followHIM - Mosiah 7-10 Part 2 • Dr. Stephan Taeger • May 6-12 • Come Follow Me
Episode Date: May 1, 2024Dr. Stephan Taeger explores how our stories inform our possibilities through the story of Zeniff leaving Zarahemla and how the Lord creates miracles from our overzealous mistakes.SHOW NOTES/TRANSCRIPT...SEnglish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM19ENFrench: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM19FRPortuguese: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM19PTSpanish: https://tinyurl.com/podcastBM19ESYOUTUBEhttps://youtu.be/1-FiyZWkj-sALL 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/followhimpodcast00:00 Part II–Dr. Stephan Taeger00:14 Why Mormon includes the flashback with Alma the Elder01:11 Mosiah 9:1-3 - Contentions and being over-zealous07:01 Mosiah 9:6-11 - Zeniff makes a deal with the Lamanites08:55 Our story determines our possibilities10:23 Mosiah 8:18, 10:6 - Remembering the Lord12:46 Elder Holland’s “A Prayer for the Children”16:06 Elder Edgley “The Rescue for Real Growth19:44 Mosiah 10:12-14, 17 The story the Lamanites tell their children27:18 Elder Bednar on being offended 29:07 Mosiah 10:17 - Elder Groberg story 35:41 Mosiah 10:19-22 Zeniff’s struggles since leaving Zarahemla36:36 God can create miracles out of our mistakes38:02 How Joseph in Egypt applies to Mosiah 10 and God’s mercy44:26 End of Part II– Dr. Stephan TaegerThanks 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. Stephan Tager, Mosiah chapter 7 through 10.
And Stephan, as you go throughout the entire book of Mosiah, it gets complicated. There's
groups of people moving all over. Absolutely. Why does Mormon give us a flashback here?
Again, I'm quoting from Grant Hardy from a book called Understanding the Book of Mormon.
This is just one reason. I think Brother Hardy's onto something here.
He says, Mormon knew that this settlement,
the one we're about to read about,
was the origin of both the Nephite Christian church
and the line of prophets who would dominate the years
leading up to the coming of Christ.
These leaders included the two Almas,
the two Helamins, and the later two Nephites as well.
This is not a random story that Mormon's trying to highlight here.
This flashback is going to help us to understand where Alma the Elder came from,
and hence where Alma the Younger came from, and then Helaman.
In chapter 9, it starts off, this was written on the original plates,
the record of Zenith, an account of his people,
from the time they left the land of Zarahemla until the time that they were delivered out of the hands of the Lamanites.
We mentioned this earlier, but this is just the story of this group of people who left
Zarahemla to try to come back to the land of first inheritance or near there.
Mosiah 9 verse 1.
This is Zenith speaking.
Mormon puts his first person record into the plate so
that we can read this. As a historian, Mormon will do that. He'll often include the sermon or the
first person record or letters even we see in 3rd Nephi. It says this in verse 1, I, Zenith,
having been taught in all the language of the Nephites and having had a knowledge of the land
of Nephi or of the land of our father's first inheritance,
and having been sent as a spy among the Lamanites that I might spy out their forces,
that our army might come upon them and destroy them.
But when I saw that which was good among them, I was desirous that they should not be destroyed.
It's interesting that he sees some good among them, and it seems to cause a little bit of hesitation.
Verse 2, Therefore I contended with my brethren in the wilderness, for I would that our ruler should make a treaty with them.
But he being an austere and bloodthirsty man commanded that I should be slain, but I was rescued by the shedding of much blood.
For father fought against father, and brother against brother, until the greater number of our army was
destroyed in the wilderness. And we returned those of us that were spared to the land of Zarahemla
to relate that tale to their wives and their children. They have this battle, a small little
lesson, the ugliness of contention. They have to go back and tell the people in Zarahemla what happened. And then we get this key principle and that we're going to see here in
verse three. It says, and yet I being overzealous to inherit the land of our fathers, collected as
many as were desirous to go up to possess the land, again, up in elevation, but down south,
and started again on our journey into the wilderness to go up into the land, again up in elevation, but down south, and started again on our journey into the wilderness
to go up into the land. But we were smitten with famine and sore afflictions, for we were slow
to remember the Lord our God. Overzealousness, it might lead to bad judgment. When we obsess
about one thing in our lives, one aspect of our life, or one aspect of a certain story, then it leads to bad judgment.
