Having been called upon, my brethren and sisters and friends, to
address you this afternoon, I feel as though I would like to read a
portion of the word of God. I will therefore read to you a part of the
14th chapter of the Book of Revelation, from the Bible known as King
James' translation.
"And I looked, and, lo, a Lamb stood on the mount Sion, and with him a
hundred forty and four thousand, having his Father's name written in
their foreheads.
"And I heard a voice from heaven, as the voice of many waters, and as
the voice of a great thunder: and I heard the voice of harpers harping
with their harps:
"And they sung as it were a new song before the throne, and before the
four beasts, and the elders: and no man could learn that song but the
hundred and forty and four thousand, which were redeemed from the
earth.
"These are they which were not defiled with women; for they are
virgins. These are they which follow the Lamb whithersoever he goeth.
These were redeemed from among men, being the firstfruits unto God
and to the Lamb.
"And in their mouth was found no guile: for they are without fault
before the throne of God.
"And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the
everlasting gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to
every nation, and kindred, and tongue, and people,
"Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the
hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and
earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters.
"And there followed another angel, saying, Babylon is fallen, is
fallen, that great city, because she made all nations drink of the wine of the wrath of her fornication."
It has been charged to the Latter-day Saints that they set but little
value upon the Christian Bible; that they criticize its translation and
the revisions through which it has passed, and that it is our endeavor
to belittle the importance of this holy book. The words which I have
read are a portion of that sacred record which we are charged with
undervaluing, and I choose them as a basis for my remarks, in order to
show how groundless is that charge, with many others, which are made
falsely against this people. The words you have heard include a
prophecy uttered some 1,800 years ago by an Apostle of the Lord Jesus
Christ, one of the Twelve whom He chose in the days of His personal
ministry upon the earth. He had delivered unto them the keys of the
kingdom of heaven, promising them that whatsoever they bound on earth
should be bound in heaven; whatsoever they loosed upon earth should be
loosed in heaven; whosesoever sins they should remit should be
remitted, and whosesoever sins they should retain should be retained.
He gave them power to go forth to all nations and preach the Gospel of
life and salvation, telling them among the last things He said that,
"He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
believeth not shall be damned;" and that certain signs should follow
them that believed. The Apostles went forth baptizing in the name of
the Lord, and confirmed His word by signs, following.
On a certain occasion, towards the close of the career of the Son of
God in the flesh, His disciples asked Him if He would at that time
restore the Kingdom to Israel, and what would be the signs of His
second coming and of the end of the world. Among other things He told
them that this Gospel of the Kingdom should be preached in all the
world as a witness unto all nations and then should the end come. The
Apostles set out upon the mission which had been given them, and we
read in the Acts of the Apostles, and in their Epistles contained
within the lids of this holy book, of the adventures which befell
them, and the persecutions which they endured. It had been said of
them by their Lord and Master, that they should be hated of all men
for His name's sake; but "blessed are ye," said He, "when men
shall
revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil
against you falsely for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad; for
great is your reward in heaven; for so persecuted they the prophets
which were before you." And the day would come, He said, when they
that put His disciples to death would think they were doing God's
service.
Thus were the minds of the Apostles prepared for the fate which
afterwards befell them. They embraced the truth, knowing that it might
cost them their lives; for they had been told that if a man loved his
life, or loved earthly possessions of any kind more than he did his
God, more than he loved the work of that God, he was in no wise fit
for His kingdom. They went into it with their eyes open; they knew
what would befall them; but being men of integrity, men who loved
truth, who based themselves upon principle, and thought more of doing
the will of Him who sent them than they did of doing their own, they
embraced their glorious mission and were willing even to lay down
their lives for the sake of that Kingdom for which they were
laboring. Their expectations were fulfilled. The truth was not
popular. Although devils were subject to these men; although they
performed mighty miracles in the name of Jesus, yet they were
despised, persecuted or ignored by the great mass of humanity. A few
believed in their words; a few rejoiced exceedingly that the Church of
God was established on the earth; that the Savior who had been
promised as a lamb slain from before the foundation of the world, had
at last come in fulfillment of the prophecies of old. Their minds were
prepared to receive Him, and they rejoiced in the work of God.
