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Jase Robertson
I am unashamed. What about you?
Zach Dasher
3, 2, 1.
Phil Robertson
Welcome back to Unashamed. It didn't you know? Zach counted us in today. It didn't have the same melody that I'm used to when Maddie does it, Zach, it just. It's felt off. Although you're a fantastic singer with a great voice. I mean, it was better than me or Jace, but. What weapons.
Zach Dasher
Oh, yeah. Chase, what do you got? What is going on, man? I'm looking at. Chase is like, mid unpacking, and I. I was. He's got a. Like a.
Phil Robertson
It's like he was just flying by and he just pulled a bunch of stuff out of his bag. It's like, hey, we're doing a podcast today. What are we doing?
Zach Dasher
If you're not watching?
Jase Robertson
There's a book.
Zach Dasher
He has a book in his hand that has got to be every bit of a foot and a half thick.
Phil Robertson
Maddie called it a monstrosity.
Zach Dasher
What is it?
Jase Robertson
You could actually use it as a mask during COVID What.
Zach Dasher
What's. I can't read that. What's on the writing? What's it.
Jase Robertson
What is it?
Zach Dasher
This is an old, old book.
Jase Robertson
This was given to me by a close friend to be named later.
Zach Dasher
Okay.
Jase Robertson
As a. To contribute to the podcast. And I will quote them. This is a Webster's dictionary from 1952.
Phil Robertson
Oh, wow.
Zach Dasher
Did we add more words back then?
Jase Robertson
Purchased by said friend to be named later by Just a couple of bucks for a couple of bucks. This is 19, I think 52 Webster's Dictionary. Well, I thought the same thing when I saw it. I thought, well, we've shortened the vocabulary. Look, it actually has a picture of said Noah Webster on the COVID Look at that. I didn't even realize this was here.
Phil Robertson
Oh, look at there.
Jase Robertson
So if you're.
Phil Robertson
If you're looking. I mean, if you're listening, J says, put up a picture. If dad were here, it'd be Noah Webster.
Jase Robertson
Well, I'm fixing no Noah Webster. Which the only reason I'm. I was in support of this famously said because, I mean, here's the guy who basically created the Western culture dictionary. Can we agree with that? He famously said that education is useless without the Bible.
Phil Robertson
That's it.
Jase Robertson
You would think that he would say without a dictionary that I wrote. And I have some for a small fee. Which now looks. I mean, the only good thing, I guess, about no Webster no longer being on the planet is he wouldn't want to know how much they're selling these for now, because, I mean, this is a couple of dollars.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, well, I looked. I looked it up. I've actually just looked it up that the real value of that's about $75.
Jase Robertson
Now, that's why my special friend was actually treasure hunting that I found at Treasure. However, I'm gonna.
Phil Robertson
Does that mean he dug it up in a field?
Jase Robertson
No, they bought it at, like, one of these.
Phil Robertson
Okay.
Jase Robertson
What do you call them?
Phil Robertson
Flea market.
Jase Robertson
Yeah. Yard sale, estate sale, something like that. I have my hair up today. Is it. Should I just let my hair down and we talk, or. No, I can see it, you know, because Maddie's real good with coming up these little sensationalized things that we say. So, like, when you see the unashamed, it's like, you know, Jace turns green, or. No, that's actually not one. But it's like, oh, Jay's gonna turn green. Let me go watch. So Jace gets a haircut. Not really. You know, got you.
Phil Robertson
Click.
Jase Robertson
Click on this clickbait, Jason.
Zach Dasher
But we said you got shot in the head, and that was a real. That actually happened.
Jase Robertson
Well, the problem is. Here's the problem I have when y'all do stuff like that, because then when I go to the gas station, people say, man, you're recovering nicely after taking a bullet to the head. I was like, I think you missed the part that. That happened when I was like, I forgot how old I was.
Phil Robertson
You're about 10, I think.
Jase Robertson
10 or 12.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
And they're looking at me like it happened to me. I know it didn't happen yesterday because you read it, so. But this. I missed the punchline on the dictionary. This was given to me by a special friend, despite the fact that they could have made a lot of money by then reselling it, because people don't realize the value of something like this. So that I could have more deeper conversations with Zach Dasher.
Zach Dasher
Now I want to know who the said friend is.
Jase Robertson
No, That's a mystery. That will remain a mystery until I will reveal it on a podcast. Coming near you.
Zach Dasher
Are they being sarcastic towards Me or were they being affirmative of me?
Jase Robertson
No, they were. They realized that I do have, you know, the computer as a backup because. Yeah, I'm. I'm pretty sure that the vocabulary has changed from 19. You know what's crazy? When I received this gift, I actually brought up the fact about. What was that word? That I didn't know the initials. The gangster thing.
Phil Robertson
Oh, gee. That I. Oh, gee.
Jase Robertson
Deeply offended by. Of people using this, you know, so. Well, we're gangsters for Jesus. So.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
Having said that, I met a person this morning actually behind the checkout counter that I would say has been given the greatest name that I've ever seen. I just. I've been here over 50 years on the planet. Greatest name I've ever met. And it happened about 15 minutes ago.
Phil Robertson
At a convenience store.
Jase Robertson
Yeah. Are you ready for that?
Zach Dasher
Did they have a name tag on that? You saw the name?
Jase Robertson
I saw the name tag. And.
Zach Dasher
Oh, yeah.
Jase Robertson
Because I'm always looking for these conversations. And look, it actually goes with something that we're going to get into in John 6. I don't know if we're going to get to John 6 today, the way this has started, but. You ready for the name? I'm building the drama.
Zach Dasher
What's the name?
Jase Robertson
1. O, n, e. That's what I thought you would say. No, W, O, N. And I said one. Now that's a name. I said you literally roll out of bed every morning and say, yep, winning. I won. But I thought now that the genius of parents. What a name. Let's name our daughter.
Phil Robertson
Did you ask him? If you ask her, is it a hero?
Jase Robertson
Yeah, it was a her.
Phil Robertson
Did you ask her? Is that how you pronounce it or is it One?