If our story determines our possibilities, if we focus in on one aspect of it, one scene, we won't see things clearly.
President Packer, he has this analogy that I love.
He says, the gospel might be likened to the keyboard of a piano, a full keyboard with a selection of keys on which one who is trained can play a variety without limits.
A ballad to express love, a march to rally, a melody to soothe, and a hymn to inspire.
An endless variety to suit every mood and satisfy every need.
How short-sighted it is, then, to choose a single key
and endlessly tap out the monotony of a single
note or even two or three notes when the full keyboard of limitless harmony can be played.
Elder Packer's teaching us something really powerful. What's one way that we overcome
overzealousness is to play the rest of the keys, to see the gospel story in its fullness and to see
our life experience in its fullness, and to see our
life experience in its fullness. We don't just teach grace, we also teach truth. Sometimes people
need grace, and sometimes they need truth, and we make sure we're teaching both of those things as
much as we can. Yes, we believe in tradition, but we also believe in innovation. Sometimes the
leaders of the church say, we're going to do things differently, and that's okay. And also,
sometimes it's important to say, do you know what?
This is tradition.
We believe in a sanctification that we can slowly become more like Christ over time through
his grace.
But we also believe in justification, which the church defines as you are declared guiltless,
legally clean before God right now.
We believe in diversity, right?
And having a variety of gifts and backgrounds,
but we also believe in unity. The way that we prevent ourselves from becoming overzealous is
to play all the keys on the piano, to be balanced and make sure that we're seeing all the facets of
the restored gospel. Wow. That is wonderful. If we lean to one side, we will lose some wonderful
things on the other side and we get too zoned in on this one thing and it becomes a problem.
What was once great is now a thorn, a problem.
If our story determines our possibilities, we have to consistently ask ourselves, is my story balanced?
Am I getting the full picture or am I just narrowly becoming overzealous about one thing?
This is wonderful.
I work with quite a few college students, as do both of you.
I'll ask them when we get to this verse, when have you been a little overzealous about something?
And they'll say, what do you mean?
Like, have you ever looked back and said, I really miss some obvious red flags, right?
And they all raise their hand.
This regret of I jumped in too fast.
I could have been more careful.
I think of sometimes jumping into debt.
I was overzealous.
I wanted that thing so badly.
I jumped in and now I regret it.
Or a relationship.
I jumped in too quickly, pushed forward too fast. Because doesn't
it sound like to you both, he has a bit of regret because he's writing this? He's like, it was a
good thing, but I missed some cues. Like when the Lamanites say, oh yeah, sorry, this is yours.
We'll give it back. You would think you have to wonder if it's his overzealousness that caused him to misjudge that situation.
I love that Zenith would say at the end of verse three,
we were slow to remember.
Sounds like he picked up a lesson from it all.
I'd put in my margin, Zenith was a just man,
because we're going to hear that description of him later.
Eventually, Zenith and the people with him,
they return south to get back their land of first
inheritance or nearby and zenith approaches the lamanite king and zenith writes this about that
moment he says and i went in unto the king and he covenanted with me that i might possess the land
of lehi nephi and the land of shalom the king of the Lamanites has all the Lamanites leave that land.
Zenith and his people, they begin to build buildings
and rebuild the walls of the city of Lehi-Nephi in Shilom.
They plant crops, they grow and multiply in the land.
It says in verse 10,
Now it was the cunning and the craftiness of King Laman
to bring my people into bondage,
that he yielded up the land that we might possess it.
Like we said a second ago, you have to wonder if maybe he had not been overzealous,
if this would have prevented this poor decision-making.
But it's interesting because this decision is going to affect a lot of people around Zenith.
His children and the grandson we've already talked about, Lemhi.
In verse 11, therefore Therefore it came to pass
that after we had dwelt in the land
for the space of twelve years
that King Laman began to grow uneasy,
lest by any means my people
should wax strong in the land
and they could not overpower them
and bring them into bondage.
