I have listened attentively to the remarks made to us by Brother
Bywater, this afternoon. He has presented to us a great many things
that are true and profitable for us to reflect upon. I always take
pleasure in listening to my brethren when they say something. I take
pleasure in reflecting upon the ideas which they present and in
carrying them to their legitimate conclusion. When we hear a truth
presented to us by the Spirit of the Lord, it is of this nature; that
we are not only instructed in that particular truth for the time
being; but it leads us to reflect upon truths that grow out of or are
connected with it. One truth seems to lead to the contemplation of
other principles, and they to others, until the great field of truth
is open to our view, and we see that we know but very little, but that
there will be an opportunity afforded us to advance and learn that of
which we are now ignorant.
Brother Bywater has to some extent this afternoon drawn the line of
distinction between the faith of the Latter-day Saints and the creeds
of the various denominations, expressing himself to the effect that
whereas each of them take in but a part of the Gospel of Jesus Christ
as de clared in the Scriptures, in their creeds, the Latter-day Saints
embody in their faith the whole of it; that whereas the different
Christian denominations are founded upon some few peculiar ideas and
tenets, the faith of the Latter-day Saints is based upon a broader
foundation—that we take in the whole of the Gospel, the whole of the
revealed will of God to man. This is correct so far as it goes. But
the faith of the Latter-day Saints is not comprehended alone in that
which God has revealed and is placed on record. The creed of the
Latter-day Saints is not comprised by a certain number of tenets; we
are not limited to a certain number of articles of faith; we are not
confined to the things which are laid down in the book called the
Bible, which all the professing Christians of the times declare they
believe. We are not bound up by the Old Testament, nor the New
Testament, nor by both combined. We have received certain principles
that can be found within the lids of the Bible. A great many of our
principles can be found existing among the various Christian
denominations. One sect believes in some things which we believe in;
other sects believe in other things in which we believe. But
there are principles connected with our faith which go over and beyond
and above all that which is comprehended in the Christian world, and
all that which is contained within the lids of the Bible. And yet at
the same time there is nothing in our faith, there is nothing in our
creed, which contradicts that which is in the Bible. There is no
principle in our faith which contradicts anything that can be
demonstrated by known truth. Truth always harmonizes with itself. And
when a person grows in the knowledge of the truth and advances to
higher principles, he does not receive anything that contradicts any
truth he had previously learned, for truth is never discordant with
itself. Truth is eternal; truth, as we have been told this afternoon
is indestructible and never contradicts itself.
The great distinction, as I view it, bringing it down to a small
point, existing between the people called Latter-day Saints and all
other bodies of professing Christians is this: That our creed is
founded upon doctrines and principles and a spirit which have come
from heaven in our own times. The doctrines of our faith, most of them,
can be found laid down in great plainness in the books of the Bible
and were revealed aforetime. Yet we have not received our training,
our ideas concerning them, from the Bible. They have come to us from
heaven direct. Every doctrine and principle of our faith has been sent
down to us in our own times. These doctrines have come by present
revelation. Now in that there is a marked difference between us and
the rest of the people who profess to believe in the Christian
religion. The various sects of modern times draw their creed—or
profess to do so, from the Bible; they take it from the written books;
they do not profess to have received any direct communication from the
heavens. Take all these various sects of modern times and examine into
their different creeds and the foundation of their belief in them, and
you will find that it rests upon the hypothesis of the divinity of the
Old and New Testaments. They trace their doctrines—or profess to do
so—to these books, and they believe in the various doctrines which
exist among them, because they consider that they can find them in
these books. The book is the foundation. The Bible the written word,
the dead letter, is the foundation of all their creeds. Perhaps the
Roman Catholic Church, as it is commonly called, is the only exception
in that respect. But even the Roman Catholic Church, who look to the
Pope as the great earthly head of the Church, do not believe in
present revelation. They did not obtain their creeds through direct
communication with the heavens. Although the Pope professes to be the
direct descendant of St. Peter, he does not even profess to have that
great gift which made Peter a veritable Apostle—that is, the gift of
revelation. Peter received communication from on high; so did his
brethren of the Apostleship. This was the real source of their light;
this was the real power by which they instructed the people. They were
filled with the Holy Ghost, the spirit of revelation; they were in
communication with the great unseen Head of the Church, Jesus, who was
crucified, and had departed from their midst.
