followHIM - Moses 1; Abraham 3 Part 1 • Dr. Philip Allred • January 5-11 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: December 31, 2025How does knowing about life before birth change how we see our life? Dr. Phil Allred explores Abraham 3 and Moses 1, teaching that God is both all-powerful and deeply personal, and that mortality is... a divinely chosen “proving ground” to help us grow, remember our covenants, and seek our own witness of eternal truth.YOUTUBE: https://youtu.be/jxZwraUIkVIALL EPISODES/SHOW NOTESfollowHIM website: https://www.followHIM.coFREE PDF DOWNLOADS OF followHIM QUOTE BOOKSNew Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastNTBookOld Testament: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastOTBookBook of Mormon: https://tinyurl.com/PodcastBMBook WEEKLY NEWSLETTER https://tinyurl.com/followHIMnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIA Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/followHIMpodcast Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastTIMECODE00:00 Part 1 - Dr. Phllip Allred04:41 Phil Allred’s bio06:28 Come, Follow Me Manual08:49 Theological dynamite10:37 Abraham’s traumatic background13:17 Hurrying to get to Abraham17:55 A cosmic perspective20:49 Jesus calls us “friends”25:52 Opportunity and deliverance29:05 Necessary torture devices32:43 No forced sealings36:40 Unique setting to become39:40 It’s a battle43:53 Premortal life45:51 Hie to what?49:42 Customized curriculum and full court basketball54:01 Elder Packer’s “The Play and the Plan”58:36 Why all the shouting?1:01:58 Excitement over our Second Estate1:05:55 “Here am I, send me”1:09:35 The purpose of suffering1:16:02 End of Part 1 - Dr. Philip AllredThanks 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)
Coming up in this episode on Follow Him.
Now we see why we can embrace a mortality and see that it really will work
because we have this understanding that we had a loving God who huddled us up and said,
I'm in the midst of you, I know you, I know what I can bless you with, I know what you need.
This is why I can embrace the craziness of mortality.
Hello, everyone.
Welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith.
I'm your host.
I'm here with my great and noble co-host.
John, by the way.
John, you know where that comes from.
Abraham 3, the noble and great ones, which you are.
Wow.
So are you.
I think you've recognized something my ancestors have long recognized of the nobility and the greatness.
No, I'm just kidding.
No, I noticed that too.
you are speaking of noble and great john we have with us dr phil all red he's been with us before
back when we were doing the new testament he is back phil welcome back to follow him thanks for being
here like a bad penny i'm grateful it's like john by the way's cat you cannot get rid of it
phil we are very excited to have you you and i are good friends we get to see each other at work
every day and i'm excited for the listeners to see you again phil john over the last
Last five to ten years, Moses chapter one and Abraham chapter three have become more and more critical. I should say, I've seen how critical they are, where before I thought these are great chapters. I memorized some verses from it for scripture mastery. Now I'm going way, wait. This is, John, you would call it theological dynamite. Yeah, I think there should be a divider in the prology price. It's explosives handle with care or something.
Sometimes when people say, how do we get the book of Abraham, I want to say, have you read it? Have you just read it? Because it is so profoundly amazing and doctrinally thick and theologically explosive, like you said. This is exciting to look at it today. I feel the same way, Hank. It's taken me years to go, wow, this is really important. Absolutely. Phil, when I came to your office to talk about this episode, we both started getting
really excited about the blessing that these two chapters are.
What have you been thinking of since then?
Well, I've been impressed in preparation as your prayerful,
knowing the venue and the opportunity.
I feel like the Lord has really helped me focus, as we will today,
not only on that theological dynamite,
but also on the very intimate and personal level.
While we have this galactic, cosmic view in both chapters,
revelations that are just astounding at the same time there is this very clear and interweaved consistent
personal touch by the lord with the lord to each of them as his sons i'm excited to tease that out
together and to see them run in parallel yeah just one verse moses 139 could answer the question
that so many children of God on this planet have.
Why am I here?
Why am I here?
You are my work and glory was the phrase that was very clearly from the spirit.
So it's not, this is my work and glory.
That's true, but it was very clear to, no, you are my work at glory.
And I love that, that just beautiful to my heart.
Yeah.
I've said this before.
I love the Joseph Smith quote.
I'll probably bring it up again.
he has made ample provision for your redemption.
This is going to happen.
He's good at his work, right, Hank?
He's good at what he does, thankfully.
Yeah, mighty to save.
Do you remember, it's in the same talk of that great quote with Brittany Nash,
you guys were talking with her about President Benson saying that the thing that's going to startle us most is how familiar his face is to us.
In the same talk, he says, you will find out, we will know that he, the father, has not
left one thing undone so that we could be saved and exalted.
So it details with that.
And I just, it's one of my favorite phrases anymore is he has not left one thing undone.
I'm so grateful for that.
Yeah.
John, like I said, Phil was with us year, year and a half ago when we talked about the book of
Hebrews, which is maybe the most difficult book of the New Testament to understand. He walked us
through the second half of that beautifully. There might be some new listeners, some people who
don't know, Phil. What do we know about him? Did you uncover anything in your private
investigation? Brother Philip Allred is a professor of church history and doctrine at Brigham Young
University Provo, but prior to that, he taught for 30 years in Idaho. He has degrees in political
science and theology. How did you do that together? He and his wife, Jennifer Lindeman, are the
parents of three children. He got his degrees in political science from Idaho State and BYU and theology
at Notre Dame. How wonderful is that? What was that like being at Notre Dame for theology?
That must have been wonderful.
It was wonderful.
To their credit, they were so warm and welcoming to me.
They knew I was Latter-day Saint.
The real quick thing to say that impressed me most was I had the thicker book, shall we say?
Like our book, The Quad, there's a lot of scripture in there.
Our book is technically thicker than their book, if you will.
Yet I found their goodness, their charity, their desire to be,
parents and family members in beautiful ways and follow the Savior was just really, really
impressive. Here I am. I got the bigger book. I don't know that I have even an equal soul
with so many that I met there. And it was really humbling and inspiring to me. Wow. Beautiful.
Okay, let's get started. I am very excited about these two chapters and how they can bless lives.
The Come Follow Me Manual starts this way. The lesson is entitled that this is my work and my
glory. The Bible begins with the words, in the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth.
But what was there before this beginning? And why did God create all of this? Through the prophet
Joseph Smith, the Lord has shed light on these questions. For example, he gave us the record of a vision
in which Abraham saw our existence as spirits before the world was. The Lord also gave us an inspired
translation or revision of the first six chapters of Genesis called the Book of Moses, which
doesn't begin with in the beginning. Instead, it begins with an experience Moses had that provides
some context for the creation story. Together, these Latter-day Saint Scriptures are a good place to
start our study of the Old Testament because they address some fundamental questions that can
frame our reading. Who is God? Who are we? What is God's work and what is our place in it? The opening
chapters of Genesis could be seen as the Lord's response to Moses's request. Be merciful unto thy
servant, oh God, and tell me concerning this earth and the inhabitants thereof and also the
heavens. Wow. Phil, I'm excited to finally start something that you and I started talking about
a couple of months ago. What do you want to do? Where do we want to go first? So excited. Let's start
in Abraham, even though it follows the Book of Moses in our Pearl of Great Price. But I think if we
begin there, that will give us the chance to talk premortality, which technically is our
earliest beginnings that we are taught about. If we turn to Abraham 3, it might be fun to begin with
a quick trapes through the entire chapter, as I mentioned at the outset, to see the personal
touches before then seeing the galactic views. Verse 1, I Abraham had the Urim and Thummum,
which is such an interesting thing, of which he then says, the Lord my God had given to me in Err of the
Caldez. He's received this Yerminthum from the Lord earlier, but at this stage in verse two,
now I saw using this Yermintham, I saw the stars. He's using this to see like a telescope, I guess,
in some way. Right out the gate we have the Lord giving him this tool to see things with.
