I have been requested to preach the funeral sermon of the wife of
brother Levi Savage, who died last December; and since coming to this
place this morning, I have been requested to preach the funeral
sermons of several of the Saints who have died in England; and I have
concluded, instead of limiting my address to any one individual case,
to preach what may be considered a general funeral sermon of all the
Saints that have died in all past ages and generations, with all that
shall die hereafter, and the funeral sermon of all those who are not
Saints, and also the funeral sermon of the heavens and the earth; and
for this purpose I will take a text, which you will find recorded in
the 51st chapter of the prophecy of Isaiah, and the sixth verse—
"Lift up your eyes to the heavens, and look upon the earth beneath:
for the heavens shall vanish away like smoke, and the earth shall wax
old like a garment, and they that dwell therein shall die in like
manner: but my salvation shall be forever, and my righteousness shall
not be abolished."
All things with which we are acquainted, pertaining to this earth of
ours, are subject to change; not only man, so far as his temporal body
is concerned, but the beasts of the field, the fowls of the air, the
fishes of the sea, and every living thing with which we are
acquainted—all are subject to pain and distress, and finally die and
pass away; death seems to have universal dominion in our creation. It
certainly is a curious world; it certainly does not look like a world
constructed in such a manner as to produce eternal happiness; and it
would be very far from the truth, I think, for any being at the
present time to pronounce it very good: everything seems to show us
that goodness, in a great degree, has fled from this creation. If we
partake of the elements, death is there in all its forms and
varieties; and when we desire to rejoice, sorrow is there, mingling
itself in every cup; and woe, and wretchedness, and misery, seem to be
our present doom.
There is something, however, in man, that is constantly reaching
forward after happiness, after life, after pleasure, after something
to satisfy the longing desire that dwells within his bosom. Why is it
that we have such a desire? And why is it that it is not satisfied?
Why is it that this creation is so constructed? And why is it that
death reigns universally over all living earthly beings? Did the great
Author of creation construct this little globe of ours subject to all
these changes, which are calculated to produce sorrow and death among
the beings that inhabit it? Was this the original condition of our
creation? I answer, no; it was not so constructed. But how was it made
in the beginning? All things that were made pertaining to
this earth were pronounced "very good." Where there is pain, where
there is sickness, where there is sorrow, and where there is death,
this saying cannot be understood in its literal sense; things cannot
be very good where something very evil reigns and has universal
dominion.
We are, therefore, constrained to believe, that in the first formation
of our globe, as far as the Mosaic history gives us information,
everything was perfect in its formation; that there was nothing in the
air, or in the waters, or in the solid elements, that was calculated
to produce misery, wretchedness, unhappiness, or death, in the way
that it was then organized; not but what the same elements, organized
a little differently, would produce all these effects; but as it was
then constructed, we must admit that every particle of air, of water,
and of earth, was so organized as to be capable of diffusing life and
immortality through all the varied species of animated
existence—immortality reigned in every department of creation; hence
it was pronounced "very good."
When the Lord made the fowls of the air, and the fishes of the sea, to
people the atmospheric heavens, or the watery elements, these fowls
and fishes were so constructed in their nature as to be capable of
eternal existence. To imagine anything different from this, would be
to suppose the Almighty to form that which was calculated to produce
wretchedness and misery. What says the Psalmist David upon this
subject? He says that all the works of the Lord shall endure forever.
Did not the Lord make the fish? Yes. Did He not make the fowls of the
heavens? Yes. Did He not make the beasts of the field, and the
creeping things, and the insects? Yes. Do they endure forever? They
apparently do not; and yet David says all His works are constructed
upon that principle. Is this a contradiction? No. God has given some
other particulars in relation to these works. He has permitted the
destroyer to visit them, who has usurped a certain dominion and
authority, carrying desolation and ruin on every hand; the perfections
of the original organizations have ceased. But will the Lord forever
permit these destructions to reign? No. His power exists, and the
power of the destroyer exists. His power exists, and the power of
death exists; but His power exceeds all other powers; and
consequently, wherever a usurper comes in and lays waste any of His
works, He will repair those wastes, build up the old ruins, and make
all things new: even the fish of the sea, and the fowls of the
heavens, and the beasts of the earth, must yet, in order to carry out
the designs of the Almighty, be so constructed as to be capable of
eternal existence.
It would be interesting to know something about the situation of
things when they were first formed, and how this destroyer happened to
make inroads upon this fair creation; what the causes were, and why it
was permitted.
Man, when he was first placed upon this earth, was an immortal being,
capable of eternal endurance; his flesh and bones, as well as his
spirit, were immortal and eternal in their nature; and it was just so
with all the inferior creation—the lion, the leopard, the kid, and the
cow; it was so with the feathered tribes of creation, as well as those
that swim in the vast ocean of waters; all were immortal and eternal
in their nature; and the earth itself, as a living being, was immortal
and eternal in its nature. "What! is the earth alive too?" If it were
not, how could the words of our text be fulfilled, where it speaks of
the earth's dying? How can that die that has no life? "Lift up your
eyes to the heavens above," says the Lord, "and look upon the
earth beneath; the heavens shall vanish away like smoke, and the earth
shall wax old like a garment, and they that dwell therein shall die in
like manner." In like manner! What! The earth and the heavens to die?
