followHIM - Genesis 12–17; Abraham 1–2 Part 2 • Dr. Jenae Nelson • Feb. 16-22 • Come, Follow Me
Episode Date: February 11, 2026Dr. Jenae Nelson weaves Genesis 12-17 with Abraham 1-2 with her own “out of order” life story to show how covenants, divine timing, and wilderness seasons reveal that the ultimate reward of faith ...is a living relationship with Jesus Christ.YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/XJvMZcDIRRUALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part 2 - Dr. Jenae Nelson03:16 Patience for promised blessings04:10 Life experiences not in the order expected09:22 Souls that were won12:15 Why covenants?15:29 Elder Renlund on power through covenants18:48 Abraham and Lot divide the land22:29 Cutting a covenant26:36 The Sea of Galilee vs The Dead Sea30:58 The paradox of giving33:45 Purpose at the intersection of gifts and the world35:15 Where does our tent face?39:52 Tent stories42:04 Faith not in outcomes44:44 Why obedience?47:01 God expands and multiplies via covenant50:44 Hope is what you need in the darkest times54:11 Encouragement for those in difficult times59:02 Unprofitable servants and promises kept1:04:24 End of Part 2 - Dr. Jenae NelsonThanks 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. Jeney Nelson, Genesis 12 to 17, and Abraham 1 to 2.
Janay, this has been fantastic, and I know there are so many, including me.
I've had times in my life where I thought, you promised.
Is this ever going to happen?
I bet both of you remember this talk, continue inpatience April of 2010, 16 years ago now.
It doesn't seem like it was that long ago.
This is Elder Uptorf.
He says, I remember when I was preparing to be trained as a fighter pilot.
We spent a great deal of our preliminary military training in physical exercise.
I'm still not exactly sure why endless running was considered such an essential preparatory
part of becoming a pilot.
Nevertheless, we ran, and we ran, and we ran some more.
As I was running, I began to notice something that frankly troubled me.
Time and again, I was being passed by men who saw.
smoked, drank, and did all manner of things that were contrary to the gospel, and in particular,
the word of wisdom. I remember thinking, wait a minute, aren't I supposed to be able to run and not
be weary? But I was weary. I was weary, and I was overtaken by people who were definitely
not following the word of wisdom. I confess it troubled me at the time. I asked myself,
was the promise true, or was it not?
And this, Janae, I think is what you're talking about.
The answer didn't come immediately.
But eventually, I learned that God's promises are not always filled as quickly as or in the way we might hope.
They come according to his timing and in his ways.
Years later, I could see clear evidence of the temporal blessings that come to those who obey the word of wisdom,
in addition to the spiritual blessings that come immediately from obedience to any of God's laws.
Looking back, I know for sure that the promises of the Lord, if perhaps not always swift, are always certain.
Eventually, years later, I don't love that.
But I know it's true.
That's one of the interesting things about getting to this stage in life and seeing,
you can see so many of these dramas unfold and how the timing was so perfect.
Even though at the time it was that wilderness trial, God was in it the whole time.
And that's the second thing that he says to Abraham, walk with me. So not only was it important
for him to have an understanding that he needed to be perfect in terms of finish the work that he was
called to do. Of Abraham, it says Abraham was a prince in the heavens and by right came to the earth
in this time to accomplish the things given him to do. Then Paul, of course, says, I have fought a good
fight. I've finished my course. I have kept the faith. That's enduring to the end. That's being perfect.
that's being a finisher and ultimately Christ is the finisher.
He which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ.
In other words, he'll perfect it. He'll finish it.
Christ is finishing the work in our life.
I think of the fact that we know so much of what's going to happen to Abraham.
The people in the scriptures, they don't know what's going to happen, but we have the benefit of just, oh, hold on, you know, next chapter.
It's going to be great.
but Abraham, he's going to have to wait a long time for the blessing of your posterity is going to bless the whole earth.
Because Israel is going to be first sent to Egypt for hundreds of years and enslaved.
Then when they return to the promised land, they're going to be scattered because they chose a king.
And how long are they scattered? John before the gathering?
I mean, a couple millennia.
even in the spirit world, Abraham and Sarah are probably thinking, wait, you promised.
The Lord's saying, yep, it's going to be a while.
Even if you have to wait a couple millennia, I will keep my promise.
One of my favorite things to tell my students is that when I was 35 years old, I didn't even have a bachelor's degree.
That shocks them a little bit, like, whoa, because I had to go back in my mid-30s to finish my bachelor's degree.
and then get my PhD.
There is a line in my patriarchal blessing that talks about getting essentially a lot of education at a university.
It's really clear that it's not like self-learning because there's lots of different ways to get an education.
It doesn't have to be through a PhD, but it was very clear that I was going to have this experience in my life.
I got married young and started having children right away, then health problems.
my education was constantly put on hold, it just nagged me. That line and my patriarchal blessing
nagged at me. Like, when is that going to happen? Because I don't know how I'm going to be able to
get all that education when I have kids. And then when they're young, and then my kids needed a lot of
help. At every step, I saw myself getting further away from this possibility, this promise in my
patriarchal blessing. My blessing also talks about how many people will come into the church
through me. The first person that I've ever seen baptized just happened in October. I'm 44 years old.
I lived so much of my life with all these pieces in my patriarchal blessing that hadn't been fulfilled,
yet God's timing was perfect. I ended up having fertility problems, and I had a hysterectomy at 29.
Imagine if I had postponed having children, getting married. What if I did it in my order? What if I did it the way that I wanted it?
You know, if I did the education first, there's a chance I wouldn't even have a family.
But at the time, I didn't see that.
I didn't understand God's goodness.
Now when I get students in my office, I just tell them, trust God's timing for you.
