With The Perrys - Best of WTP: Mormonism, Homosexuality, Parenting Tips & More
Episode Date: January 13, 2025While the podcast is on a break until summer, we're revisiting some of the Perrys’ most popular episodes. In this episode from February 2023, Jackie and Preston sit down and answer questions sent i...n from their former Patreon community. Subscribe to the Perrys' newsletter: https://withtheperrys.myflodesk.com/zhfus4jx1s Join Preston's discipleship community for men: https://www.patreon.com/PrestonPerry/membership To support the work of the Perrys, donate via PayPal: https://paypal.me/withtheperrys Shop BOLD Apparel: boldapparel.shop Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, St. Names, how are you?
What's good with y'all?
What was that?
You buried white now?
That's how I always signed.
No, it had a different octave.
How I be sounding, what's good with y'all?
No, it was good with y'all.
Why are you, like, monitoring my voice, man?
Okay.
So I want to try something this time.
It's going to be random.
I want to try something.
What?
So I want you to tell me that I'm pretty.
No, let's try it.
This is funny.
Let's try it.
Go ahead.
You're so fine.
Oh my God!
I'm so grateful that you like my face.
Thank you so much.
You got to get...
I don't know what I would do if you didn't tell me I was pretty, so let me, like,
grovel in it.
You got to get a people context of why you don't...
Because I was reading the YouTube comments, and people really feel away that I don't say thank you when you talk about my face.
Yeah, so here's the thing.
And I'm like...
Like, what is this?
Like, why are we policing my things?
Yeah, so here's the thing.
Like, I always, you know, sometimes I always,
but sometimes I opened up with a podcast calling Jackie Pretty or cute
and just flirting with her.
He's actually playing with me and mocking me and being sarcastic.
Well, I'm not mocking you.
I'm actually very serious.
But the thing that I think that people don't understand,
because they don't have like full context of our relationship.
Right.
Like if you were the type of person that said,
oh my gosh, thank you.
I probably wouldn't even do it.
I wouldn't tell you you're pretty as much.
much because that's what drew me to you.
I like the chase.
Yeah.
I like the challenge.
And so if I wanted to marry a woman that said, thank you every single time I would have.
But I, you know what I'm saying?
And so for people who be in their feelings, but like, Jackie, just say thank you.
It's just like, no, that's not who I married.
It was legit arguing me.
Because I'm like, first of all, why are y'all?
I was like, why did not get mad at him for changing the subject?
Because I will ask him what his day is doing.
I would ask him if he's excited about the.
moment and he's deflecting and talk about my face. So why is there no energy on Jackie has like
like a method to the madness and he over here being silly? I think people would be like,
I think people interpreted as, you know, Preston's really being sweet and she just ignore him.
But thank you so much for liking my face. I'm so grateful to have married a man like you.
Thank you, Preston. Why you? I don't know what I would do.
without you saying thank you why you sound like uh that's what they want me to do bill cosby
the shuttle pudding that's what they want me to do thank you preston like my face hey you should be
sounded like bill because he canceled anyway he definitely is in my book uh we are here today to talk about
well to answer questions from the patreon saints we have a patreon
where people, you know, they get exclusive access to the podcast.
They see videos before YouTube does.
They get discounts for glory events and merge that everybody else don't get.
They see random videos sometimes.
Even when my book came out or holier than now, I showed them the cover before I ever promoted it.
And so they just, you know, they just get access to stuff everybody.
They special.
Y'all special.
So for the last episode of this season, we're answering questions that our Patreon
Saints have sent us. And they sent us some good ones. Shout out to y'all. And so to start off first,
let me say her name right. Let me say her name. Lettisha Lee said what happened with the Mormon
on the plane and what did he think about the chosen series. So for everybody listening,
don't nobody even know what that's about. She's obviously picking up on something that happened
on the plane with the Mormon regarding the chosen series that people need context for. Yeah. So to give you
context a couple of days ago I was coming back in the country from Cuba and um I got on the
plane and the guy said next to me and I felt like I told came home told Jackie I said I felt like
when I sat down I was supposed to talk to this guy I was like but I just came through customs I'm
tired I really don't feel like talking to this dude but I'm like okay I'm a I'm just
kind of like well I said I was going to pray about it be honest with you I was only let me just
pray about it I did I just put my head down us about the
asleep. And so
a couple of minutes later, he pulled out his phone
and on his phone, it was the Chosen series,
the Christian series, you know, about Jesus
and, you know, the New Testament,
which we watch. And so I was like, okay, Lord, maybe you want me to talk to him
because he's a believer. So I sparked up a conversation. I said, oh, you're looking at the
Chosen. He was in the middle seat? And I was in the outseat. He was in the
out of seat. He was in the middle seat. And he was like, yeah, I love
that series. And he kind of seemed, look.
surprised probably because I look like a little hood dude yeah you don't look like you watch chosen yeah I look like
I watch um 50 cent world star hip hop 50 cents um show what's called power yeah and so yeah we started talking
about the characters or whatever and then you know uh talking about Matthew nick and demons and all the
characters on chosen so then I go you know uh are you a Christian and he paused and says yeah
and I was like that was weird like why did he pause like that and then I go like
Like, what church do you go to?