Now they were a lazy and idolatrous people,
which means they worshipped idols.
Therefore they were desirous
to bring us into bondage,
that they might glut themselves with the labors of our hands.
Yea, that they might feast themselves upon the flocks of our fields. Some of the Lamanites then
attack. Zenith is called upon for protection. And he writes this in the first person,
Yea, in the strength of the Lord did we go forth to battle against the Lamanites.
For I and my people did cry mightily to the Lord that he would deliver us out of the hands of our enemies.
For we were awakened to a remembrance of the deliverance of our fathers.
Again, in this moment of difficulty, they draw on a powerful story.
If we fill our life with stuff that can't nourish the soul, superficial spirituality, or only the stories
of this world, then we won't have the powerful gospel narratives to draw upon in the moments of
our most trying times. He says they were awakened to a remembrance of the deliverance of their
fathers. Truly, our story determines our possibilities.
My scripture study, Stephan, almost becomes like a food storage that I build up.
So in those times of need, I have these friends to call on.
Absolutely.
In fact, Elder Richard G. Scott, he recommends memorizing certain passages, and he uses that
analogy.
So like friends, you can call upon them at the right time.
How many times does just the right scripture come to your heart and mind in a moment of need because you've previously studied it?
Stefan, this is fascinating to me because way back in the beginning of the chapter, he does not want to hurt Lamanites.
He's a good guy.
But now he is fighting Lamanites in the strength of the Lord.
Oh, how it's turned, right? The poor guy. I really feel for Zenith. He didn't want to kill
the Lamanites. He was a little overexcited, missed some red flags, and now he's in serious trouble.
He's living his life in work, bloodshed. Yeah. And verse 18, thankfully it says,
and God did hear our cries and did answer our prayers.
And we did go forth in his might.
Yeah, we did go forth against the Lamanites.
And in one day and a night, we did slay 3,043.
We did slay them even until we had driven them out of our land.
Flipping over to chapter 10,
Zeno's people prosper and they have continual out of our land. Flipping over to chapter 10, Zenith's people prosper
and they have continual peace in the land.
But then, verse 6,
And it came to pass that King Laman died
and his son began to reign in his stead
and began to stir his people up
in rebellion against my people.
Therefore, they began to prepare for war
and to come up to battle against my people.
Zenith's overzealous plan is proving to be problematic and not just for himself, but for a lot of the people around him as well.
I've told John this before.
This is something that really hits home to me.
I'm going to try not to be too overzealous, but I want to show you both something. If you go
all the way back to Omni and you look at Omni 1, there's only one chapter, verse 12, and this is
Mosiah. This is Benjamin's father. Malachi says, there's this king, Mosiah. The Lord warned him
that he should flee out of the land of Nephi and as many as would hearken
unto his voice, you've got to get out of the land of Nephi. They get up and they find the people of
Zarahemla. We've talked about that. And then you have Zenith who wants to go back to the very place
that the Lord had told Mosiah to get out of. And I can't tell you how much this frustrates me because
this decision that he makes, and Zeniff, you guys, is a good guy. You wouldn't read 9 and 10 and go,
yeah, Zeniff, he's not a believer. He is a believer. He is a good guy. But this decision
to leave the prophet is one going to cause him and his people to miss
King Benjamin entirely. When they could be in Zarahemla having this miraculous experience with
Benjamin, they're not. They're down here fighting Lamanites. Not because Zenith is a bad guy. He is
not a bad guy, but because he just didn't think this through. I mentioned earlier that I have two grandpas who died of alcoholism. They have their own reasons. I don't think they're bad people. And say, do you have any idea how your decisions are going to affect your children, my parents, and me?
We are all going to suffer because of these decisions.
And you're not a bad guy.
I got to calm down.
Stefan's going to say you're a little overzealous there, Hank.
But I was deeply touched by a talk that Elder Holland gave because it hit so
personally way back in 2003. I can't believe I'm saying way back in 2003. But Elder Holland,
the talk is called A Prayer for the Children. He says this. He talks about parents and grandparents
who drift a little from the prophet. He says, I speak carefully and lovingly
because he knows these are not people
who do not believe in God or want to fight against God.