In verse three, the Lord said, these are the governing ones. We'll talk about those specifics in a second.
The name of the great one is Kolob. Then this, because it is near unto me.
for I am the Lord thy God.
This is very personal.
I got these instruments from the Lord.
He said, I am thy Lord.
It's all about Abraham.
Then we get some more details in five,
and then six says,
The Lord said to me, now Abraham.
And that's really cool because he's using Abraham's name.
This is personal.
If we skip to verse 11, he says,
Thus I Abraham talked with the Lord face to face.
In fact, he says, so we don't misunderstand.
understand, as one man talketh with another. We all know what that's like. He told me of the works
which his hands had made. Then he said to me, and I love this, my son, my son. And his hand is
stretched out. We're moving between the heavens and out beyond. Yet it's very intimate. It's
very much, it's you and me. It's you and me. And it's not just you and me like I'm your God and
and you're my groveling servant. It's my son. I know your name. This is.
us. And then 14. It's like Abraham's unfolding these little details as we go along. He says it was in the
nighttime when the Lord spake these words unto me, I will multiply thee and thy seed after thee.
Like unto these as if you could number them, meaning he's seeing the stars, but he's now using
the sands as another fit metaphor. Isn't that amazing? Not only are you my son, not only do I know
your name, not only am I helping you see things, but I will multiply you. And not just you, Abraham,
I will multiply your family. Perhaps some are more familiar than others. In Abraham chapter one,
we have this moment where Abraham reveals that he was raised in a very difficult home. It's almost
like a Disney movie. Dad's got real issues and mom's gone. You know what I mean? It's just like,
What's, it's, this classic plot.
And not only, we'd have no mention of his mother, he obviously had one, but we don't have
any information about her, but dad is dangerous.
Yeah.
Dad's religion.
So in one of the great understatements in all of Scripture back in chapter one, he says,
in the land of the Chaldeans at the residence of my father's, I Abraham saw, this is Abraham
1-1, that it was needful for me to obtain another place of residence.
It's time to go.
How understated is that?
If you're not sure why, he points you to the picture next door.
If we pause there in verse 2 of Abraham 1, this is where, to me, this point that the Lord makes is, I will multiply you and your seed.
We go to verse 2 of Abraham 1.
He says, finding there was greater happiness and peace and rest for me.
That's why I moved.
Okay, my family was, wow, I'm being raised by wolves or something here.
now he says i found that there was greater happiness and peace available so he said i sought for the
blessings of the fathers meaning these covenant blessings that had stretched down from adam all the way
down through enic etc and the right whereunto i should be ordained to administer the same then he says
having been myself a follower of righteousness but then this desiring to be one who possessed great
knowledge and to be a greater follower of righteousness, and to possess a greater knowledge
and this key to be a father. Yes, of many nations, a prince of peace, I wanted instructions,
I wanted to keep the commandments, hence I became a rightful heir, a high priest, holding this
right belonging to the fathers. Now back to Abraham 3, verse 14, the Lord is showing in this
amazing cosmic views, but he's saying, this thing you want, Abraham, I know you.
I know you. I know what you wanted. I know what you missed as a kid. I know what you want to
provide that you didn't get. I know that my spirit is upon you in a sense and you get it.
I'm promising you. I will multiply you and your seed after you. Isn't that stunning?
Yeah. There we have in chapter one. This is what I was hoping for. So I went after it and the
Lord saying, I can do that. I can do that. I can get you that desire. Isn't that nice? And then he
reminds him in 20. The Lord thy God sent his angel to deliver thee from the hands of the priest of
Elkanah. That is a reminder that he's been delivered by the Lord before and that in some ways
in verse 15, I'm going to show these things before you go into Egypt. He's mid-deliverance right now.
He's reminding him, I have delivered you. The Lord has delivered you before. You remember it. You
couldn't possibly forget that moment on the lion couch, but he's saying, I will multiply thee and
thy seed. You are going into Egypt, which is going to be a dangerous situation, and we'll learn
more about what Sarah and her trial there. Here's a man who's been delivered. He has a salvation
history. He's post-deliverance on one hand, but he's also mid-deliverance currently, and the
Lord is promising and saying, hey, this isn't over yet. The gym experience continues where this is
full of torture devices and we're still in process. But he reminds him, we've successfully done this
before. I know who you are. I know what you want and I'm going to help you get it. So if we go past
that just a little bit further and go to 22 where Abraham sees these intelligences and in 23 when he is
told about these noble and greats of which John was our sterling member, we see that he said to me,
verse 23, he said unto me, Abraham, thou art one of them. Thou wast chosen before thou was born.
I know you. We knew each other. This is like that President Benson's statement. We know his face.
He's telling him here, even though the veil's still in place, he's saying, oh, we have a relationship.
I know you. All of these stars, all these orbits, if you will, they're all centered in you and me getting you what you really want
and me delivering you through all the various things you need to help with. You know, Bob Millett, Robert Millett, such a wonderful Latterty St. Scholar for years and continues to be for us. But he in one of his publications had mentioned that in his analysis of the book of Genesis, that it was quite striking that in the first 11 chapter,
chapters, you cover such incredible things as the creation and the fall.
2,500 years of history happen in the first 11 chapters.
If we were more in our paper scriptures, it's about 16 pages of the book of Genesis.
He said, it's as if Moses is trying, he's like in a hurry to get to Abraham.
We're moving past all these things to get to Abraham, and then what happens?
Genesis slows way down.
You've got a great-grandfather, a grandfather, a father, and a grandson in those
four. So it's only 22% of Genesis. That's this first 2,500 years and these massive things,
but he gets us right to these folks. This is what the story's about. When you think Genesis,
you think, oh, Adam and Eve, it's actually no, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. It's more about Abraham.
It really is. And not just Abraham. What's fun about it, and this is where I think Nephi does such
a great job of saying in First Nephi, chapter four, when he's explaining, here's what I'm
doing, chapter four, chapter six particularly, he's saying, my fullness of my
10 is to get you to the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
And it's not just the God of Abraham.
It's the God of a grandfather, a father, and a son.
It's the God of the generation of family.
That's really significant to think about his, in verse 14 of Abraham 3,
I will multiply and thy seed.
Look at us.
Who are we?
We're sitting here doing this podcast.
We're all descendants and tied to, either by adoption or by
blood tied to Abraham. We are the fulfillment right now talking about it. We're part of this
amazing fulfillment of this blessing that God has given to Abraham. And he said, I will do this.
