaks where they say,
we need to recognize that Jesus is Jehovah, the God of the Old Testament.
And I said, so how do we reconcile the fact that according to our doctrine, these are not just the winner, these are actually the exact same person?
They had taken it back a little bit here for this.
They said some of this, of course, is we're not, as you point out, we're not good enough readers of the Old Testament.
We don't read closely enough, because again, the Old Testament insists Jehovah's mercy.
The idea that justices and mercy are competing categories is a Book of Mormon notion.
Now, I love the Book of Mormon, and this is not to run down the Book of Mormon.
But in the Old Testament, God's justice and God's mercy are the exact same thing.
God is merciful because he is just.
and he cannot be merciful unless he is just.
There's a great quote from President Holland
where he said it would be all devotional
many years ago now, where he said,
as scary as is to imagine a just God,
imagine how much scarier an unjust God would be to imagine.
But this myth comes from focusing on something like
Davidicus 10 and not Leviticus 19,
or in something like Exodus 32,
and not in Exodus 35.
And it also comes, of course, on
focusing on some parts of the gospel, but not other parts of the gospel.
Jesus says to people who abuse children,
it's better for them to have a giant rock tied on their neck and be drowned.
Yeah, and you haven't read Matthew 23.
Woe unto you, scribes, Pharisees, hypocrites.
You're like a cup that's dirty on the inside and clean on the outside.
By the way, that's reference of purity laws in Loveticus, incidentally.
Hey.
Cups of insides and outsides comes from Leviticus.
Write that down.
What's back to this idea we talked about sort of earlier here in Leviticus 10,
this idea of telling God what he can do and who he can be.
It's the idea of saying, well, obviously what makes God good is being nice to me.
Yeah.
Answering all my prayers and fixing all my problems.
even though we understand doctrinally,
we understand whatever that that's not the case,
each and every one of us feels that inherently.
Inherently, we all feel that what makes God good is being good to me.
We need to recognize that God is good,
and God is kind, and God is just.
So whatever God does will be good and kind,
and just. But good and kind and just is not the same thing as nice. That's hard. I'm not suggesting
that we who are less good and less kind and less just should not be nice. Let's be nice.
The phrase in the Old Testament, he talks about this about how he is slow to anger, it says.
It says he's a jealous God.
It says for God is a jealous God
visiting iniquity on the sins of the third and fourth.
And then we stop there.
It says,
but showing mercy under thousands of generations
of those who love him
and keep his commandments,
he's slow to anger,
quick to forgive.
The Old Testament continuously insists
on God's mercy.
That is the chief characteristic they see in Jehovah.
is how much he follows them and loves them.
So I think you're absolutely right, Hank.
It's a myth.
It's a myth rooted in ancient culture.
It's a myth rooted in trying to compare Jesus to whatever.
It's a myth rooted in our own desire to want God to be nice to us.
He's got to our discussion earlier about trials.
There's a great midrash in a Jewish text called Mechil to the Rabbi Yishmael.
It's a midrash in Exodus.
one of the rabbis he says we are not like other nations he says other nations they praise their
gods when things go good and they curse them when things go bad but we we praise our god when things go
good and we praise our god when things go bad in many ways it's that perspective that we need to have
to see how merciful really God is.
Sounds like Job.
Yeah, it's very much like Job.
Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away.
Blessed be the name of my lord.
Yeah.
When I've had moments where I felt like that
where I'm like, there's been a lot more taken away
than giving right now, God.
But hallelujah anyway.
Exactly.
Hallelujah anyway.
You are my God and I'm not,
going to leave you just because things feel difficult.
Otherwise, it's just a, it's a transaction.
It's the vending machine.
If you give me what I want, then I really like you.
And covenants are about relationships.
When God talks about being a holy people,
he's not talking about jumping you through Hup
so you could be a certain kind of whatever.
He's talking about you interred relationship with me.
Of course, President Nelson of Blessed Name and Memory
introduced the church.
broadly to this chesed. You do your chesed. You do what I ask. I'll do my chesed or whatever, but we're
bound together. Sometimes that means that you think about your own relationships. Sometimes that
means I'll give more. Of course, God always gives more than we can possibly can. This is not an
equal relationship. But covenants are about relationships and what the law of Moses is trying to do
in Leviticus and anywhere else is say, this is what
I want you to do in my relationship.
This is what we're doing together because we're in this together.
We're in this together.
Avram, I have noticed the law of Moses being addressed so much in the Book of Mormon.
I'm excited to tell our audience that you have recently written about the Law of Moses in the Book of Mormon.
Can you tell us more about that?
Yeah, sure.
Thank you.
It's been a long time project.
I've been working on for, in some ways, far too long.
But I'm publishing a book with Greg Koford books.
It's forthcoming.
We're hoping to have it out this year.
And really in this book, I work through everywhere I can see where the Law of Moses is hitting on the ground.
Sometimes in places that are more usual, they're easy to see.
Other times I'm saying this is where like, this is not something we think is law of Moses,
but they absolutely would have been seeing a law of Moses basis for this.
Places of a sacrifice, places where they're talking about making,
I walk through the Book of Mormon, sort of analyzing where he's coming from.
The idea is, if you're ever interested in, is there anything about, anything about the law in
Second E55, here's at least what one guy saw about it.
I bet this increased your testimony of the antiquity of the Book of Mormon.
Because what, did Joe Smith just make that up, put that in there?
In terms of making space for logos to testify, there's a lot there where,
suddenly the Book of Mormon is incredibly rooted, not just in the Bible, in the law of Moses.
I love it. John, today has been so helpful.
Yeah, really good information. Yeah. I feel more curious and interested about Leviticus.
Yeah, me too. I can see what Avram said when he said there's beauty in order. And that's
a lot of what this is clear boundaries.
I want two rings here.
I want two chains of gold here.
There's beauty in that.
Things in their proper places.
I like the idea of a place for everything
and everything in its place.
It sounds like a Leviticus idea.
It does, yeah.
John, I'm sad I saw this at the end.
Thou shalt rise up before the hoary head.
I should have described you that way.
The hoary head.
The hoary head.
It means old age.
It means rise up.
Stand up when an old aging person comes together.
Horrie is white.
So the hoary head is the white hairs.
Yes.
Go find someone with white hair and say,
hey, you're a hoary head.
See how that goes over.
Avram, this has been a really good day.
It's so fun.
Honestly, the very beginning,
why do I love Leviticus?
Because I find God there.
That's why I love Leviticus.
I find God.
More importantly, he
finds me. I appreciate you. Let me talk about it a little bit. Yeah. You know, going back to
Fiddler on the roof, Tevi wanted to be a rich man, but why? So he could talk about the
holy books with the rabbis. I love that that was the whole why that he had. I would just love to
sit and talk about the holy books, and that's what we got to do. With that, we want to thank
Dr. Avram Shannon for being with us today. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Soren
our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, in every episode we remember our founder, Steve Sorensen.
We hope you'll join us next week. We're continuing in the Five Books of Moses 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.co. 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
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The answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to him. Follow him.