Jase Robertson
No, it was one. One, I said. I mean, let me get this right. You just wake up every day and you're winning. You're in a constant state of winning because, hey, you won. She's like, exactly. You could not have met a more bubbly, happy person.
Phil Robertson
And working at a convenience store with that kind of attitude.
Jase Robertson
You lost. Sorry. Zach.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, that's a good name.
Phil Robertson
All right. So, Zach, I expect your next child to be one. Dasher.
Zach Dasher
Wow. There's no more Next Child for me.
Jase Robertson
Have you ever met anyone? Name one.
Zach Dasher
No, I don't think so. Why?
Phil Robertson
There was a. There was a girl that I used to be infatuated with on Star Trek, and her name was Seven. Yeah, well, her name was Seven of Nine. There were nine in her little board cluster.
Jase Robertson
Great. But one is better.
Phil Robertson
It's Better so before. But James.
Jase Robertson
But my point was about how it relates to the Bible, though, is because ever, you know, it's like you get into these passages, it's like, you know, God chose us from the beginning of the world, you know, and it's that concept when you see how parents were thinking, I want my child to remember, you know, they won just by being here.
Phil Robertson
You won.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, I just. You can kind of see their mind working in that.
Phil Robertson
I like it. It's positive. You're exactly right. No matter where you work, if you've won or if you're winning not even.
Jase Robertson
Working, I mean, if you're just. You got up out of bed, you take two steps. I'm one. I embody one. I won.
Phil Robertson
That's pretty good. I like it. So one other thing. I thought about your giant book and said, there is another way you can use it, because I use one about half that size one time. But it's. So you only get one shot to do this if you ever do this. And I'm not. I'm saying do this with trepidation and caution. But I read somewhere Lisa had a gangly insist. Are you aware of a ganglion cyst?
Jase Robertson
No.
Zach Dasher
It's on the. It's on your wrist.
Phil Robertson
It comes up on your wrist kind of on the top of your hand on your wrist, and it's just a little thing that holds fluid. And so she was trying to figure, you know, she didn't like it being there. It's just a little knot on there. And she was like, what? You know, what can I do? She was talking about going to the doctor. Well, I just, you know, did a little research. And in the old days, they would take their heavy Bibles and someone would just slam the Bible down and burst the cyst because it's just a fluid sack inside your wrist. Well, I didn't tell Lisa this because I knew she would be cautious about this procedure. So one day she. I said, let me see that thing. And she lays her hand out. It's kind of like I used to do my kids about pulling their teeth. Man. Let me just. Let me see this for a second. Put your hand out flat. So I had the dictionary off kind of out of sight, and in one quick ninja like move, I just took the dictionary and wham. Right on top of her hand, and I burst the cyst.
Jase Robertson
Really.
Phil Robertson
So it was mission accomplished. But the. The exclamation that came out of her, it wasn't. She didn't curse, but there were many words leveled at me. They were not appreciative of my procedure. And so work.
Zach Dasher
Did it actually work?
Phil Robertson
It did work. The old schoolers were right. But it's a one and done because never like it came back, by the way. And now she won't even let me look at it.
Jase Robertson
One of the greatest challenges I had of being my dad's son was trying to convince him to do anything that wasn't his idea. And he had the same question. Every time I offered something, he'd say, what is the upside? So we have a new sponsor. That is upside.
Zach Dasher
They are the upside, Jase. In fact, it's the most valuable app that you could have on your iPhone in 2025. I've got it on mine. It's upside. The free upside app gets you cash back on daily essentials like gas, groceries and dining just on diesel alone. On my truck, I have a 35 gallon tank. The last time I filled up was 71 cents a gallon that I got back. So I was like, 25 bucks every time I fill up. Upside users can get as much as 280 dol a year back. There are over 100,000 gas stations, grocery stores, and restaurants that are on the upside app, ensuring that cash back is always just around the corner for you guys. You can earn an average of 8% on restaurants and grocery purchases. And the best part is you can even stack your upside cash back on top of your credit and debit card rewards. Upside users are earning hundreds of dollars a year. That's probably why they have a 4.8 star rating on the app store. Download the free upside app using promo code unashamed to get an extra 25 cents back for every gallon on your first tank of gas. That's an extra 25 cents back for every gallon on your first tank of gas. Using promo code unashamed. Yeah, that's the problem. I mean, I've had the same issue, and I did the same exact research, but I went a little further in the research to the medical doctors that said, don't do that. So I never. Yeah, I didn't. I didn't just read the American folklore. I went a little, little step deeper. I got on a little website called WebMD. There's some, you know, the Mayo Clinic.
Phil Robertson
So you're saying they have now debunked my. My theory?
Zach Dasher
Okay, yeah. Physician, the medical community does not recommend smashing your hand with a bible.
Phil Robertson
So don't do that. I'm saying it's probably bad for your marriage as well. So don't, don't, don't. Try.
Zach Dasher
That's where the phrase Bible banger came from. What's was that really? I made it up.
Jase Robertson
I did look up my first word. And this explains why it's so big, because on the COVID of it, it says unabridged. I wasn't. I didn't have the definition of that at the ready.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
And so I looked it up in my new dictionary, and it says not shortened, complete. So that's the reason it's so big. You say it's not short. Well, I mean, why would you put that on the front of your dictionary?
Zach Dasher
Well, you know, there's. There's a hundred and there's around 100, I don't know, 60, 70,000 words in the English language. I don't know.
Jase Robertson
Did you just look that up?
Zach Dasher
No, I. I learned this whenever I took a he class. Hebrew class, and I was doing a master's program that I never finished, but I took a class in Hebrew studies. And the Hebrew language originally only has, like, I'm probably going to butcher this now, but I think it's around 8,000 words.
Jase Robertson
Really?
Zach Dasher
It's an English language. So that's one of the difficulties that we have sometimes in interpreting stuff out of the original Hebrew in the Old Testament because we have so many words compared to just 8,000 words, like 170 versus 8,000. So we have, like, they may have a word that has a lot of different meanings to it that you got to kind of play with. I don't know. I don't know if I'm exactly accurate, but it's somewhere around what I said.