Churches were formed in different lands. The Apostles went forth from
Jerusalem, after they had been "endued with power from on high," and
built up churches in many of the surrounding nations, perhaps in all
the nations that then existed. But although they were successful in
planting the tree of life upon the soil of a fallen world, it seems
that the time had not come for it to remain there and bear fruit
throughout the ages of eternity. It was destined to be uprooted, and
there was to come another time when the truth should be transplanted
once more, and should bear the fruits of righteousness forever. The
glory of God was not destined in that day to cover the earth, as He
has said it would in the latter days, "as the waters cover the mighty
deep." The Apostles labored faithfully; they went forth baptizing in
the name of the Father and the Son, and the Holy Ghost; but the power
of sin, the power of the evil one was so great that it did not please
the Almighty to establish upon the earth in that day a work which
should endure forever. He permitted it for a wise purpose to be thrown
down, and of this fact we are well assured by the prophecies of the
Apostles which they have left on record. Paul, one of the most
faithful laborers in the vineyard of our Lord in that day, said the
time would come when the people would not endure sound doctrine; but
after their own lusts should heap unto themselves teachers, and having
itching ears, should turn away their ears from the truth, and should
be turned unto fables.
If we follow the history of the Apostles, we will see how their words
were fulfilled. Nearly every one of the Twelve whom Jesus chose, met
with a tragic death in defense of the principles which they
proclaimed. Some were dragged to death, some beheaded, one was
crucified with his head downward, others were thrown into cauldrons of
boiling oil and others to wild beasts; so that at the end of the
second century after Christ, the Church of God in its purity no longer
existed upon the face of the earth. It had been torn asunder; it had
apostatized from the truth; they who were faithful had been put to
death, and in their place sprang up a race of compromisers, who were
willing to barter away to the world the principles of truth, being too
weak and cowardly to stand and die for their convictions as their
fellow laborers had done. They were willing to give up this principle,
and concede that point, to amalgamate for the purpose of making them
popular and palatable the doctrines of the pure Christian faith with
the pagan ideas of ancient Rome. So that the temporal body of Christ,
the Church, became corrupt, deformed by this departure from first
principles. Apostles, Prophets, were done away with; spiritual gifts
became extinct and were said to be no longer needed; Bishops were put
into the places of Apostles, and a multitude of new offices,
unknown to the original church, were created. Finally two Bishops
appeared, the Bishop of Rome and the Bishop of Constantinople,
contending as to which was the greatest, and striving, in a Church
professing to regard unity and brotherly love, to divide the dominions
of the Christian world between them. More attention was paid to
outward forms, to grand and imposing ceremonies, than to the simple
beautiful principles of the Gospel, and, in course of time were
fulfilled the words of Isaiah, who said that they would "transgress
the law, change the ordinances, and break the everlasting covenant."
The result of this widespread departure, this apostasy from the
primitive faith, was the withdrawal of the power of the Priesthood,
typified by the "manchild" of the Apocalypse, which was taken into the
heavens to preserve it from the mouth of the Dragon which sought its
life; there to remain until a more auspicious time should arrive for
the establishment of the work of God, and the winding up of the great
plan of human redemption.
But one of these original Apostles was left. The Latter-day Saints are
taught that Jesus, on a certain occasion, speaking to the Twelve,
wished to bestow upon them each a gift, to grant the desire of their
hearts, and He asked them what they would He should do for them. They
all but one requested to be taken home to Him in heaven when they
should have filled the allotted age of man. But one turned away
sorrowful, feeling that the wish he cherished in his heart was too
great to be granted. Peter asked the Savior, "What shall this man do?"
