VIDEO: DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS INSIGHTS WITH TAYLOR AND TYLER | MARCH 29–APRIL 4 “I AM HE WHO LIVETH, I AM HE WHO WAS SLAIN” EASTER | #STARTINGTODAY | Book of Mormon Central

VIDEO: DOCTRINE AND COVENANTS INSIGHTS WITH TAYLOR AND TYLER | MARCH 29–APRIL 4 “I AM HE WHO LIVETH, I AM HE WHO WAS SLAIN” EASTER | #STARTINGTODAY | Book of Mormon Central

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  1. **#ComeFollowMe nugget** — 𝙼𝚊𝚛𝚢 𝚆𝚑𝚒𝚝𝚖𝚎𝚛: 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚏𝚒𝚛𝚜𝚝 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚗𝚎𝚜𝚜 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙱𝚘𝚘𝚔 𝚘𝚏 𝙼𝚘𝚛𝚖𝚘𝚗 𝚙𝚕𝚊𝚝𝚎𝚜?
  2. Doctrine and Covenants 14:2 — 𝚃𝚑𝚎 𝚠𝚘𝚛𝚍 𝚘𝚏 𝙶𝚘𝚍 𝚒𝚜 “𝚚𝚞𝚒𝚌𝚔 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝚙𝚘𝚠𝚎𝚛𝚏𝚞𝚕.”
  3. VIDEO: D&C 14-17: Beyond Come Follow Me
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  5. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Casey Paul Griffiths (Doctrine and Covenants 18-19, Feb 22-28)| Book of Mormon Central | #ComeFollowMe
  6. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 18-19
  7. 📖 Join us LIVE as we discuss #ComeFollowMe Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 8: February 15–21 “Stand as a Witness” Doctrine and Covenants 14–17 📖
  8. VIDEO: Come Follow Me – Doctrine and Covenants 14-17: “Stand as a Witness” | #ComeFollowMe
  9. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Don’t Miss This Doctrine and Covenants 20-22 (March 1-7) | #ComeFollowMe
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  14. 📖 Come, Follow Me “Hour of Power” LIVE — Come, Follow Me “The Worth of Souls Is Great” Doctrine and Covenants 18–19 📖
  15. FREE DOWNLOAD: LDS COLORING PAGES DOWNLOAD FOR Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 10: March 1–7 “The Rise of the Church of Christ” Doctrine and Covenants 20–22
  16. #ComeFollowMe — Doctrine and Covenants 20 | 𝚂𝚊𝚌𝚛𝚎𝚍 𝚘𝚛𝚍𝚒𝚗𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚎𝚜 𝚊𝚛𝚎 𝚊𝚗 𝚎𝚜𝚜𝚎𝚗𝚝𝚒𝚊𝚕 𝚙𝚊𝚛𝚝 𝚘𝚏 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚛𝚎𝚜𝚝𝚘𝚛𝚎𝚍 𝙲𝚑𝚞𝚛𝚌𝚑.
  17. #ComeFollowMe nugget — 𝚁𝚎𝚟𝚎𝚕𝚊𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚘𝚗 𝙲𝚑𝚞𝚛𝚌𝚑 𝚘𝚛𝚐𝚊𝚗𝚒𝚣𝚊𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝚐𝚘𝚟𝚎𝚛𝚗𝚖𝚎𝚗𝚝
  18. VIDEO: #ComeFollowMe Hour of Power! “The Rise of the Church of Christ” Doctrine and Covenants 20–22 📖
  19. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central “The Rise of the Church of Christ” Doctrine and Covenants 20–22
  20. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 23-26
  21. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central (Doctrine and Covenants 23-26, Mar 8-14)
  22. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 11: March 8–14 “Strengthen the Church” Doctrine and Covenants 23–26
  23. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 26:2 | 𝚆𝚑𝚊𝚝 𝚒𝚜 𝚌𝚘𝚖𝚖𝚘𝚗 𝚌𝚘𝚗𝚜𝚎𝚗𝚝?
  24. This week’s LDS Coloring Pages free digital download: Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 11: March 8–14 “Strengthen the Church” Doctrine and Covenants 23–26
  25. #ComeFollowMe Nugget — 𝙴𝚖𝚖𝚊 𝚂𝚖𝚒𝚝𝚑 𝚒𝚜 “𝚊𝚗 𝚎𝚕𝚎𝚌𝚝 𝚕𝚊𝚍𝚢” | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 11: March 8–14 “Strengthen the Church” Doctrine and Covenants 23–26
  26. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 24 | 𝚃𝚑𝚎 𝚂𝚊𝚟𝚒𝚘𝚛 𝚌𝚊𝚗 𝚕𝚒𝚏𝚝 𝚞𝚜 “𝚞𝚙 𝚘𝚞𝚝 𝚘𝚏 [𝚘𝚞𝚛] 𝚊𝚏𝚏𝚕𝚒𝚌𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗𝚜.” | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 11: March 8–14 “Strengthen the Church” Doctrine and Covenants 23–26
  27. Doctrine and Covenants 26:2 | 𝚆𝚑𝚊𝚝 𝚒𝚜 𝚌𝚘𝚖𝚖𝚘𝚗 𝚌𝚘𝚗𝚜𝚎𝚗𝚝?
  28. Join us LIVE as we study Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 11: March 8–14 “Strengthen the Church” | Doctrine and Covenants 23–26
  29. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 27:1–4 | 𝚃𝚊𝚔𝚎 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚜𝚊𝚌𝚛𝚊𝚖𝚎𝚗𝚝 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑 𝚊𝚗 𝚎𝚢𝚎 𝚜𝚒𝚗𝚐𝚕𝚎 𝚝𝚘 𝙶𝚘𝚍’𝚜 𝚐𝚕𝚘𝚛𝚢
  30. FREE printable from LDS Coloring Pages: Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 12: March 15–21 “All Things Must Be Done in Order” Doctrine and Covenants 27–28
  31. **ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 27:15–18 | 𝚃𝚑𝚎 𝚊𝚛𝚖𝚘𝚛 𝚘𝚏 𝙶𝚘𝚍 𝚠𝚒𝚕𝚕 𝚑𝚎𝚕𝚙 𝚞𝚜 𝚜𝚝𝚊𝚗𝚍 𝚊𝚐𝚊𝚒𝚗𝚜𝚝 𝚎𝚟𝚒𝚕
  32. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 27:15–18 | 𝚃𝚑𝚎 𝙰𝚛𝚖𝚘𝚛 𝚘𝚏 𝙶𝚘𝚍
  33. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me with Living Scriptures — Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 13: March 22–28 Jesus Christ Will Gather His People Doctrine and Covenants 29
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  37. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 29:1–8 | 𝙹𝚎𝚜𝚞𝚜 𝙲𝚑𝚛𝚒𝚜𝚝 𝚠𝚒𝚕𝚕 𝚐𝚊𝚝𝚑𝚎𝚛 𝙷𝚒𝚜 𝚙𝚎𝚘𝚙𝚕𝚎 𝚋𝚎𝚏𝚘𝚛𝚎 𝙷𝚒𝚜 𝚂𝚎𝚌𝚘𝚗𝚍 𝙲𝚘𝚖𝚒𝚗𝚐
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  39. FREE #ComeFollowMe PRINTABLE — As a Hen Gathereth Her Chickens Coloring Page | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 13: March 22–28 Jesus Christ Will Gather His People Doctrine and Covenants 29
  40. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 29 | 𝙹𝚎𝚜𝚞𝚜 𝙲𝚑𝚛𝚒𝚜𝚝 𝚆𝚒𝚕𝚕 𝙶𝚊𝚝𝚑𝚎𝚛 𝙷𝚒𝚜 𝙿𝚎𝚘𝚙𝚕𝚎
  41. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 29:31–35 | “𝙰𝚕𝚕 𝚝𝚑𝚒𝚗𝚐𝚜 𝚞𝚗𝚝𝚘 𝚖𝚎 𝚊𝚛𝚎 𝚜𝚙𝚒𝚛𝚒𝚝𝚞𝚊𝚕.”
  42. #ComeFollowMe nugget | Doctrine and Covenants 29:36–50 |𝙹𝚎𝚜𝚞𝚜 𝙲𝚑𝚛𝚒𝚜𝚝 𝚛𝚎𝚍𝚎𝚎𝚖𝚜 𝚞𝚜 𝚏𝚛𝚘𝚖 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙵𝚊𝚕𝚕
  43. FREE DOWNLOADABLE Easter Crossword Puzzle | #ComeFollowMe
  44. FREE download: LDS Coloring Pages | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 15: April 5–11 “You Are Called to Preach My Gospel” Doctrine and Covenants 30–36
  45. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 37-40 | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 16: April 12–18 “If Ye Are Not One Ye Are Not Mine” Doctrine and Covenants 37–40
  46. Doctrine and Covenants 32; 35 | 𝚆𝚊𝚜 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝚖𝚒𝚜𝚜𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚝𝚘 𝚝𝚑𝚎 𝙻𝚊𝚖𝚊𝚗𝚒𝚝𝚎𝚜 𝚊 𝚏𝚊𝚒𝚕𝚞𝚛𝚎?
