followHIM - Moroni 1-6 Part 2 • Dr. Shalise Adams • December 2-8 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Dr. Shalise Adams continues to explore Moroni’s final treatise on the saving power of Jesus Christ.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPTSEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM49ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcast...BM49FRGerman: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM49DEPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM49PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM49ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/1LxRmL67QFAALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIMpodcast.comFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookWEEKLY NEWSLETTERhttps://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletterSOCIAL MEDIAInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part II - Dr. Shalise Adams00:07 Moroni 4:3 and Moroni 5:2 - Read closely03:07 Moroni 6:4 - A community of Saints04:52 Being remembered07:17 3 Nephi 17 - Come and be healed11:52 Finding purpose through service12:53 Moroni 6:5-6 - Meeting and praying together15:42 President Oaks: Church is to serve others18:18 John shares about Elder’s Quorum and asking for help20:51 Moroni 6:7-8 - Limitless forgiveness23:12 Moroni 6:9 - Conducting with the Holy Ghost26:34 Dr. Adams shares how to improve with Young Adults30:45 Dr. Adams shares her testimony of Jesus and the Book of Mormon33:35 End of Part 2 - Dr. Shalise AdamsThanks to the followHIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Cofounder, Executive Producer, SponsorDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to part two with Dr. Shalise Adams, Moroni 1-6. We'd be here for hours and hours, but it's a really neat experience to do this.
When we read this as a family, I like to have either my wife or my daughter.
I say, can you read this?
I remember once my daughter, Madeline, we were reading through as a family and I'm like,
Maddie, will you read this verse?
And she finished.
She's like, I've always wanted to do that.
Big smile on her face.
If I'm maybe reading the sacrament prayer or giving the sacrament prayer, I might mix
up a little bit of the pauses and tones and cadence.
It seems to be that I hear it in kind of the same manner.
I don't want it to be a distraction, but we don't have to read it with the pauses in the
same place.
I've noticed before when a young man will read it and it's different.
He uses a different emphasis in different places. Helps it stand out. There is value to reading it
out loud and hearing it in your own voice. It did something different when I was studying this and
would read it out loud. I feel like there's something different about reading it. When we
hear something in a voice that's familiar,
whether it be your own or somebody else's,
it's special, it's different.
Shalise, I think this would be appropriate in personal study
to change the pronouns from we to me.
I, that I can have his spirit to be with me,
that I witness.
You could probably spend a lot of time on personal study in just those two verses.
There's a statement that President Gordon B. Hinckley made years ago.
He was talking to the young man, and I thought, wow, that is sobering.
He said, when you as a priest kneel at the sacrament table and offer up the prayer which came by revelation,
you place the
entire congregation under covenant with the lord is this a small thing it is a most important and
remarkable thing and then he kept going now my dear young brethren if we are to administer the
emblems of the sacrifice of our lord we must be worthy to do so. It is totally wrong for you to indulge in filthy and unseemly talk
at school or work and then kneel at the sacrament table on Sunday. It was helpful to me to hear,
how cool is that? We've got maybe 15, 16, 17 year olds placing the entire congregation
under covenant. That's impressive. I really like that.
It's the same voice.
The same voice that is going to school.
Yeah.
Saying good things, I hope, is the same voice.
Is it in the book of James in the New Testament, you guys,
where out of the same mouth proceedeth both blessing and cursing?
Brethren, these things ought not so to be.
Ought not so to be. Ought not so to be.
Now, Shalise, as you and I have been talking over the last few months, I know you were excited about chapter six, which made me excited about chapter six.
So talk to me here.
What are you so excited about?
I love chapter six.
He starts by recapping everything that he already talked about. He talks to us about how to be a church and how to participate in a community of saints that helps one another and keeps each other in the right way. There's value to that. I feel like we don't place enough value on our church worship and service sometimes.
Okay, I'm ready.
Let's read verse four. This is Moroni 6.4. And after they had been received unto baptism and were wrought upon and cleansed by the power of the Holy Ghost,
they were numbered among the people of the church of Christ and their names were taken
that they might be remembered and nourished by the good word of God to keep them in the right way, to keep
them continually watchful and to prayer, relying alone upon the merits of Christ, who was the
author and finisher of their faith.