You know, and he goes, I'm a Mormon.
Okay.
And I like kind of put my head down.
I was like, you funny God.
You know, for context, I have, you know, developed a really big heart for Mormons
and just people who are in, you know, different religions,
trying to reach them throughout the years.
And so we sparked up a conversation, you know, about Mormonism,
about the LDS church and stuff like that.
And so without giving the full story, because we had like a really long conversation on this flight.
This flight was a couple of hours.
You know, we talked about some of the, you know, the main things.
And one of the things that we talked about was Joseph Smith and him being a true prophet.
We talked about, you know, the celestial marriages, how they believe, Mormons believe that we'll be married forever in heaven.
Okay.
So let's deal with Joseph Smith, right?
Who is Joseph Smith?
what does he have to do with Mormonism?
Why is he considered a prophet and how do we respond to that biblically?
Yeah, so what the LDS Church believed that Mormon, that Joseph Smith in the 1800s
was a prophet that God raised up to essentially give a New Testament of the Gospels.
In the 1800s, they believed that this teenager kid, an angel visited him or whatever,
and you know God used him to to essentially write this book of Mormon that was like you know over a course of a couple hours in one night that you know an angel you know typically wrote it and why did they need the book of Mormon and not just the scriptures because they believe well well what the guy told me of the plane and other Mormons have told me they believe that um that when the apostles left there was a gap there was a there was a void missing
And so God, Jesus typically used the apostles and the prophets, you know.
And so when the last apostles left that there was no official prophet on the earth to communicate God's truth.
And so, you know, they believe that, you know, hundreds of years later in the 19th century,
God raised up this prophet, which was a guy named Joseph Smith to essentially like fulfill, yeah, to fulfill the Word of God.
you that, you know, Joseph Smith helped restore because a lot of things were lost.
But also, he just didn't necessarily restore.
He wrote another testament, a new testament of the scriptures.
The new, new, new testament.
They don't necessarily believe that the canon was closed, and they believe that, you know,
they would teach things like the Christian church has fallen away, and Joseph Smith came
to restore.
And so they consider him basically not an apostle, but a prophet who,
through this angelic visitor has new revelation that has the same authority as the scriptures
of the apostles the same authority as the apostles yes okay yes to write scripture because they
had the authority to you know write scripture so in your conversation with the guy on the plane
when y'all got around the subject of joseph smith being a prophet like what what what was old
boy's position on like why he's considered a prophet yeah it was the same
It was the same conversation that I had with Mormons in the past, and that is.
So one of the things I like to do is I like to ask them just straight on questions with gentleness and respect.
So the conversation was respectful.
I think from early on he understood that I was a, you know, a Christian.
And so I asked them, I said, you know, why do you believe in your heart that Joseph Smith is a prophet, you know?
and he started to, one, he started to just hit me with all of these facts about how an angel
visited him and it's impossible for somebody to write this book that was clearly, you know,
you know, a divine book.
Like, nobody can do this in one night.
And so they point to, like, gifts and, you know, and things, which there's really no proof
that he wrote it in one night because nobody was around to confirm it.
But even if it did, I believe that, you know, other spirits were being.
can help you do stuff.
Yay.
But I didn't say that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Demas be writing too.
That's offensive, right?
They got pencils too.
What you mean?
I didn't, I didn't say that.
Like that demon that wrote anagram.
Okay.
Stop it.
Oh.
See, we're getting off topic.
Oh, sorry, go ahead.
Okay, so.
That's for next season.
So one of the things that I said was, you know, how do you believe that he's a prophet?
So he went in and told me all of these things.
And I said, well, no, you're telling me these facts that I don't necessarily have proof of.
Nor do you, because you wasn't there back then.
You believe it, right?
And I'm not, you know, trying to breach over your head because if you believe, why do you personally believe in your heart that Joseph Smith is a true prophet?
Because I just help me understand.
And I always say help me understand that because it doesn't seem as confrontational.
It gives them the room to, like, almost kind of like to be a.
teacher for me. And one of the things that he said was, you know, he's just pointed to faith. And he was
like, you know, faith is not about what we can see, you know, and faith isn't necessarily having all
the evidence. It's about believing something that we can't see. And I said, well, no, the Bible
says that the faith is the substance of things hold for and the evidence of things not seeing that
that faith comes by hearing, right? And so there's a response, right? And so he was like, okay, but yeah.
And it's a response to an objective truth. Right.
So it isn't faith for faith's sake.
Like I just believe for the sake of believing, but rather I believe in something that is legitimate, authentic, sincere, and provable.
Provable, yeah, absolutely.
To a certain degree.
And so one of the things that he said was, you know, I prayed a prayer, which is kind of what I wanted him to get to eventually.
Because in the Mormon faith, or the LDS faith, a lot of them like to say LDS.
And the LDS faith, you know, LDS faith, they like to say that.
that when you come over age, you have to pray a prayer,
and God has to reveal to you that Joseph Smith is a true prophet.
And so that's essentially what he ended up saying to me.
And so I said, well, let me ask you a question.
