The remarks which have been made to us this afternoon by Bishop
Preston are of a practical nature and calculated to lead our minds to
reflection upon our duties as Latter-day Saints.
The religion of God is a practical religion, and God is a real and
practical being. It has been stated by one of our leading men that God
is "a business God," and many remarks have been made concerning that
expression by persons opposed to us, with the desire of turning it to
ridicule. It has not been stated by any of our brethren that God is
only a business God, but the remark was made with reference to some of
his attributes and of His works. The people of the present day who
profess to believe in God, generally speaking, have very little idea
in regard to what He is. They consider that He is incomprehensible.
Their ideas concerning Him are very vague, and the attempts which have
been made to explain God to the children of men, by persons who claim
to be teachers of religion, and to have authority to speak in the name
of the Lord, are of such a char acter that no one can understand them.
The reason of this is because those persons who have attempted to make
an explanation have not understood the subject themselves; and when a
person does not understand a thing it is very difficult for him to try
and make somebody else understand it. Now, I do not pretend to say
that there is anybody living who fully and entirely comprehends God;
but there are many people living who have some definite ideas
concerning Him, concerning His attributes, concerning His ways,
concerning His will; and what they understand they are at liberty to
declare and to try and make other people understand, particularly if
they are called upon by the Lord, and authorized by Him so to do.
People very frequently refer to that passage of Scripture which says:
"God is a spirit," and as their notions concerning what spirit is, are
not very clear, that passage of Scripture does not make very plain to
their understanding what God is. People, generally speaking, have an
idea that spirit is something intangible, something that cannot be comprehended, nor seen, nor handled; that it is far different in
every respect from anything that is material; in fact, the
philosophers and theologians call spirit "immaterial substance." Now,
this is for want of knowing better. Men in these times, like men in
former days, have tried to find out God and the things of God by human
wisdom and learning, and they have failed: for "man by searching," the
Scripture says, "cannot find out God." But God can manifest Himself to
man; and if God chooses to make Himself manifest to His children they
can measurably comprehend Him. But in their mortal state, in this
state of probation in which we live, mankind cannot fully grasp Deity
to comprehend Him as He is in His majesty, and might, and power and
glory; but, as I said, they can measurably comprehend God when He
manifests Himself to them, and they can understand Him to the extent
that He manifests Himself to them.
According to the book called the Bible, God the Eternal Father has
manifested Himself at different times to individuals living upon the
face of this earth, and according to the testimony of the Latter-day
Saints, God has manifested Himself in this age of the world in a
similar way to men whom He called and appointed to act in His name;
and from what we read of God's revelations in former days as well as
in latter days, we learn that He is a person, an individual: that He
is not a myth, not an imaginary being, but a reality, and that He is
in the form and likeness of man, or in other words, that man is made
in the image of God. In the opening book of the Bible, in the very
first chapter of that book, we read: "And God said, Let us make man in
our image, after our likeness. * * * * So God created man in His
own image, in the image of God created he him; male and female created
he them." God is a spirit; but it does not follow that because God is
a spirit, He has no form, no shape, no extent, no limit; or that He
can be, as an individual, in every place at the same time, as many
people imagine. We are told that God dwells in heaven, and when Jesus
Christ was upon the earth He always taught His disciples that their
Father was in heaven. He said that as He came from the Father so He
was going back to the Father. This individual, then, has a location, a
place of residence. He occupies a certain position, He dwells in the
heavens, and He made man in His image, in His likeness. Jesus, we are
told, was in the "express image" of His Father's person. When He was
upon the earth He came to represent His Father, and we are told
concerning Him, "Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery
to be equal with God." And the Apostle Paul, who makes this
declaration, advised his brethren to have the same mind in them that
was in Christ Jesus:
"Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus:
"Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal
with God:
"But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a
servant, and was made in the likeness of men:
"And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became
obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.
"Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him, and given him a name
which is above every name:
"That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in
heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth;
"And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to
the glory of God the Father.—Philippians 2:5-11."
Now Jesus, who was in the form of God, was only one of the sons of
God. He called His disciples His brethren, and He impressed upon them
the great fact that His Father was their Father, that His God was
their God, that He was one of them. When He returned, or was about to
return to the Father, with His resurrected body, He told Mary to tell
His disciples that He was going to ascend to His Father and their
Father, to His God and their God.