But he hadn't done it yet for Abraham. Elder Bednar said, we were foreordained in the pre-mortal
life and born into mortality to fulfill the covenant and promise God made to Abraham. That is who we
are. That is why we are here. He also said, and I love this, that one of the reasons they want
missionaries to get their patriarchal blessing first is to see that and to read that. I'm paraphrasing,
going on a mission isn't something you do as much as something you are because you are Abraham's seed.
I'm interested, Phil and John, in how you both have seen this. Phil, you talked about watch for the
personal. But the context of the chapter is very cosmic. It's,
Stars and planets and galaxies.
Stunning.
How have you seen that play out in scripture and in your own lives
that we have an incredible savior who can both say,
look, here is who I am, and it's big.
It's very, very big.
And at the same time, I can be personal with you.
That duality is so important.
I couldn't agree.
more, partly what has impressed me about the scriptures, is that duality, as you say, this
consistent reminder that he is the God of the universe, but that he only brings that up in a
sense, I think, to inspire us to believe him. It's almost like he's in a constant credibility
battle. Like, hey, can we just kind of think about who I really am here? And I'm really trying to
help you, but you keep listening to these little voices over here. And this is, they're not going to
bless your life, but I can do that. In some ways, he suffers a bit of an image issue because of
this need to establish, hey, look, I do have power. I can do my work. I am able to do my work,
as we said. That means I am this galactic presence. And yet, what's it all for? The whole point of
it, the telos, if you will, of it, this eventual outcome or end, the whole point and purpose of it was
this immortality and eternal life of you.
You and your family and the seed that will come from,
all of that is the point.
So I just, I'm so grateful for that.
I hope that's coming through.
I hope that comes through always as we read scripture.
And you can't forget either.
You'll miss a part of him that is crucial.
John, you might not remember since you've written so many books,
but I shouldn't laugh at that,
but you've written a lot of books.
You wrote a book called Surmons in a sentence.
I just wanted to read a page of that. It says, you wrote. We are accustomed to speaking of our
Heavenly Father and the Lord Jesus Christ in King James English. We pray in these, thys and thows,
scriptural pronouns that provide a bit of distance, a verbal reverence that is appropriate and
comfortable. Perhaps this is why Nephi's intimate phrase, my Jesus, stands out. Nephi lost his
father and was hated by his brothers. So for him, the Savior was both infinite as the universe
and as intimate as a friend.
James Farrell has written
Jesus' work on our behalf
is at once infinite
and is so big
that he offers redemption to all
and yet so small
that he offers redemption to me.
Let me bring in one more witness,
if that's okay.
This is Elder Neil A. Maxwell's.
He says,
I testify that he,
this is Jesus,
is utterly incomparable
in what he is,
what he knows,
what he has accomplished and what he has experienced.
Yet movingly, he calls us his friends.
Now listen to this.
In intelligence and performance, so in what he knows and what he's done,
he far surpasses the individual and the composite capacities and achievements of all who
have lived, live now, and will yet live.
So put all of us together, all of what we know and have.
done, and he far surpasses the collective. He rejoices in our genuine goodness and achievement.
He probably thinks it's adorable. I remember hearing Henry J. Iring, basically a Nobel Prize winner
in chemistry. He said, when I go into my lab, the Lord must think it's just cute. Look at me with my
little chemistry set. He really, really is proud of me. Then Elder Maxwell goes on and says,
but any assessment of where we stand in relation to him
tells us we do not stand at all.
We kneel.
We're going to see it again in Moses I,
this confidence we can have in him
because of his power, his ultimate power,
but also the comfort,
along with the confidence,
the comfort that he cares,
the comfort that we matter to him,
the comfort that somehow little only is worth
all that he is done and is doing and will yet do for us.
In fact, to that end, let's take a look at verse 12 again in Abraham 3.
Again, I'm kind of deliberately skipping all of the cosmic stuff.
It's not that that's not significant, but when you had Kerry Milstein on four years ago,
and I would highly recommend our listeners that really fantastic from an Egyptologist, right?
Carrie and our dear friends and spent the year in Israel together teaching at the Jerusalem Center.
It was remarkable.
He really does a great job of talking through the cosmology.
et cetera, and defer in many ways to that discussion, not that we won't talk about any of it,
but that you do have those wonderful resources that follow him provided there in this
four years ago with Carrie. But looking at verse 12, he, the Lord said to me, my son, my son,
his hand was stretched out, and then notice this, I will show you all these, and then I stopped
short of the next line. He put his hand on my eyes. He physically touched me and my eyes,
and then I could now see.
What I could see was multiplied.
To be able to think Celestial as President Nelson
and join the church,
there is a way that the Lord can place his hand upon us
and allow us to see what it is about us,
about our families, about the environs, about the cosmos.
He can help us see.
It reminded me of Elder Howard W. Hunter's great statement.
Remember when he said,
whatever Jesus lays his hands upon lives,
and that if Jesus lays his hands on a marriage, it lives.
He says, if he's allowed to lay his hands on a family, it lives.
I would add to this that the living is in process.
Sometimes we'll look at what's going on right now,
and we think it's the end of the game.
We think the clock is over, and we're keeping score today, and it's done.
It didn't work.
Instead of saying, no, no, no, like he says in verse 15,
to Abraham or in 14, I will multiply thee.
I will multiply it.
That's a future thing.
Thy seed after they.
You're going to go into Egypt in 15.
You've got a life.
You're still living.
These promises are going to be yet fulfilled.
We spoke together about Hebrews chapter 11 last time when I was privileged to be with you.
One of those great passages in Hebrews 11 was that Abraham and Sarah, who only get one child between them,
They said that they saw themselves as strangers and pilgrims on the earth.
They recognized that this earth, which he's now seeing in the cosmic context of all of everything,
Kolob and, you know, that this earth is not the place of fulfillment.
This earth is the place for the promises to be made, but to be seen afar off.
I'm quoting from verse 13 of Hebrews 11, that they saw them afar off, and they
were persuaded of them and then this amazing phrase they embraced them which to me suggests some
probably ritual aspects to when these promises are made to us but as we go into the temples
and in sacred ways we get embraced in this promise making promise giving opportunity that we then
leave the temple and go back to our homes and what do we find
Well, we find incompleteness, we find difficulties, we find heartbreaking things, we find joys, yes, but amid them we find opportunity if we're not careful to doubt the Lord, his power, and his promise that he will.
But we've got to remember, we're mid deliverance. We're mid deliverance.
Could I share one cool thing? I think this is just so beautiful. Alan Bergen, who was part of the fact,
faculty at BYU for years in his book called Eternal Values and Personal Growth. This is back in 2002.
He shares about this woman that he counseled. Her name was Laura. She struggled with many things.
I just thought this was beautiful. He had a dream and he said, I was attending a picnic with friends and
family. And a large number of people had gathered near the food tables. I saw my friend Laura
standing and holding my infant son in her arms. He was snuggled up to her with his head cradled against
her neck. I was thinking how sweet the scene was, when suddenly it seemed as though the trees and
fields behind them opened up and I could see into the far distance. I no longer saw the mortal
Laura, nor my son. Rather, I saw a different Laura in a celestial setting. She was standing
in a somewhat elevated position, and below her were numberless people almost as far as the eye could
see. I perceived through the spirit that they were her children, her eternal offspring.