Yes, the material heavens and earth must all undergo this change which
we call death; and if so, the earth must be alive as well as we. The
earth was so constructed that it was capable of existing as a living
being to all eternity, with all the swarms of animals, fowls, and
fishes that were first placed upon the face thereof. But how can it be
proved that man was an immortal being? We will refer you to what the
Apostle Paul has written upon this subject; he says that by one man
came death; and he tells us how it came: it was by the transgression
of one individual that death was introduced here. But did
transgression bring in all these diseases and this sorrow, this misery
and wretchedness, over the whole face of this creation? Is it by the
transgression of one person that the very heavens are to vanish away
as smoke, and the earth is to wax old like a garment? Yes, it is by
the transgression of one; and if it had not been for his
transgression, the earth never would have been subject to death. Why?
Because the works of the Lord are so constructed as to exist forever;
and if death had come in without a cause, and destroyed the earth, and
laid waste the material heavens, and produced a general and utter
overthrow and ruin in this fair creation, then the works of the Lord
would have ceased to endure according to the promise, being imperfect
in their construction, and consequently not very good.
But what was this sin, and what was the nature of it? I will tell you
what it was; it was merely the partaking of a certain kind of fruit.
But, says one, I should think there is no harm in eating fruit. There
would not be unless God gave a command upon the subject. There are
things in nature that would be evil without a commandment: if there
were no commandment, it would be evil for you to murder an innocent
being, and your own conscience would tell you it was an evil thing. It
is an evil for any individual to injure another, or to infringe upon
the rights of another, independent of any revealed law; for the
savage, or that being who has never heard of the written laws of
heaven—who has never heard of the revealed laws of God with regard to
these principles—as well as the Saint, knows that it is an evil to
infringe upon the rights of another; the very nature of the thing
shows that it is an evil; but not so in regard to many other things
that are evil; which are only made evil by commandment.
For instance, here is the Sabbath day: a person that never heard the
revealed law of God upon the subject, never could conceive that it was
an evil to work on the Sabbath day; he would consider it just as right
to work on the first day of the week, as on the seventh; he would
perceive nothing in the nature of the thing by which he could
distinguish it to be an evil. So with regard to eating certain fruits;
there is no evil in it of itself, it was the commandment of the Great
God that made it an evil. He said to Adam and Eve, "Here are all the
fruits of the garden; you may eat of them freely except this one tree
that stands in the midst of the garden; now beware, for in the day you
eat thereof you shall surely die." Don't we perceive that the
commandment made this an evil? Had it not been for this commandment,
Adam would have walked forth and freely partaken of every tree,
without any remorse of conscience; just as the savage, that never has
heard the revealed will of God, would work on the Sabbath, the
same as on any other day, and have no conscience about the matter. But
when a man murders, he knows it to be an injury, and he has a
conscience about it, though he never heard of God; and so with
thousands of other evils. But why did the Lord place man under these
peculiar circumstances? Why did He not withhold the commandment, if
the partaking of the fruit, after the commandment was given, was sin?
Why should there have been a commandment upon the subject at all,
inasmuch as there was no evil in the nature of the thing to be
perceived or understood? The Lord had a purpose in view; though He
constructed this fair creation, as we have told you, subject to
immortality, and capable of eternal endurance, and though He had
constructed man capable of living forever, yet He had an object in
view in regard to that man, and the creation he inhabited. What was
the object? And how shall this object be accomplished?
Why, the Lord wanted this intelligent being called man, to prove
himself; inasmuch as he was an agent, He desired that he should show
himself approved before his Creator.
How could this be done without a commandment? Can you devise any
possible means? Is there any person in this congregation having wisdom
sufficient to devise any means by which an intelligent being can show
himself approved before a superior intelligence, unless it be by
administering to that man certain laws to be kept? No. Without law,
without commandment or rule, there would be no possible way of showing
his integrity: it could not be said that he would keep all the laws
that govern superior orders of beings, unless he had been placed in a
position to be tried, and thus proven whether he would keep them or
not. Then it was wisdom to try the man and the woman, so the Lord gave
them this commandment; if He had not intended the man should be tried
by this commandment, He never would have planted that tree, He never
would have placed it in the midst of the garden. But the very fact
that He planted it where the man could have easy access to it, shows
that He intended man should be tried by it, and thus prove whether he
would keep His commandments or not. The penalty of disobedience to
this law was death.
But could He not give a commandment, without affixing a penalty? He
could not: it would be folly, even worse than folly, for God to give a
law to an intelligent being, without affixing a penalty to it if it
were broken. Why? Because all intelligent beings would discard the
very idea of a law being given, which might be broken at pleasure,
without the individuals breaking it being punished for their
transgression. They would say—"Where is the principle of justice in
the giver of the law? It is not there: we do not reverence Him nor His
law; justice does not have an existence in His bosom; He does not
regard His own laws, for He suffers them to be broken with impunity,
and trampled under foot, by those whom He has made; therefore we care
not for Him or His laws, nor His pretended justice; we will rebel
against it." Where would have been the use of it if there had been no
penalty affixed?