I said, if I came to you and said that God said that I can live out,
you know, live in a house with a woman that I'm not married and we can have sex
with each other occasionally, what would you say?
Right.
And he said that, well, I will tell you that, you know, I wouldn't judge you.
He said, I wouldn't judge you, you know, but I would tell you.
you that I believe that the Bible says that it's saying but I wouldn't I wouldn't personally judge you and I said well man like well the Bible does tell us to judge right because it tells us that we can know a tree by the good fruit that it produced right and so the Bible does tell us we have some level of judgment right it doesn't say we can sit on the throne as a judge right that we have the final authority but it does tell us to judge one another through the lens of scripture and so so so he was like well yeah I will tell you that the word of God says this and I said this would all do respect
or I said when I've talked to, you know, Mormons in the past, you guys all said that, you know, that you prayed a prayer.
I said, but when I ask you questions like this, you immediately use the word of God to judge my claim.
I said, but I said, but the thing is, the Mormon faith doesn't teach you to judge Joseph Smith's prophecies or being a prophet with the same measure, right?
The Bible never tells us to measure a prophet in their way.
Teach the text.
In Neuronomy, it tells us that we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we, we,
we know that for prophet prophesize something and that prophecy does not come to pass that he is a
false prophet and not to fear him.
Yeah.
Right.
And you hit that word in your heart.
Yeah.
And so, and so like I was like, my question to you is why don't you guys measure Joseph Smith's,
Joseph Smith being a prophet with the word of God?
Why is it this prayer?
And he was like, well, that's a good question.
He was like, and I respected him for saying that.
You know, he didn't try to like formulate, you know.
answer for me and he was like no that's a good question and then we got you know uh he was like that's
something that i'll think think about and so when somebody typically said says that i don't i try not to
you know beat them over the head i just kind of like let them rest i like to allow people to rest
with with a question that they can't that they can't answer you know because i i believe that god
doesn't work after that you know yeah um and so then we started talking about faith you know um how we're
saved and they believe that a lot of their works which other religions are typically work
work-based religions.
They believe, you know, I've said, you know, on my YouTube channel that most religions
have found something to work for to please God.
Christianity is the only one that says the God who finished the work found me.
And I think that's so true because, you know, when you talk to other religions, because
they don't understand the person of Christ and who Christ is and the deep.
deity of God, they typically misunderstand grace.
And because they misunderstand grace, they always typically work to try to be right in the
eyes of God because they don't understand that grace factor.
And so in the Book of Mormon, in the Book of Mormon, there's a book in the Book of Mormon
called Nephi.
And Joseph Smith in the LDS Church, they use a lot of scriptures from the Holy Bible.
Who are these people?
Like, who is Nephi?
Who is that person?
Uh, he's a, somebody he met.
That's an angel.
Yeah.
See, we'll see, we'll see.
See, we, the, the whole angelic worship thing is.
Because they believe that Joseph Smith technically didn't write the Bible.
They believe that an angel wrote, angel, or angel wrote the Bible.
An angel visited Joseph Smith and the angel is the one who wrote the book of Mormon.
It probably was an angel, just not the kind of angel they think.
A fallen one.
Hello.
Named Mepha.
Yeah.
And so in Ephesians, it says that we are saved by grace through faith, that it is a gift
so that none of us can boast.
Not of our works, so none of us can both.
In the book of Nephi, it says that we're saved by grace through faith after all we can do.
And so essentially, to believe that after we've done all we can, that's when God, grace
comes in and saves the day.
I said Donnie Mowherk, Clark.
And so I was just like, man,
The Bible really doesn't teach that, you know.
It tells us that we're saved by grace.
And he was like, well, don't you think that God want us to work?
And so we start talking about works and faith as it pertains to our works.
And I was telling him, I was like, the Bible tells us that our works, you know, are filthy rags.
And one of the things he said was, well, it doesn't say that God, that's because our works is filthy rags.
It doesn't mean, you know, he doesn't accept them or he doesn't want them.
And I said, well, no, God wants our works.
but he wants our works to be a response
of the free gift of faith that we've been given.
It is not proof.
Our works are not proof
that we are right in the eyes of God.
It's proof that we have been justified
in the eyes of God, right?
Our works is not what saves us.
Jesus Christ finished work on the cross
is what saves us.
And he was like, I don't believe that.
And I was like, well, in the Greek,
the word filthy rags is literally translated
into scubaon.
And that means boo-boo rags.
It literally means,
what they used to wipe their butts with.
It's like that's what God thinks of our works as it pertains to our righteousness.
A booby-rub-rack.
Booboo-Rag.
And I think that's what people, like, it's not that God doesn't even want, it's like,
no, your works are disgusting to me as it pertains to your salvation.
I only want the finished works of my son.
