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A
Hello, everyone, and welcome to another episode of Follow Him. We're so glad you are here. We can't do this without you. Thank you for joining us. We're here today with Ross Barron. And this is one of those backstory type lessons. Thoughts to keep in mind. Sometimes thoughts come out, sometimes you keep them in your mind. We're actually going to talk about them right out loud today. Thoughts to keep in mind. We have Dr. Ross Baron with us, and our topic is the House of Israel. Hank, when you hear House of Israel, what do you think?
B
John, I can't tell you how excited I am for this. Maybe in the last 10 years of my teaching, this has been central to me. President Nelson lit the fire in me. I was interested before, but then he put the gasoline on the fire. Sometimes students will say in class, when am I ever going to use this? If we're talking House of Israel and the Covenant like we did last time, and they say that, I think you don't have to know your purpose in life if you don't want to. If a young Latter Day Saint is wondering, why am I here? What does God want me to do? Give them this episode. I think every Latter Day Saint, if they're not participating as a member of the House of Israel, they'll always feel something missing. Your most joyful, pure moments will come when you are participating in this with those you love. I know this is kind of a serious way to start, but this is it.
C
Yeah.
A
And it goes to our very identity. We emphasize I am a child of God a lot. And we should. This is an even more specific. Not only are we children of God, we are House of Israel. What does that mean? Ross, what are you going to take us through today to help us understand why we need to know this?
C
I feel like both you, John and Hank about the House of Israel and the fire that's lit, I felt that way kind of my whole life. I think what you said about President Nelson in his famous talk, we are children of God, but children of the covenant. This House of Israel plays into that role as an identity marker. We are children of the covenant. Knowing that we're children of the covenant. I love the way you said it, Hank. If you want to know your purpose here in life, well, you tie into who you are. That helps me understand what I'm to be and what I can become. What I'd like to do is talk about Jacob, because Jacob, the grandson of Abraham, is going to be the one who's going to be renamed. I'm going to Suggest to you today that the Jacob Ark, his life arc. And he has an arc, by the way, it's an exciting arc. That life arc of Jacob is actually emblematic of our story, that his story is our story and it's not always pretty. This is the great thing about it. One of the neatest things about the Old Testament, it doesn't sanitize. I want to be careful here. I love the prophets and sustain prophets. The Old Testament has them in all their living color. They're human beings. They have growth and they don't know everything. And they move forward. Let me just again say I love the prophets. I sustain them. When Jesus comes among the Nephites, first thing out of his mouth, he declares who he is. Behold, I am Jesus Christ. The second thing he says is whom the prophets testified shall come into the world, he immediately upholds his prophets. That's not to say, however, that the prophets don't have to stretch and have effort and to move forward and to repent as well. When we meet Jacob, interestingly, Rebecca, who is Isaac's wife, she's pregnant with twins. They're striving within her according to the text, and she doesn't know why. She goes and inquires of the Lord. By the way, this is again a great story about women and their influence in the Old Testament. And Rebecca, she doesn't go to Isaac, she who's the prophet, she goes and inquires the Lord and she gets her own revelation, which is like a section from the Doctrine and Covenants. It's a written out text. She gets this revelation about the twins in her womb. That's kind of the first time we get about Jacob. But the first real story of Jacob is the story of the birthright, which most people are familiar with. Just in summary, there's two boys, Jacob and Esau. Esau, he is a hunter, slash man of the fields. Apparently Jacob is not, the text says he's a plain man. The word plain in Hebrew is tam. And it's an interesting translation. It just means complete or whole. He's not a guy out in the field. The story is in comes Esau, and apparently Jacob is making some kind of lentil soup. Esau comes in and then he does the drama move. I need that food or I'm going to die. Jacob, he says, sell me your birthright and I'll give you some lentil soup. Then interestingly, Esau says, well, what profit is this birthright to me? He basically agrees to sell his birthright for some lentil soup. Now prophets Lots of prophets, lots of apostles. Lots of preaching has been done on this particular topic. Don't sell your birthright for a mess of pottage. Meaning don't in the moment, give up that great thing for something less. That's the sermon that's been preached on this, and I like that sermon. I agree with that sermon. Interestingly, I think we get insight at this point in their lives to both Esau and Jacob tell us about the birthright.
A
Because it seems that so often the firstborn doesn't get it in so many stories in the Old Testament.
C
I gave a talk once at an education week in byu, Idaho, called the Forsaken Firstborn, where I cannot think of a time until we get to Jesus, where a firstborn actually got the birthright. I don't know Abraham's birth order. That was one asterisk. I put that there. But even in the latter days, Joseph Smith is not the firstborn. Alvin was the firstborn, then Hyrum, then Joseph. Super interesting. Nephi is not the firstborn. In any case, the birthright, just as a reminder to most people, is simply the idea that the Father would give to the firstborn or to the favored son a double portion. This is critical to understand. The double portion wasn't so that the son could live the high life. It wasn't so that the son could live in a bigger mansion and drive nicer cars and have people fan him. It was so that he could redeem his family. If there were problems. He could take care of those that were marginalized. He could take care of those that were on the outs. He could help redeem the family. Right? Christ is the ultimate firstborn. The idea is with that endowment of power, with that endowment of resources, you literally then bless your family. Think about Christ when he was tempted and the tempter said, turn these stones into bread. Christ could have turned those stones into bread. We know that. That would have been using his power, his endowment, his birthright for himself. That's not the purpose of the birthright. The purpose of the birthright, we got to get clear, and it's going to be a theme throughout the Old Testament, is to then redeem the family. Christ is the perfect example of that.
B
You get a double portion, basically, because you're going to be the administrator of the will. You're going to help everybody else in the family.
C
It's a good way to look at it. I would even say again, with the Savior, he got resources. I use that phrase because it wasn't money. He says in his ministry, foxes have Holes and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head. He was Jehovah. He had an endowment of power. But that endowment of. Of power to redeem his family was not to be used for his own benefit. That's the key.
A
Being chosen isn't a thing about yourself. Being chosen is chosen to serve, chosen to gather. So being birthright is not about you either. It's about redeeming. Give us a definition of redeem. I want to say to buy back, right?
C
It's to buy back, to bring out of a bad situation into a good situation, using more vernacular language. You think about in the Book of Mormon, Laman and Lemuel's misunderstanding of being the firstborn. They get angry. And pretty much through Nephite history, they keep coming back to this idea. Well, you know, you robbed us of our birthright. You robbed us of our rights. Your rights were to bless your family.
B
Right?
C
You're trying to kill your dad and kill your brother. Like, that's not what the Redeemer does. That's why Nephi got it. Because Nephi is going to serve and bless and redeem and preach and teach and do all those things we talked about with respect to the Abrahamic covenant. He's going to extend that to everyone.
A
Apparently, this is so embedded in the culture that centuries after Laman and Lemuel and Nephi were dead, that's still going on in the war chapters. It's saying this war hath been to avenge their wrongs. This war has been waged to. Wait a minute. You're talking about a birth order thing centuries old, but that just tells us how embedded it must have been.