Beautiful.
There's a lot in there.
I feel like there's so much in there.
But did you notice that all of this is past tense?
I wonder if it's maybe longing for Moroni.
This is how it is to be done.
These are the good things.
After he talks about these members that are baptized, he says you're numbered among the church.
I think it's interesting that that was an ancient practice as well.
I don't think numbered means necessarily a tick on the board.
We're not trying to get to a certain number. It's more about
we number you so we know where you're at so that if we don't see you, we can find you.
That is crucial. One time I walked into Elder's Quorum, I believe it was, and there were way
a lot more chairs than usual. We all sat down and there were a lot of empty chairs. I thought this is weird.
And then the Elder's Quorum president said, I decided to set up a chair,
not for everyone who attends, but for everyone on the roll. All of a sudden I realized what used
to look like a full Elder's Quorum, we're missing people. I like what you said, that they
might be remembered. So are we doing a good job of remembering? Remembering is the hard part of
the church. We can have a calling and feel like we have love for these people. But Elder Hurst,
in this last conference, he says, being loved is not the same as feeling loved. And I think that's what we got to do when we remember somebody.
We might love them, but we have to make them feel that love.
They're not going to want to be at church if they don't feel love from the people that
they're around.
He had a beautiful English accent.
Yes, yes.
He talked about his kids passing out before they gave a talk or something.
I walk into my class and there's this sister there, student, who has a beautiful English accent and her name is Darcy Hurst.
I walked up to her after the conference and I said, is that you that passed out during a talk?
How did you make that connection?
I listened to your accent, that's how. Yeah, I remember that was a great talk.
It was a great talk. And I think the Savior teaches us about this when he comes to the people and he tells them he will heal any that are afflicted in any manner. He does that very
individually. He wants a personal connection with each of those
people. He could have said, I heal you all and it could be done. That could have happened. It
would have saved some time, but he wanted to heal people individually. And then he leaves and he
says, I'm going to come back. And all of those people that were healed then want to go find
everybody else and bring them there. That's exactly what the church is about.
It's about us finding healing for ourselves
and then going and getting someone else and saying,
come, this is where you will find what you need.
So you're connecting 3 Nephi 17,
where the Savior heals them and they go get others.
Come and be healed.
Wow.
But don't you think that that's what church is?
Come be healed.
Church is also a school to become like Jesus.
We talk about we want to live with Jesus again, but we can't do that unless we live the lifestyle of Jesus and the church provides that education.
We can't do that all
by ourselves. With the church, we're allowed to practice loving. We're allowed to practice trying
over and over. We're learning to serve and learn together. But also, the church is the only place
the priesthood and the ordinances can exist. We need a church.
Right, to implement these important ordinances. You reminded me of a thought,
Joseph B. Werthlin. The church is not a place where perfect people gather to say perfect things
or have perfect thoughts or have perfect feelings. The church is a place where imperfect people
gather to provide encouragement, support, and service to each other. I think Elder
Uchtdorf likened the church to a hospital. Elder Renlund talked about in this last conference,
he talked about the gospel and the church, and he talked about dynamite,
nitroglycerin, and the kieselker that you mix it together, and then it could be something useful,
and how the gospel is perfect
but the church is the vehicle to get us to that place he says the combination this is elder renlin
he says the combination of the gospel of jesus christ and the church of jesus christ of latter
day saints provides powerful and transformative benefits for us the gospel is perfect but a
divinely commissioned church is required to preach it,
maintain its purity, and administer its sacred ordinances with the Savior's power and authority.
The church is simply ordinary people, disciples of Jesus Christ, gathered and organized into
divinely appointed structure that helps the Lord accomplish His purposes.
Wow. In our handbook today, we have different names for everything. We used to call it home teaching. Now we call it ministering. But you see that right there. Their names were taken. We know who you are, that they might be remembered. We want you to be remembered. remember President Hinckley's statement that became so important that every new member of
the church needs a friend, responsibility, and to be nourished by the good word of God.
