Having been called upon this afternoon to address this congregation, I
rise before you trusting that the Holy Spirit, which makes plain to
the human mind the things of God, may rest upon me and upon you; that
I may be inspired by that Spirit to say something which will be of
profit to those who hear, and that those who listen to what I may say
may be able to understand in the same light and under the same
influence as that by which the words are spoken.
The elders of this Church, in ministering as public speakers, stand
before the people in the name of the Lord. They do not address
congregations for the purpose of ventilating the opinions and ideas
which they may entertain, but they occupy the position of ministers of
the Lord Jesus Christ, to speak that which is given to them by the
influence of the Holy Spirit. Nevertheless, the servants of God are
instructed to "treasure up in their hearts continually the words of
life," with the promise that if they do this and are diligent in
seeking for the mind and will of God, in the very hour that they are
needed, words shall be placed in their mouths, or ideas be brought up
in their minds, which shall be for the benefit of all who hear. It is
in this Spirit that I endeavor to address the congregation this
afternoon, and I hope I shall have not only your attention, but the
benefit of your faith and prayers, that the Spirit of God may rest
upon me and the congregation also.
We are living upon the earth at a time when there are a great many
creeds—a great many different doctrines, each professing to be the
true faith—the Christian religion. There is a spirit of doubt and
division in the world. Men are ever learning but not able to come to a
knowledge of the truth. They indulge in a great many speculations.
Some good people study the Scriptures and endeavor to find out what is
divine truth, but their ideas are various; they do not come to the
unity of the faith; and the great reason why this is so is because
they do not seek to the fountain of light and truth with the
expectation of receiving any reply. In olden times God used to speak
to the people. He had ser vants upon the earth who spoke as
they were moved upon by the Holy Ghost; angels ministered to the sons
of men, and truth was revealed in great plainness from the Father. But
in these times, people have to put up with the ideas and notions that
men hold in relation to these truths which were anciently revealed.
There is now no voice from heaven, no prophet among the people; there
are no inspired apostles; angels have ceased to minister, and to use
the words of one of the great divines of the day, "The awful voice of
prophecy is silenced forever."
Of course in making use of these remarks I am speaking in relation to
what is called the Christian world. The Latter-day Saints believe that
God is the same yesterday, today and forever, and that if he is
sought after today in the same way that he was sought after
yesterday, he will answer in the same manner. We believe that it is
just as possible for angels to come to earth in these times as in any
former age of the world; we believe that the power of the Holy Ghost
is the same today as it was thousands of years ago; that divine truth
can be made manifest direct from God to the people now as it was in
the days of Jesus, or in the days of the prophets who preceded him on
the earth.
The religion we Latter-day Saints have received—which we hold to,
which we live for, and which a great many of us are willing to die
for, if necessary—has come to us by revelation from God in the day and
age in which we live. In taking up the writings of the old prophets,
in reading the letters written by the ancient apostles, we find that
the religion which God has revealed to us is the same religion which
God revealed to them. What is contained in the Bible corroborates that
which we have received, and the spirit which accompanies the preaching
of the word to us, is similar in its effects to that spirit which
accompanied the preaching of the ancient prophets and apostles of the
Lord. We find this out by reading that portion of their records which
has been left. So that the religion of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints is not a mere theory of men. The doctrines which we
have received have come to us direct from the Lord in our own time. We
are not left to speculation, we are not left to our own theories, but
we have defined principles given to us of God for our guidance, for
our comfort and for our edification.
Now, there is a disposition existing in the world today to go away
from the Lord. Men seem to have a desire to follow out their own
imaginations, their own ideas and notions, and in consequence of this
a great many wrong principles have been received for truth in the
Christian world, and this disposition seems to increase. The Apostle
Paul, in writing to the Saints in his day, advised them to "beware
lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the
tradition of man, after the rudiments of the world, and not after
Christ." Now, that same advice is good for the people in our times;
good for the Latter-day Saints; good for the people who compose the
various sects of modern Christendom. If we have received the doctrines
of Christ, if our feet are planted firmly upon the rock which he has
laid, there is no fear of our going astray; but if we depart from that
and walk in the ways of men, and are led by their theories and their
speculations and their vain philosophy, we are very likely to go
astray.