In the Old Testament, which gives accounts of God's occasional
manifestations of His presence to men upon the earth, we find that
they all saw Him as a person, with the form of a man. Moses talked
with Him face to face. Nadab and Abihu and seventy Elders of Israel,
with Moses and Aaron, went up in the mount.
"And they saw the God of Israel: and there was under his feet as it
were a paved work of a sapphire stone, and as it were the body of
heaven in his clearness. And upon the nobles of the children of Israel he laid not
his hand: also they saw God, and did eat and drink. [Exodus xxiv, 10,
11.]"
I might refer to a number of passages of Scripture in the Old
Testament, showing that whenever God appeared to man, manifesting
Himself to man, He appeared in the form of a man. We are told
repeatedly in the Scriptures that the children of men are the sons of
God. He is the Father and God of the spirits of all flesh. The spirit
of man, which inhabits his body, and which is the life of the body in
addition to the blood—blood being the life of the flesh, but the
spirit animated all—comes from God, and is the offspring of God.
Because of this, we understand what is said in 1 John, iii, 2:
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what
we shall be: but we know that, when he shall appear, we shall be like
him; for we shall see him as he is."
God, then, the God of the Bible, who is called Jehovah, the person who
manifested Himself to Israel as Jehovah, is an individual, a
personality, and He made man in His image and His likeness. Now, if we
are the children of God, and if Jesus Christ is the Son of God, we can
upon that reasoning understand something about what God is like, for
there is an eternal principle in heaven and on earth, that every seed
begets of its kind, every seed brings forth in its own likeness and
character. The seed of an apple, when it is reproduced, brings forth
an apple, and so with a pear, and so with a plum, and so with all the
varieties of the vegetable kingdom. It is the same with all the
varieties of the animal kingdom. The doctrine of evolution, as it is
called, is true in some respects—that is, that species can be
improved, exalted, made better, but it remains of the same species.
The advancement is in the same line. It is unfoldment. We do not find
any radical change from one species to another. It is an eternal
principle that every seed produces its own kind, not another kind. And
as we are the children of God, we can follow out the idea and perceive
what God our Father is, the Being who is the progenitor of our
spiritual existence, the being from whom we have sprung. We
being the seed of God, that Being is a personality, an individual, a
being in some respects like us, or rather we are made in His image.
"Man also is spirit," we are told in the revelations of God to the
Latter-day Saints. Man, the real man, is a spirit, an individual that
dwells in a body, a spiritual person clothed upon with earth; a being
who will live when the earth goes back to mother dust. Man's spirit,
then, is an individual, a personality, and the spirit is in the
likeness and shape of the body which it inhabits. When the spirit goes
out of the body there is a person, a perfectly formed individual,
looking like the body which we now see with our natural eyes. Spirits
living in the flesh, unless operated upon abnormally by some spiritual
influence, cannot see spiritual beings. A spirit can see spirit.
Spirit ministers to spirit; and when the spirit goes out of the body
that spirit can see other spirits, beings of the same character and
nature, and we shall find when we have emerged from this body, that we
will be in the company of a great many persons like ourselves; and if
we should have the experience that the Prophet Joseph had when the mob
took him and tore his flesh with their nails, and tried to poison him
with a vial of some corrosive substance, if our spirits should be
separated from our bodies as his was, we, like him, could look at our
bodies and see that they are in form like our living spiritual
realities.
"The body without the spirit is dead." The spirit without the body is
not dead; that is a real personality, a living individual, and the
body of flesh is but a house to dwell in or a covering for it to wear;
not essential to its existence, but essential to its progress,
essential to its experience on the earth and ultimately in its
glorified condition, essential to its eternal happiness, and progress
and power in the presence of the Father.