But what was the nature of this penalty? It was wisely ordained to be
of such a nature as to instruct man. Penalties inflicted upon human
beings here, by governors, kings, or rulers, are generally of such a
nature as to benefit them.
Adam was appointed lord of this creation; a great governor, swaying
the scepter of power over the whole earth. When the governor, the
person who was placed to reign over this fair creation, had
transgressed, all in his dominions had to feel the effects of
it, the same as a father or a mother, who transgresses certain laws,
frequently transmits the effects thereof to the latest generations.
How often do we see certain diseases becoming hereditary, being handed
down from father to son for generations. Why? Because in the first
instance there was a transgression, and the children partook of the
effects of it.
And what was the fullest extent of the penalty of Adam's
transgression? I will tell you—it was death. The death of what? The
death of the immortal tabernacle—of that tabernacle where the seeds of
death had not been, that was wisely framed, and pronounced very good:
the seeds of death were introduced into it. How, and in what manner?
Some say there was something in the nature of the fruit that
introduced mortality. Be this as it may, one thing is certain, death
entered into the system; it came there by some means, and sin was the
main spring by which this monster was introduced. If there had been no
sin, old father Adam would at this day have been in the garden of
Eden, as bright and as blooming, as fresh and as fair, as ever,
together with his lovely consort Eve, dwelling in all the beauty of
youth.
By one man came death—the death of the body. What becomes of the
spirit when the body dies? Will it be perfectly happy? Would old
father Adam's spirit have gone back into the presence of God, and
dwelt there eternally, enjoying all the felicities and glories of
heaven, after his body had died? No; for the penalty of that
transgression was not limited to the body alone. When he sinned, it
was with both the body and the spirit that he sinned: it was not only
the body that ate of the fruit, but the spirit gave the will to eat;
the spirit sinned therefore as well as the body; they were agreed in
partaking of that fruit. Was not the spirit to suffer then as well as
the body? Yes. How long? To all ages of eternity, without any end;
while the body was to return back to its mother earth, and there
slumber to all eternity. That was the effect of the fall, leaving out
the plan of redemption; so that, if there had been no plan of
redemption prepared from before the foundation of the world, man would
have been subjected to an eternal dissolution of the body and
spirit—the one to lie mingling with its mother earth, to all ages of
eternity, and the other to be subject, throughout all future duration,
to the power that deceived him, and led them astray; to be completely
miserable, or, as the Book of Mormon says, "dead as to things
pertaining to righteousness;" and I defy any such beings to have any
happiness when they are dead as to things pertaining to righteousness.
To them, happiness is out of the question; they are completely and
eternally miserable, and there is no help for them, laying aside the
atonement. That was the penalty pronounced upon father Adam, and upon
all the creation of which he was made lord and governor. This is what
is termed original sin, and the effect of it.
But there is a very curious saying in the Book of Mormon, to which I
now wish to refer your minds; it reads thus: "Adam fell that man might
be; and men are, that they might have joy." Says one, "If Adam had not
fallen, then there could not have been any posterity." That is just
what we believe; but how do you get along with that saying which was
given previous to the fall, where he was commanded to multiply and
replenish the earth? How could he have multiplied and fulfilled this
commandment, if "Adam fell that man might be?" Let me appeal to
another saying in the New Testament: "Adam was not deceived;
but the woman, being deceived, was in the transgression," says the
Apostle Paul. Well, after the woman was deceived, she became subject
to the penalty; yes, after she had partaken of the forbidden fruit,
the penalty was upon her, and not upon Adam; he had not partaken of
the fruit, but his wife had. Now, what is to be done? Here are two
beings in the garden of Eden, the woman and the man; she has
transgressed, has broken the law, and incurred the penalty. And now,
suppose the man had said, "I will not partake of this forbidden
fruit;" the next word would have been, "Cast her out of the garden;
but let Adam stay there, for he has not sinned; he has not broken the
commandment, but his wife has; she was deceived, let her be banished
from the garden, and from my presence, and from Adam's presence; let
them be eternally separated." I ask, on these conditions could they
fulfil the first great commandment? They could not. Adam saw this,
that the woman was overcome by the devil speaking through the serpent;
and when he saw it, he was satisfied that the woman would have to be
banished from his presence: he saw, also, that unless he partook of
the forbidden fruit, he could never raise up posterity; therefore the
truth of that saying in the Book of Mormon is apparent, that "Adam
fell that man might be." He saw that it was necessary that he should
with her partake of sorrow and death, and the varied effects of the
fall, that he and she might be redeemed from these effects, and be
restored back again to the presence of God.
This tree, of which they both ate, was called the tree of knowledge of
good and evil. Why was it thus termed? I will explain a mystery to
you, brethren, why this was called so. Adam and Eve, while in the
garden of Eden, had not the knowledge you and I have; it is true, they
had a degree of intelligence, but they had not the experience, they
had not the knowledge by experience, which you and I have: all they
knew was barely what they knew when they came there; they knew a
commandment had been given to them, and they had sufficient knowledge
to name the beasts of the field as they came up before them; but as
for the knowledge of good, they had not got it, because they never had
anything contrary to good placed before them.