Most of them seemed to be adults, and they were reverencing her. It was an incredible, exquisite
sight. Though I recognized Laura, she did not look the same as the friend I had seen here
on the earth. She looked regal, but not regal in an earthly sense. Her appearance, her stature,
her poise, and the look on her face had a refinement, dignity.
and power I had never before experienced.
She was perfectly serene.
She was utterly radiant.
There was an infinite peace in her countenance and manner.
Her deep joy in the situation was total.
There was a sense of absolute security
and complete fulfillment.
This is incredible, right?
So the last couple things he said,
I think you're so beautiful.
Since Laura had previously confided to me
many strong feelings of inadequacy and anxiety.
I found the contrast striking.
It was as though I was seeing her eternal identity
unfettered by her mortal deficiencies.
Then he said this to conclude,
this experience had a tremendous impact on me
and on my perception of human beings.
I was especially affected by the incredible inconsistency
between the brilliant eternal personality
I had perceived with this conflicted, distressed mortal person I had known and counseled.
This is the God who works with each of us, who is powerful to save and promise,
but for whom is working to comfort us in the meantime, mid-deliverance, pre-promises all being fulfilled.
I love this God.
I'm so grateful for him and the hopes I have in him, for my family,
my hopes and dreams amidst the mortality that is strewn with the needed, you know, torture devices
of the gym.
The needed torture devices.
I'm still thinking of this verse you gave some emphasis to verse 14.
I think that's what you just did.
I will multiply the, of all the things that Abraham wanted or that we could want or should want,
is it, I will give thee many motor homes.
No, that's not it.
What is it that you would want?
It's posterity.
It's children who will rise up and call you blessed one day.
The picture that what you just read, he saw her serenity.
I love that.
We're not totally alone in the world in it.
The Lord has shared with his people throughout time that they're, you know, this same vision of things.
And we see vestiges, if you will, even though the dispensations have come and gone.
The afterlife model for us is a structured heaven, right? It's organized and ordered. Exaltation is available through the means of eternal marriage, the new and everlasting covenant of marriage, in fact. Now, there are certain Hindu traditions in which spouses may be bonded across reincarnations. Obviously, this is kind of a different way of seeing it. Future lives as reincarnations. Their afterlife model is cyclical reincarnation until,
they reach a point of total non-attachment. We obviously depart there. But there is some interesting
notion with some of these Hindu traditions that there's this bonding of spouses. There are Chinese
folk religions, it turns out, that have ancestors featuring as a main part of their family line.
There's a spirit world parallel, in fact, to earthly life that will continue post that has this
expectation that there would be some family association. In fact, Shinto, I have a lot of
had the privilege of serving the Lord for a couple of years in the mission field formally
in Japan. I became a little familiar with some of the Japanese religions. In the Shinto beliefs,
the dead become household gods and they stay connected. They're right there and they have a big
butsudan, they have a big, looks like a big amois in their rooms and they have the shrine
to their ancestors. They're with them. They don't have a sharply defined heaven, fair enough,
but there is a continuity and presence that is expected.
So it's fun to see this.
And, of course, the example par excellence, right, is ancient Egypt.
The Egyptians, and of course here, Abraham is intersecting with Egypt,
spend some time there.
Moses, of course, is raised in many ways in Egypt, et cetera.
So both of our chapters really have this strong Egyptian connection.
That's all over in Egypt and the Book of the Dead and all of the tombs and everything.
You see this expectation of reuniting with your spouse.
that paradise is similar to being perfected, having an earthly life that's now perfected,
almost like the discussion you had with Brittany Nash in Section 130 about the same sociality,
it's going to be coupled with eternal glory instead of the approximate mortal life we're having.
That's kind of interesting, isn't it, that there are some vestiges of this notion,
but that currently the fullest perhaps understanding we have, and we don't know much,
But what we do know is family, family, family.
That's wonderful.
Everything you've just said says that people yearn for that and want that.
I think that's in all of us.
How could it be heaven without Kim for me?
You know, do I get to keep her?
Does she get to keep me?
Will she want to keep me as a harder question?
That is the big question.
Elder Robert D. Hales once said,
we have to live in such a way that our families want to live with us.
for eternity. Yeah. Yeah. I was like, oh, that's a great point.
Yeah. President Oaks recently, of course, talking about no forced ceilings. Every ceiling will be
this congenial, this is what I want. So I'm with you. You guys remember Elder Glenn Pace. He
spoke at BYU once and he talked about a couple of parents and kids in a beat up station wagon
and seeing a guy go by with his boat and, well, they're not really happy. And he said,
The kids were like, yeah, there goes another unhappy fellow dad, right?
But he said, we're beat up in a station wagon with a bumper sticker that says families are forever and people don't know if that's a boast or a complaint.
That's funny.
That is so great.
We hope it's a central missionary message and then some people think, that's your offering?
No thanks, yeah.
Is that a must?
Is that required?
That's what's so important about the gospel of Jesus Christ is to recognize that mortality is the time that we experience, in a sense, the crucible, where we are stretched on purpose, then to see family touted by the restored gospel of Jesus Christ as this ultimate epitome of heaven, to see that, but then to know that, yeah, but my family's a mess. My family is dysfunctional. I mean, my wife's family. We've struggled with difficulties that I shudder to think about.
about what they went through.
So many, Abraham himself,
nearly at the behest of his father,
or at least a complicit, child sacrifice.
That's a dysfunctional family.
It turns out, right?
This is why I needed another place of residence, right?
It is a very interesting, faithful navigation
that the Lord is encouraging us to go on,
to see promises yet ahead,
but to see very and oftentimes painful effects
the fall playing out right now. So I'll play with this analogy for a second. If I were to go into a
gym, which I try to do sometimes, I'm working on it, right? But if I go into the gym and I walk in,
I go up to the front desk and I say, hey, could you point to where the chocolate fountain is?
I think you're in the wrong place, okay, maybe that's Tuesdays. That person at the desk is going to say,
did you read this sign on your way in here? G-Y-M, that none of those say chocolate, none of those say pillows.
Well, but they would say to us, they would say, all we have here are torture devices
is literally all we have in the gym.
Lots of painful things for you, yeah.
And we got trainers who are going to yell at you and tell you to tear your muscles and,
you know what I mean, and get out of breath and sweat and, you know what I mean?
And that's success.
If you went to the gym and you tore your muscles and you, you know, well, you did it.
You did it right.
I think it's a fit metaphor for mortality.
