Leading Saints Podcast

Leading Saints Podcast


Leading‏‏‎ the Restoration Today | An Interview with Patrick Mason

April 23, 2021

Patrick Mason holds the Leonard J. Arrington Chair of Mormon History and Culture at Utah State University. He is the author of multiple books, including Planted: Belief and Belonging in an Age of Doubt and Restoration: God's Call to the 21st-Century World. He and his wife Melissa have four children and live in Logan, Utah, where he currently serves as ward Sunday School president.
Highlights
5:30 What led him to write the book Restoration
8:00 Change and restoration on every level
9:35 God is more interested in restoring His people than in restoring "things"; everything else is a means to the end of restoring His children to wholeness
16:00 Encouraging leaders to join in the Restoration without stepping outside the lines: there is room for creativity and engagement
19:30 Joseph Smith never used the terms "restored church" or "restored gospel"; the word restoration referred to the house of Israel and bringing marginalized people back into wholeness in the embrace of the love of God
23:50 As leaders we need to consider what it is about what we are doing that will bring people wholeness; WHY do we do these things that we do?
26:00 Relativism and exclusivism

* Exclusivism: if one thing is true then something different cannot be true
* Relativism: different paths up the mountain
* Particularism: God gives specific gifts to all people; what is God doing among the rest of His children?

32:10 The scriptures also point outside of themselves: seek wisdom out of the best books and the Spirit will help you discern what is true
35:30 Brigham Young quote: "It is now our duty and calling to gather up every item of truth."
37:30 Having a lay leadership leads to diversity within the Church; bring the best of who you are and apply it to the Restoration
39:55 We have been a church addicted to growth; maybe our calling is to have a transformative effect, not a dominating effect
42:50 History is different than the present and part of the Restoration is to recognize what is being restored today; complacency holds us back and recognizing our baggage and changing it is part of our collective repentance process so that we can move forward
47:50 The burden of local leaders is localized and they can lean into the inspiration for their local congregation's struggles
51:30 Wards are outwardly homogenous: share your struggles and ask how you can do better; there are a lot of needs outside the ward boundaries as well
54:20 Start with our responsibility to teach the doctrine then listen and learn from one another
56:00 The world doesn't offer a place like this to love and learn together that we have within our church organizations
57:30 Cultural colonialism: separate the culture from the doctrine, and empower people to bring their gifts
1:02:15 Fundamentalism: rigidity, intolerance, condescension; the opposite of gentle, open, humility
1:07:50 Keep the focus on the individual, not a set of ideas
1:08:30 Catching the vision of the Restoration
Links
Planted: Belief and Belonging in an Age of Doubt
Restoration: God's Call to the 21st Century World