But all the various sects that compose modern Christendom more or less
repudiate the idea of present revelation. They do not believe that in
these times man can com mune with his Maker. They believe, to
use one of their favorite expressions, that the awful voice of
prophecy is closed forever; that the canon of scripture is full; and
they believe that when John the Apostle wrote the book of Revelation,
that was the last sacred record committed to man.
Now you see there is a great difference between the whole Christian
world and the Latter-day Saints. Whereas we also believe in the Bible;
whereas we also believe that God inspired holy men of old and that
they wrote as well as spoke by the Holy Ghost: while we believe in the
merits of Jesus, the mediator of the New Covenant, believe in his
atonement, believe in the work he wrought out for the salvation of
mankind; and believe in the teachings of his inspired Apostles, yet we
do not found our faith upon that which is recorded in the sacred book
called the Bible. But our faith is founded upon communications
received in our own times, in the nineteenth century by living
Prophets and living Apostles—by men who today hold that authority
which the men held who wrote the things contained in that book. In
that, then, is a great distinction between us and all the rest of the
Christian world.
And there is another distinction, as I remarked just now; that whereas
these various Christian sects are confined within certain narrow
limits of faith, tied up within a certain number of articles or
principles, our faith is not tied up by any number of tenets. The
revelations which have been given to us at the present time do not
constitute the whole of our creed. True, they constitute our creed so
far as we have advanced today, but we stand ready to receive still
further communication from the same source; the way is still open for
us to receive still further light, further principles, further
admonitions, further counsels, and further plans for the rolling forth
of the great work of God on the face of the earth. So that our
creed—although it is true it can be likened to the blossoming of that
flower which Brother Bywater has so beautifully pictured before us,
but which will fade and fall away—is to me more like the tree of life,
which shall never perish, whose leaves are for the healing of the
nations, whose fruit bears the flavors and the juices of immortality,
whose leaves never crumble or decay, whose roots are grounded in
eternal soil, and that shall never wither and never die. This
everlasting Gospel which we have received is the tree of life that
shall flourish forever. And the same power which has revealed faith,
repentance, baptism, and the laying on of hands, and the holy
Priesthood, and has made known unto us the plan for the redemption of
the living and the dead, and has inspired us to our works up to the
present time, is still ready to communicate line upon line, precept
upon precept, here a little and there a little, that we may be ready
for every emergency, prepared for every event in the work of our God
as it rolls forward on the earth. And when we, as individuals, depart
behind the veil, we shall find the same opportunities there. We shall
not lose the power to receive revelation. Our Priesthood will go with
us. We will continue to grow in the knowledge of correct principles.
That same Holy Spirit which has revealed a few things to us on the
earth, and stamped the truth of them upon our hearts, will continue to
open unto us the great things of the boundless universe; for it is the
spirit of truth, and it will guide into all truth.
This is the condition that the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints is in, and in that respect it stands distinct from
all other bodies of so-called Christians now extant upon the face of
the earth. But in this respect it is exactly the same as the old
Church we read about in the Bible.
The beginning of this great latter-day work was when the Father and
the Son revealed themselves to the Prophet Joseph Smith. God spake
from heaven. God opened up the communication that had been lost for
centuries. Ages had rolled along and there was no voice from above.
