The fact that I speak quite directly on a most important subject will,
I hope, be regarded as something of a tribute to you who are our loyal,
devoted, and inspired associates.
I have come to believe that it is the tendency for many members of the
Church who spend a great deal of time in academic research to begin to
judge the Church, its doctrine, organization, and leader-ship, present
and past, by the principles of their own profession. Oft-times this is
done unwittingly, and some of it, perhaps, is not harmful.
It is an easy thing for a man with extensive academic training to measure
the Church using the principles he has been taught in his professional
training as his standard. In my mind it ought to be the other way around.
A member of the Church ought always, particularly if he is pursuing extensive
academic studies, to judge the professions of man against the revealed
word of the Lord.
Many disciplines are subject to this danger. Over the years I have seen
many members of the Church lose their testimonies and yield their faith
as the price for academic achievement. Many others have been sorely tested.
Let me illustrate.
During my last year as one of the supervisors of seminaries and Institutes
of religion, a seminary teacher went to a large university in the East
to complete a doctorate in counseling and guidance. The ranking authority
in that field was there and quickly took an interest in this personable,
clean-cut, very intelligent young Latter-day Saint.
Our teacher attracted attention as he moved through the course work with
comparative ease, and his future looked bright indeed-that is, until he
came to the dissertation. He chose to study the ward bishop as a counselor.
At that time I was called as one of the General Authorities and helped
him obtain authorization to interview and send questionnaires to a cross-section
of bishops.
In the dissertation he described the calling and ordination of a bishop,
described the power of discernment, the right of a bishop to receive revelation.
and his right to spiritual guidance. His doctoral committee did not understand
this. They felt it had no place in a scholarly paper and insisted that
he take it out.
He came to see me. I read his dissertation and suggested that he satisfy
their concern by introducing the discussion on spiritual matters with
a statement such as "the Latter-day Saints believe the bishop has
spiritual power," or "they claim that there is inspiration from
God attending the bishop in his calling."
But the committee denied him even this. It was obvious that they would
be quite embarrassed to have this ingredient included in a scholarly dissertation.
It is as Paul said: "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because
they are spiritually discerned" (1 Corinthians 2:14).
He was reminded of his very great potential and was told that with some
little accommodation--specifically, leaving out all the spiritual references--his
dissertation would be published and his reputation established. They predicted
that he would become an authority in the field.
He was tempted. Perhaps, once established, he could then insert this spiritual
ingredient back into his work. Then, as an established authority, he could
really help the Church.
But something stood in the way: his faith, his integrity. So, he did the
best he could with his dissertation. It did not contain enough of the
Spirit to satisfy him, and too much to have been fully accepted by his
worldly professors. But he received his degree.
His dissertation is not truly the scholarly document it might have been,
because the most essential ingredient is missing. Revelation is so central
a part of a bishop's experience in counseling that any study which ignores
it cannot be regarded as a scholarly work.
He returned to the modest income and to the relative obscurity of the
Church Educational System.
I talked to this teacher a day or two ago. We talked about his dissertation
and the fact that it was never published. He has been a great influence
among the youth of the Church. He did the right thing. He summed up his
experience this way: "The mantle is far, far greater than the intellect;
the priesthood is the guiding power." His statement becomes the title
for this talk and embodies what I hope to convey to you.
I must not be too critical of those professors. They do not know of the
things of the Spirit. One can understand their position. It is another
thing, however, when we consider members of the Church, particularly those
who hold the priesthood and have made covenants in the temple. Many do
not do as my associate did; rather, they capitulate, cross over the line,
and forsake the things of the Spirit. Thereafter they judge the Church,
the doctrine, and the leadership by the standards of their academic profession.
This problem has affected some of those who have taught and have written
about the history of the Church. These professors say of themselves that
religious faith has little influence on Mormon scholars. They say this
because, obviously, they are not simply Latter-day Saints but are also
intellectuals trained, for the most part, in secular institutions. They
would that some historians who are Latter-day Saints write history as
they were taught in graduate school, rather than as Mormons.
If we are not careful, very careful, and if we are not wise, very wise,
we first leave out of our professional study the things of the Spirit.
The next step soon follows: we leave the spiritual things out of our lives.
I want to read to you a most significant statement by President Joseph
F. Smith, a statement that you would do well to keep in mind in your teaching
and research, and one which will serve as somewhat of a text for my remarks
to you:
It has not been by the wisdom of man that this people have been directed
in their course until the present: it has been by the wisdom of Him
who is above man and whose knowledge is greater than that of man, and
whose power is above the power of man. ... The hand of the Lord may
not be visible to all. There may be many who can not discern the workings
of God's will in the progress and development of this great latter-day
work. but there are those who see in every hour and in every moment
of the existence of the Church, from its beginning until now, the overruling,
almighty hand of Him who sent His Only Begotten Son to the world to
become a sacrifice for the sin of the world.1
If we do not keep this constantly in mind-that the Lord directs this
Church--we may lose our way in the world of intellectual and scholarly
research.
