Episodes

  • Celebrating Our Constitution
    Jun 28 2026

    Join W. Cleon Skousen as he walks the room from history to the present, weaving dramatic Founding-era stories with a lawyer’s sober account of how the Constitution’s 248 principles were meant to protect liberty — and how many have been unraveled. Through vivid anecdotes about Jefferson, Adams, and Washington, he reveals the quiet, deliberate choices that created America and the slow shifts that have taken it off course.

    Skousen’s talk becomes part memoir, part warning, and part blueprint: he explains the consequences of monetary change, federal overreach, and lost states’ rights, then sketches an unexpected hope — a restored system of law and community built on reparative justice and timeless principles called God’s law. It’s a passionate call to study, stand, and prepare, told with courtroom clarity, pioneer grit, and the conviction that a nation can be remade if enough people learn what the founders intended.

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    47 mins
  • OT 23 David Becomes King of Israel
    Jun 21 2026

    Text: 2 Samuel chapters 1-4

    Supplemental Text: The Fourth Thousand Years chapter 4

    BYU Lecture 28: David learns of the death of King Saul and his son Jonathan. Rather than rejoicing from the news that his tormentor Saul was dead, he went into fasting and mourning. David writes a sad song lamenting the passing of Saul, the Lord’s anointed, and of Jonathan, his dear friend. But even with the death of King Saul, it wouldn’t be for nearly 8 years before David was recognized as the anointed King of all twelve tribes of Israel.

    Once recognized as King, David moves the capital of Israel from Hebron to Mount Moriah, known later as Jerusalem. Now that Israel was united with their new king, Israel begins preparations to arise to her greatness. However, their dreaded enemy, the Philistines, were preparing to destroy this new threat.

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    37 mins
  • OT 22 The Fall of King Saul
    Jun 14 2026

    Text: 1 Samuel chapters 22-31

    Supplemental Text: The Fourth Thousand Years chapter 3

    BYU Lecture 27: King Saul, bitter and feeling rejected by nearly all he trusted, sought the life of David in a tirade. He calls on the prophet Ahimelech, accusing him of treason for siding with David. Saul has the prophet killed along with 85 temple priests.

    David and his army of 600 loyalists continually flee from Saul and his vast armies. At En-geti, David has the opportunity to kill Saul while asleep in the very cave David is hiding. Instead of killing the man who sought madly to take his life, David recognizes the divine anointing of Saul as King by the prophet Samuel and merely cuts off a piece of his cloak, showing he had power and opportunity to kill Saul, but chose not to. David uses this as a negotiation tactic to find peace with Saul. This works, but only for a short time.

    Saul again launches a new war on David. Marching his army and obsessed with the task of killing David, Saul is caught off guard when attacked by the Philistines. The war goes poorly for Israel, and Jonathan, Saul’s son and beloved friend of David, is slain. When Saul realizes all is lost, he falls on his sword and takes his own life.

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    41 mins
  • OT 21 Saul's Campaign to Murder David
    Jun 7 2026

    Text: 1 Samuel 18 - 21

    Supplemental Text: The Fourth Thousand Years chapter 2

    BYU Lecture 26: David exercises his faith in God and confronts Goliath, killing him with a rock and sling. David suddenly becomes a military hero to the people of Israel. He meets and befriends the crown prince of Israel, Jonathan – son of King Saul. With all the praise for David from the people of Israel, Saul becomes jealous and feels his power threatened, especially since the prophet Samuel informed Saul that God is planning to replace him with another man, a king worthy of God.

    King Saul becomes psychotic and makes five failed attempts to kill David.

    As tension rises, David slips through the land of Israel – seeking refuge in priestly tents, feigning madness in enemy courts, and secretly settles within his own homeland, the land of Judah. David begins to gather followers and allies. As counseled by the prophet Gad, David stays in Judah waiting upon the Lord until circumstances allow him to rise as king of Israel.

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    42 mins
  • OT 20 King Saul and the Rise of David
    May 31 2026

    Text: 1 Samuel 16-17

    Supplemental Text: The Fourth Thousand Years chapter 1

    BYU Lecture 25: The Jews use different names for some of their scriptural books than do our Bible scriptures. The following reference table shows these differences:

    JEWISH KJV Bible

    1st Book of Kings 1st Samuel

    2nd Book of Kings 2nd Samuel

    3rd Book of Kings 1st Kings

    4th Book of Kings 2nd Kings

    5th Book of Kings 1st Chronicles (parallels 1st Kings)

    6th Book of Kings 2nd Chronicles (parallels 2nd Kings)

    All the history and prophecy during this period of time was originally recorded by the prophets Samuel, Nathan and Gad, but the writings were tragically lost. Fortunately, scribes and scholars had extracted some material from the original writings which we have today in these 6 books. It’s important to keep in mind that these writings we have today were not recorded by prophets of God, but rather by scribes.