C
Amen. No, that's exactly right. One of the things I love to do when I teach about the New Testament, to look at the questions that people ask Jesus, they're quantifying questions. Who's the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven? Peter, James, and John. They're hoping he's gonna be like you are, Peter.
A
You're.
C
You're the one. You were right all along. It was your sneaking suspicion. And you, in fact, are the greatest. Then what does Jesus do? He turns it on its head and he teaches. What a powerful lesson he brings. A little child. This is the greatest. The attributes of a little child, that's the greatest. And I'm likening this to the birthright, literally a responsibility you have to bless others. Let's say you're not the birthright, son. You're not the birthright, child. Great the whole purpose of that birthright child is to help redeem you, to bring you up to the status of that birthright child. The whole idea is that we get back and become like them. There's nothing that we're going to lose out on. Looking at the text here in Genesis 25, verse 32, and Esau said, behold, I'm at the point to die. Again, a drama moment. I think that's not true. I'm gonna die. We've all heard that. Just reel it in, brother. I'm at the point to die. And then this line, what profit shall this birthright do to me? Fundamental misunderstanding, doctrinally to me of what the birthright is. Fundamental misunderstanding that will take profits. Constantly teaching us that's not what the birthright means. You're not losing anything. Jacob desires the birthright. And Jacob said, swear to me this day, verse 33. And he swear unto him. And he sold his birthright unto Jacob. Then Jacob gave Esau bread and pottage of lentils. He did eat and drink and rose up and went his way. Then it says, thus Esau despised his birthright. Okay, whoever is redacting, editing the book of the Old Testament. And when I say redact, I mean they're compiling documents, deciding what's going to go in, what's not going to go in. Much like Mormon did with the various records of the Book of Mormon, we believe that Moses was one of the main redactors of the Old Testament. When he says, thus Esau despised his birthright. That word despise is a strong word in Hebrew. When Nathan comes to David after David has killed Uriah and committed adultery with Bathsheba, he says, you have despised the Lord. And he uses that same Hebrew word, which is strong language. You despise the Lord. Thus Esau despised his birthright. Think about it. He despised his opportunity to be a goel. That's the Hebrew word for redeemer. He despised that opportunity to redeem the family, to use that power not for himself, but to bless others. But we're talking about Jacob here, Hank. You're a dad, John, you're a dad. If you heard this story, like, let's say you were in the other room, and you're like, I just want to see how this plays out. Tell me not how you're feeling about Esau, but what's your take on Jacob here?
B
I don't know if I'm falling into a trick question, but I can hear me from the other room. Jacob, stop. Right? You're taking advantage of the situation.
A
You've pointed out the mindset of what will it do to me? What's in it for me? Maybe our question today, like Hank, I'd be, hey, you guys get along in there.
C
And by the way, not a trick question again, Jacob becomes an amazing person. I have a saying that the way history was is not the way history had to be. And that Jacob's going to get the birthright. He doesn't have to get it this way.
B
This way. Yeah, it does seem sneaky.
C
It's sneaky. It's going to create contention between the brothers. Overlaying again President Nelson on this thing. We could be peacemakers. He could have had a conversation with, listen, let's sit down and have some legumes together and we can talk about the birthright. What do you think, brother? I don't know how it would have went or it would have gone. The point being, I read this and there's a part of me that thinks, is Jacob the mature disciple yet? And I'm going to say probably not. This is again, the beginning, the middle and the end because Jacob will become a mighty prophet. This to me is a hint of maybe some of the immaturity and some of the rough edges that have to be knocked off.
B
Russ, can we just stop and talk about this skill for a second? In scripture reading lingo, it's called exegesis and it has nothing to do with Jesus, but it's the idea of let the text say what it says. Don't read into it, don't try to twist it, rest it, just say, yeah, that's what it says.
C
He's young, they're brothers. They're probably some rivalry going on here and they probably have some history. Again, this is redacted, meaning it's been edited. So we have a fragment. I want to say we have a fragment of a story. I don't want to read too much into it, but I love what you said. Just let the text speak for itself. The Old Testament doesn't sanitize it and the Old Testament is going to allow it to just speak for itself. But again, I think it's purposeful because we have a story arc here about Jacob's life and then the next story is Genesis 27. In one of the more bizarre chapters. By the way, that's saying a lot because there's some bizarre chapters in the Old Testament. In one of the more bizarre chapters of the Old Testament, your main characters in this story are Isaac, who is the prophet, but old and maybe a bit out of it. Sometimes, which is fine. God can lead his kingdom through whoever he wants. You've got Rebecca, you've got Esau, and you've got Jacob. People know the story. And I've been in lots of situations where people, in fact, Hank, don't want to let the text speak for itself. But I love it when I teach this in class and we go through the whole story. Students aren't often as familiar with the details, but the bottom line is Isaac's getting old and people want blessings from their prophet dispensation kind of guy. Father Jacob wants a blessing, but Rebecca thinks that Esau is going to get the blessing. The blessing, the right blessing. And she had that revelation back in Genesis 25, where Jacob's going to be the firstborn. She's a little concerned, maybe looking at it through her normal eyes. She's one of the great matriarchs. But we're just looking at a human story. You guys know the story. Esau's going to go out in the field because Isaac's requested it. I'm going to get you some really good meat. We're going to have some good meat. This is going to be great. I'm going to make it just the way you like it. Rebecca heard it. Rebecca's like, hey, Jacob, quick. I'm going to make some savory meat for your dad. And you're going to put on Esau's clothes, and you're going to get the blessing. Now here's the interesting thing. She says all this to him. Then he says verse 10. And Jacob said to Rebekah, his mother, behold, Esau, my brother is a hairy man. I'm a smooth man. My father, Peradventure, will feel me, and I shall seem to him a deceiver. I shall bring a curse upon me and not a blessing. He didn't say, mom. That would be a lie. Mom. That would be inappropriate. I should never do that to deceive Father. What are you thinking? Let's sit down and talk.
B
The lie's not gonna work. Yeah.
C
He's like, the lie ain't gonna work.
B
And I'm gonna take the blame, and
C
I'm gonna take the blame. And she says, no, no. If he curses you, it's on my head. This is a very human story. I don't need to sanitize the text. It is what it is. People are being human. Everything's going to be fine. We're going to work it out. The Savior is going to work it out. All's good. Now look what happens Here they go into the closet of Esau, and they put on the skins. I've never fully pictured how it works, but he's got on his clothes. Verse 18. He came unto his Father. I'm in Genesis 27. And said my father. And he said, here am I. Who art thou, my son? Jacob? 19. And Jacob said unto his father, I am Esau, thy firstborn. What do we call that sentence? That is a lie.
B
That's called the lie.
C
And there's no two ways around it. There's no exegetical Hebrew I can. Yoga position. I can get out of. It is a lie. There's no other way to say it. Isaac feels like there's something up and, you know, and he's like, back and forth and again. Verse 24. And he said, art thou my very son Esau? He said, I am. Okay.
A
He eats.