While our Father, then, is a person, an individual, it may be asked:
"How can He be here, there and everywhere at the same time?" Well, He
is not, in His personality; but He can be omnipresent in a certain
sense. There is a spirit, an influence, that proceeds from God, that
fills the immensity of space, the Holy Spirit, the Light of Truth. As
the sun itself, a planet or heavenly body, is not present in any other
place except that which it actually occupies, so the individual Father
occupies a certain locality; and as the light that proceeds from the
sun spreads abroad upon all the face of the earth and lights up other
planets as well as this earth, penetrating to the circumference of an
extended circle in the midst of God's great universe, so the light of
God, the Spirit of God, proceeding forth from the presence of God,
fills the immensity of space. It is the light and the life of all
things. It is the light and the life of man. It is the life of the
animal creation. It is the life of the vegetable creation. It is in
the earth on which we stand; it is in the stars that shine in the
firmament; it is in the moon that reflects the light of the sun: it is
in the sun, and is the light of the sun, and the power by which it was
made; and these grosser particles of light that illuminate the heavens
and enable us to behold the works of nature, are from that same Spirit
which enlightens our minds and unfolds the things of God. As that
light comes forth from the sun, so the light of God comes to us. That natural light is the grosser substance or particles of the same
Spirit.
Spirit is a substance, it is not immaterial; it may have some
properties that are different from that which we see and handle, which
we call matter, but it is a reality, a substantial reality. And spirit
can understand spirit and grasp spirit. A spiritual person can take
the hand of another spiritual person and it is substantial. A person
in body could not grasp a spirit, for that spirit has different
properties to those of our bodies, and it is governed by different
laws to those that govern us in this sphere of mortality. A spiritual
substance, organized into form, occupies room and space just as much
in its sphere as these natural particles occupy in this sphere.
God our Father, then, is a person, an individual, and He really is our
Father, actually and literally. We sprang from Him. He is the Father
of our spirits, and not only the Father of the spirits of the
Latter-day Saints, but the Father of the spirits of latter-day
sinners. He is the God and the Father of the spirits of all flesh. Not
only those that now dwell on the earth, but all people who dwelt
aforetime; all people who ever lived upon the face of this planet, are
the children of God. And so with people who dwell upon other planets,
they are the offspring of God. And our Father and our God is an
individual, a personality; He is a spirit, and they that worship Him
must worship Him in spirit and in truth; but He dwells in a
tabernacle, in a body, though that body is different from our bodies,
it being a spiritual body. It is quickened by spirit. Our bodies are
quickened by that corruptible substance which we call blood; but our
Heavenly Father's body is quickened by spirit. It is not governed by
the same laws as those by which earthly bodies are governed. It is a
body something similar to that which Jesus had after His resurrection.
Jesus Christ, when He rose from the dead, had the same body that He
had upon the earth, but a change had been wrought upon it. He had shed
His blood for the remission of sins. This body was quickened by
spirit. "He was put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the
Spirit;" so we are told in the Scriptures, and He was raised up from
the dead by that Spirit. Paul says, in his Epistle to the Romans, viii
ch. 11 v.:
"But 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."
Jesus Christ's body was put in the sepulchre a natural body; it was
raised a spiritual body. It was placed there in weakness; it was
raised in strength. It was a mortal body when placed in the sepulchre;
but when it came forth quickened by spirit, it was no longer a
natural or mortal body, it was a spiritual and an immortal body; and
with that immortal body He ascended from the earth. It was no longer
bound by the laws of earthly gravitation, as it was before. He stood
upon the mount of Olives, in the presence of His disciples, and
ascended up to heaven from their midst and disappeared from their
view. He could manifest Himself to them, and then take Himself away
from their gaze. He could enter the room when the doors were shut, as
He did in the case when His disciples gathered in secret for fear of
the Jews, and manifest Himself to them. And yet at the same time His body was tangible, and the unbelieving Thomas could reach
forth his hand and thrust it into His side, and put his fingers into
the prints of the nails. But this body was a glorious body, "the
glorious body of the Son of God," and it was in the fashion and
likeness of the glorious body of His Eternal Father. It was a
celestial body quickened by the celestial glory. And if we wish to
attain to the Heavenly kingdom we must walk in the ways of life, and
sanctify ourselves before God, as Jesus did, so that the influence and
power of the celestial kingdom can be with us. Then, in the
resurrection, when we come forth from the grave, we shall be quickened
also by the operation of the celestial glory and receive of the same,
even the fullness thereof, and be made like unto Jesus Christ, and
thus become like unto God the Father.