One time I was in a training meeting and Elder Von Keech told the coolest story. He said he was
on a plane and he sat next to somebody who was a search and rescue technician in Oregon. Elder
Keech was just, so what do you do? And the guy was telling him,
well, I rescue a lot of people on Mount Hood. And usually by the time I get to them,
they don't want to be rescued. Hypothermia has set in. They finally feel warm, although they're
really in danger. And he said, I find that at that point, I have to do three things. So I get
out my satellite phone because cell service doesn't work there. I introduce myself. I find out their name. I make friends with them. Then I get out my
satellite phone and I give them something to do. I'm like, you need to call your family and tell
them where you are and that I'm here with you and that I'm going to get you out of this.
And then I get some hot chocolate and I give them some nourishment. And Elder Keech said, did you hear what he just said?
I find somebody on Mount Hood. I give him a friend. That's me. I give him a responsibility.
Call your family. And I give him some nourishment. He said, what if somebody doesn't want to be
rescued? What do you do? Same thing as President Hinckley. Be a friend. I'd never heard that. That's great.
In that same talk, President Hinckley says we would lose far less people if we took better
care of them. I don't know exactly how he said it, but that's why we're numbered and remembered.
Sometimes we're the ones that need to be taken care of, and sometimes we're the ones that do the caring. And it's okay to be both.
I know that sometimes I have been someone who just wants to go to church, sit, listen,
and go home.
I don't know if he'd say, yeah, that's what I was after.
I think he might say, did you remember people?
Did you nourish them?
Did you talk with them and uplift them?
I remember a time when I was transitioning from the YSA ward to the family ward.
I did not want to be either place. I didn't want to be in the YSA ward because I was too old and
I didn't fit in there. I did not want to be in the family ward because I didn't have a family
and I didn't fit in there. So I would sit in the back and leave because I didn't belong and I didn't want to be anywhere.
I knew church was important. I had a testimony of the gospel, obviously not a strong enough one,
but it was hard because I didn't feel like I fit in. And then somebody snagged me and put me with the young women. And that changed my life
because I had somebody to love. I had somebody to serve. And all of a sudden I had a purpose.
That's why we need those callings is we need a purpose. We need something that makes us feel
valued and like we belong somewhere. So at least that's beautiful.
Verses five and six, five and six says, the church did meet together oft to fast and to pray and to speak with one another concerning the welfare of their soul.
Don't you love that this is still what we do today?
It is the very same thing that they were doing then.
It is exactly what we're doing now.
There's something beautiful about that. This hasn't changed. It is exactly what we're doing now. There's something
beautiful about that. This hasn't changed. This is still the Savior's way. This is still how He
wants us to do things. I had an experience while I was in Palmyra this last summer, and I have
never been before, and it was a beautiful place. Oh yeah, we ran into each other. I remember that.
At the Sacred Grove. This is what I'm going to talk about. I knew I was going to be at the Sacred Grove two different times.
I had good experiences both places, but they were very different. So the first experience I went,
and as we're driving over there, I am excited to go because this is a place I have a testimony of,
and I know of what happened there. I thought in my head, I want to have a good experience. But that's as much thought as I think I really put into it. So we go there and there is
a stillness and a peace that's there that is tangible and beautiful. And I had a good experience.
It was wonderful. But I did not see an angel. I did not hear a voice or get an answer to my life's problems. It was a good experience,
but that's as far as it went. Second time I went, I was with a group, Millennial Choirs and
Orchestras, and we were there for the purpose of making a video that could be shared, a video that
shared our testimony of Jesus Christ and God the Father appearing to Joseph Smith.
So as we're there, everyone is dressed beautifully, their words are memorized,
and their music is learned. As we sat there at that sacred grove getting ready to sing, I could still feel the peace, I could still feel the goodness of the place.
But as we shared our testimonies, as we raised our voices in song, it was a different experience
because 2,000 people were there sharing a testimony of Jesus Christ. And the spirit was
there changed me. It will be something that I never, never forget, but it was because there
was testimony there. So I think that the church is no different. The church is a beautiful
place where sacred things happen. But when we combined it with testimonies of one another,
that's where the power comes. That's why we need a church. President Oaks said this in 2021. He
says, years ago, I changed my attitude about going to church. No longer do I go to church for my sake,
but to think of others. I make it a point to say hello to people who sit alone,
to welcome visitors, to volunteer for an assignment. In short, I go to church each week with the intent of being active and not passive, and making a positive difference in
people's lives. I get not knowing where you fit. As single member of the church we hear often that half of the
church membership is single and I hate that statistic I hate it because I'm like but that
doesn't describe me that it talks about these missionaries that are young and still have their
whole lives to lead and that talks about these people that have had a family and a spouse and
are alone at the end of their lives but I didn't ever feel like it described me.