And when you receive the free gift of salvation through Jesus Christ, your works is that
outpour of the grace that you have been given and I accept that works. Those works are good because
it's through Jesus Christ. All works on our own. And I was like, and so the fact that you guys say that
we are saved by grace through faith after we are all we can do is your works first. And then when your
works kind of like fall short, you know, God comes and saves a day. But I was just like, that's just
not how God tells us how to obtain salvation. So how did it end? That kind of ended with he. He just
kind of ended by saying I've never heard people you know use these comparisons of scriptures I'm
I'm a look into that I was just like well you know I respect that I respect that you know
and then one of the things that we kind of stayed on the longest was just the fact that he you know
just believed that the the Mormon church is the true church yeah you know we kind of ended there
and he just think the Mormon church is the true church and and we just started talking about
Jesus and why he came and if Jesus came to to finish the work that we couldn't finish
why did Joseph Smith have to come and establish this yeah and we just kind of ended there and
afterwards you know I wanted to ask him can I pray for him but I was just like no he probably
think the devil sent me and so we just kind of like left it like that and I thank God because
the rest of the ride he was just looking up you know like staring intently thinking and I just
start praying and I start asking the Lord to just do a work with our conversation.
Yeah, I was telling Preston when he came back and told me this story.
To me, what came to mind was, you know, God uses the foolish things of the world to confound
the wise because it's not simply the message that you gave.
Like the gospel message is foolish to those who are perishing, right?
So that has a has a foolishness to it.
But it's also the package.
which the message came in.
It came in the package of a young,
uh,
urban black man who would not be perceived as holding this kind of treasure.
And so to me,
it speaks to the,
the,
the lengths and the way God
shows up in people's lives
in really unexpected ways.
You are a very unexpected package,
but you actually have studied and done the work
that met,
that man where he needed to be or met him with it yeah i don't know if i should i should be encouraged
or uh or discouraged i'm just courage i'm just playing even when you think of jesus god in flesh yeah
born in a manger yeah to a young girl can anyone was not of like royal stat like and also what he
came from i mean everything galilee was considered technically you know like not the prestigious neighborhood
It was considered the, you know, the hood.
Can anything good come from there?
You mean Nazareth?
Nazareth, that's what I meant to say.
Nazareth or Nazareth?
Nazareth.
Oh, okay.
The next.
You'd be trying to, you be trying to play me.
I said Nazareth.
You just said it's so strong.
Just now.
Do it again.
Nazareth.
Read the next question.
Pamela Yu said, how would you handle a conversation with a believing friend who knows that homosexuality is a sin,
but still believes that we are being unfair to the LBGTQ Plus community by
telling them they cannot be who that who they identify as this question is not for me i'd be telling
jackie she's um an apologist just in the field of sexuality she's like no you're the apologists i'm
i don't disagree that i'm not i just i think i'm a cultural apologist yeah yeah well all
apologists locate hopefully um get your feet up my table no so this is the thing how would you handle
a conversation with a believing friend who knows that homosexuality is a sin but still believes that we are
unfair to the gay community.
Because even LBGTQ plus, though that acronym represents a lot of different groups.
And so I'll just handle the lesbian, the L and the G and the B.
The community by telling them they cannot be who they identify as.
I think the first problem is the end of the question, right?
So I think we are reading the Bible wrong or not reading it at all.
if we attribute certain sinful behaviors to our identity in the sense of the Bible does not
describe homosexual behavior as intrinsic to a person's ontology, their being.
That's actually a really new understanding of personhood that's like risen in the last 100, 200 years.
Like before like the 1800s for the most part, homosexuality was all.
always considered a behavior, a vice.
Like, even the terms heterosexual and homosexual did not exist.
People did not think of themselves through the lens of their desires.
That's a very new understanding.
And so even when we get into certain texts that use the term homosexual in the New
Testament, those I think are actually kind of misreadings of the Greek, because the Greek
is usually almost always referring to homosexual behavior.
not homosexual people.
And so when you get to 1st Corinthians 6, 9 through 10 or 11, where it says like, don't
be deceived, neither those who practice homosexuality will inherit the kingdom of God.
He's talking about a practice, not a person, right?
And so that might be some of why or one reason why I think homosexuality or the teaching
against it has landed wrong for decades.
It's because people have assumed that because I deal with a certain sexual desire or have a certain experience within myself in terms of sexuality, that thus means that the experience itself means that I warrant hell.
Let me explain.
Like to just be tempted with the same sex means I'm going to hell.
It's like, no, to be tempted actually signals that you are born after Adam and therefore you need a savior.
Right?
Teach us.
And so the emphasis in all of our understandings of people within any community is that first and foremost, we are made in the image of God.
That is our preeminent and predominant identity marker that we were made from and for God.
Now, in light of that identity is where we're supposed to understand ourselves.
That's good.
Right.
So if I'm made from and for God, it means that as certain desires pop up, I need to ask the question.
question of does this honor God? Did this come from God? Does this serve God? Does this glorify God?
If not, then who do I go to to handle it? Let me go to God. Who's the great high priest? Who's the
savior? Who's the Lord and King? And so how do you talk to your friend about it? You have a conversation
about what the Bible says about identity and how we respond to parts of us that are not in alignment with
the way we were created. Yeah, because understanding the identity and having a firm foundation of how
how God created us sets the tone for everything.
Yeah, that's huge.
