Kirjeen tarkoituksena oli kertoa tri. Englandille, että McConkie
oli erittäin tyytymätön joihinkin hänen julkisesti
kannattamiinsa ideoihin. Näihin kuului aiempien johtajien kuten Brigham
Youngin opettamia oppeja.
Bruce R. McConkie myöntää kirjeessää, että
Brigham Young syyllistyi opettamaan oppeja, jotka "eivät olleet
sopusoinnussa evankeliumin kanssa" (s. 6).
McConkie tekee hämmästyttävän tunnustuksen:
En tunne kaikkia Herran tarkoituksia, mutta tiedän, että
hän sallii vääriä oppeja opetettavan kirkossa ja
sen ulkopuolella ja että sellaiset opetukset ovat osa kuolevaisuuden
seulontaprosessia. (s. 7)
Tällaisen lausunnon pitäisi saattaa ymmälle rivimormonit,
jotka ovat kuulleet johtajiensa kerran toisensa jälkeen vakuuttavan,
että "Jumala ei milloinkaan salli kirkon profeetan johtavan
kirkkoa harhaan." Mitä muuta väärien oppien opettaminen
voisi olla kuin ihmisten harhaan johtamista?
McConkie hyökkää rajusti sitä Youngin ajatusta vastaan,
että Jumala olisi jatkuvasti kehittyvä olento tai että
Aadam on Jumala. McConkie väittää kirjeessään,
että sellaiset, jotka yhtyvät joihinkin MAP-kirkon toisen profeetan
ja presidentin näkemyksiin, tulevat kirotuiksi (s. 7). Hän ei
myönnä, että Youngin täytyy myös olla kirottu,
koska hän opetti sellaista.
Tämä kirje on erinomainen, klassinen esimerkki siitä,
miten mormonit pyrkivät sekä syömään kakun että
pitämään sen.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS
The Council of Twelve
47 East South Temple Street, Salt Lake City, Utah 84150
February 19, 1981
Mr. Eugene England
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Dear Brother England:
This may well be the most important letter you have or will receive.
It is written in reply to an undated letter from you which came in an
envelope postmarked, September 4, 1980. Your letter enclosed a 19-page
document which you had prepared under the title, "The Perfection
and Progression of God: Two Spheres of Existence and Two Modes of Discourse."
In your letter and the article enclosed with it, you set forth the thesis
that although God knows all things as pertaining to our sphere of existence,
there are nonetheless other spheres beyond ours in which Deity continues
to advance and progress in knowledge and truth.
In espousing and explaining this philosophy you suppose you are harmonizing
quotations from various of the early Brethren.
Some of these statements emphatically say that God knows all things and
has all power and others of them say that he is advancing in knowledge
and understanding and is gaining new truths.
When your letter arrived I was aware of the subject material contained
in it and in the enclosed article. Because I do not engage in controversy
or discussion of divergent views, either orally or in writing, I simply
dropped your letter in a drawer and did not bother to read it.
Some four and a half months later, in January of this year, I did read
your presentation for the first time. I was not at all pleased, but still
thought I would have nothing to say to you on the subject.
Over the months various hearsay reports have come to me indicating that
you are presenting and championing the views you sent to me.
I have now reached the conclusion that it would be wise for me to depart
from my usual custom and send you an answer to your letter.
I do so out of respect for your parents, G. Eugene and Dora, and for your
own personal well-being and for your guidance where your teachings and
discussions with others are concerned.
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I shall write in kindness and in plainness and perhaps with sharpness.
I want you to know that I am extending to you the hand of fellowship though
I hold over you at the same time, the scepter of judgment.
My office door is open to you and if you feel the need for discussion
with me, my secretary will be pleased to set up a mutually convenient
time or times for such.
On Sunday, June 1, 1980, I spoke at one of the multi-stake firesides
in the Marriott Center on the subject, "The Seven Deadly Heresies."
In that talk I said:
"There are those who say that God is progressing in knowledge and
is learning new truths.
"This is false -- utterly, totally, and completely. There is not
one sliver of truth in it. It grows out of a wholly twisted and incorrect
view of the King Follet Sermon and of what is meant by eternal progression.
"God progresses in the sense that his kingdoms increase and his
dominions multiply -- not in the sense that he learns new truths and discovers
new laws.
God is not a student.
He is not a laboratory technician.
He is not postulating new theories on the basis of past experiences.
He has indeed graduated to that state of exaltation that consists of knowing
all things and having all power.