  47. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me with Mormon News Report | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 15: April 5–11 “You Are Called to Preach My Gospel” Doctrine and Covenants 30–36
  48. Doctrine and Covenants 37–40 | “𝙸𝚏 𝚈𝚎 𝙰𝚛𝚎 𝙽𝚘𝚝 𝙾𝚗𝚎 𝚈𝚎 𝙰𝚛𝚎 𝙽𝚘𝚝 𝙼𝚒𝚗𝚎”
  49. **#ComeFollowMe nugget** | 𝙸𝚏 𝙸 𝚊𝚖 𝚙𝚛𝚎𝚙𝚊𝚛𝚎𝚍, 𝙸 𝚗𝚎𝚎𝚍 𝚗𝚘𝚝 𝚏𝚎𝚊𝚛.
  50. VIDEO: #ComeFollowMe Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 18: April 26–May 2 “The Promises … Shall Be Fulfilled” Doctrine and Covenants 45
  51. VIDEO: Doctrine and Covenants 37-40 (Apr. 12-18) Come Follow Me Don’t Miss This | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 16: April 12–18 “If Ye Are Not One Ye Are Not Mine” Doctrine and Covenants 37–40
  52. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 16: April 12–18 “If Ye Are Not One Ye Are Not Mine” Doctrine and Covenants 37–40
  53. FREE DOWNLOAD: LDS COLORING PAGES | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 17: April 19–25 “My Law to Govern My Church” Doctrine and Covenants 41–44
  54. VIDEO” Don’t Miss This Doctrine and Covenants 41-44 (Apr. 19-25) Come Follow Me | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 17: April 19–25 “My Law to Govern My Church” Doctrine and Covenants 41–44
  55. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 17: April 19–25 “My Law to Govern My Church” Doctrine and Covenants 41–44
  56. FREE download: LDS Coloring Pages Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 18: April 26–May 2 “The Promises … Shall Be Fulfilled” Doctrine and Covenants 45
  57. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler from Book of Mormon Central | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 19: May 3–9 “Seek Ye Earnestly the Best Gifts” Doctrine and Covenants 46–48
  58. Come, Follow Me with Living Scriptures | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 19: May 3–9 “Seek Ye Earnestly the Best Gifts” Doctrine and Covenants 46–48
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  67. Come, Follow Me with Living Scriptures | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 24: June 7–13 “That Which Cometh from Above Is Sacred” Doctrine and Covenants 63
  68. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 24: June 7–13 “That Which Cometh from Above Is Sacred” Doctrine and Covenants 63 | Book of Mormon Central
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  70. Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants with Living Scriptures | Lesson 25: June 14–20 “The Lord Requireth the Heart and a Willing Mind” Doctrine and Covenants 64–66
  71. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants with Mormon News Report | Lesson 25: June 14–20 “The Lord Requireth the Heart and a Willing Mind” Doctrine and Covenants 64–66
  72. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 27: June 28–July 4 “No Weapon That Is Formed against You Shall Prosper” Doctrine and Covenants 71–75 | Book of Mormon Central
  73. VIDEO: Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 26: June 21–27 “Worth … the Riches of the Whole Earth” Doctrine and Covenants 67–70 | Book of Mormon Central
  74. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 67-70 | Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 26: June 21–27 “Worth … the Riches of the Whole Earth” Doctrine and Covenants 67–70
  75. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Insights (Doctrine and Covenants 84, Jul 26-Aug 1)
  76. VIDEO: LDS Women and the Priesthood in Doctrine and Covenants 84 (Come Follow Me – You Missed This!)
  77. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 85-87
  78. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler with Book of Mormon Central | Doctrine and Covenants 88 | August 9-15
  79. VIDEO: Come Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants 88 (Aug. 9-15) Don’t Miss This
  80. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 34: August 16–22 “A Principle with Promise” Doctrine and Covenants 89–92
  81. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Come, Follow Me Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 38: September 13–19 “After Much Tribulation … Cometh the Blessing” Doctrine and Covenants 102–105
  82. Come, Follow Me LIVE with Mormon News Report | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 38: September 13–19 “After Much Tribulation … Cometh the Blessing” Doctrine and Covenants 102–105 | Zion’s Camp
  83. Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 106-108
  84. VIDEO: DiscipleClass | Come Follow Me 2021 Doctrine and Covenants 109–110 | The story of the Manaus Caravan
  85. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Living Scriptures: Doctrine & Covenants 111-114
  86. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Casey Paul Griffiths (Doctrine and Covenants 115-120)
  87. Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 44: October 25–31 “A House unto My Name” Doctrine and Covenants 124 | Book of Mormon Central
  88. Come, Follow Me with Living Scriptures | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 44: October 25–31 “A House unto My Name” Doctrine and Covenants 124
  89. Come Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 46: November 8–14 “When We Obtain Any Blessing from God, It Is by Obedience” Doctrine and Covenants 129–132 | Book of Mormon Central
  90. VIDEO: Come Follow Me with Taylor Halverson (Doctrine and Covenants 129-132, November 8-14)
  91. Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 47: November 15–21 “Prepare Ye for the Coming of the Bridegroom” Doctrine and Covenants 133–134 | Book of Mormon Central
  92. Come, Follow Me Insights with Taylor and Tyler | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 50: December 6–12 “We Believe” The Articles of Faith and Official Declarations 1 and 2 | Book of Mormon Central
  93. Come, Follow Me with Living Scriptures | Doctrine and Covenants Lesson 51: December 13–19 “The Family Is Central to the Creator’s Plan” The Family: A Proclamation to the World