But he said, please be aware
that the full price to be paid for such a stance
does not always come due in your lifetime.
No, sadly, some elements of this
can be a kind of profligate national debt
with payments coming out of your children's and your grandchildren's pockets in far more expensive
ways than you ever intended to be. He tells this story. He says, not long ago, Sister Holland and
I met a fine young man who came in contact with us
after he had been roaming around through the occults, sorting through a variety of Eastern
religions, all in an attempt to find religious faith. His father, he admitted, believed in
nothing whatsoever. But his grandfather, he said, was actually a member of the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. But he didn't do much with it, the young man said.
He was always pretty cynical about the church.
From a grandfather who is cynical, to a son who is agnostic,
to a grandson who is now looking desperately for what God had already once given his family.
Don't you just want to grab Zenith and say,
you're walking away from a place that your grandson is going to spend his entire life
trying to get back to, and you're willingly walking away from that.
You know, I try to be vulnerable on our show talking about my childhood. It was it was not ideal. And we suffered immensely. My siblings, my parents, extended family, we suffered immensely because of the decisions of past generations. that they had their reasons. But it takes a grand level of spiritual maturity to say,
how are my decisions here going to affect my children and my grandchildren? Because
you might be just fine, right? You might say, I'm going to take this journey over here.
Not thinking through who might have to pay the price for that.
I want to give a second witness to that story with another story.
Do you guys remember Elder Richard C. Edgley?
Yes.
Presiding Bishop at the time?
A talk in 2012 called The Rescue for Real Growth.
He said,
A few months ago, after meeting with new converts and less active members,
a reactivated gentleman about my age came up to me and said, I am one who has been less active
most of my life. I fell away from the church early in my life, but I am back now and at work
in the temple with my wife. To let him know that everything was okay, my response was something
like this, all is well that ends well. He responded, no, all is not well. I am back in
the church, but I have lost all of my children and my grandchildren. I am now witnessing the
loss of my great-grandchildren. All out of the church. All is not well. In our family, Elder
Edgley continued, we have an ancestor who joined the church in Europe.
In the early days of the church, one son became inactive.
Sister Edgley and I have attempted to track the inactive descendants of this ancestor.
It was easy for my wife and me to conclude that during the following six generations,
and with reasonable assumptions, there could be a loss of up to 3,000 family members.
Now project two more generations, the loss could theoretically approach 20,000 to 30,000 of our Heavenly Father's children.
That's one of those talks that I remember.
All is not well.
No.
Motivating to me to stay the course and to shout out to my dad who did not tell his parents he was getting baptized
because he thought his mother would be against it. Fortunately, my grandparents were, my grandmother
particular was baptized and my grandfather reactivated. So, wow, those decisions, Hank,
have an impact. Man, thanks for, like you said, being vulnerable and sharing that.
And I hadn't really applied that to Zenith before.
Zenith's a good guy.
You know, it would be easier almost if Zenith was an evil guy.
But the fact that he's such a good guy.
It's clear that we don't make decisions in a vacuum.
And there is an intergenerational element to the gospel.
When you think about Malachi chapter 4, ultimately when things will be set right is when the human family is sealed together.
Truly our decisions can affect generations.
And that includes the positive ones.
That includes the small acts of goodness and obedience and love, love of God and love of others. And those two will set a ripple effect
for something holy and sacred to happen in our families. There is a lot at stake in every
decision we make. Mike Wilcox, who we've had on the show many times, he talked about once growing
up on the ranch and he said the adult cows would
push against the fence. They just didn't like that fence. So they would push against the fence
and they could never make it out. They just push against the fence. But he said they'd lift up the
fence enough for the calves to get out. And he said he would find the calves devoured by predators.
And there was grass right there.
But they had what they needed right there.
But they would push against the fence.
It hits close to home for me.
Stephan, should we keep going?
Yeah.
Thanks for that, Hank.
That was powerful.
And thanks for being open and real with us there.
Zenith, because they're getting ready for battle,
he tells the old and the young men to prepare for battle.
And then the women and children, they are hid in the wilderness.
And then, interestingly enough,
Zeniff starts to tell us the Lamanite side of history.
