Of all the vices that entangle a man, perhaps none is as unholy
as jealousy. Jealousy, the "green-eyed monster", dwells in the deeper
regions of sin because the source of its existence is unbridled
covetousness growing out of pride and insecurity. However, in the
case of jealousy, what is a vice in human nature is a virtue in
the divine nature of God. Though among men jealousy is a ravaging
and soul-destroying cancer, in God it is a righteous zeal, based
upon His covenant love for His own people, which seeks to protect
a love- relationship and avenge it when broken. The godly zeal which
the Lord has for those whom He has chosen is an attribute worthy
of all praise and adoration.
The fact that He is a jealous God was one of the first characteristics
that the Lord made known to Israel after He had redeemed her out
of the slave market of Egypt. She became His love and possession,
and He demanded from her a love and devotion that would extend to
no other.1
I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of the land
of Egypt, out of the house of Bondage. Thou shalt have no other
gods before me...for I the LORD thy God am a jealous God (Ex.
20:1,3,5).
Thou shalt worship no other god; for the LORD, whose name is
Jealous, is a jealous God (Ex. 34:14).
Throughout Old Testament history the Lord taught Israel that He
was the only God with whom they had to do. For her to worship and
serve another would be sheer adultery and whoredom:
And yet they would not hearken unto their judges, but they went
a whoring after other gods, and bowed themselves unto them (Judges
2:17).
In the New Testament we find the same teaching. The New Testament
writers shared the Lord's jealousy over His covenant people:
For I am jealous over you with a godly jealousy: for I have
espoused you to one husband, that I may present you as a chaste
virgin to Christ (II Cor. 11:2).
While throughout the flow of Bible history we see God proclaiming
that He alone is to be worshiped, at the same time we find prophets
who were not of God taught the contrary. True prophets would never
be found teaching the people to worship another god - whether is
was a stone idol, and imaginary god dwelling in heaven, or a deified
man. They knew that it was Jehovah who had redeemed Israel out of
Egypt and that He alone is God. Inspired by God's Spirit, they knew
the mind of the Lord: that He would give His glory to no other.
Therefore, when these living oracles of God spoke as prophets, they
were moved to proclaim, "Thou shalt worship the LORD thy God, and
Him only shalt thou serve."
In light of this insistence upon the exclusiveness of the true
God, we can understand the test of a prophet that Moses taught the
children of Israel. By applying this timeless test, people throughout
all ages may detect the false ones:
If there arise among you a prophet, or a dreamer of dreams,
and giveth thee a sign or a wonder, and the sign or wonder come
to pass, whereof he spake unto thee, saying, let us go after other
gods, which thou hast not known, and let us serve them; thou shalt
not hearken unto the words of that prophet, or that dreamer of
dreams: for the LORD proveth you, to know whether ye love the
LORD your God with all you soul. Ye shall walk after the LORD
your God, and fear Him, and keep His commandments, and obey His
voice, and ye shall serve Him, and cleave unto Him. And that prophet,
or that dreamer of dreams shall be put to death; because he has
spoken to turn you away form the LORD your God, which brought
you out of the land of Egypt, and redeemed you out of the house
of bondage, to thrust thee out of the way which the LORD thy God
commanded thee to walk in. So shalt thou put the evil away from
the midst of thee (Deut. 13:1-5)
These words tell us that though a man might exercise miraculous
powers, he could not be a prophet of the Lord if he sought to lead
the people away to a strange god. Any prophet who advocates the
service and worship of another god is not a mouthpiece of the Lord,
is false, and, under the theocratic nation of Israel, was to be
slain.
Holding fast to these truths let us now turn to Brigham Young,
a man who claimed for himself the station and office of prophet
of God. Recent history records the lives of few men who have possessed
the leadership qualities that Young exhibited. For thirty years
he presided as Prophet, Seer, and Revelator over the Mormon Church,
a people claiming to be led by prophets of God as in the days of
ancient Israel. On the basis of this claim the Mormons have always
regarded themselves as the only true Church on earth today.2
Their priesthood claims sole possession of the authority or power
needed to act on behalf of God,3 and they consider
all other "Christian churches" to be in a state of apostasy, who
at best teach a partial truth about the gospel of Christ.4
Now if Brigham Young, Mormon prophet from 1847 to 1877, were a false
prophet all along, then the claims of those who have sought to derive
their priesthood authority through him are empty and void.5
If Brigham taught false doctrine, that cuts the ground from under
Mormonism's claim of latter-day prophetic revelation and the Mormon
Church is not divinely led. Acknowledging this to be true, LDS Apostle
Orson Hyde stated:
To acknowledge that this is the Kingdom of God, and that there
is a presiding power, and to admit that he [Brigham Young] can
advance incorrect doctrine is to lay the axe at the root of the
tree. Will he suffer his mouthpiece to go into error? No.6
Any boast of prophetic guidance would be worthless if that guidance
were false. John Taylor, Mormon Apostle and later President, admitted
also this to be the case: "If that mouthpiece [Brigham Young] has
not the power to dictate I would throw all Mormonism away."7
The Mormon Church must base the truth of her claims on the authenticity
of Brigham's calling. Yet, we shall see that Brigham Young, who
presided over the Mormon Church longer than any other man, did indeed
advance false doctrine that focused worship on a god other than
the Lord God of Israel.
Adam-God first proclaimed
It stormed heavily on April 9, 1852, but the people turned out
for the sessions of the Spring LDS Conference that were that day.
Each session of the six-day church conference was filled to capacity.
Those desiring the best seats lined up outside the doors hours before
they opened. At times, because the crowds were so large, many male
members would leave the tabernacle to allow more room for the women
to attend.
At 6:00 on the evening of the ninth, all LDS male members gathered
together in the Salt Lake Tabernacle for another session. The house
was full. After the usual introductory exercises, Mormon Prophet
and President Brigham Young began to address his brethren upon various
subjects. He instructed them concerning the place recreation and
amusements should occupy in their lives and concerning the principle
of tithing.
Then, after a moment's pause, the Mormon Prophet took up his next
topic. The question was, Who begat Jesus Christ in the flesh? This
was a hot issue. There had been no little dispute about it among
the LDS Elders, and there were opposing views. As a Prophet and
mouthpiece of God, Brigham Young stepped forward to silence all
erroneous opinions and to declare with finality the true answer
to the inquiry.8
First, he repeated the fundamental Mormon doctrine that the Father
and Son each has a physical body of flesh and bones. Next, he set
forth Mormonism's belief that God the Father in a pre-existent period,
begot every spirit that would come to this earth. Then Brigham looked
out over the vast audience and boldly commanded all of his hearers,
whether near or far, Mormon or non-Mormon to take heed to his next
statements:
Now hear it, O inhabitants of the earth, Jew and Gentile, Saint
and sinner! When our father Adam came into the garden of Eden, he
came into it with a celestial body, and brought Eve, one of his
wives, with him. He helped to make and organize this world. He is
MICHAEL, the Archangel, the ANCIENT OF DAYS! about whom holy men
have written and spoken - He is our father and our God, and the
only God with whom WE have to do. Every man upon the earth, professing
Christians or non-professing, must hear it, and will know it sooner
or later.9
After declaring that Adam was the God of this world and the Father
of its inhabitants, Brigham then addressed the original inquiry
concerning the savior's birth:
When the Virgin Mary conceived the child Jesus, the Father had
begotten him in his own likeness. he was not begotten by the Holy
Ghost. And who is the Father? He is the first of the human family;
and when he took a tabernacle, it was begotten by his father in
heaven, after the same manner as the tabernacles of Cain, Abel,
and the rest of the sons and daughters of Adam and Eve.... I could
tell you much more about this; but were I to tell you the whole
truth, blasphemy would be nothing to it, in the estimation of
the superstitious and over-righteous of mankind. However, I have
told you the whole truth as far as I have gone... What a learned
idea! Jesus, our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the
same character that was in the Garden of Eden, and who is our
Father in heaven. Now let all who may hear these doctrines, pause
before they make light of them, or treat them with indifference,
for they will prove their salvation or damnation. I have given
you a few leading items upon this subject, but a great deal more
remains to be told. Now, remember from this time forth, and forever,
that Jesus Christ was not begotten by the Holy Ghost. I will repeat
a little anecdote. I was in conversation with a certain learned
professor upon this subject, when I replied, to this idea - "if
the Son was begotten by the Holy Ghost, it would be very dangerous
to baptize and confirm females, and give the Holy Ghost to them,
lest he should beget children, to be palmed upon the Elders by
the people, bringing the Elders into great difficulties." Treasure
up these things in your hearts. In the Bible, you have read the
things I told you tonight; but you have not known what you did
read.10
Having made this response, Young concluded his comments with another
reference to tithing. The Mormon choir then sang a hymn and Elder
H. G. Sherwood gave the closing benediction.
Few of the Latter-day Elders who filed out of the Tabernacle that
night missed the meaning of what their prophet had just announced.
