I will read a portion of the 3rd chapter of the first epistle of St.
Peter, and a portion of the 4th chapter; commencing at the 12th verse
of the 3rd chapter:
12 For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are
open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is against them that
do evil.
13 And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which
is good?
14 But and if ye suffer for righteousness' sake, happy are ye: and be
not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled;
15 But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to
give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that
is in you with meekness and fear:
16 Having a good conscience; that, whereas they speak evil of you, as
of evildoers, they may be ashamed that falsely accuse your good
conversation in Christ.
17 For it is better, if the will of God be so, that ye suffer for well
doing, than for evil doing.
18 For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the
unjust, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the
flesh, but quickened by the Spirit:
19 By which also he went and preached unto the spirits in prison;
20 Which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of
God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein
few, that is, eight souls were saved by water.
21 The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not
the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good
conscience toward God), by the resurrection of Jesus Christ:
22 Who is gone into heaven, and is on the right hand of God; angels
and authorities and powers being made subject unto him.* * * *
1 Forasmuch then as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm
yourselves likewise with the same mind: for he that hath suffered in
the flesh hath ceased from sin;
2 That he no longer should live the rest of his time in the flesh to
the lusts of men, but to the will of God.
3 For the time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the
will of the Gentiles, when we walked in lasciviousness, lusts, excess
of wine, revellings, banquetings, and abominable idolatries:
4 Wherein they think it strange that ye run not with them to the same
excess of riot, speaking evil of you:
5 Who shall give account to him that is ready to judge the quick and
the dead.
6 For for this cause was the gospel preached also to them that are
dead, that they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but
live according to God in the spirit.
7 But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and
watch unto prayer.
8 And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves: for
charity shall cover the multitude of sins."
These words, my brethren and sisters, embody to us today, though
written by the Apostle Peter, 1,800 years ago, the Gospel of life and
salvation. They are exceedingly appropriate to Latter-day Saints, as
doubtless they were when written to former-day Saints. The
circumstances which surrounded our brethren and sisters in former
days, no doubt were similar in many respects to those which surround
us in this one day, probably, with this difference that we are not
scattered to the same extent they were; we have been gathered together
from the nations where the Gospel was preached to us, and are now
living in one community in these mountains. But the same doctrines,
the same principles, the same powers of evil, the same powers of good,
the same Spirit of God, and the same spirit of evil, were extant then,
and were experienced then by the Saints who took upon themselves the
name of Christ, as they are by us who now live.
Since I have come into this stand my mind has reverted to a
conversation which I had a few days ago with a minister of the Dutch
Reform Church, who was passing through this city, and who was
introduced to me, and had a good many inquiries to make respecting our
doctrines. When I told him how God had revealed Himself in these last
days, how He had restored the Everlasting Priesthood, the ordinances
of life and salvation, the Gospel in its original purity and power,
accompanied with the Holy Ghost and its gifts, and had organized the
Church as in ancient days, and related to him what God had said
concerning all the churches in Christendom, he had the question to
ask, which is so frequently asked of all our Elders when they travel
and declare the same message, "Why has God left the Christian world
for so long a time without these blessings and these powers and these
gifts that you now claim as belonging to your Church and having been
restored from heaven? And what has become of those Christians whom you
say died in ignorance of the fullness of the Gospel of salvation?"
These are very pertinent questions. They are questions frequently
asked of all our Elders. They are questions which suggest themselves
to the minds of every thinking man when he is told that God has
restored the truth in its original purity, with the power and
authority of the Priesthood which have been so long withdrawn. Our
ancestors we may have known, at least some of them; we may have
known the morality of their lives, the purity of their intentions, the
goodness of their motives, their exemplary conduct; and if we do not
understand the principles of the Gospel when we are told the message
that the Elders have to bear, the inquiry naturally arises, "Is it
possible that my grandfather, my grandmother, my uncle, or perchance
my father and my mother, have not gone to heaven, that they are not in
the presence of God? Why, better people I never knew, and I have
always thought," says the inquirer, "that they really had gone to
heaven, and now you tell me that unless I am baptized I shall be
damned, and yet they are dead and have not been baptized."
I expect many feel as the heathen king once felt. He was a king of the
Franks, one of the old races that invaded what is now called France.