Jase Robertson
Listen to this. Now, I looked it up to check you. You said 100 and what? What'd you say?
Zach Dasher
I said 160 to 160,000. Let me read you this.
Jase Robertson
Webster's Third New International Dictionary. I just googled how many words are in the English language. This was the first thing that popped up. Unabridged. That's the name of this dictionary, together with its 1993 section. So this is 1952. Includes 470,000 words. So you were close. Not really. You only missed about 300,000.
Zach Dasher
Where are you? Where'd you look this up? I'm going to look it up now on my.
Phil Robertson
Oh, boy.
Jase Robertson
See, here we go. That's.
Phil Robertson
Here we go.
Jase Robertson
I mean, this is.
Zach Dasher
Did you Google it?
Jase Robertson
Yeah, Google it.
Zach Dasher
There's your problem. Google's over that. We're not Googling.
Jase Robertson
I didn't Google it. I just typed it in. And AI sent me to Merriam Webster dictionary.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, that's Exactly. That's the Google AI you need to go to like some we'll go to chat GPT or something.
Jase Robertson
I love it how a man just starts arguing with the very thing that he's put all his hope and trust.
Zach Dasher
How many words are in the English language? Okay, see that's interesting because you know what mine says?
Jase Robertson
What?
Zach Dasher
Estimating the exact number of words in the English language is difficult, which we would agree. But it's generally accepted that There are roughly 170,000 words in current use with an additional 47,000 obsolete words and potentially over a million total word forms.
Jase Robertson
So I have some. I hold in my hand evidence that you are wrong. There are more than 170000 words in here. So. Okay. This just shows you how.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
I mean.
Zach Dasher
Yeah. It's hard. We don't know.
Phil Robertson
We.
Zach Dasher
The point I was making Jace, is that there was a lot more words in the English language.
Jase Robertson
Well, I got 470000 of them right here. Six inches from me.
Zach Dasher
What was your. What was your search? I'm just curious how you're searching.
Jase Robertson
I wasn't searching my dictionary. It just. It took me to.
Zach Dasher
But you asked the question. I asked.
Jase Robertson
I said how many words are in the English dictionary now? Maybe this thing is listed.
Zach Dasher
You said in the English dictionary.
Jase Robertson
I said the English language. Nope. I put English language. But I think these computers have spies now. And it heard me talking about the dictionary and it just put up. I didn't know what it was. I just saw it said how many words are in the English language? And the first thing that popped up as I was typing, I clicked on finished the sentence for me and it sent me to Webster's. What do you call it?
Zach Dasher
Well, I've got. I mean I just redefined my search. How many words are in the English dictionary? And it has anywhere from 170. 600. I mean that's all over the place. The moral of the story is you can't believe what you read on the Internet.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, that's a nice way to say you were wrong.
Phil Robertson
I knew this would wind up in a redneck conspiracy at some point. That's.
Zach Dasher
That's.
Phil Robertson
It all starts with a three foot thick book. And here we go.
Zach Dasher
How many words are in John? Are we in John 6 yet? I thought we were.
Phil Robertson
We're in John 5.
Zach Dasher
That's what I thought he said.
Phil Robertson
We haven't quite.
Zach Dasher
Well, he's a big one. When we get there.
Phil Robertson
We're eventually going to get there, but I doubt it'll be on this podcast. But now we still got a little work to do in a little thing called the back half of John 5. Zach. Because we didn't quite complete that on the last podcast. One of your favorite verses that you quote all the time, we hadn't even dealt with yet, which is about the. You put your trust in the scriptures.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Phil Robertson
And you miss Jesus, which we'll talk about. Just to catch us up from in John 5, we talked about. We started after he does this healing, and then we get into this Sabbath because, you know, Jesus doesn't do things by accident. And we talked about there are multiple. In the other Gospels as well, healings that are done on the Sabbath and other things that he's asserting his lordship. He did the same thing with the temple back in John 2. Now it's going to be the Sabbath, which is really dealing as much with law as anything. He could have dealt with any of it. But the Sabbath is one of those things that the Pharisees took and the teachers of the law and they just expanded it, you know, and just made up a lot of their own stuff. And this stuff, like, to the people that are there, these are. These are offenses that put you in court. I mean, these are things that get you into trouble, you know, if you break them. So he. He's showing his. His lordship over the. Over this. And so that becomes part of his description. And we picked it up in verse 19 through 30, and we talked about these claims that he makes, which. Which are pretty amazing because he decides to just jump on into it with this crowd that's here. And he says, the Son of Man is equal with God. He's a giver of life. He's a judge. He's the ultimate determiner of destiny. I mean, that's a huge claim. He said. He says he'll raise the dead. You know, he says that in 2529. And then I made the point that actually Chuck Swindoll made in verse 30. All this time he's been saying son of Man. And then he just goes ahead and says, and by the way, I am the Son of Man. I mean, this is me. I'm the one doing this. So he says he's always doing the will of God. So that got us down to verse 31, which now he's going to do what any good Jewish, you know, law person would do, is he's going to say, there's a lot of testimony that backs up these claims that I made. And so he's going to hit several of those in this Next text. So that kind of catches us up. Does that. Does that suffice for from you guys as to where we are?
Zach Dasher
Yeah, I could sign off on that.
Jase Robertson
Jay slept since then, so I'm going to take your word for it.
Phil Robertson
That's it.
Jase Robertson
Unlike. Unlike.
Zach Dasher
Al keeps copious notes. He do a great job though.
Phil Robertson
So. So I will say this. This in the text is Deuteronomy 17:6 and also 19:15. That there is Jewish law that there had to be at least two or more witnesses in any sort of civil or criminal situation. In other words, you can't just say, well, one person said they saw this. Jewish law is based on the idea of more than one. So I think that's part of what Jesus is by bringing up these multiple witnesses that basically defend who he is. And I'll just lay out what they are and then I don't know. Jace, you got glasses on. Can you read the text of the. On my glasses?
Jase Robertson
Yeah, I can read it. I think I'm gonna read it.
Phil Robertson
All right, read it. Start in verse 31 and read to.