I notice in reading some of the works of modern divines, and
noting the progress of religious thought among the people, that there
is a doctrine which is becoming very widespread among the people
called "Christians," that is, a heresy in regard to the doctrine of
our condition in the future. It is believed by a great many people
at the present time, that there is no such thing as a literal
resurrection of the body; that when this body is laid away in the
ground and goes back to the elements out of which it was organized,
that is the end of the body, and that it will never come up again.
They do not see any need of a literal resurrection of the body; they
cannot perceive by what process it can be resuscitated; and not being
able to comprehend how this great change can come, how the scattered
elements of the body can be brought together again, they reject the
doctrine altogether. This is the belief of the people who are called
spiritualists or spiritists. This is one of the doctrines of that
great delusion of the latter times, that "strong delusion" that the
Lord has permitted to come into the world because men would not
receive the truth, but turned away from it and loved a lie. It is
taught by that rapping and muttering influence, that when the spirit
leaves the body and passes into another state, that is the
resurrection; that the body will be raised up no more; that the
spirit, liberated from the body, will progress from sphere to
sphere—how many spheres they do not know—but that there is no further
need of the body. This idea is increasing in its hold upon the minds
of the people, among the various "Christian" sects, and some of the
greatest preachers and divines of the day entertain this idea,
philosophize upon it and teach it to their congregations. Now we have
the satisfaction of definite knowledge in regard to this matter, as
well as all the articles of our creed—if we have such a thing as a
formulated creed. The ideas we have in relation to this doctrine have
come from God. There is no need of any doubt about it, no need for any
speculation. The Lord has revealed something concerning this. It is
true he has not revealed the philosophy of it in full, he has only
given us some ideas concerning it. But he has made the fact very plain
that there may be no misunderstanding about it. In the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants—which contains many of the revelations that God
has given to the Church through the Prophet Joseph Smith, we find this
doctrine laid down in great plainness. It is stated that the spirit
and the body make up the soul of man, and that the resurrection from
the dead is the redemption of the soul. We are taught also that there
are material elements and spiritual elements; that the spiritual part
of our being was in the beginning with God, and that the spiritual and
material when inseparably connected receive a fulness of joy,
otherwise men cannot receive a fulness of joy. It takes the spiritual
part of man and the material or physical part joined together
inseparably to obtain a fulness of joy. When the spirit is separated
from the body, a fulness of joy cannot be obtained. When the spirit is
joined to the body temporarily under a temporal law, under the law of
death, it cannot receive a fulness of joy. The spirit and the body
must be so joined together that both will be immortal, and in that
condition man can receive a fulness of joy.
The Book of Mormon is also very plain upon this subject. I will read
one or two texts from that book, and if I have time I may
refer to the Bible, to show that the things contained in the Book of
Mormon and the Book of Doctrine and Covenants are the same as
contained in the old scriptures. I will read a passage from the
seventy-ninth page (new edition) of the Book of Mormon, namely:
"And this death of which I have spoken, which is the spiritual death,
shall deliver up its dead; which spiritual death is hell; wherefore,
death and hell must deliver up their dead, and hell must deliver up its captive spirits, and the grave must
deliver up its captive bodies, and the bodies and the spirits of men
will be restored one to the other; and it is by the power of the
resurrection of the Holy One of Israel.
"Oh how great the plan of our God! For on the other hand, the paradise
of God must deliver up the spirits of the righteous, and the grave
deliver up the body of the righteous; and the spirit and body is
restored to itself again, and all men become incorruptible, and
immortal, and they are living souls, having a perfect knowledge like
unto us in the flesh, save it be that our knowledge shall be perfect.
"Wherefore, we shall have a perfect knowledge of all our guilt, and
our uncleanliness, and our nakedness; and the righteous shall have a
perfect knowledge of their enjoyment, and their righteousness, being
clothed with purity, yea, even with the robe of righteousness."