You seminary teachers and some of von institute and BYU men will be teaching
the history of the Church this school year. This is an unparalleled opportunity
in the lives of your students to increase their faith and testimony of
the divinity of this work. Your objective should be that they will see
the hand of the Lord in every hour and every moment of the Church from
its beginning till now.
As one who has taken the journey a number of times, I offer four cautions
before you begin.
First Caution
There is no such thing as an accurate, objective history of the Church
without consideration of the spiritual powers that attend this work.
There is no such thing as a scholarly, objective study of the office of
bishop without consideration of spiritual guidance, of discernment, and
of revelation. That is not scholarship. Accordingly, I repeat, there is
no such thing as an accurate or objective history of the Church which
ignores the Spirit.
You might as well try to write the biography of Mendelssohn without hearing
or mentioning his music, or write the life of Rembrandt without mentioning
light or canvas or color.
If someone who knew very little about music should write a biography of
Mendelssohn one who had been trained to have a feeling for music would
recognize that very quickly. That reader would not be many pages into
the manuscript before he would know that a most essential ingredient had
been left out.
Mendelssohn no doubt would emerge as an ordinary man, perhaps not an impressive
man at all. That which makes him most worth remembering would be gone.
Without it he would appear, at best, eccentric. Certainly, controversy
would develop over why a biography at all. Whoever should read this biography
would not know, really know, Mendelssohn at all--this, even though the
biographer might have invested exhaustive research in his project and
might have been accurate in every other detail.
And, if you viewed Rembrandt only in black and white, you would miss most
of his inspiration.
Those of us who are extensively engaged in researching the wisdom of man,
including those who write and those who teach Church history, are not
immune from these dangers. I have walked that road of scholarly research
and study and know something of the dangers. If anything, we are more
vulnerable than those in some of the other disciplines. Church history
can he so interesting and so inspiring as to be a very powerful tool indeed
for building faith. If not properly written or properly taught, it may
be a faith destroyer.
President Brigham Young admonished Karl G. Maeser not to teach even the
times table without the Spirit of the Lord. How much more essential is
that Spirit in the research, the writing, and the teaching of Church history.
If we who research, write, and teach the history of the Church ignore
the spiritual on the pretext that the world may not understand it, our
work will not be objective. And if, for the same reason, we keep it quite
secular, we will produce a history that is not accurate and not scholarly--this,
in spite of the extent of research or the nature or the individual statements
or the incidents which are included as part of it, and notwithstanding
the training or scholarly reputation of the one who writes or teaches
it. We would end up with a history with the one most essential ingredient
left out.
Those who have the Spirit can recognize very quickly whether something
is missing in a written Church history this in spite of the fact that
the author may be a highly trained historian and the reader is not. And,
I might add, we have been getting a great deal of experience in this regard
in the past few year.
President Wilford Woodruff warned: "I will here say God has inspired me
to keep a Journal and History of this Church, and I warn the future
Historians to give Credence to my History of this Church and Kingdom;
for my Testimony is true, and the truth of its record will be manifest
in the world to Come."2
Second Caution
There is a temptation for the writer or the teacher Of Church history
to want to tell everything, whether it is worthy or faith promoting or
not.
Some things that are true are not very useful.
Historians seem to take great pride in publishing something new, particularly
if it illustrates a weakness or mistake of a prominent historical figure.
For some reason, historians and novelists seem to savor such things. If
it related to a living person it would come under the heading of gossip.
History can be as misleading as gossip and much more difficult--often
impossible--to verify.
The writer or the teacher who has an exaggerated loyalty to the theory
that everything must be told is laying a foundation for his own judgment.
He should not complain if one day he himself receives as he has given.
Perhaps that is what is contemplated in having one's sins preached from
the housetops.
Some time ago a historian gave a lecture to an audience of college students
on one of the past Presidents of the Church. It seemed to be his purpose
to show that that President was a man subject to the foibles of men. He
introduced many so-called facts that put that President in a very unfavorable
light, particularly when they were taken out of the context of the historical
period in which he lived.
Someone who was not theretofore acquainted with this historical figure
(particularly someone not mature) must have come away very negatively
affected. Those who were unsteady in their convictions surely must have
had their faith weakened or destroyed.