Come Follow Me Insights (EASTER, Mar 29-Apr 4) – powered by Happy Scribe

I’m Taylor and I’m Tyler, and I’m John. We welcome you to a special edition of Book of Mormon Central Come, Follow Me Insights.

Today, an Easter celebration. We’ve invited our friend John Helton to share time with us today as we celebrate Jesus and his love.

So to begin and to set the stage for today.

Let me just take a few moments and and kind of outline what we’re going to be doing. You’ll notice right off of the bat that we’re going to be talking about something infinite in nature. It’s the infinite atonement. And as President Nelson reminded us a few years ago, in general conference, it’s not an entity unto itself. It’s not a thing in isolation.

It’s the infinite atonement of this is really important of Jesus Christ. So sometimes we can get so excited about what the atonement can do for us or how the atonement can help us or heal us or forgive us when at the end of the day, the atonement itself doesn’t do any of those things.

He’s the one who does all of those things through the power of his atonement, through the things that he suffered willingly of his own free will and choice that opens this door for us, overcoming sin and temptation and struggles and pain and adversity and affliction.

It’s it’s important that we keep the focus, especially on Easter around this time of year, that we keep the focus clearly on this son of God as we celebrate the most important event in the history of the universe, I think in the history of eternity, as far as we’re concerned for our salvation.

So to begin, Taylor is going to help us understand the foundation of where we get most of our information from the first century in the Holy Land regarding the events of the infinite atonement of Jesus Christ.

So we are celebrating Easter, Easter. If you turn and face east in the morning, what do you typically see if there are no clouds? The brilliant, beautiful sunrise that is Jesus symbolically and that is what East Tour is all about. It’s about facing east, the resurrection of the rising sun. Easter reminds us that because of Jesus, all of us can be resurrected physically and spiritually if we center in Jesus. So the scriptures have lots of great stories about Jesus.

And in particular, if we look at the four gospels in the New Testament, this is where we get much of our information about Jesus, his life, his death and his resurrection. The gospels, as we’ve talked about in the past, the word gospels means the good news and it is good news. God has spoken forth from heaven through the living word, his son, Jesus Christ. And we have four incredible disciples who each penned their witness of who Jesus was, sort of an invitation to you that as you learn more about Jesus, you might look specifically at how Matthew, Mark, Luke and John each witnessed or testified of Jesus.

What is similar? What is different about those witnesses? Similarly, when you are listening in testimony, meeting, if all these members of the church who each witness Jesus Christ but each in their own way, there’s something beautiful to learn to just give you a moment or two to hear about what the Gospels are as literature.

So when the gospels were written anciently, they were written in the guise of an ancient biography. Now the modern day, most of us generally understand what a biography is in many biographies are very lengthy. And they basically go from like before the person was born through every little thing they did as a child and their young age and their middle life and how they died and their legacy. But every last detail we try to pack into these biographies, that is a modern biography.

We try to trace the character development of the hero of the story. Ancient biographies were a little bit different. Let me just point out why ancient biographies were composed. And what we’ve discovered through scholarship is that the four gospels in the New Testament follow this format of an ancient biography.

First of all, it’s to preserve the words and deeds of a great hero. Second, to preserve the memory of a great person, to provide praise for that individual so that the reader will follow that hero. And you reveal the character of the hero through that story. And in particular, ancient biographies often would deeply focus on the manner of the death of the hero as a way of revealing their character. If you think about the four gospels, we only two of them even talk about the birth of Jesus.

They spend most of their time only the last year or two or three of Jesus’s life. And even then, most of the focus of the Gospels is the last week of Jesus’s life with a deep focus on the suffering leading up to his death, his crucifixion and then his resurrection. And I might point out that for an ancient reader who is familiar with ancient biographies, they would have been stunned to read about Jesus because in the ancient biographies, the hero never came back to life, ever.

And yet here we have four witnesses saying this hero not only died for all of us, but the character of this hero is that he had the ability to come back to life. And because of that, you two can live again. That is the beautiful promise of Easter. And so this Easter celebration, we invite you to think about all the times Jesus has lifted you up. Wherever you’re at in your life, you can be lifted up by the power, mercy, grace and goodness of God.

That is our witness to you today. And that is what we’re going to be spending our time talking about.