Now, according to the Book of Mormon, the spirits of men, the
righteous and the wicked, are to be brought up from the place to which
they shall go when they depart from this life. There is no need for
any dubiety about this, there is no need for any mistake; it is clear
that the separation of the spirit from the body is not the
resurrection spoken of in this book.
The Prophet Alma, touching on this subject, explained to the people in
his day what an angel of God made known to him. These words, which I
am about to read to you from the Book of Alma, in the Book of Mormon,
are not Alma's ideas and speculations. He says they were revealed to
him by an angel. I would advise you to read the 40th chapter, 352
page, new edition. Alma states here that he was very much troubled
concerning the doctrine of the condition of people after they passed
away from this life. He wanted to know something of the condition of
man between death and the resurrection, and he says an angel of God
made known to him that there is a space between death and the
resurrection, that the spirits of the wicked are in a state of unrest,
having a knowledge of all their wickedness, and a remembrance of all
their transgressions; that they are in a state of fear, looking for
the wrath and indignation of God, not knowing what their punishment
will be; while on the other hand, the spirits of the righteous enter
into a state of rest. They have a perfect knowledge of all that God
has done for them, and all their acts of righteousness, and they await
in peace for the time when their bodies shall be brought forth from
the dust to stand in the presence of their God to receive their crown.
Alma then goes on to say:
"But this much I say, that there is a space between death and the
resurrection of the body, and a state of the soul in happiness or in
misery until the time which is appointed of God that the dead shall
come forth, and be reunited, both soul and body, and be brought to
stand before God, and be judged according to their works.
"The soul shall be restored to the body, and the body to the soul; yea,
and every limb and joint shall be restored to its body; yea, even a
hair of the head shall not be lost; but all things shall be restored
to their proper and perfect frame."
Now, that is clear and distinct on this point. In regard to the times
and seasons of this resurrection, about which Alma speaks, he said he
did not know, but those things he did know were made known to him by
an angel, namely, that there is a space between death and the
resurrection; that at the resurrection the body and the spirit shall
be brought up and restored to each other, and not only the body and
spirit, but every part and particle belonging to the body; not a hair
of the head shall be lost; every joint and muscle and fiber and sinew,
and every part and particle necessary to make up a perfect physical
body for the spirit to dwell in, shall be restored to that spirit in
the resurrection. That is the doctrine laid down by the Prophet Alma,
as taught to him by an angel.
The very meaning of the word "resurrection" ought to dispel the idea
that the separation of the spirit from the body at death is
resurrection. The word itself means, "I stand up again." The idea
which all the prophets and apostles of old had was that at some future
time the voice of God should be uttered, and the dead should stand up
again, their bodies should come from the grave; just exactly the
doctrine laid down in the Book of Mormon and Book of Doctrine and
Covenants. Some have an idea that the people who lived upon the earth
before Jesus had no correct ideas in regard to the future. I have
seen such statements published by popular divines of the day; but when
we come to take up the Old Testament Scriptures, we find that the
writers, holy men of God, who wrote as they were moved upon by the
Holy Ghost, had a distinct and unwavering faith in regard to this same
doctrine, that of the resurrection of the body.
The book of Job is said to be the most ancient book of the Bible. I
will read a verse or two from the 7th chapter. In the 9th verse we
read: "As the cloud is consumed and vanisheth away: so he that goeth
down to the grave shall come up no more." Now, that is a very plain
statement of Job's; that when a man goes down to the grave he shall
not return. Those who believe in the vain philosophy that I have
referred to, take a great deal of comfort in quoting that passage, and
also some sayings of Solomon, the wise man; that is, he was a wise man
once, but he became a foolish man before he died, not because he
married more wives than one, but because he transgressed by marrying
strange wives. Solomon, in some of his writings, speaks in the same
way as Job. But I will read a verse from the 14th chapter of Job:
"As the waters fail from the sea, and the flood decayeth and dryeth
up: So man lieth down, and riseth not."