We walked in here and remember, it said, it said,
fallen world here. It said mortality, which is not eternity, but it is exceedingly significant that
we come in tear muscles here. So that when the healer, the healer, not only internally the way he's
designed our bodies, to use this metaphor, but when the healer, right, with healing in his wings,
rises, the sun, to quote Malachi, he can now make a physique, make a character, make a daughter
of God, make a son of God like Laura was seen by Dr. Bergen. But it means I have to see the telos
of mortality. I have to see the object and end and the point of mortality so that when my family is
struggling and in that great talk by President Oaks, that watershed address in 2000 by what called
the challenge to become, where he said family, family is unique setting in which this becoming can
happen. I don't know. Does that speak to your experiences as well? Yeah, I would ask you a question. You teach at
at BYU, you teach a cornerstone class. So it's a required class called the Eternal Family. What has
that been like in recent years with the young adults that are coming through? They were born
after the proclamation on the family. In fact, long after a lot of them, 10 years after the
proclamation. Yeah. It's been really interesting to watch the reactions over time.
because we're all of a vintage, can we say?
We're of a vintage that when the proclamation was given,
I'm guessing you had the same reaction that we did,
which is, did we have to make a proclamation about that?
It's like they said, we've got to proclaim that the sky is blue
and the trees are green.
Okay.
It was pretty wild, right?
But it didn't take long within a decade or so
that we saw social trends in which,
as we learned from Elder Anderson
talking about quoting from President
Nelson's own experience
and being part of the apostolic group
that felt inspired and wrote the document
that they could see, as Sherry Dew
has said, they could see around corners.
In fact, President Nelson
is quoted by Elder Anderson is saying
we could see it all coming.
We could see it all coming.
So to your question, I have been watching
because I've had the privilege of teaching this course
for nearly two decades now
in its BYU Idaho pre-Eternal family form
and its current form now adopted by church education worldwide.
But I've watched students in the cultural zeitgeist
in the waters they're swimming in.
I've watched them get nervous, like wait,
what are you saying?
Because this is so different than everything else I'm hearing
to a kind of a come back and seeing,
yeah, we saw that, heard that,
And I watched people that I know, maybe siblings, aunts, uncles, or whatever, chase after that.
And I'm seeing a resurgence of, oh, yeah, we've seen the Law of Harvest playing out and seeing the philosophies of men playing out.
And people's life, I'm seeing more students who are saying, oh, give me the pure doctrine.
Reminds me of President Gordon B. Hinkley.
Was it 60 Minutes?
Why is the church successful?
Well, we serve as an anchor in a world of shifting.
values. And he say something like that. Yeah, yeah, that's great. We are searching some
of us. Give me some absolute truth. Can you give me an anchor somewhere that I can tie to?
And that's maybe what the proclamation does. Yeah, I think it does. I've been heartened by the
students' reactions. It's a battle. This may be a perfect place to talk about something that I think
is significant about Abraham and Moses, and that is what they experience, right? We're
We read the scriptures, and I know, I know we all feel like, oh, I wish I could have done that.
I wish I could have experienced that.
I wish that was me.
I want him to lay his hands on me and be able to see.
I want him to tell me that I will multiply thee, and I want him to send an angel to get me off the lion couch.
It doesn't take too long of honest reflection to realize we actually do have our own salvation histories.
There are those moments.
Don't forget that we take a record.
If we're wise, we make a record of when the deliverances have come.
Now, a side point to this that I think is significant is, as I was thinking about this moment,
I feel like the Lord inspired me to think of it this way.
I work with these students, as we all do, and encourage them that all of this information is independently verifiable.
I can read it.
There's a book here, but remember Joseph Smith warned.
He said, look, you've got to go to God and get your own knowledge.
You can't get it out of books.
The books are a catalyst, shall we say.
I'm reading about Abraham here,
and we'll be reading momentarily about Moses,
but that's their story.
That's their story.
That's not my story.
The Lord very much wants us to individually connect with him,
not just by proxy.
It's too easy to read by proxy,
either our parents or in the scriptures or whatever,
and go, well, okay, I guess you've got to just trust that.
and instead of saying, no, the invitation, there should be curiosity.
They experience this, well, what would it take for me?
I want to know.
Nephi listening to his father's dream and saying, well, I want to see that.
I want to know.
Praying and having his heart softened right there in First Nephi, chapter two,
way before he ever gets these big visions, they are their experiences and we can learn things
from them.
But they should be invitations to our own faith and study approach that I can,
can independently verify these things are true. I would just want to add a quick witness.
I read the Book of Mormon in preparation to serve a mission. It wasn't until Heelman or so,
and I hesitate to even share this, but at times, I mean, this is my witness. I get to Heelman.
I'm unsuspecting, because I've just been reading and thinking, okay, I should know these things.
I get to Heelman 5, and here comes this mob in to take out these two missionaries that are in prison.
this whole scene, I have the most remarkable experience.
It's better than a vision.
But I have a witness that it was real and it happened in a better way
than if I had seen a YouTube book of Mormon YouTube video of it.
Not a recreation, but the actual video.
I had something happen that I can't totally describe.
And it's the same thing that's happened to you guys.
And everybody else who has submitted themselves to the process of study and faith,
that something happened
that's not a story
these are not characters
and I get it we may use
that language here and there
haphazardly I refuse to
use those words
I do not ever talk about
Nephi and his brother
Lehi in this case in Heelman 5
I don't talk about Moses and Abraham
and Sarah and Surai
I don't talk about Mary
I don't talk about any of them as if they're a story
or a character
because I have independently verified
that I'm going to meet them one day.
They are people
and I can't wait to ask them questions.
I'm curious about their lives.
I'm like, how buff was Nephi?
Like how I'm serious?
No, okay, I know.
I'm joking, but there's things I want to know, right?
But that they are real
and that these experiences happen to them,
independently verifiable for each one of us.
I am grateful and cheerfully submit
that I have a witness
of that, and I look forward to meeting them.
Phil, one thing you and I talked about a month or two ago as we were discussing this lesson
was how crucial our doctrine of a pre-mortal life is.
This is actually very unique and very important, more important than I thought.
Yeah, exactly.
In fact, we mentioned that I was at the University of Notre Dame for some theological studies,
and I remember asking a rabbi.
I took a class on Judaism.
We had a rabbi who was a marvelous instructor,
and I remember he had a thing where we would be able to write a question down before a class
and put it on the board, and we'd take turns.
I wrote the question about the pre-existence.
I said, what's the Jewish notion of premortal life?
It was really interesting because, of course, that's an esoteric term.
I should have known that's a Latter-day Saint term.
I didn't do pre-existence.
I thought I'd have been, you know,
but I thought I'd done better with pre-mortaric.
mortal life. But of course, he just read it as pre-mortal life. Well, that's the life we're in
right now because we haven't died yet. You know, it's like, ah, great. But as I was able to
circle back around and explain, there's this sense of like, yeah, that's not really, no.
In fact, even the Logos, the Logos, you know, notion for Christianity, John 1, etc., there's
really not a lot of understanding about that this is a thing. You can even look at commentaries on
Jeremiah 1, verse 5, before I formed the in the belly, I knew the to Jeremiah. You're just not
going to get much there. Acts chapter 17, Deuteronomy 32. You're going to have these passages that
we like as Latterty Saints because we do have prophetic commentary and restoration scripture that
helps us with this, including here in Abraham 3. But if you don't have those, it's fairly opaque
for our brothers and sisters without the restored scriptures and restored prophets. As we talk about
that maybe we can set it up a little bit by deferring to the extended discussion of this with
Kerry Milstein, who did such a marvelous job. But let's take a look at Kolob and take a look
at the stars really quick, just to seed then the premortality for a second, because this is how
the Lord sets it up for Abraham. In Abraham 3 here, verse 2, that there is one of these stars that he
sees that's nearest to the throne of God. If you skip over to verse 16, you get this notion of,
Oh, the greatest, their Kolob is the greatest of all these Kokobium,
all these stars, all these special ones.