Upon returning home that evening, Hosea Stout, the prominent Mormon
pioneer, recorded the following in his daily journal:
Friday 9th April 1852. - Stormy morning. attended conference
House much crowded, did not stay in House long. after noon was
not in because of the crowd. - Another meeting this evening. President
B. Young taught that Adam was the father of Jesus Christ and the
only God to us. That he came to this world in a resurrected body
&c more hereafter.11
Samuel Rogers, who also was present that night, similarly noted
the content of Brigham Young's discourse:
April 16 1852, Conference commenced on the 6 and continued untill
the 11, it was heled in the new tabernacle, adjourned untill the
6 of next October we had the best Conference that I ever attended
during the time of the Conference President Brigham Young said
that our spirits ware begotten before that Adam came to the earth,
and that Adam helped to make the Earth, that he had a Celestial
boddy when we came to the Earth, and that he brought his wife
or one of his wives with him, and that Eave was allso a Celestial
being, that they eat of the fruit of the ground untill they begat
children from the Earth, he said that Adam was the only God that
we would have, and that Christ was not begotten of the Holy Ghost,
but of Father Adam...12
Denial Adam-God was taught
As we consider Brigham Young's claim that Adam is God, it becomes
clear that he was a false, uninspired prophet. This teaching not
only runs counter to what has been revealed in the Bible, but it
is also branded as false doctrine in modern Mormonism. LDS Apostle
Mark E. Petersen, one of Mormonism's doctrinal authorities, stated:
Some dissidents would have us believe that Adam is our God and
that we have nothing to do with any other God, which, on the face
of it, is ridiculous. To say that Adam is God is, of course, opposed
utterly and completely to the scriptures as well as to our Articles
of faith.13
Spencer W. Kimball, Mormon Prophet, also denounced the teaching
that Adam is God:
We warn you against the dissemination of doctrines which are
not according to the scriptures and which are alleged to have
been taught by some of the General Authorities... Such, for instance
is the Adam-God theory. We denounce that theory and hope that
everyone will be cautioned against this and other kinds of false
doctrine.14
These and most other Mormon General Authorities, while denouncing
the doctrine that Adam is God, avoid or deny the fact that Brigham
Young himself was the major exponent of this doctrine. In his book,
Adam Who Is He?, Mark E. Petersen tries to rescue Mormonism's
second prophet from teaching false doctrine by maintaining that
Brigham Young was misquoted in the address in question. On pages
16-17 of his book, Petersen sets forth as evidence for his defense
as reference in which C. C. Rich supposedly stated that Brigham
was misquoted in this sermon. Petersen claims that Rich was present
on the ninth of April and was therefor in a position to note the
misquotation which later crept into the published account of the
discourse:
Elder Charles C. Rich, of the Council of the Twelve, was present
on a day when President Young gave an address that was wrongly
reported as saying that Adam was Deity. In the copy of the Journal
of Discourses that he had, Elder Rich referred to the misquotations
as it appears in the Journal of Discourses,and in his own hand
he wrote the following as the correct statement made by President
Young: "Jesus our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by
the same character who talked with Adam in the Garden of eden,
and who is our heavenly Father." (This signed statement is in
the hands of the Church Historian.) Some of the reporters at the
Tabernacle in those days were not as skill as others, and admittedly
made mistakes, such as the misquotation of President Young as
above, which was corrected by Brother Rich and which has caused
some persons in the Church to go astray. The erroneously reported
statement has been mistakenly made to read: "Jesus, our elder
brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same character that
was in the Garden of Eden, and who is our Father in Heaven." (JD,
1:51) On the face of it the mistake is obvious and was quickly
noted by Elder Rich, who was present and heard the sermon. Hence
the correction that he made.
What seems to be a good case made by Petersen crumbles, however,
upon cross examination. C. C. Rich, who Petersen claims "was present
and heard the sermon," was in reality not even in Salt Lake City
on that day! Rich left San Bernardino, California, on March 24,
1852, for the Great Salt Lake.15 He did not reach
his destination until April 21. Under this date, the LDS Journal
History records:
April 21, 1852: Elder Chas. C. Rich and thirteen others arrived
today in G.S.L. from California.16
In the May 1, 1852, issue of the Mormon Deseret Weekly
the following announcement was made:
Elder C. C. Rich arrived on Wednesday, the 21 of April, in company
with 13 others... direct from San Bernardino.17
Hosea Stout, in his journal, also noted the event:
Wednesday 21st April 1852 Engaged as yesterday. Gen Rich and
some 15 others arrived today from California by the South rout
all well.
Furthermore, not only was C. C. Rich absent on the ninth, but
the reference which Petersen claims was written by C. C. Rich "in
his own hand" was in reality written and signed by his son, Ben
E. Rich, many years after the sermon was delivered!18
Whether Mr. Petersen was deliberately seeking to suppress the
facts or not, the truth is that there is no evidence whatsoever
that Brigham Young was misquoted. As we shall see, Young came under
much criticism from outside and from within the Mormon Church for
teaching that Adam was God the Father. If he had merely been misquoted,
Brigham simply could have corrected his hearers and accusers. Instead,
however, Young continued to affirm and preach this doctrine against
all opposition.19
These facts have forced other Mormon writers to maintain that
Brigham was quoted correctly, but that he has been misinterpreted
by his hearers and readers. Realizing the implications of one of
their prophets teaching false doctrine on such an essential matter
as who God is, these LDS apologists insist that Brigham Young did
not mean to say that Adam was deity. Characteristic of this argument
are the following statements made by the tenth Mormon President,
Joseph Fielding Smith:
In discussing the statement by President Brigham Young that
the Father of Jesus Christ is the same character who was in the
garden of Eden, I maintain that President Young was not referring
to Adam, but to God the Father, who created Adam, for he was in
the garden of Eden, and according to Mormon doctrine Adam was
in his presence constantly, walked with him, talked with him and
the Father taught Adam his language. It was not until the fall,
that the Father departed from Adam and from the Garden of Eden.20
In regard to Brigham's statement that Jesus was begotten by "the
First of the human family", Smith states that this is referring
to the God and creator of Adam, who was the "first of the human
family", being its "progenitor".21
Brigham's statement that Adam is "our Father and our God and the
only God with whom we have to do" is interpreted to mean that Adam,
being the first man, is the patriarchal head of the human race,
and in this regard he could be considered a god. In no way would
these later Mormon writer believe that Brigham is identifying Adam
as God their heavenly Father and the Father of Jesus in the flesh.22
Young's statements become plainer
It must be admitted that Brigham's statements in the 1852 discourse
can be taken in more than one way. However, it again needs to be
asserted that both Brigham's friends and his opponents had understood
him to mean that Adam was God and was the Father of Jesus Christ
in the flesh. He simply could have corrected the misinterpretation,
but he didn't. Instead, 25 years after his original "Adam-God" sermon,
we find that the Mormon "Revelator" continued to declare in no uncertain
terms that Adam was the Lord God Almighty.23
During a discourse given on Sunday night, February 19, 1854, Brigham
Young again addressed the question of who begot Jesus Christ in
the flesh. Speaking of Christ, he asked:
Who did beget him. His Father, and his father is our God, and
the Father of our spirits, and he is the framer of the body, the
God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Who is he. He is Father
Adam; Micheal; the Ancient of days. Has he a father? He has. Has
he a mother? He has. Now to say the Son of God was begotten by
the Holy Ghost, is to say that the Holy Ghost is God the Father,
which is inconsistent, and contrary to all the revelations of
God both modern, and ancient. I silenced this erroneous doctrine
a year ago last fall conference. It was I think when a dispute
arose among some of our best Elders, as to who was the Father
of the Son of Man pertaining to the flesh. Some contended it was
the H Ghost, and some that it was Elohim. When I spoke upon it
in this stand before a conference of Elders, I cautioned them
when they laid their hands upon people for the gift of the H Ghost,
according to the instructions of the Savior, to be very careful
how they laid hands upon the young women for if it begat a child
in the days of the virgin Mary it is just as liable to beget children
in these last days.24
While Brigham in his discourse of 1852 may have been unclear,
in this 1854 address there is no question about his meaning. Here
Brigham distinctly names Adam as God the Father. Wilford Woodruff,
Mormon Apostle and later Church President, had not doubt about what
Brigham meant. Referring to this discourse under the date of February
19, 1854, in his journal, Woodruff recorded:
He [Brigham Young] said that our God was Father Adam He was
the Father of the Savior Jesus Christ - Our God was no more less
than ADAM, Michael the Arkangel.25
It should be noted that Brigham identifies Adam as the "Father
of our spirits."One of Mormonism's fundamental doctrines is the
belief that God the Father was married and that he and his celestial
wife in a pre-existent period had begotten every spirit that would
come to this earth. These spirits then enter into individual infants
who are born physically upon the earth.26 By referring
to Adam as the Father of our spirits, Brigham was clearly identifying
him as the being whom Mormons address as "Heavenly Father".