The beauty of the church is that we really actually can belong anywhere, but sometimes it has to be the hard choice to put yourself out there like President Oaks is talking about.
I go not only for me, but I go to make somebody else's life better. But I think when that happens,
when we serve one another, that changes our hearts.
I feel like some of my most favorite friends are the people I have come in contact with
because we served together in a calling.
We served for the benefit of somebody else and that made us better.
But that also made our relationship with one another stronger because it was founded in
Jesus Christ.
I remember a time I was in the
YSA ward and I was asked to be the Relief Society president and I didn't know who to call and I saw
this beautiful person and I was like, that's her, but I didn't know her. I didn't even know her name.
And I can count on one hand probably the times I felt like the Lord said, this is exactly what
you need to do. But this was one of them. I called her and we served together and she's one of my most favorite friends out there. But when I
talked to her, she also had a similar thought like, I'm not sure about this. I'm not sure I
want to do this. But that relationship has made us better. I feel like that happens time and time
again with BYS, the youth program that I was involved in. These people that I served with year after year for the benefit of the youth,
all volunteer. Those are the people that are my family. Those are the people that I love
because I know their hearts and I know where their testimony is. And I know that they love
Jesus Christ. And because of that, we've created a family. That's been
important in my life, is finding those people that I belong to. That is beautiful. Perfect.
In verse five, just that subtle little way this is worded, and to speak one with another. You're
an award family. One week, this person will give a talk. Another week, this person will give a talk.
And then this person will get this calling, and this person will get this calling.
And a few months later, we'll play musical callings, and everything will be shuffled up again.
There's not a professional who does it every week, but we speak one with another.
I love that.
And I recall a time I was in an elders quorum in Provo, and at the end of the regular priesthood lesson, which I cannot even remember what it was
about, this brother who had recently come back to the church put his hands in his face and started
to sob. And he said, brothers, I need your help. And we sat with him for a half an hour and talked
about the challenge he was going through. And I will never forget that meeting. And it always
reminds me, that verse
always reminds me of, we're going to speak one with another. I don't just go to listen and go
home. We're going to help each other concerning the welfare of our souls. And like I said,
I can't remember what the lesson was about, but boy, do I remember that elders quorum meeting.
I remember as a young father sitting in elders quorum it just felt so good to have
people ahead of me in life talking it was like a it was like a mentor session
of how do i do what you're doing don't you think there comes some vulnerability there where we
have to tell people where we're at or we have to ask for that advice
or we have to say this is where i'm struggling we have to be a little bit more open because it's
easy to say i'm fine i'm fine i don't need anything i'm fine but sometimes we actually do
latter-day saints get together a couple times a week to lie to each other about how they're doing, right? How are you? I'm doing great. How are you? Fine. Love and life. But yet we do have our
challenges that we're not sharing. Yeah. And what a group of mentors that we are surrounded with.
I love what you said, Hank, those that are maybe a little older, raising their families, whatever,
and you get to hear their experiences and their wisdom.
That's a really good point. I love the idea of mentors, and I think that's why there are young men's leaders and young women's leaders and so forth. You've got to speak one with another
concerning the welfare of their souls. Isn't it cool that Moroni had this whole church organization
described here in so few verses verse seven we talk about the standards
that are there that we don't have any iniquity and i think there has to be a line there has to
be some boundaries but verse eight says but as oft as they repented and sought forgiveness with
real intent they were forgiven that promise of return is pretty limitless as often as we wish.
We mess up every day, but we can come back every day.
And that's awesome.
Wow.
As oft as they repented, which means it was often, right?
Yeah.
It should be.
We should recognize that.
Those rare times when they needed to repent, they were forgiven.
It's like, no, it was often.
And it was okay that it's often.
I love Sister Raina Alberto.