OK, so as we jump into discussing the events of that final week of the savior’s life with emphasis on the final twenty four hours, let’s just get a really quick overview here on the board.

So. There are some differences and there are some similarities between Matthew, Mark, Luke and John on the various events and when they took place and what order they took place in and how they unfolded.

But, John, how would you how would you help us contextualize what’s happening from Sunday to Wednesday? Not particularly in order, but some of the major events. So, for example, on Sunday of the triumphal entry, the savior enters into Jerusalem. And along with that, there’s the host of people who are praising him as he enters in. As Tyler said, the gospel authors differ slightly on the details of which day. But we know the cleansing of the temple is coming up next.

Jesus is going to curse the fig tree and he’s going to teach some parables in the temple and the Pharisees and especially the chief priest where they’re going to perceive that he’s speaking against them in parables. You know, one thing that we sometimes don’t focus on is that in John Chapter 12, some Greeks seek an audience with Jesus and he gives a testimony to them in the voice of God speaks from heaven, testifying of his son, Jesus Christ. Another powerful event in these final few days.

So this this leads us up to the critical critical time period, which is there is a lot that’s going to happen in this last twenty four hours of Jesus’s life.

So we’ll start probably with the Last Supper. And so while we don’t know the precise physical location where this was held, Jesus is going to meet with his disciples. And that’s when Judas Iscariot will leave to go and betray the savior. And from there, the savior will walk across the Kidron Valley into Gethsemani. Little interesting detail. We often talk about the Garden of Salmoni, but that is not a scriptural phrase. John talks about a garden and Matthew and Mark talk about Gethsemani and we put that together is the Garden of Gethsemani.

And that’s where the savior will offer prayer, specifically with Peter taking Peter, James and John aside and suffer for our sins from Gethsemani. Christ will be betrayed and taken to the house of Cleophus. John adds in an extra trial, all of the Gospels talk about the trial at the house of Caiaphas. They call it a palace, which gives us an indication of the wealth of the high priests at that time and from their Christ will go to pilot.

So now, whereas we’re into the morning of the day of his death, he’ll be tried before. Pilot Luke tells us that there was also a trial before Herod Antipas and eventually the savior will walk what we today called the Via Dolorosa, the way of sorrows. And on the way to the cross. That’s where we have Jesus speaking to the women who are mourning his death. We have Simon who carries this cross. And finally, Christ is taken to the place that we often refer to as Calvary as Luke’s term or Golgotha.

And it’s interesting that we sometimes talk about the Hill of Calvary are going up to Calvary, but the scriptures themselves don’t speak about a Hill of Calvary. There’s no elevation difference that is spoken of in the scriptures. So let’s dove deeper into each of these events and look at at the significance of what happened in each element on this list and more importantly, why we should care in the twenty first century about what happened here.

So let’s begin with Gethsemani. So you have this place where Jesus goes to begin the infinite atoning sacrifice.

And it’s important for us at the outset to note where does Jesus suffering take place wherein you and I have some sort of benefit?

Is it is it all in here, is it in here, is there any of it in here? Do you and I benefit from anything that took place here? Because sometimes what we like to do as as human beings, I think, is we want clearly defined borders. We want clearly defined. This is the box.

This is where it all fits, either here or here, when in reality, I think it’s important to realize that we have the opening thresholds and the closing thresholds when he when he gives up the ghost.

And we may not know, we cannot tell what pains he had to bear, not just on the cross, but throughout this process. Now we have a lot of clues in scripture and from prophetic commentary.

But isn’t it interesting that sometimes we put all of our emphasis on Gethsemani and then some put all of the emphasis on the cross, but we don’t often even talk about this middle stuff. And yet, Isaiah says by his stripes, we are healed. That sounds redemptive.

That sounds atoning to me like the scourging is part of scourging is part of his infinite suffering.

It’s part of what elder Maxwell would call the awful arithmetic of the atonement for all of God’s children.

And so it’s important as we jump in that we don’t try to create clearly defined boundaries where the scriptures and the prophets don’t create boundaries so as to jump in on that.

Elder Gerald Lond taught that it is a, quote, doctrinal error to separate out a lot of people. Is what Jesus atone for our sins and Gethsemani and on the cross, that’s the resurrection. And again, everyone. So that’s a doctrinal error can bifurcate it like that. There’s more than 50 scriptures that talk about Jesus dying for our sins. Jesus, as I was slain for the sins of the world that was crucified for the sins of the world.

So to separate out Christ atoning from our sins from Calvary is not accurate.

He he in describing his own gospel in thirty five. Twenty seven. What does he say? I was I came down to the earth basically because the father sent me. And why did the father send him to be that I may be limited up apply men upon upon this cross.

He’s and that’s the core of his gospel he defines as gospel. If you read and thirty five. Twenty seven. Fourteen he actually mentions over and over again. Lift it up for this. Cause I was lifted up, my father had me lift it up.

It’s the central focus in his own definition. He’s not afraid of talking about the cross. And one other quick thing on this, because I think some people might wonder who actually like I don’t care if it was a seminary calvary, why does it matter? I was talking with Robert Millet, who spent more than 30 years doing interfaith studies and conversations. And one of the things that he lamented to me was that at least for some Christians, the way that some Latter-Day Saints almost exclusively focus on Gethsemani has led them to believe that we don’t believe in the importance of the cross, the importance of Christ’s atonement on Calvary.

And so for for some Christians, they may look at members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints and say, oh, you’re not Christian, when we actually do believe in the atoning power of Calvary. So sometimes if we focus exclusively on testimony, we actually create a misperception about what we actually believe. So, John, you’ve done a lot of research on on the the comparisons between what the scriptures, what the prophets have said, beginning with Joseph Smith down to our modern day regarding testimony and the cross on Calvary, what have you learned?

So the short version and honestly, this was a surprise to me. I was having a conversation with a colleague and he said, John, where do you think the atonement, the emphasis that we have on so many comes from? And I was like, well, of course, the scriptures. So I started looking at the scriptures. And to my surprise, what I found was there’s only two passages of scripture that talk about Jesus suffering for our sins and Gethsemani.

These are powerful scriptures and they’re important ones. There’s just two of them. In contrast, there’s more than 50 passages in Scripture that talk about Jesus Christ dying for our sins.

