It is my intention this forenoon, if the Lord will assist me by his
Spirit, to say a few words upon the principles of the Gospel; or, in
other words, the first principles of that great plan of salvation
which was devised before the foundation of the world, for the benefit
of the inhabitants of this earth. The Gospel of Jesus Christ is of
great antiquity. It was ordained in the councils of heaven before the
world was, and all its principles, ordinances, promises, and blessings
were instituted in the beginning, before man was placed upon the
earth. These principles have been revealed to the human family in
various ages of the world—not only revealed in the meridian of time
by Jesus and the Apostles, but to generations and ages before the
Apostles lived on the earth.
Before I commence investigating these principles, to know precisely
what they are, I will read from some new revelations which were
revealed to the Prophet Joseph Smith in the month of December, 1830.
They are revelations concerning Adam, Enoch, Noah, and the Gospel of
salvation, as it was made manifest to them. That which I am about to
read is an extract from the prophecy of Enoch—a book revealed by
inspiration to the Prophet Joseph Smith, some twenty-nine years ago—
"And Enoch spake the words of God, and said, But God hath made known unto
our fathers that all men must repent. And he called upon our father
Adam by his own voice, saying: I am God; I made the world, and men
before they were in the flesh. And he also said unto him: If thou wilt turn unto me, and hearken
unto my voice, and believe, and repent of all thy transgressions, and
be baptized, even by water, in the name of mine Only Begotten Son,
which is full of grace and truth, which is Jesus Christ, the only name
which shall be given under heaven, whereby salvation shall come unto
the children of men, ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost, asking all things in his name, and whatsoever
ye shall ask, it shall be given you. And our father Adam spake unto the
Lord, and said: Why is it that men must repent and be baptized by
water? And the Lord said unto Adam: Behold I have forgiven thee thy
transgression in the Garden of Eden. Hence came the saying abroad
among the people, that the Son of God hath atoned for original guilt, wherein
the sins of the parents cannot be answered upon the heads of the
children, for they are whole from the foundation of the world.
"And the Lord spake unto Adam, saying: Inasmuch as thy children are
conceived in sin, even so when they begin to grow up, sin conceiveth
in their hearts, and they taste the bitter, that they may know to
prize the good. And it is given unto them to know good from evil;
wherefore they are agents unto themselves, and I have given
unto you another law and commandment. Wherefore teach it unto your
children, that all men, everywhere, must repent, or they can in nowise
inherit the kingdom of God, for no unclean thing can dwell there, or
dwell in his presence; for, in the language of Adam, Man of Holiness
is his name, and the name of his Only Begotten is the Son of Man, even
Jesus Christ, a righteous Judge, who shall come in the meridian of time.
"Therefore I give unto you a commandment, to teach these things freely unto your
children, saying: That by reason of transgression cometh the fall, which fall bringeth death, and
inasmuch as ye were born into the world by water, and blood, and the spirit, which
I have made, and so became of dust a living soul, even so ye must be
born again into the kingdom of heaven, of water, and of the Spirit, and be cleansed by blood, even the
blood of mine Only Begotten;
that ye might be sanctified from all sin, and enjoy the words of
eternal life in this world, and eternal life in the world to come,
even immortal glory; For by the water ye keep the commandment; by the
Spirit ye are justified, and by the blood ye are sanctified; Therefore it
given to abide in you; the record of heaven; the Comforter; the peaceable things
of immortal glory; the truth of all things; that which quickeneth all
things, which maketh alive all things; that which knoweth all things,
and hath all power according to wisdom, mercy, truth, justice, and
judgment.
"And now, behold, I say unto you: This is the plan of salvation unto
all men, through the blood of mine Only Begotten, who shall come in the
meridian of time. And behold, all things have their likeness, and all
things are created and made to bear record of me, both things which
are temporal, and things which are spiritual; things which are in the
heavens above, and things which are on the earth, and things which are
in the earth, and things which are under the earth, both above and beneath: all things bear record of me.
"And it came to pass, when the Lord had spoken with Adam, our father,
that Adam cried unto the Lord, and he was caught away by the Spirit of
the Lord, and was carried down into the water, and was laid under the
water, and was brought forth out of the water. And thus he was
baptized, and the Spirit of God descended upon him, and thus he was
born of the Spirit, and he became quickened in the inner man. And he
heard a voice out of heaven, saying: Thou art baptized with fire, and
with the Holy Ghost. This is the record of the Father, and the Son,
from henceforth and forever; And thou art after the order of him who
was without beginning of days or end of years, from all eternity to all eternity.
Behold, thou art one in me, a son of God; and thus may all become my
sons. Amen."
I have read this that the Latter-day Saints who have not had the
opportunity of reading these inspired translations of the Prophet may
have an opportunity of learning the fact that the Gospel was revealed
unto man in the earliest ages of our world. I will read also a short
extract from the prophecy of Enoch in relation to a commandment and a
mission given unto him—
"And it came to pass that the Lord said unto me: Look; and I looked,
and beheld the land of Sharon, and the land of Enoch, and the land of
Omner, and the land of Heni, and the land of Shem, and the land of
Haner, and the land of Hanannihah, and all the inhabitants thereof;
And the Lord said unto me: Go to this people, and say unto
them—Repent, lest I come out and smite them with a curse, and they die. And
he gave unto me a commandment that I should baptize in the name of the
Father, and the Son, which is full of grace and truth, and of the Holy Ghost, which beareth record of the Father and the Son."
