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Genesis 24-33 Part 1 • Bro. Mike Harris • Mar. 2-8 • Come, Follow Me

73 min
Feb 25, 20263 months ago
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Summary

Brother Mike Harris joins the followHIM podcast to explore Genesis 24-33, focusing on how God blesses families through covenant relationships rather than material prosperity alone. The episode emphasizes that true blessings come through loyalty to covenants, agency in decision-making, and understanding biblical symbolism—particularly how Isaac and Rebecca's marriage prefigures Christ's covenant relationship with His people.

Insights
  • Biblical blessings often appear as trials and difficulties rather than immediate material rewards; Abraham's 'blessings' include loss, age, unfulfilled promises, and grief—reframing how modern believers interpret divine favor
  • Covenant relationships are fundamentally about loyalty and connection to God, not contractual agreements; the Hebrew concept of 'hesed' (covenant loyalty) flows both directions and persists even when humans fail
  • Agency and consent are central to covenant-making in scripture; women's choices are honored and never coerced, challenging assumptions that ancient biblical culture was uniformly patriarchal
  • Symbolic and revelatory reading of scripture reveals deeper theological messages; the same text can be read historically and symbolically simultaneously without contradiction
  • The land/covenant connection in Old Testament theology represents not real estate but a type and shadow of heaven—achieved through obedience and loyalty rather than geographic location
Trends
Shift in religious education toward symbolic and revelatory interpretation methods rather than purely historical-critical approaches to ancient textsEmphasis on covenant relationships as emotional and relational bonds rather than transactional agreements in faith communitiesGrowing recognition of agency and consent in religious narratives, particularly regarding women's roles in covenant-makingIntegration of cross-scriptural analysis (Old Testament, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants) to identify consistent theological patterns and idiomsReframing of adversity and unfulfilled promises as evidence of divine blessing rather than divine absence in faith-based teaching
Topics
Covenant theology and covenant relationshipsBiblical symbolism and typology interpretationFamily dynamics and marriage in scriptureHebrew language idioms and their theological significanceAgency and consent in religious decision-makingGrief and loss in the context of faithThe promised land as theological conceptWomen's roles in Old Testament narrativesProphetic and revelatory experiencesTemple symbolism and sacred spaceLoyalty (hesed) in covenant relationshipsSecond Coming symbolism in scriptureBride and bridegroom metaphors for Christ and the ChurchPatriarchal blessing and inheritanceFaith during unfulfilled promises
Companies
Utah Valley University
Institution where Brother Mike Harris has taught at the Institute for the past nine years
Brigham Young University (BYU)
Mike Harris earned his bachelor's degree there and has taught in the Religion Department
Amherst University
Mike Harris is currently a PhD candidate in Old Testament studies at this institution
People
Mike Harris
Guest expert discussing Genesis 24-33, specializing in Old Testament symbolism and covenant theology
Hank Smith
Co-host of the followHIM podcast leading the discussion on Genesis
John
Co-host for over five years, participates in scriptural analysis and discussion
Chad Savage
Nephew of Hank Smith who recommended Mike Harris as a guest teacher
Clea Harris
Mike Harris's wife of 27 years; met while teaching seminary in 1997
Dallin H. Oaks
Quoted regarding grief after loss of spouse in his book 'Life Lessons Learned'
Gordon B. Hinckley
Quoted regarding his experience of grief after his wife's death
Russell M. Nelson
Referenced for teachings on covenant loyalty and the Book of Mormon
David A. Bednar
Referenced for distinction between 'covenant relationship' and 'covenant connection'
Joseph Smith
Referenced regarding oath-making principles in Doctrine and Covenants
S.C. Reif
Author of article 'To Look Up' analyzing Hebrew idiom for lifting eyes in revelatory contexts
Gary Little
Colleague of Mike Harris who highlighted Elder Bednar's teachings on covenant connection
Quotes
"Home can be heaven on earth, but let's be honest. Sometimes it can be hell on earth."
Mike HarrisEarly in episode
"When we lose a spouse, we are usually unaware how deeply wounded we are. For a time, we do not function well physically or mentally."
Dallin H. Oaks (quoted by Mike Harris)Mid-episode discussion on grief
"I will go."
Rebecca (Genesis 24:58)Discussion of covenant commitment
"His blessings aren't purchased or seized or won. He gives them freely to all who live up to the name of Israel, who let God prevail in their lives."
Come Follow Me Manual (quoted)Opening lesson summary
"The Lord is aching to help us to know how to navigate through all this messiness."
Mike HarrisIntroduction to Genesis 24-33 themes
Full Transcript
Coming up in this episode on Follow Him. You got the ten camels and Rebecca and her damn souls on it. Then they get closer. They're gonna see Isaac walking in the field and then you're gonna have to marriage the encounter. Love it for sight and people read these and they're like, oh, it's a romantic love story and it is, but it's so much more. Hello, everyone. Welcome to another episode of Follow Him. My name is Hank Smith. I'm your host. I'm here with my co-host. He's been my co-host for over five years. Those five years have seemed unto me just a few days. John, by the way, John, welcome back another episode of Follow Him. Just a few days. Do you know where that comes from, John? Yeah, it comes from Genesis 29 verse 20 where Jacob served seven years for Rachel, but those seven years it says seemed to him, but a few days for the love he had to her. That beautiful. John, we are privileged today to be joined by brother Mike Harris. Mike, welcome to Follow Him. This is your first time here. Thank you for having me, gentlemen. We are excited to have you comes highly recommended. I'd heard of Mike before, but when my nephew Chad Savage came to me, he said, I have a guest for you. It's my all time favorite teacher I've ever had. Mike Harris, Chad and his wife, Tasia, they are going to be very excited. John, we've been walking through these opening chapters of Genesis for a while now. When you think of Jacob, the prophet Jacob, not Book of Mormon, but Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, what comes to mind? So much of all we talk about is Jacob's posterity, his name being changed Israel and the House of Israel. And in these chapters, I think about marriages and the importance of that for Isaac and Rebecca. We all look back to Jacob and talk about that a lot. Don't we about Israel and the House of Israel and let God prevail? Yeah, this initial family, how many times do we hear the phrase Abraham, Isaac and Jacob? And here we are in these stories. Mike, what are you looking forward to today? I know when you and I discuss this, this is something you really wanted to do. Thank you so much. Genesis chapters 24 to 33 dives into the messiness of families of heartache. And shattered dreams, betrayal. It's just so relevant for our day. We love families. We sing families can be together forever. But the reality of it is sometimes it can be so hard to be trail, divorce, addictions, things that destroy families. Home can be heaven on earth, but let's be honest. Sometimes it can be hell on earth. And as I go through these chapters and preparing for this podcast with you, find gentlemen, I just get this feeling that the Lord is aching to help us to know how to navigate through all this messiness. And Genesis does not shy away