On June 26-28, 1854, a special General Council of the authorities
of the LDS British Mission convened in London, England. The council
minutes show that Brigham's doctrine of Adam being God was not readily
received by some of the members there. After the introductory exercise,
Mormon Elder Thomas Caffall rose to state the affairs of the Southern
LDS conference. Among other things he reported the following:
...some of the officers have not met in council for three years.
They are lacking faith on one principle - the last 'cat that was
let out of the bag.' Polygamy has been got over pretty well, that
cloud as vanished away, but they are troubled about Adam being
our Father and God. There is a very intelligent person investigating
our principles, and who has been a great help to the Saints; he
as all the works and can get along very well with everything else
but the last 'cat', and as soon as he can see that clearly, he
will become a 'Mormon'. I instructed him to write Liverpool upon
it.27
Elder Joseph Hall followed with a report of his district's progress.
Despite the non-Biblcal nature of the Adam-God doctrine, those in
his area were willing to receive it as truth:
Relative to the principles recently revealed, we have not the
least difficulty. If Adam's being our Father and God cannot be
proved by the Bible, it is alright.28
On the final day of the council Elder James A. Little rose and
made the following remarks:
I believe in the principle of obedience; and if I am told that
Adam is our Father and our God, I just believe it.29
Mission president Samuel W. Richards followed with a concluding
exhortation concerning the Adam-God doctrine:
Concerning the item of doctrine alluded t by Elder Caffall and
others, viz., that Adam is our Father and God, I have to say do
not trouble yourselves, neither let the Saints be troubled about
that matter... If, as Elder Caffall remarked, there are those
who are waiting at the door of the Church for this objection to
be removed, tell such, the prophet and Apostle Brigham has declared
it, and that IS THE WORD OF THE LORD.30
Apostle Pratt opposes Young's Adam-God
Though Richards and most of the other Church authorities accepted
their prophet's declaration as the word of God, there was one member
of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles who openly opposed Brigham
in his views. That man was Orson Pratt. Under the date of September
17, 1854, LDS Apostle Wilford Woodruff recorded in his journal the
details of a confrontation between Young and Pratt. Pratt had been
writing and publishing a monthly periodical which contained doctrine
contrary to the Mormon President. When Young declared some of Orson's
doctrines to be false, Pratt retaliated against the prophet by voicing
his disbelief in the Adam-God doctrine:
Brother Pratt also thought that Adam was made of the dust of
the Earth Could not believe that Adam was our God or the Father
of Jesus Christ President Young said that He was that He came
from another world & made this brought Eve with him partook of
the fruits of the Earth begat children & they ware Earthly & had
mortal bodies & if we were faithful we should become Gods as He
was. He told Brother Pratt to lay aside his Philosophical reasoning
& get revelation from God to govern him & enlighten his mind more...
This dispute between the Mormon Prophet and his Apostle continued
for several years. Because of his disbelief in the Adam-God teaching
and in other doctrines of Young, Pratt was for years upon the point
of being severed from the Church.31
In October of 1854, the Mormon Church held it's semi-annual Conference.
The session of October 8 was help out of doors in the open air.
The congregation, which numbered in thousands, heard Brigham Young
deliver what was perhaps the most colorful discourse ever presented
in the history of the Mormon Church. Addressing this immense gathering
upon the subject of the identity of God, Young made the following
statements:
...my text is in the Bible and reads as follows: "And this is
life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and
Jesus Christ whom thou has sent." I will now put another text
with this and then offer a few remarks. It is one of the sayings
of the Apostle Paul:"For though there be that are called Gods,
whether in heaven or in earth (as there be Gods many and Lords
many) but to us there is but one God, the Father of whom all things,
and we in him; and one Lord Jesus Christ, by whom are all things,
and we by him." This God is the father of our Lord Jesus Christ
and the father of our spirits...
Now if you believe what you have heard me say you will believe
there are Lords many, and Gods many; and you will believe that
unto us, the inhabitants of the earth there is but one God with
whom we have to do...
You and I have only one God to whom we are accountable, so we
will let the rest along, and search after the one we have to do
with; let us seek after him, the very being who commenced this
creation...
But let us turn our attention to the God with which we have
to do. I tell you simply, he is our father; the God and father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the father of our spirits...
I tell you more, Adam is the father of our spirits. He had lived
upon an earth; he did abide his creation, and did honor to his
calling and priesthood, and obeyed his master or Lord, and probably
many of his wives did the same and they lived, and died upon an
earth and then were resurrected again to immortality and eternal
life...
I reckon that Father Adam was a resurrected being, with his
wives and posterity, and in the Celestial kingdom they were crowned
with glory, immortality, and eternal lives,with thrones, principalities
and powers; and it was said to him it is your right to organize
the elements; and to your creations and posterity there shall
be no end...
Our spirits and the spirits of all human family were begotten
by Adam and born of Eve.32
At no previous time had Brigham gone into as much detail concerning
Adam as he did during this discourse. While the Mormon prophet had
formerly taught that Adam was the God and Father of Jesus Christ
and the father of men's spirits, he had never expounded upon Adam's
pre-earthly course of life as he did during this 1854 conference.
to fully comprehend the implications of Brigham's statements concerning
Adam's pre-earthly development and advancement from stage to stage,
it is necessary to understand the Mormon doctrine of "eternal progression."
Mormonism's fifth President, Lorenzo Snow, summarized this doctrine
with his aphorism:
As man is, God once was; As God is, man may become.
The doctrine of eternal progression states that God the Father
was once a man who lived, died, and was resurrected upon an earth
similar to ours. By his faithfulness to the commandments of his
God he progressed and advanced from degree until he was crowned
with exaltation, or Godhood. Having become God, he was then given
the privilege of creating this world and being the Lord over it.
He and his wife then begot the spirits which would later enter into
the fleshly tabernacles which he would form for them. In a discourse
in September of 1856, Brigham, Young described this progression
to exaltation which God the Father had passed through:
...our father in heaven is exalted and glorified. he was received
His thrones, His principalities and powers, and He sits as a governor,
as a monarch, and overrules kingdoms, thrones, and dominions that
have been bequeathed to Him, and such as we anticipate receiving.