You will find that he is so good that even this thing that feels hard right now is blessing you and you will find out why that is.
And it will all make sense someday.
but right now, while you're in the waiting,
you just have to trust that God has a better plan than you have for yourself.
He does. He says in Abraham 2.8, my name is Jehovah.
I know the end from the beginning.
Therefore, my hand shall be over thee.
He's saying, I know, nothing is escaped from me.
I know beginning to end, A to Z, you're going to have to trust me.
that phrase that you used jane it wasn't happening according to my order reminded me of another one of my
fallback verses you know hank mentioned a couple of millennia took me about that long to find someone
who would marry me section 1111 verse 11 says be as wise as serpents and yet without sin but this is the part
love, and I will order all things for your good as fast as ye are able to receive them.
I've got the order down. I know when you're able to receive. That is so interesting at 29.
You had had your children and then you could do this education part, but it wasn't in your order.
He ordered it for you. Yeah, and it worked out way better for so many reasons. I mean,
going back to school at 35 was a huge blessing. I had a lot of life experience.
at that point, being in classroom with 20-year-olds, was hard.
At that time, I wasn't quite old enough to be their mom.
I am now.
It was challenging, feeling like I did my life out of order.
But then when you realized, no, this was exactly the order that God had for me.
And there's so many beautiful things that came out of my life because of it.
I was raising teenagers while I was studying teenagers in grad school.
I mean, how good is God?
He was just like, let me give you a real.
education, you're going to be learning about teenagers at the same time as you're raising them. I can't
imagine a better time for me personally. Other people have different timetables. I have really close colleagues
that raised young children while they were in grad school, while they were preparing for their
careers. That just wasn't what was going to work for me. And God, in his infinite wisdom and love,
understood that my path had to look differently. It had to be different from other people.
That's precisely why these trials are so hard when there's a delay, when you're not fitting the stereotype,
when you aren't participating in the rights of passage, in the right order, those things actually cause a lot of psychological distress.
That's when there's disorder in our life because we have these social and cultural differences in what's expected and what's happening in our life.
We need to be gentle and careful with people who are breaking these molds,
who aren't following this prescribed pathway or timeline that we often see in the church.
And a lot of young people, a lot of their suffering really follows from not fitting this mold in one way or another.
Don't you find it fascinating?
In verse 15, he says, I took my family and the souls that we had won.
I love that phrase.
And we leave to go to the land of Canaan.
Now, all three of us know how amazing Canaan is, but they don't know that.
that phrase that comes up that you pointed out, Janay,
eternity was our covering and our rock and our salvation,
you're going out there, you have no idea if this is going to work.
It reminds me of the saints going west from Navu to Salt Lake.
Eternity is our covering.
What are you going to do out there?
How are you going to get what you need?
How do you know you're not all going to go out there and die?
Eternity is our covering.
It's a beautiful phrase.
God is my roof.
He also says that he called on the Lord devoutly during that time.
Consistently over and over you see throughout his story, turning to the Lord.
He doesn't stop.
Oftentimes when we're in those wilderness-type trials or when we're going through something treacherous in our life or uncertain,
we can choose to call on the Lord.
We can choose where we turn back to the idea of turning.
Are we turning away from God?
or are we continuing to call on the Lord devoutly.
God will answer our prayers.
Maybe not the way that we want.
He will answer them in that he will be our presence.
He will be our support.
I love that quotation from Elder Renland.
I had never equated an eternal perspective with eternity was our covering.
That's really cool.
I love having the perspective of the reader knowing the future, right?
Yes, I know.
We're like, it's going to work out.
Yeah, you're going to be fine.
What's the problem?
And I wonder if the Lord looks at us the same way that we look at these scripture characters.
He's going, oh, just wait a couple verses.
Things get better.
And we think, I don't have the book.
Yeah.
Just tell me how it's all going to work out.
But that doesn't require faith.
That's the point.
If we knew what was going to happen, it wouldn't be that hard to trust.
It wouldn't be that hard to have faith.
That's why God knew that we needed a couple.
because that's another thing that the covenant gives us is it helps us establish trust. I want to share
a passage from this book by Jennifer Lane. This is what she says. As we get older, this simple concept
of promises gets layered with our adult life experiences. We sign contracts for phones, apartments,
cars, mortgages, and so on. We have obligations to make payments in exchange for goods and services.
We do our part and we expect the other party to do their part. We make
contracts, but we break contracts too. Others break contracts with us, too. We are penalized for
breaking contracts, but that's a part of life. This contractual model can and does easily color
our sense of what covenant means, but in an ancient world making a covenant wasn't a matter of
commerce. In ancient Israel, the term for covenant was Barit. The concept behind Barit is a relationship
understood as a family relationship. Making a covenant in scripture can be best understood as forming a new
relationship. I love that. She goes on to talk about when we get married, we create a new relationship.
When we have children, we become a mother and a father. We're creating new families. And she says that we don't
need a contract for that. She says, you know, it's clear that we have new roles and new responsibilities. But
She says that covenants in a like way create new family relationships.
So if we think about our covenants as a family relationship,
then she says that covenants can change who we are because they'll change our relationship with those around us and their relationship to us.
That's really profound.
I asked a lot of my friends leading up to this, why do we need covenants?
Can't God just bless us anyways?
What is it about the covenant?
It makes sense anciently because that's kind of how they lived.
But in our day and age, we just aren't a people that can understand covenants the same way.
It's just not part of our daily living.
We have insane return policies.
We don't keep anything.
We're transactional beings and we don't understand what this type of relationship means.
But I had some people say, God doesn't need covenants to bless us that he causes the rain to fall in the just and the unjust.
But what Covenant does is what we just said.
Covenant creates a new relationship.
It's saying that I'm allowing Christ to claim me.
I'm claiming Him.