from the messiness of all scripture. I have a friend, you know how the church is trying to compile an international hymn book. He told me that there's one hymn in particular that they're really struggling with. And it's him 301 in the English hymn book. I am a child of God. And why would you struggle with it? That's a no brainer. You don't even have to pray whether or not that needs to be in the hymn book. And he says, no, no, no. Yeah, the chorus is money. I am a child of God. There's a phrase in there that's for some people really painful. The part says, has given me an earthly home with parents kind and dear, which implies that God sent you to that family. Well, then that's all fine and dandy. You're going to sing that with gusto. If you come from a family, that is kind and dear. But what if they're not? I've heard that before from people they'd be at. What if that's not me? Well, then this lesson is for you. Let's talk about it. Not too long ago, I was going on a walk with one of my neighbors. I've known him for decades. I think he's one of the three Nephites. He is just as committed as anybody I know in the kingdom. But he said something that surprised me. He said, Mike, I feel like I'm losing my faith. I'm like, somebody with this call and election made sure it will not lose his faith. What are you talking about? Now I said, I've been reading the Old Testament every time I read the, I feel like I'm losing my faith. There's just so many things that are so odd and shocking. The Lord repeatedly and infatically says, Jacob, I loved, but Esau, I hated. And you're like, there's some tricky things. And we want to be able to approach the text and interpret it in a responsible, faithful manner. And I think we can talk about some tools that can help us do that. Wonderful. Let's read exegetically. That's the word. Speaking of him's my wife and I sometimes sing that there is beauty all around when there's no one home. Okay. Yeah. John, tell us about Mike. What do we know about him? Brother Mike Harris, he's been teaching at Utah Valley University Institute for the past nine years. He served a mission in, I'm so excited to say this. Torreon, Mexico, how they do. And after returning home, tended BYU, he earned a bachelor's in Spanish, a minor in family science. He has two master's degrees, one in curriculum development and the other in white fort, Old Testament Biblical studies. And he's currently a PhD candidate in Old Testament studies at Amherst University. And he's taught in seminaries and institutes for the past 20 years. His wife, Clea's from Alberta, Canada. He met her while they were both teaching seminary in 1997. She was at Pleasant Grove High School and he was at Orm, Jr. I, they both insist it was love at first sight. So this is perfect because we're going to have some marriages here in these chapters. They have six children, been married for 27 years. Clea is in a state planning attorney, which also gets into families, trying to help them. Mate, things not messy. He says I subscribe to the keto diet, except when hanging out with my buddies Ben and Jerry for fun. I enjoy scrabble and playing pickleball. What a delightful background and notice how much family is in there. Welcome, Mike. This is going to be fun. I think we found the perfect guess to talk about the messiness of families. And yet here's the Lord working through this family. Let's start with the come follow me manual. Then Mike, John and I are ready to learn the name of the lesson this week is let God prevail. How do you secure for yourself a blessing from God? You might say that the account of Jacob, grand son of Abraham and Sarah is the story of a man who learned the answer to that question. In a culture where the first born son received a birthright blessing, Jacob was born second, grasping the heel of his twin brother, Esa. The name Jacob means supplanter, one who replaces someone else. Jacob lived up to that name by trying more than once to supplant Esa as inheritor of the birthright blessing because Esa was on worthy of it. The result was discord in the family and Jacob had to flee for his life into the wilderness. Years later, God commanded Jacob to return home. On the way, Jacob in humility again sought a blessing from God. The scriptures described this time as a wrestle for Jacob and he declared that he would not give up except thou bless me. Then came the lesson and the blessing. God changed Jacob's name to Israel, meaning among other things, let God prevail. Israel learned that to receive God's most valuable blessings, his covenant blessings, it's not necessary to supplant someone else. His blessings aren't purchased or seized or won. He gives them freely to all who live up to the name of Israel, who let God prevail in their lives. So well written. All right, with that, Mike, where do you want to start? How exactly does God bless family? Yes, faith, prayer, repentance, forgiveness, respect, love, compassion, work, and hold some recreational activities. Bring blessings, but there's something else that's really critical. That's my favorite part of the proclamation to the world on the family. You have this solemn tone of the proclamation and at the very end and play pickleball. I get out there and do things. That just endears my heart to my Heavenly Father. As silly as this might sound, he wants me to have fun. That's the God I believe in. Yes, all those things are so crucial if we want to have a happy home. But like I said, there's something else. So let's dive in. Verse one, Genesis chapter 24, verse one, we're going to find something here unexpected. In fact, in preparing for this podcast, I'd never seen this before. It says here, an Abraham was old and well stricken in age and the Lord had blessed. That's what we want, right? We want to be blessed. Blessed Abraham in all things. Wait a minute though. Really? I know we're supposed to count our blessings, but just for a second, humor me. At this moment in Abraham's life, let's count his non-blessings. Okay, right there, even in the text itself, he's old. There's some nice things about you know, but typically what I want to get out of a chair now, I got to be one for the money, two for the show, you know, and I got to get a, there's some problems there. And then it's like doubling down on it. The next phrase, well stricken in age. What? It wasn't okay just to say he was old. Why is it emphasizing that? I did a search every time that phrase appears. It's never good. Real quick. In first Kings chapter one, verse one, David, he was stricken in age and says, and David got no heat. In the New Testament, Elizabeth and Zacharias are stricken in years and they've suffered much grief and they can't have any children. A Gideon in the book of Mormon, it says that he's stricken with many years. He wasn't able to withstand the blows of knee whore and so he got killed. Even Saraya Nephi, they're on the boat and it says that same phrase appears. They're stricken in years so they weren't able to calm layman and Lemuel down when they were acting with exceeding rudeness and they were about ready to be buried with their great hairs into a watery grave. This verse is emphasizing, you know, in the ancient Hebrew text, there's no chapter divisions. The verse, right before verse one here, if we go to chapter 23 verse 20, what's happened? He just buried his wife. And people mean well and they say things like, well, you know, it was her time. She lived a good long life and for the righteous, there's no sting, but you know what? I don't know. I think for a good person who's righteous and truly has loved, oh, death stings. In fact, as reading President Dalin H. Oaks book, it's titled Life Lessons Learned, he gives sweet tender insight into what it was like when his first wife died. He said, quote, when we lose a spouse, we are usually unaware how deeply wounded we are. For a time, we do not function well physically