and received the reply, "If I will that he tarry till I come what is
that to thee?" "Then went this saying abroad among the brethren that
that disciple should not die." It is vaguely given, I admit, in the
Bible from which I have quoted, but modern revelation has made it
plainer, and shown us that the Apostle John obtained a promise from
the Savior that he should remain upon the earth to witness the
downfall and the rise of nations, that he should live to perform a
mighty mission in the midst of the children of men; that he should
prophesy before kings and rulers, and should tarry upon the earth
until the Son of God came in His glory. This Apostle was the only one
who escaped the tragic fate of his fellows. He was the only one of the
original Twelve who was not put to death. An attempt was made upon his
life by throwing him into a cauldron of boiling oil, but he escaped
miraculously, and his enemies, not having the power to put him to
death, banished him to the desert island of Patmos. It was during his
exile upon this lonely spot, that God condescended to reveal to him
what should come to pass in the last days, and the book which is
called the Apocalypse is a record which the Apostle left of the great
things that were shown him, and which he should remain upon the earth
to see. An angel appeared unto him; John mistook him, it seems, for
the Lord, and fell down at his feet to worship him, his person was so
glorious. But the angel reproved him and said, "See thou do it not:
for I am thy fellowservant and of thy brethren the prophets." Here
was one of the prophets who had been slain for the testimony of Jesus,
who was so glorious when he appeared that John, who perhaps had
labored with him, did not recognize him. He had been sent unto
him to show him what should come to pass thereafter.
But not only was John shown what should occur after the time in which
he was living, but he was shown what had already taken place; not as
the imperfect records of profane history have given it to us, but he
saw it typified in its fullness. The events of the seven thousand
years of the world's temporal existence passed before him, like the
scenes of a mighty panorama. If you will read the book which he left,
you will there find portrayed symbolically each of the seven thousand
years. He saw the events which had followed the creation down until
one period had passed; he then saw the events of the second thousand
years or until two periods had passed, and then the third and the
fourth periods at the end of which Jesus came as the Savior of
mankind, to perform a personal work in the flesh. John saw, further,
the events of the fifth thousand years. He saw the great apostasy that
was to take place in the Christian church, when they put to death
every inspired man; when they did away with the gifts and blessings of
the Holy Ghost; when they said they were no longer necessary; when
they engrafted upon the olive tree of the Christian faith the wild
branches of paganism. He saw all this taking place down to the sixth
thousand years, and after the world had wandered in darkness for
centuries, he says:
"And I saw another angel fly in the midst of heaven, having the
everlasting Gospel to preach unto them that dwell on the earth, and to
every nation and kindred, and tongue, and people,
"Saying with a loud voice, Fear God, and give glory to him; for the
hour of his judgment is come: and worship him that made heaven, and
earth, and the sea, and the fountains of waters."
Showing conclusively, as well as language can show, that this was to
be an event of the last days—the hour of God's judgment, which
Christianity itself, in its perverted state, will admit is at the end
of the world. John saw the angel restoring the Gospel shortly before
the hour of God's judgment, saying with a loud voice to all nations,
kindreds, tongues and peoples—not only to the heathen nations, but to
those who professed to have the true Christian faith—"Fear God, and
give glory to him, for the hour of his judgment is come." This to us
is another proof of the apostasy of the Christian world; for if they
had the truth, as they claim, by apostolic succession, from St. Peter
down to the present day—what need of restoring the Gospel in its
fullness to preach to them? It would be superfluous, unnecessary, a
work of supererogation, to preach to those who were living in the full
blaze of Gospel light, and call upon them to repent of their sins.
I never like to wound people's feelings in regard to religious
matters. I never like to have my own feelings wounded. I try to have
charity for the sincere sentiments of all men; but it is needful that
the truth be spoken in plainness. It is no act of friendship to
flatter, to deceive and to gloss over error, when by exposing it the
souls of some honest people may be saved. The Latter-day Saints erect
a nobler structure before they tear down that which is old. They do
not wish to ridicule the opinions of their fellow creatures, it should
never be done except where good will be the result. All men have the
right to believe as they please. They have a right to worship
where, how and what they please. God has made us free. We are in
bondage to no man, to no power. His children, from the rising to the
setting of the sun have been made free. Therefore I do not feel to
ridicule the religion of my Christian friends; but I desire to lay
before them and before this congregation the religion of the
Latter-day Saints. We claim that the Christian world is in a state of
apostasy, and though thousands and millions of them are perfectly
sincere—just as sincere in their belief as we are in ours—still, it
devolves upon me as a servant of God to preach what I know to be the
truth, and you can take your choice whether you accept or reject it.