I am accepting this new identity as being his.
I'm saying yes to this new identity.
That's what Covenant allows us to do.
And then within that covenant, we can receive, because it's the authorized order,
we can receive blessings, greater blessings, not that we didn't get blessings before, but we can now receive greater blessings,
we can receive greater happiness, peace, etc.
I love that in the past dozen years we've been speaking of covenants much more as a relationship.
I think I'm hearing that.
Do you guys think so?
But this idea of a two-way agreement, that's nice, but it can sound like a contract that I sign and put on the shelf.
but thinking of a relationship and then loyalty and it's to Christ is so much better way to put it.
And when somebody says, I just can't do this, you want to say, yeah, you're right, you can't.
But what if you're in covenant with Christ?
He can do it.
If you're bound to him with a covenant, it's amazing what you can do with being bound to Christ in a covenant.
And then it makes more sense than a contract.
Right.
I'm sure both of you remember this story accessing God's power through covenants, April of
2023. My grandparents, this is Elder Renland speaking, I think it's Lena Sophia and Matt's
Leander Renland received God's power through their baptismal covenant when they joined the church
in 1912 in Finland. They were happy to be part of the first branch of the church in Finland.
Leander died from tuberculosis five years later when Lena was pretext.
pregnant with their 10th child. That child, my father, was born two months after Leander's death.
Lena eventually buried not just her husband, but also seven of her ten children. As an impoverished
widow, she struggled. For 20 years, she did not give a good night's rest. During the day,
she scrambled to provide food for her family. At night, she took care of dying family members.
It's hard to imagine how she coped.
Lena persevered because she knew that her deceased husband and children could be hers through the
eternities. The doctrine of temple blessings, including that of eternal families, brought her peace
because she trusted in the sealing power. In 1938, Lena submitted records so that temple ordinances
could be performed for her deceased family members, some of the earliest submitted from Finland.
After she died, temple ordinances were performed by others for her.
and her deceased children. By proxy, she was endowed. Lina and Leander were sealed to each other,
and their deceased children and my father were sealed to them. Like others, Lena died in faith,
not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off and was persuaded of them and
embraced them. Lina lived as though she already made these covenants in her life. I mean,
this is just the power of covenants. I like what you said there.
I don't know what's on the next page, but I know I've made covenants.
God keeps his covenants.
I love that. And there's not just belief in those covenants,
but there's something indescribably real about those covenants.
When I lost my grandma on my dad's side,
so I've been sealed to my dad and my stepmom.
I have that sealing to my grandma that passed away.
I was very sad.
was difficult for me, but I had this peace that I couldn't describe. I could see her rejoicing in
heaven. I could feel this very real bond to her that's really hard to describe. When my mom's mom
died, my grandma Nina, this is the side of my family that I'm not sealed to. It was a different feeling.
It felt unfinished. It felt like there was still work to do. I believe in a loving Heavenly
father that's not going to keep me away for my family. He's going to provide those ordinances.
It's messy for me right now, but God is going to work that out. I completely believe that.
I still believe that God will make it work, but with that unfinished work, it created a different
experience for me. Hink, I know that you love the story in Genesis 13. I would love to hear you tell
us about it. Yes, I love this story, and I wish I could be more like Abraham here. I'm trying.
they get to Canaan and he and his nephew, Lott, are doing very well.
They're doing so well that the land that they're in can't hold all their cattle.
Their herdmen, the herdman of Abraham's cattle and the herdmen of Lott's cattle start to fight and get contentious.
Abrams says to Lott, I don't like this contention that's happening between our two, all of our employees, I would say.
Why don't we do this?
You choose a part of the land you want, and I'll just take whatever you don't want.
Lot, of course, sees the better part, and he's like, I'll take the better part.
And Abram says, okay, I'll take the other half.
Abraham, to me here, is an example of a peacemaker.
He says, I have enough, I have sufficient for my needs.
How can we make peace here between these two,
between these two groups. It reminds me of Edward Partridge. I have lost my affection for this
world's goods. I love what Douglas Clark says about Abraham on this front. He says,
this principle of righteous loving kindness or charity would become the governing principle of
Abraham's life for which he is still remembered among his Jewish descendants as the embodiment of
Hesed. For the decisive factor in Abraham's personality was
the unceasing urge to help others. Going back to the very beginning, I shared the story of those
tokens, the tokens that helped identify the children. This one is the most important characteristic
of being part of Abraham's family, having this loving kindness, having this charity. And Christ
himself said, by this shall men know ye are my disciples if ye have loved one for another.
It's our compassion. It's our desire to alleviate suffering that identifies us. It's a token of our membership in the House of Israel. If we want to be recognized as part of the covenant, we need to be living like Abraham in the sense that we embrace this loving kindness. This story is a perfect example of how he did that. An interesting thing happens when money is involved in situations. As you know, money can bring out the world.
worst in people, money, property, land, business. They say, don't go into business with your family.
This can create major tensions and problems. It's precisely because we have put our trust or we created
an idol out of these things. And clearly, Abraham is saying that he is done with idols and he is
living that. He doesn't have an interest in accumulating those things that he knows are not eternal.
He's in the business of collecting things of an eternal nature.
He's in the business of worshiping the true God.
My father-in-law, Michael Loveridge, is an estate planning attorney.
He actually used to give talks at Education Week.
His title of his talk was How to Avoid Death, Taxes, Probate, and Family Civil War.
The stories he tells about, oh, it's awful, what happens to some families when that time comes.
to divide up what their parents left behind.
Some of those are heartbreaking to hear when they can't be like Abraham here.
Yeah, he was putting the gods of this world behind him.
That's interesting too, because as you guys know,
the word for covenant means cutting a covenant.