Yeah, but also too, correct me if I'm wrong
because I don't be knowing a lot about stuff, you know what I'm saying,
but homosexuality not being originally in, you know, in the scriptures
and being added, I believe, you know, years and years later after the scriptures
was written, that word, that's typically used by people who are,
kind of gay affirming that you know the the argument that because the term is not in the original
language that that somehow means that the the behavior itself isn't actually condemned yes that's what
you mean right right so so even if because one of the terms is arsonacoitis which is basically
this this Greek term that means men in bed with men so it's not describing it's not a noun it's not
describing a person.
It's describing a behavior.
A act. And just because
it's not describing a person
and actually describing a behavior
doesn't mean that the justice
or that God
hates it any less than what the
scripture describes it as. Does it make sense?
Yeah. Yeah. Like just because
they interpreted it or translated
it in a particular way doesn't
distract from the whole
message of the scriptures and
how it speaks against
same-sex sex sex.
Yeah, because it actually supports your argument,
which I think is a true argument,
that God is,
he has beef with the act.
The act is what,
you know, the act.
Yeah, the practice, the activity,
the submission to us operating outside
of the way he created us, not necessarily saying,
you know, I'm under this banner
or this term of homosexual, the act.
Now, I'll speak to the first part,
of the question like when it comes to friends that might be affirming in one sense like one
I think you got to pray for wisdom and love two I what I what I found is that people who
are affirming can fall into two categories they might be those who are really
empathetic and really justice oriented
And so they tend to lean towards taking positions that lift up and honor the dignity of other persons.
And so I can understand then why they will be more inclined to interpret texts in a particular way that leaves room for a person to be honored and dignified and have the freedom of expression that they think is true to them.
The problem is when we are, when we presume that our compassion and our empathy is actually more than God's empathy and God's compassion.
He is the most compassionate one.
He is the most empathetic one to the point that he became flesh and dwelt among men and was killed by them.
And so this God by his spirit has given us a text that is authoritative, that is true, that is convicting, but he's also given us a Savior to help us to obey it.
That's really good.
And so, like, we can never posture ourselves as, yeah, like, yeah.
So that's one category.
I think there's another category of people who, truth be told, are just people pleasers.
Like, to be honest.
So they interpret a passage and land in particular directions on controversial,
subjects that alleviate any tension with anybody.
You know what I'm saying?
They don't want to be caught between two worlds.
So I'm going to take the position that means that there ain't nobody going to hate me.
Which is a very dangerous position to be in because if you're a people pleaser,
you run the risk of living a life that allows people to shape how you think about the Bible,
not the Bible itself.
Yeah.
And so your interactions with people will inform how you see a text, which is scary.
Yeah.
Because in both categories, the person who is superficially empathetic to a certain degree
and the person who is interpreting in light of being a people pleaser,
both of them have people as their focus.
And that's a part of the problem.
That's good.
That like whatever you do, you do to the glory of God.
He has to be the central focus.
And so if he is a central focus, it means that I can love you
and still have a biblical conviction about sexuality.
Like I don't have to land in your, I don't have to be tolerant in the way that you define it
to actually be loving.
So that's one, but also having a God focus means that my preeminent desire is to please you.
I mean, please God.
And by pleasing God, I will love you even if I don't necessarily please you or make you happy.
So that's that.
Yeah, that's good.
What's the next question?
Okay.
This is light.
We needed a light one.
Both of them were like, boom, boom.
Chris Lacey said, if you could put four of your favorite movies,
movies on Mount Rushmore, what would they be and why?
That's, man, that's a really good question.
I think for me, Five Heartbeats has to be one of my favorite all time.
Ministers Society, because, you know, I'm a hood baby.
And even though it's a lot of violence, hood violence, I think the message at the end is really, really good.
I think we can get a lot out of it.
I think I would have to throw loving basketball in there.
That's just, it's just, it's just a good romantic, you know what I'm saying, but like good, it's, it's, the story is told so well.
It's toxic, though.
It is toxic.
My fourth one is, dang, probably the color purple.
I love the color purple.
That movie was so dope to be.
It was so long.
And I got to think about my fifth one.
What's your father?
It was only four.
I already know.
It was only four.
Holland opus
So Serafina
A South African classic
A Beautiful Mind
With Russell Crow
Because that that movie is so
Interesting
You know like you have this guy
Who's like a
Scientific genius
Who starts to see things
And by the end of the movie
You realize that
The conversations and the partnerships
And the friendships and the relationships
That these scenes
have kind of been focusing on are actually in his imagination like he's he's seeing things you know
I'm saying and it always reminded me of the story of Nebuchadnezzar how he was this high and lifted up
king but because he took pride in his position the Lord took his mind and I just I think to see a
scientist be humbled in losing his mind is really ironic so yeah I have to share that
Mr. Holland's opus,
like my fave.
Yeah.
And then Salina.
Okay.
Those are definitely my mount,
my Mount Rushway.
Salinas!
That's my jam.
Okay.
This is definitely for you because Erica Porter said,
what relationship tips do you have for extroverts
wanting to be more mindful of their interactions and expectations of the introverts in their lives?
One, I really like how.
she organized that sentence.
That was written really well.
Good job, Erica.
Yeah, the first thing I would say
is just chill out.
Okay, that works.
Chill out, man.
What does that mean?
I don't know.