We will bring up an example. For instance, suppose you had never
tasted anything that was sweet—never had the sensation of
sweetness—could you have any correct idea of the term sweetness? No.
On the other hand, how could you understand bitter if you never had
tasted bitterness? Could you define the term to them who had never
experienced this sensation, or knew it? No. I will bring another
example. Take a man who had been perfectly blind from his infancy, and
never saw the least gleam of light—could you describe colors to him?
No. Would he know anything about red, blue, violet, or yellow? No; you
could not describe it to him by any way you might undertake. But by
some process let his eyes be opened, and let him gaze upon the
sunbeams that reflect; upon a watery cloud, producing the rainbow, where
he would see a variety of colors, he could then appreciate them for
himself; but tell him about colors when he is blind, he would not know
them from a piece of earthenware. So with Adam previous to partaking
of this fruit; good could not be described to him, because he never
had experienced the opposite. As to undertaking to explain to him what
evil was, you might as well have undertaken to explain, to a being
that never had, for one moment, had his eyes closed to the light, what
darkness is. The tree of knowledge of good and evil was placed
there that man might gain certain information he never could have
gained otherwise; by partaking of the forbidden fruit he experienced
misery, then he knew that he was once happy, previously he could not
comprehend what happiness meant, what good was; but now he knows it by
contrast, now he is filled with sorrow and wretchedness, now he sees
the difference between his former and present condition, and if by any
means he could be restored to his first position, he would be prepared
to realize it, like the man that never had seen the light. Let the man
to whom all the beauties of light have been displayed, and who has
never been in darkness, be in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye,
deprived of his natural sight; what a change this would be to him; he
never knew anything about darkness before, he never understood the
principle at all; it never entered the catalogue of his ideas, until
darkness came upon him, and his eyesight was destroyed: now he can
comprehend that the medium he once existed in was light. Now, says he,
if I could only regain my sight, I could appreciate it, for I
understand the contrast; restore me back again to my sight, and let me
enjoy the light I once had; let me gaze upon the works of creation,
let me look on the beauties thereof again, and I will be satisfied,
and my joy will be full. It was so with Adam; let the way be prepared
for his redemption, and the redemption of his posterity, and all
creation that groans in pain to be delivered—let them be restored back
again to what they lost through the fall, and they will be prepared to
appreciate it.
In order to show you the dire effects of the fall, it is not only
necessary to say that old father Adam has experienced that penalty,
and laid down his body in the dust; but all generations since that
time have experienced the same; and you, and I, and every man, and
woman, and child, have got to, undergo that penalty; it will be
inflicted upon us, and thus will the law of God be magnified, His
words fulfilled, and justice have its demands. It is not because of
our sins, that we die; it is not because we have transgressed, that we
die; it is not because we may commit murder, or steal, or plunder, or
rob, or take the name of the Lord in vain; it is not these things that
bring the death of the body; but it is Adam's sin that makes the
little child die, that makes kings, princes, and potentates die, and
that has made all generations die from his day down to the present
time. Don't you think there ought to be some way to redeem us from
this dreadful calamity? We had no hand in the transgression of Adam;
you and I were not there to participate in it; but it was our great
father who did it, and we are suffering the effects of it.
Cannot some of the wise medical men of the age—some of the great
physicians and doctors of the day, who have studied medicine all their
life—can they not imagine up something new, that will relieve the
posterity of Adam from this awful calamity? They have not done it yet.
Dr. Brandreth recommended his medicine for all kinds of diseases, and
even it was said that steamboats were propelled by its power; but it
made no man immortal; it did not save one man; and it is doubtful in
the extreme—it is certain, that no man in this mortality has ever
discovered that medicine which will relieve us from these awful
effects transmitted from father Adam to this present time. There is a
remedy, but it is not to be found in the catalogue of the inventions
of man; it is not to be found in the bowels of the earth, or dug out
of any mines; it is not to be purchased by the gold of California, or
the treasures of India. What is it, and how was it
discovered? It was the Being who made man, that made him immortal and
eternal, that Being whose bosom is filled with mercy, as well as
justice, that exercises both attributes, and shows to all creation
that He is a merciful God, as well as a God of justice; it was He that
discovered this wonderful remedy to preserve mankind from the effects
of this eternal death. But when is it to be applied? Not immediately,
for that would frustrate His designs: when the body has got back into
the dust, and after man has suffered sufficiently long for the
original sin, He then brings him forth to enjoy all the bloom of
immortality; He tells Death to trouble him no more; He wipes away all
tears from his eyes, for he is prepared to live forever, and gaze
upon His glory, and dwell in His presence.