We see the necessity of Abraham cutting ties from things of this world,
cutting ties with the natural man,
with these false idols, he cut those ties so that he could be opened up. We need to be cut open
so that the word, the seed, the blessings can start to grow. They can flourish. But there's a
cutting that's involved, which is sometimes painful. The beautiful thing is that God brings it all
back together. We come to him with our broken hearts, with ourselves split open, and that's the
fertile grounds for which he can now do his work.
I'm very impressed by generosity.
The older I get, we want to hold on to our goods.
I earned that.
I want that.
And then I'll meet others who will say, oh, you know, it's just money or it's just
stuff.
It's not a big deal.
I want to give.
I want to share.
To me, that's very impressive, somehow overcoming selfishness.
If I'm Abram, I might say, okay, let's get somebody to
come value the property so we can split it evenly.
Instead, it's, I'll take whatever you don't want.
Yeah, it's very impressive.
It's interesting, Hank, because I was reflecting on how Abraham lived the laws of the endowment.
It's really easy to see how he lived the law of obedience, the law of sacrifice.
So we can see all of these laws in his life play out,
But what you just described was the law of consecration.
That's a crowning covenant precisely because what you're saying,
it requires that you only have one God,
that you're not relying on those other things for security, for safety.
When you have that relationship with things where you're no longer requiring them for safety and security,
it's easier to consecrate.
But it also requires a loving kindness and a care for other.
people where you see it's not just about letting go of your attachment to other gods or making idols
out of those, but it's also really knowing the identity of the other person that they are also a
child of God and that they have needs and that you need to attend to them. And if you truly understand
their identity, then you will have that compassion and that desire. We think of generosity sometimes
is something that we have to muster up.
I actually researched this.
We wonder, why aren't people more grateful?
Why aren't they more generous?
What's going on here?
I think it's very similar to happiness
that once the right conditions are in place,
generosity just results from it.
Same with happiness.
We lived after the manner of happiness.
You do certain things,
and then it brings happiness.
But if you are in the search for happiness,
you're not going to find it that way.
You're going to have to live after the manner of happiness.
But similarly, with generosity,
this is something that is cultivated by living a certain way.
It's by not having those idols, not having those attachments to things,
but it's also the way you see your fellow human beings that if you see them as you see yourself,
then you would do anything to alleviate suffering of that person.
If you saw them the way the Heavenly Father saw them or if you saw them as yourselves,
it would just come naturally that you would want to help them.
Our covenants help us do that. Every single covenant that we make in the temple is relational. It is
meant to help us relate better to each other. It's meant to help us get to that end that you're
talking about Hink, where that generosity comes naturally. It's not even a question of,
am I going to give this or should I give them the better part? It just happens naturally because of the
way that you view other people and the way you view yourself. John, you've heard me make this
comparison before about the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea over in the Holy Land.
There are two seas in Palestine. One is fresh and fish are in it. Splashes of green adorn its banks.
Trees spread their branches over it and stretch out their thirsty roots to take in its life-giving waters.
Along its shores, children play, as the children played when our Lord was there. He loved it.
He could look across its silver surface when he spoke his parables, and on a rolling plain not far away, he fed that.
thousands of people. The River Jordan makes this sea with sparkling water from the hills,
so it laughs in the sunshine, and people build their houses near it, and birds their nest,
and every kind of life is happier because it is there. The River Jordan flows on south into
another sea. Here there is no splash of fish, no fluttering leaf, no song of birds, no children's
laughter. Travelers choose another route, unless on urgent business, the air hangs heavy above its
water and neither man nor beast or foul will drink. What makes this mighty difference in these neighboring
seas? Not the river Jordan. It empties the same good water into both. Not the soil in which they lie and
not the country about. This is the difference. The Sea of Galilee receives, but does not keep the Jordan.
For every drop that flows into it, another drop flows out. The giving and receiving go on in equal measure.
sea is selfish, hoarding its income jealously. It will not be tempted into any generous impulse.
Every drop it gets, it keeps. The Sea of a Galilee gives and lives. The other sea gives nothing.
It is named the Dead Sea. If you've ever been there, one is gorgeous and beautiful, and the other
is, I mean, you can float in it for a little while, which is kind of fun. I have compassion for people
that are like the Dead Sea though too, Hank, because people that are like that, that are holding
tightly onto their things oftentimes are doing that because they have this scarcity mindset
that I'm not going to get more. This is all there is. They live in a world that isn't generous to
them in their minds. Because the world isn't generous, because it's cruel, it takes from you,
you can think of the world or God that way. People think of God that way too. You can imagine that
Abraham and Sarah could have thought about God as a God who takes. Similarly, every single person
constructs a narrative about the world. They think that the world is either harsh and that everyone
for their own or that the world is a loving, happy place. People are mostly good and that good
things will come to you if you put it out there. And it turns out that people that believe that have
less depression, anxiety, and other psychological problems, and you can see why. The people that are
holding on are usually doing that because they're afraid. They're afraid that they're not going to get
back. If we can use Abraham's story in our lives as evidence that God is generous, God does give,
think how much Abraham was multiplied greater than the Zanz in the sea and the stars in the heaven.
That's not just referring to his posterity, but the blessings. God is in the work of multiplying,
And we live in a world that is harsh sometimes and that can feel like it takes from us and it can feel like if I give this, I'll never get anything back in return.
But when you understand how God works, you realize that we don't have to be stuck in this transactional way of living the world.
We can be in the business of transformation, in the business of giving, in the business of helping other people become their best selves and not just focus on what you get out of things.
it requires us to make a shift in our mindset.
Yeah.
John, think about the people on our team and our podcast.
Are these not the most generous people that we get to work with?
Not only our guests, people like Jeney who come and give of their time and expertise.
Then we have Shannon, our producer.
We have Lisa Spice.