    Near the beginning of the fourth thousand years (about 1,100 BC) the slothful high priest was Eli. His student Samuel was called by God to replace Eli, to be the new prophet and High Priest of Israel.

    Samuel’s prophetic voice shapes the nation. But Israel eventually rejects Samuel as their leader and demands a king. Distraught by failure, Samuel is reassured by God that Israel has not rejected Samuel but has rejected God. Meanwhile, a humble shepherd boy named David begins life’s journey in the shepherd fields.

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    39 mins
  • OT 19 - Introduction to the Thundering Thousand Years
    May 24 2026

    Text: The Old Testament

    Supplemental Text: Finish up the Third Thousand Years chapters 21-26 from last semester. The Fourth Thousand Years text begins next week.

    BYU Lecture 24: This is the "thundering thousand years" from David down to Christ. This is the thousand years of Bible history in which you have all prophets, not the Patriarchs. Programmed learning includes memorizing the “hook dates” in biblical history so the doctrine of the gospel can be connected to its history and context. For example, 1776 is a hook date that can be related to all the American independence and revolutionary war activities. By memorizing hook dates, the entire Old Testament will come alive and piece together the events, patriarchs, prophets, and kings.

    Old Testament Hook Dates, simple and worth memorization:

    4,000 BC Fall of Adam and Eve

    3,500 BC Enoch

    3,000 BC Noah

    2,344 BC The Great Flood (just remember 1-2-3-4---4)

    2,000 BC Abraham

    1,900 BC Isaac

    1,800 BS Jacob

    1,700 BC Joseph

    1,500 BC Moses

    1,400 BC Joshua

    1,100 BC Samuel and Saul

    1,000 BC David and Solomon

    922 BC Division of Israel

    900 BC Elijah

    800 BC Elisha

    700 BC Isaiah

    600 BC Jeremiah, Daniel, Ezekial, Lehi and Nephi

    589 BC Nebuchadnezzar destroys Jerusalem

    538 BC Jews return to Jerusalem

    516 BC Dedication of the new temple in Jerusalem

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    40 mins
  • God's Outlook for America
    May 17 2026

    Join Dr. W. Cleon Skousen on a sweeping, personal journey through the birth of the United States—where battlefield drama, prophetic vision, and a small band of determined leaders collide to forge a Constitution which ultimately bears the hand of God. Through vivid anecdotes—from Yorktown’s storms to the tense debates in Philadelphia—Skousen brings the Founders to life and reveals why the document they wrote contain principles for all mankind, no matter the time, place or circumstance.

    Part history lesson, part sermon, this episode is a heartfelt call to action: learn the rules that made freedom possible, teach them to the next generation, and take up the unfinished work of exporting constitutional liberty to a troubled world.

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • OT 18 The Final Year for Moses
    May 10 2026

    Text: Deuteronomy 6-8; 15; 18; 29-30; 34

    Supplemental Text: The Third Thousand Years chapter 20

    BYU Lecture 23: Finally, the Lord declares that Israel is now ready to enter Canaan, the Promised Land. Moses is 120 years old and is in the last year of his life. He has also recently lost Aaron and Miriam.

    Moses takes the hosts of Israel on a march towards the east of the Dead Sea, avoiding the Anaks. Along their march, God instructs Moses not to fight against three groups or tribes: the Edomites (children of Abraham through Esau, known today as Arabs), nor the Moabites or Ammonites (both groups descended from Abraham through Lot).

    The story of the fallen prophet Balaam is told and how he colluded with the Midianites to corrupt the youth of Israel.

    Moses is told that he is allowed to see the Promised Land but he cannot enter it. In his final 30 days of mortality, Moses devotes himself to record the book of Deuteronomy – God’s Laws.

    Moses is translated and Joshua takes the lead as the Israelites march into the promised land. The miracle of the river divided. Manna is now stopped. Joshua puts all Israel under covenant to God by circumcising the men and then marches around Jericho and the walls fall.

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    40 mins