The responsibility ends with me here; it is assumed by those who
listen, who can act as they feel led; they will be accountable whether
they give heed to the warning message, or whether they ignore and
reject it.
At any rate John saw the time when an angel would come and restore the
everlasting Gospel—not another Gospel, not various kinds of gospels,
not the precepts and fables of men, but the good, old, "sound
doctrine" of ancient times. The Gospel of Christ in its fullness was
to be preached to all the nations of the earth. What for? To fulfill
the prediction of the son of God, who said that "this Gospel of the
kingdom" —that Gospel which had Apostles to preach it and Prophets;
which had gifts and miracles and signs following; a gospel of faith,
repentance, baptism by immersion for the remission of sins, and laying
on of hands for the gift of the Holy Ghost, and other principles to be
revealed one after another as fast as the people were able to receive
them—that this old original Gospel of the kingdom should come back to
the earth to be preached as a witness unto all nations, and then
should the end come.
That these are the last days very few people will deny. The earth has
almost fulfilled its mortal probation, its working time. It is closing
the six thousand years of its temporal history. It has worked nearly
six days; for "a day with the Lord is as a thousand years." When God
said to Adam, "in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."
He did not mean a short day of twenty-four hours, a day made by one
little revolution of the little earth upon which we dwell, but it was
a day of a thousand years, corresponding to one revolution of the
great and mighty planet upon which God our Father dwells. "In the day
that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die." Adam lived to the age
of 930 years, so that he died within the day that God had reference
to. The earth has labored nearly six days—six days of one thousand
years each. It is yet to have its sabbath, its millennium of peace,
when the Savior of the world will come to take the reins of
government, to reign upon the earth King of kings as He now reigns
king of Saints; the seventh period, whose dawn is almost upon us, is
the sabbath, the day of rest which God has ordained for the planet
upon which we live, and He will celebrate that sabbath by coming in
person to reign upon the earth over all nations. It is for this that
the Latter-day Saints are preparing; having fulfilled, as the
instruments of God, the prediction of John the Revelator; an angel in
this day having restored the Gospel, which is now being preached as a
witness unto all nations, and then shall the end come.
It is a merciful characteristic of our Heavenly Father that He brings
to pass upon the human family no event affecting their eternal
welfare, but He first sends Prophets to prepare the way, to give the
people a warning that such and such things are coming to pass, that
they may be prepared for them and not be caught napping by the
suddenness of their coming, even as a thief in the night. We read that
as it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be in the days of the
coming of the Son of Man. What was done in the days of Noah? A
prophet—Noah himself—was raised up and sent forth to preach a warning
message to the children of men. What was his warning? That the world
was about to be deluged. Its sins had cried unto heaven, and God had
remembered its iniquities. He was about to baptize the earth in water,
to wash away its sins, that they should no longer smoke to heaven, an
offering of wrath to an offended God. Noah preached this warning, and,
as usual, was met with ridicule and scorn. Never did a prophet come
forth that was not ridiculed and persecuted, and the message that he
proclaimed considered foolishness by the wisdom of the world. But how
did it result? Did the superior (?) wisdom of the world in that day
save them from the truth of the words of Noah? Or did God stand by
that prophet? Did He make good His words? Did He drown the world? Did
He sweep the wicked from its surface? History will tell you what took
place. It sees that Noah and the few souls that clung to him were
right, and the world at large were in the wrong. Noah had really
received a revelation from God. He was pointed at, despised and
derided, doubtless called visionary and fanatic, an old fool, or
anything else; but he had received a revelation and God made good the
words which he proclaimed.