Kolob, a sense, if we did a Miller's analogy,
Kolob is to X, well, here we would say,
Kolob is to Jesus, Kolob is to Jehovah,
Kolob is to the son of God,
he is this governing one, he is the one closest to God, etc.
Before we turn the pages over to the later verses in Abraham 3,
we have this interesting distinction of one,
Jesus, Jehovah, the Son of God, is this one.
Now, this one is also among others.
Kolab is to Jehovah.
The stars are to the noble and great ones.
Recognizing that and saying,
oh, well, there's an interpretive tool
that there's a metaphor going here
that the Savior is trying to help him understand his deliverer.
He's also helping him understand who he is
and confidence in himself and his potential.
And he does this with all these analogies of motions and stars, et cetera.
And it's just this big extended object lesson.
It's an object lesson that is transformative.
There's a transformative arc that is laid out before to say, oh, yeah, there are differences.
But these differences are bridgeable.
These differences are transcendible.
It's an exciting object lesson to say, oh, so we're going to take you from where you used to be
and when you used to be.
And we're going to now shoot you through,
if you're willing, right?
We're going to shoot you through
this amazing, transformative
conversion in Christ
to become one of these.
You started with opportunity
and with some capacities for this,
and we're now going to set up a plan
by which everyone who is willing
can funnel through this amazing plan of salvation,
plan of happiness, plan of exaltation.
so if we read verse 22 i the lord as now the lord had shown unto me abraham the intelligences that were
organized before the world was and among all these there were many of the noble and great ones
there's that clear tie in with what he's been seeing cosmically as the object lesson then god saw
now it shifts from the vision that he's giving abraham it shifts to now god as if in the first
place describing what happened to God. God saw these souls. Now it's not Abraham seeing. Now it's
shifting to, oh, God amidst these souls saw that they were good. He saw potential. He saw, right,
goodness, opportunity. And he stood in the midst of them. Again, we're in the cosmic realm,
but this is very personal. He's standing in the midst. He's not standing apart. Think of the beauty
of like, no, he's right in the middle of them. Okay, guys. So someone's got his arms around him.
And it's like, okay, all right, here we are, guys. Here we go, team. And it's this really fun
moment where he says, okay, I got things for you to do. You have things to do. Again, here's
your assignment. This is how we're going to coordinate this. We're going to do that. He says to
Abraham, isn't this so beautiful? He says, Abraham, get this. You were one of them. You were there
with me. I was doing this with you. It's just so beautiful. Then we learned there as we go
forward, I want to pause on this first estate. If we go from there, versus 24 and 25, there's
the one that's among them, like unto God.
This is Kolob, aka Jesus Jehovah.
And he says, we're going to go down.
There's space there.
We're going to take of these materials.
This is the job.
Go team, go team.
And what are we going to do?
We're going to go create an earth.
We're going to go make this place.
This is the next sphere of improvement and progression.
We're going to make this place so you can dwell on it.
And the job here is, first 25, we're going to prove you to see if you're going to do everything
that the Lord, their God would command him.
This is described here as a proving ground.
This is the gym, if you will.
This is the torture devices.
All right, we're going to run you through.
And it suggests that God knew in advance a highly customized training path for each of us.
Pretty customized curriculum for mortality for each of us.
Therefore, as we get into the gym, we have to be careful not to look sideways at somebody working on a particular machine or a particular
muscle group or something and say, well, they're dumb, they're weak, or alternatively, to
look at them and go, look how strong they are, and this is the easy for them and everything.
When I'm working on my machine or I'm getting this exercise and my trainer is taking me through
these, it's so easy to be comparative rather than to be charitable and recognize, oh, they're
going through this customized curricula of mortality as part of the transformative arc from premortality
into that future state of where we'll end today in Moses 139, that immortality and eternal life.
I just felt like I should share with you a very interesting thing that happened to me in the mission field.
This is years ago, but it's remained indelibly attached to my mind.
I was a newer missionary.
I didn't know Japanese very well.
I was assigned a missionary that had been out about a year or so for whatever reason,
this missionary had struggled with the rules had felt a little bit like,
Why can't we play full court basketball?
Like, that's dumb.
You know what I mean?
Why can't we do that?
Understandably, I mean, I looked at that and went, good one.
I haven't a clue why we can't do that.
I'm with you.
I didn't disagree, but it kind of was a bother.
A bother to him.
Now, to his credit, he's there, he's working.
But he's got these questions, he's bugging him.
And we have a few conversations in the first few days that were companions where I can
see that he's, this is really frustrating to him.
I don't know how to answer him, and I don't have the answers, but I was a little more
comfortable with just keeping the rules for whatever reason. As I remember it, I was down doing
dishes. We had this little two-story apartment with four elders in it, and I was doing dishes
or something for breakfast, and he was in another room doing a scripture study. And he yells at me,
he goes, all right, all right, Choro. He says, get in here. I'm like, whoa, what's going on?
So I go in there, and he's got his scriptures open, and he says, I get it, I get it. I'm like,
well, okay, what do you get? What are you talking about?
he says look check this out and he reads verse 25 he says look we will prove them herewith they're going to do everything that god will ask them and then he said this i have memorized this because it was so crazy he said all right look if to get saved
god said every day at noon you had to stand on your head in the corner and recite the articles of faith backwards would you do it
I'm sitting there going in my mind
the acrobatics of
what that would be hard
he said seriously
if that's what God said
you gotta do this to be saved
would you do it
and I was like
well yeah
I very much want to be saved please
I would do it
and he's like that's why
that's why we can't play
full court basketball
and I was like
okay I get where you're going
And it worked. And I'll tell you what, we had such a great companionship. He dug in, he worked hard,
he was so charitable to me. We had some really, really remarkable experiences finding and teaching
people because he was like, okay, I'm in. Whatever God asks, I get the point. I see what we're doing
here. I was very impressed and appreciated his perspective. It blessed me. I admire him to this day for what
he could see. He read the scripture and let the spirit teach him. He's having these questions
and everything. And then when the spirit did provide an answer, he ran with it. He accepted it and he ran
with it. I'm very proud of him and it blessed my life. And this is Boyd K. Packer when he gave this
address in 2008 to the religious educators. This is those evenings with the general authority.
He said this. He says, don't let a student, or should we say, don't let a friend
don't let a family member leave your class or leave your conversation without knowing that there is a premortal
existence if he doesn't or she doesn't know it how can they make sense of mortality in fact he goes on
mortality just is not fair if you look at it realistically i'm quoting the apostle
mortality just isn't fair if you look at it realistically some people were born with limitations
physically or mentally there's little chance of doing much how can that
be fair. Well, the apostle says, if you see the whole scope of things, the pre-mortal
existence, we have lived forever, there never was a beginning. Earth life is one of the chapters
in the book of life that we are writing and living. Post-mortal existence goes on forever.