I began teaching seminary under Abel S. Rich, principal. He was the second
seminary teacher employed by the Church and a man of maturity, wisdom,
and experience. Among the lessons I learned from him was this: when I
want to know about a man, I seek out those who know him best. I do not
go to his enemies but to his friends. He would not confide in his enemy.
You could not know the innermost thoughts of his heart by consulting those
who would injure him.
We are teachers and should know the importance of the principle of prerequisites.
It is easily illustrated with the subject of chemistry. No responsible
chemist would advise, and no reputable school would permit, a beginning
student to register for advanced chemistry without a knowledge of the
fundamental principles of chemistry. The advanced course would be a destructive
mistake, even for a very brilliant beginning student. Even that brilliant
student would need some knowledge of the elements, of atoms and molecules,
of electrons, of valence, of compounds and properties. To let a student
proceed without the knowledge of fundamentals would surely destroy his
interest in, and his future with, the field of chemistry.
The same point may be made with reference to so-called sex education.
There are many things that are factual, even elevating, about this subject.
There are other aspects of this subject that are so perverted and ugly
it does little good to talk of them at all. Some things cannot be safely
taught to little children or to those who are not eligible by virtue of
age or maturity or authorizing ordinance to understand them.
Teaching some things that are true, prematurely or at the wrong time,
can invite sorrow and heartbreak instead of the joy intended to accompany
learning.
What is true with these two subjects is, if anything, doubly true in the
field of religion. The scriptures teach emphatically that we must give
milk before meat. The Lord made it very clear that some things are to
be taught selectively and some things are to be given only to those who
are worthy.
It matters very much not only what we are told but when we
are told it. Be careful that you build faith rather than destroy it.
President William E. Berrett has told us how grateful he is that a testimony
that the past leaders of the Church were prophets of God was firmly fixed
in his mind before he was exposed to some of the so called facts
that historians have put in their published writings.
This principle of prerequisites is so fundamental to all education that
I have never been quite able to understand why historians are so willing
to ignore it. And, if those outside the Church have little to guide them
but the tenets of their profession, those inside the Church should know
better.
Some historians write and speak as though the only ones to read or listen
are mature, experienced historians. They write and speak to a very narrow
audience. Unfortunately, many of the things they tell one another are
not uplifting, go fat beyond the audience they may have intended, and
destroy faith.
What that historian did with the reputation of the President of the Church
was nor worth doing. He seemed determined to convince everyone that the
prophet was a man. We knew that already. All of the prophets
and all of the Apostles have been men. It would have been much more worthwhile
for him to have convinced us that the man was a prophet, a
fact quite as true as the fact that he was a man.
He has taken something away from the memory of a prophet. He has destroyed
faith. I remind you of the truth Shakespeare taught. ironically spoken
by Iago:
Who steals my purse steals trash--'tis something, nothing,
'Twas mine, 'Tis his, and has been slave to thousands--
But he that filches from me my good name
Robs me of that which not enriches him
And makes me poor indeed.3
The sad thing is that he may have, in years past, taken great interest
in those who led the Church and desired to draw close to them.
But instead of following that long, steep, discouraging, and occasionally
dangerous path to spiritual achievement, instead of going up to where
they were, he devised a way of collecting mistakes and weaknesses and
limitations to compare with his own. In that sense he has attempted to
bring a historical figure down to his level and in that way feel close
to him and perhaps justify his own weaknesses.
I agree with President Stephen L Richards, who stated:
If a man of history has secured over the years a high place in the
esteem of his countrymen and fellow men and has become imbedded in their
affections, it has seemingly become a pleasing pastime for researchers
and scholars to delve into the past of such a man, discover, if may
be, some of his weaknesses, and then write a book exposing hither-to
unpublished alleged factual findings, all of which tends to rob the
historic character of the idealistic esteem and veneration in which
he may have been held through the years.
This "debunking," we are told, is in the interest of realism, that the
facts should be known. If an historic character has made a great contribution
to country and society, and if his name and his deeds have been used
over the generations to foster high ideals of character and service,
what good is to be accomplished by digging out of the past and exploiting
weaknesses, which perhaps a generous contemporary public forgave and
subdued?4
That historian or scholar who delights in pointing out the weaknesses
and frailties of present or past leaders destroys faith--A destroyer of
faith--particularly one within the Church, and more particularly one who
is employed specifically to build faith--places himself in great spiritual
jeopardy. He is serving the wrong master, and unless he repents, he will
not be among the faithful in the eternities.
One who chooses to follow the tenets of his profession, regardless of
how they may injure the Church or destroy the faith of those not ready
for "advanced history," is himself in spiritual jeopardy. If that one
is a member of the Church, he has broken his covenants and will be accountable.
