Thank you Broth for your teachings.. we are all so blessed to have you both to teach our Spirits the lesson that Father would have us learn.. God truly gave to us a huge blessing with you and your companion 🙏
Thank you again. This lesson was so impacted with great lessons making us think a bit deeper than anytime before. Loved it immensely!!! Bless you both. ❤️😘
I love both of you brothers. I thank you for teaching me so much opening my eyes, ears and heart to the information that Heavenly Father wants us to have about his beloved son
Thank you so much this is so powerful, you are the best teacher. You explain so good and not talking so fast I can comprehend much better. Thank you so much ❤ have a good evening.
For an idea of the effort the brother of Jared had to go to, try watching glass making videos. Listen to the artisans talk about how hot the furnace is and the injuries they can suffer. Now, think of having to achieve those temperatures without gas, without insulated furnaces to contain the heat, but wood and raw sand or stone, maybe ceramic, and time, because he would have had to maintain those tempuratures for upwards of a week or more to even to get it to melt in the first place, and so on. It's also way more work to get clear glass.
Doesn't the Lord's direction sound like line upon line, precept upon precept...! Isn't this the way of receiving knowledge from our scriptures? This is why I believe we study them over And over again.
@@traceythorup1547ok, still doesn’t explain why the person writing would leave out such an important name. Especially when they literally write a bunch of names in the beginning.
One explanation I’ve heard is that writing “Mahonri Moriancumer” in Reformed Egyptian would have taken a lot of characters to write (& space on plates was not a luxury Moroni had). So instead, using two characters to write “Brother [to] Jared” saved space. Also, in Korean, sometimes names are so revered that instead of saying them, you say how they’re related to another. For example, a Korean Mother with a son named “Yoon-ho” could be called “Yoon-ho’s mother” out of respect. So another explanation could be that the author of the 24 Jaredite plates (or even the people of Jared) revered Mahonri Moriancumer so much, that they called him “Jared’s Brother” as a sign of respect.
If you want to hear more from Taylor, he has his own channel called Scripture Insights @ScriptureInsightsLearning . Personally, I love listening to both of them. They each have unique ways of looking at things that I can learn from.
As always, I am so lifted by your thoughts and words
Thank you Broth for your teachings.. we are all so blessed to have you both to teach our Spirits the lesson that Father would have us learn.. God truly gave to us a huge blessing with you and your companion 🙏
Thanks Taylor and Tyler! Thanks SC! Love ya all!!!
Beautiful lesson as always ❤
5:53 this explanation i feel like tells us more about the importance of family in believing together as one
Thank you again. This lesson was so impacted with great lessons making us think a bit deeper than anytime before. Loved it immensely!!! Bless you both. ❤️😘
I love both of you brothers. I thank you for teaching me so much opening my eyes, ears and heart to the information that Heavenly Father wants us to have about his beloved son
Thanks. Most helpful
Thank you so much this is so powerful, you are the best teacher. You explain so good and not talking so fast I can comprehend much better. Thank you so much ❤ have a good evening.
For an idea of the effort the brother of Jared had to go to, try watching glass making videos. Listen to the artisans talk about how hot the furnace is and the injuries they can suffer. Now, think of having to achieve those temperatures without gas, without insulated furnaces to contain the heat, but wood and raw sand or stone, maybe ceramic, and time, because he would have had to maintain those tempuratures for upwards of a week or more to even to get it to melt in the first place, and so on. It's also way more work to get clear glass.
Very cool lessons & insights! Thank you. Doing my best to live by the light.
Thank you very much for your wonderful lessons and insights, indeed inspiring! Especially the one concerning Ether 1 through 5. Really strengthening.
Thank you so much, you bring these scriptures to life
Awesome lesson!! I took lots of notes for my lesson Sunday!!❤❤
Let Taylor talk ‼️‼️‼️💕💕
Did they have information from the journey of Noah about stones that glow? The ark needed light in all the levels.
Doesn't the Lord's direction sound like line upon line, precept upon precept...! Isn't this the way of receiving knowledge from our scriptures? This is why I believe we study them over And over again.
It’s weird to me that we never get the brothers name. Someone obviously important and he’s just ‘the brother’
Joseph Smith revealed the name of the Brother of Jared.
@@traceythorup1547ok, still doesn’t explain why the person writing would leave out such an important name. Especially when they literally write a bunch of names in the beginning.
One explanation I’ve heard is that writing “Mahonri Moriancumer” in Reformed Egyptian would have taken a lot of characters to write (& space on plates was not a luxury Moroni had). So instead, using two characters to write “Brother [to] Jared” saved space. Also, in Korean, sometimes names are so revered that instead of saying them, you say how they’re related to another. For example, a Korean Mother with a son named “Yoon-ho” could be called “Yoon-ho’s mother” out of respect. So another explanation could be that the author of the 24 Jaredite plates (or even the people of Jared) revered Mahonri Moriancumer so much, that they called him “Jared’s Brother” as a sign of respect.
I love that explanation! Thx for your insight!
Moronhimoriankimer ( Spelling?)
Why do you talk all the time, Tyler and Taylor never gets any screen time
If you want to hear more from Taylor, he has his own channel called Scripture Insights @ScriptureInsightsLearning . Personally, I love listening to both of them. They each have unique ways of looking at things that I can learn from.