He had surrendered his old convictions sufficiently to consent to
receive the rite of baptism. A Catholic Bishop from Rome was to
sprinkle him. But before submitting to be sprinkled the thought
suggested itself to the king to ask the question what had become of
his ancestors. The Bishop, more ready than politic, said, "They have
gone to hell." "Then," said the king, "I will go to hell with them;
I
shall not be separated from my ancestors," and he refused to receive
the rite of baptism.
Now, I expect that there are many people in the world who, in the
absence, or for the want of knowledge concerning the plan of salvation
would almost feel the same when told that if they did not obey the
Gospel, they would be damned. But when people are enlightened
concerning the plan of Jehovah, the Gospel of the Son of God, they can
easily reconcile justice and mercy as being attributes of the Great
Being whom we worship. As I remarked to this gentleman, "I might
easily answer your question by propounding another question to you.
You are a Christian minister; you preach what you believe to be the
Gospel; what has become of the millions of heathen who died in
ignorance of that Gospel which you profess to obey and accept as the
plan of salvation—the millions of heathen who never heard the name of
Jesus Christ, the only name given under heaven whereby man can be
saved—what has become of them?"
"Oh," said he, "but they were not Christians."
Said I, "Do you think that God makes a distinction between the souls
or the spirits of men? Is there one class of spirits for whom He has a
greater respect than He has for others! Is a Christian soul more
valuable, or more precious, in the sight of our Great Creator, than
the soul of a heathen? I do not believe it myself. I have no such
idea."
But he could see a wide distinction between those who were Christians
and those who were not.
Nevertheless the difficulty still remains, and it will ever remain to
those who do not comprehend the plan of salvation as revealed by the
Lord Jesus Christ. We must remember that God's work is not confined to
this life; that God's plan of salvation extends throughout eternity;
that according to our belief it began to operate in eternity, if it
ever began at all—for it never really in truth began, it always
operated, operated from eternity and will operate to eternity, for all
the children of men, for every human soul. The plan of salvation
devised by our Father and God, is intended to save every human
being that will be saved; to reach them all, unless, during this
probation, they commit what is termed the unpardonable sin, the sin
against the Holy Ghost, and become sons of perdition, in which even
salvation ceases (so far as they are concerned) to operate; they put
themselves outside of the pale of salvation.
There is a very interesting revelation contained in the new
translation by the Prophet Joseph Smith, which is found in the Pearl
of Great Price. The revelation says:
"And it came to pass that the God of heaven looked upon the residue of
the people, and he wept; and Enoch bore record of it, saying, How is it
that the heavens weep, and shed forth their tears as the rain upon the
mountains? And Enoch said unto the Lord: How is it that thou canst
weep, seeing thou art holy, and from all eternity to all eternity? And
were it possible that man could number the particles of the earth, yea,
millions of earths like this, it would not be a beginning to the
number of thy creations; and thy curtains are stretched out still; and yet
thou art there, and thy bosom is there; and also thou art just; thou
art merciful and kind forever; And thou hast taken Zion to thine own
bosom, from all thy creations, from all eternity to all eternity; and
naught but peace, justice, and truth is the habitation of thy throne;
and mercy shall go before thy face and have no end; how is it that
thou canst weep?
"The Lord said unto Enoch; Behold these thy brethren; they are the
workmanship of mine own hands, and I gave unto them their knowledge,
in the day that I created them; and in the Garden of Eden, gave I unto
man his agency; And unto thy brethren have I said, and also gave
commandment, that they should love one another, and that they should
choose me, their Father; but behold, they are without affection; and
they hate their own blood; And the fire of mine indignation is kindled
against them; and in my hot displeasure will I send in the floods upon
them, for my fierce anger is kindled against them. Behold, I am God;
Man of Holiness is thy name; Man of Counsel is my name; and Endless
and Eternal is my name, also. Wherefore, I can stretch forth mine hands
and hold all the creations which I have made; and mine eye can pierce
them also, and among all the workmanship of mine hands there has not
been so great wickedness as among thy brethren; But behold, their sins
shall be upon the heads of their fathers; Satan shall be their father,
and misery shall be their doom; and the whole heavens shall weep over
them, even all the workmanship of mine hands; wherefore should not the
heavens weep, seeing these shall suffer? But behold, these which thine
eyes are upon shall perish in the floods; and behold, I will shut them
up; a prison have I prepared for them. And That which I have chosen
hath plead before my face. Wherefore, he suffereth for their sins;
inasmuch as they will repent in the day that my Chosen shall return
unto me, and until that day they shall be in torment; Wherefore, for
this shall the heavens weep, yea, and all the workmanship of mine
hands."
