"Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord: yea, saith the spirit,
henceforth they rest from their labors;" or, in other words, blessed
are those who have received the Priesthood of the Son of God, and have
honored it in their lives. Those who have honored their calling and
Priesthood to the end die in the Lord, and their works do follow them.
Our brother has lived faithful during his life, and has gone to his
rest. We do not mourn as others do. We can truly say that we have a
hope—a knowledge. The way of life and salvation has been revealed to
us, giving us knowledge of the present and future. We rejoice. Shall
we rejoice that we have the opportunity of paying the last respects
due to this lifeless clay, which a few days ago was alive and active,
full of spirit, attending the High Council, giving decisions full of
knowledge? Yes, we will rejoice. It is a matter of rejoicing more than
the day of his birth. It is true it is grievous to part with our
friends. We are creatures of passion, of sympathy, of love, and it is
painful for us to part with our friends. We would keep them in the
mortal house, though they should suffer pain. Are we not selfish in
this? Should we not rather rejoice at the departure of those whose
lives have been devoted to doing good, to a good old age? Brother
Spencer has lived beyond what is counted to be the common age of man
some four or five years; his judgment was as active as it was
twenty-five years ago. He has been faithful in this holy war. He
instructed all with whom he met in the way of life. He never gave
counsel but what marked the way to life everlasting.
I say to the wives and children and relations, we have more reason to
rejoice for Daniel Spencer today, than on any day of his mortal life.
He lives—he has gone on a mission. We are taking steps to the very
place he has gone to. That which was made subject to sin through the
fall, has fled to its eternal place. This is only a mystery to those
who do not understand. But we have joy in the dissolution of the body.
While the spirit remains in the body, it is liable to sin and
overthrow. We are only preserved by the grace of God and our own
faithfulness. Brother Spencer was, while in the body, subject to
temptations and the vanities that are in the world. So with us. That
silent clay is consigned to rest, and the spirit is free—gone to God
who gave it. How far had he to go to get to the Lord? According to the
ancients, he is dwelling there. David says, "If I were to flee to the
uttermost parts of the earth, thou art there." God is everywhere by
His Spirit, and his spirit is free—it can see the Lord as well in this
room as to travel millions of miles away. If he is watching us now, he
has not the privilege of speaking to us. God has placed the spirits of
the departed subject to bounds, and they are controlled by certain
laws. They have not the privilege of joining with us in our mental
exercises; yet brother Spencer is in the presence of the Lord. Shall
we be in the presence of God, as brother Spencer is? Yes, if we are
faithful, for we have the privilege of being crowned with immortality
and eternal lives. All people have their guardian angels. Whether our
departed dead guard us is not for me to say. I can say we have our
guardian angels.
I say to the family of brother Spencer, there is no cause to mourn.
This body is sown in mortality. This tabernacle is from the elements
of the earth. We are of the earth, earthy, yet this tabernacle,
through faithfulness whilst here in the flesh, has the promise of a
glorious resurrection. If the spirit brought into subjection the whole
man, bringing every portion of the flesh subject to the law of God, it
has the promise of a resurrection. All the component parts of this
body, which now lies before us, will be resurrected, and be prepared
to enter into the presence of the Father and the Son. Some have
supposed that it matters not what particles we receive again. In this
they are mistaken. The parts which have been honored by the
faithfulness of the spirit in this life will be joined in the life to
come.
It has been the idea of many that the spirit goes directly to God who
gave it. Does it remain there? Go on the great battlefield of the
past, and if they could be seen the spirits of the slain are hovering
around their dust. They stay about this earth until there is another
call for them. The kingdom and place where brother Spencer is called
to dwell, he will be in. Every departed spirit is subject to the laws
that govern the spirit world. What do we gain by being faithful to the
Gospel of the Son of God? We gain life and salvation. Salvation in
this world and the world to come. When they leave the body those
spirits are free from the power of the enemy. There are wicked men in
the spirit world. Millions of them will have the privilege of
receiving the Gospel in the spirit, that they may be judged according
to men in the flesh, and no doubt but many will reject the Gospel
there. Jesus went to preach to the spirits in prison. The faithful
Elders who leave this world will preach to the spirits in the spirit
world. In that world there are millions and millions to every Elder
who leaves here, and yet every spirit will be preached to that has had
a tabernacle on the earth and become accountable.
This is the plan of salvation. Jesus will never cease his work until
all are brought up to the enjoyment of a kingdom in the mansions of
his Father, where there are many kingdoms and many glories, to suit
the works and faithfulness of all men that have lived on the earth.
Some will obey the celestial law and receive of its glory, some
will abide the terrestrial and some the telestial, and others will
receive a glory. Our brother is living today, and is bright with
intelligence to preach the Gospel in the spirit world. We know where
his remains are. They are here. But where is his spirit? He is in the
line of his duty, and prepared to do more good than if he were upon
the earth. As quickly as the spirit is unlocked from this house of
clay, it is free to travel with lightning speed to any planet, or
fixed star, or to the uttermost part of the earth, or to the depths of
the sea, according to the will of Him who dictates. Every faithful
man's labor will continue as long as the labor of Jesus, until all
things are redeemed that can be re deemed, and presented to the Father.
There is a great work before us. We plant the seed in the ground and
it comes forth, being warmed by the sun and nourished by the earth. By
the same great laws of God the earth and its fullness have been
produced, giving various degrees of intelligence. The Lord is raising
a crop, and He will continue to labor until the work is finished.
May we all be faithful as brother Spencer was. I say to his family,
God bless you. You have cause to rejoice. In 1840 he was ready to go
into the grave with consumption, but he embraced the Gospel, health
was restored to him, and he has lived to a good old age and has done a
good work. May God bless you. Amen.