After all of the tomorrows of mortality have been finished, he will not
stand where be might have stood.
I recall a conversation with President Henry D. Moyle. We were driving
back from Arizona and were talking about a man who destroyed the faith
of young people from the vantage point of a teaching position. Someone
asked President Moyle why this man was still a member of the Church when
he did things like that. "He is not a member of the Church." President
Moyle answered firmly. Another replied that he bad not heard of his excommunication.
"He has excommunicated himself," President Moyle responded. "He cut himself
off from the Spirit of God. Whether or not we get around to holding a
court doesn't matter that much; he has cut himself off from he Spirit
of the Lord."
Third Caution
In an effort to be objective impartial, and scholarly a writer or
a teacher may unwittingly be giving equal time to the adversary.
Someone told of the man who entitled his book An Unbiased History
of the Civil War from the Southern Point of View. While we chuckle
at that, there is something to be said about presenting Church history
from the viewpoint of those who have righteously lived it. The idea that
we must be neutral and argue quite as much in favor of the adversary as
we do in favor of righteousness is neither reasonable nor safe.
In the Church we are not neutral. We are one-sided. There is a war going
on and we are engaged in it. It is the war between good and evil, and
we are belligerents defending the good. We are therefore obliged to give
preference to and protect all that is represented in the gospel of Jesus
Christ, and we have made covenants to do it.
Some of our scholars establish for themselves a posture of neutrality.
They call it "sympathetic detachment." Historians are particularly wont
to do that. If they make a complimentary statement about the Church, they
seem to have to counter it with something that is uncomplimentary.
Some of them, since they are members of the Church, are quite embarrassed
with the thought that they might be accused of being partial. They care
very much what the world thinks and are very careful to include in their
writings criticism of the Church leaders of the past.
They particularly strive to be acclaimed as historians as measured by
the world's standard. They would do well to read Nephi's vision of the
iron rod and ponder verses 24-28.
And it came to pass that I beheld others pressing forward, and they
came forth and caught hold of the end of the rod of iron; and they did
press forward through the mist if darkness, clinging to the rod of iron,
even until they did come forth and partake of the fruit of the tree.
And after they had partaken of the fruit of the tree they did
cast their eyes about as if they were ashamed. [Notice the word
after. He is talking of those who are partakers of the
goodness of God--of Church members.]
And I also cast my eyes round about, and beheld, on the other side of
the river of water, a great and spacious building; and it stood as it
were in the air, high above the earth.
And it was filled with people, both old and young, both male and female;
and their manner of dress was exceeding fine; and they were in the attitude
of mocking and pointing their fingers towards those who had come at
and were partaking of the fruit.
And after they had tasted of the fruit they were ashamed, because
of those that were scoffing at them; and they fell away into forbidden
paths and were lost.[1 Nephi 8:24-28; emphasis added]
And I want to say in all seriousness that there is a limit to the patience
of the Lord with respect to those who are under covenant to bless and
protect His Church and kingdom upon the earth but do not do it.
Particularly are we in danger if we are out to make a name for ourselves,
if our
hearts are set so much upon the things of this world, and aspire to
the honors of men, that [we] do not learn this one lesson--
That the rights of the priesthood are inseparably connected with the
powers of heaven, and that the powers of heaven cannot be controlled
nor handled only upon the principles of righteousness.
That they may be conferred upon us, it is true; but when we undertake
to cover our sins, or to gratify our pride, our vain ambition, or to
exercise control or dominion or compulsion upon the souls of the children
of men, in any degree of unrighteousness, behold, the heavens withdraw
themselves; the Spirit of the Lord is grieved; and when it is withdrawn,
Amen to the priesthood or the authority of that man.
Behold, ere he is aware, he is left unto himself, to kick against the
pricks, to persecute the saints, and to fight against God. [D&C
121:35-38 ]
There is much in the scriptures and in our Church literature to convince
us that we are at war with the adversary. We are not obliged as a church,
nor are we as members obliged, to accommodate the enemy in this battle.
President Joseph Fielding Smith pointed out that it would be a foolish
general who would give access to all of his intelligence to his enemy.
It is neither expected nor necessary for us to accommodate those who seek
to retrieve references from our sources, distort them, and use them against
us.
Suppose that a well-managed business corporation is threatened by takeover
from another corporation. Suppose that the corporation bent on the takeover
is determined to drain off all its assets and then dissolve this company.
You can rest assured that the threatened company would hire legal counsel
to protect itself.
Can you imagine that attorney, under contract to protect the company having
fixed in his mind what he must not really take sides, that he must be
impartial?