She says, the church is more than the buildings and the ecclesiastical structure.
The church is us. The church is the members.
Don't you feel that every time you go somewhere to church that you haven't been like a different location?
I remember going to church in Switzerland a few years ago.
I couldn't understand a thing that was said, but I felt comfortable there.
I was happy.
It was home.
But we have this experience, you know, if you go to church in a different town, it still
feels the same or it should because the spirit is there.
And because the church is us, it's the members.
Recently, I went to church in a little town in Wyoming, McKinnon, Wyoming.
Sat there with my family, a tiny little chapel, right?
Just not a large chapel.
And my kids were looking around going, hey, look at this.
But it felt like home. I felt like I was among friends.
Because you were.
Yeah.
Yeah. I was attending a sacrament meeting in Portland, Maine, and I heard a couple of exceptionally beautiful talks there and but had that feeling you walk in and you've
you felt like hey this is family we're brothers and sisters and yeah amen to what you just said
we end with verse nine it says and their meetings were conducted by the church after the manner
of the workings of the spirit we've talked so much about the holy ghost and how it helps us
in our lives,
but do you have any thoughts about how we should conduct meetings that way?
Yeah, look at that. Spirit, Holy Ghost, Holy Ghost. I think he's trying to emphasize something.
Yeah. I don't know if you guys have ever experienced this. Have you ever had a visiting authority, like in a state conference, who tosses the agenda and starts picking on people and doing
different things. And everybody starts looking down like, don't pick me. Don't call on me.
I had a good state president that did this.
I've seen that happen before. And yeah, whoever's presiding has the keys to do that.
And I've seen meetings happen that way. Way back when I was a student at BYU,
kids used to decide to stand up in the middle of a hymn, and then everybody else in the
congregation would see that. Oh yeah, that's fun. Let's stand up too. It happened a lot.
People would just stand up. One time I was in a training meeting in the Marriott Center,
an elder, M. Russell Ballard was there, and this happened. A bunch of people just stood up, and Elder Ballard got up after that hymn, and he said,
I want to teach you a principle.
I noticed that a lot of you stood up during the hymn, and then he said, watch the presiding authority.
You will notice I never stood up, right?
And then he taught us that the members don't take control of the meeting.
The Spirit does, and there's an order of things, and the presiding authority decides that.
I would just never forget that.
And that thing stopped after that, where he said, you watch the presiding authority.
I would like to close with this thought.
President McKay said the principal reason that the church was would like to close with this thought. President McKay said
the principal reason that the church was organized was to make life sweeter today, to give contentment
to the heart today, to bring salvation today. Some of us look forward to a time in the future,
salvation and exaltation in the world to come, but today is part of eternity. I feel like that's why we have a church, so that we can be happy today
and we can find comfort today. In the end of Moroni, we're invited to come unto him. The
beginning of Moroni is how we do that. That's how we hear him. These chapters are what brings us to
Jesus Christ and how we strengthen our resolve to follow him. We come to the sacrament table each week to recommit and to renew our covenants that we're willing to remember Jesus.
But that brings healing.
We find wholeness and belonging in church, and that's why we go.
We might not feel the spirit every time I go to church, but I feel like if we don't attend, we're less likely to feel it in other parts of our lives.
Because that's where we go.
And you've said it so beautifully today, Shalise.
That's where the ordinances are.
That's where we go to continue this covenant relationship with Christ.
We are not only willing to take upon us his name.
We are honored.
We are thrilled to get back to that sacrament table and to have him give us another chance, another week.
Shalise, I don't want to let you go without asking you a couple of questions.
Ask away.
You talked about being a single adult in the church.
You're not a missionary who's just got home.
You're not someone who raised a family but is now maybe a widow or widower.
So in your mind, we have plenty of ward leaders who listen and wonder,
what should I do?
How can I do better?
So in your opinion, how could we improve?
Talk to those single people in your ward.
Ask them what they want to do. The ways that I was most comfortable
was when somebody didn't treat me different
because I was single.
I didn't have a family,
so probably I couldn't be in Young Women's
or I couldn't be in Relief Society
because I didn't really understand all those people.
We're all just people.
We all have hard stuff.