But the Lord spake to Joseph saying, "This is My Beloved Son, Hear
Him!" The Lord, the Great God, the Eternal Father, who spake in
ancient times by the Prophets; and in the meridian of time by His Only
Begotten Son, has spoken in this age of the world and has pointed to
His Son as His mouthpiece as standing between him and the inhabitants
of the earth, and this work in which you and I are engaged, is under
the immediate direction of that holy being, our Elder Brother Jesus
Christ, whom we are commanded to hear. We are not to go after the vain
traditions of sects, nor the vagaries of men; we are to "Hear Him!"
God has said so. Every doctrine and every principle that has been
revealed to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has come
from the Father through the Son and by messengers who have been sent
to this world by the Son, and by the power of the Holy Spirit, which
bears witness of the Father and the Son. It is as it was in that
revelation given to St. John on Patmos. Read the first two verses of
the first chapter of the book of Revelation: "The Revelation of Jesus
Christ, which God gave unto him, to show unto his servants things
which must shortly come to pass; and he sent and signified it by his
angel unto his servant John." That is the order. God, our Father, is
the author of all things here upon this earth. He is the developer or
revelator of truth to us. He is the author of our existence and of our
faith; it all comes from Him; but it comes through Jesus Christ; He
stands between us and the Father, and although all things are of the
Father, they come by and through Jesus Christ, the mediator. He sends
others as the Father sent Him. These come and minister to those on the
earth. And the Holy Ghost that proceeds from the Father, that fills
all the immensity of space, that is in all things and through all
things and round about all things, and is "the law by which all things
are governed;" that beareth witness of the truth to all people who
abide by the truth, will quicken them and bring them into communion
with the Father and the Son. And therein lies the beauty of our faith.
Now, this communication that I am speaking of is not confined alone to
those that are called to the Priesthood in this Church; it is not
confined to three or twelve or seventy, or any given number of men, or
to all the men; it belongs to the whole Church, male and female. It is
the spirit of revelation, the spirit of Jesus, which is the spirit of
prophecy. This spirit quickens the whole body. And here again is a
distinction between us and the rest of the world. We cannot only
receive the Holy Spirit to gladden our hearts, to cheer our souls, to
comfort us, to make plain what is written in the books, but also as a
present revelator. Just as the light that comes from the sun streams down to gladden our eyes and make plain the physical objects of
creation, so the light that comes down from the sun of righteousness
is universally diffused in the Church, that every man and every woman
and every child of proper years who has obeyed the ordinances of the
Gospel, may receive of that spiritual light and revelation, each and
all in their own place and for their own purposes as they need.
When I speak of this spirit of revelation, I wish to be clearly
understood. As I have said, each one in his own place is entitled to
the manifestations of the spirit. But the President of the Church, who
is sustained by the voice of the Church and by Divine appointment,
stands as the revelator to the Church. If there is anything to reveal
for the guidance of the Church as an organized body, or for the
comfort and edification of the Church, it will come through the head.
That is clearly laid down in the revelations God has given us, that we
might never be deceived by the revelations of this person or that
person who might claim to have received a Divine message. In the rise
of the Church the Lord said if He had anything to communicate to the
Church as a body, He would reveal it through his servant Joseph. "None
else," said the Lord, "shall be appointed unto this gift except it be
through him; for if it be taken from him, he shall not have power
except to appoint another in his stead. And this shall be a law unto
you, that ye receive not the revelation of any that shall come among
you; And this I give unto you that you may not be deceived, that you
may know they are not of me." But, says one, supposing the head does
not obey the ordinances; supposing he transgresses; suppose he turns
aside and is unfit to receive the revelations of God for the
Church—why, then, the Lord says another shall be appointed in his
stead. Thus we have an order by which we may not be deceived. When we
get any revelation from God to this Church, it will come through the
head of the Church. Yet when a man is called to preside over a portion
of God's Church he may obtain, by the power of the Holy Ghost, a
knowledge of his duties, a knowledge of the wants of the people under
his care, and thus be able to counsel them under circumstances in that
particular sphere. So in a family. A man who has a family, and who has
been ordained to the Priesthood, can have the light of God to guide
him in the interests of his family, that he may know how to rule and
conduct all things properly in that household; but it is not his duty
to dictate to the Ward or to the Stake in which he resides; that
belongs to the constituted authorities; but in his own affairs he may
obtain the revelation that he needs, and so in regard to principle and
doctrine for his own benefit. A man or a woman in this Church is not
tied down to written tenets of faith, but has no right to teach or
attempt to expound that which God Almighty has not given through the
head, although all have the right to receive light and knowledge for
themselves. And I know the way is open. I know the Lord is ready to
hear the prayer of every member of the Church. I know He will hearken
and hear and speak to their souls that which they need in due season.