or mentally. We should not make major decisions until we are mostly whole again. The required time will differ. For me, it was, and this blows my mind, here he is, a special witness of Christ. And what did you say? For me, it was about a year before I could trust myself with a major personal decision. I think Abraham, yes, he knows that his wife's going to be a resurrected. They can be together forever. But I think there's a lot of hurt going on right now on loneliness and just ache. Mike, I remember when sister Hinckley passed away. President Hinckley in the next conference says, I was at her bedside as she slipped peacefully into eternity. As I held her hand and some mortal life drained from her fingers, I confess I was overcome. Before I married her, she had been the girl of my dreams. To use the words of a song then popular, she was my dear companion for more than two-thirds of a century. My equal before the Lord, really my superior. Now in my old age, she has again become the girl of my dreams. Wow. Could you hit me in the fills? So I feel about my wife, Clea. Yeah, beautiful. We're not done counting our non-blessings. There's more. I know there's a lot here in verse 1. It's pretty dense. He's been promised repeatedly that he and his posterity would inherit the land of Canaan, yet it was all that Abraham could do back in Genesis 23 to purchase a parcel of land to have his wife buried. Remember, the Lord promised him that he wouldn't receive the entire land. He says, look north, look south, look east, look west. It's all going to be yours. We're not just talking in the eight career or two. He can barely get a small piece of land for his wife's burial. You've received a patriarchal blessing or a priesthood blessing and you've been promised something and it's not happening. Abraham understands. We're not done counting our non-blessings here. He was promised posterity as numerous as the sand, the dust, and the stars. He's not even dating. In fact, when Isaac gets on dating apps, he's not swiping to the right. He's not swiping up because he's living in the middle of Canaan where all the candidates, the dating prospects are their idol worshipers. He's spending Friday night at home. John, it reminds me of when the Lord says, I will bless you and then you usually quote the Princess bride. I will bless you and then you usually quote the Princess bride. I will bless you. You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means. I'm not seeing it the second way. I'm not seeing blessings the way you are. Here in verse one, it says, the Lord had blessed Abraham and all things. The Hebrew word behind blessed is Baroque. As you look at how it's used here in these opening chapters of Genesis, it's repeatedly connected explicitly to multiplying and replenishing the earth. In Genesis chapter one, the Lord creates the beast of the field and he commands them. He blesses them and then immediately commands them to multiply and replenish. Then in verse 26, the same thing with Adam and Eve. Then in Genesis 9, verse 1, no blesses his sons and then commands them to multiply and replenish. See it over and over again. Abraham's like, where's the blessing? The posterity is numerous as the sands see. It's not happening. It says at the end of verse 1, the Abraham was blessed in all things. The Hebrew behind that, and I don't think this appears anywhere else in the Hebrew Bible. It's Hac-Kul. That means the all or the everything. If you were to translate it literally from the Hebrew, but no English versions translate it that way. They'll all say he was blessed in everything or in all things or in all ways. It's conveying this idea that Abraham is being blessed in all facets conceivable. Yet this is so contradictory. Wait a minute. Really? The most red verse in the book of Mormon is, I, Nephi, having been born of goodly parents. Therefore, I was taught somewhat in the learning of my father, and having seen many afflictions in the course of my days. And then his next phrase, yay, having been highly favored of the Lord. Like, wait, what? In one verse, it teaches the exact same thing that apparently the Lord sees blessings as opportunities to grow. Yeah, we have to keep reading to figure out what is the text trying to get across and hang. That's a beautiful cross reference. What does Abraham do to bless his family? Do you just read the scriptures? Go to church, say your prayers? I mean, you know, of course he does, but he does something else. In chapter 24, as we go through here, verse by verse is going to give some hints, some clues along the way to show us how we can really bless our family. Let's go to verse two. And Abraham said unto his eldest servant of his house that ruled over all that he had, put, I pray the thy hand under my thigh, verse three, and I will make the swear by the Lord, the God of heaven, and the God of the earth, that thou shalt not take a wife unto my son of the daughters of the Canaanites among whom I dwell. But thou shalt go unto my country. That's about 500 miles up north to Haran, modern day Turkey, and to my kindred and take a wife unto my son Isaac. When you read that, you might be thinking, why not just send Isaac himself? I would suggest this, that throughout the Old Testament, leaving the land of Canaan is often equated with living outside the covenant blessings. Like you recall, they'd had to go to Egypt for a while because of the seven years of famine. While they're there, Jacob or Israel, he's about ready to die and he requires his son Joseph, Joseph with the coat of many colors to take an oath. You make sure you bury my bones in Canaan. And then Joseph goes to die also there in Egypt, and he puts his people under oath, solemn oath. You make sure that you bury my bones in Canaan. Suggesting this theological message that I've got to be in the covenant. That is the promised land. Yeah, so I think for Abraham, it's not worth the risk to have Isaac move outside Canaan and maybe not come back. I think that's what the text is trying to suggest. In fact, look at verse 5, and the servant said unto him, Peradventure the woman will not be willing to follow me unto this land. Again, this land into the covenant. Must I need to bring thy son again unto the land from whence thou cameus? Verse 6, and Abraham said unto him, Beware that thou bring not my son, Thither again. It's interesting where it says in verse 6, Beware that thou bring not my son, Thither again, meaning, Thither, meaning up there in Haran outside the covenant. To bring comes from the Hebrew word, Shoev. The root of it simply means to turn. And it's often referred to with repentance where you just turn to the Lord, or sometimes it refers to turning away from the Lord, being going apostate. So I think the text is trying to suggest that I don't want my son to turn away from the covenant. Got it. Isaiah named his son, Sharia Shoev. A portion will return. I didn't think about that. That's beautiful. To sublice our families, yes, we need to read scriptures and go to church there, prayers and place them pickleball. Notice how Genesis 24 is underscoring. If we really want a blessed family, we have to have this covenantal focus. The come follow me manual that you're at Hank at the beginning of the podcast really did a beautiful job, but that's worth repeating. That should be our primary interpretive lens as we go through this chapter. And that is an order for God to fully bless our families. Genesis 24 is inviting us to focus on the covenant. The servant seems to realize how important this is. He says, what if the woman doesn't want to come back? And you know what's shocking about that, Hank is sometimes I hear people say, you know, back in those days, sometimes the Bible can be sexist, you know? But I'm like, I always feel a little uncomfortable. I know the culture was, but when you impose that on the scriptures, sometimes it's like, it gives me pause. I