Suppose that when the records of the company he has been employed to protect
are opened for him to prepare his brief he collects evidence and passes
some of it to the attorneys of the enemy company. His own firm may then
be in great jeopardy because of his disloyal conduct.
Do you not recognize a breach of ethics, or integrity, or morality?
I think you can see the point I am making. Those of you who are employed
by the Church have a special responsibility to build faith not destroy
it. If you do not do that, but in fact accommodate the enemy, who is the
destroyer of faith you become in that sense a traitor to the cause you
have made covenants to protect.
Those who have carefully purged their work of any religious faith in the
name of academic freedom or so-called honesty ought not expect to be accommodated
in their researches or to be paid by the Church to do it.
Rest assured, also, that you will get little truth, and less benefit,
from those who steal documents or those who deal in stolen goods. There
have always been, and we have among us today, those who seek entrance
to restricted libraries and files to secretly copy material and steal
it away in hopes of finding some detail that has not as yet been published--this
in order that they may tell it for money or profit in some way from its
publication or inflate an ego by being first to publish it.
In some cases the motive is to destroy faith, if they can, and the Church,
if they are able. The Church will move forward, and their efforts will
be of little moment. But such conduct does not go unnoticed in the eternal
scheme of things.
We should not be ashamed to be committed, to be converted, to be biased
in favor of the Lord.
Elder Joseph Fielding Smith pointed out the fallacy of trying to work
both sides of the street: "You may as well say that the Book of Mormon
is not true because it does not give credence to the story the Lamanites
told of the Nephites."5
A number of years ago, professors from Harvard University who were members
of the Church invited me to lunch over at the Harvard Business School
faculty dining room. They wanted to know if I would join them in participating
in a new publication; they wanted me to contribute to it.
They were generous in their compliments, saying that because I had a doctorate
a number of people in the Church would listen to me, and being a General
Authority {at that time I was an Assistant to the Twelve), I could have
some very useful influence.
I listened to them very attentively but indicated at the close of the
conversation that I would not join them, I asked to be excused from responding
to their request. When they asked why, I told them this: "When your associates
announced the project, they described how useful it would be to the Church--a
niche that needed to be filled, And then the spokesman said, 'We are all
active and faithful members of the Church: however, . . . .'"
I told my two hosts that if the announcement had read, "We are active
and faithful members of the Church; therefore,. . ." I would have
joined their organization. I had serious questions about a "however" organization.
I have little worry over a "therefore" organization.
That however meant that they put a condition upon their Church
membership and their faith. It meant that they put something else first.
It meant that they were to judge the Church and gospel and the leaders
of it against their own backgrounds and training. It meant that their
commitment was partial, and that partial commitment is not enough to qualify
one for full spiritual light.
I would not contribute to publications, nor would I belong to organizations,
that by spirit or inclination are faith destroying. There are plenty of
scholars in the world determined to find all secular truth. There are
so few of us, relatively speaking, striving to convey the spiritual truths,
who are protecting the Church. We cannot safely be neutral.
Many years ago Elder Widtsoe made reference to a foolish teacher in the
Mutual Improvement Association who sponsored some debate with the intent
of improving the abilities of the young members of the Church. He chose
as a subject "Resolved: Joseph Smith was a prophet of God." Unfortunately,
the con side won.
The youngsters speaking in favor of the proposition were not as clever
and their arguments were not as carefully prepared as those of the opposing
side. The fact that Joseph Smith remained a prophet after the debate was
over did not protect some of the participants from suffering the destruction
of their faith and thereafter conducting their lives as though Joseph
Smith were not a prophet and as though the church he founded and the gospel
he restored were not true.
Fourth Caution
The final caution concerns the idea that so long as something is already
in print, so long as it is available from another source, there is nothing
out of order in using it in writing or speaking, or teaching.
Surely you can see the fallacy in that.
I have on occasion been disappointed when I have read statements that
tend to belittle or degrade the Church or past leaders of the Church in
writings of those who are supposed to be worthy members of the Church.
When I have commented on my disappointment to see that in print, the answer
has been. "It was printed before, and it's available, and therefore I
saw no reason not to publish it again."
You do not do well to see that it is disseminated. It may be read by those
not mature enough for "advanced history," and a testimony in seedling
stage may be crushed.
Several years ago President Ezra Taft Benson spoke to you and said:
It has come to our attention that some of our teachers particularly
our university programs, are purchasing writings from known apostates
. . . in an effort to become informed about certain points of view or
to glean from their research. You must realize that when you purchase
their writings or subscribe to their periodicals you help sustain their
cause. We would hope that their writings not be on your seminary or
institute or personal bookshelves. We are entrusting you to represent
the Lord and the First Presidency to your students, not to views of
the detractors of the Church.6
I endorse that sound counsel to you.