This great Redeemer is stronger than Death, more powerful than that
direful monster who has come into the world, and laid siege to all the
inhabitants thereof; He will banish it out of this creation. How will
He do it? If the penalty of the original sin be the eternal separation
of body and spirit, how can justice have all its demands, and mercy be
shown to the transgressor? There is a way, and how? It is by the
introduction of His Only Begotten Son, the Son of His own bosom, the
firstborn of every creature, holding the birthright over every
creation He has made, and holding the keys of salvation over millions
of worlds like this; he has a right to come forth and suffer the
penalty of death for the fallen sons and daughters of man. He offered
his own life: says he, "Father, I will suffer death though I have not
merited it; let me suffer the demands of the law. Here I am innocent
in thy presence; I have always kept thy laws from the day of my birth
among thy creations, throughout ages past down to the present time; I
have never been re bellious to thy commandments; and now I will suffer
for my brethren and sisters: let thy justice be magnified and made
honorable; here am I; let me suffer the ends of the law, and let
death and the grave deliver up their victims, and let the posterity of
Adam all be set free, every soul of them without an exception." This
is the way that justice is magnified and made honorable, and none of
the creations of the Almighty can complain of Him, that He has not
answered the ends of justice; no intelligent being can say, "You have
deviated from your words." Justice has had its demands in the
penalties that were inflicted upon the Son of God, so far as Adam's
transgression is concerned.
I will explain a little further. So far as that transgression is
concerned, all the inhabitants of the earth will be saved. Now
understand me correctly. If there are any strangers present, that have
not understood the views of the Latter-day Saints, I wish you to
understand that we have no reference in any way to our own personal
sins; but so far as the original sin of father Adam is concerned, you
and I will have to suffer death; and every man and woman that ever
lived on this globe will be redeemed from that sin. On what condition?
I answer, on no condition whatever on our part. "But," says one,
"where I came from they tell me I ought to repent for the original
sin." I care not what they tell you, you will be redeemed from the
original sin, with no works on your part whatever. Jesus has died to
redeem you from it, and you are as sure to be redeemed, as you live
upon the face of this earth. This is the kind of universal redemption
the "Mormons" believe in, though in one sense of the word, it is a
different kind of universal redemption from that which the nations
have been in the habit of hearing. We believe in the universal redemption of all the children of Adam into the presence of God, so
far as the sins of Adam are concerned. They will obtain a universal
redemption from the grave. It matters not how wicked you are; if you
have murdered all the days of your life, and committed all the sins
the devil would prompt you to commit, you will get a resurrection;
your spirit will be restored to your body. If Jesus had not come, all
of us would have slumbered in the grave; but now, wicked as we may be,
if we go down to the grave blaspheming the name of the Lord, we shall
as sure come up again as we go down there. This is free grace without
works; all this comes to pass without works on the part of the
creature.
Now let us pause upon another subject, as we pass along. Don't you
know, my hearers, that there has been another law given since man has
become a mortal being? Is it the Book of Mormon? No. After man became
a mortal being, the Lord gave him another law. What was it? "You have
now got into a condition that you know good and evils by experience,
and I will give you a law adapted to your capacity," says the Lord,
"and I now command you, that you shall not do evil."
What is the penalty? Second death. What is that? After you have been
redeemed from the grave, and come into the presence of God, you will
have to stand there to be judged; and if you have done evil, you will
be banished everlastingly from His presence—body and spirit united
together; this is what is called the second death. Why is it called
the second death? Because the first is the dissolution of body and
spirit, and the second is merely a banishment—a becoming dead to the
things of righteousness; and as I have already remarked, wherever a
being is placed in such a condition, there perfect misery reigns; I
care not where you place them; you may take any of the celestial
worlds, and place millions of beings there that are dead to
righteousness, and how long will it be before they make a perfect hell
of it? They would make a hell of any heaven the Lord ever made. It is
the second death—the penalty attached to the commandment given to the
posterity of Adam, viz., "You shall cease to do evil; for if you cease
to do evil, you shall be redeemed from Adam's transgression, and
brought back into my presence; and if you cease not to do evil, you
shall be punished with everlasting destruction from my presence, and
from the glory of my power," saith the Lord.
"But," says one, "He is so merciful that He would not inflict such a
penalty upon us." Have you ever seen a man that has escaped from the
first death? Or who had any prospect of it? No; you cannot find a
remedy to hinder him from going down to his grave. Has there been any
escape for any individual for 6,000 years past? Now, if the Lord has
been punctual to make every man, woman, and child, suffer the penalty
of the first transgression, why should you suppose that you can stand
in His presence, and behold the glory of His power, and have
everlasting life and happiness, when He has told you that you should
be banished therefrom, that the second death should be inflicted upon
you? For the first provocation, He has fulfilled to the very letter
the penalty of the law; so will He in the second, and there is no
escape. Says one, "Is there no escape?" No; not so far as you are able
to provide. But I will tell you that there is a redemption for man
from this second death or penalty, and the Lord remains a perfect,
just Being, His justice being magnified.
There is a way of escape from the effects of your own individual
transgressions, but it is different from the redemption from
the original sin of Adam. The redemption from that sin was universal
without works, but the redemption from your own personal sins is
universal with works on the part of the creature—universal in its
nature, because it is free to all, but not received by all. The
salvation, or redemption from your own sins, is not by free grace
alone, it requires a little work. But what are the works? Jesus
Christ, through his death and sufferings has answered the penalty, on
condition that you believe in him, and repent of your sins, and be
baptized for the remission of them, and receive the Gift of the Holy
Ghost, by the laying on of hands, and continue humble, and meek, and
prayerful, until you go down to your graves; and on these conditions,
Jesus will plead for you before the Father, and say, "Father, I not
only died for Adam's sin, but for the sins of all the world, inasmuch
as they believe in my Gospel; and now these individuals have repented,
they have reformed their lives, and have become like little children
in my sight, and have performed the works I have given them to do—and
now, Father, may they be saved with an everlasting salvation in thy
presence, and sit down with me on my throne, as I have overcome, and
sit down with thee on thy throne; and may they be crowned, with all
the sanctified, with immortality and eternal life, no more to be cast
away."