Thus we see that not only Adam understood the principles of faith,
repentance, baptism, the new birth, and the gift of the Holy Ghost;
but Enoch also understood the same plan, and had authority given him
to administer in the ordinances of it. We will now pass along to Noah,
still reading from the new translation of the Old Testament, not
translated by King James' translators, but by the Prophet of the
living God—translated by the gift and power of inspiration from on
high—
"And in those days there were giants on the earth, and they sought
Noah to take away his life; but the Lord was with Noah, and the power
of the Lord was upon him.
"And the Lord ordained Noah after his order, and commanded him that
he should go forth and declare his Gospel unto the children of men,
even as it was given unto Enoch.
"And it came to pass that Noah called upon men that they should
repent; but they hearkened not unto his words; And also, after they
had heard him, they came up before him, saying: Behold, we are the
sons of God; have we not taken unto ourselves the daughters of men?
And are we not eating and drinking, and marrying and giving in
marriage? Our wives bear unto us children, and the same are mighty
men, which are like unto them of old, men of great renown. And they
hearkened not to the words of Noah.
"And God saw that the wickedness of men had become great in the earth;
and every man was lifted up in the imagination of the thoughts of his
heart, being only evil continually.
"And it came to pass that Noah continued his preaching unto the
people, saying: Hearken, and give heed unto my words; Believe and
repent of your sins and be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, the
Son of God, even as our fathers, and ye shall receive the gift of
the Holy Ghost, that ye may have all things made manifest; and if you
do not this, the floods will come in upon you; nevertheless they
hearkened not. And it repented Noah, and his heart was pained that the
Lord had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart."
You recollect King James' translators render it—"And it repented the
Lord that he had made man on the earth;" but the translation given by
inspiration says—"It repented Noah, and his heart was pained that the
Lord had made man on the earth. And the Lord said, I will destroy man,
whom I have created, from the face of the earth, both man and beast,
and the creeping things, and the fowls of the air; for it repenteth
Noah that I have created them, and that I have made them, and he hath
called upon me, and they have sought his life."
These extracts which I have read concerning Adam, Enoch, and Noah you
will find in a little work called "The Pearl of Great Price,"
published by F. D. Richards, in England, a few years ago. We might go
on and read further extracts from the Book of Abraham—a book also
revealed by inspiration to the Prophet Joseph Smith, showing that the
Gospel was revealed to him, and how he received the promise that all
the children of men that would obey that same Gospel preached by him
should be justified and become his children—called his seed, and heirs
according to the promise. But I have read sufficient for the
information of the Latter-day Saints upon this subject.
I know it is customary, at the present day, to select some passage of
Scripture as a text upon which to make remarks. Sometimes I follow
this custom, and sometimes I do not. I will just observe, however,
that we have no examples on record that Jesus or his Apostles
followed this plan in their preaching. Neither have we anything on
record showing that Jesus or his Apostles opened their meetings by
singing, and then praying, and then singing again, and then preaching.
We frequently conform to the present-day custom in this respect, and
we often do not conform to them, as we feel led by the Spirit of
truth. Neither was it customary, in the days of the Apostles, to make
long prayers; but if they had something very important to communicate
to the people, they did not wish the time occupied in any other way
only in delivering the message they had for them: hence we generally
find their prayers consisting of a very few sentences.
I shall select this morning a text of Scripture corroborative of those
I have already read. I shall select it from King James' translation.
You will find it in the Gospel according to John, 3rd chap., 5th
verse—"Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man
be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God."
There is much comprehended in this passage that is not fully realized
and understood by the great mass of the human family. To fully
understand it, it is necessary we should understand the true condition
of fallen man; then we shall see the necessity of a new birth:
otherwise, perhaps, we should see no necessity for it. It is recorded
in Scripture history that our first parents, while in the garden of
Eden, transgressed a certain law and commandment of the Almighty, by
partaking of a certain forbidden fruit; which transgression brought
them under condemnation, and subjected them to a certain penalty,
which was the death of their bodies of flesh and bones. "Dust thou
art, and unto dust thou shalt return," was the penalty pronounced upon
Adam. Pre vious to this, Adam was a pure, innocent being: he was not
contaminated with sin, and was entirely destitute of the knowledge of
good and evil. He was a being intended in his construction to endure
for evermore. Death had no dominion over his tabernacle: the principle
of blood which flows in the mortal tabernacles of men did not exist in
his immortal body; but his veins and arteries contained a fluid of a
far purer nature than that of blood: in other words, they were filled
with the spirit of life, which was calculated to preserve them in
immortality. Though they partook of various kinds of fruit in the
garden, yet there was no fruit in that garden, except one called the
forbidden fruit, which would have the least tendency to destroy the
principles of immortality that reigned within them. They were
organized to endure, bodies and spirits united, millions of ages. By
the transgression of that simple law given to them, they fell from
immortality to mortality: their bodies partook of disease; the seeds
of death were sown within them; and in the day that Adam ate thereof
(reckoning according to the Lord's time), he passed away and returned
to his mother dust.
The probability is, there were deleterious properties or poisonous
qualities in the food he ate, which were calculated to introduce into
the system the seeds of mortality, and so change it that various
forces of nature should have power over it, that in time it should die
and be dissolved to dust.
Was this the only penalty pronounced upon father Adam? No: this was
only a part of the penalty. There was dwelling in each of the
tabernacles of Adam and Eve a personage of spirit, formed of more
refined materials than flesh and bones—materials that were
intelligent, immortal, and eternal. Immaterialists of the present day
may object to this: but we do not believe in an immaterial substance.