This also is a very plain statement, is it not? But Job did not stop
here as he did in the 7th chapter, for he continues,
"Till the heavens be no more, they shall not awake, nor be raised out
of their sleep. O that thou wouldst hide me in the grave, that thou
wouldest keep me secret, until the wrath be passed, that thou wouldest
appoint me a set time, and remember me! If a man die, shall he live again?
all the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change
come. Thou shalt call, and I will answer thee: thou wilt have a desire
to the work of thine hands." Chapter xiv, 12-15.
Read again in the 19th chapter, where he is a little more explicit,
commencing at the 23rd verse:
"Oh that my words were now written! oh that they were printed in a
book! That they were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock
forever! For I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand
at the latter day upon the earth: And though after my skin worms
destroy this body, yet in my flesh shall I see God."
Now, in the first place, Job is speaking in regard to what we all seek
in this world, in regard to the common lot of mortals. "Man lieth down,
and riseth not." In saying that Job had no reference to what would
take place in the future. He was speaking of the common experience of
mankind. But afterward, inspired by the spirit of prophecy, he looked
right down to the latter days, in the midst of his afflictions, his
trouble and sorrow, his pain of body and anguish of mind, when his
friends were turned against him—he looked down to the latter days and
wished that his words were written and printed in a book, that the
words were graven in the rock with an iron pen and lead put into them,
that they might stand as a witness to all future generations, as a
testimony to the resurrection of the body and a rebuke to the vain
philosophy of the latter times.
I will now read a verse or two from the book of the Prophet Isaiah, to
show that others of the ancients, besides Job, had some idea of the
doctrine of the resurrection of the dead. In the 19th, 20th and 21st
verses of the 26th chapter of Isaiah we read;
"Thy dead men shall live, together with my dead body shall they arise.
Awake and sing, ye that dwell in dust: for thy dew is as the dew of
herbs, and the earth shall cast out the dead.
"Come, my people, enter thou into thy chambers, and shut thy doors about
thee: hide thyself as it were for a little moment, until the
indignation be overpast.
"For, behold, the Lord cometh out of his place to punish the
inhabitants of the earth for their iniquity: the earth also shall
disclose her blood, and shall no more cover her slain."
Isaiah, you see, had the same spirit as Job. He spoke about the time when
the indignation or wrath of God should pass over the earth, and he
wished to be hidden in the grave until that time was over, and then he
expected the earth to cast out her dead.
I have not time to read the 37th chapter of Ezekiel—you can read it at
home—but in that Chapter we find that the Lord showed Ezekiel a valley
full of dry bones. The Lord asked him whether these bones could live,
and he answered, "Thou knowest." Then the Lord told him to prophesy
upon these bones, and as he prophesied, there was a noise and behold a
shaking, and the bones came together, bone to his bone, the sinews and
the flesh came upon them, and the skin covered them above, but there
was no breath in them. Then the Lord again told them to prophesy, and
he prophesied as commanded, and the breath came into them, and they
lived and stood upon their feet, an exceeding great army. Now, we have
no need to read the writings of the divines of the present time to
find out what this means. Right in the same chapter is given the interpretation.
"These bones are the whole house of Israel: behold, they say, Our
bones are dried, and our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts.
Therefore prophesy and say unto them, Thus saith the Lord God; Behold,
O my people, I will open your graves, and cause you to come up out of
your graves, and bring you into the Land of Israel. * * And shall
put my spirit in you, and ye shall live, and I will place you in your
own land: then ye shall know that I the Lord have spoken it, and
performed it, saith the Lord."
Now, by these testimonies that I have quoted from the Old Testament
scriptures, we find that the people who lived on the earth before
the days of Jesus had some knowledge in regard to the future, in
regard to the condition of the spirit when it left the body, and also
in regard to the resurrection of the body. The wise man Solomon in the
Book of Ecclesiastes 12th chapter and 7th verse, speaking in regard to
death, after giving a very poetical description of the house we live
in, says: "Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the
spirit shall return unto God who gave it." He had some idea in regard
to life after death, although if we read some of his writings we might
gain the idea that man ended when his body was laid down in the
grave.