We have David Perry.
We have Kyle Nelson.
I don't want to go through the entire team here, but these are just people who give and give and give.
And it's so fun to work with them.
Yeah.
It is a paradox, isn't it? It's kind of like Malachi. If you bring the tithes, I'll open you the windows of heaven and pour you out a blessing. It's paradoxical, but the more you give, the more you receive it. You lose yourself, you find yourself.
And I love what you said there, Jene. It's not usually someone does not want to be generous. There's a wound there. Something is happening. There's a need not being met. Something is happening inside of them. I think it was President Kimball who said,
The Savior was able to see sin as the result of an unmet need on the part of the sinner.
That story reminds me of a story told by Elder Robert C. Gay.
He said,
Sitting on the podium that day as I marched down the aisle in my Harvard graduation robe was Mother Teresa.
She rose and delivered one of the most memorable speeches ever given at Harvard,
a profound call to service and repentance.
she expressed the hope that we graduates in going into the world would go with Jesus,
would work for Jesus, and would serve him in the distressing guise of the poor.
She also shared the following story of a couple she had met just a few days before leaving Calcutta
for Harvard.
A young man and a young woman came to our house with a big amount of money.
I asked them, where did you get this money?
Because I knew that they gave their money to feed the poor.
They gave me the most strange answer.
before our wedding, we decided not to buy wedding clothes, not to have a wedding feast, but to give you the money to feed the poor.
Then I asked them one more question.
But why? Why did you do that? That is a scandal in India, not to have a wedding feast and special clothes.
And they gave me this most beautiful answer. Out of love for each other, we wanted to give each other something special,
and that special something was that big sacrifice, the wonderful something.
one of the world's genuine saints reminding us graduates that everyone, not just some fortunate few in
the audience that day, but even those in the poorest regions of the world with little to their
names, have something to give, if nothing more than sacrifice and pure love for others. Mother
Teresa taught us that sacrificing something as simple as new clothing or a meal or a cultural
right of passage could change a life. I knew then, as I hope you know now,
that everyone has something to give.
God asks that we act courageously
in giving of ourselves
and sharing the gifts and blessings
he has given us.
Take the talents and skills you have developed
and go out and be a positive force for
and on behalf of our Savior.
That is the law of consecration.
It's part of the covenants
Jane has been talking about.
Yeah.
Yeah, I love that.
So we've talked a lot about identity and purpose
is things that come out of the covenant.
What you just touched on, John, with that story, is what we teach people about purpose.
It's another thing that I research.
And that is that oftentimes we find our purpose at the intersection of where our gifts and talents meet the needs of the world.
Our job is to find out what is that work that we're called to do.
Sometimes that requires some reflection and some identifying what those gifts and talents are that we have.
Some people have really clear, easy to identify gifts and talents.
If you're a musician, those types of things tend to be a little bit easier to identify.
But meekness, friendliness, those types of things, those characteristics and gifts, those can be used in small ways, but they can make a big difference.
I don't know how many free, totally, absolutely free, firesides, John, by the way, has given in this church.
It's got to be in the thousands.
You can't what to pay for.
You're using your gifts, John.
Using your gifts.
And you've blessed the church.
I wonder how many people out there listening have heard a John, by the way, talk.
They had a good rest.
Yeah.
They're in a comfortable pew.
Yeah.
Church sleep.
Janae, we're getting close to the end of our scripture block here.
What's next?
Yeah, I think there's a section in Genesis 13 that we should talk.
about really quick. We talked about where we turn and how Abraham's fathers were turned towards
these idols, these false gods, and that he was turning to the right God. And so we get this story in
verse 12 about the direction the tent is faced. John, why don't you tell us a little bit more about
this? I'm glad you asked. When King Benjamin is getting ready to give his
address, it says in Mosaic 2.6, they pitched their tents round about the temple, every man having his
tent with the door thereof towards the temple, which is a nice little metaphor and kind of a haven't
my margin, Genesis 1312. It says, Abram dwelt in the land of Canaan and Lot dwelt in the cities of
the plain and pitched his tent toward Sodom. But the men of Sodom were wicked and sinners before the
Lord exceedingly. And I remember Elder Razband making a comment about the King Benjamin's story
and asking, where is our tent door pitched? Is it pitched toward the temples? Good question.
My tent door, what's it facing? What's my life facing? What's my family trying to face and
keep its eyes on? Yeah, I like that because we've talked about how what we rely on, who we listen to,
and now where we're facing.
These are all indicators of who we're serving.
I like that a lot.
If you look in chapter 14, verse 12,
wasn't long before Lot dwelt in Sodom.
He ended up there.
He faced there first and ended up there.
That usually what happens, right?
We face a certain direction,
and slowly over time, we end up there.
You drift that way.
When you change direction,
even just a little bit,
about those little tiny degrees can actually get you way off the course in the long run.
That story reminds me of, I think it was Holland that was talking about the jersey that you wear.
My son ran for American Fork High School. Their cross-country team is one of the best in the
nation. They've got several national titles. Their coach would always say to them,
wearing the jersey doesn't make you a national champion. You have to actually do the work,
but there was something about putting on that jersey knowing that you were now part of a team that was nationally recognized and that had this record, it made them think differently about themselves.
They're like, I am a caveman.
That's a big deal around here.
If you're a runner, there is something about being on this team, this winning team that gave these young men and young women a different perspective.
And so I think about how when we are joining the Lord's team and when we are, when we're putting on our garments, when we're wearing the Lord's jersey, we're saying something about our identity. We're saying something about the team that we belong to. But not only is it important for us to put on that jersey or to make that commitment to be facing the right direction, but then it also requires that you are doing the work. Those runners are expected to run like national champions. They're expected to show us.
to practice and they work really hard. Their coach can turn just about anybody into a national
champion runner because he's such a good coach. But this is the way that Christ is. He's such a good
coach that he can bring us to that level. And there's nothing magical about the Jersey,
but it's that partnership with the coach. It's the coaching that you get, the mentoring that you get
when you choose to be on God's team. When you join his family, you make those new covenant relationships.