The spirits that dwelt in our first parents were capable of thinking,
feeling, understanding, perceiving, acting, possessing a will and a
judgment: in other words, they were a part of that great substance of
life, or Spirit, which fills the immensity of space, that is in all
things, and through all things. The spirit of man had also a penalty
pronounced upon it, because it yielded to disobedience, by giving heed
to the Tempter; for, by yielding to his teachings, it became subject
to him as a servant.
If we become subject to a being, we are under his dominion and power,
and he controls us and exercises authority over us, whether good or
bad. Adam and Eve had placed themselves in a condition that the
Tempter had complete control over their spirits: they became servants
to the fallen angels, to do according to their bidding.
Let us now examine how the fall affected their posterity. We do not
inherit Adam's transgression, but the consequences of it. There is a
difference between inheriting the original sin and feeling the
consequences of it. To illustrate: We do not say, when children
inherit the diseases of their parents brought on by drunkenness,
debauchery, lasciviousness, and wickedness of every description, that
it is the effect of the children's individual sins. This is not so:
they only inherit the consequences of the sins of the parents. So it
is with all the posterity of Adam. The consequences of the
transgression of Adam and Eve have flowed down upon us; hence we find
that all the sons and daughters of Adam have become mortal. The seeds
of dissolution are within our tabernacles, because our first parents
sinned, and yet we are not guilty of their sins.
Furthermore, Adam and Eve be came subject in the spirit to the being
that tempted him. The children that were begotten by him, inheriting
unholy, fallen tabernacles, also became subject to the same being, on
the supposition that there had been no atonement provided. Hence you
perceive the baneful consequences of the fall, considered separate and
apart from any atonement which was to be made.
Next let us inquire as to the duration of the penalty. Was the penalty
to cease at the end of a certain period? I want you to look at this,
independent of any considerations of the atonement. If there had been
no atonement provided, the bodies of our first parents, as well as the
bodies of all their children, would have crumbled back to their mother
earth, to rise no more. Would not that have been an eternal death of
the flesh and bones? If there were no atonement, there could be no
resurrection. How could man, being fallen and corrupted, atone for his
own sins? He could not do it. How could he deliver himself from the
power of Satan to whom he had made himself subject? He could not do
it. Satan had claim upon him, and there was no power in man, in the
least degree, to redeem himself from that bondage.
This is what we call fallen man, and this is what we call spiritual
death—not a dissolution or disorganization of the spiritual elements,
but the subjection of the spirit to the power of Satan as eternal in
its duration as the subjection of the flesh and bones to death.
Now let us take into consideration for a few moments the great plan
which God devised before Adam was placed in the garden of Eden in
order to redeem man. God, by his foreknowledge, beheld that man would
fall from his first estate, by turning aside from his
commandments—that he would bring upon himself an eternal
death both of body and spirit. Now is the opportunity for mercy to
step in. Justice had consigned them to eternal death and misery, and
mercy could not step in without destroying the claims of justice, only
upon certain conditions. And what may be those conditions? Would God
accept the sacrifice of a corrupted, sinful, degraded, fallen being as
an atonement for his own sins? No; that would not satisfy the demands
of justice. God could not exhibit the attribute of mercy on any
principle whatsoever, only for a sinless being to suffer in behalf of
sinful man. Inasmuch as the sin was against an infinite being—a
transgression of a law issued by an infinite being, the atonement
must be an infinite atonement. Hence God sent forth his only begotten
Son in the meridian of time, who took upon himself the form of fallen
man: that is, he entered into a tabernacle of flesh and bones,
although he had not been guilty of the original sin. This he did
voluntarily on his part.
For the edification of the Saints, I will refer to a passage in the
inspired translation of the book of Abraham, where we read that in the
counsels of eternity, before the foundation of the world, the Lord
devised the great plan of salvation. When he came to that part of it,
in relation to the future redemption of man, which pertains to a
sacrifice, he made an inquiry—"Whom shall we send?" He did not feel,
as it were, willing to say to anyone of the council, You are the
person, and you must go and make this atonement: he did not seem
willing to exercise this authority upon an innocent being, but looked
around upon the assembly as though he would have someone to
volunteer. "And one answered like unto the Son of Man: Here am I, send
me." Here, then, was an offer on the part of the Son of God, the
Firstborn—"I will go and redeem the human family upon the conditions
that thou hast devised."
But how could he go and redeem them? He could not redeem them, unless
he suffered for them and in their behalf. The penalty of death had
passed upon them. His father might have reasoned with him in words
something like these—If you, a pure sinless being, my only begotten
Son, are willing to go and take upon you the same kind of body that
the fallen sons of men have taken upon themselves—a fallen body of
flesh and bones, subject to pain, disease, sickness, temptation, and
finally death, and offer yourself as a sacrifice (although it is not
required of you, for you have committed no sin that I should cause
death to come on your body; yet if you do this voluntarily, and keep
my commandments in all things, and not sin against me), I will accept
the sacrifice which you make in behalf of your younger brethren; and I
will have mercy on them, otherwise no mercy can be shown to them:
justice must have its full effect, and they must suffer eternal
misery, being captive to that being whom they have consented to obey.
Here, then, was the principle in which could be made manifest mercy in
behalf of the fallen sons and daughters of men. When could this
principle of mercy begin to be exercised? Could it be exercised before
the blood of the atonement was shed? Yes. There was the free,
voluntary offer of the Son of God to do all this work, and suffer and
die for his brethren, before man was placed in the garden: hence, in
the mind of God, it was just the same as though it had actually been
fulfilled. Therefore he is called a lamb slain, as it were, before the
foundation of the world: hence he could have mercy on Adam, on Enoch,
on Noah, on Abraham, on the Prophets, and on the children of
men while the earth should stand, because of the atonement that was to
be made in the meridian of time.