Now, these doctrines, which were understood by the people before the
days of Christ are the same as believed in by the disciples of Jesus,
the same as Jesus taught. We will take, for instance, Jesus' own
declaration in regard to the resurrection, in which he says: "Marvel
not at this: for the hour is coming, in the which all that are in
their graves, shall hear his voice. And shall come forth; they that
have done good unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done
evil, unto the resurrection of damnation." Or as it reads in the
Prophet Joseph Smith's version, "they that have done good, in the
resurrection of the just, and they that have done evil, in the
resurrection of the unjust." Now, according to Christ's own statement
to his disciples, all that are in their graves are to come forth, both
the righteous and the wicked, just as it is taught in the Book of
Mormon. This is also in accordance with what the Prophet
Daniel—another of those ancients who understood this doctrine—says in
the 12th chapter of his book. He speaks of Michael and the great
trouble that shall come upon the earth in the latter days and says:
"And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake,
some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt."
Daniel understood that there was to be a resurrection both of the just
and the unjust. Now take the 20th chapter of the Book of Revelation,
read it, and you will find the resurrection portrayed to John by
vision when he was on the Isle of Patmos. He says:
"And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given
unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the
witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not
worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark
upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned
with Christ a thousand years. But the rest of the dead lived not again
until the thousand years were finished. This is the first
resurrection. Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the first
resurrection: on such the second death hath no power, but they shall be priests of God and of Christ, and shall reign with him a
thousand years."
And after the thousand years passed away, John saw in the vision the
rest of the dead brought forth. "The sea gave up the dead which were
in it; and death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them:
and they were judged every man according to their works."
The Apostle Paul in writing to the Philippians, 3rd chap., 20-21 v.
says: "Our conversation is in heaven; from whence also we look for
the Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall change our vile body,
that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body." Now, according
to this testimony, the righteous, who look for a part in the first
resurrection, expect to have bodies like the glorious body of the Son
of God. What kind of a body was that? We read that Jesus Christ was
put to death upon the cross; that when he had cried with a loud voice,
he said "Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit," and then gave up
the ghost. The body was placed in a new tomb in which no man had lain,
and to guard the body, lest somebody should come and take it away,
Roman soldiers were placed before the door of the tomb or sepulchre.
But we read that two angels came, before whom these Roman soldiers
fell as dead, and they (the angels) rolled away the stone from the
tomb and the sleeping body of Jesus awakened and came forth. When the
disciples arrived, the body was gone. Mary went into the garden to try
and find out something concerning the body, and while she was weeping,
Jesus appeared unto her. She sprang forward and was about to embrace
him when he said, "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended to my
Father: but go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto my
Father, and your Father; and to my God, and to your God." When the
disciples were informed of this they could not believe it, and they
met together on a certain occasion, and when the doors were shut, for
fear of the Jews, and they found they were securely alone, they began
to talk about the wonderful things that had transpired; about the
death of Jesus, the crucifixion of one whom they thought was to take
the throne and sit upon it in power forever. And we read that while
they were talking Jesus appeared in their midst and said, "peace be
unto you."
"But they were terrified and affrighted, and supposed that they had
seen a spirit. And he said unto them, Why are ye troubled? and why do
thoughts arise in your hearts? Behold my hands and my feet, that it is
I myself: handle me, and see; for a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as
ye see me have. * * *
"And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, he said unto
them, Have ye here any meat? And they gave him a piece of a broiled
fish, and of an honeycomb. And he took it, and did eat before them." Luke
xxiv 36-43.