While He was in the flesh, as we are, He was as we are. But it
is now written of Him that our God is as a consuming fire, that
He dwells in everlasting burnings,...God is the Father of our
spirits; He begat them and has sent them here to receive tabernacles...33
This same doctrine of eternal progression teaches that men today,
if faithful as their God was, will continue on the road of progression
until they too are exalted and crowned with Godhood. They will then
not only receive eternal life, but they will as Gods be given "eternal
lives" or the power of eternal increase. They will then have the
ability to organize a world and to be the progenitors of the spirits
of its inhabitants. In a discourse delivered during a special conference
in August of 1852, Brigham, Young described this process:
After men have got their exaltations and their crowns - have
become Gods, even the sons of God - are made Kings of kings and
Lords of lords, they have the power then or propagating their
species in spirit; and that is the first of their operations with
regard to organizing a world. Power is then given to them to organize
the elements, and then commence the organization of tabernacles.34
Having an understanding of the Mormon concept of eternal progression,
we can now clearly see the implications of Brigham Young's statements
in his 1854 General Conference discourse. When he stated that Adam
"was a resurrected being", he meant that Adam had lived, died, and
had been resurrected upon another earth. By stating that Adam "in
the celestial kingdom...was crowned with glory, immortality, and
eternal lives", he was saying that Adam had attained to exaltation
and was therefore a God. In his statement that "our spirits and
the spirits of all the human family were begotten by Adam", he was
claiming, in no uncertain terms, that Adam was Heavenly Father.
In short, by applying these statements to Adam, Brigham meant that
prior to the organization of this world Adam had advanced along
the road to eternal progression and was exalted to Godhood. He would
therefore be our Father and our God and the only God with whom we
have to do.
Throughout the lengthy address which was delivered in the open
air that day, according to the Deseret News Brigham "held
the vast audience as it were spellbound".35 Wilford
Woodruff believed Brigham's address to be "the greatest sermon ever
delivered to the Latter-Day Saints since they were a people".36
The Journal of the Southern Indian Mission also noted Brigham
Young's address, stating that it was a "discourse equaled by none".37
Though many were favorable impressed with Brigham's statements
that afternoon, there were nevertheless some who opposed. Joseph
Lee Robinson, who attended the conference, noted that Orson Pratt
was among them.
Attended conference, a very interesting conference, for at this
meeting President Brigham Young said thus, that Adam and Eve were
the names of the first man and woman of every earth that was ever
organized and that Adam and ever were the natural father and mother
of every spirit that comes to this planet, or that receives tabernacles
on this planet, consequently we are brothers and sisters and that
Adam was God, our Eternal Father. This as Brother Heber remarked,
was letting the cat out of the bag,...but behold ye there were some
that did not believe these sayings of the Prophet Brigham, even
our Beloved Brother Orson Pratt told me he did not believe it. He
said he could prove by scriptures it was not correct. I felt very
sorry to hear Professor Orson Pratt say that. I feared lest he should
apostatize.38
While Pratt was publicly denying the doctrine of the Church President,
others who trusted their prophet's counsel and doctrine were adopting
his revelations into their own writings. On January 9, 1855, during
a social party in the Great Salt Lake City, Eliza R. Snow 39
recited the following from a poem she had written:
Father Adam, our God, let all Israel extol, and Jesus, our Brother,
who died ...40
Shortly after this a new edition of the LDS Church hymn book was
printed. Among the hymns contained in the book was one which confessed
Adam along with the other two members of the Godhead:
We believe in our God, the great Prince of his race, The Archangel
Michael, the Ancient of Days, Our own Father Adam, earth's Lord
as is plain, Who'll counsel and fight for his children again.
We believe in His Son, Jesus Christ, who in love, To his brethren
and sisters, came down from above, To die to redeem them from
death, and to teach To mortals and spirits the Gospel we preach.
We believe in the Spirit most holy, that's given From God our
great Father, who dwells high in heaven, To instruct and enlighten,
to comfort and cheer- Tongues, dreams, visions, healings proclaim
it is here.41
In the spring of 1856 another confrontation erupted between Young
and Pratt over the position of Adam. Under the date of March 11,
1856, Samuel Richards recorded in his journal the events which transpired
between the two that evening:
Evening with the Regency in the Upper Room of the President's
office,... A very serious conversation took place between Prest.
B. Young and Orson Pratt upon doctrine. O.P. was directly opposed
to the Prest. views and very freely expressed his entire disbelief
in them after being told by the President that things were so
and so in the name of the Lord. He was firm in the Position that
the Prest's word in the name of the Lord, was not the word of
the Lord to him. The Prest. did not believe that Orson would ever
be Adam, to learn by experience the facts discussed, but every
other person in the room would if they lived faithful.42
Brigham's statements, that Pratt would never be "Adam", suggest
that the two were again disputing over the subject of the first
man. Wilford Woodruff, who was also present that night, noted this
indeed was the issue discussed.
I spent part of the day in the committee room and met with the
regency in the evening...the subject was brought up concerning
Adam being made of the dust of the earth and elder Orson Pratt
pursued a course of stubbornness and unbelief in what President
Young said that will destroy him if he does not repent and turn
from his evil way For when any man crosses the track of a leader
in Israel and tries to lead the prophet... he is no longer led
by him but is in danger of falling.
A few months after this event, Brigham Young's first Counselor,
Heber C. Kimbell, publicly sustained the Church President as the
Prophet of God whose doctrines were inspired:
Just think of your position; you have heard the teachings and
instructions of President Young, and his instructions are the
word of God to us, and I know that every man and woman in this
Church who rejects his testimony, and the testimony of those that
he sends, rejects the testimony of God his Father. I know that,
just as well as I know that I see your faces today.43
Because rejecting Brigham's word was rejecting God, Orson Pratt
was walking on thin ice. According to Wilford Woodruff, Pratt's
Church membership was on the line:
President Young made some remarks about Orson Pratt and said
that if he did not take a different course in his philosophy..he
would not stay long in this Church.44
Opposition to Adam-God intensifies
Brigham's opposition did not consist of Orson Pratt alone. Apparently
there were a number of Mormons who were muttering their disbelief.
It was to this group that the prophet addressed the following remarks
during a discourse delivered on October 7, 1857:
Some have grumbled because I believe our God to be so near to
us as Father Adam. There are many who know that doctrine to be
true... Now, if it should happen that we have to pay tribute to
Father Adam, what a humiliating circumstance it would be! Just
wait till you pass Joseph Smith; and after Joseph lets you pass
him, you will find Peter; and after you pass the Apostles and
many of the Prophets, you will find Abraham, and he will say,
"I have the keys, and except you do thus and so, you cannot pass";
and after a while you come to Jesus; and when you at length meet
Father Adam, how strange it will appear to your present notions.45
Nevertheless, it was the Mormon Apostle Orson Pratt who was the
real thorn in Brigham's side, and it was inevitable that the President
would seek its removal. In 1860 Young gathered his Apostles to consider
the case of Orson Pratt's remarks.
After the Mormon General Authorities assembled in the President's
office on the evening of January 27, Brigham read to them various
doctrinal statements written by Pratt. He followed by expressing
his disbelief in these doctrines. Wilford Woodruff then confessed
his trust in Young:
...it has ever been a key with me that when the Prophet who
leads presents a doctrine or principle or says thus saith the
Lord I make it a point to receive it even if it comes in contact
with my tradition or views being well satisfied that the Lord
would reveal the truth unto his Prophet whom he has called to
lead the Church before he would unto me, and the word of the Lord
through the prophet is the End of the Law unto me.46
One by one the Apostles expressed their faith in their prophet
and sought to lead Pratt to a confession and repentance. The stubborn
Apostle did not budge, however. Having no confidence in the prophet's
declaration, Pratt refused to confess what he believe to be false:
I must have something more than a declaration of President Young
to convince me. I must have evidence. I am willing to take President
Young as a guide in most things, but not in all.... President
Young said I ought to make a Confession But Orson Pratt is not
a man to make a Confession I do not believe. I am not going to
crawl to Brigham Young and act the hypocrite and confess what
I do not believe.... President Young condemns my doctrine to be
false. I do not believe them to be false... I will not act the
hypocrite. It may cost me my fellowship But I will stick to it.