But the great question for us to consider, on this occasion, is, in
what way the fallen sons and daughters of men can be made partakers of
the benefits of this atonement? Are they to be unconditionally
redeemed by the blood of Christ? Is it to be done by free grace alone,
without any works on the part of the creature? Or are there required
on the part of the man certain conditions by which the atoning blood
of Christ can have effect upon him? I will answer this question. The
atonement of Jesus Christ redeems mankind, so far as the fall is
concerned, unconditionally. Now, I want you all to understand this
clearly. There is no faith, repentance, baptism, or works of any kind
required on the part of man to be redeemed from the fall, or from the
sins committed by our first parents. Not one of you are guilty because
Adam and Eve sinned. Did you eat the forbidden fruit? Were you there,
on that occasion, to put forth your hand, and take of that fruit, and
eat of it? The united response of all the world in this and all
generations of man would be—"We were not there." You are not
condemned
for a sin you did not commit. Can you repent of something you never
have done? I defy the whole world to repent of Adam's sin, for they
never committed it. You did not exercise your agency on that occasion:
why, then, not be redeemed from it without exercising your agency? Why
not be redeemed by free grace alone, without works? Why be required to
believe, repent, and be baptized for Adam's sin? It would be
foolishness. The atonement of Jesus Christ will redeem every son and
daughter of Adam from his day down to the end of the earth, so far as
that sin is concerned. Hence, all little children have been redeemed
from the fall, and are perfectly innocent and pure before God. The
original sin is not imputed to them. Why? Because of the atonement.
The atonement is just as broad as the original sin and the effects of
it. If the original sin extends its effects to the latest generations
of Adam, so the atonement will extend its effects to all his
posterity, and redeem them from these consequences. But you may
inquire, If we are to be redeemed from Adam's sin and its
consequences, unconditionally, by the atonement, shall we not be
restored into the condition Adam was in before he fell? I answer, You
will be. What condition was he in? He was an immortal being, and you
will be restored to immortality, whether you be Saints or sinners. The
decree has gone forth that every man is to be raised to immortality.
Then you will be as Adam was in the garden of Eden before he fell.
Furthermore, Adam, before he fell, was in the presence of God, and
could behold the face of his Maker, hear his voice, look upon his
glory, behold his angels, and associate with those pure and holy
beings. Will you be restored, back to the presence of God? Yes, after
the resurrection; for Jesus says, "if I be lifted up, I will draw all
men unto me" —that is, lift them up from their graves, and bring them
into his presence, to stand before the bar of his judgment. What for?
To be judged. For Adam's sin? No. We have nothing to do with that sin
in the day of judgment; but we shall be brought before the bar of God,
and be restored from the fall, with flesh and bones, but not blood,
and be capable of enduring forever and ever; and there we shall
behold the face of our God and of Jesus Christ, and the face of his
angels, and be able to converse with them, and hear them converse, as
Adam did before the fall. Is not this a complete restoration?
Yes.
Now I want to tell you of something that will come a little closer
home than Adam's sin. Every man or woman upon the face of this globe,
that has come to the years of understanding and accountability, has
committed sin himself or herself. You have had commandments given to
you as well as our first parents had. The holy law has issued from
heaven to us, and penalties have been affixed. And when we come up to
years of understanding and accountability, we transgress the holy law
and commandment given us from heaven, even as Adam transgressed the
first law in the garden of Eden.
Now let us consider the consequence of this second transgression. God
has given a law to the posterity of Adam, after coming to a knowledge
of good and evil by the fall, that they should not do evil. If he has
given a strict law that we shall not do evil, you may depend upon it he
has affixed a strict penalty to it; for what would a law be good for
without a penalty? What is the penalty? It is, that if the posterity
of Adam shall do evil, they shall, after the resurrection, be banished
again from the presence of God, and from the glory of his power; they
shall endure the pains of the second death. The violation of the first
law given to Adam brought the first death, and the violation of the
second law given to the posterity of Adam will bring the second death,
which is the penalty attached to it. How are we going to help
ourselves? We have all sinned after we came to the years of
accountability. When we were little children, we were perfectly pure,
even as the angels of God; and of such, said Jesus, is the kingdom of
heaven, being redeemed from the fall by the atonement. But are we
redeemed from our own actual sins? We have used our agency in
committing these actual sins, and we have no excuse to plead. We could
justly excuse ourselves in relation to the sin committed by Adam, but
there is no excuse in relation to breaking these second commandments.
We have violated them with our eyes open. Can we escape the penalty?
Says one, There is the atonement. Yes, that is true; but will that
have effect to redeem us from this second death and banishment
unconditionally on our part? No. If we are redeemed from this second
penalty, it will be by exercising our agency—by complying with certain
conditions; and these conditions I intend to lay before you, which are
called the Gospel.
I think I have pointed out, as clearly as my feeble language will
permit, the condition of the whole human family, so far as it regards
their fallen state, and so far as it regards their own individual
transgressions. I have tried to be simple in my explanations.
What are the conditions by which we are to be redeemed from our own
actual sins and escape this second penalty? After being redeemed from
the grave and brought back into the presence of God and angels, what
would be more terrifying than to hear the words, "Depart, ye cursed,
into everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his angels?"