Jase Robertson
The newer NIV from the Internet. If this thing kind of creeping me out now that I know it's listening.
Zach Dasher
Oh, it's.
Jase Robertson
We're technically sharing Jesus to some kind of artificial intelligence, which is cool.
Phil Robertson
Do you think they. Do you think they could be converted?
Jase Robertson
You know, they need to be. One of the things I love most about the earth is being cozy on the earth.
Zach Dasher
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Jase Robertson
Well, my wife stayed with the Cozy Earth theme and bought every member of my family a pair of pajamas for Christmas.
Zach Dasher
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Jase Robertson
If I testify about myself, my testimony is not true, which is an interesting statement. There is another who testifies in my favor and I know that his testimony about me is true. You have sent to John and he has testified to the truth. Not that I accept human testimony, but I mention it that you may be saved. John was a lamp that burned and gave light, and you chose for a time to enjoy his light. I have testimony weightier than that of John for the works that the Father has given me, to finish the very works that I am doing. Testify that the Father has sent me. And the Father who sent me has himself testified concerning me. You have never heard his voice nor seen his form, nor does his word dwell in you. This is getting uncomfortable for his listeners, for you do not believe the one he sent. You Study the scriptures diligently because you think that in them you have eternal life. This is getting really uncomfortable. These are the very scriptures that testify about me. Yet you refuse to come to me to have life. I do not accept glory from human beings. That's another quite a statement. But I know you. I know that you do not have the love of God in your hearts. I have come in my Father's name and you do not accept me. But if someone else comes in his own name, you'll accept him. How can you believe, since you accept glory from one another, but do not seek the glory that comes from the only God. But do not think I will accuse you before the Father. Your accuser is Moses, on whom your hopes are set. If you believe Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me. But since you do not believe what he wrote, how are you going to believe what I say?
Phil Robertson
So by my count, Jay's, that's five. Well, six if you include Jesus himself. But that's five witnesses beyond Jesus's own testimony, which. So he's making quite the case. You've got God the Father, who he mentions in two different places. There is also witness of this. But you know, they're like, yeah, right, you know, Yahweh is your. Is your witness. But then he mentions John the Baptist again, and then he mentions the Scriptures themselves, which, by the way, that's. That's more than just prophecy. That's prophecy. That's law. That's history. That's all of it. And then he mentions the works in verse 36, his own signs and miraculous. In other words, how is he able to do these things? And finally Moses. So by my count, that's five separate witnesses that Jesus is who he says he is. I mean, that's the case that he's making to the folks here.
Jase Robertson
Well, and then the side point is, is these people that he was talking to, they touted themselves on how well they knew the Torah. You brought the Torah, the law and the Scriptures.
Phil Robertson
Right.
Jase Robertson
So and now, I mean, he's there's throwing people under the bus. I mean, he's speaking the truth in love, I guess. I mean, I don't guess. I guess he is. But for them to hear that would have enraged them because he's like, you think studying the Scriptures you're going to have eternal life? Well, who wouldn't agree with that even today? But the scriptures he's talking about obviously are in the Old Testament because they didn't have the New Testament or even what we're reading here. So I think that's why they got so angry. And you know, I think one thing that, that we haven't said is they're like, well, what are you saying that Moses talked about you? I mean, do you think they made that connection? They went that far?
Phil Robertson
Well, I think that, yeah, I think they wouldn't have. Don't you say? I mean, I think they, they wouldn't have thought it was him.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, no, no, they would. But because you think about going back to even that the road to Emmaus, I mean, this is post resurrection of Jesus in Luke 24. I think it said Luke 24.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, I actually just went there. So you can go ahead. We were thinking alike on that.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, it's like so that, I mean, you people can't see it. Like someone, someone called me the other day and asked me a question about particular geopolitical issue and they're like, do you think people like see that Jesus is the Messiah? Like that don't like how can they read the Old Testament and not see it? And I think the Bible's pretty clear and you'll see this again in the next chapter of John, that God has to illuminate our minds to see this. And so I don't think they really understood what Jesus was. I mean, they knew he was upsetting the apple cart. I don't think they really understood the depths of what he was talking about. They did know that he was definitely a threat to their Power structure, because that's why they tried to kill him. But he's a, he's essentially taking all of the things that they would hold up. Because when you said Moses, I mean, another way of thinking about Moses is thinking, thinking of him as a prophet. Right. They, they, they kind of worship the prophets. You know what I mean? In fact, when Jesus.
Jase Robertson
Well, that comes up in the next chapter, they're like, well, we. Oh, okay, we can see you're prophet. I think that's Deuteronomy. I'll look it up.
Phil Robertson
It's Deuteronomy 18:15.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, but you got script. The scripture, the, the five things you mentioned, the scripture, the miracles, the father, Moses. What was the fifth one? I can't remember what you said.
Phil Robertson
His works, his signs and his works.
Zach Dasher
All the things that would point as that would testify to what Jesus is saying. It just so happens to be. They claim to hold all of those things in very high regardless. Yeah, but the problem is, is they can't see that. They can't see how they, they're all pointing to Jesus.
Jase Robertson
I wanted to bring this up so. Because you were thinking the road to emmaus in Luke 24. I was thinking later on in Luke 24 when. Remember when he showed him his hands and his feet? This is in verse 40. And while they still not. They still didn't believe because of joy and amazement, because they're looking at a guy who was dead and he's like, look at my, my hands and my feet. The reason this got my attention, because I think what we're reading in John 5 is fixing to leak over into John 6.
Phil Robertson
Correct.