If I die tonight I would say O Lord God Almighty I believe what
I say.
The Apostles stood amazed. After a moment's pause Apostle John
Taylor tried to convince Orson of his error. Wilford Woodruff followed:
Brother Orson Pratt, I wish to ask you one or two questions.
You see that the spirit and doctrine which you possess is entirely
in opposition to the First Presidency, the Quorum of the Twelve,
and all who are present this evening, and it chills the blood
in our veins to hear your words and feel your spirit. Should not
this be a Guidance to you that you are wrong... Every man in this
room who has a particle of the Spirit of God knows that President
Young is a Prophet of God and that God sustains him and He has
the Holy Spirit and his doctrines are true...
Various other Apostles testified that Orson was in error. President
Young then closed by stating the importance of following God's Prophet.
The meeting was dismissed; Pratt made no concession.
It must have been a sleepless night for Orson, however; the following
day saw a change in the disposition of the Apostle. Wilford Woodruff
noted this in his journal:
I spent the day in the office. I met with the Twelve in the
prayer circle. Orson Pratt met with us. He did not dress but said
he wanted to be in the society of the Twelve. He seemed much more
soft in his spirit then he had been.
Quite unexpectedly, Orson Pratt on the next day confessed from
the Tabernacle stand that he was in error. Woodruff informs us of
the event:
Sunday I met at the Tabernacle. Orson Pratt was in the stand
and quite unexpected to his brethren he arose before his brethren
and made a very humble full confession before the whole assembly
for his opposition to President Young and his brethren and he
said he wished all the Church was present to hear it. He quoted
Joseph Smith's revelation to prove that President Young was right
and that all was under obligation to follow the Leader of the
Church. I never heard Orson Pratt speak better or more to the
satisfaction of the People, than on this occasion.
At issue: Is Young teaching false doctrine?
Strange and fickle as it might seem, however, within a few months
Pratt was again openly opposing Brigham! On April 4 and 5 the Church
Authorities again convened to discuss Pratt. Though the subject
of Adam was not the major issue during the January 27 meeting, it
was brought up often during these sessions.
On April 4 in the Church Historians Office Pratt told the quorum
members that he did not find the Adam-God doctrine to be supported
by Joseph's revelation:
I would like to enumerate items first preached and published
that Adam is the Father of our spirits... When I read the revelation
given Joseph I read directly the opposite.
Brigham later responded to Orson's attack by appealing to his
own prophetical calling:
It is my duty to see that correct doctrine is taught and to
guard the Church from error, it is my calling.
Orson spurned this statement; still believing that the Mormon
prophet could err in doctrine even when he was acting as a prophet.
With Brigham absent on the following day, Mormon Apostle Orson Hyde
answered Pratt by affirming that to charge the prophet with advancing
false doctrine was in reality undermining the entire truth and foundation
of their religion. God's prophets cannot advance false doctrine.
Therefore, to acknowledge that the prophet Brigham was indeed advancing
false doctrine would be to acknowledge that he was not divinely
led. This would destroy their claim to be the Kingdom of God. Hyde
insisted on this implication:
To acknowledge that this is the Kingdom of God, and that there
is a presiding power, and to admit that he can advance incorrect
doctrine is to lay the axe at the root of the tree. Will he suffer
his mouthpiece to go into error? No. He would remove him and place
another there. Brother Brigham may err in the price of a horse,...
but in the revelations from God, where is the man that has given
thus saith the Lord when it was not so? I cannot find one instance.
Pratt expressed his total disbelief in Brigham's doctrine regarding
Adam:
In regard to Adam being our Father and God... I frankly say,
I have no confidence in it, although advanced by Brother Kimball
in the stand, and afterwards approved by Brigham... I have heard
Brigham say that Adam is the Father of our spirits and he came
here with a resurrected body, to fall for his own children, and
I said to him it leads to an endless number of falls which leads
to sorrow and death; that is revolting to my feelings, even if
it were sustained by revelation.
Orson Pratt's central argument was that Young's doctrine contradicted
the Scriptures. Joseph Smith claimed to have restored the pure version
of the Genesis creation narrative in his inspired revision of the
earlier chapters of the Bible. This "inspired" revision later became
part of Mormon scripture, entitled the Book of Moses. In the following
verse Joseph's account of Genesis distinctly implies that Adam was
not the God and Father of Jesus Christ:
And he called upon out 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 in water, in the name of Jesus Christ...
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 (Moses 6:51f., 62)
These and other passages in Joseph's Book of Moses teach that
the Father of the only begotten son, Jesus Christ, spoke to Adam
in the Garden. that clearly indicates that Adam was not God the
Father. It was to this fact that Orson Pratt appealed:
One [revelation] says that Adam was formed out of the earth,
and the Lord put in his spirit, and another that he came with
his body, flesh and bones, thus there are two contradictory revelations.
in the garden it is said that a voice said to Adam, in the meridian
of time, I will send my only begotten son Jesus Christ, then how
can that man and Adam both be the Father of Jesus Christ? It was
the Father of Jesus Christ that was talking to Adam in the garden.
Young says that Adam was the Father of Jesus Christ both of his
spirit and body in his teaching from the stand.
The apostles answered Pratt by reassuring Brigham's divine calling;
he was God's mouthpiece. The thought that a prophet of God could
advance false doctrine chilled their blood. It was the duty of all
to set aside any personal opinions and to be subject to the pronouncements
of their divinely led leader. Wilford Woodruff angrily retorted:
As our leaders are inspired to talk, they are inspired oracles,
and we should be as limber as a dish cloth.
Hyde, the President of the quorum of the Twelve Apostles, later
in the session asked his brethren what should be required of Orson
Pratt. George A. Smith, Church Historian, responded by suggesting
that Orson acknowledge Brigham as a prophet and inspired man. Smith
assured that if Brigham was indeed the Church President, he would
be a inspired man. On the other hand, if Orson Pratt were correct
in his doctrines, which were declared to be false by Brigham, then
all would have to conclude that the man whom they had thought was
God's prophet was in fact not divinely led. Smith told Hyde that
Pratt should,
...acknowledge Brigham Young as President of the Church in the
exercise of this calling. But he only acknowledges him as a poor
driveling fool, he preaches doctrines opposed to Joseph, and all
other revelations. If Brigham Young is the President of the Church
he is an inspired man. If we have not an inspired man, then Orson
Pratt it right.
Pratt's January confession sermon was then revised for publication.
Shortly after this the meeting came to a close. It was agreed that
the proceedings of the sessions would be kept silent. Brigham and
Pratt assured each other that no more would be said concerning their
disagreement, and though Orson still disagreed with the prophet's
teachings, it seemed that Brigham would not take any drastic action.
In a few months, however, Orson received a mission call which would
remove him from the Salt Lake area to the eastern United States.48
Young's Adam-God meets continued opposition
All opposition did not cease with Orson Pratt's removal. This
time, though, the attack came from a group outside the LDS fold
- the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.49
Believing the original teachings of Joseph Smith to be true, the
Reorganized Church immediately spotted the contradiction in Brigham's
doctrine of Adam becoming God. In the November and December issues
of their True Latter-Day Saint Herald, the RLDS Church printed
a lengthy refutation of Brigham's Adam-God doctrine. This article
uses the same arguments and quotes the same scriptures as Orson
Pratt did earlier that year when he contended with the Utah prophet.
The Herald sought to overthrow the words of the living prophet
by appealing to the written word.
The True Latter-Day Saint Herald saw clearly that Brigham
Young was teaching false doctrine though he claimed to be acting
as a prophet. They also clearly realized the implications. The man
whom many looked to as being the successor of their martyred prophet
was in reality a false prophet who taught as the word of God the
imaginations of his own heart. Seeing by this that the Utah faction
was not of God, they urged Utah Mormons to return to the true God.