Now, here was a resurrection of the body. Not the raising of Christ's
spirit, but his body out of the tomb. In that body he appeared before
the disciples, and when they thought it was merely a spirit, he told
them that a spirit had not flesh and bones as they saw him have. The
disciples who had this manifestation told some of the rest. Thomas,
however, would not believe it. He said, "Except I shall see in his
hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the
nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe." After
making use of these foolish remarks, Jesus appeared to Thomas
when he was assembled with the other disciples, and he said unto
Thomas, "Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither
thy hand, and thrust it into my side: and be not faithless, but
believing." Thomas could not help believing then, but Jesus said unto
him, "Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed
are they that have not seen, and yet have believed." Faith is a great
blessing. Some people will not believe anything they cannot grasp with
their human reason or cannot see with their natural eyes. But blessed
is the man of faith, blessed is the woman of faith! For by faith they
can see into things that cannot be discerned by the natural eyes. They
can reach out to the regions of immortality, grasp eternal realities
and lay hold upon the things of God! Now, Jesus appeared in the same
body that was placed in the tomb, and yet it was not the same, there
was a change in it. What change was it? We read that Jesus Christ shed
his blood "for the remission of sins: not for ours only, but for the
sins of the whole world." Jesus was raised up from the dead by the
power of God, and says Paul, "If the Spirit of him that raised up
Jesus from the dead dwell in you, he that raised up Christ from the
dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth
in you." Paul also says, "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of
God." Blood is corruptible, the blood-quickened body is subject to the
law of death. But Christ's body when it was raised from the dead was
"quickened by the spirit." There was a great deal of difference not
only in this respect but in others. When the disciples were shut up in
that room Christ was able to enter it without opening the door, which
could not be done by mortals. He had power to manifest himself to his
disciples, and he had power to cover himself from their gaze. He had
power to overcome the laws of gravity, and on a certain occasion,
after he had visited his disciples, had appeared to 500 brethren at
once, had given instructions to his apostles to build up his church,
as he spoke to them "a cloud received him out of their sight." He was
able to lift himself up from the earth and depart from this sphere to
another; his body was no longer a mortal body, no longer governed by
the same laws as those by which we are governed. We are also told that
"While they looked steadfastly toward heaven as he went up, behold,
two men stood by them in white apparel; Which also said, Ye men of
Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into heaven? this same Jesus, which is
taken up from you into heaven, shall so come in like manner as ye have
seen him go to heaven—Act. i, 9-11." When he shall come again he shall
come in the same body, and we are told in the 14th chapter of
Zechariah that his feet shall stand in that day upon the Mount of
Olives and in the 13th chapter that when the Jews behold him, the
Messiah, whom they have expected so long, they will say, "What are
these wounds in thine hands?" Then he shall answer, "Those with which
I was wounded in the house of my friends." And then every family will
mourn apart; the whole house of Israel will mourn because of the
wickedness of their forefathers in putting him to death. In receiving
him at his second coming they will comprehend the truth of his first
coming, and not before, and they will welcome him as the resurrected Christ.
Now, the Apostle Paul says that "He shall change our vile
body, that it may be fashioned like unto his glorious body." What kind
of bodies will the righteous possess in the resurrection? They are to
be bodies of flesh and bones quickened by spirit; not quickened by
blood, no longer subject to death, pain, or any of the ills of
mortality. This does not look much as if the separation of the spirit
from the body is resurrection. Such a doctrine as that is not
according to the scriptures, it is only "vain philosophy."
Latter-day Saints, beware of this vain philosophy which would rob you
of your faith in the resurrection that is to come. O, what a glorious
hope it brings! Husbands who mourn the loss of their wives, whom they
loved and whom they have placed away in the tomb, shall receive them
again in the resurrection. What a glorious meeting, that is, if they
have been sealed by the holy order of God. Whatever is thus sealed to
them on earth is sealed in heaven. Husbands and wives, those sealed
and united according to the holy order of celestial marriage, will be
joined again in the resurrection. They will come forth out of the tomb
and their bodies will be quickened by the power of the Holy Spirit,
and made glorious like unto the body of the Son of God. They will be
reunited as man and wife forever, and of their increase and of the
extent of their dominion and glory, power and might and majesty, there
shall be no end! Mothers who put away the bodies of their little ones
in the ground in deep sorrow and lamentation shall receive their babes
again to their bosoms. As they were laid down in the grave, so shall
they come forth again in the same stature, the same likeness, nothing
shall be lost, not even a hair of their heads, but they shall be
quickened after the power of an endless life. The Apostle Paul
illustrates this in the 15th chapter of 1st Corinthians. He says: "It
is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption: It is sown in
dishonor; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised
in power: It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.