Don't you think the Father would accept an appeal of this kind from
His Only Begotten Son? Yes. He is our Mediator, to plead before the
Father for those who will comply with his commands, and the laws of
his Gospel. The way is simple, so simple and easy that many step over
it and
say, "O, that is of no consequence, it is of no avail, it will
do no good to be baptized in water." But if the Lord had not
constructed it upon a simple plan, adapted to the capacities of all
men, they might have had some excuse; but as it is, they have none:
all you have got to do is to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of
God, turn away from your sins, cease to do evil, saying, "Father, I
will cease from this time henceforth to sin, and will work the works
of righteousness; I will try to do good all the days of my life; and I
witness this before thee by this day going down into the waters of
baptism; and thus cast off the old man, with his deeds," and
henceforth live in newness of life. If you will do this, you will just
as sure be redeemed from your own sins, and the penalty thereof, and
be lifted up to dwell in the presence of God, as you have been
redeemed or lifted up from the waters of baptism. This is the Gospel,
the first principles thereof, by which you can be redeemed from your
own sins; and by and by death will come, and it will be sweet to you,
for Jesus has suffered the penalty of sin; the pangs of sin are gone,
and you fall asleep in peace, having made sure your salvation, and
having done your duty well, like those we are preaching the funeral
sermon of this morning; and thus you will fall asleep, with a full
assurance that you will come up, in the morning of the first
resurrection, with an immortal body, like that which Adam had before
he partook of the forbidden fruit. This is the promise to them that
fall asleep in Jesus.
When our spirits leave these bodies, will they be happy? Not perfectly
so. Why? Because the spirit is absent from the body; it cannot be
perfectly happy while a part of the man is lying in the earth. How can
the happiness be complete when only a part of the redemption is
accomplished? You cannot be perfectly happy until you get a new house.
You will be happy, you will be at ease in paradise; but still you will
be looking for a house where your spirit can enter, and act as you did
in former times, only more perfectly, having superior powers.
Consequently, all the holy men that have lived in days of old, have
looked forward to the resurrection of their bodies; for then their
glory will be complete.
What did Paul say upon this subject? He said, "I have fought a good
fight," "I have kept the faith; henceforth there is laid up for me a
crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall
give me at that day." Do you understand this passage? Remember that
this crown that Paul speaks of, was not to be given in the day we die;
but it is to be given in "that day" —the day of the Lord's appearing;
it is to be given to all those that love his appearing; then is the
time that Paul will get his crown; then is the time that the Saints
who fall asleep in our day, will receive their crowns—crowns of
rejoicing—kingly crowns. What good would a crown do a man who is
miserable and wretched? Many persons have worn crowns in this life;
tyrants have had crowns of diamonds and gold; but what benefit are
they? None at all, except to a being who has made himself perfectly
happy by his obedience. But what are we to understand by this crown of
righteousness, which is to be given to the Saints? We understand that
it is actually to be a crown of glory; that they are to be kings in
reality. John speaks in the first chapter of his Revelation to the
Churches in his day, and represents the Saints to be Kings and
Priests; he says, Christ "hath made us kings and priests unto God and
His Father;" and this too, while in this life.
In another place he speaks of those who are dead—about their singing a
new song: "And they sung a new song, saying, Thou hast redeemed us
Oh God by thy blood, out of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and
nation; And hast made us unto our God kings and priests." Here then we
find, from the first chapter, that they were made Kings and Priests
before they were dead; and in the next quotation; we find that they
still retained their kingly office after death, and actually had made
songs to express their happy condition—"Thou hast made us kings and
priests." Now we see the reason why they are to wear crowns, for they
will be made Kings and Priests on the earth: the Lord then, must have
some way to give this kingly power.
Do you understand this, brethren and sisters? If you were to speak, I
should hear innumerable voices respond, "Yes, we understand it; the
Lord has revealed the ordinances; we know how the sons and daughters
of God obtain this kingly office, while living here in this mortal
tabernacle."
We will pass over that; suffice it to say, that death does not wrench
it from them; for they are to be kings, not for a day, or for this
short life, but they are to remain to all eternity kings; having their
thrones, and acting in the duties belonging to their kingly office.
Compared with this, what are all the little, petty kingdoms of this
earth worth? They are not worth one snap of the finger. The kings of
the world exercise a certain authority over the nations—over their
subjects, issuing laws, and framing governments, and controlling them;
and do you suppose that the Saints will be kings in the eternal world,
and sit down upon thrones, in silence, not exercising the functions of
their office? No. That is not the way the Lord has organized His
creations; if there are kings, you may depend upon it they will have
kingdoms under their control; they will have authority and dominion;
they will give laws to those subjects over whom they bear rule; they
will control them by the priestly office, for it is combined with the
kingly office, and neither can be separated to all eternity. Is our God so narrow and contracted in
His feelings, in His views and disposition, that He would limit the
authority of the priestly office to this little globe we inhabit? No.