Remember: when you see the bitter apostate, you do not see only an absence
of light, you see also the presence of darkness.
Do not spread disease germs.
I learned a great lesson years ago when I interviewed a young man then
in the mission home. He was disqualified from serving a mission. He confessed
to a transgression that you would think would never enter the mind of
a normal human being.
"Where on earth did you ever get an idea to do something like that?" I
asked.
To my great surprise, he said, "From my bishop."
He said the bishop in the interview said, "Have you ever done this? Have
vou ever done that? Have vou ever done this other?" and described in detail
things that the young man had never thought of. They preyed upon his mind
until, under perverse inspiration, the opportunity presented itself, and
he fell.
Don't perpetuate the unworthy, the unsavory, or the sensational.
Some things that are in print go out of print, and the old statement "good
riddance to bad rubbish" might apply.
Elder G. Homer Durham of the First Quorum of the Seventy told of counsel
he had received from one of his professors who was an eminent historian:
"You don't write [and, I might add, you don't teach] history out of the
garbage pails."
Moroni gave an excellent rule for historians to follow:
For behold, the Spirit of Christ is given to ever man, that he may
know good from evil therefore, I show unto you the way to Judge: for
every thing which inviteth to do good, and to persuade to believe in
Christ, is sent forth by the power and gift of Christ; wherefore ye
may know with a perfect knowledge it is of God.
But whatsoever thing persuadeth men to do evil, and believe not in Christ,
and deny him, and serve not God, then ye may know with a perfect knowledge
it is of the devil; for after this manner doth the devil work, for he
persuadeth no man to do good, no, not one; neither do his angels; nether
do they who subject themselves unto him. [Moroni 7:16-17]
It makes a great deal of difference whether we regard mortality as the
conclusion and fulfillment of our existence or as a preparation for an
eternal existence as well.
Those are the cautions I give to you who teach and write Church history.
There are qualifications to teach or to write the history of this church.
If one is lacking in any one of these qualifications, he cannot properly
teach the history of the Church. He can recite facts and give a point
of view, but he cannot properly teach the history of the Church.
I will state these qualifications in the form of questions so that you
can assess your own qualifications.
Do you believe that God the Father and His Son Jesus Christ personally
appeared to the boy prophet, Joseph Smith. Jr., in the year 1820?
Do you have personal witness that the Father and the Son appeared in all
their glory and stood above that young man and instructed him according
to the testimony that he gave to the world in his published history?
Do you know that the Prophet Joseph Smith's testimony is true because
you have received a spiritual witness of its truth?
Do you believe that the church that was restored through him is in the
Lord's words, "the only true and living church upon the face of the whole
earth, with which I, the Lord, am well pleased" (D&C 1:30)? Do you
know by the Holy Ghost that this is the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints restored by heavenly messengers in this modern era;
that the Church constitutes the kingdom of God on earth, not just an institution
fabricated by human agency?
Do you believe that the successors to the Prophet Joseph Smith were and
are prophets, seers, and revelators; that revelation from heaven directs
the decisions, policies, and pronouncements that come from the headquarters
of the Church? Have you come to the settled conviction, by the Spirit,
that these prophets truly represent the Lord?
Now, you obviously noted that I did not talk about academic qualifications.
Facts, understanding, and scholarship can be attained by personal study
and essential course work. The three qualifications I have named come
by the Spirit, to the individual. You can't receive them by secular training
or study, by academic inquiry or scientific investigation.
I repeat: if there is a deficiency in any of these, then, regardless of
what other training an individual possesses, he cannot comprehend and
write or teach the true history of this church. The things of God are
understood only by one who possesses the Spirit of God.
Now, what about that historian who defamed the early President of the
Church and may well have weakened or destroyed faith in the process? What
about other members of the Church who have in their writings or in their
teaching been guilty of something similar?
I want to say something that may surprise you. I know of a man who did
something quite as destructive as that who later became the prophet of
the Church. I refer to Alma the Younger. I learned about him from reading
the Book of Mormon, which in reality is a very reliable history of the
Church in ancient times.
You are acquainted with the record of Alma as a young man. He followed
his father, the prophet Alma, about, and ridiculed what his father preached.
He was, in that period of his life, a destroyer of faith. Then came a
turning point. Because his father bad prayed for it, he came to himself.
He changed. He became one of the great men in religious history.
I want to say something to that historian and to others who may have placed
higher value on intellect than upon the mantle.