There is a natural body; and there is a spiritual body." When wheat is
planted in the ground, the seed seems to die. It is said that in the
midst of life we are in death. But in the midst of death there is
life. There is a nucleus of life that is imperishable. There is a germ
within that little kernel of wheat that seems to perish and die, that
is also indestructible, and so with the body planted in the ground.
What is raised, Paul? Is it the spirit raised out of the body? No; it
is the resurrection of the body. That was the testimony the apostles
bore. Their chief testimony was that Jesus was crucified upon the
cross, and that he was raised up from the dead.
But, says one, I cannot see any good of it. What is the use of this
old body after it goes to the ground and mingles with the dust? What
is the use of taking the trouble to bring it up again? How is it
possible? In regard to the possibility, there are a great many things
possible with God that are impossible with man. A few years ago it was
not thought possible for a man to stand in New York and talk to
another in London, but it is done, it is possible, and many things are
done now that were not thought of years ago. Supposing a person who
knows nothing about the properties of the magnet were to visit some of
the big factories in England, he would see in many of them large
quantities of brass and steel filings all mixed together. I
have been in such works and seen that the proprietors are very careful
to allow nothing to go to waste. They sweep up all these filings and
put them in barrels or other receptacles, and by and by some one comes
along with a large magnet and digs it into the mass of mixed filings,
and when it is withdrawn it is seen to be covered with particles of
steel or iron. This is repeated over and over again until all the
steel is separated from the brass. But a person who had no knowledge
of the magnet would naturally think, on seeing these particles all
mixed together, that it would be impossible to separate them. Now, do
you not think that God has more power than man? That he has "magnets"
with properties beyond our present ken? I think he has. I think if God
desires to bring the particles of the human body together, he
understanding their composition, can easily do so. In the beginning he
spake to chaos, and by the power of his faith the worlds were formed.
Faith is a force. It is as much a force as magnetism or electricity.
It is the power by which the universe was framed. God can speak to the
elements of our bodies and bring them forth again according to certain
fixed laws known to him if not to us. Jesus spoke to the winds and
they obeyed him. He walked upon the water. Out of five loaves and two
fishes he made a great feast, "And they took up twelve baskets full of
the fragments, and of the fishes. And they that did eat of the loaves
were about five thousand men." All this was done upon natural
principles, and we would be able to comprehend this if we understood
natural principles thoroughly. And I have no doubt in my own mind,
that when the resurrection shall come, when God shall speak, and we
shall answer, it will be just as natural to bring up our bodies in the
morning of the resurrection as it was for us to lay them down. Why, we
do not understand how it is that they crumble away. Can you explain
the death process, when an individual is taken hold of by some
mysterious power, and the life goes out of him? There is no
brightness to the eye, no beauty on the cheek, no motion to the lip,
all is quiet, cold and lifeless. The body is placed away in the ground
and the particles begin to separate, when, but a little while before
there was something that caused all the particles of that body to
cling together. A change has come, and they all want to get away from
each other. What is the process and who understands it? There are a
great many things we do not understand. This afternoon we are whirling
in space at an immense velocity. The earth is revolving upon its own
axis and traveling around the sun. How is it done? "By the operation
of certain forces." But how did these forces come into operation, what
did they spring from, how are they regulated? Who knows? Who
understands the process of sleeping and waking up again? Here is a
thing that takes place every night. We go to sleep. How do we go to
sleep? I do not know. Sometimes I try to go to sleep and cannot, and
again I try to keep awake and cannot. Sleep is in the likeness of
death, and waking up is in the likeness of the resurrection. I do not
know how it is done, only that it is done by the power of God. It will
be as Job says, God will call and we will answer. The glorious frame
of man, the most beautiful piece of God's workmanship, so "fearfully
and wonderfully made," will come forth in its full perfection and endure throughout all the ages of eternity.