So I guess that my best advice
is don't necessarily treat them different. Just involve them. I feel like I have a lot to offer, even though I don't have any knowledge of children. I have nieces and nephews, but I get that it's not the same. We're just people. We're just people like you and everybody else. I like when you mentioned also that we say single adult,
but there's all sorts of categories of single adult.
Maybe, Shalice, in not meaning to,
we kind of just scrunch them all together as one.
I think that that does happen.
And I don't think it's intentional.
I don't think it's vindictive.
But sometimes we think if we're married, we have it all figured out. And I don't think it's intentional. I don't think it's vindictive, but sometimes we
think if we're married, we have it all figured out. And that's not true. Sometimes if we think
people think that we're single, so we should do this A, B, and C in order to not be single.
And that's also not correct. It's just the life that we are at right now. I don't think me being single is a problem to be fixed.
It's not something that anybody needs to be concerned about.
Just involve me and help me belong where I'm at and let me offer what I have.
Because that might be something different than somebody else has.
That's where when we meet together like that and we offer
what we can, that's what makes the friendships and the community that we have as a church beautiful.
I really like that. I can see in my own mind that you have this early 20-something-year-old
couple come into your ward, and then you have this single person who's in their 40s, and you
almost gravitate
toward that young couple saying, okay, you know what you're doing, right? Versus here's this
experienced single adult. But we maybe don't see that as a, I don't know, I don't know what the
word is, someone who can fully contribute maybe? Be thoughtful and be kind. Don't ask somebody why
they're not married because who
knows the pain that maybe has gotten us to that spot where we're single. But that applies more
than to just single. It might apply to somebody that can't have children. Don't ask them why they
don't have children. That might be something that they have pain about. Be warm and loving and
accept people for where they're at. And that's okay.
People say not mean things, but thoughtless things often that they don't mean to offend.
It comes to me as well.
I have to be careful not to be offended because I think sometimes that's really easy.
For the most part, people are good and kind and they don't mean to make you feel less than you are.
Human nature is not to be terrible.
So I think it's a two-way street.
We have listeners from all over the world, so I guarantee there are some mothers and
grandmothers out there saying, I have the boy for her, right?
So we love to show our guests who's listening and where they're listening from.
We haven't done this in a while.
If you'll come on to YouTube and just leave us a comment,
I think Shalice would love to know,
hey, I'm listening from Orem.
I'm listening from Germany.
It's pretty fun, right, John, to see some of those places.
It's amazing, too.
I'm grateful for technology that makes this kind of thing available. in your feelings for the entire book. You're someone who's very well educated,
getting that doctorate degree.
You've probably read quite a bit.
With all the experience you have
and the education you have,
how does the Book of Mormon compare
against all of that?
The Book of Mormon changes everything.
The Book of Moroni, it's been a fun study
and I'm internally grateful that we had a prophet that was given some extra time The Book of Mormon changes everything. The Book of Moroni, it's been a fun study,
and I'm internally grateful that we had a prophet that was given some extra time to write these things. But these things, particularly in the whole Book of Mormon,
change our life because they provide ways for us to liken scriptures. They provide ways for us to
feel our Heavenly Father's love, which sometimes we feel like we don't in the world that we're in.
The Book of Mormon for me is something that brings me to the Savior
and reminds me who I am and where I want to be and how to get there.
I have been so edified today.
I just feel it, this feeling of,
wow, this book holds the answers, especially when you have
someone like Shalise to help you look through it. The Book of Mormon starts with one man,
Lehi, and then it just grows and there's this huge group of Nephites. And now we're down to
one guy, Moroni, saying, we're about to become extinct. Here's my last lecture for you.
It's so powerful.
I'm so glad he stuck it out.
So, Shalise, thank you so much for being with us today.
Thank you.
And with that, we want to thank Dr. Shalise Adams for joining us today.
We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorenson, our sponsors, David and Verla
Sorenson. In every episode, we remember our founder, Steve Sorenson. We have two more lessons,
John, just two more lessons coming up on Follow Him. Before you skip to the next episode, I have
some important information. This episode's transcript and show notes are available on our website, followhim.co.
That's followhim.co.
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Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament and Finding Jesus Christ in the New Testament.
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Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.
Turn to Him.
Follow Him.