You just have mentioned the word slain for the sins of the world or in many of those are the savior’s own own words, his own voice. Another example in Romans Chapter five, Paul says that while we were yet sinners, Jesus died for our sins. So over and over again, the scriptural emphasis with OK, must be Joseph Smith. That’s where the emphasis comes from. But that’s actually not true. If you look at the writings and sermons of Joseph Smith, he only talks about guess how many one time.

And in that instance, he’s not even talking about suffering. For instance, he uses it as an example of Christ’s submission to his father. But there’s more than thirty times that he focuses on the crucifixion. Several of those are specifically about Christ dying for our sins. To make a long story short, across thousands of talks in the Journal of Discourses in General Conference from 1850 to the present day, for every one time a church leader has said something like Christ suffered for our sins in Gethsemani, there’s been more than five times that.

They’ve said something like, Christ died for our sins. So whether you’re looking at the scriptures or the voice of church leaders or actually if we were, to me, what’s most important is to look at the voice of the savior himself on one powerful occasion and doctrine and covenants 19, he focuses on his suffering for Sins and Gethsemani. And in contrast, there’s more than 20 times that. He specifically focuses on his death, his crucifixion being lifted up upon the cross.

And so it just I’m reminded of a. When I was talking with a friend and he was pretending to be interested in something that was important to me and I was like, you’re not even interested in the chair. He’s like, but I’m interested in you. And it’s an important lesson that when you care about someone, you care about what’s important to them. And so even some of us might feel like, oh, I don’t like to look at an image of the crucifixion or I don’t like to think about the crucifixion.

The fact that it’s clearly important to Jesus Christ is an indication that it should be important to us, at least for me in my teaching, because I know about your experience in earlier years when I focused on teaching about Christ atonement, I would spend most of my time right here in the cemetery. And then we kind of skim through all of this and come to the resurrection, whereas actually the scriptures in the church leaders have had a different emphasis.

Yeah, so it’s interesting because back in in the early nineteen hundreds, elder James Talmage wrote the book that many of you were familiar with called Jesus the Christ.

That’s interesting because he says in there he devotes a lot of good effort to helping us understand what Jesus is enduring and experiencing. And Gethsemani, when he shifts over to his description of the savior’s atonement on Golgotha on the cross of Calvary. He uses a very interesting word there. He talked in talking about the the description in the scriptures from noon to 3:00 p.m. when when darkness gathers, he says the weight of Gethsemani returns to Jesus intensified on the cross. He uses the word intensified.

There’s something there’s something really profound taking place on the cross.

And we take everything that’s going on here. And now we continue it for three more hours, but this time in a very public place in the middle of the day, raised up, stretched out with people mocking him along the way.

And on that note, in twenty eighteen, I believe we can go back and double check the exact date. But President Nelson actually said something very similar that Jesus Christ and he felt every pain, felt the weight of our sins. And then he said all of this suffering was intensified as he was cruelly crucified on Calvary’s cross.

So, John, the question the question would then come up, I think, for many people in the church of of the actual symbol of the cross itself.

Why why would we not have that on our churches? That’s a great question and it probably deserves a whole broadcast in itself. But the short version is what’s interesting is if we were to go back to the time of Joseph Smith, the cross was not the symbol of Christianity. Methodists, Baptists, most Protestant denominations did not use the cross as a symbol. It was only a Catholic symbol. And there were only five Catholic churches in the whole state of New York in 1820.

So Joseph Smith is growing up in a cultural context where the cross is not a sign of religion and specifically of broader Christianity. And over the following decades, our church has continued the institutional practice of not displaying the cross. And I think one of the things that can be very helpful for us as we interact with the ninety nine percent of Christians for whom the cross is a symbol of the resurrected Christ, is to remember that for many the cross is the living Christ.

Eric Huntsman published this story. I remember being surprised once when a Presbyterian friend corrected me when I told her that we preferred to worship a living rather than a dead Christ she responded that she did to the cross, reminded Protestants that Jesus died for their sins, but it was empty because he was risen and no longer there on it. I was chastened by her response, realizing that just as we do not appreciate others mischaracterizing our beliefs, neither should we presume to understand or misrepresent the beliefs and practices of others.

I don’t know what your experience is throughout your life event either, but I know that for me, when I was a missionary, if I saw someone wearing a cross, I would kind of automatically think about them as the other. And that’s different now. I wish I could go back and go like, hey, I see that you believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ or I see that you believe in Christ’s atonement for our sins. I’ve got this book right here and it talks in the very beginning, a prophet named Nephi Forces’ Jesus Christ lifted up upon the cross.

And it’s this great common belief that we have. The prophet Jacob and Jacob chapter once said that we should view his death, Mormon said that the death of Christ should rest in our minds forever.

And in another place, he says, behold the wounds as Jesus doctor and kind of six thirty seventh of the living Christ himself is saying, fix your eyes upon.

Look at the wounds. When Jesus says Learn of me, he means his whole life, and especially culminating in that most critical part of his life when he’s performing the infinite sacrifice, when the Lamb of God is being slain for the sins of the world. And I’m and you and we’re all part of this of the world. He’s. Brothers and sisters, he’s not just dying on the cross. He’s suffering from me, he’s suffering for you. He’s suffering for each of us on the cross this week of Easter.

It’s worth some time to maybe dig in to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John and then the scriptures of the restoration to learn of him even when it gets a little bit uncomfortable, because that price wasn’t just paid in random, that that infinite, infinite atonement was paid for me and you and us. And to understand what that means and what he went through, understanding once again, it’s an infinite atonement. And here I am with finite capacity, a finite brain.

And for me to be able to understand that, it’s impossible, but with a finite capacity, with the help of the Holy Ghost, I can learn certain elements of what Jesus is going through to enhance that experience so that it becomes much more meaningful for me, so that I appreciate the price that was paid, because I understand it better. And the more I understand it, the more I will love him, the more I love him, the more I’ll follow him and the world devote my life to him.

He gave everything. For us, he laid it all on the altar, and the more I can learn about what was actually laid on the altar, the more likely I am to lay all that I have back on the altar.

In return, President James Fallows said that any increase in our understanding of the savors atonement draws us to him. Or there might be some opportunities for me to learn about an aspect of this atonement that previously I’ve shied away from a little bit. But any increase in any aspect of the Savior’s atonement increases that learn of me will then help us draw closer to him. And it’s been interesting to me to look at a couple of stories from members of the 70 who, before they were converted to the church, found great power in the image.