Jase Robertson
And we tend to categorize everything. Because somebody put a number there.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
But because he's going to give this illustration of, you know, where he fed the 5,000, which was basically a fulfillment of the manna in the wilderness. I mean, that is, that is what goes along with that.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
And so because he just said Moses, you know, you don't believe what Moses said about me. Well, I think it's interesting in Luke 24, after he's showing hands and feet and they still didn't believe it, then he says, do you have anything here to eat? So, because, you know, dead men don't eat. But, but it's also, I think this idea from manna from heaven, I'm the bread of life, feed on me, kind of thing that we'll get into. So they gave him a piece of broiled fish and he took it and ate it in their presence, which it's like Drama feel to me. You know, they're sitting there watching a guy who was dead slowly eat, or maybe he's eating it quick, I don't know, eat a piece of fish. I mean, that's drama to me. And then he's, while he's eating the fish, he said to them, this is what I told you while I was with you. Everything, everything must be fulfilled that is written about me in the law of Moses, the prophets and the Psalms. So it's like they don't even believe it when they're looking at him. But he goes back to his disciples. Yeah, he goes back to the same argument. He's like, remember that time when Moses and David wrote the Psalms and the prophets were prophesying? Yeah, I fulfilled all the things they said about me. And they're like, oh, that was about you. I mean, that's the answer he was looking for. So I do my own investing and full transparency on a few shares of Oracle, but I don't know a whole lot about one of their companies, netsuite.
Zach Dasher
Well, I run the business over here and I'm telling you it would be nice if I could predict the future when it comes to business. Ask nine experts, you're going to get 10 answers. I mean, it's really hard to dictate and figure out where the market's going. Are we in a bull market? A bear market? Are interest rates going to fall? They going to rise? Inflation up or down? It would be awesome if you had a crystal ball could see into the future. But until there's a crystal ball that's developed. Over 40,000 businesses have future proofed their business with NetSuite by Oracle. The number one Cloud ERP, bringing accounting, financial management and inventory, HR. It's all into one fluid platform with one unified business management suite. There's one source of truth giving you the visibility and the control that you need to make quick decisions. With real time insights and forecasting, you're peering into the future with actionable data. When you're closing the books in days instead of weeks, you're spending less time looking backwards and more time on what's next. Whether your company is earning millions or even hundreds of millions, NetSuite helps you respond to immediate challenges and seize your biggest opportunities.
Phil Robertson
You know, Zach, when I look back in the early days of Duck Commander, you know, just watching our business trying to get off the ground, I mean, if we had known about NetSuite, it would have made our job so much easier to manage everything we had going on.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, it's A lot easier to make the right decisions when you have all the information you need. Speaking of opportunity, download the CFO's guide to AI and machine learning at netsuite.com Phil the guide is free to you at netsuite.com Phil netsuite.com Phil that's what's interesting, the tie back to John 5. He says, you study the Scriptures like, you study them. You know the scriptures, Old Testament scriptures. You study them diligently and by them you think you're saved. Yet you missed me, the one they point to. So when you go to Luke 24, that's exactly what he does. He does the same thing with his disciples in Luke 24, as you just mentioned. But if you back up a little bit, when he comes up on the two guys on the road to Emmaus and they're pretty distraught over the fact that Jesus had died, and he said, hey, what's wrong with you guys? And they're like, have you not heard? Have you been under a rock? He actually was under a rock for three days. But have you been like, where have you been for the last three days? Have you not heard what's happened in town? And they say this weird thing in verse 21. It's not weird, but it kind of shows what they were thinking. But we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. Jesus died, but we hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel. But now he's dead. He's been dead for three days. Now, if you skip down a little bit, Jesus says this in verse 25, and he said to them, o foolish ones and slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken. You didn't understand what was written in the Scriptures as what Jesus is saying here. Was it not necessary that the Christ should suffer these things and enter into his glory? And beginning with Moses, going back to John 5, and all the prophets, he interpreted to them in all the Scriptures. What scriptures? The Old Testament. The things concerning himself. And then when Jesus left their presence, they had a conversation with themselves in verse 32. And they said, did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scripture? Then he goes into that room and has the conversation you were just talking about, Jace. But listen to what it says in verse 45. Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. What scriptures? The Old Testament. And said to them, thus it is written that the Christ should suffer and on the third day rise from the dead. And that repentance for forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name. To who? To all nations beginning in Israel. You say, well, what does that sound like? It sounds a whole lot like the Great Commission which Jesus gave at the end of Matthew when he said, all authority on heaven and earth has been given to me. Now go make disciples, going back to where to get the authority from when he appeared before the ancient of days, which is prophesied about in Daniel 7, which is the phrase son of man, which is mentioned in John 5. So all these things are present here in this moment. And Jesus is like cutting through all of the minutia and the religion, and he's testifying that the king is here. The king. You guys are. You're not seeing. You're not seeing me.
Phil Robertson
Plus, I'll give you one more, Zach. That happened before what you just read. And that was the Mount of Transfiguration, which was a little side inside PowerPoint presentation of Jesus, Moses and Elijah, the same culmination of glory that all are brought together in him. And yet they actually showed up for the party. And that was just a private show. That was just Peter, James and John. But those were going to be the three leaders of the new church going forward. So they need to know what they were talking about. I think that's why they got the inside look of exactly what you just described.
Zach Dasher
They couldn't see Jesus because of the Scriptures, ironically.
Phil Robertson
Right?
Zach Dasher
They could not see him because they couldn't see him. And, and my point is, I think that what we'll learn next is you can't see Jesus until Jesus says, hey, here I am. I mean, like this is that, that is the, the motif of, of the baroque to Emmaus. They did not understand the Scriptures until Jesus opened their mind to it. And so I think that that's. You'll see that play out in John 6. And so the question you gotta ask yourself is like, I want God to show me. I'm asking for revelation. I want to see Him. I don't want it just to terminate and on itself. And I think a lot of times we don't want to see Jesus because we don't want to see that the Savior is going to suffer, because we don't want to suffer. And the Gospel is centered in a suffering Savior who dies on a cross. And yes, he's raised from the dead, but he does die on a cross. He does suffer. He does suffer. And that's why that last thing that Jesus said before, one of the last things he said before he died, he said, my God, my God, why has. Why have you forsaken me? But do you remember what they thought he. What they thought he was saying? They thought he was calling out to the prophets. They thought he was calling out to Elijah because it kind of sounds the same. And I think that's really ironic because he was actually crying out to God and they had made the prophets their God. Really, that's what they'd done with the Scriptures. They had made the scriptures their God. And in that last moment of Jesus's life when he's crying out to his Father, they actually think he's crying out to the prophets. So it's kind of a weird irony. I know it was a. That's what they heard, but I think it's what they wanted to hear because to them that was their God.