Remember, as we go through this, this little theme we've been talking about,
that our story determines our possibilities. We'll start in verse 12. Believing in the tradition of their fathers,
which is this, believing that they were driven out of the land of Jerusalem because of the
iniquities of their fathers, and that they were wronged in the wilderness by their brethren,
and that they were also wronged while crossing the sea. And again, that they were wronged while in the land of their first inheritance,
after they had crossed the sea,
and all this because that Nephi was more faithful in keeping the commandments of the Lord.
Now, the story that this group of Lamanites is telling themselves
is much, much, much older than Nephi and Laman and Lemuel.
In fact, this kind of story, it goes all the way back to the Garden of Edom.
If you remember, Adam and Eve partake of the fruit.
The Lord approaches Adam, Genesis 3, verse 12.
He says this,
The woman whom thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat.
Then when Eve is asked about it, quote Genesis 3.13,
the serpent beguiled me and I did eat. Adam says, it was Eve's fault. And Eve says,
it was the snake's fault. It was the serpent's fault. Elder Lionel Kendrick, he said this
in general conference, it has been from the beginning and it will be till the end
that the natural man will have a tendency to rationalize and to blame his behaviors on others
or on certain circumstances. Spouse gets home from work and they say, why can't you keep the
house clean? And they forget how maybe they don't help out a lot. Or a young woman in college, she says to her roommates, hey, whenever people come over, you guys treat me different.
But she doesn't stop to think that maybe she's not the most warm or friendly person socially.
A student walking around maybe BYU campus and says, no one ever comes up and says hi to me.
And it is true, and we have to be really, really really clear about this that people can make decisions
that seek to inflict harm on other people but a very common and restricting story that humans
tell ourselves is that someone else is ultimately the reason for my sadness and difficulty in life
it is absolutely true that humans can hurt each other. But when we
take that too far and say, another person is the ultimate reason why I'm not happy,
that's when it starts to cross the line into blame and accusation. It says in verse 14,
that Nephi's brethren were wroth with him. Zeniff says, because they understood not the dealings of the Lord.
They hardened their hearts against the Lord. They claimed Nephi had taken the ruling of the people
out of their hands because Nephi took the records which were engraven on the plates of brass.
This is obviously a very different version of history than we read earlier in 1 Nephi. But
some of these people have taken up the story of their primary identity
has come from they have been wronged, that someone has wronged them. Again, it is true that people
can wrong others, but it's dangerous if we take that up as our primary sense of identity.
One of the things that I'm very interested in is self-deception and how humans have a tendency to blame and to rationalize.
I quoted a Terry Warner story the last time I was on this podcast, and I'd like to read another one and sort of unpack this phenomenon for a second.
I believe all of the stories in Brother Warner's book, Bonds That Make Us Free, are true stories.
Quote, Carol hated Saturdays because her husband yelled at the children when he supervised their
household chores. She said this ruined her hopes for a day of cooperative work and loving play.
When he would begin to yell, she would roll her eyes and say under her breath,
or sometimes a little louder than that, here we go again, or he's ruining everything just like every Saturday. As a victim of this domestic autocrat, she would often cry.
Then she came to a realization that astonished her.
In a flash of understanding,
she saw that the Saturday morning problems were not entirely her husband's fault.
I told myself I was trying with all my might to make sure we had a good time together,
but in reality, I was looking hard for evidence that he was making it impossible.
That's what surprised me so much.
What was most on my mind was, how can I be a good mother when the father acts like this?
Ironically, I could tell that my criticism not only hurt him,
but seemed to make him even more agitated and impatient. My criticism was contributing to the
problem. And then Brother Warner writes, Carol's story shows clearly how three aspects of the
self-betrayer's conduct always go together. And this is one of the most brilliant insights that Dr. Warner has
to offer. He says, these three things go together. One, accusing others. Two, excusing ourselves.
And three, displaying oneself as a victim. Because these happen in the same emotional move,
if I remember correctly, and we're going to get
technical for a second, but Dr. Warner calls this a unitary act of self-deception. I don't notice
it, it's happening. But at the same time I blame someone, I'm also excusing myself and displaying
myself as a victim. Now, we need to be really clear. If people are wronged, especially in serious ways, then it is perfectly the Christian thing to that is coming our way infect our own souls and our own spirits.