I think that they're different level of extroverts.
Okay.
I think you talked about me being like
an extrovert but not an extra extrovert.
Yeah, I've explained you to people.
I said Preston is...
You're going to say so crazy.
Preston is a traumatized extrovert.
So you don't have an issue with talking to strangers.
Obviously, you had a whole conversation with a Mormon in the middle seat.
Yeah.
Like you don't have it.
Like you don't get drained by human interaction like I do, right?
But you are super hypervigilant and super cautious so that in certain environments people
might assume you're an introvert because you're watching your environment and not
actually.
Yeah.
That's just kind of grow up from how I grew up.
Right.
Like, because there's some extroverts that are extra, meaning they don't got social cues.
They just be talking and yapping and then they get offended because you're not talking
and as excited as they are.
Like those extroverts give me an intensity of anxiety that I can't even explain.
And then, and then, you know, as I got older and became a Christian, you know, my caution,
it was joined with, like, discernment as well.
Let's explain that.
And so like I just be discerning, you know, rooms and environments in some people.
I'm like, I'm actually extrovert.
I just, I don't trust you.
You know what I'm saying?
So as an extrovert in relationship with a introvert, how have you managed that, right?
Yeah.
So I think, I think one, it's, I think it's a level of maturity that that I had to go through.
and I think all extroverts have to go through to understand the way we are wired,
it seems normal.
Like, I think that's for everybody.
I think for some introverse, it's like, why do you want to talk all day?
Like, that don't seem normal, right?
And so I think for sometimes, I think sometimes for extroverts, it can be like,
well, if we're not beefing, you know, if we like each other, like, why don't you want to
talk to me right now?
But understanding that some people are not just wired like that, I think you have to walk
in a certain level of understanding and empathy
to somebody who's wired different than you.
Because I think what we have to understand is
I think a lot of extroverts will be closer with introverts
if the introvert felt like they had the room
to be who they are.
Right?
And so I think, you know,
understanding for the extrovert to understand
that, no, I actually would have greater relationships
with introverts if I gave them the space
to live and to breathe.
You know what I'm saying?
So for you, even when we were friends, you know, for three years, I knew that
you were introverted.
Like, we were around each other enough to know Jackie kind of is tapped out.
And we became really good friends because I didn't mind being in the space with you not
talking.
Yeah.
But we still like being around one another.
But I didn't have to speak to you.
Yeah.
You know?
And so I think, and that's another thing.
I think some people are.
are really uncomfortable with silence.
They are.
It's just like, no, like you can.
And what is that?
Yeah.
Because I think, I think for people who like to talk and for people who, people who like to have
conversation, I think that's how they, that's how they bond.
That's how they.
But some of it seems like an insecurity where you attribute to the silence to maybe what this
person thinks about you.
in them not wanting to talk to you.
Because I think...
When it really ain't even a...
It might be about you, actually.
But it might not be.
I think it could be a couple of things,
but I think one of the main things is
the insecurity can form when that's how they are.
Like if...
If I'm a safe...
Safe instance, I'm an expert, which in some way I am, right?
If I don't like a person,
I'm probably not going to talk to them.
Right.
But if I like you, I'm going to talk to you as much as I can.
And so I think they might be projecting how they interact and how they feel onto an introvert.
And an introvert doesn't have to, it's not that they don't like you.
They probably don't like you now because you talk too much.
But they, you know what I'm saying?
Too stressful.
But like, so I think it can be a lot of projecting, you know, how they feel or whatever.
And so I think just being being okay with silence, understanding that everybody is not wired like you.
And also just pray for discernment and pray for God to just give you wisdom and insight.
It doesn't necessarily mean you have to tone down your personality or whatever.
Don't be afraid to act an introvert.
Am I talking too much?
You know, be mindful.
Don't love the sound of your own voice more than you pay attention to a person's,
body language. You know what I'm saying?
Be aware. And I think that
I think that when we, the more we are
aware of the world around us and
stop being so consumed with the things
that's coming out of our mouth. And sometimes it's a
legit curiosity of
the other person, but just know
that like you be making people out here.
And truth be told,
even the subject or idea of
introversion and extroversion is
a theory, right? And so
really I think the greater task
is how does love
show up in my personality, right?
And so if my burden is however I'm made,
if I'm more prone to being quiet
or if I'm more prone to talking,
how do I love through that, right?
And so for me, you know,
I'm not the most talkative person around certain people,
but around other people I am, right?
And so in spaces where I don't feel as inclined to speak,
the way I show up in love through my personality is
if someone speaks to me, I speak back.
I engage. I try to be cordial.
Or I lean into the introverted part of me, which is to observe.
And I'm able to pick up on a lot of things because I'm not so addicted to talking.
But in me picking up, one of the downsides of that could be you become judgmental, right?
You become so observant.
You pick up so many cues that you could pick apart people's personalities without having a conversation.
And so part of the burden of love is if I observe a thing, I'm praying about it.
Yeah.
Right.
If I am an extroverted person and how does love show up in that personality type?
It means if you're going to talk a lot, you need to make sure your words are edifying,
that you are building up and not tearing down, that you're not being nosy,
but you're actually being intrigued for the sake of loving and honoring that person.