Jase Robertson
Well, but it's because it was though. I think you're missing one leg of the puzzle because I think their status with God was based on who the smartest person in the Scriptures would be. That's how their leadership works. Yeah, so it's like, well, we do the same thing today. I mean, just think how much we argue about Scriptures and every little detail how much you know and are becoming in the scholarly world. And meanwhile, it's very easy when you get into that kind of trying to win that battle. You're missing Jesus. It's not about.
Phil Robertson
So, Jay, Jay, let me read this because you just made such a good point. And this is what NT Wright said in his book, this is John for Everyone, which is one of the things I've been reading. Listen to what he said to back up what Jay's just said.
Zach Dasher
Listen.
Phil Robertson
It is possible to allow the study of the text and of different interpretations of the text to become a substitute for allowing the text to bring us into the presence of the living God. It is deceptively easy to know everything about the Jewish hope for the Messiah and not to know the Messiah himself in person. And it is all too simple. Indeed, sometimes our academic institutions and seminaries encourage it to use our knowledge and intellectual ability to gain status and prestige among our colleagues or among those who belong to the same part of our party within the church as we do. This is as true today as it was in Jesus's day. And I think that's such a smart point.
Jase Robertson
That was a better way to put what I was saying. But I what I agree with completely. I mean, I think that's. They were looking at him like, we know this like the back of our hands and it doesn't include you. I mean, You're. Who. Who are you? Where. Where did you get your degree? Where did you study? You know, which is amazing when you think about. Remember when Jesus, when he was a kid, even when he was a kid, 12 years old, he said, I. I'm. I got to do my father's business. Which he echoed in the previous verses of this same chapter when he said, I'm working and God is working. I mean, he was concerned, not concerned. He was obsessed with this not being his own thing. That's why he just said, I'm not even trying to give you testifying about myself, because it's not valid. I'm testifying on behalf of my father.
Phil Robertson
Plus, you know what's interesting, Jason, about that is he at 12, he said, why would you be surprised? Didn't you know I'd be in my father's house? So he was still articulating the Jewish concept, which, you know, had been from God, that this was the house of God. This was the only place the presence of God was going to be, albeit very temporary. So he hadn't even begun to then reveal what he was going to reveal as an adult that we're reading about now, which is very interesting to me. I mean, he was true all the way through.
Zach Dasher
You know how. You know how it plays out, too. I was thinking of, like, the way I grew up and you guys kind of grew up similar at different points of our life because we grew up in the same kind of tradition of faith. I had this conversation with my granddad when he was probably 15 years ago, and one of the things that we were talking about was, what does it mean to be a Christian? And he said, you know, actually, how do you get to heaven? And he said, well, you got to obey the gospel, which is in the Bible, by the way, you know what. Second Thessalonians, chapter one. But I asked the question to him. I said, well, what does that mean? He goes, so what is the gospel? And he said, it's the Bible. He told me that. I said, so you have to obey the Bible to go to heaven? He said that? That's right. I said, do you do that? He said, I do. I said, do you do it completely? He's like, well, no, but. And. And he didn't have a framework, but his, like, in his system. It was that everything that he was trying to accomplish was we got to make sure that our worship is. Is. Everything's got to be like. It was like a formula. And the way that he interpreted the Bible was a rule book. Here's the rule book that on how you're supposed to do everything. And that's what it was. And then being right with God meant I'm going to do all the right things. But I was like, but you're missing the bigger picture. This is a story that we're being invited into, into participate in a life with Jesus who takes us into the divine life, into the divine nature of the Father, Son and Spirit. I think that's the big thing here. And I think that's what Jesus is getting at here. You're looking at the Scriptures and you think there's some kind of formula in here for you to be saved, or you're looking at the miracles and you're thinking there's something in that for you. But these are all testifying to me. So don't let your, your worship terminate on the things that I've given you to reveal myself. Let those be the conduits for you to come to me. And that happens, I think, in all of religious circles. And no matter what kind of denomination you grew up in, I mean, this is kind of the. What we do as humans. We want to box God in, in this way.
Phil Robertson
So, Zach, you know, I think a lot of times when people think about martyrs and think about persecuted Christians, a lot of people that aren't paying attention think that was just something of the past.
Zach Dasher
Yeah, it's happening right now on planet Earth today, 2025.
Phil Robertson
Jace, you have a CO of a new book called When Faith is Forbidden that was written by our good friend Todd Nettleton, who's the Voice of the Martyrs radio host. And it's basically his 20 years of travel in restricted nations. And as that mentioned, that goes on even to this very day and that inspires us. Voice of the Martyrs has been an inspiring organization for many years for me personally as a pastor to be able to tell the stories of what it looks like for people to truly live unashamed. And that goes on every single day. And so that's what this book is about. You get to travel with Todd as he goes into these places, hear real stories of real persecuted Christians and what they've done to stand up for Christ and what it means for us to support him, to pray for him, to be right there with them. We don't want you to miss out on the inspiration of these amazing and remarkable stories. And it's free. It's free for you to take and read and encourage other people. So here's what you do. Request your free copy of When Faith is forbidden by calling 848-446-34059. That's 844-463-4059. Or you can visit vom.org unashamed. That's vom.org unashamed now, that's true. And, you know, it's like one quote I read it said, you're looking at the right book, but you're reading it the wrong way. And I think, you know, that's still true today. It's interesting, Jace, because you teased ahead where we're going. And I think you right that there's all these pictures that Jesus is using and living that's going to strike into the Jewish mindset about coming out of Egypt, out of slavery, into something new, which is kind of what he's preparing them to do. And you know, as you can see in our text, there's. I call it a fault line that's beginning to grow in the Book of John. And it's going to get. I mean, by the time we get to John 8, it's going to be very clear. Those who just don't believe him and don't believe he is who he said he is, versus those who are struggling with believing it. But then they trust in him, which is the disciples. They don't understand a lot about what he's saying and what's going on, but they believe in Him. I mean, that's why they're still there. Some of these other folks, they should know, because as he told Nicodemus, you've had all the history, you understand exactly why I'm supposed to be here. And yet you won't believe that I'm the one that God has sent, that I am God. And so that was the fault line. And this grows further. And I think you saw that even in that original group that came out of Egypt, because you remember, right, when they got near the promised land, you remember that most of them said, no, we can't do it. They're too big, they're giants. We're better off just going back to Egypt. And then Joshua and Caleb were like this new mindset that said, no, I mean, God says, this is what we're supposed to do. We're forging forward. And so that whole other group died in the desert. But it was the. It was the ones who were willing to believe in faith. They were the ones that actually went into the new territory and started Israel.