"Well, what is the good of it?" I think that passage in the Book of
Doctrine and Covenants explains it clearly. The Lord through the
Prophet Joseph Smith said that the spirit and the body of man must be
inseparably connected before a fullness of joy can be obtained. Man
must be raised up in an immortal body which cannot be grasped by the
hand of death. The unembodied or disembodied spirit cannot receive the
joys that come through the grosser elements. Spirit ministereth to
spirit, Spiritual things have affinity for that which is spiritual.
There are pleasures which can only flow through the medium of a
material body, and hence the necessity of the resurrection. A perfect
being is an immortal spirit dwelling in an immortal body, and by
affinity with all things, and heaven the key to the heights and depths
and breadths of the universe, is able to draw from every source the
joy and bliss and pleasures and glories, that are the heritage of the
celestial ones who are filled with the fullness of the eternal God. I
am afraid that those vain philosophers who do not want any more to do
with the body after death, will find themselves in the same condition
as those who are spoken of in the vision of Ezekiel to which I have
referred. The Lord declared of them "Behold, they say, Our bones are
dried, our hope is lost: we are cut off for our parts."
There is a great deal in the revelations that God has given to the
prophet Joseph that may not be plain to our minds at the first glance.
Therefore, I would advise my brethren and sisters to read, mark,
learn, and inwardly digest the things that God has placed on record
for our guidance, and let us place our trust in them rather than upon
the vain philosophy and foolishness of men who think they are great
scientists, and imagine that they can reason out the things of God.
Man, by searching, cannot find out God, but He reveals them to the
faithful by his spirit which "searcheth all things, yea the deep
things of God." And if we will take for our guide the laws and
precepts God has given; take the Bible, the Book of Mormon and the
Book of Doctrine and Covenants, which all run together like three
globules of water, and are like the three measures of meal in the
parable, and seek to God Almighty for the gift and power of the Holy
Ghost, that it may be a lamp to our feet and a light to our path, then
we will have manifested unto us those things that are necessary for us
to understand. God has set in the Church in these days, as he did in
olden times, apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers, etc.,
for the work of the ministry and for the perfecting of the Saints, and
if we are guided by the living oracles of the Church, and the power of
the Holy Ghost and the sacred books, we will not go astray, but if we
are guided by the vain philosophy of uninspired men we are almost sure
to get upon the wrong path.
This is the point which I desired to make plain this afternoon—the
glorious doctrine of the resurrection of the body, one of the main
doctrines of the Christian religion. It all hinges on that; for if
Christ is not risen, then is our hope vain. Christ died and was raised
again. So shall we die—perhaps not all of us will sleep in the earth,
for some are to remain and be alive at his coming—but we shall all be
raised, and those who dwell upon the earth when the Lord appears shall
be changed in the twinkling of an eye. The trumpet shall sound
and the dead shall awake, and with those who are living shall be
caught up to meet the Lord. Perhaps this may be the lot of some in
this congregation this afternoon. The day of the Lord is nigh at hand.
Behold he cometh, as the prophets have declared! Not as the babe of
Bethlehem, but as the Lord of power and glory, as the resurrection and
the life! Every word which has been spoken concerning him will be
fulfilled. Christ will appear and he will call the righteous to
himself. They will come forth in the morning of that great "day of the
Lord, that bright and beautiful morning when the Sun of righteousness
shall arise with healing in his wings," and the lambent rays of his
regal glory shall warm the righteous dead to life. But woe unto them
that know not God and obey not the Gospel, for they shall be banished
from the presence of the Lord, and until the millennial day is over
they cannot come forth in their bodies to receive their portion.
May God help us to walk in his ways and keep his commandments, that
we may have a right to a part in the first resurrection, is my prayer
in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.
- Charles W. Penrose