There is this difficulty sometimes in this Church, however, and the
same difficulty existed in former times. If a person should happen to
grow a little in the knowledge of the truth, and get something
which others may not have received, he may become puffed up in the
vanity of his heart, and think he should be exalted into a high
position. For instance the Lord gives gifts to the Church—the gift of
tongues, the gift of prophecy, the gift of healing, the gift of being
healed, the gift of discernment of spirits, and a great many other
gifts according to the faith desires, and capacities of the Saints. A
person may get a gift and rejoice very much in that gift, but just as
soon as he becomes desirous of displaying it, and wishes to be
considered great among men because of it, just at that moment he is in
danger of being led by a false and delusive spirit, led out of the
strait and narrow path that leads to lives eternal. All these gifts
properly used are for the benefit of the Church. Above all, every
member should enjoy the spirit of revelation. Were it not for this
spirit of revelation we would not be any different from other
churches, this Church would be dead without this divine light, which
indeed is the life thereof.
Now, my brethren and sisters, seeing this is a day of revelation,
seeing we stand in this position before the Lord, seeing the Lord is
nigh to us, that he can hear our prayers, and that he will answer
them, what kind of people ought we to be? Why, we should be a people
ready and anxious to receive every word he may reveal through the
authorities of His Church whom he has appointed to lead, guide and
instruct us. People make a great deal of fuss about the "Mormons."
They say we are led by men. They think we are bound up in chains of
bondage, compelled to do this, that or the other. Why we are of all
people in the world the most free! Sometimes I think we have almost
too much freedom. We have embraced the gospel of liberty, and seeing
that God has placed at its head men to make known how we are to act,
we should be ready and anxious to receive the word of life; and when
we pray for God to sustain the authorities of the Church in their
respective positions, we should be ready and willing to sustain them
ourselves, and receive the word of God revealed through them for our
guidance. And if we were willing to put into actual practice the
things that God has revealed in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants—a
book which contains some of the revelations given in our time—I know
the Lord would reveal more. Just as soon as we are ready to carry out
what has already been revealed, the heavens are ready to reveal more.
We have only received a little of that which is designed to be made
known in the latter days. God is ready to reveal in this great
dispensation all things that were revealed in former times, and many
things that have been hid from the foundation of the world. Well, let
us live up to that which we have received, let us reduce it to daily
practice, and if we have been doing things that are wrong and contrary
to the will of God, let us make up our minds that we will do so no
more, that we will live the lives of Latter-day Saints, doing our
duty, filling the sphere we are called upon to occupy, and we shall
have joy in our labors, God will be near to us, He will be unto us a
Father and a Friend, and we will have all the time a testimony of this
work.
I bear my testimony this afternoon before this congregation—and I am
willing to do so before all the world, if my voice could reach to the
ends of the earth—that I know God lives, that Jesus of Naza reth, who died on Calvary's Mount, is His son; that He has
revealed Himself in our time; that the Holy Ghost, the spirit of
revelation, has spoken to my soul, bearing witness to me of the truth
of this work, and I rejoice that I am a Latter-day Saint.
I pray God to bless us as a worshipping congregation today; that He
will seal upon our hearts the spirit that shall help us to be truthful
and righteous and pure, and that we may always be actuated by the
spirit of revelation, through Jesus Christ. Amen.
- Charles W. Penrose