Zach Dasher
That's why he says, he says, I'm not. He said, but do you think I will not? Do you think I will accuse you before the father. Jesus says this. He says, no, your accuser is Moses, right, On whom your hopes are set. If you believed Moses, you would believe me, for he wrote about me. Since you do not believe what he wrote, how are you going to believe what I say? And I think it's kind of interesting what you said there, because if you were to go back and read everything that Moses wrote and everything that's in the Old Testament, for that matter, how would you ever practice that right now? I mean, you can't. There's no temple, there's no sacrifice, there's no priest. Like, that's all gone. I mean, 80, 70, all that went away. So it is kind of interesting that, like the act, the accuser is the very thing that they had put their hope in, which was Moses in the Mosaic Law. They had put their hope into that. And that was the very thing Jesus is like, I'm not accusing you. Look at your own stuff like, I'm not accusing you. You're accused by Moses, the one that you hold up above the one Moses pointed to.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, I think it was a pride issue or a hubris issue, which I looked up this morning because every time I turn on the TV, it's recommended viewing. And they keep putting Duck Dynasty up there, which is weird. So I finally clicked on it today and there was this huge debate over whether we should use hand carved decoys or just cheap, cheaper decoy because we were putting so many out. The argument was, how would they notice in a short, the ducks, which ones were hand painted? I mean, you know when, if you put a thousand decoys out, that was what the debate was over. But anyway, they cut to my dad and he said, he said I was being hubris. And then he's like, the Bible says pride comes before the fall. I was like, I cannot believe my dad said this on national television about me. And I didn't even know what hubris was. I had to look it up. Thankfully I had a dictionary and I was like, he was calling me prideful. That's why it didn't offend me at.
Phil Robertson
The time, because you didn't understand what it meant.
Jase Robertson
I didn't know what that word was. When was the last time you called someone hubris? But my point is, you got to think that God chose this nation and then he's given them the law and they have the scriptures and they're basing it all on that. They're like, well, we're God's. We're God's chosen people here and we Know this like the back of our hand. We're following all the laws, you know, and that's what he was up against. I think that means more when you look at it like that, which is why I think we get to the next stage when he goes back to that manna and his fulfillment of that. I'm the bread of life. I mean, that's the segue here into this argument about Moses. And look, it goes back to how the whole. How John started it. Remember when he said in verse 17 of chapter one, for the law was given through Moses, grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. So he's not saying, look, the law was bad. He was saying it led everything, including your whole nation, to me. Yeah, which is why I read that about. I came to fulfill it. That's why I always have a problem with people going to the Old Testament and trying to make practical applications today without understanding that Jesus is the fulfillment of that. I mean, don't miss Jesus in whatever doctrine you've created based on, you know, kind of like we did in the Valley of the Dry Bones, you know, which is, yes, we're going to be resurrected, we're going to get new bodies. But he was, he was actually talking about he's going to resurrect his holy nation from being unfaithful through one. Through one, which is a common theme in the, in the Bible, God would choose one for the good of the many, which I think is a theme in the Bible, which is why, you know, and Paul said when Jesus died, all died, because he basically, through one, saved the whole or offered salvation to the whole.
Phil Robertson
Well, isn't it interesting and ironic that to back up what you just said, that God didn't allow Moses to go into the promised land? I mean, he was alive, he was there, he had led the people out. But you know why? Because of hubris. He decided that Moses was going to get right to the edge and go up a mountain and see it. But it would be Joshua Yeshua, which ironically is the same name we get Jesus from, was the one that was going to lead them into the new promise. And so again, I mean, these things aren't done accidentally.
Zach Dasher
It's not. The, the phrase I like is. It's called the New Exodus language.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Zach Dasher
So when you think about what Jesus is doing, he. It's. It's New Exodus. And so it's an overlay. So when you read about Moses, it really is like a mirror image of what's happening in the, in the New Testament, except in the New Testament, everything's going to be accomplished. What couldn't be accomplished in the original exodus of God's chosen people will now be fully accomplished in Jesus. And now we become God's chosen people along with, with Israel.
Jase Robertson
Well, and I think, got to keep in mind the practical application of all this is because I'll speak for Zach and myself here. You know, we have argumentative tendencies. We like to argue. Which I heard a good joke about that, Zach. I think it was nt right. I was listening to a podcast and they asked some crazy question about whether they had a viewer led question. And the question was, what came first, the sin or the sinful nature? And he said, well, that reminds me of an argument between the chicken and the egg. And he said, they basically decided, we're here, let's just deal with it.
Zach Dasher
You just got to get.
Jase Robertson
Yeah, yeah, yeah. Which reminded me of me and you.
Zach Dasher
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
So I think my point is they're literally just think as a human being, they've been given life, they're on the planet at a certain specific time, and you find yourself arguing with the creator of the universe. You're on the wrong side of the argument with the creator.
Zach Dasher
Exactly.
Jase Robertson
I think of all the terrible things that could happen to a human being, that has got to be in the top 10.
Phil Robertson
Yeah.
Jase Robertson
I was one of the guys who was looking at my creator saying, nope.
Phil Robertson
Nope, you missed it.
Jase Robertson
Which I. Look, I understand that because I brought up Doug Dynasty a while ago. I've had people come up to me and argue because they'll say, hey, what happened on some certain scene? And I don't remember because I don't watch the show. So I tell them what happened. They're like, no, that's not how it happened. I'm like, I created that. That was my, my life. Oh, I know I'm right. I don't care what they edited or how it came across. This is what happened. And they're like, nope, nope, I saw it.