C
And 28 and 29. I want to read the blessing that Jacob gets who's acting like he's Esau. Now what we're going to do. Anybody who's listening or watching, I want you to rate the blessing. Ratetheblessing.com okay, this is what this is going to be. 1 is low, 10 is the highest. We ready? 28. Therefore, God give thee of the dew of heaven and the fatness of the earth and plenty of corn and wine. Let people serve thee, and nations bow down to thee to be lord over thy brethren. And let thy mother's sons bow down to thee. Cursed be everyone that curseth thee. And blessed be he that blesseth thee. Let's rate it. John, what are we thinking?
A
That's pretty good. If anybody goes against you, they will be cursed. If anyone blesses you, they will be blessed. I don't know what you'd add to that, Hank. Maybe a Ford F150 or something. But.
B
And it's also very Esau. The smell of the field, the fatness of the earth, plenty of corn and wine. He's. Jacob's gotta be thinking, this is definitely not for me.
C
Then you get that part. People are gonna serve you, and they're gonna bow down to you. And this is 10 out of 10. My patriarchal blessing doesn't say this in my blessing. Yeah, okay. Exit stage left. He goes. He's got this blessing. Boom. In comes Esau. Isaac does in verse 32, who art thou? And he said, I am thy son, thy firstborn, Esau. Now, here's an interesting thing. He says, please give me a blessing. Isaac kind of vacillates, but then he gives him a blessing. Verse 39. Behold, thy dwelling shall be the fatness of the earth and the dew of heaven from above. Very similar to verse 28, like you said, Hank. Very Esau like. But then look at this. By thy sword shalt thou live and shalt serve thy brother. And it shall come to pass that when thou shalt have the dominion, that thou shalt break his yoke from off thy neck. I mean, it's a good blessing. Clearly different now, at the end of verse 33, there's a critical line. And Isaac, who is the prophet at the end of verse 33, he says, Yea, speaking to Esau about Jacob's blessing, and he shall be blessed. Meaning, in my view, when Isaac blessed Jacob, the Spirit was leading it, whether he received it deceptively or not. It was the blessing that Jacob was supposed to get. Esau got the blessing he was supposed to get. You with me. This is my hot take. Everyone got the blessing they were supposed to get. And none of the machinations, none of the trickery needed to be done. Had Esau come back and fed him, he would have got the blessing in verses 39 and 40. And if Jacob would have come in later, he would have got the blessing in 28 and 29 that Isaac was being led by the Spirit. And had Isaac felt like the deception was sufficient, that the blessing wasn't correct, he with his power could have revoked the blessing. But. But didn't. He testifies at the end of verse 33. Yea, and he shall be blessed. I think this story in connection with the selling of the birthright is an immaturity on the part of Jacob and a little bit problematic with Rebecca. Again. I love Rebecca. She's one of my heroes, actually. She again, human side. It's okay. We're going to work through this. God's going to do his work. And we don't need to try to manipulate it. We don't need to do that. We don't need to try to jockey for position. We don't need to do that. The Lord's going to do his work through his servants, period.
A
I like the way you've said this here. Those humans, they just humaned. Those humans are going to human. Is that a verb now? It is a verb now, but God gave the person who was supposed to receive the blessing receive the blessing.
B
Here's the famous quote I'm sure both of you have thought of here. Elder Holland. Except in the case of his only perfect begotten Son, imperfect people are all God has ever had to work with. That must Be terribly frustrating to him. But he deals with it. So should we. In this line, Ross seems to come right out of this story. And when you see imperfection, remember that the limitation is not in the divinity of the work.
C
I love the story. We have to take a lot of time. People are working through it. So Jacob lied. I was like, yeah, yeah. Yep, he did. And Rebecca. Yeah. For a moment, man, she lost bearings on who Isaac actually is. And God's doing his work. Wow. Like, God's doing his work now. Now here's the fun part of the story. In Alma 41, verse 15, I call this the karma verse of the Book of Mormon, it says, for that which you do send out shall return unto you again. Jacob has been deceptive, been a little sneaky, been a little tricky. And we might think, man, that guy got away with it. Brother Baron, that guy got away with it, did he? We're gonna get some karma now. That which you sent out, it's coming right back to you. They're gonna send him up to Padanaram. He is going to be with Rebecca's brother, Laban. So his uncle Laban has daughters, and he wants to marry Rachel. He's in love with Rachel. But on the wedding night, they do a switcheroo, and it's Leah. This is the karma. He gets deceived. He deceived. Now he gets deceived. Now we know the story. He ends up marrying Rachel. Then he ends up marrying two other women, Bilhah and Zilpah, who are the handmaids. Later in Genesis 31, this is starting in verse 38. He now is recounting to Laban. Now think about what Jacob did, and think about now the karma. Think about that which you do send out is coming back to you. Quote starting in verse 38. This 20 years have been with thee. Thy ewes and thy she goats have not cast their young. And the rams of the flock have I not eaten. That which was torn of beasts I brought not unto thee. I bear the loss of it, of my hand. Didst thou require it? Whether stolen by day or stolen by night. Thus I was. Now listen to his description. In the day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night, and my sleep departed from mine eyes. Thus have I been 20 years in thy house. So two decades I served thee. 14 years for thy two daughters, six years for thy cattle, and thou hast changed my wages 10 times. The deceiver initially, the tricky one initially got tricked, and he got deceived in his own life. And then God Wanted to see how are you going to respond. But he responds in a Christlike way. He responds as God wanted him to respond. He's honest, he has integrity, he's faithful, he's loyal, and he does what's required of him. This is beautiful again, in terms of the story arc, because then God can use him. God can use him. Eventually he's going to have some supernal visions that will then crown who he is and the promise that he's going to get. Then we can move into the house of Israel.
A
I've never connected those events before. This is great.
C
Well, good.
A
What goes around comes around.
C
Exactly. That's another way of saying it.
B
John likes to say, I think he's quoting Elder Maxwell, that the Lord has his macro plan of salvation made up of billions of tiny little micro plans of salvation. This is maybe one of the micro plans is Jacob, I'm going to teach you some things along the way as I'm going about my great purposes. You are going to have some tutoring.