A most important revelation, this, to Enoch, showing unto him the fate
of the wicked after his city should be translated and taken to heaven.
The inhabitants of the earth should grow worse and worse, more
abandoned than ever in their wickedness, until the time should come
for the Lord to send forth His floods and drown the inhabitants
of the earth except Noah, and those who received His testimony. All
this was shown unto Enoch; and he was shown that those who had thus
acted, or who should thus act, "would be consigned to prison, they
would be consigned to a place of torment, and because of their
sufferings, because of that which they should have to pass through,
the heavens themselves wept over their fate." Enoch was told that they
should remain there until the day of the Lord Jesus Christ, or in
these words: "And that which I have chosen has plead before my face.
Wherefore, He suffereth for their sins, insomuch as they will repent
in the day that my Chosen shall return unto me."
That is, after the Savior's advent in the flesh, after He has suffered
for their sins; until then, when He should return unto the Father,
they should remain in this prison and in this condition of torment.
"Wherefore, for this shall the heavens weep, yea, and all the
workmanship of mine hands."
Those millions of spirits who had thus committed sin and iniquity until it
could be borne no longer, until the earth groaned under their
wickedness, and cried aloud as with a human voice against the
wickedness upon its surface of which those inhabitants had been
guilty—those millions of spirits were swept off with a flood, the
whole family of man was destroyed, except Noah and those seven souls
who received his testimony, a part of his family, and a part only, for
there were children that Noah had who rejected his testimony, and who
also shared in the destruction that came upon the inhabitants of the
earth. But those eight, including Noah, were the sole surviving
remnant of the entire family of man. The antediluvian world numbered
millions doubtless; millions were swept away from the face of the
earth, and consigned to a place of torment, or to a prison. In this
prison they were immured, doubtless in utter darkness—in the condition
that is so expressly described by the Savior Himself, when upon the
earth—in outer darkness, where there is weeping and wailing and
gnashing of teeth, a place of torment, where they were kept until the
Savior Himself came in the flesh, and proclaimed unto the children of
men the Gospel of life and salvation.
Jesus Himself, on one occasion, went into the synagogue after His
baptism by John the Baptist, and there was handed to Him a book
containing the prophecy of Isaiah, or as it is written in the New
Testament Esaias. He took it and read these words: "The Spirit of the
Lord God is upon me; because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good
tidings unto the meek; He hath sent me to bind up the brokenhearted,
to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to
them that are bound; to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord." He
there proclaimed in the words of the Prophet Isaiah, the exact
character of the mission that had been assigned Him by His Father in
heaven. He was not only commanded to preach good tidings unto the
meek, and to bind up the broken hearted, but He was sent to proclaim
liberty to the captives and the opening of the prison to them that
were bound. Thus was a part of His mission foretold by the Prophet
Isaiah a long time before His birth. He Himself confirmed the
correctness of the prediction by reading it in the ears of the people;
and when He left the earth, after having established His Gospel
upon it, after having commenced the work of salvation here, after
having ordained men to the authority of the everlasting Priesthood
which He held, the Priesthood of Melchizedek, after having done this
and was slain by wicked men, suffered for the sins of humanity in the
flesh, He then went, in the words that I have read in your hearing
from this epistle of Peter, and preached to the spirits in prison
which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God
waited in the days of Noah. He went and proclaimed liberty to the
captive; He went to open the prison doors to them that were bound. He
alone could do this. No Prophet that preceded Him had the authority,
for none of the Prophets that had preceded Him had this mission
assigned them. It was His duty as the Son of God, as the Redeemer of
the world, after, as I have said, committing the Gospel to men in the
flesh, after ordaining men to preach that Gospel and administer its
ordinances in the power and authority of the everlasting Priesthood,
to preach to those spirits in prison. It did not take a great while to
commence the work; for He was crucified on Friday, and was resurrected
on Sunday; but in the interim, while His body laid in the tomb, His
Spirit, as is correctly stated in one catechism—I believe that of the
Episcopalians—"descended into hell," and, according to the mission
that had been assigned Him, according to the revelation that God gave
to Enoch before the floods descended upon the wicked world, according
to the predictions of Isaiah, and according to the power and authority
which He exercised as the Son of God He went and opened the prison
doors to them that were bound, preached to them the everlasting
Gospel, once more, and gave unto them the privilege of receiving it in
the spirit even as though they were in the flesh. Therefore says
Peter, "by which also He went and preached unto the spirits in prison
which sometime were disobedient when once the long-suffering of God
waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing." Then he
goes on and he says—after telling the Saints how they should live, how
the wicked should act, and how they should be treated—he says: "For
this cause was the Gospel preached also to them that are dead, that
they might be judged according to men in the flesh, but live according
to God in the spirit."