The article in the Herald caused no small stir when it
reached Utah. In his diary under the date of February 3, 1861, John
D. Lee, adopted son of Brigham Young, recorded the following:
Eving attendd Prayer meeting & instructed the Saints on the
points of Doctrine refereed to by the true Latterday Saints Herald
& their Bombarding Pres. B. Young for Saying that Adam is all
the god that we have to do with & to those that know no better,
it is quite a stumbling Block...50
The Utah authorities held to the revelations revealed by their
prophet. Some even claimed to have received for themselves a revelation
that confirmed what the Living oracle had spoken. In a notebook
that contained several personal revelations which he believed God
had personally revealed to Him, Heber C. Kimbell, counselor to Brigham
Young, recorded the following:
April 30, 1862, the Lord told me that Adam was my father and
that he was the God and father of all the inhabitants of this
earth.51
Though assailed from outside and from within the ranks of his
own people, Brigham Young continued to set forth his belief in the
doctrine. Speaking in the Tabernacle on the morning of October 8,
1861, Young remarked:
I will give you a few words of doctrine, upon which there has
been much inquiry, and with regard to which considerable ignorance
exists. Br. Watt will write it, but it is not my intention to
have it published therefore pay good attention, and store it up
in your memories. Some years ago, I advanced a doctrine with regard
to Adam being our father and God, that will be a curse to many
of the Elders of Israel because of their folly. With regard to
it they yet grovel in darkness and will. Is is one of the most
glorious revealments of the economy of heaven, yet the world holds
it [in] derision. Had I revealed the doctrine of baptism from
the dead instead [of] Joseph Smith there are men around me who
would have ridiculed the idea until doomsday. But they are ignorant
and stupid like the dumb ass.52
A year prior to this statement Brigham stated that the only thing
of which he was guilty was that he had revealed too much truth to
the people.
...if guilt before my God and brethren rests upon me in the
least, it is in this one thing - that I have revealed too much
concerning God and his Kingdom, and the designs of our Father
in heaven. If my skirts are stained in the least with wrong, it
is because I have been too free in telling what God is, how he
lives, the nature of his providences and the earth, his designs
concerning them, etc. If I had, like Paul, said - "But if any
man be ignorant, let him be ignorant", perhaps it would have been
better for the people.53
Nevertheless, as the years passed Young was still emphatically
claiming that Adam was God the Father. In fact, he asserted this
revelation in terms stronger than he ever had before. On June 8,
1873, Brigham again addressed his audience concerning Adam, and
the week following he had his discourse published in the Deseret
News:
How much unbelief exists in the minds of the Latter-day Saints
in regard to one particular doctrine which I revealed to them,
and which God revealed to me - namely that Adam is our Father
and God... The Christian world read of, and think about, St. Paul,
also St. Peter, the chief of Apostles. These men were faithful
to and magnified the priesthood while on the earth. Now, where
will be the mystery, after they have passed through all the ordeals,
and have been crowned and exalted, and received their inheritances
in the eternal worlds of glory, for them to be sent forth, as
the Gods have been forever and ever, with the command - "Make
yourselves an earth, and people it with your own children?"...
Oh fools, and slow of heart to believe the great things that God
has purposed in his own mind... Adam came here and got it up in
a shape that would suit him to commence business. What is the
great mystery about it? None, that I have seen. The mystery in
this, as with miracles, or anything else, is only to those who
are ignorant. Father Adam came here, and then they brought his
wife. "Well". says one. "Why was Adam called Adam?" He was the
first man on the earth, and its framer and maker. He with the
help of his brethren, brought it into existence Then he said,
"I want my children who are in the spirit world to come and live
here. I once dwelt upon an earth something like this, in a mortal
state. I was faithful. I received my crown and exaltation. I have
the privilege of extending my work, and to its increase there
will be no end. I want my children who were born to me in the
spirit world to come here and take tabernacles of flesh..."
The opposition was still present, and there were still those who
disbelieved in the sayings of their leader. It is interesting to
note in this sermon that Brigham does not grieve over any misquotations
or misunderstandings of his previous statements concerning Adam,
but rather he laments over the disbelief which existed among his
brethren. During all the years Young never claimed to be misquoted
or misinterpreted. Instead, he appealed to his divine calling as
proof of the truth of this statements.
Young also did not shy away from claiming that his teachings were
the Word of God. He did not believe his doctrine to be just his
personal opinion, which could be wrong. On the contrary, believing
himself to be a prophet of God, he declared all of his sermons to
be revelation, directly from the Lord:
I know just as well what to teach this people and just what
to say to them and what to do in order to bring them into the
celestial kingdom, as I know the road to my office. It is just
as plain and easy. The Lord is in our midst. He teaches the people
continually. I have never yet preached a sermon and sent it out
to the children of men that they may not call Scripture. Let me
have the privilege of correcting a sermon, and it is as good Scripture
as they deserve. The people have the oracles of God continually.54
Brother Orson Hyde referred to a few who complained about not
getting revelations. I will make a statement here that has been
brought against me as a crime, perhaps as a fault in my life.
Not here, I do not allude to anything of the kind in this place,
but in the councils of the nations - that Brigham Young has said
"when he sends forth his discourses to the world they may call
them Scripture." I say now when they are copied and approved by
me they are as good Scripture as is couched in this Bible, and
if you want to read revelation read the sayings of him who knows
this mind of God...55
There is no room for thinking that Brigham was expressing what
he believed to be merely his own opinions. No. He rightly believed
that when a prophet of God acts as a prophet, he speaks the truth.
Young firm to end on Adam-God
As we come to 1877, the last year of Brigham Young's life, we
find him still teaching what he had first taught 25 years before.
The setting for this discourse is in the home of Brigham Young.
There appears to be evidence that part of this address was to be
used as the lecture before the veil in all future endowment ceremonies:
...after supper went to Prest Young's... Prest Young was filled
with the spirit of God and revelation and said... "In the creation
the gods entered into an agreement about forming this earth &
putting Michael or Adam upon it. these things of which I have
been speaking are what are termed the mysteries of godliness but
they will enable you to understand the expression Jesus made while
in Jerusalem. This is life eternal that they might know thee,
the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent. we were
once acquainted with the Gods & lived with them but we had the
privilege of taking upon us flesh that the spirit might have a
house to dwell in. we did so and forgot all and came into the
world not recollecting anything of which we had previously learned.
We have heard a great deal about Adam and Eve, how they were
formed & some thing he was made like an adobie and the Lord breathed
into him the breath of life, for we read 'from dust thou are art
and unto dust thou shalt return'. Well he was made of the dust
of the earth but not of this earth. he was made just the same
way you and I are made but on another earth. Adam was an immortal
being when he came on this earth. he had lived on an earth similar
to ours, he had received the Priesthood and the he Keys thereof
and had been faithful in all things and gained his resurrection
and his exaltation and was crowned with glory immortality and
eternal lives and was numbered with the Gods for such he became
through his faithfulness, and had begotton all the spirits that
was to come to this earth. and Eve our common mother who is the
mother of all living bore those spirits in the celestial world.
and when this earth was organized by Elohim, Jehovah and Michael
who is Adam our common Father, Adam and Eve had the privilege
to continue the work of progression, consequently came to this
earth and commenced the great work of forming tabernacles for
those spirits to dwell in. and when Adam and those that assisted
him had completed this kingdom our earth he came to it, and slept
and forgot all and became like an infant child. it is said by
Moses the historian that the Lord caused a deep sleep to come
upon Adam and took from his side a rib and formed the woman that
Adam called Eve - this should be interpreted that the man Adam
like all other men had the seed within him to propagate his species,
but not the woman. she conceives the seed but does not produce
it, consequently she was taken from the side or bowels of her
father. this explains the mystery of Moses' ark sayings in regard
to Adam and Eve. Adam & Eve when they were placed on this earth
were immortal beings with flesh and bones, and sinues, but upon
partaking of the fruit of the earth while in the garden and cultivating
the ground their bodies became changed from immortal to mortal
beings with blood coursing through their veins as the action of
life... Father Adam's oldest son (Jesus the Savior) who is the
heir of the family is Father Adam's first begotten in the spirit
world, who according to the flesh is the only begotten as it is
written. (In his divinity he having gone back into the spirit
world and come in the spirit to Mary and she conceived for when
Adam and Eve got through their work on earth they did not lay
their bodies down in the dust, but returned to the spirit world
from whence they came."