C
I like that a lot. And I think that's well put. And I think it's right on. But sometimes people literally will think, oh, he got away with stuff. No, he paid for 20 years. He paid for 20 years. He did. And becomes a different person. Not only does he become a different person in respect to his integrity and loyalty, but in his relation and I think in his pondering about Esau, he wants to reconcile with Esau. That's his brother. They've been estranged because of certain things that have happened. And now he is becoming the man of God that he needs to be. I want to talk about a couple of super important events quickly. And I want to get to the house of Israel and to the children and how that all plays out. In Genesis 28, we get this vision he has, or it's a dream where he sees the ladder. He sees a ladder going up into heaven and he sees God at the top of the ladder. And then he sees angels descending and ascending the ladder. He says something super significant. He says, this is Beth El in Hebrew. This is the house of God. This is the entry, the portal. As Latter Day Saints are listening in terms of those who know about the temple, who've read about the temple, this idea of a ladder going into heaven and angels descending and ascending and reporting to God and then coming back with missions, he is in fact seeing what we know as the temple, as a temple ceremony, learning. And then the prophet Joseph Smith said, the rungs on the ladder are ordinances and covenants that help Us ascend the ladder to come back into the presence of God. He has this incredible vision which is, I think, a turning point for him in terms of who he is to become and what he is to do in mortality. That's number one. Number two, Hank and John, you guys have been to the River Jabbok, right? In Jordan. And the River Jabbok is where Jacob is going to see Esau the first time in decades. And he's actually concerned. He thinks that Esau is still angry at him, that he could kill him or kill his family. He has a supernal moment at the River Jabbok. He sends everybody and he is alone there. This is Genesis 32, 24, 30. I'm going to quote President Nelson, who's going to talk about this event. This is from the October 2020 General Conference. He's the president of the church, and he says this. Let us recall a crucial turning point in the life of Jacob, the grandson of Abraham. At the place Jacob named Peniel, which means the face of God, Jacob wrestled with a serious challenge. It's really interesting the way President Nelson is doing this. His agency was tested. Through this wrestle, Jacob proved what was most important to him. He demonstrated that he was willing to let God prevail in his life. In response, God changed Jacob's name to Israel, meaning, let God prevail. God then promised Israel Jacob that all the blessings that had been pronounced upon Abraham's head would also be his. That's October 2020. That is a powerful prophetic interpretation of a tricky couple of verses there. That back to Hank's comment about exegesis. Biblical scholars have wrestled themselves with what in the world's going on in this text. And it's very difficult. Here you have a prophetic interpretation that is very subtle, by the way, this idea of him wrestling with a decision and some agency that is being tested. And I wonder, given the context, if that is, do I really want to reconcile with my brother? Is it worth it? Do I want to risk that? I think in the end, letting God prevail, God is saying, hey, you need to reconcile with your brother. This is Jesus's teaching. He that forgiveth not his brother's trespasses standeth condemned before the Lord. Like, you've gotta do this. If you're not one with your brother, you can't be one with me. You've gotta do this thing. And he finally, through this, wrestle says, I'm gonna do it. It doesn't matter. I'm gonna do it. He lets God prevail the Very next chapter. Is this beautiful, by the way, Reconciliation with Esau, where they are brothers indeed.
A
I think it's significant that this is the first time the name Israel comes up. It's God that gives him the name. It's possible to say, and I've heard this said before, there was Israel before Israel because of premortality, that there's certain souls that were sent to come through the house or the family.
C
Correct. Somebody might be listening to thinking these guys were chosen in premortality. You have to go back. Chosen for what? Chosen to wear out our lives. To bless humanity. That's what you're chosen to do. So that those other people can come up to the exact same station you're at again. It's not to lord over people or that you're better than other people. It's about choices and agency, but extending those blessings to everyone.
A
I love that you could say, let's do again now what we did premortally. We let God prevail, then let's let God prevail in our lives now. Let's be who we are as House of Israel.
C
I love that. That's exactly right. Back to my idea of the story arc. You have Jacob, who starts out maybe a bit immature, makes a couple mistakes, doesn't fully trust God. There's some trickery going on. He eventually has all these things come back to him. He responds in appropriate ways. God then bestows upon him gifts, meaning gifts of the spirit. He has dreams and other things. Then he gets all these promises sealed upon his head. His story is my story. His story is your story. We've all made mistakes, we've all done dumb things. Then we get opportunities to repent, to change. And then God's promises, just like to Jacob, he'll bless us, he'll endow us with power, and then he'll seal upon us all the blessings he wants to seal upon us. It's not a story to be mad at Jacob or to point out the deficiencies of Jacob. It's simply a story to say, his story is my story. He is like me. And I can receive all these amazing blessings. I can repent.
A
But.
C
But you gotta know something. What you gotta know is that choices have consequences. Choices have consequences. Jacob made some choices, he got some consequences. And in the end, after repentance, fully 100% blessed and didn't become Jacob anymore, became Israel. New name. He gets a new name. Wow.
A
What benefit is there going through the lives of early Latter Day Saints, for example, looking for flaws. News flash. You will find Them?
C
Yep. Check.
A
What have you proven?
C
Right. Somebody comes to me, he's like, Joseph Smith. I'm like, okay, therefore. Therefore, he's not Jesus. Okay. Neither are you. Neither am I. Yep, we're good.
A
Neither am I.
C
We're good. Yeah, we're all good. I also think it's fascinating on that topic that Isaiah says there's no form nor comeliness, that when we behold him, we should desire him to the naked eye, Jesus, to many, would have appeared imperfect and not up to their standard. Anyway, that's so fascinating if a seminary
B
teacher or Sunday school teacher or parent can help a young person walk through this and see. Yeah, look at the Lord using this prophet prepares them for church history and also today.
C
Yes, right.
B
Their bishop, their stake president, their Relief Society president, themselves, their parents.
C
Now, I do want to make a comment, and it'd be an interesting episode to do again, the women in the lives of these patriarchs. Sarah plays an enormous role in the life of Abraham. Enormous. I don't believe, and I mean this, that Abraham would have been Abraham without Sarah. I believe that with all my heart. I believe that Isaac is not Isaac without Rebecca and that she is a woman of massive faith. Do you remember when the Eleazar goes to get her and she says, I will go, just like Nephi, I'm going to go. I'm going to do this. This is what God wants. Rebecca is incredible. Getting her own revelation. Then the wives of Jacob, Leah and Rachel and Bilhah and Zilpah. These are amazing women. Faithful, being tried and tested to the core. It's incredible. We don't have, I don't think, the full account. Obviously, we're going to get the full account one day. I think it's specifically interesting. I'll just make this aside that in Genesis 22, which is one of the more incredible chapters of when Abraham is asked to offer up Isaac, that Sarah is glaringly absent from that story. She's not mentioned one single time. The way it's written in Genesis 22, it's Abraham's story. One day we'll get Isaac's story, and one day we'll get Sarah story. But right now we have Abraham's story in Genesis 22, which is apparently what the Lord wants us to have. But one day we'll get these stories. I want to give a shout out to these incredible women who played critical roles, crucial roles in all of the events that we've been talking about. Now, in terms of the house of Israel, Jacob, remember, has Leah and then Rachel than Bilhah and Zilpah. With Leah, he has six sons and one daughter, Dina. Rachel, who is kind of the wife that Jacob really loved. I mean, he loved them all. I think in the end he did love them all. But she is having a hard time conceiving. He prays to the Lord. Then she has Joseph and then Benjamin. So Rachel has two children. Then Bilhah and Zilpah each have two as well. You've got six through Bilhah, Zilpah and Rachel. And then. And you've got six with Leah. Those 12 sons become what we call in the church the house of Israel. The children of Israel. Israel. Those are all names for those. And we call them the tribes of Israel. In certain blessings that are very poetic, each tribe gets a blessing. Each tribe has a corresponding responsibility. So you have this situation where everyone gets a blessing. Now we need to say this. The firstborn son of Jacob is Reuben. But because of some iniquity on the part of Reuben, he lost his birthright. Then it went to the firstborn son of the next wife, which is Joseph. Joseph then becomes the birthright son. Then Genesis 37 through Genesis 50 is essentially the story of Joseph as a type of Christ, as a redeemer, as a kinsman redeemer, fulfilling the role of redemption, and again as a type of Jesus Christ. If somebody's wondering what's the house of Israel? The house of Israel is simply those 12 sons and their descendants. So anybody who's descended through Reuben, Issachar, Zebulon, Dan, Naphtali, Joseph, Judah, Levi, those are the tribes of Israel. Those are the tribes. Now, one of the biggest questions I get all the time is let's say somebody gets a patriarchal blessing. Now, Hank, you look like you're an Ephraimite. Are you from Ephraim?