Unpleasant as this would be, it must be pronounced, if God is a God of
truth and holiness: his justice must take effect; and, notwithstanding
the atonement, there is no way for him to exercise his mercy in behalf
of the children of men, only through their agency. You can save
yourselves through the atonement, or let it alone. Jesus has done his
part: he has died for us—has got the plan all laid; his blood has been
shed, and he has suffered the pains of all the children of men, and in
their behalf, if they will only accept the conditions.
What is the first condition required of the human family? It is to
believe in Jesus Christ as the true Redeemer, and in his
Father as the true God. This condition stands before repentance,
baptism, the sacrament, or keeping the Sabbath day holy; for no person
can keep the Sabbath day holy until he complies with the Gospel. This
faith or belief is the first principle of the Gospel. "He that
believeth and is baptized shall be saved," says Jesus Christ; "and he
that believeth not shall be damned." Much has been said about faith.
What is it? Many definitions have been given, but there is nothing
more easy to be comprehended than faith. It is simply an act of the
mind—a belief in those things that are true. It is also a simple act
of the mind to believe those things which are not true. You may have a
false faith or a true faith. Faith should be founded upon evidence.
Where substantial evidence is presented to the mind, it should be
received, and should produce faith in our minds. We should be very
careful in regard to our faith, that we do not receive false evidence,
for this would give us a false faith. I might refer you to many
examples of false evidence producing a false faith. For instance, a
few centuries ago, almost all the world believed that our earth did
not turn upon its axis once in twenty-four hours from west to east;
but they believed the sun, moon, and stars went round it once in
twenty-four hours, and that the earth stood still. This was a false
faith—the result of believing without sufficient evidence: they were
guided by the tradition and popular testimony of the age. Copernicus
set forth evidence in his day to prove that it was the earth that
revolved on its axis, instead of the sun, moon, and stars revolving
around the earth. The evidence he produced began to beget in the
hearts of the people a true faith, which was founded upon true
evidence; and since his day many demonstrations have been given to
prove the great fact that it is the earth which moves, instead of the
starry firmament. Upon that subject the world now have true faith,
founded upon true evidence demonstrated to them.
So it is in regard to Jesus, the great Redeemer, and God his Father:
evidence is granted to prove to us that there are such beings. Chosen
vessels are called, and have their eyes opened to behold the Father
and the Son, and go forth as witnesses to the inhabitants of the
earth, and bear testimony of that fact, setting forth the doctrine of
the Father and the Son. This evidence begets in the minds of the
people a true faith, while a traditionary evidence often begets a
false faith. For instance, Paul, previous to his conversion, was a
zealous, good man as far as he understood. He went forth, being
governed by his faith, to persecute the Church of the living God. He
verily believed he ought to do many things contrary to the name of
Jesus Christ, the Nazarene. He believed he was doing God service in
putting the servants of Jesus Christ to death. He had a false faith,
founded upon sufficient evidence. By-and-by he received a testimony
for himself that Jesus was really and truly the Christ—that he was
persecuting the followers of the true Redeemer. His faith now became
corrected, a true faith was given him, and the testimony he received
prepared him to bear witness of the fact to tens of thousands of
others—not a secondhand testimony, but he could testify, My eyes
have seen him; my ears have heard his voice; I have beheld his glory.
He went forth as a witness goes forth into our courts of justice to
testify that he knew positively, and not to testify what some other
men had said, or to what some other person knew. Such witnesses go
forth to the world, and their testimony produces faith in the minds of
those who carefully weigh the evi dence. Believe that Jesus is,
and that he has atoned for the children of men; believe that without
his death and sufferings there could have been no forgiveness of sins;
believe that his is the only name given under heaven whereby mankind
can be saved. It is a principle requisite to the new birth.
My text informs us that unless a man be born of water and of the
Spirit, he can in nowise enter into the kingdom of God. Before you can
be born of water, you must have faith in such a principle as birth of
water. "Faith," says the apostle, "comes by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God." That is, in ancient days they had no printing
presses to circulate the written word, so that faith could come by
reading: they produced faith by their verbal testimony in the hearts
of their hearers who were honest, and who investigated the subjects
laid before them. Will this faith alone save a person in the kingdom
of God? No. This is only faith without works, such as devils have; and
yet it is necessary in a true believer, to precede the works which he
must perform. Devils believe that Jesus is the Son of God, and they
believe it on good substantial testimony. Mankind are required to
believe the same fact as well as the devils; but such faith will never
save an individual without works: there are other conditions to be
connected with it before he can be saved.
What is the next step? It is to repent of all our sins: we know what
they are. These persons sitting before me, in this congregation, can
look back upon the past years of their lives, and can reflect upon the
many sins they have committed before God, that perhaps no other person
living knows anything about. You can recollect many laws you have
broken. Perhaps many of you have forgotten some of your
transgressions; but in the next world they will be brought before you.
But you can call to mind some of the most prominent evils and
transgressions which you have committed. Have you taken the name of
God in vain? What saith the law of God? "Thou shalt not take the name
of the Lord thy God in vain." Are there not many people in this city
who have used that name in vain? Are there not many persons present
this morning who have blasphemed His name? If there are, you are the
persons I mean: you are the individuals who have need of repentance.
You are the persons that must reform from this sin, or else your faith
that Jesus is the Christ will do you no good. Are there any persons
under the sound of my voice who have cheated their neighbor, and who
have been dishonest in their dealings generally? Look within your own
hearts; look back upon your past dealings with your neighbors in
former days. Have you defrauded them out of the least particle of
their property? If you have, you have broken the law of God—that law
that was thundered from Mount Sinai by the voice of the trump of
God—that law that was continued under the Christian
dispensation—namely, the ten commandments. If you have coveted your
neighbor's property, or stolen, you have broken that portion of the
law. It is just as bad to cheat a man out of his property as to go in
the nighttime and secretly steal it from him. Both of these are
strictly against the law of God, and the penalty of that law will be
fulfilled upon every individual that has transgressed it. You cannot
get from under it, only by repentance and restitution. What said
Zaccheus in ancient times? He was very anxious to see Jesus Christ.