God has more expansive views; His works are without beginning, and
without end; they are one eternal round. What kind of works are they?
They are to make creations, and people them with living beings, and
place them in a condition to prove themselves; and to exercise the
kingly and priestly office to redeem them after they have suffered
pain, and sorrow, and distress; and to bring them up into the presence
of God; that they, in their turn, may become kings and priests for
other creations that shall be made, and that shall be governed and
ruled over by those possessing the proper authority.
We do not believe that everything has got to be limited to this little
space of time in this world; but the Saints will be doing a work that
will be adapted to beings that are the sons of God in the fullest
sense of the word, that are precisely like their Father; and if so,
they will be like Gods, and will hold dominion under that Being who is
the Lord of lords; and they will hold it to all eternity.
We will come back to our text. We have been talking about the funeral
sermon of the earth; the earth is to wax old like a garment and pass
away. I have already proved to you the redemption of man, and how he
will become immortal and eternal; now let us look after his
inheritance; we will see if he is to be lifted up in space, without
any inheritance to stand upon, without any land upon which to raise
manna for eating, or flax for the spinning and making of fine robes
and other wearing apparel. Let us see if it is to be a shadowy
existence, like the God that is served by Christendom, "without body,
parts, and passions," and located "beyond the bounds of time and
space."
The earth is to die; it has already received certain ordinances, and
will have to receive other ordinances for its recovery from the fall.
We will go back to the creation. The first account we have of the
earth, it was enveloped in a mass of waters; it was called forth from
the womb of liquid elements. Here was the first birth of our
creation—the waters rolled back, and the dry land appeared, and was
soon clothed upon with vegetable and animal existence. This was
similar to all other births; being first encompassed in a flood of
mighty waters, it burst forth from them, and was soon clothed with all
the beauties of the vegetable kingdom. By and by it became polluted
by Adam's transgression, and was thus brought under the sentence of
death, with all things connected with it; and as our text says, it
must wax old and die, in like manner as the inhabitants upon the face
thereof.
The heavens and the earth were thus polluted, that is, the material
heavens, and everything connected with our globe; all fell when man
fell, and became subject to death when man became subject to it. Both
man and the earth are redeemed from the original sin without
ordinances; but soon we find new sins committed by the fallen sons of
Adam, and the earth became corrupted before the Lord by their
transgressions. It needs redeeming ordinances for these second
transgressions. The Lord ordained baptism, or immersion of the earth
in water, as a justifying ordinance. Said he to Noah, "Build an ark
for the saving of thyself and house, for I will immerse the earth in
water, that the sins which have corrupted it may be washed away from
its face." The fountains of the great deep, and the windows on high,
were opened, and the rains came and overwhelmed the earth; and the dry
land disappeared in the womb of the mighty waters, even as in the begin ning. The waters were assuaged; the earth came forth clothed with innocence, like the
newborn child, having been baptized or born again from the ocean
flood; and thus the old earth was buried with all its deeds, and arose
to a newness of life, its sins being washed away, even as man has to be
immersed in water to wash away his own personal sins.
By and by the earth becomes corrupted again, and the nations make
themselves drunken with the wine of the wrath of great Babylon; but
the Lord has reserved the same earth for fire; hence He says by the
prophet Malachi, "Behold, the day cometh that shall burn as an oven,
&c." A complete purification is again to come upon the earth, and that
too, by the more powerful element of fire; and the wicked will be
burned as stubble. When is this to be? Is it to be before the earth
dies? This is a representation of the baptism that is received by man
after he has been baptized in water; for he is then to be baptized
with fire and the Holy Ghost, and all his sins entirely done away: so
the earth will be baptized with fire, and wickedness swept away from
its face, so that the glory of God shall cover it. As the waters cover
the great deep, so will the earth be overwhelmed and immersed in the
glory of God, and His Spirit be poured out upon all flesh, before the
earth dies. After this purifying ordinance, there will be a
thousand years of rest, during which righteousness shall abound upon
the face of the earth; and soon after the thousand years have ended,
the words of the text shall be fulfilled—"The heavens shall vanish
away like smoke, and the earth shall wax old like a garment," &c. When
the earth waxes old, and has filled the measure of its creation, and
all things have been done according to the mind and will of God, He
will say to the earth, "Die." What will be its death? Will it be
drowned? No: it is to die through the agency of fire; it is to suffer
a death similar to many of the martyrs; the very elements themselves
are to melt with fervent heat, and the hills are to be made like wax
before the Lord. Will the earth be annihilated? No, there is no such a
word in all His revelations; such a thing was never known in the bosom
of the Almighty, or any other being, except in the imaginations of
some of the moderns, who have declared that the globe was to become
like the "baseless fabric of a vision." It is one of the sectarian
follies, that the elements and everything else are to be completely
struck out of existence. The Lord never revealed, or thought of, or
even hinted at such a thing.