Otherwise, we get what Hank was talking about so beautifully a few minutes ago in verse 17.
And thus they had taught their children that they should hate them and that they should murder them and that they should rob and plunder them and do all that they could to destroy them.
Therefore, they had an eternal hatred towards the children of Nephi.
Hank, you modeled that for us beautifully about being honest and vulnerable
about maybe some of the complexities that have come into your own family life
without becoming bitter.
It doesn't mean we bottle up our emotions and hide how we really think and feel about situations
that is deeply unhealthy but it means we don't let the bitterness of another infect our own
happiness we refuse to let that happen yeah i'm grateful for that i don't think
my grandparents and great-grandparents are bad people and And I don't want to be a victim and say, well, I have no
possible way out of my situation because of them. But you're telling me it's okay to acknowledge,
wow, we got handed a difficult situation. Yeah. I want to read a quote from Elder Bednar
that is for me, incredibly liberating and deeply, deeply, profoundly true. It's a little hard on
the natural man and woman, but ultimately it is incredibly liberating. He says this,
it ultimately is impossible for another person to offend you or to offend me.
Indeed, believing that another person offended us is fundamentally false. To be offended is a choice we make.
It is not a condition inflicted or imposed upon us by someone or something else.
I mean, obviously we could be tempted, right?
We could be tempted to be offended and to be agitated and annoyed.
But Elder Bednar says, and he's teaching the truth here,
we have a choice
if we're going to lean into that or turn away from it. I'll quote our beloved prophet, President
Nelson, the Savior's message is clear. His true disciples build, lift, encourage, persuade,
and inspire no matter how difficult the situation. True disciples of Jesus Christ are peacemakers. The antidote for accusation and blame
is to be a peacemaker. And we have all of the resources we need to do this. Why? Because if
Jesus went to Gethsemane and go Gotha for us, if we are that loved, if we are that forgiven,
if Jesus really rose from the dead and we will also rise from the
dead, there is no human on this planet that can permanently hurt us. The faithful will prevail
in Christ. And because that's the heart of our story. We have the most beautiful possibilities in Jesus of Nazareth.
This mindset that they grew up with being taught by their parents.
We were wronged here.
We were wronged there.
We were wronged there.
And then in verse 17 that you read that you grimace when you hear this, they have taught
their children that they should hate them.
And I don't think hate comes naturally to children.
I think they should hate them. And I don't think hate comes naturally to children. I think
they were taught that. I put in my margin that this idea went for so long that way into the
middle of the war chapters, when Ammaron, the brother of Amalickiah, writes a letter to Moroni,
he says in Alma 54 verse 24, this war hath been waged to avenge their wrongs.
He's got the same list of wrongs in his mind that has persisted generationally.
We were wronged, we were wronged, we were wronged.
And it reminds me of Stephen Covey who said he found this quotation in a book in Hawaii.
I think I've mentioned it before that you'll love it.
It reminds me of
C. Terry Warner, but between stimulus and response, there is a space. And in that space
lies our freedom to choose our response. And in that space lies our growth and our happiness.
That's like what Elder Bednar is saying. You get to choose because we have that
space and animals and physics and action reaction, they don't have that, but we have a space to
choose our response. And I'm glad you brought up the Elder Bednar quote because he said that
beautifully. I'm sure both of you remember this story, but if not, let me tell it to you. And I
would love for you, Stefan, to analyze this with all the wonderful research you've done and all that you've read. This is a story from John
Groberg, Elder Groberg. What did they call him, John?
Kolipoki.
Yeah, Kolipoki. He was in Hawaii when he met a man who told him this story. He met a husband and
wife and they were willing to accept a calling, he says,
and I was very grateful.
And he said,
the husband told me of an experience he had
when he was 12 years old
that stayed with him throughout his life.
In the early 1900s,
his family joined the church in Hawaii.
They were faithful members,
and after two years,
he and his father received the priesthood.