Now, say some, "Oh, this means when men are dead in their sins. This
is what Peter means—dead in their sins."
It does not mean any such thing. That is not the meaning of it. It
means just what it says. It means that the Gospel shall be preached to
them that are dead; that the Savior should carry the glad tidings of
salvation to them, and not only to those who were disobedient in the
days of Noah, but to all the spirit world, to every soul of Adam's
race that had up to that time died who had not received the Gospel in
the flesh. He commenced the work there just as He did here. He
commenced, as I have said, by preaching the Gospel, by revealing it to
His disciples, by giving them the authority to preach it, and then He
descended into Hades or hell, and He there, doubtless, chose His
ministers, the men who had the authority of the Holy Priesthood, and
set them to the same labor that was commenced on the earth, the labor
of preaching His everlasting Gospel to all the spirit world, to the
millions of spirits who had died either in disobedience to the Gospel of Christ, or in ignorance of that Gospel, never having heard
the sound of it. The Gospel was sent to the entire spirit world,
except, as I have before stated, to those sons of perdition who had
committed the unpardonable sin, or the sin against the Holy Ghost, and
the labor has doubtless continued from that day until the present time
in the spirit world. In the authority and power of the everlasting
Priesthood the servants of God have been calling upon the inhabitants
of that world to repent and believe in Jesus: first to repent of their
sins and be willing to receive the Gospel of the Son of God in its
fullness and in its purity, just as men would receive it in the
flesh—that is, be willing to comply as far as possible with all its
requirements, and also to have this further willingness, that if they
were in the flesh they would submit to and receive every ordinance of
the Gospel of life and salvation. They must not only believe in Jesus,
as I have said, and repent of their sins; not only be willing to go
that far, but be willing to go the full extent of the requirements of
the Gospel, be willing to obey every ordinance and every law that is
necessary, and say in the spirit, "Oh, if I were in the flesh I would
be baptized for the remission of my sins; I would have hands laid upon
me for the reception of the Holy Ghost; I would be willing to obey
every law of God, my Eternal Father, if I had the opportunity in the
flesh of doing so."
Jesus illustrated this principle and the work which lay before Him
very beautifully, in the case of the thief on the cross. One of the
thieves reviled Him. The other turned and rebuked his companion for
reviling the Savior, and asked the Savior to remember him when He came
into His kingdom; for you must understand that the idea had become
prevalent then that Jesus was a king, and they had written over His
cross in three languages, "Jesus, King of the Jews," partly in
derision, doubtless; but it was the truth. Pilate asked Him if He was
not a king, and this robber, doubtless, shared in the feeling that
Jesus was a king. Therefore he besought Him to remember him when He
came into His Kingdom. Jesus said to him: "Today shalt thou be with
me in paradise." "There I can speak to you," He might have said,
"more
fully than I can now. This is our dying hour, and I am not in a
position to preach to you or explain to you the plan of salvation that
I have; but wait awhile, before this day ends you will be with me in
paradise, and there I can make full explanations to you concerning all
that you desire to know."
And this in reality was the case. That day they were in paradise
together. Jesus was in a position to preach to him in the spirit as He
had done to men in the flesh. And you will remember—although it seems
almost unnecessary to repeat it to this congregation who are so well
instructed; but there are young people who are not so familiar with
these doctrines, and, therefore, for their benefit I quote the
Scriptures. You will remember when Mary, after she missed the body
from the sepulchre, rushed forward to a man, supposing him to be the
gardener, and asked him where he had laid the body. She did not
recognize Him at first, but as soon as He made Himself known she
essayed to clasp Him in womanly affection. He, however, told her to
stand back, not to touch Him. You must not put your hands on me, Mary.