B
Absolutely.
C
Okay. And John, I think you look like an Ephraim too. Are you? Ephraim was the second born son of Joseph. Manasseh is the firstborn son. There are certain blessings Joseph has. President Nelson, in an incredible statement, told us that the tribe of Judah prepared the world for the first coming of Jesus Christ and that the tribe of Joseph will prepare the world for the second coming of Jesus Christ. When somebody comes to me and says, brother Baron, I got my patriarchal blessing, I'm from Zebulon or I'm from Judah, or I'm from Issachar or I'm from Dan, what's my role? My absolute categorical statement is before the second coming of Jesus Christ, we are all co partners with Joseph to gather Israel in preparation for the world for the second coming of Jesus Christ. Now, what other responsibilities you might have in the millennium will be made known to us. But right now, I am not an Ephraimite. I am from Judah. My responsibility is to be co partner with Joseph, with the tribes of Ephraim and Manasseh, to gather Israel from both sides of the veil, period. That's my role. Anybody listening who's from any other tribe, we get the privilege, the blessing to partner with each other, to be in the most glorious work, which is literally gathering Israel on both sides of the veil. That is the answer to that question, like, what's my role? What's my responsibility? That is. Now again, there might be other roles and responsibilities made later by the Savior himself, but at this point, that's what's going on.
B
We've said this before, Ross and John, but we should say it again. The Lord has a chosen family to bless all the families of the earth because he loves everyone. That question, if he loves everyone, why would he have a chosen family? This is clearly why he has a chosen family. Their covenant responsibility is to bless all the families of the earth.
C
That's exactly right. And I do think there's a doctrine of foreordination which is true, and there's a doctrine of predestination which is false. Predestination is the idea that God elects certain people to be saved and certain people to people to be damned. They can't do anything about it. And moral agency is really not a thing. Foreordination means that in premortality we were foreordained to certain tasks, responsibility and missions that we could either live up to or not in accordance with our moral agency. God's plan cannot be frustrated, but we have choices with respect to our foreordination. The House of Israel was foreordained to come to earth to bless the earth and to bless all the inhabitants of the earth, both living and dead. That's foreordination. That was super helpful, Hank, to answer the question like, why did God use a family to do this? Because they were foreordained to do it. That's the way that has to work.
B
Let's tie this in. Ross too. As members of the church, as part of the House of Israel, we are a birthright where we get all these blessings from the gospel that we are to use to bless everyone else.
C
In other words, we don't have sort of a birthright, literally as members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. You get baptized, you get the gift of the Holy Ghost. There's priesthood, there's keys, there's temples, there's the fullness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. There's re revealed scripture in terms of the Book of Mormon. There are prophets and apostles on earth who hold the keys of the kingdom. So we're not blown about by every wind of doctrine. We are that birthright kingdom whose responsibility is then under the direction of the Savior to redeem all mankind. I want to do back handsprings. I'm so excited about that. I can't do a backhand spring actually, but I want to because I'm so excited about what you said because that's our covenant obligation, the covenant obligations to do that. I've talked about this before. I was serving in Rexburg as a stake president and I got a call from the temple president. It was probably about 9 or 10 in the morning. He said, hey, I want to talk to you about some of your members that can create some fear on the part of a stake president. He said, I had a bunch of your members that were knocking on the door of the baptismal door font at 4 this morning because they were so excited about the family names they had got. They wanted to do baptisms. We have to get in there. In Isaiah, chapter two or two, Nephi chapter 12, it says, all nations shall flow into the temple. The temple is in the top of the mountains. According to Isaiah chapter two, rivers don't flow up, rivers flow down. I've thought like, what's going on with that imagery? That's because those young people at 4am are going 100% against the natural man. That's not natural. You don't have a bunch of 18 to 20 year olds getting up at 4 in the morning, pounding the door of the temple to say we've got to do baptisms for the dead. That's what Isaiah saw. He was excited about those guys. They are flowing into the temple against nature, against the natural man, doing that which in mortality seems to this cannot possibly be. That's what's going on that is so powerful and beautiful. Back to your comment, Hank. Are we the firstborn? Yeah. Do we have that endowment of power, those resources? Yes. And it has one sole purpose. That's to bless all of God's children everywhere. It's 100% inclusive, not exclusive.
B
We can sometimes be a little bit like Esau. What's in it for me?
C
That's right. What does it profit me?
A
Can we go back to that question that so often comes Up. I'm of this tribe, of this tribe. Sometimes what they'll do is gone to the Old Testament and look for what Jacob said to Dan or something like that and think that's their blessing. And I want to say, you have your own patriarchal blessing. We probably have a fragmentary record in the Old Testament of what was said to each of the sons, but you've got your own blessing. Look at that.
C
Amen. That calling to be a patriarch is one of the holy and blessed callings in the kingdom. When I joined the church, I was 18. When I joined the church, and my bishop said to me, you need to get a patriarchal blessing. I, of course, had no clue what a patriarchal blessing was. He kind of explained it to me, and I thought, okay, that sounds good. I drove to this little house and parked in front, walked in, knocked on the door of the. This old guy with white hair answered the door, introduced himself, and Frankly, I was 18. He seemed like he was at least 170 to 180 years old and a little out of it. So we sat down and he probably chatted with me for two or three minutes and then said, well, are we ready? And I said, yeah. And he put on two recorders. He put. Like he put over his head. He put, this is, you know, way back when. And he put these tape recorders. And he said, I do these two tape recorders in case one fails. He says, so don't mind me. I'm going to push start, and then I'm going to lay my hands on your head. I said, okay, puts his hands on my head. I am telling you. He gave me this blessing that was out of this world. And he said things in there that literally only God and I knew, and about my experience and reading Scripture and about my inheritance as a descendant of Judah, which he didn't know, by the way. He didn't know any of that stuff. And he just said incredible things. To this day, I read my patriarchal blessing, the specific fulfillment of prophecies that he uttered upon my head. Now, everyone knows that patriarchal blessings are conditional. That is, they're conditioned upon our faithfulness to the covenant, our faithfulness, not perfection, but that we're striving to do what we are supposed to do. That those blessings will be fulfilled using this language. That God has endowed his kingdom, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, with power to redeem children on both sides of the veil is astounding. And all the different helps. That's the words that President Oaks used. Divine Helps that he's given us in the latter days. That patriarchal blessing has sustained and blessed me my entire life. Anybody who's not had a patriarchal blessing yet, you get that blessing. Part of it is to be declared that lineage. You are of the House of Israel. You are part of the covenant. And now you have an obligation to go and do the works of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, our fathers and our mothers. My great grandma is Leah. Your great grandma is Rachel. We are same dad, different moms.