The Brethren then and now are men, very ordinary men, who have come for
the most part from very humble beginnings. We need your help! We desperately
need it. We cannot research and organize the history of the Church. We
do not have the time to do it. And we do not have the training that you
possess. But we do know the Spirit and how essential a part of our history
it is. Ours is the duty to organize the Church, to set it in order, to
confer the keys of authority, to perform the ordinances, to watch the
borders of the kingdom and carry burdens, heavy burdens, for others and
for ourselves that you can know little about.
Do you know how inadequate we really are compared to the callings we have
received? Can you feel in a measure the weight, the overwhelming weight,
of responsibility that is ours? If you look for inadequacy and imperfections,
you can find them quite easily. But you may not feel as we feel the enormous
weight of responsibility associated with the callings that have come to
us. We are not free to do some of the things that scholars think would
be so reasonable, for the Lord will not permit us to do them, and it is
His church. He presides over it.
There is another part of the on-going history of the Church that you may
not be acquainted with. Perhaps I can illustrate it for you.
A few years ago it was my sad privilege to accompany President Kimball,
then President of the Twelve, to a distant stake to replace a stake leader
who had been excommunicated for a transgression. Our hearts went out to
this good man who had done such an unworthy thing. His sorrow and anguish
and suffering brought to my mind the phrase "gall of bitterness."
Thereafter, on intermittent occasions, I would receive a call from President
Kimball: "Have you heard from this brother? How is he doing? Have you
been in touch with him?" After Brother Kimball became President of the
Church, the calls did not cease. They increased in frequency.
One day I received a call from the President. "I have been thinking of
this brother. Do you think it is too soon to have him baptized?" (Always
a question, never a command.) I responded with my feelings, and he said,
"Why don't you see if he could come here to see you? If you feel good
about it after an interview, we could proceed."
A short time later, I arrived very early at the office. As I left my car
I saw president Kimball enter his. He was going to the airport on his
way to Europe. He rolled down the window to greet me, and I told him I
had good news about our brother. "He was baptized last night." I said.
He motioned for me to get into the car and sit beside him and asked me
to tell him all about it. I told him of the interview and that I had concluded
by telling our brother very plainly that his baptism must not be a signal
that his priesthood blessings would be restored in the foreseeable future.
I told him that it would be a long, long time before that would happen.
President Kimball patted me on the knee in a gentle gesture of correction
and said. "Well, maybe not so long. . . ." Soon thereafter the intermittent
phone calls began again.
I want to tell you of another lesson I received. Many years ago when I
was a new General Authority and not very experienced, I was called to
the office of the First Counselor in the First Presidency. "We find you
are going to the West Coast for conference this weekend. We wonder if
you would leave a day or so early to help with a problem at a mission
headquarters in another city."
A missionary had confessed to transgression and the mission president
was reluctant to take action. I was instructed to see that a court was
convened and that the missionary was excommunicated.
I went, and I interviewed the elder at great length. I then went to a
park to think and pray about it. It was an unusual case, most unusual.
After two hours, I telephoned the member of the First Presidency from
a pay telephone and told him a little of what I had learned and of how
I felt about the matter. He asked what I wanted to do. Hesitantly I told
him I wanted to delay, to take no action now. Then I said, "But, President,
tell me to do it, again, and I will do it."
His voice came over the telephone and seemed like thunder to me: "Don't
you go against the voice of the Spirit!"
I had learned a great lesson. I have never forgotten it, and the inspiration
greatly affected the outcome when final action was taken.
Do not yield your faith in the payment for an advanced degree or for the
recognition and acclaim of the world. Do not turn away from the Lord nor
from his Church nor from his servants. You are needed--oh, how you are
needed!
It may be that you will lay your scholarly reputation and the acclaim
of your colleagues in the world as a sacrifice upon the altar of service.
They may never understand the things of the Spirit as you have a right
to do. They may not regard you as an authority or as a scholar. Just remember,
when the test came to Abraham, he didn't really have to sacrifice Isaac.
He just had to be willing to.
Now a final lesson from Church history, one that illustrates the kind
of thing from the past that builds faith and increases testimony.
William W. Phelps had been a trusted associate of the Prophet Joseph Smith.
Then, in an hour of crisis when the Prophet needed him most, he turned
against him and joined the apostates and oppressors who sought the Prophet's
life.
Later, Brother Phelps came to himself. He repented of what he had done
and wrote to the Prophet Joseph Smith, asking for his forgiveness. I want
to read you the letter the Prophet Joseph wrote to Brother Phelps in reply.
I confess also that many times I have moaned in agony when I have thought
of the many incidents of this kind that researchers have discovered when
they have pored over the records of our history but have left them out
of their writings for fear they would be regarded as not worthy of a scholarly
review of Church history.