I felt myself much blessed in being permitted to associate with
such men and hear such instructions as they savored of life to
me.56
At one minute past 4:00 P.M., on August 29, 1877, Brigham Young
died. He presided over the Mormon Church longer than any other man
- 30 years. Though many continued to believe in Adam as their God,
the doctrine was largely buried along with Brigham. Rather than
publicly preaching this doctrine, the Church authorities sought
to avoid controversy by remaining silent.
The present dilemma and the true way out
As time went on, not only did the Adam doctrine cease to be preached,
but it began to be denied. Most LDS General Authorities even denied
that Brigham had ever taught it. Being far removed from the time
in which the second Mormon President expounded the teaching, these
apologist were safe in dismissing his remarks as being misquoted
or misinterpreted. Those who continued to believe the Adam-God teaching
were soon to be excommunicated from the Church for believing it.
Books and articles were written to denounce the Adam-God theory
These books quoted against the false doctrine the precise verses
that Orson Pratt and the Reorganized Church had employed against
Brigham a hundred years before.57 There were no
admissions that Brigham had taught it. Instead, there were denials.
An examination of the evidence, however, will admit to no other
conclusion that that Brigham Young did teach that Adam was Heavenly
Father, the Father of men's spirits as well as the Father of Jesus
Christ in the flesh. Brigham Young, one of recent history's most
prominent religious leaders, did indeed advance a doctrine that
was to focus worship on a strange god. The doctrine that he taught
for over 25 years was false doctrine and the LDS Church admits this
today. It has, in effect, sided with Orson Pratt and has adopted
his arguments and views as being right. However, in doing this it
has unknowingly admitted that Brigham was not an inspired prophet
of God. It is caught in the words of one of its own Apostles, George
A. Smith:
If Brigham Young is the President of the Church he is an inspired
man. If we have not an inspired man, then Orson Pratt is right.
The implications certainly are obvious. The claims of the Utah
LDS church utterly collapse when they claim to be the only true
church and the sole possessor of God's authority.
The Mormon, furthermore, faces the dilemma of being unable to
be certain that his present prophet is advancing in true doctrine.
Perhaps the present teachings of the living prophet will be tomorrow's
false teachings of a dead prophet. Perhaps the present revelations
which the modern President claims to have received will be swept
under the carpet as was the revelation concerning Adam that Brigham
Young claimed to have received from God.
Today's Mormon cannot hide behind a testimony that the living
prophet is advancing in correct doctrine. His testimony holds no
more weight than the strong testimonies which past members had concerning
the truth of Brigham's Adam-God teaching. In reality, no Mormon
can test assured and have confidence that his prophet is not uttering
the imaginations of his own heart. Even when he speaks as a prophet
and is sustained and defended by his fellow Apostles, he still cannot
be fully trusted.
This frightening dilemma in which the Mormon finds himself is
not peculiar to him or his people, but is the snare in which all
men find themselves when they put their trust in men. To trust the
arm of flesh is really to have no hope at all. One's faith can be
only as firm as the object upon which he places his trust. To place
one's confidence upon erring flesh is to lack firm footing and roots:
Thus says the Lord, Cursed is the man who trust in mankind and
makes flesh his strength, and whose heart turns away from the
LORD. For he will be like a bush in the desert and will not see
when prosperity comes, but will live in stony wastes in the wilderness,
a land of salt without inhabitant (Jer. 17:5,6).
God invites all men today to place their trust in Him directly
through His Son, Jesus Christ. Unlike a false prophet who teaches
the people to follow a strange god, Jesus can be fully trusted to
lead us to His Father. By His death, Christ has secured a place
in the presence of God for all who place their trust in him. Those
who trust Him can be absolutely sure that He will never fail.
Even as this article was being prepared for its publication, Mormon
Apostle Mark E. Peterson was busily revising his book. "Adam
Who Is He?" Because of previous exposure of the deception concerning
Peterson's statement on pages 16 and 17 of his book (quoted under
heading: Denial Adam-God Was Taught) they were forced to "correct"
what was apparently one of Peterson's strongest arguments alleging
that Brigham Young was "misquoted". As you recall, Peterson went
to great lengths about the "misquotation" and the proof of that
being a "signed statement" of C.C. Rich. But since it was clear
that neither assertion was factual, Peterson changed the paragraphs
in question to read as follows:
Elder Charles C. Rich was not present on the day when President
Young gave an address that was wrongly reported as saying Adam
was our Father in heaven (see JD 1:51). The sermon was delivered
April 9, 1852, and Elder Rich returned April 21. In a copy of
the Journal of Discourses Elder Ben E. Rich, son of Elder Charles
C. Rich, referred to the misquotation as it appears in the Journal
of Discourses, and in his own hand corrected the statement to
read as follows: "Jesus our Elder Brother, was begotten in the
flesh by the same character who talked with Adam in the Garden
of Eden, and who is our Father in heaven." In this same statement
Ben E. Rich wrote "As corrected above is what Prest. Young said,
as testified to me by my father, C.C. Rich." (This signed statement
is in the hands of the Church Historical Department).
Some of the reporters at the Tabernacle in those days were not
so skilled as others, and admittedly made mistakes, such as the
misquotations of President Young as above, which was corrected
by Brother Rich and which has caused some persons in the Church
to go astray.
On the face of it the mistake is obvious. We find in Genesis
2:15-16 and 3:8-9 that God walked and talked with Adam in the
Garden of Eden.
Mark E. Peterson Adam Who Is He? (1979 Edition)
page 16-17
It is quite interesting to compare this version with the one that
was quoted in this booklet because we see a complete turning around
of the facts, but an attempt to stay with the argument!
The "strength" of Peterson's argument (such as it was) was based
on the "fact" that C.C. Rich was present at the delivery of the
sermon and thus able to "correct" the "misquotation". Since we know,
and Peterson admits that C.C. Rich was NOT present, the whole basis
of the argument is now totally missing. Who cares what Ben E. Rich
wrote in his copy of the Journal of Discourses several decades later
(remember he wasn't even born until 1855) especially when he was
quoting a man who was not even there?
Footnotes
- Calvin, in his exposition of the second commandment,
explains this beautifully: The Lord very frequently addresses
us in the character of a husband... As he performs all the offices
of a true and faithful husband, so he requires love and chastity
from us; that is, that we do not prostitute our souls to Satan.
As the purer and chaster a husband is, the more grievously he
is offended when he sees his wife inclining to a rival; so the
Lord, who has betrothed us to Himself in truth, declares that
he burns in the hottest jealousy whenever, neglecting the purity
of His holy marriage, we defile ourselves with abominable lusts
and especially when the worship of His deity, which ought to have
been most carefully kept unimpaired, is transferred to another...
since in this way we not only violate our plighted troth, but
defile the nuptial couch, by giving access to adulterers (Institutes,
II, viii, 18).
- The Doctrine and Covenants, on of Mormonism's
scriptures, states that the Mormon people are "the only true and
living Church upon the face of the whole earth". (D&C, 1:30).
- Mormon Apostle Orson Pratt wrote that all other
churches are entirely destitute of all authority to administer
the sacraments: But who in this generation have authority to baptize?
None but those who have received authority in the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints: all other churches are entirely destitute
of all authority from God; and any person who receives Baptism
or the Lord's Supper from their hands will highly offend God,
for he looks upon them as the most corrupt of all people. Both
Catholics and Protestants are nothing less than the "whore of
Babylon" whom the Lord denounces by the mouth of John the Revelator
as having corrupted all the earth by their fornications and wickedness.