The earth will not be annihilated, any more than our bodies are after
being burned. Every chemist knows that the weight of a thing is not
diminished by burning it. The present order of things must be done
away, and, as the apostle John says, all things must become new; and
he tells us the time when: it is to be after the millennium. The
passing away is equivalent to death, and all things being made new is
equivalent to the resurrection. Is the new earth to be made
precisely like this earth? No; but as this earth was, before sin
entered into it; and we shall inherit it. This is our heaven, and we
have the title to it by promise, and it will be redeemed through the
faith and prayers of the Saints, and we shall get a title from God to
a portion of it as our inheritance.
O ye farmers, when you sleep in the grave, don't be afraid that your
agricultural pursuits are forever at an end; don't be fearful that you
will never get any more landed property; but if you be Saints, be of
good cheer, for when you come up in the morning of the resurrection,
behold! there is a new earth made, wherein dwells
righteousness, and blessed are ye, for ye shall inhabit it. "Blessed
are the meek," says our Savior, "for they shall inherit the earth,"
though they have died without a foot of land. The Latter-day Saints
were driven from one possession to another, until they were driven
beyond the pale of civilization into the deserts, where it was
supposed they would die, and that would be the last of them; but
behold, they have a firm hold upon the promise that the meek shall
inherit the earth, when they come here with immortal bodies capable of
enjoying the earth. True, we can have plenty of the things of this
life in their cursed condition; but what are all these things? They
are nothing. We are looking for things in their immortal state, and
farmers will have great farms upon the earth when it is so changed.
"But don't be so fast," says one, "don't you know that there are only
about 197,000,000 of square miles, or about 126,000,000,000 of acres,
upon the surface of the globe? Will this accommodate all the
inhabitants after the resurrection?" Yes; for if the earth should
stand 8,000 years, or eighty centuries, and the population should be a
thousand millions in every century, that would be eighty thousand
millions of inhabitants; and we know that many centuries have passed
that would not give the tenth part of this; but supposing this to be
the number, there would then be over an acre and a half for each
person upon the face of the globe.
But there is another thing to be considered. Are the wicked to receive
the earth as an inheritance? No; for Jesus did not say, Blessed are
the wicked, for they shall inherit the earth; this promise was made
only to the meek. Who are the meek? None but those who receive the
ordinances of the Gospel, and live according to them; they must
receive the same ordinances the earth has received, and be baptized
with fire and with the Holy Ghost, as this earth will be when Jesus
comes to reign upon it a thousand years; and be clothed upon with the
glory of God, as this earth will be; and after they have died as the
earth will die, they will have to be resurrected, as this earth will
be resurrected, and then receive their inheritance upon it.
Look at the seventeen centuries that have passed away on the eastern
hemisphere, during which time the sound of the Gospel has never been
heard from the mouth of an authorized servant of God. Suppose now that
out of the vast amount of the population of this earth, one in a
hundred should receive the law of meekness, and be entitled to receive
an inheritance upon the new earth; how much land would they receive?
We answer, they would receive over 150 acres, which would be quite
enough to raise manna, and to build some habitations upon, and some
splendid mansions; it would be large enough to raise flax to make
robes of, and to have beautiful orchards of fruit trees; it would be
large enough to have our flower gardens, and everything the
agriculturalist and the botanist want, and some to spare.
What would be done with the spare portions? Let me tell you of one
thing which perhaps some of you have never thought of. Do you suppose
that we shall get up out of the grave, male and female, and that we
shall not have the same kind of affections, and endearments, and
enjoyments that we have here? The same pure feelings of love that
exist in the bosoms of the male and female in this world, will exist
with seven-fold intensity in the next world, governed by the law of
God; there will be no corruptions nor infringements upon one another's
rights. Will not a man have his own family? Yes; he will also have his own mansion and farm, his own sons and daughters. And what
else? Why, the fact is, man will continue to multiply and fill up this
creation, inasmuch as it is not filled up by the resurrected Saints
after it is made new.
And what will he do when this is filled up? Why, he will make more
worlds, and swarm out like bees from the old hive, and prepare new
locations. And when a farmer has cultivated his farm, and raised
numerous children, so that the space is beginning to be too strait for
them, he will say, "My sons, yonder is plenty of matter, go and
organize a world, and people it; and you shall have laws to govern
you, and you shall understand and comprehend through your experience
the same things that we know." And thus it will be one eternal round,
and one continual increase; and the government will be placed under
those that are crowned as kings and Priests in the presence of God.
Much more might be said, for we have only just touched upon these
things, only turned the key that you may look through the door and
discern a little of the glories that await the Saints. Let me tell
you, it has not entered into the heart of man to conceive the things
which God has laid up for them that love Him, unless he is filled with
the Holy Ghost, and by vision gazes upon the thrones and the
dominions, the principalities and powers, that are placed under His
control and dominion; and He shall sway a righteous scepter over the
whole.
This we will consider a kind of resurrection sermon for this creation,
and all the righteous that shall inhabit it. We have not time in this
discourse to preach the resurrection of the wicked, nor point out the
place of their location.