He, no doubt, believed in him, and felt to repent, and said, "Lord, if
I have wronged any man, I am ready to restore four fold." Are
you ready to do the same, you that have wronged your neighbors—that
have dealt dishonestly and cheated them—you that have put forth your
hand and taken your neighbor's goods, or his money? If you have true
repentance, you will go and restore fourfold; you will not only say to
him, "Neighbor, I am sorry I have wronged you, and I will do so no
more" (that would not be acceptable in the sight of God); but you will
go and make restitution, which is the way Samuel the Prophet was
willing to do before his death. After having lived to a good old age,
he called together the mighty hosts of Israel, and said to them,
"Behold, here I am: witness against me before the Lord, and before his
anointed: whose ox have I taken? or whose ass have I taken? or whom
have I defrauded? whom have I oppressed? or of whose hand have I
received any bribe to blind mine eyes therewith? and I will restore it
to you." No man came forward to accuse the Prophet; and if there is no
just accuser in time, there will be none in eternity but God and your
conscience. If you know that you have wronged a man, your conscience
will accuse you in the day of judgment. Repent of that sin, for
repentance has got to be connected with your faith, or your faith is
good for nothing. Again: Is there any man in this congregation who has
committed adultery? That is against the law thundered by the voice of
the trump of God in the midst of the lightnings and quakings of Mount
Sinai. If you are guilty of that evil, repent of it, and turn to that
God against whom you have offended, and confess your sins, and forsake
them, and do that thing no more.
Are there any persons in this congregation who have murdered—who have
shed innocent blood, and have done this in their ignorance of the law
of God, or perhaps in the blindness of their minds, not knowing his
law? There is a chance for you to repent. But if there is a person who
has been enlightened by the Spirit of truth—a person who has received
the gift of the Holy Ghost, and has put forth his hand to shed
innocent blood, we do not call upon you to repent, for there is no
repentance for you. It is a sin that you will have to meet before the
bar of God. It is a sin for which there is no forgiveness in this
world, nor in the world to come. It depends altogether how much light
a murderer has before he commits the deed, as to his chance of
forgiveness; but you have to suffer the penalty that is attached,
which is death.
I am now preaching the first principles of the Gospel, and some of the
most prominent sins of this generation I have named over before this
congregation. Look abroad among the nations of the earth, and see the
spirit of murder and bloodshed that exists in the hearts of millions
towards their fellow men. Look at the feeling of this generation in
regard to our youthful Prophet, who was martyred for his testimony and
for the revelations he received from heaven. In the year 1844 he was
smitten down by the hands of his enemies. Even they are called upon to
repent, if they did not know any better—if they did it in their
ignorance. But if they did it with their eyes open, we would say to
such persons, "There is no repentance for you." Perhaps, after they
have suffered in the eternal worlds, there may be a possibility of
some of those murderers who were not enlightened to find redemption at
a certain period, and some degree of glory. This applies not only to
those who put forth their hands to shed the blood of the servants of
God, but to those who have sanctioned the deed: they are guilty
also.
Are there any persons in this congregation who feel to sanction the
shedding of the blood of innocent men in this generation? If you do,
though you were not present to put forth your hand to stab the fatal
blow, remember you are guilty. What said Jesus to the people in his
day? "Wherefore, behold, I send unto you prophets, and wise men, and
scribes: and some of them ye shall kill and crucify; and some of them
shall ye scourge in your synagogues, and persecute them from city to
city: That upon you may come all the righteous blood shed upon the
earth, from the blood of righteous Abel unto the blood of Zacharias
son of Barachias, whom ye slew between the temple and the altar.
Verily I say unto you, All these things shall come upon this
generation." How is it that those who lived two thousand years ago had
to answer the blood of the martyrs slain five or six thousand years
ago? Because they sanctioned the deed by putting to death the living
Prophets sent to them. When a man puts forth his hand to shed the
blood of a living servant of God who bears testimony of the truth, and
has been sent by authority of God, that man is guilty of the blood of
all the servants of God who have been slain from the creation; and all
who sanction the deed will have to be punished with those murderers
that actually perpetrated the same.
There will be a great many murderers in this generation; for there are
hundreds and thousands of pious, sanctified hypocrites in the pulpit,
and editors of the press, and the people that feel to say, concerning
the martyrdom of the Prophet Joseph Smith, I am glad of it; thank the
Lord that they have killed him, &c., just as they said about Jesus in
his day, and about all the Prophets in former times; and the blood of
all these ancient martyrs will be required at their hands.