You are now saying I'm taking Christ on as my coach and my partner, and I'm choosing to walk with him.
That's the youth theme this year, which I think is really beautiful.
You're choosing him as your coach who doesn't want a national championship as a coach.
Where does your tent face?
A great devotional lesson for this week.
For any seminary teacher, right, any mom or dad, go get a tent, pitch it in the living room and talk about which way it is our tent face.
could be a very intense discussion.
Last time I was on here, I talked about a tent too.
That's funny, that tent that blew over in the wind.
Genesis 15, Abraham has an encounter with the Lord again.
He's still Abram at this point.
And this is, think what the Lord says to him is really beautiful and instructive for us.
He says, fear not, Abram, I am thy shield.
So again, eternity is his covering.
and thy exceeding great reward. Going back to this idea that there are certain promises that are
associated with the Abrahamic covenant, there's outcomes, there's certain things that Abraham is expecting
to see. And even Abraham says, what will thou give me seeing I go childless? He's bringing this up,
you know, I don't have children. He's saying I haven't got the outcome yet, the outcome that I want,
in the timing that I want. But right before that, I don't know if he was paying very good attention
because the Lord said that he, as in the Lord, is his reward. He says, I am thy shield and thy
exceeding great reward. In the gospel, when we think about obedience being tied with blessings,
we often think about very specific blessings that we think we should be getting. And this is where
we get into problems because we think, okay, if I'm not getting those blessings, then we're back
to that cycle of perfectionism because maybe I'm not good enough or I'm not worthy enough for those
blessings. Or then the opposite of that is that, or maybe God isn't good, maybe God doesn't love me.
So we either blame ourselves or we blame God. Either way, the problem is that we're expecting the
blessings of the covenant to be a certain thing or to come on a certain timetable. God is saying,
I am your reward. Can you just see that?
I know that you want a child. You're going to get a child. You're going to get all the promises. But if you don't understand that I'm your shield, I'm your reward, I'm going to protect you. I am going to be your provision. The point of covenant is that we get Christ as our reward.
My faith is not in outcomes. My faith is in Christ.
That's hard, though, Hank, because hope is tied to outcomes.
there's a gap here in how people are supposed to actually practically apply this that don't have faith in outcomes, but also have faith and outcomes.
That can be confusing for people. I hear this a lot from missionaries tell me.
My mission president said that if we were exactly obedient, we would get blessings.
There were some missionaries that were breaking all the rules and they were baptizing 20 people a week.
And then I was keeping all the rules and I didn't have any baptisms.
and I just felt like I was the worst.
How do you reconcile this?
Not only do we have these wilderness trials
where you're not seeing the blessings
that God has promised you,
but what about when you're obedient
and we're told that if you're obedient,
you'll get blessings,
but it feels like you're not getting them.
Similar to that wilderness trial,
but it can cause a lot of heartache for us.
My son's patriarchal blessing says
that you'll get certain blessings
and it repeatedly says, if you obey the principles of the gospel with exactness,
we talked about how some of the blessings and his patriarchal blessing are not going to happen
because of the way that his mission changed, which was out of his control.
He's like, maybe it's because I didn't obey with exactness.
And I said, okay, let's back this up a little bit.
Similarly to, like, let's unpack what perfect means and what God may be meant by that,
obeying the principles of the gospel with exactness.
So what are the principles of the gospel?
faith, repentance, baptism, receive the Holy Ghost, and George at the end. I said, so to me,
that sounds like repentance. You're going to mess up, but you can choose to repent quickly. Like,
that's something that is in your power. You might have weaknesses or traditions of your fathers
that keep you from being able to be exactly obedient. Nobody did it, but Jesus. Jesus is the only one
that had exact obedience, but we can keep repenting.
And that's the same idea of don't give up, right?
That we can continue going on because of repentance.
I really like that.
And I think perhaps that's why the Lord made the first principle faith in him,
because it sounds like if that's the first principle,
we're going to need it a lot.
It's not going to look like it's working out.
You're going to have faith in me.
Chapter 15, verse 6, and he believed.
I love that, and it's not that we're saying that obedience doesn't matter.
It's the first law of heaven.
It's the first covenant we make in the temple.
It's important to remember that obedience is necessary, and Abraham quickly obeys when the Lord commands him to leave.
He's consistently obeying and doing what the Lord asked him to do, and that obedience is an act of faith.
Once we've demonstrated faith, then he can bless us.
but it's not like we are earning those blessings through our obedience.
It's just that we're demonstrating faith in him.
We're demonstrating faith that he is the great reward that requires listening to him
and following him and choosing him as our God.
When I am obedient, I'm connected to him, and therefore I have the reward.
That's right.
Still 15, verse 6.
And it came to pass that Abram looked forth and saw the days of the Son of Man.
So he's seeing the life of Christ and was glad, and his soul found rest, and he believed in the Lord.
And the Lord counted it to him for righteousness.
There's this principle here that Abraham is looking to the life and teachings of Jesus Christ for rest, and he's receiving that rest.
President Nelson talked to us about rest and how we can experience rest, because that's another plight that we have in this life, especially in the latter days,
just feeling busy, feeling like there's a lot to do, feeling overwhelmed.
But if we can center our lives on Christ, if we can look to his life, we can find rest.
Sometimes that means also pairing down and that we're just focusing on the most important things,
using Christ's life as an example as to what we should prioritize.