The images that we’re talking about, Elder Dubé of the 70s told about an experience when he was 10 years old in Zimbabwe, where he grew up in the Catholic Church. He was not a member, but he’s looking at these different images of the savior. And he says, when I got to the picture of the crucifixion, tears came to my eyes. He called it one of the defining moments of his life. He felt this spiritual rush saying this happened.

Jesus died for you, Elder Enzio Bush. He was in the hospital and thought he was going to die. And he just looks at the wall and he sees an image of Christ on the cross. And Alison is filled with hope. And I think for some people in this, it’s probably going to be different for individuals. But I think especially those who are feeling truly deep pain, there may be something about the image of Christ on the cross that allows us to connect with him in a different way, to realize Jesus truly understands the pain that you’re going through.

And you or I, at a moment of doubt, we might say no one understands me and maybe I don’t understand you and maybe your mom doesn’t understand you, maybe no human understands you, but Jesus does. And for some people, I think it’s going to be Gethsemani that really helps them feel that connection. You mentioned the scourging with his stripes. We are healed. That might be a part of it. And for others, it can be Calvary.

And I love that. We don’t have to split it up. It’s it’s there’s an infinite atonement here. And one phrase that we often focus on is the living Christ. And we absolutely. One hundred percent do believe in and focus on the living Christ. I think another phrase that we can remember is the loving Christ. The Savior himself said greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. So Jesus Christ himself personally defined his greatest act of love as the crucifixion.

Nephi says he loveth the world that he lay down his life for the world. Moroni says that same thing over and over again. We see that God is manifesting his love. And so it’s not that there’s. Well, which is is that the living Christ or the love in Christ? It’s both. In fact, if I can share this quote from Dr. Jennifer Lane. She’s the dean of religious education at BYU Hawaii. She wrote, As we think about the lamb slain from the foundation of the world, we can also know that he is the life and the light of the world Christ as the sacrifice and Christ as the living word.

We don’t have to pick which one to focus on because we can’t have one without the other. So a phrase from from many, many talks. And I’ve used it and I’m going to continue to use it because it’s really important. The phrase is, I am so grateful that Jesus died for me. Isn’t it interesting that. We put the emphasis on him dying for me. The older I’ve gotten, the more I’ve studied the infinite atonement and the elements taking place through each of these events.

The more I stand in absolute or the Jesus Christ chose to live for me, what do I mean by that?

I don’t mean just that he resurrected. I mean that when he goes into Gethsemani, knowing the dual nature of his of his being half mortal, half God Mary is his mother and God the father is his father.

It seems to me that the entirety of his mortal aspects would be. Pleading with him. If not screaming at him to just give up the ghost, right then because this is way, way harder to endure then than should ever be expected of anybody.

He could have he could have let that pass from him, rejected the cup that had been that he had covenanted to take, but he chose to endure it, to go through it, not around it, not and not push it aside, but to go through it and live through it, to endure all of that infinite agony, not just in Gethsemani, not just the senseless things that are taking place in the abuse through the trials and words.

They scourged him and he suffered.

He suffered with it. They spit upon him and he suffered that and that eighteen, twenty eight dictionary suffered. The definition is allow. So he allows the spitting, the mocking, the scorching. Why. Because of his love, so at any point, because of who he is, the only person ever born who has absolute power over life and death, the only person who you can’t forcefully take his life away from him, he has to give up the ghost.

He has to willingly lay it down.

And at any time in this process, he could have taken the easy road either to Galilee or head up to Galilee or say, you know what, I can’t do this anymore. And he uses the phrase in doctrine Covenant’s 19 with Martin Harris to shrink. He didn’t shrink. He stood up under the weight and he lived through all of it for me. When everything in his mortal side would have been pleading with him to use that heavenly power to give up the ghost, and it’s only at the very end when he says it is finished, which becomes three of my favorite words and all of the scriptures when Jesus says it is finished.

That’s the indication to me that he has now lived through all of it.

The full price has been paid. There’s nothing left to be done. He completed it. He lived for me. And then and only then does he allow himself to die for me.

And I think it’s important there might be one person out there today who’s injured themselves, but did he die for me? Am I too far gone? Like you do not know all the things that I’ve done. And it’s so important to remember that just like Jesus did not give up on us at any stage here, he is not giving up on us now. It is not too late.

So you as another witness, if we think about the living Christ, we have this beautiful image that we have of the church. It’s our official logo. It’s the Crysta statue. If we look closely, particularly at the one we have in Salt Lake based on a model in Denmark. Well, the original in Denmark. What do we see in that statue? It’s the marks of Jesus suffering on Calvary. So when we worship the living and the loving Christ his witness to us that he is who he says he is, is in flushed in his resurrected body.

I remember as a kid asking my dad, like, wait a second, I thought a resurrected body is a perfected body. I think it’s curious that Jesus has perfected resurrected body and yet he’s got wounds in his body. When you think about this, we are engraved on the palms of his hands. He does not forget us. He does not forget that he did all these things for us.

So when you see that beautiful image that we have as the official logo of the church, you can know that Jesus always and forever will remember you because you are in his hands.

I love this concept that they were just shared.

It reminds me of something our good friend Sean Hopkin this concept he shared that when Jesus presents himself to the Nephites, what is his first invitation to them to come forth and touch the wound in his side and the marks in his hands, his wrists and his feet. Why? So that they might know that he is their God who came down to this earth to be slain for them to save them. And in the way Sean talks about this is it’s in Christ’s vulnerability that we find strength in our own vulnerability, in our own weakness.

We can find great strength knowing that, like you were saying, it doesn’t matter how deep we’ve gotten into something, there’s still hope.

And lest we lose that hope, Christ retains those those scars in his perfected, resurrected body as a reminder to us that we’re not beyond his reach. Our badness doesn’t exceed his power and his goodness. Elder Holland referred to those as signs the tokens in his hand as signs that bad things happen to the perfect. And I think that’s a helpful thing for us to remember as well, that Jesus Christ, who didn’t deserve any of this and maybe you or I in our lives are treated in a way that we don’t deserve.

But Jesus also understands that. Now, let’s let’s go to Calvary itself and not talk about the specifics of the physical crucifixion.