Murder is a prominent evil of this generation. And again, behold other
prominent evils that exist in our large cities. Look at the city of
New York, for instance, which contains twenty thousand female
prostitutes, that get their daily living by prostitution, of course
encouraged by hundreds of thousands of male prostitutes, who are just
as bad or worse than the female prostitutes. Here is a sample of one
city. Then go to Boston, Albany, St. Louis, New Orleans, Baltimore,
Philadelphia, and to all the principal cities of the American Union,
and you will find the same proportion of prostitutes among those
cities who are sunk in the lowest depths of degradation, daily and
hourly prostituting themselves, and disobeying one of the most strict
and holy commandments of God ever issued from his throne; and this is
only a beginning as it were. Read the statistics of the great city of
London, which show there is in it something like ninety thousand
female prostitutes; and all these must be encouraged and supported by
millions of male prostitutes. This is carried on not for one year only
or two years, but for a whole generation, and from generation to
generation. Then step across into the European governments. Go into
France, into Germany, Prussia, and all those old countries of the
East, and you will find in many of those nations, as the statistics
show, one-half of the children that are born to be illegitimate; and
that is only a beginning of the corruptions that exist. There are more
that are covered up in the dark, that are not made so publicly
manifest, than what are made manifest by the births of illegitimate
children. There are probably a hundred sins that are dark and hidden
from the gaze of the public to one that comes to light. Then realize that these things have existed for generations that are past
upon our earth, and then all reflecting men will think there is a
necessity for the people to repent. Perhaps someone may say, I am not
guilty of these things. But have you ever done anything to prevent
them? Have the wise legislators and representatives of those nations
ever devised any laws to put a stop to this wickedness? If they have
not, they are included in the guilt. Whether they are actually engaged
in these crimes or not, they will be included among the guilty ones,
while they suffer these things when it is in their power to stop them.
How can you stop them? Let the lawmaking departments of those various
governments enact laws that shall put an utter stop to them. What law
should they enact to stay this flood of iniquity? Not a law that can
be trampled upon with impunity by millions; but let it be the law
pointed out in the Scriptures—namely, the law of death. Let the
penalty of death be attached to your laws, and let it be put in force
upon the adulterer and the whoremonger, both male and female; and if
you do not find these floods of prostitution assuaged, then you may
depend upon it that I do not understand these things. You would find
these prostitutions become as rare as murders, if you have the same
penalty attached. Death was the penalty for the sin of adultery in
ancient days, and the enlightened of Europe and of all Christendom
pretend to found their criminal laws, more or less, on the Bible. All
these sins and crimes need to be repented of.
After a man has repented, will his faith and repentance bring the
forgiveness of sins through the atonement? Are these all the
conditions required? No. You may confess your sins; but if you never
make restitution to the persons you have wronged, your confession will
be of no service. You may confess your sins to the Lord, and promise
him you will never sin any more, and after all your sins will not be
forgiven. Why? Because he has ordained a still further condition. And
what is that? Be baptized for the remission of sins. Now, says one, is
there anything in that ordinance that actually atones for the sins of
the people? Baptism does not atone for a single sin. Then how is it
that the sins are remitted after it? Because of the atonement of Jesus
Christ—because he has opened the way whereby these conditions can be
granted to the creature—because the gifts of faith, repentance, and
baptism have been granted to you through the atonement; and these are
the conditions on which your sins can be pardoned. Is that all? No. If
you stop there, you are lost. You have only a forgiveness of past
sins; you are not a new creature: you must be born, not only of water
(which is baptism for the remission of sins), but you must be born of
the Spirit also, or you cannot inherit the kingdom of God.
I will give you some few ideas in relation to baptism for the
remission of sins. This is instituted of the Lord our God as the birth
of the water. There are a great many things we cannot give reasons
for, because we do not know them ourselves. We have no knowledge why
such and such ordinances are instituted and revealed; but when we come
to baptism, we can tell why that was revealed: we can understand the
reason, because God has revealed it. If he had not, we should be in
the dark relating to it.
In the passage from the new translation which I read at the
commencement of my remarks, we find the first teachings of the Gospel
to Adam—"That inasmuch as they (thy children) were born into the
world by the fall which bringeth death, by water, and blood, and
the spirit, which I have made, and so become of dust a living soul,
even so ye must be born again of water, and the Spirit, and cleansed by
blood, even the blood of mine Only Begotten." This is in order that
you may become a new creature, otherwise you cannot inherit the
kingdom of God. One thing is instituted because of the other. How came
we with these mortal bodies, corrupted and degraded? Because of the
fall. We are born into the world, through the fall, with the
particular kind of bodies we inherit. When we came into this world, we
were born out of the watery elements into the element of air. We also
partook of the blood, when we were in embryo, that flowed through the
veins and arteries of our mothers, and from thence circulated through
our embryo tabernacles: our infant tabernacles were also quickened by
the human spirit; and thus, by the water and by the blood, and by the
human spirit, we were born naturally a living soul into a world of
death. If we would be restored from this fallen state, and become a
new creature, it must be by baptism—the new birth—the birth of the
water, the atoning blood of Jesus, and the birth of the Spirit—all
three corresponding to the water, blood, and spirit of man that enters
into the tabernacle; one thing corresponding to another—one principle
to another; and hence the ordinance of baptism was instituted, that
man might be brought forth from the liquid element of water, which is
called a birth, the same as the child is brought forth from the same
element in the womb into the air; and as the child is quickened by the
human spirit taking possession of the embryo tabernacle, so must the
individual that comes from the watery element be quickened by the Holy
Spirit, and be prepared to enter into the kingdom of God—one thing
being in the likeness of the other. And as, through trans gression, the
blood has brought death into the world, so by the blood of Jesus
Christ we must be sanctified, that eternal life may come into the
world—one thing answering to the other. Hence we can see the
propriety of the new birth that is spoken of in the fifth verse of the
third chapter of John.
How definite are the remarks of our Redeemer to Nicodemus on this
subject—"Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of
water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." No
man can get there without both of these births—the birth of the water,
or baptism for the remission of sins; and baptism by the Holy Ghost,
or the new birth of the Spirit. Both of these must be received, or we
fail to enter into that kingdom which is called the kingdom of God.
How many in this congregation have not complied with these conditions?