The earth underwent a baptism by being immersed in water, for the
remission of its sins, the washing away of its iniquities. "As it was
in the days of Noah, so shall it be in the days of the coming of the
Son of Man." Is the world to be deluged in water again? No; because
God gave a promise to Noah and set his bow in the clouds as a sign
that the world should never again be drowned in water; but in the day
of the coming of the Son of Man it will receive the baptism of fire
and of the Holy Ghost. John the Baptist said: "There cometh one
mightier than I, after me, the latchet of whose shoes I am not worthy
to stoop down and unloose. I indeed have baptized you with water: he
shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire." Not only man,
but the earth itself, which is a living creature, must undergo this
ordinance—this dual baptism, and Jesus, when He comes in the clouds of
heaven with power and great glory, to take vengeance upon those who
know not God, who have not sought to know Him, who have persecuted His
people, and set aside the Gospel as a thing of naught, will deluge the
earth with fire and the Holy Ghost. Then will the Scriptures be
fulfilled which say that the glory of God shall radiate from the
rivers to the ends of the earth.
Nor is this all. The earth and its elements will melt, as Peter the
Apostle said, "with fervent heat, and all the proud, yea, and all that
do wickedly shall be stubble: and the day that cometh shall burn them
up, saith the Lord of hosts." These things are coming to pass. God
only has to turn upon this world the glory of His presence to
consume it from before His face and cause it to vanish like chaff in a
flame. We are not prepared for the glory of His coming. But this work
which has been established in our day, is one that will prepare us for
His glorious advent. All who believe and are baptized into this Church
have been promised the gift of the Holy Ghost. What is the Holy Ghost?
It is the Spirit of God. God dwells in the pure element of fire; it is
the atmosphere which the holy angels, the spirits of the just, the
Gods in eternity breathe and live within, but which would consume us
if we came too suddenly upon it, or it upon us. We must needs approach
it gradually. We read that in the days of Moses, when God wished to
commune with him, He called him up into a high mountain, and filled
him with the Holy Ghost. Moses, therefore, could endure His presence;
but when he came down from the Mount his face shone like an angel's,
and he had to put a veil upon it lest the children of Israel should be
consumed before him. This shows what we may expect when God comes in
the clouds of heaven, if we do not rid ourselves of iniquity and
prepare our souls to meet Him. But ere that day comes there shall be
wars and rumors of wars, thunders and lightnings, famines and
pestilences; the sea shall heave itself beyond its bounds, and all
things shall be in commotion; the sun shall be darkened, the moon
shall be turned to blood, and the stars shall fall from heaven like
figs from off a fig tree. The judgments of God shall stalk through the
earth, decimating the human race, before the great day of the Lord
shall come.
Are we to suppose that in a day like this, when such mighty and
terrible things are coming upon the earth, God would leave the world
in darkness; that he would shut the heavens, as our Christian friends
say He has done; and send forth no more prophets to prepare us for
these great events which are at our doors? I for one would have a very
poor opinion of a God who would leave His children in that cruel
manner. But the God we worship is just and merciful. He never brings
upon the earth any judgment but He sends first a warning message to
prepare the people for its coming.
This is our warning today—that the Gospel of the kingdom is being
preached unto all nations as a witness, and then the hour of God's
judgment, or the predicted end of the world shall come. It is a
message of mercy, not one of anger, not one of cruelty. It is not
cruel to tell men the truth. If we see a man on the brink of a
precipice and tell him that if he takes another step forward he will
be dashed to pieces, is that cruelty, or is it charity of the truest
kind? It may humiliate him to be told of his danger; it may cast
reflection upon his eyesight; he may not see the precipice; men do not
always see things which are immediately near them; they who are at a
distance sometimes observe the danger first and give warning. It is
not uncharitable, it is not intolerant to tell men the truth; we must
sometimes be cruel in order to be kind; and hurt men's feelings if
necessary in order to save their souls. I do not mean the saving of
their souls by the killing of their bodies. Heretics used to be
punished on that theory. The object of "Mormonism" is to save the body
and the spirit, which together constitute the soul.