And any person who shall be so wicked as to receive holy ordinance
of the gospel from the ministers of any of these apostate churches
will be sent down to hell with them, unless they repent of the
unholy and impious act (Orson Pratt, The Seer, Washington ed.,
p.255).
- Joseph Smith claimed that in the spring of 1820
Jesus Christ appeared to him in a vision and instructed him to
join none of the Christian denominations, "for they were all wrong
and all their creeds were an abomination and their professors
were all corrupt." (Pearl of Great Price, Joseph Smith 2, verse
19).
- Mormon Prophet Spencer W. Kimball was ordained
an Apostle under the hands of Heber J. Grant. Grant was likewise
ordained by George Q. Cannon. Cannon was ordained to his apostolic
office under the hands of Brigham Young. Similarly, every one
of the present Twelve Apostles of the Mormon Church has received
his ordination through Brigham Young. If Brigham was false, then
all those who were ordained through him lack the very priesthood
which they believe Brigham had. A break in one link causes the
entire chain below it to fall to the ground; so a break in the
Mormon priesthood succession breaks off the transfer of authority.
- "Misc. Minutes" unpublished ms., Brigham Young
Collection, Church Archives, Salt Lake City, p.1.
- Ibid., pp.6-7.
- Believing himself to be a prophet of God, Young
declared that it was his gift and calling to teach true doctrine
and to guard the members against heresy: What man or woman on
the earth, what spirit in the spirit-world can say truthfully
that I have ever gave a wrong word of counsel, or a word of advice
that could not be sanctioned by the heavens? (Journal of Discourses,
Vol. 12, p.127). It is my duty to see that correct doctrine
is taught and to guard the Church from error, it is my calling
("Misc. Minuets", unpublished ms., B.Y. Collection, Church Archives).
- Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Vol.1
, p.50. According to Mormon theology, Adam is Michael the archangel
and the Ancient of Days, Cf. Doctrine and Covenants, 27:11.
- Ibid., pp. 50-51.
- Diary of Hosea Stout. Copied from typed transcript.
B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo, Utah. The spelling,
grammar, and punctuation in this quotation as well as in all others
cited herein have not been changed from the originals.
- Journal of Samuel H. Rogers, Vol. 1, p. 179.
Copied from the original located at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections,
Provo, Utah.
- Mark E. Peterson, Adam Who Is He? (Deseret
Book, 1976), p.14.
- Spencer W. Kimball, Deseret News, October 9,
1976, Church News Section, p.11).
- Leonard J. Arrington, Charles C. Rich (B.Y.U.
Press, 1974), p.173
- Copied from microfilm of original. B.Y.U. Library,
Special Collections, Prove, Utah.
- Copied from Deseret Weekly, microfilm, B.Y.U.
Library.
- Copy of the original Journal of Discourses
volume on which statement was made is located in the Church Historian's
Office, Salt Lake City. For photo reproduction, see Bob White,
Where Does It Say That?, p.77.
- Faced with the fact that Brigham Young made
no attempt to correct his statements, Mormon scholar, Rodney Turner,
was forced to admit that Brigham was quoted correctly: Was Brigham
Young misquoted? It is the writer's opinion that the answer to
this question is a categorical no. There is not the slightest
evidence from Brigham Young, or any other source, that either
his original remarks on April 9, 1852, or any of his subsequent
statements were ever misquoted in the official publications of
the Church... In light of Brigham Young's attitude toward the
errors of others, and in view of the division created by his remarks
concerning Adam, it would be stretching one's credibility to the
breaking point to believe that he would have remained silent had
he been misquoted. (The Position of Adam in Latter-day Saint Scripture
and Theology, M.A. thesis, B.Y.U., pp.45-46; thesis is presently
restricted from viewing or reading).
- Joseph Fielding Smith, Answers to Gospel
Questions, Vol. 5, p.123.
- Ibid., pp. 122-123.
- See Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine
(Bookcraft, 1966), pp. 18-19.
- In his thesis, Rodney Turner similarly discounts
the possibility that Brigham was being misinterpreted: It is true
that the original discourse of April 9, 1852, could be taken in
more than one way; and if he had never mentioned the subject again,
his actual meaning would be a moot point. However, he did mention
the subject again, many times. Therefore the likelihood of misunderstanding
him, in view of his subsequent statements through the years, becomes
more remote (The Position of Adam, p.36).
- Brigham Young Papers, Feb. 19, 1854, call number
Ms. F219 #81, Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
- Copied from microfilm of journal located at
B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo, Utah.
- See Bruce R. McConkie, Mormon Doctrine,
pp.516-517.
- Millennial Star, Vol. 16, No. 31, August 5,
1854, p.482.
- Ibid., p.483
- Ibid., Vol. 16, No. 34, August 26, 1854, p.530.
- Ibid., pp.534-535.
- See T. B. H. Stenhouse, The Rocky Mountain
Saints, p.492. Photo reproduction of original available through
Modern Microfilm Co., Box 1884, S.L.C., Utah 84110.
- Brigham Young Papers. Oct. 8, 1854, call number
Ms. d 1234, Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
- Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Vol.
4, p.54).
- Ibid., Vol. 6, p.275.
- Deseret News, Vol. 4, No. 31, October 12, 1854,
p.2.
- Journal of Wilford Woodruff, October 6-8, 1854.
- Journal of the Southern Indian Mission, p.88.
- Joseph Lee Robinson Journal, copied from typed
transcript located at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, p.62.
- Eliza R. Snow was a plural wife of Joseph Smith
and was later married to Brigham Young.
- Millennial Star, Vol. 17, No. 20, p.320.
- Sacred Hymns for the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints, 1856, 11th ed., p. 375. This hymn has been
deleted from present LDS hymnals. In the 20th ed. there appeared
a hymn titled, "Sons of Michael, He approaches." In the second
line Michael was described as the "eternal" Father. In today's
edition this has been changed to read the "ancient" Father.
- Diary of Samuel Whitney Richards, copied from
typed transcript at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo,
Utah, p.113.
- Journal of Discourses, Vol. 4, p.2.
- Wilford Woodruff Journal, December 29, 1856.
Typed from microfilm of original.
- Journal of Discourses, Vol. 5, p.331f.
- The minutes of this session are found in the
Wilford Woodruff Journal, under the date of January 27, 1860.
- The council minutes are located in the Brigham
Young Collection, Miscellaneous Papers, Church Historian's Office.
- The entire Orson Pratt-Brigham Young affair
cannot be underestimated. The controversy which raged between
the two shows that Brigham was teaching that Adam was God. From
the charges that Pratt made it is clear what Brigham was teaching.
Furthermore, it is significant that Young made no attempt to correct
a misquotation or misinterpretation. On the contrary, he defended
his doctrine, and continued to assert it. Importance should also
be placed upon the remarks of the other Apostles who rallied to
their Prophet's defense. They replied to Orson that a prophet
of God cannot advance false doctrine, therefore all should accept
the President's statements. They rightly understood the biblical
emphasis that a prophet of God cannot advance false doctrine about
God and that he would be inspired to teach the truth. They also
realized the implications of Orson Pratt's statement. If Brigham
was advancing false doctrine, then he would be a false prophet.
Only a false prophet advances false doctrine. To charge Mormonism's
prophet with teaching false doctrine would be to undermine Mormonism's
claim to be a divinely led people.
- The Reorganized Church at this time was known
as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Later they
attached to themselves the title of being the "Reorganized" Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The Mormon factions has
its headquarters in Independence, Missouri.
- A Mormon Chronicle: The Diaries of John
D. Lee (The Huntington Library, 1955), Vol. 1, p.293.
- Sacred History, Solomon F. Kimball Papers,
Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
- Manuscript Sermon, "A Few Words of Doctrine",
Brigham Young Collection, Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake
City.
- Journal of Discourses, Vol. 8, p.58.
- Ibid., Vol. 13, p.95.
- Ibid., p.264.
- L. John Nuttall Journal, pp.20-24, copied from
original at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo, Utah.
- See Mark E. Peterson, Adam Who Is He?
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