think here's a great example. The agency of the woman is completely being honored. When it comes to making covenants, maybe in the ancient Near East, you would be pressured and manipulated to make a treaty or covenant, not with the Lord, but with the King or a ruler. But when it comes to making covenants or treaties agreements with God, he 100% says, I do not want to pressure. This has to come from you 100% and you see that being highlighted here in the text. You would not expect that from their culture. In verse eight, if the woman will not be willing to follow the then thou shalt force her? No, then thou shalt be clear from this my oath. There's consent involved and agency is honored. I'm glad you pointed that out. Am I reading this right that he says, bring him back? Is that what Abraham is saying to the servant is, if the woman doesn't want to come, I want my son come back only you will not return my son there. Is he saying like, I want him back home? I think what he's saying there in verse six is, hey, if you can't find a worthy candidate for my son to marry, whatever you do, you can't take my son out of the covenant land. You can't take him from here in Canaan. You can't take him up to to Haran. He has to stay in the covenant. That's my dying wish here. Right. So Mike, am I reading this right that the servant is going to go find a woman for Isaac to marry, but Isaac is going to stay in Israel in Canaan and the servant is saying, well, what if she doesn't want to come here? Abraham saying, well, okay, if she doesn't want to come here, then you don't have to find him a wife because no matter what, he's not going there to her. Exactly. Got it. Okay. I want Isaac to remain here in the land of Canaan. The text is trying to emphasize Isaac has to stay in the land slash covenant. Got it. Because in your mind, the land and the covenant are the same. Yes. Synonymous in this case. That's what we're doing equating the covenant with the land. I like to say it landslash covenant. That makes us all go, oh, I see why this is so important here. Not just real estate. It's about the covenant. Yeah. And to build on that idea, you see that in the book of Deuteronomy where it describes, I want to take you to a land that flows with milk and honey. Well, I've been to Israel. You've been to Israel. Modern day Israel. Is it known for its milk and honey? Do you like it? You got to try their honey. The book of Deuteronomy is filled with this poetic language. Like, if you're faithful to me when you get there, there'll be no disease. None of your women will suffer from barrenness or infertility. All this hyperbole where clearly throughout the Old Testament, the Lord connects being in the promised land with it's a type in a shadow of heaven, which is only achieved through obedience and loyalty to the covenant. Now, in our modern day culture, we have friends, family, parents, church leaders that maybe sometimes pressure us to, hey, you got to get married in the temple. You got to get your endowment. Maybe sometimes a culture press too hard. All the pressure, maybe it's not all bad. It's just coming from a good place. But at the end of the day, the text here is, we've got to honor the agency of the woman. She's got to enter into a covenant, ultimately, if she wants to. That's true for us today. How about verse 7? Do we see any focus on the covenant here in verse 7? It says, the Lord God of heaven, which took me from my father's house, that would have been back where he grew up. His stomping grounds was in Ur, which is modern day Iran, Iraq area. And from the land of my kindred and which speak unto me and that swear unto me, saying unto thy seed, will I give this land? He shall send his angel before thee, and thou shalt take a wife unto my son from Thence. We've got some covenantal connections here in this verse, the first three words, the Lord God. If you look in the Hebrew, typically you first have verbs followed by the subject. Here, and this is a really good translation, it's fronting Lord God. It's placing the Lord God in what we call an infatic position. I mean, we can kneel next to our bed and we can make promises with God. I promise I'll be a good boy. I promise I'll be a good girl. I'll go to church. If you'll just bless me with the, and we try to make deals with God, I suppose that's fine. But when it comes to official covenants, we don't stipulate the terms. You see that here where it's the Lord God who's taking the initiative to make things happen. Verse 9, should we keep moving? Yeah, let's keep going. And the servant put his hand under the thigh of Abraham, his master, asswear to him concerning that matter. It looks like the JST in verse 2 and verse 9 is changing side to hand. It's interesting in Genesis chapter 47 verse 29, right before Jacob dies in Egypt, he makes Joseph covenant that he'll make sure that his bones are buried in Canaan like I was saying earlier. He tells him to put his hand under his thigh and there's no JST. I find this interesting because we know anciently the penalty for oath breaking, especially in the ancient Near East. If you broke your treaty, you're covenant with the king or the ruler. What's the penalty? Death. This seriousness is being underscored by placing his hand under Abraham's loins. That part of the body associated with lineage. This dramatically captures the serious and sacred nature of an oath. It's definitely one of those the past is a foreign country. They do things differently there. Right. Oh, okay. Interesting. I don't know how to best teach this to those that we love that are preparing to go to the temple. But I mean, it's just so sad when people go to the temple and it's a one and done. I remember Elder Holland was speaking with the media once and one of the reporters asked, So Elder Holland, would you give your life for the church? Any thought about it? And they said, well, that's what I thought I was doing. Yeah, that's I'm pretty sure that's the covenant isn't like a part time deal. Like, okay, on Sunday, I'm going to be a good boy. Good girl. I'm going to go to church. Now, this is 24, 7, 365. None of us do it perfectly well, but we're striving all the time to be all in. Maybe our listeners have heard this before. It's kind of humorous, but at the same time, it gets the point across. The story goes that the hen and the pig were in the barnyard talking about the difference between commitment and involvement. To get us point across the pig said to the hen, tomorrow morning, when the farmer comes out for breakfast, you're only involved, but I'm committed. You're going to give some eggs, but I'm bacon. Fortunately today, for most of us, it's not a lie for death situation and when we keep our covenants, but the Lord expects us to daily strive to be all in. You get that seriousness being communicated by this covenant making going on. It's not just the land that is equated with the covenant. Let's go to verse 10 now. And the servant took 10 camels of the camels of his master and departed for all the goods of his master were in his hand and he arose and he went to Mesopotamia onto the city of Nahor. These camels and the goods, you get the impression that he's going to load up these camels and most Bible scholars will say, oh, you need 10 camels because you got to carry all these goods which can serve as the bride price or the dowry. You also need supplies for the journey. I mean to travel 500 miles, you're going to need a month or two. Reading it through that historical lens, I think is helpful and correct. I think there's some symbolism going on at the same time. The phrase, the goods comes from the Hebrew word, tove, which occurs 32 times in the Old Testament. This is the first time it appears. If you survey every time it appears, guess what you see appearing over and over again, not every time, but repeatedly, tove refers to the material and the spiritual blessings that can come