This story hits so close to home for many who can't have children, who want children,
but for some reason or another, are unable to have.
have children reading this, where Abraham's kind of begging almost.
You have given no seed, will you?
The Lord tells him, take a look at the stars.
Take a look at the stars.
Try to number those stars.
That's going to be your posterity.
And he believed, still wondering how in the world it's going to happen.
I like that God is pointing Abraham to nature for a
pattern of going back to that generosity, God's goodness. Look, my creations are vast. That can give
you an understanding of what I want to do for you. If we think about God as being someone that's
generous, he's a creator, he multiplies versus a God who takes, a God who punishes, a completely
different paradigm. I'm glad that you brought up that. Hank and I did want to talk a little bit about
Sarah and mothers in Israel. Because we talk a lot about Abraham, but right by Abraham's side was Sarah.
She also received a new name, and she was also part of the covenant. We don't get Sarah's words.
We don't get to get into her mind and what she's going through, but I think about how difficult it
might have been for her, especially in giving Abraham Hagar, and Hagar is the one who produces seed
first and the emotion that she must have been going through, but yet we find that she's faithful.
I love this quote from Jeffrey R. Holland, another good one from him. He said, this is speaking to women.
Yours is the grand tradition of Eve, the mother of all human family, the one who understood that
she and Adam had to fall in order that men and women might be, and that there would be joy. Yours is the
grand tradition of Sarah and Rebecca and Rachel, without whom there could not.
have been those magnificent patriarchal promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, which bless us all.
Yours is the grand tradition of the mothers of the 2000 stripling warriors. Yours is the grand
tradition of Mary, chosen and foreordained from before this world was to conceive, carry, and bear
the son of God himself. We thank all of you, including our own mothers, and tell you there is
nothing more important in the world than participating so directly in the work and glory of God
in bringing to pass the immortality and earthly life of his daughters and sons so that immortality
and eternal life can come to those celestial realms on high. It's not just Abraham that
promise. It was Sarah. God had a promise to keep, not just Abraham, but also to Sarah. It was
so important that that promise be fulfilled through Isaac. We get kind of a glimpse of the way that
the Lord must have felt about Sarah. He loved her. He wanted them to rely on him and to be able to
trust him that that would happen. And that trust building required them to not have that promise
for a while, which seems paradoxical or counterproductive.
But that's exactly what increased their faith.
So that when God finally comes to him in Genesis 17,
when God finally comes to him and says,
all right, now it's time.
You're going to conceive.
This is when he gets that promise.
He's 99 years old.
The Lord seems to play out some of these people's lives like a really good movie.
like the last possible moment where you think it's all lost.
There is no hope.
It's all gone.
Then he says, okay, it's almost like raising Lazarus from the dead.
I'm going to push this longer than anybody thinks possible.
I'm going to push your faith to the end and then a little bit more, which I don't love that idea.
It was actually at the last follow him gathering that I believe was Annabelle Sorin's
there's a video where she said that hope is something that you need when times are the darkest,
when things are the most bleak. We often think about hope as being maybe toxic positivity
or people have hope when things are going well or when things are happy, but it's really difficult
to have hope in those messy times. When things are not coming together, when God's promises
seem delayed, when things aren't making sense, that's actually,
when we need hope the most, but it's also when it can be the hardest. I think this is actually
from Udorf. He says this. We learn to cultivate hope the same way we learn to walk, one step at a time.
As we study the scriptures, speak with our Heavenly Father daily, and commit to keep the commandments of God,
like the Word of Wisdom, paying a tithing, we attain a hope. We grow in our ability to abound in hope
through the power of the Holy Ghost, as we more perfectly live the gospel.
There may be times when we must make a courageous decision to hope,
when everything around us contradicts this hope.
Like Father Abraham, we will against hope believe in hope.
Or, as one writer expressed,
in the depth of winter we find within us an invincible summer.
That's from his talk on infinite hope.
But I like that hope is something that he's saying,
it's basically just putting one foot in front of the other.
Some days hope just looks like I got out of bed.
Some days, that's as much as you can do.
That was hope.
Sometimes hope is saying,
I'm not going to listen to those self-sabotaging voices anymore.
I'm going to believe that I'm loved.
I'm going to believe that I have value,
even if it doesn't feel that way right now.
I'm just going to take a step of faith,
and that faith can produce hope.
I just love that not only did God give
Abram a new name, but how do you say it's Sarai, a new name? And to me it speaks of the importance of
marriage and family that this covenant is impossible without Abraham, Abraham, and Sarah. I like that.
And I wonder how many times God has done the same thing, but we don't know about it with others,
but at least here we know about it with Abraham and Sarah. New names, new beginning, new start,
and what Jeney taught us about.
Perhaps that's why Isaac is going to be the covenant son over Ishmael
is because of the Lord valuing Sarah in this instance.
He does value Hagar, he's going to take care of her,
but when it comes to Abraham, it's going to be Sarah.
It's going to be the two of them together.
Jeney, you've talked to us a lot about hope today
and hope in difficult times,
when it does not seem that the promises we've done,
been given are going to be fulfilled or can be fulfilled. Those wilderness trials, you have had
many yourself. You've had dark times yourself. Sometimes I think people listening, John,
assume that our guests when they come on the show aren't experiencing dark times, but many of them
are. They come on the show in the middle of really hard things. They don't know how it's going to work
out. They're still here with us teaching. Janay, if you could maybe wrap us up here by speaking
to those who are maybe in their car
thinking it's never going to happen for me
or maybe there's some in a dark room
praying that the Lord will come through for them
and we've already seen the Lord seems to push us
way past our comfort zones
what would you just say to those listeners
who are in moments where you also have been
wow that's a big question
sometimes we think that
the Lord's mercies are only for the righteous, for those who are doing their best, those who are
maybe living the holiest, most righteous life. The darkest times in my life were when I was
not living the gospel of Jesus Christ at all, when I didn't believe in God at all. And God
rescued me from that. And it wasn't from anything that I did or deserved. He pulled me out of that. His mercy was
there for me. His love was there for me. Now, as an older person, living with some of the consequences
of my childhood, some of the imprints, some of those survival skills that we talked about that no
longer serve me. I find myself in need again of rescuing, of being delivered. I think what we see
in Abraham is a God who is responsive, a God that's proactive, a God that doesn't make the best out
of bad situations, but that is actually using those trials to form his children. And if we can see
that his mercy is there.