A
Our listeners might want to go to Ensign College and listen to Hank's talk about this because it was all about who are we and what does House of Israel mean? What are we supposed to do with that knowledge? So people might want to listen to that because it's in true Hank Smith style. You'll enjoy it, you'll laugh, you're kind.
B
John, on that same message, this is all about this. I remember Sarah saying, you're really spending a lot of time on that. I was at the kitchen table late into evening after evening after evening, really trying to shape this because like we said earlier, a young person needs to know why they are here. If they don't know, there will always be something missing once they catch the vision of the House of Israel and who they are. It locks you in. It locks you in as a member. I have yet to hear a friend say, I really locked in as a member of the House of Israel, but I left the church. I've heard people say, oh, I was in the bishopric. Oh, I was in the early society presidency, and I left the church. I get that everyone has their own journey, but I've yet to hear someone say, the Book of Mormon taught me that I am of the covenant people, that God has a work for me
C
to do that's powerful.
A
Yeah.
C
The idea of the baptismal font, we go and you have an open house and we take people to the baptismal font. Of course, the fonts on the back of 12 oxen, each tribe has their own symbol, but it's Ephraim that's the ox. The responsibility for the salvation of humankind rests correctly so on the back of the House of Israel, but specifically on the back of Ephraim. When I said, we're all co partners with Ephraim, that baptismal font is symbolic of that truth. And if we go to section 133, it's interesting. This was at one point the appendix of the Doctrine and Covenants. Well, it isn't anymore because we have other sections after it in section 133. The Lord makes this comment to Joseph about Ephraim. He says, and they, the others from Israel shall bring forth their rich treasures unto the children of Ephraim. My servants. I'm in verse 30 of 133, 31. And the boundaries of the everlasting hills shall tremble at their presence. And there shall they fall down and be crowned with glory. Ephraim is crowning people with glory, bringing them up to their same status, not lording over anyone. And they shall be crowned with glory even in Zion by the hands of the servants of the Lord, even the children of Ephraim. Behold, this is the blessing of the everlasting God upon the tribes of Israel. The tribes of Israel. And the richer blessing upon the head of Ephraim and his fellows. Isn't that powerful? There's the concept, this blessing for what? This endowment, these gifts, these helps. They're all there to bless everyone. We've got a responsibility.
A
Can you connect Ephraim and Manasseh with Joseph?
C
Joseph is sold into Egypt. When he sold into Egypt. Through a series of events and through his faithfulness and loyalty, he becomes the number two in the land of Egypt. He is the vizier. He is Jafar, but a good guy. Yeah, he's the vizier in Egypt. He's only second in the throne to Pharaoh. He marries Azenath with Azenith. They have two children. One of them is Manasseh and one of them is Ephraim. They're both the children of Joseph. Now, when Jacob gives the blessing to Joseph's sons because they have the reconciliation, Jacob blesses Ephraim as the firstborn son. Well, then there's 13 tribes, right? There's 13 because we have Ephraim and Manasseh. That technically is true, but Ephraim and Manasseh are Joseph.
B
I wanted to read these two paragraphs from the manual thoughts to keep in mind. The house of Israel. This is beautiful. I think it sums up what we've said so far in the church today. You may hear about Israel in expressions like the gathering of Israel. We sing about the Redeemer of Israel, the hope of Israel and Ye elders of Israel. That's a great song. In these cases, we aren't talking or singing about the ancient kingdom of Israel or the modern nation called Israel. Rather, we are referring to people who have been gathered from the nations of the world into the church of Jesus Christ. We are referring to people who persevere with God, who earnestly seek his blessings, and who, through baptism, have become his covenant. People in the Words of President Russell M. Nelson. To be of Israel means to let God prevail in our lives, to let God be the most powerful influence in our lives. Second paragraph here. This is the two paragraphs at the end of the manual. Your patriarchal blessing declares your connection to one of the tribes of the House of Israel. That's more than an interesting piece of family history. It has to do with your present and future. Being part of the House of Israel means you have a covenant relationship with Heavenly Father and Jesus Christ. It means that you, like Abraham, are meant to be a blessing to God's children. It means, in the words of Peter, that you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people, that you should show forth the praises of him who hath called you out of darkness into his marvelous light. It means that you let God prevail, that you are one who perseveres with God as you honor your covenants with Him. I was like, as I read that, I thought, wow, that's succinct and powerful.
A
Yeah. So when we're watching the Other side of Heaven or one of those movies and they say, hurrah for Israel, they're not talking about a piece of land. They're talking about the people, the House of Israel. That that name continues now. And it's talking, as you read, Hank, we're talking about people who have been gathered from the nations of the world.
C
What you read is so powerful and so succinct, and I appreciate the clarity of the statement. If I was listening, there might be an outstanding question I had. What if I'm not the literal seed of Jacob? What if somebody's listening and they're thinking, is everybody in the world? Are they all from the 12 tribes? And I think the answer is probably not that person. When they accept the gospel of Jesus Christ and are baptized by proper authority into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, confirmed a member of the church, they then become part of Israel. They are now adopted in. We use that phrase, adopted in. They are now members of the House of Israel. They can get a patriarchal blessing. In all likelihood, that patriarch will bless them and they will probably be descendants of Joseph and get that Ephraimite blessing to participate in the gathering of Israel. No one is excluded. I am from Judah. I have bloodlines that say, I am House of Israel. But let's be careful. When I was not a member of the church, I wasn't a participant in all of the blessings that accrue to those that are the House of Israel because I needed to be born again, I e baptized, have the gift of the Holy Ghost, receive all those blessings, to be able to fully participate in all of the blessings of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Anybody who's listening, you don't feel excluded, feel included. And that's one of the reasons we send missionaries out. My wife's an Ephraimite, so I married an Ephraimite so that the prophecy of Isaiah would be fulfilled, that Judah wouldn't vex Ephraim and Ephraim wouldn't vex Judah.
A
Nice.
C
I wanted to help Isaiah on the other side of the veil. He appreciates it. I want to be in good with Isaiah.
B
Can I think of it maybe less as a declaration of my DNA and more of a mission call, perhaps? Like you are assigned to labor in this tribe.