As I have previously explained, God is not everywhere present
personally, but He is omnipresent in the power of that spirit—the Holy
Spirit—which animates all created things; that which is the light of
the sun, and of the soul as well as the light of the eye, that which
enables the inhabitants of the earth to understand and perceive the
things of God. As the light of the sun reveals natural objects to our
eyes, so the spirit that comes from God, with a fitting place to
occupy and conditions to operate in, reveals the things of God. We see
natural things by the light of the sun. We see spiritual things by
spiritual light, and he that is spiritual discerneth all things and
judgeth all things, and he that is not spiritual cannot comprehend
spiritual things. They are foolishness to him. And while the Saints of
God, quickened by the spirit which they have obtained through
obedience to the Gospel, can comprehend these things of which I am
speaking and discern their meaning and signification, those that are
wicked and corrupt and obey not the ordinances of God, cannot see
these things nor comprehend them as they are, but they are foolishness
to them.
But, if God is an individual spirit and dwells in a body, the question
will arise, "Is He the Eternal Father?" Yes, He is the Eternal Father.
"Is it a fact that He never had a beginning?" In the elementary
particles of His organism, He did not. But if He is an organized
Being, there must have been a time when that being was organized.
This, some one will say, would infer that God had a beginning. This
spirit which pervades all things, which is the light and life of all
things, by which our heavenly Father operates, by which He is
omnipotent, never had a beginning and never will have an end. It is
the light of truth; it is the spirit of intelligence. We are told in
the revelations of God to us that, "Intelligence or the light of truth
never was created, neither indeed can be." And we are told further,
that this Spirit, when it is manifest, is God moving in His glory.
When we look up to the heavens and behold the starry worlds, which are
kingdoms, we behold God moving in His Majesty and in His power. Now,
this Spirit always existed; it always operated, but it is not
understood, and cannot be comprehended except through organisms. If
you see a living blade of grass you see a manifestation of that Spirit
which is called God. If you see an animal of any kind on the face of
the earth having life, there is a manifestation of that Spirit. If you
see a man you behold its most perfect earthly manifestation. And if
you see a glorified man, a man who has passed through the various grades of being, who has overcome all things, who has been
raised from the dead, who has been quickened by this spirit in its
fullness, there you see manifested, in its perfection, this eternal,
beginningless, endless spirit of intelligence.
Such a Being is our Father and our God, and we are following in His
footsteps. He has attained to perfection. He has arisen to kingdoms of
power. He comprehends all things, because in Him dwelleth the fullness
of the Godhead, bodily. He is a perfect manifestation, expression and
revelation of this eternal essence, this spirit of eternal,
everlasting intelligence or light of truth. It is embodied in His
spiritual personality or spiritual organism. This spirit cannot be
fully comprehended in our finite state. It quickens all things. As we
are told in the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, it is:
"The light which is in all things, which giveth life to all things,
which is the law by which all things are governed, even the power of
God, who sitteth upon his throne, who is in the bosom of eternity, who
is in the midst of all things.—Sec. lxxxviii, v. 13."
That spirit exists wherever there is a particle of material substance;
that spirit is round about it, and in it, and through it; but that we
may comprehend it, it must be manifested through organisms. The
perfection of its manifestation is in the personality of a being
called God. That is a person who has passed through all the gradations
of being, and who contains within Himself the fullness, manifested and
expressed, of this divine spirit which is called God.
Some people may think this is rather a low idea of a Divine Being. But
I think it a most exalted one. The person whom I worship I acknowledge
as my Father. Through Him I may learn to understand the secrets and
mysteries of eternity, those things that never had a beginning and
will never have an end. He has ascended above all things after
descending below all things. He has fought his way from the depths up
to the position He now occupies. He holds it by virtue of His
goodness, of His might, of His majesty, of His power. He occupies that
position by virtue of being in perfect harmony with all that is right,
and true, and beautiful, and glorious and progressive. He is the
perfect embodiment and expression of the eternal principles of right.