We are so afraid of making mistakes and we make them all the time, which is ironic,
but we're so afraid that our sins will disqualify us or that we'll somehow miss the boat or
that we'll have to be living out a plan B because we didn't marry the right person or do
this at the right time or whatever it is.
I just think we have to understand and keep in mind that God is bigger than all of these things.
he sees the whole picture.
When he tells Abraham to look at the stars in the sky,
I don't think he's just doing math with Abraham.
I think what he's trying to do
and how Abraham is able to have this perspective
is he's trying to get Abraham to look up.
I think he's trying to get Abraham to think celestial,
the way that President Nelson taught us.
He's trying to say,
look, if I can put the stars in the sky,
If I can number all of them, then I can take care of your life.
I can handle this.
I have a plan for you.
Once you stop trusting in all these things,
even the promises of God can become an idol for us
if we are missing the point that God is the reward.
God is the reward.
Christ is the reason that we have covenants.
we're not just following a bunch of rules
so that we can earn a bunch of rewards
we are trying to live in a way
that we can become like our Savior Jesus Christ
and he models that in the covenant
when times are really, really dark
God would say to us
and I think God does say to us
out of these pages in the Bible to us
look up at the sky
when it's dark out
you can see the stars
sometimes when it's the darkest
that's when we can see the light
from the stars the best
understand that
there's a pattern
there's an order and God is in charge of all of it
to people who feel like
maybe their homes are falling apart
their relationships
who maybe struggle
to understand their identity
or their purpose, I would say to you that in Christ you always have a home,
in Christ you always have belonging, in Christ you always have a purpose.
That's kind of what God is trying to tell us over and over and over again in the Old Testament
through the covenant is, you know, we don't make very good covenant partners.
President Holland said, we're all he has to work with,
but the fact that he's willing to enter into that relationship with us,
should tell us something about his love.
We will always be indebted.
We will always be unprofitable servants.
He still enters that relationship with us.
Imagine starting a business with somebody
and just knowing they're going to be the worst business partner ever
and still doing it and saying it's going to be fine
and we're going to make a profit because I'm just that good.
I am going to cover you.
I'm going to literally cover you.
That's what the detoment is for.
You don't have to rely on your work alone.
our response to that type of love, to that Hecid, to that covenant commitment that Christ is willing to enter that relationship with us should be a desire to obey.
So yes, we're not going to be flawless in the terms of perfect, never making mistakes in that way.
But we should want to obey. We should want to live like him. We should want to emulate him and follow him.
that should be what spurs us on to keeping our covenants,
not just checking off these boxes so that I can receive these blessings,
but that this will actually make me a better person,
and in the process I might help other people too.
Thank you, Jena.
I saw that connection.
Chapter 15, verse 5.
You said, he told him to look up, look at the stars,
and then you pointed out that phrase in Abraham too.
Eternity was our covering.
It's almost like those two are linked, those two moments that he figured it out.
The stars, eternity was my covering.
And it will be for each of us as well.
Yeah, we didn't talk about this, but when the Lord passes through those pieces on the altar,
Abraham's altar and his sacrifice and he comes through those pieces,
that would just be my final testimony that Christ comes in the pieces.
the reason why we sometimes have to get broken up is so that he can enter in.
We come with a broken heart and a contrite spirit.
The Lord will pass through those broken pieces in our life and he will come.
Abraham teaches us this process.
We've learned today about all of the things that he went through
and how he was able to persevere because of his faith in his hope and his love.
Ultimately, the point of all of it was for him to understand who God was,
and to be able to enjoy the presence of the Lord.
And that's something that he wants.
He wants us to be able to enjoy the blessings that he had.
And one of them is the presence of the Lord.
That's really powerful to me.
And he believed.
Man, I think that's a major takeaway for me today, right, from Jeanne.
She believes.
She believes.
It's like, Abraham, do you still see those stars?
Okay, then the promise is still coming.
Every night you see the stars, no, those are the ones I told you about.
The promises are still coming.
They're still there.
And, Janay, you're a testament to faith.
You're a testament one that you said, the Lord came and grabbed you, right, and got you and said, you're coming with me.
And then you've stuck with him ever since.
Thank you.
I feel when you know you've been rescued and when you know that there are people that are still in harm's way,
you just want to go and help as many people as you can.
you want to introduce people to your rescuer, you want to introduce people to your deliverer and your
savior, because you know what it can do for you. You know that completely changes your life.
When I say that this is the God I serve, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, I'm saying,
this is the type of God I serve, this type of God that rescues, that delivers.
He invites me into his work, and I want to bring other people back home.
Jene, what a testimony. We have been so blessed.
you here. And I feel uplifted and edified, and I feel like I can continue to trust. I will keep
trusting. And we hope and pray the Lord will continue to pour out blessings upon you and your family.
With that, we want to thank Dr. Jenae Nelson for joining us again. We want to thank Shannon Sorensen,
our executive producer. Our sponsors, David and Verla Sorensen, and every episode for the last
five years, we've remembered our founder, Steve Sorensen. We hope that we hope that we've
Hope you'll join us next week. We've got more to go through in the book of Genesis on Follow Him.
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