C
I like that a lot. When I interviewed missionaries, I was serving as stake president. When President Monson lowered the age of missionaries, I ended up doing sometimes between 30 and 35 mission interviews a week. Now, if you know anything about a mission interview, it's about a 45 minute to an hour interview. And that was in addition to all the other responsibilities I had. And I went to the area 70 above me and I said, I'm going to have to quit my job and be a full time stake president. He's like, no, no, we're not going to do that. One of the questions I asked every single missionary and still do, by the way, I'm currently serving as a bishop on young single adult ward is will you go wherever you're called? Hank, connecting what you just said. Oh, yeah, yeah, I'll go wherever I'm calling. Okay, good. If you got called to Reno, Nevada, you're going to Reno, Nevada. Yep. And if you get called to Helsinki, Finland. Yep. Okay, good. What about the Spanish Fork, Utah mission? Are you gonna. You going? Oh, absolutely. Okay, good. Because you go where you're assigned. That's not our prerogative. I had one young lady, you guys, it was funny. She comes in and I did the interview. She was awesome and worthy. And I said, you'll go wherever you're called. And she goes, yep, but I'm going to Paris, France. And I said, okay, wow, okay, I like that, but that's not really our prerogative. And she goes, oh, no, no, no, President. She goes, I'll go wherever I'm called, but I'm going to Paris, France. We went back and forth for about 10 to 15 minutes on this because I had to get comfortable. She sees me about two Weeks later, she runs and she says, I got my call. I go, where are you going? She goes, paris, France.
B
Wow.
C
And I was like, I need to know the backstory on this. She said, when I was five years old, I was in primary sharing time. The theme was serving a mission. And we sang all the mission songs in primary. She said, the spirit came over me and said, you will serve a mission and go to Paris, France. I thought, you are one faithful young lady. So she served in Paris, France. I thought that was great. But I really like the idea of it's an assignment. And Heavenly Father, I think, said, will you go wherever you're called? Yep. Okay. You are assigned to serve in the Judah mission. Okay, cool. I'm gonna go and do whatever my responsibility is. I'll happily carry it out. Yep. Love that. I think that's great. I was teaching a class at BYU Idaho. The first person on the list, it was Simal Aktash. I said, c mal. And he said, it's Jamal. I said, jamal, where are you from? He said, turkey. Are you a member of the church? No. I said, what are you doing here? He said, I don't really know. My wife and I looked on the website of different colleges. I saw the BYU Idaho website, and I was just attracted to it. I said, I know why you're here. Come see me after class. So he come after class, and I said, you've got to have the missionary discussion. Oh, no, no, no. Anyway, he ended up getting baptized and his wife. And it was a beautiful story. I just thought how interesting it is, how the Lord is bringing his people in at the right time. He speaks fluent Turkish and fluent English, and he's just a wonderful, wonderful soul who's blessing so many lives. And he read parts of the Book of Mormon, and he told me this is a good translation, but this wasn't a native Turkish speaker. And I thought, oh, okay. God does have a work for you to do. We sometimes have a narrower view of what the gathering is, or we think it's only missionaries in Uruguay or missionaries in some place. It's way bigger than that. It's bigger than all of us. Jesus Christ is in the details and coordinating the details through his servants, the prophets. It is powerful.
A
We have talked so many times, haven't we, Hank? About how God has the long game, the long view in mind? This is just another testimony of that. The fact that the Abrahamic Covenant talks about blessing the families of the earth. That's what this is all about.
C
And in thee and thy seed shall all the kindreds of the earth be blessed.
A
What's a way to explain this to children? About there was this family of Jacob, and now we're part of it. How would you say it?
C
What we've been talking about and what cuts through maybe some of the complication is what everyone knows, and that's family connections. That's how you explain it in primary. You have to bring it back to maybe getting away from some of the complicated stuff about all the tribes, because you might get lost in some of the details. But if I just talk about dads and moms and sons and daughters, they'll understand that that's powerful.
A
I was a kid, but I just remembered watching how wonderful my dad thought it was when Alex Haley the movie Roots. That's exactly what we're talking about. When he was on the Tonight show with Johnny Carson, and he presented Johnny Carson with his family history, he could have presented Johnny Carson with the keys of a Cadillac or something. But imagine the look on Johnny Carson's face about the treasure he just had in his hands when he had this family history. Here's who you are. Now we're back to identity. Here is who you are. Here's where you came from. What a treasure that would be long after your Cadillacs in the junkyard, right? But you've got this sense of identity.
C
My grandma used to tell the story when they were in Russia, there was what's called a pogrom. A pogrom is when Russians would come into little villages, and just for fun, they would shoot my family. They would kill people. So my great grandfather finally said, enough. They escaped on the Trans Siberian railroad, went east. They were in Minsk, and they went east to Vladostok, and then to Kobe, Japan, then from Kobe, Japan, to Seattle. So my grandma used to tell that story. And I remember thinking, you know, as I got older, I thought, is that true? Could that possibly be true? Then through familysearch and, you know, some effort, we found all the records. We found the manifest from Vladostok to Kobe, and then from Kobe to Seattle. And we found the manifest when they came into the United States. And I thought, that is a rich treasure right there. That is incredible. These little peasants from Russia show up in Seattle. They don't speak a word of English. They make their life here. It was incredible. Again, that's part of that family idea. I was once at a dinner party, and this can be sensitive for Jews because you guys know we don't do baptisms for Holocaust survivors unless we're directly related. And that's church policy. And I was once at a party. It was my. My whole family on my mom and dad. And we were all there. And everyone knows that I do family history and that I'm a Latter Day Saint. One of my cousins said, ross, why are you doing all this family history work? It was like the record went and like the light went on me and everyone stopped talking. Roy, I said, you know that verse at the end of the Hebrew Bible that says the hearts of the fathers will turn to the children, the children to the fathers? And he goes, yeah. And I go, that's why I do it. My heart's turned to the fathers. Then everyone waited. And Roy goes, that's beautiful. And then the music went back on and the lights went on. It was so interesting. It was one of those moments where it resonates with people because my heart's turned to my fathers. I'm just interested in my family. Everyone was like, got it.
A
That's great, Ross. This has been so fun. I can't wait to have you again. And when we do, our topic is the tabernacle. They had it in the wilderness. It was at the center of everything, which I think is really cool, how they moved. Can you give us kind of a preview of what we'll talk about when we talk about the tabernacle? And we're not talking about the one at Temple Square. This is tabernacle means what, a building? A tent?
C
Even so, it's not the tabernacle in Montpelier. It's not that tabernacle.
A
No, no, St. George.
C
It's the ancient tabernacle. And am I ever excited to talk about the tabernacle. President Nelson used to say that the temples in the church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and what goes on in the temples is of ancient origin. When on in the tabernacle is a type and shadow of Jesus Christ and it's a type and shadow of what we do in temples in the latter days. It is one of the best temple preps is to learn about the tabernacle and understand not only what went on in the tabernacle and the symbolism of the tabernacle, but but what the priests had to wear and how the priests had to be prepared to work in the tabernacle. And like you said, John, where the tabernacle is in relation to everyone else. Oh, my word. I gotta be careful not to just go crazy right now. I'm gonna stop. But there is so much we can talk about. It'll be such a blessing.
A
Oh, thank you so much. Everything you've done today has been. The word I keep thinking of is clarifying some really nice things to clarify that people will say, okay, okay, House of Israel. I'm not going to just run past that phrase anymore. That's everything. That's who we are. It's what we're doing. It's what we're supposed to do, what we're called to do. It all comes down to blessing all the families of the world, blessing the
B
families of the earth. I love it. I'm so grateful for this series. John. Thoughts to keep in mind. Thank you, Ross.