Whatever your relations may be to me, you must not touch me
now. "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 your God." This was His expression when His
body had been resurrected from the tomb. He had not yet been to His
Father—that is, directly to the immediate presence of His Father.
Therefore it was not fit that any mortal should put hands upon Him. It
was not the privilege even of Mary, closely connected as she was with
Him—it was not her privilege to put her hand upon her resurrected
Lord. He had not yet ascended to the Father.
Thus you see the Scriptures corroborate that which I have said in this
respect. His body had lain, as I before remarked, from Friday until
Sunday, in the tomb, and then it was resurrected. But during that
period His spirit had been engaged preaching to the spirits in prison;
they heard the glad tidings of salvation from the Savior. His voice
penetrated the depths of hell, the gloom of darkness, and it awakened
hope within their hearts. He proclaimed liberty to the captive. He
opened the prison doors to those that were bound. He preached unto
them the acceptable year of the Lord: for the time had come for them
to be redeemed from their prison house in which they had been so long
incarcerated for the sins committed in the flesh.
This is the Gospel of salvation that God has revealed. Every human
being that has ever been born upon the face of the earth, every human
being that ever will be born will hear these glad tidings of salvation
proclaimed by those who have authority to administer it unto fallen
man, whether they lived before Jesus, whether they lived at the time
of or since Jesus, or whether they will live yet in the future. They
cannot hear the Gospel. They cannot be judged until they do hear it.
Every principle of salvation will be proclaimed to those who have died
without the privilege of hearing it in the flesh—they must hear it in
the spirit world as well as those who hear it in the flesh. Therefore,
we need not be in any anxiety concerning our ancestors; we need not
puzzle ourselves with questions as to the fate of the heathen; we need
not be disturbed in our feelings to reconcile the justice of God with
His mercy, or His mercy with His justice, to the children of men. None
of these questions need trouble us, for the reason that by the
revelation of these glorious principles God's mercy is reconcilable in
the most perfect manner with His justice. We see by this that God will
not consign any soul to endless torment without first giving him an
opportunity of receiving or rejecting the Gospel. If he be consigned
to torment it will be as a punishment for violating law. Where there
is no law there is no transgression of the law. There can be therefore
no punishment if a man does not comprehend the law. If it is not made
plain to him, its binding force does not operate upon him; but when he
understands it, when his mind comprehends it, when it is declared to
him, then it begins to operate upon him, and if he reject it, then the
penalty begins to operate also, and unless he repents and obeys that
law he will receive severe condemnation. Therefore in the spirit world
there are grades of punishment just as there are grades of spirits.
Some are ignorant. Some men who never heard the name of Jesus have
lived according to the light that God gave them; for God has given to
every man that is born into the world, according to the
revelations we have received, His Spirit. He has given unto every man
and woman His Spirit, not the gift of the Holy Ghost, but His Spirit
by which they are led and guided. Some call it the light of
conscience, the voice of conscience. No man ever committed a wrong
that listened to that voice without being chided for it, whether he be
Christian or heathen, whether he has lived according to the light of
the Gospel or been in entire ignorance of it. Every man has within him
a spirit which comes from our Great Creator, and if we grieve it not
it leads us, guides us, though we may not know the Gospel, as has been
the case with many thousands and millions of human beings. It leads
all the children of men when they listen to it; it leads them in the
path of peace, in the path of virtue, in the path of happiness; but if
they violate that spirit or grieve it, if they go contrary to its
monitions, if they harden their hearts against and sin against it,
then it departs, and another spirit takes its place, namely, the
spirit of the evil One.
Thus it is that the heathen, many of them have lived lives most
exemplary, lives which are the admiration of posterity. Men not
confined to one race, not to one nationality, but men of every race,
men of every clime, men of every language, have received the same
spirit and have been enlightened by it and their lives have been noble
and admirable, and no doubt have been acceptable to God our eternal
Father. Therefore, when you think about your grandparents whom you
have known, when you think about your parents or some other relatives
whom you have known, who died in ignorance of the Gospel, you have
known their lives, you have known how good their desires were, you
have known how they conformed to the law so far as they understood it,
how moral they were, how exemplary, how correct in their conduct, in
their conversation and in their dealings—when you think of these, you
need not be afraid that they have lost anything because they died in
ignorance of the Son of God. I tell you that God's providence is over
all His children, and He will reward every man and every woman
according to his or her works, and He will reward those who have lived
exemplary lives, those who have been moral, whether they be heathen or
Christian, whether they have known the name of Jesus or not, whether
they have the Bible, or the Koran, or some other book, or no book at
all; whatever may have been their condition and circumstances, if they
have lived according to the light that God has given them, and to laws
that they understood, God will reward them, and will eventually bestow
every blessing upon them which they are capable of receiving. Yes,
those poor people who persecute us, those people who would, in their
ignorance destroy us, we can well say to them and concerning them that
which Stephen said, when about to give up the ghost. They stoned him.