from living in the land that flows with milk and honey. The tove or these goods that he's carrying, it's almost like this symbol, this token that this servant's going to carry up there and show the woman that's going to marry Isaac. Look, we're looking for a covenant marriage. Look at the blessings here. Look at the tangible blessings, these material blessings. These aren't just because he was good at investing in the stock market. This is evidence that God is blessing him. Now, I don't want to be misunderstood. We don't want to promote the prosperity gospel. Like, if you keep my commandments, you're going to get a pay raise. That doesn't always happen. Here, the text is using the material goods to symbolize that God is prospering. Abraham, these goods aren't just, hey, we've got to go up and buy this daughter from somebody. You're basically taking a member of their household, like an employee, someone who does work. So you're going to go and say, hey, we want to take this person from your family. Here's the payment for it. Also, you're saying the goods aren't just for that purpose. It's also proof that they are in a covenant relationship with God in Canaan. Look what we have. I'm bringing a portion of this. This is like a sample of what life is like back home. I think that's a good summary. So as you go through here and you see the camels and you see the goods I'd look at as a token or evidence of the covenant. Verse 11 also strikes at the heart of this covenant. Here we go. Verse 11. And he, the servant made his camels to Nile. To Nile also comes from that Hebrew word baroque to bless. You got this beautiful sound play where the text has this beautiful overtones. I, the Lord, want to bless. I'm not trying to suggest that that the camels are kneeling down to worship or praise the Lord. It's just a Hebrew sound play to emphasize that throughout this text that God wants to bless through the covenant. Verse 11. And he made the camels to Nile down without the city by a well of water. At the time of the evening, even the time that women go out to draw water. For the Hebrew listeners, when they hear camels kneeling, they're going to hear that word baroque and they're thinking, oh, blessing. It's a literary device signaling that God's blessings are about to break forth. They're about to unfold. This is the moment. So like the camels kneeling are a sign of readiness for this significant encounter. Yeah. And you can only hear that if you are listening to it in the original Hebrew because of that baroque word play. We've got to talk about the type seen of the well of water or the spring of water. It's a common motif or theme in the scripture canon. We also have it not only here with Isaac and Rebecca, but we have it with Jacob and Leah and Rachel. We have it with Moses and Zopora. We also have Jesus and the Samaritan woman, these encounters. All of these encounters at the well have five plot elements. One, a groom journeys to a foreign land. Two, he encounters a girl or girls at a well three, someone draws water. Four, girl runs home to announce the visitor's arrival and five. Visitor is invited to a mill. I got to give credit to Joan Cook who wrote a great article entitled Well, Women and Faith where she unpacks this motif. There's intentional symbolism going on. The best commentary that shows that this is intentional symbolism is found in modern Latter-day Saint scripture in doctrine and covenants section 63 verse 23. It says, the Lord told Joseph Smith, unto him that keep with my commandments, I will give the mysteries of my kingdom. And the same shall be in him a well of living water springing up unto ever-lasting life. The text is trying to tell us, wow, these people at this spring aren't just thirsty. They are righteous. They are covenant individuals that love the Lord. It makes me want to speak Hebrew because you would see that with the camels kneeling, the well is a symbol of God's blessings. Something significant from God is about to happen. It's not just about a marriage between a mortal man and a woman, Isaac and Rebecca. It's also about it should point our minds to the marriage that the Lord wants with his people, covenant Israel. This marriage motif between the Lord and his people is all throughout the the 10 virgins, five or wise, five or foolish. We know that the bridegrooms Jesus and the virgins symbolize the church members. It's over and over. It's in the one chapter of Isaiah that Jesus quotes to the Nephites, it's Isaiah 54, about the husband who is looking for his wife. Over and over in scripture is this. He is the groom Israel, both men and women are the bride. And we'll keep seeing it all this year. And even Paul, he repeatedly stated when referring to the Adam and Eve story in the Garden of Eden, the way he reads it is, Adam is a symbol for Jesus and Eve, a symbol for the church or covenant Israel. Let's look at one more verse and then we'll quickly summarize the rest of chapter and then jump to the exciting conclusion. We can't skip verse 12. Check this out. Notice the covenant. He, the servant, said, oh Lord God of my master Abraham, I pray the, pray the comes from the Hebrew, na, which a better translation is please, please send me good speed this day and show what kindness unto my master Abraham. Any guesses what the Hebrew is behind kindness? I know this one. The word here is heset. And four years ago, one of my friends Hillary Wright, she said to me, what is heset? You guys bring it up all the time. Every lesson I hear has said this and has said that, Mike, can you teach us? Yeah. President Nelson talked about it a lot. I think we can summarize it by saying that heset is covenant loyalty. It's not just the loyalty that we should show to God, but it's also the loyalty that he shows to us. It goes both ways. We know that even when we're stinkers, he still has heset. He still stays loyal. Even if we're cheating on him, he doesn't cheat on us. The covenant stays intact. It's a beautiful tender way to describe it. Husband and wife, she keeps leaving him for other men and he still loves her. It's tender. It's painful. Maybe it's describing the pain that he feels when Israel goes after other gods. People have helped me think of the covenant. You know how often we've said it's a two way agreement. Well, it is, but what you've been saying, Mike, this is a relationship and it involves loyalty. I don't feel loyalty to a piece of paper if I signed a two way agreement in the same way of loyalty to a person. When we think of the loyalty and a marriage that's working and the loyalty God offers us and wants us to offer him, I didn't help a lot to think, oh, it's not the covenant contract. It's a covenant relationship. You remind me of something my colleague and dear friend Gary Little at the Utah Valley Institute of Religion. He pointed out where elder Bednar has done something interesting. There's been two or three times separate occasions where he's emphasized. He says, you know, I don't really like to say a covenant relationship. I mean, it is a relationship. We use that because that's our world. We can understand relationships. But he says, I prefer to say a covenant connection because you think of our relationships, like we've been saying, they're messy. And even the best ones, he says, they don't even come close to the reality of how wonderful it's going to be in the hereafter to have that covenant connection with the Lord. The closest we can get to is to say a covenant relationship, but it's going to even be on that. He says, I'm going to call it a covenant connection. I'm paraphrasing elder Bednar, but hopefully that gets the point across. It's better than a relationship as sweet as relationships can be. I love what we're doing here, Mike, because we've got listeners who one have been promised, oh, you'll be blessed. And we're going, is this what blessings look like? Look at the difficulty Abraham is going through. Then he's thinking, oh, I want my child to marry in the covenant. Please marry in the covenant. And then sometimes it doesn't happen. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it's wonderful. And a child marries in the temple and they return to the temple over and over and over. You get to see the blessings from that. Sometimes a child chooses not to do that. What am I going to do then? How am I going to deal with that? But at the same time, I'm keeping my covenants. The Lord is going to be loyal to me. Even if I'm not, we find he is going to be loyal. Should we keep going? What happens? Do they find the girl? Yeah, okay. The servant makes the 500 mile journey up to the land and he finds Rebecca. And let's not go into all the details. But long story short, Rebecca decides, yes, I'm going to be a part of this covenant. I am going to go back and I'm going to be married to Isaac. There is one verse that we can't skip. Well, let's let Rebecca speak. She doesn't say a lot, but oh, boy, it also points to the power of covenant. What verses is it? It's verse 58 and they called Rebecca and said under her, will thou go with this man? And she said, I will go. And in Hebrew, it's just one word, which this succinct response agrees with the instructions Jesus gave about oath making in 3 Nephi chapter 1333 and 37 where he said, quote, thou shalt perform unto the Lord thine oaths. But let your communication be what? Yeah, yeah, or nae, nae. And it's the same in our temples today when we make covenants. It's yes. And boy, talk about a life changing moment. It is done with a simple and a sincere yes. As soon as you utter the words in a temple, not words, that single word, yes, you are inviting the Lord to transform your life. Maybe a fun thing to do with my boys would say, who said this? Quote, I will go. So I guarantee all of them will say, I know that dad, that's Nephi say actually not this week. It's a teenager. Yeah, it's a young, but it's a girl this time. You can make a pretty good argument that Nephi is actually referring to. If not this exact phrase right here in this specific verse, Nephi continually is drawing upon the brass plates and the Old Testament. That's a Old Testament phrase right there. Now the moment of moments, they got a travel back 500 miles. This is really fun. I mean, you got the 10 camels and Rebecca and her damsels on it. Then they get closer. They're going to see Isaac walking in the field. And then you're going to have the marriage, the encounter. Love it for sight. And people read these and they're like, oh, it's a romantic love story. And it is. But it's so much more. If we unpack the symbolism, surprise. Welcome to the Old Testament world. I'm going to expose my ignorance back in 1995. I went to a movie and it was the worst. It had Tom hangs in it. And I know it's got a 7.7 ranking on IMDB. The critics all loved it. It's a very popular movie. I'm sure you have heard of it. But it was absolutely the worst. I needed it. I was so excited because everybody was raving about it. The name of the movie is Apollo 13. It's all done. I'm walking out there. I'll never forget. I turned to my wife and I said, well, that was boring. That was awful. And she looks at me like, what are you talking about? Where were the aliens? And she looks at me. It wasn't sci-fi. That was based on true story. And I looked at her. It is. I had no idea that it was actually, okay, I know, I should have known my head. I didn't know. I was expecting a sci-fi and I was bored out of my mind. Didn't understand the genre. Yes, the genre 100%. I don't want to exaggerate. But it happens over and over again when I'm teaching at Utah Valley Institute of Religion, or I've also taught it at the BYU Religion Department and Insemitry. And with my neighbors and friends, they'll read something in the Bible. Typically, it's the Old Testament. They're like, I don't get this. Or a lot of times it's with Genesis 1, 2, or 3 with the endowment. And they're like, I'm getting so frustrated. Or this doesn't make sense. I'll tell you, 95% of the time it's because they're reading it through historical ends. The Bible is not an historical textbook. Or the quote President Nelson talking about the Book of Mormon, there is history in it, but it is not a historical textbook. I don't know how to teach that. And I'll tell people, well, it's not a historical book. You've got to look for symbolism. They still struggle with it, but it will make all the differences. Somehow we can shift our interpretive lens and start looking for symbolism in theological messages. If we run a fact checker through everything in the Bible, sometimes we're going to lose our faith, we're going to get confused, we're going to think God's weird and mean. But if we look for how to unpack it through his symbolic lens and identifying the correct genre, can we give an example on, let's do this with the conclusion of Genesis chapter 24. Okay. Symbolism is its own language. At first glance, it just seems like a nice romance between Isaac and Rebecca. Can we try something? I want us to read these verses, but every time we come to something that could be a symbol, I want us to remove the symbol and insert the meaning. For instance, Isaac, he arguably can be a symbol for, let's go back to Genesis chapter 22. Abraham almost sacrifices him on the altar. Isaac clearly in that context is a symbol for Jesus. I wouldn't suggest that we need to carry that symbolism over here. So Isaac, think Jesus, Rebecca the woman and Hank, you were referring to this earlier, oh, Baron, that Baron's not and we know that Rebecca is going to be Baron here. Rebecca, according to Isaiah and other passages, she can serve as a symbol for the church or covenant Israel. Now let's read it through that lens starting in verse 61. Rebecca arose and her damsels and they rode upon the camels and followed the man and the servant took Rebecca and went his way. Now let's read it symbolically and covenant Israel or the church members arose and her damsels. By the way, the word damsels comes from the Hebrew word nahar and I have a colleague and a friend in my PhD studies over an amrige who just finished his dissertation. He did a survey of every time the word nahar appears right here for damsels. Sometimes it refers to women, sometimes it refers to men, but there's a lot of Hebrew words for boy, girls, lad, damsel, child and they all come from this Hebrew word nahar. But sometimes you use other Hebrew words like yell it, which means child. What he noticed after doing this comprehensive word study of nahar that it refers to a high status, I would argue that when it says damsels, this is also referring to covenant Israel, these women and they, these covenant members rode upon the camels. And again, what are the camels symbolize and all these goods that they're carrying? The blessings of the covenant. Yep, they're these covenant keepers and they rode upon the camels and followed the man. The Hebrew word for man is evid, which means the servant, the prophets throughout the Hebrew Bible are often called the servants of the Lord. I would say that the servant should be like the prophet and they followed the prophet and the servant or the prophet took Rebecca or covenant Israel and went his way. They're on the covenant path. Next verse and Isaac came from the way of the well, Lahai Roy, freed dwelt in the south country, now I'll read it symbolically. And the Lord came from the way of the well, you got this water, this living water and Lahai Roy in the Hebrew means well of life of vision or well of the living and seeing God. Jesus is coming from this well where he can see he has this vision. Oh, and then it says he dwelt in the south country, the south country is the Nagev. It's the southern most part of Israel and it's a desert, it's dry. Often in the Old Testament it symbolizes, yes, you're in the covenant, but it conveys a