Are there any individuals here who believe that Jesus Christ is the
only name given under heaven whereby you may be saved, that believe in
his atoning blood? If there are, to you I say, Repent of all your
sins (if you have not repented of them already), and then be baptized
in water for the remission of them, and come forth again out of the
water born unto newness of life, that you may be filled with the Holy
Ghost, or be immersed with the Spirit of truth, that you henceforth
may live in newness of life, and then you can enter into the kingdom
of God. And you may set it down as one of those immutable principles
that cannot be moved, that you never can get there without obeying
these conditions. You may flatter yourselves as much as you please to
the contrary; you cannot get there on any other terms, unless you can
prove Jesus Christ an impostor.
But, says one, did not the thief on the cross get there? No. He turned
to Jesus in his expiring moments, and said unto him, Lord,
remember me when thou comest into thy kingdom. And Jesus said unto
him—"Verily I say unto thee, Today shalt thou be with me in
paradise." And where is that? Is it in the kingdom of God? Let us
inquire into this matter. We find that paradise, according to the
definitions given by the most eminent writers, is a place of departed
spirits. Where did Jesus go? Peter said he went to preach to the
spirits in prison, while his body was in the tomb. The Church of
England, in one of their articles, say that Jesus Christ suffered
death and descended into hell, and after three days he rose again and
ascended to his Father. What did he go there for? Peter says to preach
the Gospel to them that were dead, that they might be judged according
to men in the flesh. Did the thief go with him? Yes: "This day shalt
thou be with me in paradise;" and there I will preach to you among the
rest. But to enter the mansion where God dwells, and where the holy
angels dwell, you must be born of water and of the Spirit, or you
cannot enter that kingdom. Adam could not go there; Enoch could not;
Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and the Prophets, none of them could get
into that kingdom without being born of water and the Spirit. This
astonished Nicodemus; and Jesus said—"Art thou a master of Israel, and
knowest not these things?" —as much as to say, the new birth had been
unfolded to the people since the beginning of man, and handed down
from generation to generation, and yet you are "a master in Israel,"
and do not know these things! It was the only way of salvation before
Jesus came, and it was the only way after he came. And these
ordinances must be administered by properly authorized persons. But as
time will not admit us to make remarks on this point, we conclude by
bearing testimony that the great God has restored this same plan or
system of things, by which you can be born of water and the Spirit by
legal administrators—by those who have received power and authority
from heaven, from under the hands of holy angels. This is the
testimony we have to bear to all nations. It is the testimony we have
borne far beyond these United States. We have crossed the great ocean
into foreign countries, and borne this testimony in many lands. I see
sitting before me hundreds in this assembly that have crossed the
ocean and come to these Rocky Mountains to settle with the Saints of
God, to live or to die with them if necessary. You heard the servants
of God bear testimony in your native countries, that holy angels had
been sent from heaven, clothed with authority and power, who laid
their hands upon chosen vessels, and restored the authority and
Apostleship again to the earth, in order that people might be
baptized; for they could not be born of water unless the administrator
had authority to administer. If a man undertake to administer the
ordinance of baptism, and he is only called by his fellow men, it
would not be worth anything. It would not be legal in the great
judgment day. A person cannot be born again legitimately without a
legal administrator. If you are born of the Spirit, there must needs
be a man authorized to administer that Spirit. Paul says, "Who hath
also made us able ministers of the new testament; not of the letter,
but of the spirit: for the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth
life." Why? Because he was authorized to lay his hands on baptized
believers, and confirm upon them the gift of the Holy Ghost, that they
might be born of the Spirit and become new creatures.
In the last days the same Apostle-ship has been restored, and you are
the witnesses of the servants of God that occupy these seats. We may
say thousands of the people in this territory are witnesses
that this authority is restored. How do you know? Did you see the
angel? No. Did you have a heavenly vision? How do you know that these
are the servants of God—that angels have come from heaven and restored
the Apostleship? You answer, We believed their testimony on good
substantial evidence, but we did not know it to be true; we acted on
our faith, repented of our sins, were baptized, and the administrator
laid his hands on our heads, and confirmed the Holy Ghost upon us. Did
you receive it? Yes, and we received a perfect knowledge that they
were the servants of God. This is what Luke means when he says, "And
we are witnesses of these things; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom
God hath given to them that obey him."
Now, strangers, if you want to obtain a knowledge that this work is of
God, obey the word of God, and you shall receive the gift of the Holy
Ghost; and when you receive that gift, you will know: you will be
beyond belief, so far as that one thing is concerned. You will know
that this is the truth which we have told you: you will know that an
angel of God has been sent from heaven; that the Book of Mormon is a
Divine revelation—the history of ancient America, containing the
Gospel preached in ancient times in this land; that God has raised up
his kingdom on earth for the last time; that this is the winding-up
dispensation; and that the great day of the Lord is at hand. This you
will know through the administration of the ordinances of the Gospel.
Are you willing to try it? Are you willing to believe our testimony?
We say to infidels—you who do not know whether there is a God or not,
test our words and prove them whether they are true or not. If you do
as we tell you, you shall know there is a God—that this is his
work—that these testimonies given by the servants of God are
testimonies given for your benefit, to prepare you for the great day
of his coming. Infidels and all other men may know whether this work
is true or not. You can prove whether we are false teachers or not. We
set these things before you: comply with them, and the blessing is
yours, as sure as the Lord lives and reigns on his eternal throne. But
if you do not comply with them, you cannot know until it is too late.
May God bless those that are inquiring after the truth, and all that
obey it, is my prayer, in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.