He has won that position by His own exertions, by His own
faithfulness, by His own righteousness. Jesus Christ, the only
begotten son of God in the flesh, but His firstborn in the spirit, has
climbed His way up in a similar manner. He loved righteousness and
hated iniquity. He kept every law and every commandment. He knew no
sin, and guile was not found in His mouth. He loved not His own life,
as a paramount consideration but sacrificed it to atone for the sins of
others. Whatever He learned was right. He practiced, and He broke no
commandment of the Father, but obeyed every one. He came not to do His
own will, but the will of the Father that sent Him, and because He did
this and was faithful unto death, He was exalted on high. He overcame
evil. He conquered mortality. He triumphed over death. He conquered
that being who is the expression of evil principles, who is the
embodiment of the principles of darkness, who is the embodiment of all
the principles that are in opposition to those that exist and burn in
the bosom of Deity. He met him and conquered him and overcame him. He, being in the truth and living by the truth; therefore he is
now to us, "the way, the truth, and the life." Overcoming all things
He was entitled to inherit all things, and all that the Father hath
was given unto Him. And we read:
"The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he seeth the Father do:
for what things soever he doeth, these also doeth the Son likewise."
(John v, 19.)"
As the Father had taken His upward course in worlds before this, so
Jesus Christ followed in his footsteps in every respect; therefore he
is entitled to sit down at the right hand of God in the heavens, to
sit on his throne and be one with the Father in all things; and all
the power and glory, and dominion that the Father hath he conferred
also upon Jesus. And the promise to the sons of God on the earth is,
that if they will follow in the footsteps of Jesus, they shall be also
exalted and shall partake of that glory which he partakes of and they
shall become Gods, even the sons of God, and "all things" shall be
theirs. And we are told in the revelations of God to us in the latter
days, that if we are faithful in all things, "all that Father hath"
shall be given unto us. We shall become like Him, and we shall receive
power and dominion and glory similar to that which he enjoys, only He
will always be above us, God as our Father, and Jesus Christ our elder
brother.
Now, we can understand a little about a being like this, but a being
of the character that divines attempt to describe is one we cannot
understand at all. They say that there are three of them, and yet
there is only one; that God has no body, neither parts nor passions.
Yet this thing that has no substance, and no parts, we are told, has
three parts, one part of which had a body, and that body was composed
of parts. And we are told also that it has no passions. Yet this one
part of that thing which has no body and no parts and no passions had
a body and parts and had passions. Jesus experienced the same things
that a man experiences, lived like a man, and died like a man, to some
extent. Now, who can understand these contradictions which are to be
found in the creeds of modern Christendom? The Athanasian Creed was
read in the Church of England, as it is called, when I was a boy, and
I believe it is now. I think the American Episcopal Church has
discarded it, which was very sensible. It says:
"Whosoever will be saved, before all things he must hold the Catholic
faith, which faith except he do keep whole and undefiled he shall,
without doubt, perish everlastingly. And the Catholic faith is this:
"That we worship one God in Trinity, and trinity in unity, neither
confounding the persons nor dividing the substance. For there is one
person of the Father, another of the Son, and another of the Holy
Ghost, but their glory is equal, and their majesty co-eternal. Such as
the Father is, such is the Son, and such the Holy Ghost. The Father is
God, the Son is God, and the Holy Ghost is God; and yet there are not
three Gods, but one God. The Father is Lord, the Son is Lord, and the
Holy Ghost is Lord, and yet there are not three Lords, but one Lord.
For while we are compelled by Christian verity to acknowledge each
person by himself to be both God and Lord, so we are forbidden by the
Catholic faith to say that there be three Gods or three Lords."
It goes on to show how that these three are all exactly alike,
and then to declare that they are all essentially different. It
explains that the Son is begotten while the Father is not, and then
that the Holy Ghost is proceeding not begotten, while the Son is not
proceeding, neither is the Father, yet at the same time they are all
the same, and to cap the climax of the pile of absurdities it
announces that:
"The Father is incomprehensible, the Son is incomprehensible, and the
Holy Ghost is incomprehensible, yet they are not three
incomprehensibles, but one incomprehensible."
Well, that is an attempt of man to explain God. As I said in the
beginning of my remarks, we do not pretend that we can comprehend God
in his fullness in our finite and mortal condition here on the earth,
because he is an infinite being. But we are promised that "the day
shall come when we shall comprehend God, being quickened in him."
Jesus said:
This is life eternal, to know thee the only living and true God, and
Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent."