sense of sadness or loneliness. And Jesus wants to be married or have this covenant connection with this people and it hasn't happened yet. So I think it's intentional that he's coming from this south country. Before we came, I came on the podcast, I searched, I wouldn't say everywhere, but I did a pretty big search. I'm like, has anybody pointed out there's probably somebody that's written an article on this, but if any of our listeners know of somebody that's explored this more fully, I'd love to know. I like the parallel covenant Israel rode upon covenant blessings, followed the prophet. I like where you're going. Yeah, I have to say I'm impressed with Rebecca, you know, as you read this chapter, just when he meets her, she is running everywhere. She is moving 300 gallons of water to these camels. Then when she finds out that this is God's plan for her, she's like, I will go. She leaves her family. I would think probably not going to see them again. I don't know if they would frequently travel that far, Mike, but that's a long ways to go in that time. She's willing to sacrifice it. Leave her family to go and be with Isaac and that kind of plays into what you're telling us to. We leave everything behind to go meet the Lord as Israel, right? As covenant Israel, we leave it all behind to follow the prophet and go meet the groom in this case. It's Isaac, but the Lord in the symbolism we've been talking about. I love that. The covenant is joyous, but I love how if I hear you right, Hank, you're also recognizing that sometimes keeping the covenant it can be hard. For some, it even puts a wedge in the family. I think the Lord acknowledges that as Rebecca is leaving her. Like you said, they can even see each other again and it's a big commitment. Yeah. Her family says thou art our sister, but you go be the mother of thousands of millions. That's such a great phrase. Thousands of millions. Go. The Lord said, you leave your mother and father and you cleave to your spouse. Yeah, that doesn't just refer to your mortal parents. Yes, you leave them, but then you need to cleave to your spouse. And in the Bible context, your spouse, the spouse for covenant Israel is the bridegroom. You cleave to Jesus. Yes, you'll cleave to your mortal spouse, but ultimately we should think I've got to put Jesus first. It's such a good lens, Mike, to see whenever I see a marriage, especially in the Old Testament, I should be thinking, oh, Jehovah Israel. Jehovah Israel, let me see the type there. What I can learn. Bulls eye. Verse 63, Isaac went out to meditate in the field at even tide. He lifted up his eyes and saw and behold, the camels were coming. Let's reread it again. Let's take out the symbols and assert the meaning and the Lord went out to meditate. Now, the Hebrew word behind meditate only occurs here. Scholars aren't sure what it means, but then to the day, they're like, I guess it means he's praying or meditating, but they really don't know. At least I haven't found anybody that's been definitive on it. Jesus is out praying in the field and throughout the scripture can and filled often symbolizes this earth, this world. So he's on the earth now and it's at what time in earth's history even tight. It's at the end of times. This is the second coming. You can't skip this part. He lifted up his eyes. In verse 64, Rebecca later is going to lift up her eyes. This phrase lift up her eyes. We got to unpack. There's a Bible scholar, good Christian Bible scholar who looked at every time this appeared in the Hebrew and it occurs 50 times. A lot of times in the KJV, you'll see not only lift up your eyes, but sometimes you'll see the translated as casturize. He studied them all and he says, you know what? I've determined that this is a Hebrew idiom that can mean one of two things, depending on the genre. If it's a historical text, it means to make a close inspection or to take a close look. But if it's in a prophetic revelatory genre type of text, then it means check this out. To have a vision or to have a revelation. Now, say with me because maybe I'm nerding out too much on this, but this really speaks to my soul. I wonder if that Hebrew idiom carries over into Latter-day Saint Restoration Scripture in the book Mormon, Dr. Cummins, Prolegate Price. This phrase lift up your eyes or cast your eyes. Lo and behold, what do we find? I think this scholar is absolutely right. I don't think he's trying to prove to the world that the book Mormon's true, but wow, this is pretty cool. I should give credit to the scholar. It's by SC Reef R E I F. If anybody wants to look it up, the title of his article is To Look Up. Now, look here in the Prolegate Price. Moses chapter 1, it says that Moses lifted up his eyes. There's the idiom unto heaven being filled with the Holy Ghost, which beareth record of the Father and the Son. Calling upon the name of God, what happens? He beheld his glory. He has a vision. He receives a revelation. Lehi, first Nephi chapter 8, the famous iron rod leading to the tree. He says, I cast my eyes round about that perhaps I might discover my family also, but what does he see? He beholds the river of water, a tree, and its fruit. He is given this revelatory experience. You see this repeatedly in the book Mormon. Nephi and other prophets refer to how ancient Israel were murmuring and then they get bitten by the poisonous serpents. Moses puts the brazen serpent on the pole and then he says, you need to look, but the phrase is you need to cast your eyes. That's the idiom here. And if you cast your eyes, then you'll be healed. No, we can read that historically. If you take a peak, come on, dad, you're dying. Just turn your head and take a peak and you won't die. Okay, we can read it that way. I think the text is trying to say if you will look to Jesus Christ, receive this fuller revelation, then that's when the healing comes. And you have in Helaman, the Nephi and Lehi in the book of Helaman, remember they're in the lame night prison. They think they're going to be destroyed, but then it says, quote, Nephi and Lehi cast up their eyes as if to behold from once the voice came and behold, they saw the heavens open. And angels came down out of heaven and ministered unto them. They have this revelation. And then of course, we've got to give the example out of 3 Nephi 11 that we've all read. The Nephites also heard a voice, the voice of Elohim, the Father. And it says, and the voice came as if it were out of heaven and they cast their eyes round about for the understood not the voice which they heard. Now, I think here where it says, cast rise round about, that's just a historical context. They're like, whoa, what did I just hear? What was that? And they're just trying to make a close inspection. They're trying to figure it out. They're not having a revelation yet. Then notice what you keep reading and behold, the third time they did understand the voice which they heard. And it said unto them, behold my beloved son and whom I'm well pleased and whom I have glorified my name. Here ye him, verse 8, and it came to pass as they understood. Here it is again the second time. They cast their eyes up again towards heaven and behold, what do they see? A man to sending out of it. Then they have this suburnal revelatory experience. Not to belabor the point, but there's just so beautiful same thing in 35 17. Jesus, he's been with them for I think three days. They're tired. They're tuckered out. He says he cast his eyes upon the multitude. He sees that they're tired and he tells me has to go and he sees them in tears. I think that's just an historical. He's just looking carefully into their eyes, trying to discern whether he's feeling. Notice at the end of the chapter, this same idiom goes from just making a close and inspection to a revelatory experience. After he blesses the children one by one, he tells the parents to behold your children. But what did