So, but I'm just trying to eliminate even these kinds of categories that we put ourselves in
and we depend on these categories more than we pay attention to.
How do I just love people through the way God made?
That's good.
That's real good.
Okay.
The Shell or Deschel, if she was in St. Louis, I don't know what her mama meant it to be pronounced as, but we would say Dayshel.
Dayshel.
Dayshel.
Hey, Deshell.
No, it's not Shell.
Dayshel.
Dayshel.
Yeah, there we go.
Deshael Disney.
That's her.
That's what they say.
Okay, cool.
From New York, she said, hey, my favorite godly cousins in my head.
Hey, girl.
Mine is a two-part question.
God is seeking
Godly seed
Okay, she's declaring a thing
What?
Hey,
Deshaea, why you start
to send this off like that?
You're a wild girl.
She's so wild for that.
She said God is seeking
a godly seed.
That is so spiritual.
Like, what?
Where are we going?
So with four children,
wait a minute.
How are you both discerning their gifts
and preparing them
as they grow?
And how do you answer
your children's questions?
questions when they doubt God. So let's just answer one.
Since God is seeking a godly seed, hello.
How with four children are we discerning their gifts and cultivating?
I don't mean a harp on the way she started off this question, but the way she started off
did not make me think that was about parenting. I thought she was going to talk about
planting a harvest. I mean, in the children.
He is seeking a godly seed. He is seeking those who worship him in spirit and a truth.
this prophetic like arrangement to it.
I sense in my spirit.
I sense in the latter day that God is seeking a godly see.
She goes to listen to it.
It's like, why they roast to me?
It's like, he is seeking a god.
Since because we can roast one another.
He is seeking a golly seed.
You are for that.
Dayshale.
So do you want me answer first?
Okay.
So discerning our kids gifts.
I mean, that's been my attention since day one.
And one of it is I am really intrigued by,
psychology and sociology and the study of people.
I spend a lot of time looking, just watching and paying attention to people.
And so when it came to my children, even when Eden being our first, I just tried to pay a lot of
attention to how she seemed to be wired and tried to discern through God's help what that
might mean for her.
I think she is one of the clearest examples of discerning gifts because she's olded.
Right? And so I think in Eden, we've obviously discerned that she's a communicator. She's been really talented and gifted with words since she was really, really young. She has a really clear intellect. Like she is able to understand and have a level of depth that is just interesting. It's different. You know? It's almost scary. It's like, girl, yeah, you ate. And she's also a leader. And so I think you put all of those together. It is possible that, because there's this.
intersection I've been reading in a book that sometimes there is a natural talent or a natural ability that the spirit actually kind of sanctifies.
And so like for me, I think I have a natural gift with words, a natural way with communication.
And when I was born of the spirit, then that became kind of sanctified in the sense that now I teach and inform and educate people.
And I think Eden might have that same gift.
Yeah, because it's weird to see, one, Eden.
It's just I think a lot of times I see both of our gifts wrapped up in one, you know, the way she could process.
But we also have similar gifts.
We're both teachers.
Teachers, communicators or whatever.
And so, like, with her, it's not just one.
And other, it's kind of like almost like both.
But also, too, the way she processes.
so quickly with you like it reminds me of you you just you just process things so quickly but her
her memorization right it's me like I memorize things really really really retention my have my
retention is crazy and so like it's just all together and so like for me you know particularly with
eden I feel like I've been called to um steward her leadership you know um gift gift gift
things like like one to instill in her that she's a leader and also to help her with humility in being a
leader because I think you know when you are natural leaders I think the tendency sometimes is to be
you know dominant dominant you know and so consistently our prayer at night or riding riding home from
school when she telling me you know even when she talks about school and what she's what she what she
did with her classmates she don't even
understanding as leadership.
Yeah.
And it's like you was able to do that, Eden, because you're a leader.
Well, they're older than me.
Some of them older than me.
And I'm like, no, but you're still a leader.
You don't understand.
You know what I'm saying?
And so, like, now just really trying to grow her up and teach her humility and what
that looks like being a leader in the world now I think is really important for me.
The other kids, like Autumn, I mean, she's just so artistic.
Yeah.
And so, yeah.
Yeah, I was just going to give a real quick example practically.
of just different ways
I've tried to cultivate
Eden. One, when it comes to
the Bible,
we will read it and I will
tell her to explain
what she sees, how she understands it.
I was doing that the other day.
I was going to see her with baptism.
We was reading about baptism because I'm trying
to develop, not,
I'm trying to kind of like prepare her
for the work of
interpretation and explanation at some point.
You're doing a good job too.
The leadership
part is one time she was helping or her and autumn were cleaning up the room and she was getting
frustrated you know how she always does because autumn won't help because autumn got she
autumn gets very easily distracted and i told eden i said listen i said your sister is probably
overwhelmed by the amount of things that there are to do and so you need to identify an area
that she can focus on give her that task and once she's finished come back and we'll figure out
another way. So that's showing her like, no, leadership is also observing the situation at hand,
discerning the person you're leading, and then delegating a particular task that is in alignment with
their nature. And so like leadership ain't just go clean the room. It's no, how can I serve you?