How can we learn to know God? We can learn of our Father by hearkening
to his voice by listening to the whisperings of the holy Spirit, that
spirit that comes from him. "They that are led by the Spirit of God
are the sons of God." We can understand much concerning him by the
power of the Holy Ghost. The gift of the Holy Ghost is conferred on us
that we may learn something about God, so that we may go on to
perfection; that we may walk in his ways; that we may climb the ladder
which he has climbed to perfection; that we may peradventure overcome
and be made like him, share in his glory, and be one with him. And if
we will take the course that our Father has taken, living by every
word that comes from his mouth, we shall know what is right, for he
will reveal unto us what is true, and it is the knowledge and practice
of truth that exalts. If we will learn this as he learned it, advance
step by step, overcoming the Evil One; overcome the world and the
flesh, grapple with evil as we meet it and conquer it, we will have
the help of the Lord, and may raise ourselves by our own exertions, by
our faithfulness, by our obedience, and peradventure will overcome all
things, and inherit all things. We may thus rise above all things. We
may obtain glorious bodies like unto the glorious body of the Son of
God. We may prepare ourselves for the celestial glory in which the
Father dwells, and in which the Son dwells, and be made like him in
every respect, becoming spiritual beings dwelling in spiritual bodies,
quickened with the celestial glory, among the Gods, and enter into
holy order which is without beginning of days or end of years—the
everlasting order of the holy Priesthood—which Jesus Christ has, and a
portion of which he imparted unto his disciples when he was upon the
earth, and which he has restored to the earth in these latter days.
There are things connected with this that we cannot dwell upon in a
short discourse. But the keys of this Priesthood have been restored,
and by them we can obtain heavenly knowledge; learn to comprehend our
Father who is at the head of that Priesthood; learn to comprehend
Jesus Christ our Great High Priest. By this same Priesthood, a portion
of which we have received, we can obtain communion with the heavenly
Jerusalem, with the spirits of just men made perfect, with
Jesus the Mediator of the new covenant, and with God who is the
holiest of all. That Priesthood had no beginning, and will never have
an end. As we are told in Scripture it is "without father or mother,
without beginning of days or end of years;" it always existed. The
individual, the organized person may have had a beginning, but that
spirit of which and by which they organized never had a beginning.
That Priesthood which is the power of government in the heavens, never
had a beginning, and it will never come to an end. The works of that
eternal spirit of intelligence, the great Eternal God, manifested to
us in our Father and through Jesus Christ, never had a beginning.
There never was a first world or man; there will never be a last. We
cannot grasp that in its fullness, but we can understand a little of
it by comparing it with other things. For instance, we will take
space. This tabernacle contains so much space, bounded by the walls of
the building; but go outside of these walls and space is there. Go to
the farthest bounds of this Territory, space is there. Go to the ends
of the earth, if you can find them, and there is space beyond. Mount
upward to the stars; go to the sun, pass above the sun to the two
worlds that govern it, that we read about in the Book of Abraham, in
"The Pearl of Great Price;" go even unto Kolob, the nearest to the
throne of God, and there is just as much space beyond as that which
you have left. There is no outside to space—no beginning, no end.
Thus there is boundless space, and we cannot fully comprehend it, yet
we must admit that it exists without limit. "There is no kingdom in
the which there is no space, and no space in the which there is no
kingdom, either a greater or a lesser kingdom." So we learn in the
Doctrine and Covenants. So travel where we will, there we find space,
and also inexhaustible material. And the elements, whether they be
spiritual or what we call natural—we use these terms to distinguish
them—never had a beginning—the primal particles never had a beginning.
They have been organized in different shapes; the organism had a
beginning but the elements or atoms of which it is composed never had.
You may burn this book, but every atom of which the book was composed,
every particle of substance that entered into its composition, still
exists; they are indestructible. When you go right down to the primary
elements, they never had a beginning, they will never have an end. For
in their primal condition they are not "created." They did not come
from nothing; they were organized into different forms, but the
elementary parts of matter as well as of spirit, using ordinary terms,
never had a beginning, and never will have an end.
