T10 Bearded Bishops, Rated R Movies, & the Honor Code | An Interview with John Hilton III

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 31 ก.ค. 2024
  • John Hilton III was born in San Francisco and grew up in Seattle. He served a mission in Denver and earned a bachelor’s degree from Brigham Young University, where he met his wife, Lani. They have lived in Boise, Boston, Miami, Mexico, Jerusalem, and China. Currently they live in Utah, and have six children. John has a master’s degree from Harvard and a PhD from Brigham Young University, both in Education. John is a professor of Religious Education at BYU.
    John has published several books with Deseret Book, including "Considering the Cross" and his latest book, "Voices in the Book of Mormon". He is also the author of the podcast and video series, “The Book of Mormon: A Master Class.” John loves being with his family, doing humanitarian work, learning Chinese, and performing magic.
    For updated links related to this video, visit leadingsaints.org/bearded-bis...
    HIGHLIGHTS
    0:00 Start
    7:04 John quotes President Uchtdorf in which the former addresses the many “shoulds” and “should nots” that become a challenge in our lives. We can lose peace in our lives when we focus on admittedly good ideas, but aren’t grounded in the Gospel of Jesus Christ.
    8:50 What are “Fence Laws”? Imagine an unfillable hole in your backyard, which poses a threat to children who may fall in. You therefore put a fence around this hole, which represents sin. The fence represents the protective effort against anybody falling into the sin.
    9:45 We are already protected from sins by commandments, which John refers to as “core laws”. Yet some still feel the need to add additional “fence laws”. E.g.:
    * Core Law: The law of chastity, i.e., no sexual relations outside of marriage.
    * Fence Law: No kissing until the fourth date, and kiss will last no longer than five seconds.
    * Fence Law: No going into the bedroom of a member of the opposite sex.
    10:47 Some fence laws have prophetic sources, like those found in the For the Strength of Youth, etc. There is a goodness to fence laws as guided by the spirit or other divine sources, like prophets.
    13:57 Examples of positive fence laws.
    15:22 Dangers of focusing on the fence laws while forgetting the commandments: “I didn’t go into the bedroom of a member of the opposite sex, but I still broke the law of chastity.” Children need fences, but the choices should shift away from extrinsic fences to self-imposed fences.
    16:50 Too many good fences can become a burden.
    22:58 “Take my yoke upon you” meaning.
    25:49 Ward traditions that become fences.
    28:56 Allowing the spirit to fill in the details around prophetic direction.
    30:14 Anecdotes where a personal fences law caused harm:
    * Unrighteous judgment
    * Offending others
    * Teaching others incorrectly
    43:20 Fences should help us feel the Holy Ghost
    45:50 Leading Saints’ contribution to fence laws: learning by seeking to understand the purpose behind a fence.
    48:14 How to step back from the rush to judgment.
    51:48 When to correct and when to ignore as leaders.
    53:10 Did we become members of Christ’s church in order to argue with others what true discipleship looks like? Paul, when using dietary habits as an example of arguing over something inconsequential, said “For meat, destroy not the work of God.” Romans 14:20.
    55:14 “The work of God” and your role, the bishop’s role, and our common goal.
    58:01 Trusting prophets as “seers”, even if we can’t “see” the point of their counsel.
    100:08 Review of four key points:
    * It’s good to have spirit-driven fence laws
    * Some fence laws can be burdensome
    * Know the mark: loving God and loving our neighbors
    * Judging others over fence laws, and teaching doctrine
    100:35 “Lord, is it I?” mode: who needs to hear this podcast? Look inward.
    1:02:58 Upward empathy toward leaders.
    204:18 Conclusion

ความคิดเห็น • 6

  • @amynazza
    @amynazza 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    A lot of eastern cultures/religions refer to stimulants as ‘hot’ and depressants as ‘cold’ so with that context the phrase in the WoW makes a lot more sense that it refers to the tea plant which is riddled with caffeine, as is the coffee plant, and caffeine is a stimulant.

  • @quoblack47
    @quoblack47 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    G.K. Chesterton has a quote that inspired a similar heuristic to not remove a fence until you know the reason why it was put up. Lot's of fences have been put up over the years by well-intentioned volunteer leaders. Now is a time of carefully, respectfully removing those that no longer have a modern application. Sometimes, it's obvious why they're there if the fence surrounds a large pit. But, a not so obvious example would be a fence surrounding an axe in a stump. This is standard practice in order to establish a safety zone when a person is swinging the axe to chop wood. While there's no immediate risk, as the axe can't swing itself, the scenario can quickly become dangerous. All fences should initially be respected, yet only few fences/laws are above scrutiny.

  • @johnneilson9295
    @johnneilson9295 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love this!!

  • @user-sj8gw7pn8c
    @user-sj8gw7pn8c 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I missed the comment on bearded Bishops. Where is it?

    • @Sweetcast
      @Sweetcast 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Only in the title.