Now the letter:
Dear Brother Phelps:
You may in some measure realize what my feelings, as well as Elder Rigdon's
and Brother Hyrum's were, when we read your letter--truly our hearts
were melted into tenderness and compassion when we ascertained your
resolves, &c. I can assure you I feel a disposition to act on your
case in a manner that will meet the approbation of Jehovah, (whose servant
I am), and agreeable to the principles of truth and righteousness which
have been revealed; and inasmuch as long-suffering, patience, and mercy
have ever characterized the dealings of our heavenly Father towards
the humble and penitent, I feel disposed to copy the example, cherish
the same principles, and by so doing be a savior of my fellow men.
It is true, that we have suffered much in consequence of your behavior--the
cup of gall. already full enough for mortals to drink, was indeed filled
to overflowing when you turned against us. One with whom we had oft
taken sweet counsel together, and enjoyed many refreshing seasons from
the Lord--"had it been an enemy we could have borne it." . . .
However, the cup has been drunk, the will of our Father has been done,
and we are yet alive, for which we thank the Lord. And having been delivered
from the hands of wicked men by the mercy of our God, we say it is your
privilege to be delivered from the powers of the adversary, be brought
into the liberty of God's dear children, and again take your stand among
the Saints of the Most High, and by diligence, humility, and love unfeigned,
commend yourself to our God, and your God, and to the Church of Jesus
Christ.
Believing your confession to be real, and your repentance genuine, I
shall be happy once again to give you the right hand of fellowship,
and rejoice over the returning prodigal . . .
"Come on, dear brother, since the war is past,
For friends at first, are friends again at last."
Yours as ever,
Joseph Smith, Jun.7
Brother Phelps did return to full fellowship. He was a writer of hymns.
The one we sang to open this meeting, "Praise to the Man." was written
by Brother Phelps, as were "O God, the Eternal Father," "Now Let Us Rejoice,"
"Gently Raise the Sacred Strain," "The Spirit of God Like a Fire"--to
mention but a few.
Oh, how great the loss to the Church if Brother Phelps had not returned.
And how great would have been the tragedy for him.
When I read about our Brethren of the past, I am overwhelmed with humility.
Consider the Prophet Joseph Smith and the little opportunity he had for
formal schooling. Read the letters written in his own hand, and you will
know that he could not spell correctly. Oh, how grateful he must have
been for a scribe. I have wept when I have contemplated what they accomplished
with what little they had. I sense how grateful they were to those who
stood by them.
To you who may have lost your way, come back! We know how that can happen;
we have walked that path of research and, study. Come help us!--you with
your scholarship and your training, you with your bright, intelligent
minds, you with your experience and with your academic degrees.
How grateful we are today for the many members who have special gifts
and special training that they devote to the building up of the Church
and kingdom of God and to the protecting of it.
May God bless you who so faithfully compile and teach the history of the
Church and build the faith of those you teach. I bear witness that the
gospel is true. The Church is His church. I pray that you may be inspired
as you write and as you teach. May His Spirit be with you in rich abundance.
As you take your students over the trails of Church history in this dispensation,
yours is the privilege to help them to see the miracle of the Restoration,
the mantle that belongs to His servants, and to "see in every hour and
in every moment of the existence of the Church . . . the overruling, almighty
hand of [God]."8
As you write and as you teach Church history under the influence of His
Spirit, one day you will come to know that you were not only spectators
but a central part of it, for you are His Saints.
This testimony I leave, with my blessings, in the name of Jesus Christ.
Amen.
- Joseph F. Smith, in Conference Report, Apr. 1904, p. 2; emphasis added.
- Wilford Woodruff Journal, 6 July 1877, microfilm of holograph, Wilford
Woodruff Collection, Library-Archives of the Historical Department,
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah;
emphasis added. Spelling and punctuation have been standardized.
- Othello, act 3, sc. 3, lines 157-61.
- Stephen L. Richards, Where is Wisdom? (Salt Lake City: Deseret
Book Co., 1955) p. 155.
- Joseph Fielding Smith, "History and History Recorders," Utah Genealogical
and Historical Magazine 16 (April 1925); 55
- Ezra Taft Benson, The Gospel Teacher and His Message, Address
delivered to Church Educational System personel, 17 September 1976,
p. 12.
- Joseph Smith, Jr., History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints, ed. B. H. Roberts, 2d ed. Rev., 7 vol. (Salt Lake City;
Deseret News, 1932-1951), 4:162-64.
- Joseph F. Smith, in Conference Report, Apr. 1904, p. 2.
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