Phil Robertson
Yeah, I watched it.
Jase Robertson
So I think we all have to be careful when we're studying this. Number one, not to miss Jesus. And number two, you know, keep an open mind. There's a God and we're not him.
Phil Robertson
So to quote to it, we'll, we'll wrap it there. To quote a wise man, pride goes before a fall. We don't want to. We want to listen to the creator. All right, I think we set it up beautifully for John six, so we'll get there. Next time on Unashamed.
Jase Robertson
Stay humble, my friend.
Phil Robertson
Thanks for listening to the Unashamed podcast. Help us out by leaving a rating and review on Apple Podcasts. And don't miss an episode by subscribing on YouTube. And be sure to click the little bell and choose all notifications to watch every episode.
Podcast Summary: Ep 1070 | Phil Scorched Jase on ‘Duck Dynasty’ but Jase Never Knew What It Meant Until Now
Podcast Information:
In Episode 1070 of "Unashamed with the Robertson Family," hosts Phil, Al, Jase, Zach Robertson, and their special guests delve into a blend of personal anecdotes, humorous exchanges, and deep biblical discussions. The episode uniquely intertwines family dynamics from West Monroe, Louisiana, with insightful explorations of faith and Scripture.
a. Jase's Unusual Gift
The episode kicks off with Jase Robertson revealing that he received an old Webster's Dictionary from a close friend. Sharing his astonishment, Jase introduces the dictionary as a "monstrosity" gifted specifically for contributing to the podcast. He humorously notes, “You could actually use it as a mask during COVID” (00:36).
b. Phil’s Unorthodox Medical Intervention
Phil Robertson takes center stage with a wild anecdote about using the heavy Webster's Dictionary to burst his wife Lisa's ganglion cyst. He recounts, “I just had the dictionary and wham. Right on top of her hand, and I burst the cyst” (10:08). Although effective, Phil admits it wasn’t well-received, jesting, “she didn’t curse, but there were many words leveled at me” (11:04). This story not only adds humor but also illustrates the Robertson family's penchant for unconventional solutions.
a. Counting Words Challenge
A lively debate ensues when Phil and Jase argue about the number of words in the English language. Phil cites the Webster's Dictionary, claiming it contains “470,000 words” (16:09), while Zach counters with estimates around 170,000 active words plus obsolete ones (16:34). Jase humorously declares, “So I have some evidence that you are wrong. There are more than 170,000 words in here” (16:08), highlighting their playful yet competitive dynamic.
b. The Role of Technology in Learning
The discussion humorously touches upon the limitations of relying solely on internet searches versus physical dictionaries. Jase laments, “That's your problem. You’re over-relying on Google AI” (16:10), emphasizing the importance of firsthand knowledge and traditional learning tools in understanding complex topics.
a. Connecting Dictionaries to Scripture
The conversation seamlessly transitions from dictionaries to biblical studies, particularly focusing on John 5 and John 6. Phil provides a comprehensive overview of John 5: “[...] the Son of Man is equal with God. He's a giver of life. He's a judge. He's the ultimate determiner of destiny” (19:02). This sets the stage for a deeper exploration of Jesus's claims and their theological implications.
b. The Road to Emmaus Parallel
Jase and Zach draw parallels between their discussions and the biblical narrative of the Road to Emmaus in Luke 24. Jase reflects, “This is getting comfortable for his listeners, for you do not believe the one he sent” (26:00), tying Jesus's teachings to contemporary struggles in understanding and acceptance within the faith community.
a. Maintaining Humility and Avoiding Pride
Phil and Jase delve into the theme of pride versus humility, inspired by both biblical teachings and personal experiences. Phil quotes, “Pride goes before a fall,” (57:09) reinforcing the episode's underlying message of staying humble and attentive to God's guidance.
b. The Importance of Personal Relationship with Jesus
Zach shares a poignant conversation with his grandfather about the essence of Christianity, differentiating between viewing the Bible as a rule book versus embracing a personal relationship with Jesus. He states, “Don’t miss Jesus in whatever doctrine you’ve created based on…” (55:35), urging listeners to prioritize personal faith over rigid doctrinal adherence.
a. The Impact of Modern Tools on Business and Faith
Phil reminisces about the early days of Duck Commander, pondering how modern business tools like NetSuite could have streamlined their operations: “If we had known about NetSuite, it would have made our job so much easier” (33:55). This segues into discussions about integrating faith with business ethics and the role of technology in enhancing both.
b. Advocacy for Persecuted Christians
The hosts highlight ongoing global struggles faced by persecuted Christians, referencing Todd Nettleton's book "When Faith is Forbidden." Phil emphasizes the importance of supporting such communities, stating, “Voice of the Martyrs has been an inspiring organization for many years” (45:48), underscoring the podcast's commitment to real-world applications of faith.
As the episode draws to a close, the hosts reflect on their discussions, tying back to their initial themes of humility, faith, and the importance of not losing sight of Jesus in scholarly pursuits. They set the agenda for the next episode, promising to delve deeper into John 6 and its relevance for believers today.
Notable Quotes with Timestamps:
Faith and Humor Intertwined: The Robertson family adeptly combines light-hearted anecdotes with profound faith discussions, making theological topics accessible and engaging.
The Importance of Personal Relationships in Faith: Emphasizing a personal relationship with Jesus over mere doctrinal adherence ensures a more heartfelt and genuine faith journey.
Humility as a Core Christian Virtue: Maintaining humility helps believers remain open to God's guidance and prevents the pitfalls of pride.
Integrating Faith with Daily Life and Business: Leveraging modern tools and practices while upholding Christian ethics can lead to more efficient and morally grounded business operations.
Support for Persecuted Christians: Highlighting the struggles of persecuted Christians fosters a sense of global Christian solidarity and responsibility among listeners.
This episode of "Unashamed with the Robertson Family" offers a rich tapestry of humor, personal stories, and deep biblical insights, encouraging listeners to remain humble, prioritize their personal relationship with Jesus, and actively support global Christian communities.