What we’re going to focus on for the last segment here is what do we learn about Jesus, about the kind of person he is using this first century biography idea?

What do we learn about his character by analyzing the few statements that we have recorded in the New Testament that he uttered while he was on the cross recently? I’ve gone through and looked at every time one of the seven final statements that Christ makes in the cross has been used in general conference. So it’s been more than three hundred times that these statements have been used. And it’s the first statement from the savior that represents about half of those. Yeah. And so as Jesus is being nailed to the cross, he says, Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.

And the Joseba translation makes it clear that he’s referring to the soldiers who crucified him. Although if you look at other general conference talks, speakers have referred to many other people, including the Pharisees, the chief priests that Jesus is, including all of them in his statement, forgive them. And I mean, that is so powerful that in the very act of being crucified, he is forgiving those who are doing that to him.

And by the way, those Roman soldiers who are who are in the act of crucifying him or shortly after they’ve crucified him, whenever that statement came, they weren’t they weren’t being gentle. They weren’t apologizing.

They weren’t these men were mocking him as this symbol of the king of the Jews, this group that for them. But there’s not a lot of love there. And there’s something about Christ character of looking outward. I know that when I’m in pain, I look inward and focus on myself. But as Christ was walking to the cross, he turns to comfort the women who are trying to comfort him. Now, here in the cross, when he could be spitting at the people who are mocking him, he’s forgiving them, thinking about them.

And while we can’t know for sure the precise chronological order of the statements, what are the next statements is when the thief on the cross says, Jesus, remember me? And and I don’t know what your thoughts are. When I was growing up, I always kind of had a negative impression of this thief that when Jesus says, truly, today, you will be with me in paradise, there was always a focus on the fact that, well, you know, he’s really talked about out of prison and there’s no deathbed repentance.

One of the things I think that that’s interesting is the phraseology that the thief says is kind of similar to Alma, the younger Jesus, thou son of God, have mercy on me. And even though Alma Younger was in the darkest abyss, Jesus reaches out to him. And so I wonder if there’s a message to us in this statement from the Cross that Jesus is saying there is worth in you and you will be with me today in paradise. Here’s what Joseph Smith said.

He kind of paraphrased this statement. He said that in this statement, Christ was saying, this day, thou shall be with me in the world of spirits, then I will teach you all about it and answer your inquiries. Did you notice did you notice the first person I will personally teach you and me that’s so powerful I’ve never seen maybe there’s a painting of this and I haven’t seen it, but I would love to see the painting of Jesus and the thief in the world, the spirits where he’s reaching out to him.

And so, again, I think there’s that message. It is not too late for you. Even on the cross, Jesus is holding out hope to the man who is recognized Jesus for who he is and is begging for mercy. So we’ve got two of the statements.

What about the one where he looks? And in the distance you have John standing next to his mother, Mary, and he says, Mormon, behold thy son and John, behold thy mother. To me, that’s again this beautiful image of Christ reaching out when most of us would be reaching. And it shows the love of the savior. If we were to look at how that phrase has been used in general conference most frequently it’s used to talk about Christ’s love for women, especially his mother, especially his mother, who who gave him life.

And now she’s watching that life that she she engendered being raised up on the cross. And another way that we can think about this is if now John’s mother is Mary, that makes John and Jesus brothers so on the cross. John is coming closer into the family of Christ. And I think there may be also a metaphor that we can see in there for each of us.

And because Jesus is Mary’s first born son, the oldest under that Jewish tradition, he’s in charge of taking care of her and making sure her needs are met. There’s no mention of Joseph in the story from the time the last time we met Joseph in the New Testament account is when Jesus was 12. So something happened to Joseph in that subsequent 18 years, we would assume, which means Jesus is still fulfilling his earthly duty as her oldest son to make sure she’s taken care of.

Even in the midst of his intense suffering. He’s still turned charity suffers long and is kind. He’s he’s showing us what this looks like over and over and over again.

Then for me, the most. The most painful of the seven statements on the cross is traditionally that that number four, where he according to the timeline in Matthew and Mark, after the the three hours of darkness from noon to 3:00 p.m., where it says that he raises up on the cross and in a loud voice says, my God, my God, why has thou forsaken me? In that phrase, we see a Christ who is completely and utterly alone, and we’ll put a link in the description to this article about what church leaders have taught about the seven statements.

This is one of the most earliest ones, actually, that church leaders talked about. Brigham Young spoke about this in the 50s regarding the fact that God is withdrawing. Gispert isn’t completely abandoned Jesus, but to Jesus it feels that way. He is utterly and completely alone. I love Halldor. Todd Christofferson phrased it. Each of us, whenever that sense may come upon us, need to stop and think. Jesus Christ died for me, Jesus Christ thought me worthy of his blood, and he loves me, he has hopes for me and he can make a difference in my life.

His grace can transform me.

You and I might feel humbled is we realize that Christ feelings of forsaken us on the cross were for us, so that when you and I feel alone, we know that he has felt that way as well.

You know, John, for me, one of the grandest ironies of that whole sequence taking place on the cross is when you couple it with what he had told his apostles moments before stepping over the Kedron Brook and entering Gethsemani.

He told them this night, you’re all going to be scattered and you’re all going to leave me alone. But he says, but I am never alone. I’m not alone because the father is with me. He’s always with me. He’s always been with me. And now here, a matter of hours later, he’s saying, my God, my God, why has thou forsaken me? And the grandest irony of all is that he asks he asks this heartfelt question, why his self forsaken me?

And we have no response in the scriptures, and I love how elder Holland taught the concept in his great talk that he gave it as his opinion that never was the father actually closer to the sun than at that moment. But Jesus wasn’t allowed to feel that. Thus adding serious depth to Jesus, a statement in doctrine and covenants. Seventy six ers, one or seven, when he said he tread the wine press alone, he he had to be all alone for some reason.

And it might be worth your time this Easter season to read carefully the accounts of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John separately, like Taylor talked about earlier, to see their portraits. It’s in Matthew and Mark that this statement is made. And that’s the last statement. There is no other voice that the temple, the veil of the temple is rent perhaps is a way of God testifying and declaring to the people of what’s happened. But in Matthew, Mark Christ dies on the cross with this cry.

And I think there’s a there’s a portrait of Jesus that they want us to see and understand that so beautifully described.