This is the message we bring, the olive branch that we extend to the
world, and for so doing we are despised and persecuted and trampled
upon. But we know that we need expect no different fate from that
which our predecessors have experienced. They laid down their lives in
preaching this same Gospel. We must be willing to lay down ours, if
need be, to establish these truths upon the earth.
God does not punish except to save, He never chastens except to
purify. In sweeping the antediluvian races from the earth, it was an
act of mercy to them, that they might not add sin to sin and heap up
iniquity until they could not have been pardoned. He swept them off
when their cup was full, and imprisoned their spirits while their
bodies moldered in the grave. Jesus, however, while His body was
lying in the tomb, went and preached to the spirits in prison; those
who rejected the message that was offered to them by Noah, and were
swept away by the flood. So it will be in this day, if this message is
rejected; God will bring judgments upon the world until He has humbled
the people to a state where they will be glad to receive it. He says
to His Elders: Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every
creature; and after your testimony, comes the testimony of earthquakes
and tempests, of thunders and lightnings, of the sea heaving itself
beyond its bounds, of wars and rumors of wars, of famine and
pestilence. Says He, the time shall come when he that will not take up
his sword against his neighbor must needs flee unto Zion for safety,
for there shall be gathered to it of every nation under heaven, and
they shall be the only people who are not at war one with another.
It is that the world may escape these terrible judgments and plagues
that will desolate the wicked, that we put our lives and liberties in
jeopardy in preaching that which is unpopular, and which brings upon
us the wrath and hatred of the world. We desire, as much as men can
desire, the salvation of our fellow men. Our mission is to save, not
to condemn. This is the Gospel of salvation, not a Gospel of
damnation. Damnation follows as a necessary alternative of the
rejection of the truth. Men who reject the truth damn themselves. The
man who will shut the door in his own face keeps himself out from the
Kingdom: it is nobody's fault but his own. The waters of life are
free; come and partake of them, without money and without price! If
you will not partake of them, how can you blame anyone but yourself
if you die of thirst in the desert? If you put out the light by
persecuting the Saints of God, how can you blame anybody but yourself
if you are left in darkness? Could the ancients blame God for taking
His Church from the earth, when they took every pains to exterminate
it? They destroyed the body of the Church, and the spirit departed,
just as naturally as when the body of a man is killed; his spirit has
no longer any business upon the earth. It returns to God who gave it,
to come again at a more auspicious time, with the Son of God in clouds
of glory, provided it be one of the 144,000 faithful ones who follow
the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.
If condemnation follows the rejection of the Gospel, God cannot help
it, His servants cannot help it. If we invite men to come out into the
sunlight and they prefer to stay in the shade, who is to blame but
themselves? They prefer darkness to light. They have their
choice. Light has burst forth in the midst of darkness, but the
darkness comprehendeth it not. Men love darkness rather than light,
because their deeds are evil. If, however, we extend the message of
mercy and of peace, our responsibility ends. Men will be judged by the
light they possess. The heathen nations will be redeemed and will
obtain a higher exaltation than those who receive the truth and turn
away from it, or refuse to accept it when it is offered to them. God
is merciful to ignorance and lack of opportunity; but responsibility
rests like a mountain upon those who hear the truth and then reject
it.
My testimony to this congregation is that Joseph Smith was a Prophet
of the living God; that Brigham Young was a Prophet of God; that John
Taylor is their legally ordained successor; that there are Prophets
and Apostles in this Church today; that we preach the same Gospel
that was preached in the days of Paul, for if we preached any other we
should be accursed. My testimony is that "Mormonism" stigmatized and
hated as it is, is the fullness of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the
only plan of life and salvation, the only one that will exalt man in
the presence of God; and the world reject it to their condemnation. I
pray God to bless this congregation, and grant that the words I have
spoken may sink into some honest hearts, like good seed upon fertile
soil, to spring forth and bear fruit for their salvation to the honor
and glory of God. Amen.
- Orson F. Whitney