They treated him most cruelly for his belief. He had declared to them
the Gospel; but they stoned him to death. Before he died he said—and
it's the spirit which every man of God, who comprehends the purposes
of God, and the plan of salvation will cherish and always give
utterance to under all circumstances—"Father forgive them, they know
not what they do." They were ignorant. He therefore besought the
Father to forgive them. They did not know what they were doing. They
did it ignorantly. This was proved by the fact that the young
man at whose feet lay the clothes of those who committed this bloody
deed, afterwards became a flaming light in the Church and Kingdom of
God, and ultimately laid down his life for that Gospel which he had
witnessed Stephen die for, and which at the time he thought was a
righteous judgment upon Stephen.
My brethren and sisters, we can of all people be charitable. As the
Apostle Peter says: "Above all things have fervent charity among
yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins." And not
only among ourselves, but have charity for an ignorant world who know
not what they do in fighting against God, in fighting against His
truth, in seeking to destroy His Priesthood from the face of the
earth: they know not what they do. We would save them if we could. We
would carry the Gospel of salvation to them. We are ready, as we have
been, to endure all things for the sake of the souls of our
fellow men. We have gone from continent to continent, from land to land, from
island to island, wherever there was a door open, to preach the
Gospel. We have forsaken home, forsaken wives and children, and all
the endearments of home, everything that men love and hold sacred,
even to the sacrificing of our lives for the salvation of our
fellow men—gone without purse or scrip, gone forth in the midst of shame and
ignominy, in the face of persecution of the most cruel and sometimes
of the most dreadful character. We have done this, we are still doing
it, we shall do it, until every soul under the broad canopy of heaven
shall hear the Gospel of the Son of God, this message of life and
salvation which has been entrusted to us. Every mortal shall hear the
glad tidings of salvation. They shall be judged by this message. They
shall receive the blessings of God or His condemnation, according to
their willingness to receive or their determination to reject the
Gospel; and then when this life is ended, when this mortal is laid
aside, we shall go into the spirit world, endowed with the same
Priesthood and authority of the Son of God; clothed with that
authority; enveloped with it, even the fullness of it; we shall go
into the spirit world and continue this glorious labor of warning our
brethren and sisters who once were in the flesh, until throughout the
spirit world the Gospel of salvation shall be heard from one end of it
to the other. It is a never-ending work that which we have taken upon
ourselves. It will never terminate until this earth shall be redeemed,
until the power of Satan shall be subdued, until wickedness shall be
banished from the earth, until He reigns whose right it is to reign,
and every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus is the
Christ, the Son of God. Then will this labor cease so far as the
family of man is concerned; but it will never cease until all who
belong to this earth, whoever were born upon it—no matter in what age,
no matter what time, no matter what nationality, shall be redeemed who
can be redeemed.
Now, my brethren and sisters, you have some little idea of the
character of the work in which we are engaged. Do we set too much
value upon our Priesthood—when we talk about Priesthood and
authority—when these are the labors that attend the Priesthood and
that devolve upon it? No, we cannot value our calling too highly. And
I say to you that you have entered upon a pathway that leads
back to God. You may dally by the wayside; you may fool away your
time; you may be idle, indifferent and careless; but you only lose
thereby the progress that you ought to make. Unless you commit the
unpardonable sin, you will have to progress. It is written in the
eternity of our God that every soul must progress that does not
retrograde. Therefore, make good use of the time you have. Now is the
time of your probation, now is the time of harvest, now is the summer
of your days. Let it not be said, the harvest is past, the summer is
ended, and my soul is not saved. But let us bear in mind that now is
the probation that God has given us. Let us make use of it by doing
the works of righteousness, by keeping the commandments of God, by
having our eye on the mark of our high calling in Christ Jesus; which
may God grant in the name of Jesus. Amen.
- George Q. Cannon