The family prospered,
enjoyed the fellowship of their little branch,
and they anxiously look forward to being sealed as a family in the nearly completed Laie Temple. Then, as it happens, adversity crossed their path. One of the sisters became
ill with an unknown disease and was sent to the hospital. At this time, people in Hawaii were
wary of unknown diseases as disease had wrought great havoc in the islands. The concerned family
went to church on Sunday, hoping to receive strength and understanding from their fellow
branch members. The son and his father had responsibilities of blessing and passing the
sacrament that Sunday. They irreverently broke the bread while the congregation sang the sacrament
hymn. When the hymn was finished, the father started to kneel to offer the sacrament prayer. All of a sudden, the branch president realized who was at the sacred table and sprang
to his feet. Pointing his finger, he cried, stop. You cannot touch the sacrament. Your daughter is
ill and you may get the rest of us sick. Leave immediately. Someone else will fix new sacrament bread. We can't have you here. Go.
The stunned father slowly stood up. He looked at the branch president, then at the congregation.
Sensing the anxiety, tension, and embarrassment of all of it, he motioned to his family,
and they quietly filed out of the chapel. Not a word was said as they moved along the dusty trail to their
small home, their heads hung. The young son noticed his father's firmly clenched fists.
When they entered their home, they all sat on the floor in a circle and the father said,
we will be silent until I am ready to speak. All sorts of thoughts went through this young
boy's mind. He envisioned his father coming up with different ways of getting revenge.
Would they kill the branch president's pigs?
Burn his house down?
Quit going to church?
Join another church?
He could hardly wait to see what his father would decide.
Five minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes, not a sound.
He glanced at his father.
His eyes were still closed.
His mouth set.
His fingers clenched, but no sound.
20 minutes, 25, still nothing.
Then he noticed a slight relaxing of his father's hands, a small tremor on his father's lips, then a barely perceptible sob.
He looked at his father and saw tears trickling down his cheeks.
Soon his mother was crying also,
then one child, then another,
and soon the whole family.
Finally, the father opened his eyes,
cleared his throat, and announced,
I am now ready to speak.
Please listen carefully.
He turned to his wife and with deep feeling said,
I love you.
Then he turned to each child and said,
I love you.
I love all of you. This is not the branch
president's church. It is the church of Jesus Christ. We will not let any man or any amount
of hurt or embarrassment or pride keep us from staying actively involved in God's kingdom on
earth. Next Sunday, we will go back to church.
We will stay by ourselves until the illness is known. We will let other people look at us,
however they will, and say whatever they want about us, but we will go back.
Stephan, does that fit what you've been talking about here in chapter 10? It was when he thought of Jesus and it being his church that softened his heart. And what an
example of true fatherhood. What an example of saying that's real strength. Our culture tells
us that strength means he would have exploded and gotten mad and spoke up. But the real strength is I will do the simple, loving thing.
It doesn't mean we can't tell the truth about a situation.
It doesn't mean we can't express how we feel.
But we're still going to do the right thing, whatever that is.
I think the balance here is to be honest about other people's decisions.
And people can do wrong.
And they can do wrong towards us.
Absolutely. And people can do wrong and they can do wrong towards us. Absolutely. And people can
wrong us, but that can't be as an excuse to wrong others. Even if we have to be tough with people,
we do it in a way that shows respect to their humanity and shows love, even if we have to set
boundaries. Yeah. And Zenith, he finishes here in chapter 10, I, Zenith, having told all these things to my people concerning the Lamanites, we battled with our might, we put our trust in the Lord, they returned to their own land and start to tend their flocks. Zenith has had a tough life since leaving Zerahemla. But I love what you brought up, Stephan. Grant Hardy said, why is this story in here?
Because through this story and through what happens in the land of Nephi comes Abinadi,
comes Alma, and you can start at Alma and watch the plates, the records get passed down all the
way to Moroni, starting at Alma. Abinadi changes the world and Alma that listened to him, Alma
the elder. That was interesting to me.
Why is this story in here? Why did Mormons
say we got to tell this story? Because this
is where the plates start
getting handed down.
Let me ask you both before
I let you go, Stephan.
Zenith's decision to leave Zarahemla,
go down to the land of Nephi,
causes a lot of problems.
But as John is saying, some good comes out of it.
One of the most beautiful stories, and if our stories determine our possibilities, this is an example of what you're teaching there, Hank, is with the last 116 pages.