And then you get in in the Gospel of John, that simplest statement of all I searched towards and in President Nelson talked about that phrase.

That’s the phrase that’s been least used in general conference. But President Nelson talked about in a powerful way, saying that to a doctor of medicine. That is a significant statement and it is an indication of the unbearable agony and shock that Christ is going through physically and spiritually. And then the last two statements kind of go hand in hand, the it is finished and then farther into the hands, I commend my spirit and I mean, I think both of those are beautiful.

That last one that you said farther into the hands, I commend my spirit, like you mentioned earlier, that Christ is laying down his life. No one is making him do it. And it’s interesting that in Luuk, the very first time we hear the voice of Jesus is when he says to his parents, with you, not that I must be about my father’s business. And now the last words we hear and Luke, again turning to his father’s business, that these last statements on the cross reveal the character of Christ in a really powerful way.

And now for us in the 21st century, I find it fascinating that Taylor already mentioned the church’s new logo with this emphasis of the Christus statue there, knowing that the marks of this infinite atonement are retained in his hands and in his feet and in his side.

Isn’t it interesting in English how this works, the way we talk about Jesus of all of the titles there, there we could we can spend hours on all of just the titles and names of Christ.

One of them is he’s the Prince of Peace, Brothers and Sisters. We live in a world that is not saturated with peace right now. We live in a world that has a lot of turmoil, a lot of conflict and contention and war and dishonesty and things that are the opposite of peace. But I love how if we turn to the prince of peace and we learn of him, we we appreciate him. We we call on his name. What will happen is we will become much more familiar.

With the Prince of peace. His has the violence he endured for us means that you and I. Can experience his peace. We can come into the safety of his wings that he puts out force, that he uses that analogy to scriptures as a chicken with the little chicks coming under that wing to protect us as we come into that covenant with him. There’s a power that comes when we feel the peace of Jesus Christ and I want to testify that I know Jesus Christ lives today.

He is the living and the loving Christ. Now, as we turn our attention from the events that take place in testimony and through the trials and and on the cross, and we we now focus on the tomb and that glorious resurrection morning, I think it’s important for us to realize why Easter is such a significant event, why the resurrection is the single greatest event probably in all of eternity for us. Up to this point, Jesus has overcome two deaths for us through this infinite atoning process.

He suffered for our sins. He paid for our spiritual death in the scriptures, especially in The Book of Mormon. The prophets there refer to that as hell, that he suffered the pains of hell for us so that we wouldn’t have to go down into that into that awful realm. And when he said it is finished on the cross seems to imply that that full price is paid. Now, his body laid in the tomb that late in the evening of that Friday.

He then lays in that tomb for the rest of Friday, all day Saturday, and then early in the morning Sunday to overcome our physical death, to overcome the grave. For us, it seems that it was required of him to overcome both deaths. What Jacob in The Book of Mormon will call that awful monster death. And hell, he overcomes both of them by descending into them to then break the bones of both of those deaths for for all of us.

Now, on that first Easter morning when those women went to the grave with the. Spices and the ointments to complete the burial process, and the stone was rolled away and the angels angels declare to them why Sikhi the living among the dead, he is not here for he is risen. I don’t know if three any more powerful words in all of scripture than he is risen, because what that means is now those those two deaths have been totally broken for us, opening the way for us to rise.

I love how in The Book of Mormon in second Nephi nine, when Jacob the Prophet and his face brothers talking about this, he says if Jesus hadn’t completed an infinite atonement, then our bodies would have died and would have been laid down in the dirt in the grave to rot and crumble, to rise no more. And if that happens to our bodies, he says, Jacobs says that our spirits would be subject to the devil, we would become angels to the devil to rise no more.

Jacob used the same forward phrase to rise no more for both our spirit and our body if Jesus doesn’t complete an infinite atonement. Is it any wonder that we sing out, he is risen, he has risen, he has opened Heaven’s Gate, we are free from since dark prison. Risen to a Houllier state. I want to finish with a personal experience that we had a couple of days ago in our home. It was Sunday and Jenna are little 12 year old daughter had done a primary experience for her three youngest siblings, Brennan, EYLEA and Merritt, and they sing Easter songs and they had a little craft.

And later that evening, as we’re gathered around eating dinner, Jenna mentioned, hey, did you all see the neat crafted the little kids did for their primary lesson today? And there were four of these sitting over on the side of the room. And our little merit, the youngest age five. He was so proud of his as my wife went and got his and was admiring it. And then little Mary said, and did you see the tears?

And all of us looked at each other and thought, what is he talking about? Did we see the tears? And this little five year old said to us. The tears on Jesus face and I went and I got the this and I looked a little closer and sure enough, little merit has drawn a tear coming out of Jesus his eye. And we asked him why tears? Why is Jesus crying? And this little five year old said, because he loves us, the thing that’s amazing to me is the independence of everybody else.

A little five year old came to the conclusion that Jesus loves little merit and loves all of us so much that when he was able to burst the bounds of death and come walking out of the grave, that it would cause him to shed a tear of joy because of that deep and profound love that he has for all of us now. As you celebrate Easter this year, there are a lot of uncertainties in this world, there are a lot of heartaches.

There are a lot of things that you and I are carrying in our soul, deep within our heart, that at times are very painful. I love the fact that we worship a God who weeps with us. Who who cries tears of joy and cries, tears of, at times, pain as we suffer and the glorious message of the gospel, the good news of the gospel is that the son of God came from heaven. To this fallen earth, he took upon himself all of our struggles, all of our pains, all of our toils, all of our frustrations and sins and addictions and and everything, that would be the negative effects of the fall of of Adam and Eve.

He took all of that upon himself and conquered death and hell, that awful monster so that you and I. Can I have a bad day every once in a while? We can have times when we feel less than strong, less than ideal, and somehow because that tomb was empty and because there is a savior who isn’t just the savior, but he’s your personal savior and redeemer and he’s up in heaven today, sitting enthroned on the right hand of the father who is pleading our cause before God on the high.

Somehow we will be able to overcome through through his infinite goodness and mercy and grace as we celebrate Easter this year. Just knowing that he lives. He is not in the tomb. He is risen and because of him, you and I can rise up both physically and spiritually. I’m going to stick with Margaret on this one, Jesus involves us. More importantly, he loves you and we leave that with you in the sacred name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

 

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