Yeah. And helping you clean the room. Now, in light of autumn, I think we're figuring,
I think autumn, she's just a lot like you, man. Yeah. Like autumn just, she's just being space sometimes.
I don't be in space.
No, it's not, you up there, you up there, you up there, you up there doing something good.
You up there.
Like, you're like, ooh, Jupiter and the rings, Jordan got six rings.
I wonder what Jordan is doing right now.
I need to go clean my shoes because I got a lot of Jordan's shoes.
I wonder like if I need to go get some cleaner, I'm going to go to Target.
That's what's happening while you're in space.
Facts.
And so with autumn, it's been no, like she's going to have our, I think, creative.
thing, but I don't know.
I think I'm trying to discern how do we like,
how do we cultivate and give her that freedom of expression
while at the same time training her to have discipline in it?
Yeah, because I think one of the things I want to help all of them to understand
and what I have been trying to help us to understand is just because you cannot
focus on one thing at a time as much as your sister can.
And it doesn't mean you're not equally intelligent.
That's good.
Right.
And so helping, like really affirming her.
And no, like you're smart, Autumn.
You're so smart or encouraging her.
And I've noticed the more I give her encouragement,
the more she wants to talk to me about certain things.
And so like with Eden, I can say, Eden, what did you learn today?
You know, yada yada.
She's excited.
I'm like, wow.
Well, Autumn, what do you learn a day?
I don't know.
And so now I have to say,
you know, you're so smart.
You're so intelligent.
You're so intelligent, chip monk.
Tell me what did you learn?
And then she does it with hesitancy, but she does it.
She explains.
And so, yeah.
I'm sorry.
You actually said something that's actually really important.
Yeah.
Because we not only want to identify, discern, cultivate the giftedness of our children,
but we also need to discern the underlying temptations and sins that coincide
with their particular personality.
type. Absolutely. Right. So with Eden as a leader, as a communicator, as a intellect, she is also
dominant and arrogant. Yeah. Right. And so there's this like in helping her grow into who she's
supposed to be, we need to deal with the parts of her that's going to ruin that. And so also with
autumn, with her kind of being in the sky a little bit and a sister to somebody who's
completely different to her, like we are having to. Affirm her. Yeah. Help her focus.
but also help her not be insecure in light of her differences as compared to her sister now with sage
in august sage is different man just different i just that i have no other word to describe her but
different yeah she's but what i'm noticing she's a sour patch she's so sweet and so mean but i i think
i told you i don't think i told you this what we could probably enter here so i was praying i pray
I pray for our children all the time
and I felt like the Lord was showing me
because one thing we've noticed about Sage is that Sage is
she's deeply empathetic
she cries a lot and that's a part of it is that she
feels very deeply
and I think she's going to be a lot like your mother
just a nurturer really mindful
and sensitive to the needs of other people
and I felt like the Lord was showing me that
because a Sage feels so deeply
the degree of her suffering will be unique.
And so that I needed to pray for perseverance.
And then I needed to pray for resilience in her
because her emotions will be so deeply affected by her trials.
Yeah.
Did I tell you that?
Yeah, you did.
We talked about it.
Date night one night.
But then also, too, with August, he's one.
And, you know, we're still, he's unfolding.
But for the most part, we just, I'm noticing he has,
a little temper problem.
Yeah, he's a gentle giant.
Yeah, he's a gentle giant.
So, like, you know, we're just trying to, like, I'm, like, getting ready because I had a
temper problem.
And a lot of the things that I saw that was in me, I'm starting to see him.
And so I feel led by the Lord, especially lately, to make sure I give him the same amount
of love and affection that I give my daughters because me growing up not necessarily having
that love and affection, even kissing.
him holding him hugging him yeah you know I didn't have that from a man growing up and so you know what
the enemy did with my my anger problems it was just like you like wildfire and so like I feel you know
led by the Lord especially of late to just make sure when he's mad to hold him come on here
and to comfort him because something I didn't have you so extra oh my gosh because we are going
way over but it's so much 50 minutes with the paris
It's so much power in that because you had so much misplaced rage and angst.
Stilling on folks.
You know what I'm saying?
And like it either it kind of manifested itself in two places.
You either had to fight all the time, like all the things or you was having all this sex.
And it's really you trying to find places to put your emotions.
Yes.
And so like if he had a father or if you had a father where you, he would have.
have cultivated this freedom of emotional expression in you.
Yeah.
You would have had a safe space to go to.
Because the other day, the other day, he, he got mad for something that he shouldn't be
mad about.
Like, he wanted Sage's toy.
And that's his toy.
So he kept trying to grab Sage's toy.
And like, he got so mad to the point he did, he does this little sound like, ah!
Yeah, he does that when he's hungry.
And he's just like really, really mad and like, and then he starts pulling his hair.
Like he doesn't know what to do with his frustration
And I just grabbed him and brought him to the couch
And laid him on my chest and said, it's okay
And he just was
And I was like, man
And the father's bosom
But I thought to myself, I was like
The only begotten
What if I had that?
Ooh
Bye y'all
Peace
Bye
No, that's beautiful
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