Now, here are some things that you can understand to some extent, that
are beginningless and endless. It is the same with duration. Duration
never had a beginning, and it never will have an end. We measure
portions of time, but time itself, cannot be counted. Go back as far
as we can think, and there was just as much time or duration before
that period as since, and think as much as we can down the stream of
time there is just as much ahead. There is no limit to duration, no
beginning, no end. Thus there are boundless space, an infinity of
substance, endless duration. The elements of that eternal spirit which exists in and through and round about all things, and is
the law by which all things are governed, never had a beginning and
will never have an end. There was no beginning and there will be no
end to its operations. And therefore we are told that "the works of
God are one eternal round." There was no beginning to the works of
God, and there will be no end. The Priesthood, as I have quoted to
you, is without beginning of days or end of years. It was always
existent and always active. And therefore there was never a first
world or being, neither will there be a last one. We are here to learn
those principles that pertain to this lower sphere; to learn how to
raise ourselves from this groveling mortal condition, and make
ourselves like God, that we may dwell with him, come into perfect
harmony with that spirit of which I have been speaking, be one with
the Father and participate with him in the power which he wields, in
the midst of eternity.
Now, my brethren and sisters, will we walk in this way? Will we fit
ourselves to enter into our next estate with honor? We have come down
from God as his offspring. That part of us which is spirit was with
him in the eternal world. We have come down here in our time and
season, and God "determined the times before appointed and the bounds
of our habitation." We are here to learn the laws that govern this
lower world; to learn to grapple with evil and to understand what
darkness is. We came from an abode of bliss to understand the pain and
sorrow incident to this probation. We came here to comprehend what
death is. We existed in our first estate among the sons of God in the
presence of our Father, "when the morning sears sang together, and the
sons of God shouted for joy." The knowledge of our former state has
fled from us. Like Jesus, "in our humiliation our judgment is taken
away," and the veil is drawn between us and our former habitation.
This is for our trial. If we could see the things of eternity, and
comprehend ourselves as we are; if we could penetrate the mists and
clouds that shut out eternal realities from our gaze, the fleeting
things of time would be no trial to us, and one of the great objects
of our earthly probation or testing would be lost. But the past has
gone from our memory, the future is shut out from our vision and we
are living here in time, to learn little by little, line upon line,
precept upon precept. Here in the darkness, in the sorrow, in the
trial, in the pain, in the adversity, we have to learn what is right
and distinguish it from what is wrong, and lay hold of right and truth
and learn to live it. For it is not only the learning of it that is
needful, but we must live it, being guided and governed by it in all
things. If we have any evil propensities—inherited from progenitors
who for ages have gone astray from God—we have to grapple with them
and overcome them. Each individual must find out his own nature, and
what there is in it that is wrong, and bring it into subjection to the
will and righteousness of God. He must work with it until he is master
of it; until he can say to this mortal flesh which is continually
warring against the spirit, "I am your master by the grace of God."
Every passion, every inclination, every desire must be controlled and
made subject to the will of God. Though we mingle with the world, yet
we must not pattern after their evil ways nor "touch the unclean thing." We need not partake of the sins of the world. We can be
wrapped around by the influence of our religion as by the garments
that we wear, and be separate even though in the midst of the wicked.
We need not follow their ways nor be guided by their enticements, or
be governed by their nations, but should live according to the light
of God; and when evil spirits tempt us and seek to turn us aside from
the strait path that leads to the celestial city, stand firm in the
spirit of the Gospel and overcome them. And if we overcome all things
we shall inherit all things.
"To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne, even
as I also overcame, and am set down with my Father in his throne. Rev.
iii, 21."
We are the children of God, and when we go back into the presence of
our Father, if we return with honor, there will be joy in heaven;
there will be joy in our own bosoms, such joy as is not expressible.
How we shall rejoice! We will then comprehend all we knew before we
came here. We will comprehend everything we learned when we dwelt in
the flesh; and we will be clothed upon with the spirit and power of
God in its fullness, and kingdoms and power and glory eternal will be
given unto us. We shall have the gift of eternal and endless increase.
Our families will be with us and be the beginning of our dominion, and
upon that basis we shall build forever. Our wives and our children
will be ours for all eternity. Our increase shall never cease while
duration rolls along and the works of God spread forth, and our
posterity and kingdoms will grow and extend till they shall be as
numerous as the stars, and we will enter into the rest of our Father
and enjoy his presence and society for evermore. God help us to attain
to the fullness of this glory, for Christ's sake. Amen.
- Charles W. Penrose