That God can take the mistakes of others and even ourselves, but if we repent, he can redeem those. In the words of Isaiah,
we can get beauty for ashes, but we have to allow him to do that through our faithfulness
and our repentance. And that's when he can take difficult situations and redeem them and make
them better for us and actually teach us powerful, powerful lessons.
I love that. Anyone who is listening, who's in a tough spot, tough place,
tough situation, even with consequences of their own choices, with regrets, whatever,
look what God can do. God can turn that. And he is so good at it. And so much of what we read in
these stories is evidence of he'll take anybody where they're at and he'll make it better.
Yeah. And I'm seeing what Stefan taught us here, John, is that if you don't open your heart to
that, you can allow anger and resentment to poison you. And that poison goes to maybe the
next generation. And the next hundreds of centuries,
if they're still talking about in the war chapters,
hey, we were wronged back in 600 BC.
And imagine if verse 17 had said,
thus they were taught to love, to forgive,
to choose the right, even when they've been wronged,
to go forward, even when injustices happened to them. I mean, imagine how different that verse could have been.
It's interesting in verse 17, Stephan,
therefore they had an eternal hatred.
Yeah, what a phrase.
Yeah, that's a powerful phrase.
Stephan, as we walk away from Mosiah 7 through 10,
let's say I'm on my commute and I've been really impressed and
touched by what you've said. What's my action item? Give me a therefore, what should I do?
I'm going to hole into my driveway. I walk into my house. What do I do?
Hank, can I answer that indirectly?
Please do.
I'm going to tell a story and I want you to hear it for the first time. And Joseph dreamed a dream and he told it his brethren and they hated him yet the more.
Now, if someone was talking to Joseph's brothers, they might say, hey, I know Joseph is difficult.
Forgive him. Forgive him. Be patient with Joseph. Forgive him. But what Mosiah 10 is sort of indirectly teaching us is that's not the problem.
Eventually, they throw Joseph into a pit.
Genesis 39 verse 28.
Then they're passed by Midianites, merchant men, and they drew and lifted up Joseph out
of the pit and sold Joseph to the Ishmaelites for 20 pieces of silver.
And they brought Joseph into Egypt. They thought Joseph was such a problem.
They felt completely justified in doing this horrible act to him because they thought Joseph
was the issue. Later in life, in Egypt, the tables are turned. Joseph is now successful and in power.
Joseph's brothers show up.
They need food.
Joseph knows it's them.
He knows it's them, and they don't know it's him.
And at one point they say this, Genesis 42, 21.
They said one to another,
We are verily guilty concerning our brethren,
in that we saw the anguish of his soul when he besought us,
and we would not hear.
Therefore is this distress come upon us.
They refused to see Joseph's humanity.
They didn't see that his thoughts, his feelings, his wishes mattered as
much as their own. All those years, people might've been like, oh, just forgive Joseph,
forgive Joseph, be patient with him. That's what they could have said to Joseph's brothers.
But to draw on a principle from Terry Warner in order to be set free of their anguish, they didn't need to forgive.
They needed to repent. And when I say repent, I mean they need to repent for their harsh and
unkind feelings towards their brother for all those years, for seeing him less than human.
So there are two stories that we are taught about our interactions with others.
One is true and one is false.
The first one I'm going to tell you is false.
The story goes like this. My resentment, my bitterness, and anger are someone else's fault.
The other story, the true story, is I am free to love all people, including my enemies.
Our story determines our possibilities.
Stefan, thank you.
Thank you for that.
That answered that question perfectly.
What a great day.
Dr. Tager, thanks for spending your time with us.
Thanks for having me.
I appreciate it.
Yeah, we loved it.
John, I've got all sorts of new notes. Me me. I appreciate it. Yeah, we loved it. John,
I've got all sorts of new notes. Me too. What a blessing. Thank you. We want to thank Dr. Stefan
Tager for being with us today. We want to thank our executive producer, Shannon Sorenson,
our sponsors, David and Verla Sorenson, and we always, every episode, we remember our founder,
Steve Sorenson.
We hope you'll join us next week.
We're going to cover more chapters in the book of Mosiah on Follow Him.
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