they do instead? It says, verse 24, the parents look to behold their children and they cast their eyes towards heaven and they saw the heavens open and they saw angels descending out of heaven as if it were in the midst of fire. There's other examples, but this phrase to lift up your eyes or to cast your eyes significantly can point to a revelatory experience. And I think that's exactly what's going on here in Genesis 24. Not in every case, perhaps, but in many cases watch for the phrase they cast their eyes. What the scholar wrote was that's indicating a revelatory experience. Not just I look this way in that, but to cast a revelation is coming. Yeah, a revelation or a vision. A vision. Yeah, yeah, exactly. Back to verse 63. So Isaac went out and made it to meditate or the Lord's going out in the field. He's coming to the world at the even tide or at the second coming. He lifted up his eyes. So immediately that Hebrew phrase is inviting us as readers to start viewing this through a symbolic revelatory lens. Or you can read it just historically. That's fine. Like you can pitch it. Oh, Isaac, like, whoa, those cam, could that be my wife? He's making a close expression. He's trying to look carefully. You can read it historically. That's fine. That's correct. But then I would suggest to our readers or our listeners that we then got to go to this symbolic way of reading it. Notice three times you have this emphasis of seeing he lifted up his eyes. He saw and behold this three-peat idea of I can't believe my eyes. I've been waiting all my life to find the somebody to marry. This is the moment of moments. That verse is just filled with that thrill, that emotion. And then verse 64. And Rebecca lifted up her eyes. And when she saw Isaac, she lighted off the camel. Now let's read it symbolically. This is my new favorite verse. She lighted off the camel. Or another way, if you read other modern Bible versions, we'll say she dismounted off the camel. And that's a good translation. The word lifted comes from the Hebrew word, Na'fall. Na'fall means what it sounds like. It means to fall down literally. But I can just see the 1611 KJV translators. They're like, the camel's about six feet high up the ground. I don't think she's going to fall down. That would hurt. We can't say she fell off the camel. Let's just say she lighted. She lighted off. That's what I say when I fell. I lighted down those stairs. You look at all the other Bible versions, NIV, SAV, NRSV, all these really good Bible translations. None of them, unless I'm mistaken, but I don't think they go with she falls off. Because it just sounds too weird. But it's not weird if you read it symbolically. When we see Jesus, what are we going to do? We're going to fall to the ground. I think that's what the text is trying to tell us. It's first Nephi chapter 8 when they finally get to the tree and the fruit and they partake, yeah, they fall down when you're in the presence of the Lord. That's all you can do. You just melt. I love what the Septuagint does with this, which is the Greek version. The word that the Septuagint uses means to leap or to jump. She jumps off the camel. I just love that imagery. When we see Jesus again, we are going to leap for joy. Her just could be a puddle of grateful, joyful tears as we fall to the ground. We can't even imagine it. But this text is beautifully trying to convey that imagery. That's fantastic. Seeing this Isaac Rebekah as Jesus and Israel transforms the chapter. Verse 65. And she had said unto the servant what man is this that walketh in the field to meet us. And the servant had said it is my master. Therefore she took a veil and covered herself. Should we unpack the symbolism? 65. For covenant Israel had said unto the servant the prophet. What man is this that's walking in the field that is come down to earth to meet us? Who is this? It's the same reaction we got in 3511. They saw a man descending. They thought it was an angel, but like, who's this man descending out heaven? It's the prophet that explains it is my master. And that's where it clicks for. Oh, this is the person I'm in a marry. But from a symbolic point of oh, this is the bridegroom. If this is Jesus appearing in all his glory, what are you and I going to do? You're going to take a veil and you're going to cover yourself. Now, historically all Bible commentators will say, oh, this is an ancient Near Eastern practice to show modesty and it indicates that you're going to get married. You're the bride. That's a legit historical interpretation. Then the text is building on that culture to also point to throughout scripture. When you have a veil on your face, it's to protect you. It signifies you need to be transfigured so you can withstand the glory and power of God. Verse 66, the servant told Isaac all things that he had done. The prophet is going to give his report of accountability. The prophets are the lords, right hand man, anciently and today. That has always been the pattern. Then it ends with this. I love verse 67. And Hank, this goes back to how you mentioned Isaiah 54. Isaac brought it her into his mother's oh, man, I just want to cry. And Isaac brought her into his mother, Sarah's tent and took Rebecca and she became his wife and he loved her and Isaac was comforted after his mother's death. Okay, and we can read that historically. It is a beautiful romance. They're married, they're together finally and they love each other. It's sweet. It's tender. It's beautiful. But let's read it symbolically. It's the Lord that initiates this. Brought us covenant Israel into Sarah's tent. Sarah's tent isn't just some canvas structure to protect us from the wind in the Hebrew Bible. Tent repeatedly refers to the temple or the tabernacle of Moses. In Isaiah 54 that you're talking about verse one, it says enlarge the tent. Make room not just so that we can have everybody, I mean, we have almost 400 temples on the earth today. It's not just we want people to go to the temple, but God wants the entire earth to be a temple. He wants his presence to dwell and he wants us to dwell here on the earth with him. Ultimately, that's the destiny of the earth to become one large temple where God can be with us 24, seven. The Savior's bringing us his bride into the tent or I would say his presence and he took Rebecca. This is beautiful. It doesn't say it, but it's implied. This is the moment where the veil is removed. And to quote Marani chapter seven, we can see him as he is. She became his wife and he loved her and this is so beautiful. Isaac was comforted. You'd expect that it would say and Rebecca was comforted because it's Jesus who's going to comfort us. He's going to wipe away all our tears and there'll be no more pain or sorrow. But isn't it so beautiful that yes, of course, Jesus is going to comfort us in all our trials and he'll make up all the unfairness of life to us. I think it's so beautiful that also Jesus in some way that I don't comprehend, he is feeling comforted that we have made this covenant. I fact as thrilled as we are to be back with him again someday, the text seems to suggest to me that his thrill matches or maybe even surpasses it. He becomes comforted. Hmm. It reminds me of the comment he makes in third Nephi. Now my joy is full. Seeing this Isaac and Rebecca story as Jehovah and his love for Israel, one thing I noticed that you already hit was Rebecca has to choose this over and over and over. She's never forced to do anything and it seems that way for us. Israel, the Lord will never force Israel to be the covenant people. You choose to come to me. Your own free will and choice. Coming up in part two, here's the moment of moments, he gets intense. If this was a movie, the crescendo, the music is building and building, dun dun dun dun. You know, those scenes where the armies are charging after it and there's going to be it's really intense. It's kind of like that.