It will never end. If we know that, we can have a little more patience, and we will know
more, and then he said, they must know that. I love verse 25. I think it's one of the most
clarifying verses of all. I will prove them to see if they will do all things. Agency is implied
in there. What's the famous story about Hugh B. Brown? Somebody asked him, why did God ask Abraham
to sacrifice Isaac? Because God knew he would do it. President Huie Brown's answer was, because
Abraham needed to learn something about Abraham.
Sometimes I would like to add after it to see if they will do all things whatsoever,
the Lord their God shall command them, even if it doesn't make sense.
Sometimes I kind of want to add that because I think about playing basketball in your mission
or keeping the Word of Wisdom when you have no idea about nicotine or what all those things,
keeping the Word of Wisdom in 1845, right?
You have no idea about those reasons.
and I think it's kind of a slippery slope.
If we, well, I will do all things the Lord commands
as soon as I know every single reason
for every single commandment.
That's probably not the best idea.
Boyd K. Packer gave another talk
in 1995 called The Play and the Plan.
He divided our existence into a three-act play.
He said, act one, the pre-mortal existence,
you were brilliant in that place.
But the curtain's been drawn.
You don't remember a thing.
And then he said act two is characterized by four T words, test, trials, temptations, and even tragedies.
Then he said, nowhere in act two appears the line happily ever after.
That's reserved only for act three.
And then he said this.
I mean, it's just the profound statements, don't suppose that God causes that, which for his own purposes, he permits.
slow down and chew on that one.
That is maybe why Elder Maxwell called the pre-mortal existence
a wonderful flood of light.
You get to see it from 30,000 feet and back up
and see Act 2 as temporary.
And you see the post-mortal spirit world, kingdoms of glory.
All of the sudden, it's a lot easier to take the test trials,
temptations, and tragedies.
And we say it so easily, have an eternal perspective.
Yeah, take that off and it changes everything.
Love it. Thank you.
John, I like what you said there.
This is right out of the Come Follow Me Manual.
We know very little about our premortal life.
But much of what we do know comes from Abraham III.
It says, why are these truths valuable to you?
What difference do they make in your life?
It is huge.
For just one reason, I think Elder Packer said this same thing, which is, this life is so hard.
One thing I frequently have to remind myself and others is, we signed up for this.
Like, this was not forced upon us.
We were given a choice, and I'm sure it was an informed choice.
Phil mentioned the verse from Jeremiah, and all the sons of God shouted for joy.
I remember Elder Maxwell saying something like,
now that we're here, we wonder what all the shouting was about.
Like, wait, this is a lot harder than I thought.
It's like, hmm.
As you say that, I think about this personalized view.
Like, he's standing in the midst of us as we got there in 23.
If you see the team that the arms around, okay, we're huddling, this is what we're going to do.
In that pre-planned way, there is great comfort in the premortal life, that while we do have the veil pulled, which I think has a significant role yet to play in a merciful judgment someday, which I'm intrigued by.
But this idea has been taught by the prophets.
President Nelson in his Stand as Millennials talk, he said, a true millennial is one who taught and was taught the gospel of Jesus Christ pre-mortally and who made covenants there.
with our Heavenly Father about courageous things,
even morally courageous things that he or she would do while here on the earth.
Then he made a promise, as you know, President Nelson was so marvelous at making these promises
that when you begin to catch even a glimpse of how your Heavenly Father sees you
and what he is counting on you to do for him, your life will never be the same.
As we look at the sources for what we get that information,
patriarchal blessings are amazing, though.
They may not say anything specific about premortality.
They might, but that as we read them,
we get glimpses of what is possible
that God is offering these promises that are yet ahead,
mid-deliverance, fair enough,
but that are going to be fulfilled in their fullness one day.
In fact, President Lorenzo Snow said,
had we not kept what is called our first estate,
and that language is here in verse 26, Abraham 3.
So he says,
they who keep, after this proving verse that we talked about in verse 25,
they who keep their first estate in verse 26
will be added upon.
Again, there's this transformed of arc.
Yes, you're much lower, infinitesimally smaller
than the Lord or others and certainly Father.
Okay, fine, but you can be added upon.
on. That's why the laws are given so that this can be added upon in us. He says, back to President Snow's
quote, had we not kept what is called our first estate and observed the laws that governed there,
well, you and I would not be here today. We are here because we are worthy to be here. That
arises to a great extent, at least from the fact that we kept our first estate, right? And that's just
so comforting, right? It's like, oh, apparently I did this well once. Maybe I'm struggling.
right now with God's laws, but I apparently killed it in premortality. I nailed it. President Snow continues. He
says, I believe that when you and I were in yonder life, we made certain covenants with those that had the
control, that in this life when we should be permitted to enter it, we would do what we had done
in that life, which he said is, find out the will of God and conform to it. Wow. I wonder that, Phil,
John, when we read that verse that John pointed out, and we will prove them here with to see
if they will do all things whatsoever the Lord God shall command them, I wonder if part of that
maybe could be rephrased. We will make an earth and we will prove to see if you will choose
to go to earth. Awesome. That's a fun way to think of it. Will you keep your first estate?
Well, let's make an earth and find out. Let's find out if you will choose. Instead of that verse being
scary like oh man i don't know if i'm doing it no you did you proved that you believed and by going
recently i got to zoom with the adriatic i think it was the adriatic north mission president's sister
cordray he told his missionaries these people already chose the father's plan once
and i thought everybody on earth already chose the father's plan and that was like oh you
Yeah, that's true.
As we think about approaching people, they already made an excellent choice once.
Already had an excellent time in Act 1.
Now the curtain's been drawn.
Just tell them who they are, that they already chose once.
Tell them that this life's the test, trials, temptations, tragedies, but it's temporary.
And we signed up for it.
We knew it was going to happen.
The question of what does it mean to know about a pre-emortal existence, how do you
overstate how important that is?
It's so true, right? It's just awesome.
If you believed that you were created at birth, you did not exist before this, you came
into a life that is, think of India in the 500s, a lot of suffering and a short life and a lot of
suffering, and you might think, that was pointless.
Yeah, what was that about?
And you're there saying, oh, God, maybe someone saying God, God, God, love.
loves you, I can see why someone would say, I don't believe in God.
Yeah.
Or why somebody would say life is hard and then you die and not, and that's it.
And take off the blinders and see the big picture.
That's the flood of light.
We don't see the transformative right role that hardship plays.
If somehow we've bought into that we didn't come into a gym and this is actually supposed
to quote be heaven.
This isn't the training ground for heaven.
If we've, if we misperceive that and mismeasure this experience,
then that's exactly the card the adversary plays over and over and over incessantly
when inequities, unfairnesses, pains and sufferings, balding, I might add, happen.
I see you two have not had to suffer that indignity in your mortality.
Hey, you look good.
There's a few perfect heads in the world.
And God put hair on the rest.
Oh, this is good.
It's a good thing.
But it really does play into the adversary's hands to misperceive what mortality really is.
I see it all the time.
In fact, I think this is a pretty cool point of elder Neil A. Maxwell.
We were extolling his virtues earlier.