A
With that wonderful discussion that we get to keep having with Dr. Ross Barron. We're so glad that you joined us today. Join us again soon on another episode of Follow Him.
B
As a thank you to our wonderful listeners, we'd love to gift you the digital version of our book, Finding Jesus Christ in the Old Testament. It offers short, meaningful insights drawn from our past Old Testament episodes. Visit followhim.co. that's followhim.co. to download your free copy today and you'll also find the link to purchase the print edition. Thank you for being part of our Follow him family. Of course, none of this could happen without our incredible production crew. David Perry, Lisa Spice, Will Stoughton, Crystal Roberts, Ariel Cuadra, Heather Barlow, Amelia Kabwica, Sydney Smith and Annabelle Sorensen.
C
Whatever questions or problems you have, the answer is always found in the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. Turn to him. Follow Him.
Hosts: Hank Smith & John Bytheway
Guest: Dr. Ross Baron
Date: March 3, 2026
Theme: The House of Israel—Identity, Covenant, and Purpose
In this clarifying and engaging episode, hosts Hank Smith and John Bytheway welcome Dr. Ross Baron to dig deep into the "House of Israel," a foundational and sometimes misunderstood concept in Latter-day Saint doctrine. Together, they explore its biblical origins, why it matters for personal and collective identity, and what it means practically for Latter-day Saints today. Dr. Baron brings historical context, spiritual insights, and modern application while also weaving personal stories and humor throughout.
Dr. Baron emphasizes that being of the House of Israel is more than a stately scriptural phrase. It is inextricably tied to our covenantal identity and purpose:
"We emphasize 'I am a child of God' a lot. And we should. This is an even more specific. Not only are we children of God, we are House of Israel." (01:38)
President Nelson's teaching: we're not just children of God, but "children of the covenant." Understanding this helps us answer soul-defining questions like "Why am I here?" and strengthens our sense of mission and belonging.
The arc of Jacob (grandson of Abraham) is illustrative of growth, imperfection, and redemption—mirroring each person's spiritual journey.
Birthright Misunderstandings:
Jacob and Esau's story is discussed as an example of misunderstanding, selfishness, and eventual growth.
“Jacob desires the birthright… Fundamental misunderstanding, doctrinally to me, of what the birthright is.” (10:15)
“The purpose of the birthright… is to redeem the family. Christ is the perfect example.” (07:58)
Letting Texts Speak for Themselves:
The hosts and Dr. Baron stress the importance of reading scriptural stories "as is," acknowledging the humanness of prophets and patriarchs.
“Let the text say what it says. Don’t read into it, don’t try to twist it...just say, yeah, that’s what it says.” (14:42, Smith)
Jacob’s Deceptions and 'Karma':
Jacob's early trickery returns to him via Laban's deceptions (see Genesis 29). This "what goes around comes around" principle turns Jacob into a humbler, more Christlike person.
"Jacob has been deceptive...We're gonna get some karma now. That which you sent out, it’s coming right back to you." (23:33)
Jacob’s Ladder (Genesis 28):
Seen as a temple motif: ascending to God via covenants and ordinances. Joseph Smith taught that the ladder’s "rungs" are ordinances that help us return to God. (28:10)
Wrestling at Peniel (Genesis 32):
President Nelson’s 2020 Conference quote reframes Jacob’s wrestle as a test of agency and willingness to "let God prevail."
“Through this wrestle, Jacob proved what was most important to him. He demonstrated that he was willing to let God prevail in his life.” (29:41, quoting Nelson)
Identity Transformation:
Jacob’s name is changed to Israel—"he who lets God prevail." His story resonates because it’s about making mistakes, receiving correction, repenting, and being blessed.
“His story is my story. He is like me. And I can receive all these amazing blessings...and then God's promises, just like to Jacob, he'll bless us..." (32:52)
Latter-day Saints shouldn’t be surprised by the messiness or flaws in the stories of ancient or modern leaders. The focus should remain on the divinity of the work, not the perfection of individuals.
Memorable Quote:
“Except in the case of His only perfect begotten Son, imperfect people are all God has ever had to work with. That must be terribly frustrating to Him. But He deals with it. So should we.” (23:06, Elder Holland, quoted by Smith)
Jacob fathers twelve sons (and a daughter), who become the patriarchs of the tribes of Israel. Not all are firstborns; often, worthiness or calling outweighs strict birth order (06:03, Baron).
The Birthright: A Call to Service, Not Privilege
The “double portion” is an endowment to bless, redeem, and lift others.
"You get a double portion, basically, because you're going to be the administrator of the will. You're going to help everybody else in the family." (07:50, Smith)
Joseph, Ephraim, and Manasseh:
The birthright passes from Reuben (disqualified) to Joseph, fulfilled through Ephraim and Manasseh (Joseph's sons).
All tribes play a role in gathering Israel, particularly for the latter-days (39:21).
The House of Israel is anyone who participates in the covenant—by literal descent or adoption.
Modern Application:
Every member, regardless of tribe, works together in the grand gathering of Israel.
“We are all co-partners with Joseph to gather Israel in preparation for the Second Coming...” (41:00, Baron)
Foreordination vs. Predestination:
The former: We were foreordained to bless the world (by moral agency); the latter (predestination): God unchangeably elects some to be saved/damned—rejected as doctrine (41:26).
Birthright Blessings Today:
Modern Church members receive enormous spiritual blessings and responsibilities to use for others, not self.
“We are that birthright kingdom whose responsibility is…to redeem all mankind.” (42:48, Baron)
No One Excluded:
Adoption into the House of Israel means full access to the blessings and mission, regardless of lineage (54:48).
Patriarchal blessings declare tribal lineage as a spiritual assignment and personal mission, not just genetic fact.
“Can I think of it maybe less as a declaration of my DNA and more as a mission call, perhaps?” (56:40, Smith)
Personal story: Dr. Baron's own remarkable patriarchal blessing affirmed his unique lineage and mission (45:53).
Dr. Baron encourages simplifying the narrative: focus on family connections and belonging.
“If I just talk about dads and moms and sons and daughters, they'll understand…” (61:25)
Identity and connection are communicated best through story (e.g. Alex Haley's "Roots") and family history.
| Segment | Timestamp | |---------------------------------------------|---------------| | Introduction, why House of Israel matters | 00:05–01:59 | | The Birthright Explored | 05:55–11:00 | | Jacob’s Arc: Deception, Consequence, Growth | 13:20–26:40 | | Jacob’s Ladder, Wrestling, New Identity | 27:04–32:52 | | Application to Modern Saints | 39:20–45:53 | | Patriarchal Blessings and Adoption | 45:53–54:48 | | Explaining to Children, Family History | 61:17–62:35 |
Next Episode Preview: Ancient Tabernacle—its temple parallels, symbolism, and centrality to Israel’s worship and camp.
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