Well, let's continue something he said.
And he's going to quote an earlier apostle on this as well.
Quote, here's Nilea Maxwell from all these things she'll give the experience.
He says, one day we will understand fully how complete our commitment was in our first estate.
in accepting the very conditions of challenge in our second estate,
about which we sometimes complain about in this school of stress.
He then said,
our collective and personal premortal promises will then be laid clearly before us.
Premortal promises, conditions, opportunities.
We had a vision.
What does the proverb say?
Where there is no vision that people perish?
We had an understanding of a vision of this.
Otherwise, if in verse 28, right, so if you're in Abraham 3, let's do 27, having explained that if we kept this verse estate, we could have glory added on our heads.
If we would keep the second estate, then it would be added on our heads forever and ever.
Then the Lord says in verse 27, whom am I going to send?
He has to offer the opportunity, even though he's called Jehovah to do it.
He has to offer the opportunity as an agency for him to receive the blessings for doing so.
one answered like unto the son of man and said here am i send me and another we understand from other passages
and prophetic commentary that this is the adversary lucifer he said here am i send me and the lord said i will send
the first and now it explains why in 28 as you were saying earlier that the second was angry he kept not
his first estate he rejected the earth or the plan of making the earth he then had many follow after him
They had to know what this was.
They had to make that choice, and for it to be just, for the law of harvest to roll out,
they had to know what they were rejecting.
Our agency had to be actually an agent's in premortality.
We had to have had this explained and taught clearly and lawfully in a way that we could make a real choice.
It is the fact, as you said, John, from that wonderful mission leader,
It is the fact that every single person here who is bodied and every embodied soul did make this choice
and they did accept that the Savior could be their redeemer and they can do so again.
Maybe one other quick thought here about these personal premortal covenants that I think is helpful.
He says,
Elder Orson Hyde said of our life in the premortal world,
we understood things better there than we do in this lower world.
As to the agreements we made there he also surmised
It's not impossible that we signed
The articles thereof with our own hands
Which articles may be retained in the archives above to be presented to us
When we rise from the dead
And be judged out of our own mouths
According to that which is written in the books
Elder Brooke P. Hales, his talk
Several conferences grow was so significant
The title says it all
Mortality Works
why does it work?
The only way it could work is if in pre-mortality
we had an understanding of what it was we needed
in our progress, in our stratification
of not yet being like God,
not yet being like the one close to God
or Kolob or Jee's Jehovah,
that, oh, what would we need,
what torture devices,
what muscle group is undeveloped,
what character is not yet achieved, et cetera.
Now we see why we can embrace a mortality
and see that it really will work
because we have this understanding
that we had a loving God
who huddled us up and said,
I'm in the midst of you,
I know you, I know what I can bless you with,
I know what you need.
This is why I can embrace
the craziness of mortality
because of these wonderful truths
in the scriptures and the living prophets.
I've heard it called the Lord's Law of Learning.
They will learn by their own experience
to discern good from evil.
My grandpa, Vernon Ezekiel Jarman.
What a great grandpa name.
That's awesome.
Vernon Ezekiel Jarman used to say,
Experiences at Deer School, and we fools will learn in no other.
That's great.
I love it.
Maybe as we cap off this part of the discussion with Abraham 3,
Joseph Smith said,
The Organization of the Spiritual and Heavenly Worlds
and of the Spiritual and Heavenly Beings,
was agreeable in the most perfect order and harmony.
Their limits and bounds were fixed irrevocably, and then this,
and voluntarily subscribe to in their heavenly estate by themselves,
and were by our first parents subscribed to upon the earth.
Wow.
There are properties to this achieving immortality in eternal life,
to this transformative arc that can't be one in any other way.
They can't be obtained in any other way.
We subscribe to them, and our first parents, Adam and Eve, subscribe to them and got this mortality rolling.
John, we talk about this a lot.
We know, and we've heard from listeners who are truly suffering, suffering with the loss of a son or a daughter,
the death of a loved one, the estrangement from people they love.
It's impossible to name all the ways we go through pain.
Yeah, I think, Phil, what you've taught us here is that the suffering I'm going through has great purpose.
It's not just suffering to suffer, that it has purpose, that God is in it, and that one day we will see the purpose.
For now, we endure, we obey.
I've loved this little definition of the word prove from verse 25.
I don't do much baking.
I wish I could.
But as John would say, listen with your spiritual ears.
To prove dough in baking is not to see if it's real or see if it's going to come through for us.
It's a different definition.
I'm just reading from a baking website.
What do exactly do we mean when we prove bread?
It's the crucial final step of the process.
It's the final rise during which the bread takes shape.
Talks about how it works here.
Proving takes time, but it's a step you cannot skip for the dough to mature.
You can't rush dough.
Good bread relies on this time so that it will have a great texture and crust.
remember good dough makes good bread it's that simple if you listen with your spiritual ears
the lord saying yes i'm not testing this dough i'm proving i'm proving this dough giving it the
needed time to mature and go through the process it has to go through in order to become
bread john did you hear with your spiritual ears you always tell me to do that yeah oh i like it
I like to say to the teenager, if you have shallow experiences, if you got asked to every dance, you never got rejected, if you won every contest or aced every test, if you have shallow experience after shallow experience, you might end up being shallow.
But if you have experiences that test you, deep experiences that are tough that you're getting proven,
you're getting tested through, you might become deep.
You might become a friend to somebody that you can sit with and say, I have been through that.
The Lord will use you to help other people who are not having shallow experiences.
Sometimes I think he does that on purpose.
puts us next to somebody who's really been through something tough right when we need it.
That's another way I guess we get proved.
What's the dad joke?
I wanted to be a baker, but I couldn't raise the dough or something like that.
I knew you would have something for me there.
And I wanted to throw one more idea out at both of you from Elder Maxwell.
Man, he's been with us today.
He taught that at some point, for some people,
in some point of their lives, it's no longer about God doubting the outcome of this test.
He said, God is already preparing you for future assignments in the next life.
Here's the quote,
the future duties to be given to some of us in the worlds to come
will require of us an earned sense of esteem
as well as proof of our competency.
Thus, the tests given here are not given because God is in doubt as to the outcome,
but because we need to grow in order to be able to serve with full effectiveness in the eternity to come.
Learned by experience.
So good.
Your past step one.
He's now preparing you for your callings after this life.
That's that conversion.
We are literally being converted.
and transformed.
I can't help but just cap off with this statement from Elder Hales
about the woman who had had such a hard mortality
and her son is in the temple and gets this kind of incoming.
Her quote is so cool.
I want you to know that mortality works.
I want you to know that I now understand
why everything happened in my life the way it did
and it is all okay.
That's October
24. It's all okay.
We have this God who knows us.
He's standing in the midst of us.
He's prepared every needful thing.
Just as he's worked with Abraham,
as he will talk about with Moses,
he's working with each of us
very customized curricula
for our becoming and conversion.
Coming up in part two.
I essentially just, I've had it.
I clearly can't do this.
I wouldn't be surprised if we rolled the tape back
if I yelled up to heaven.
And I just said, I can't do this.
I just can't do this.
You don't always get responses to those.
But I did that day.