"The life that God lives is named eternal life.
His name, one of them, is 'Eternal,' using that word as a noun and not
as an adjective, and he uses that name to identify the type of life that
he lives.
God's life is eternal life, and eternal life is god's life.
They are one and the same.
Eternal life is the goal we shall obtain if we believe and obey and walk
uprightly before him.
And eternal life consists of two things.
It consists of life in the family unit, and, also, of inheriting, receiving,
and possessing the fulness of the glory of the Father.
Anyone who has each of these things is an inheritor and possessor of the
greatest of all gifts of God, which is eternal life.
"Eternal progression consists of living the kind of life God lives
and of increasing in kingdoms and dominions everlastingly.
Why anyone should suppose that an infinite and eternal being, who has
presided in our universe for almost 2,555,000,000 years, who made the
sidereal heavens, whose creations are more numerous than the particles
of the earth, and who is aware of the fall of every sparrow -- why anyone
would suppose that such a being has more to learn and new truths to discover
in the laboratories of eternity is totally beyond my comprehension.
"Will he one day learn something that will destroy the plan of
salvation and turn man and the universe into an uncreated nothingness?
Will he discover a better plan of salvation than the
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one he has already given to men in worlds without number?
"The saving truth, as revealed to and taught, formally and officially,
by the prophet Joseph Smith in the Lectures on Faith is that God is omnipotent,
omniscient, and omnipresent.
He knows all things, he has all power, and he is everywhere present by
the power of his Spirit.
And unless we know and believe this doctrine we cannot gain faith unto
life and salvation.
"Joseph Smith also taught in the Lectures on Faith 'that three
things are necessary in order that any rational and intelligent being
may exercise faith in God unto life and salvation.
These he named as:
- "'The idea that he actually exists';
- "'A correct idea of his character, perfections, and attributes;
and
- "'An actual knowledge that the course of life which he is pursuing
is according to the divine will.'
"The attributes of God are given as knowledge, faith or power,
justice, judgment, mercy, and truth.
The perfections of God are named as 'the perfections which belong to all
of the attributes of his nature,' which is to say that God possesses and
has all knowledge, all faith or power, all justice, all judgment, all
mercy, and all truth.
He is indeed the very embodiment, personification, and source of all these
attributes.
Does anyone suppose that God can be 'more honest than he already is? Neither
need any suppose there are truths he does not know or knowledge he does
not possess.
"Thus Joseph Smith taught, and these are his words:
'Without the knowledge of all things, God would not be able to save
any portion of his creatures, for it is by reason of the knowledge which
he has of all things, from the beginning to the end, that enables him
to give that understanding to his creatures by which they are made partakers
of eternal life; and if it were not for the idea existing in the minds
of men that God had all knowledge it would be impossible for them to exercise
faith in him.'
(Cited, Mormon Doctrine, p. 264.)
"If God is just dabbling with a few truths he has already discovered,
we have no idea as to the real end and purpose of creation."
The foregoing quotation is from the published version of the talk.
As it was actually given it included the following
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paragraph: "Will he one day learn something that will destroy the
plan of salvation and turn man and the universe into an uncreated nothingness?
Will he discover a better plan of salvation than the one he has already
given to men in worlds without number? I have been sorely tempted to say
at this point that any who so suppose have the intellect of an ant and
the understanding of a clod of miry clay in a primordial swamp -- but
of course I would never say a thing like that."
I deliberately deleted the last quoted sentence because it does not come
out in print the way it was expressed by voice.
It was said in such a tone as to draw laughter from the congregation and
is of course, a normal use of hyperbole.
In that same devotional speech I said; "There are those who believe
or say they believe that Adam is our father and our God, that he is the
father of our spirits and our bodies, and that he is the one we worship."
I, of course, indicated the utter absurdity of this doctrine and said
it was totally false.
Since then I have received violent reactions from Ogden Draut and other
cultists in which they have expounded upon the views of Brigham Young
and others of the early Brethren relative to Adam.
They have plain and clear quotations saying all of the things about Adam
which I say are false.
The quotations are in our literature and form the basis of a worship system
followed by many of the cultists who have been excommunicated from the
Church.
I also received, of course, your material in which you quote from Brigham
Young and others of the early Brethren saying that God is progressing
in knowledge.
I assume that you were aware of the foregoing quotations when you wrote
me in September of 1980.
In the October 1980 General Conference, without as yet having read your
material, I said the following:
"True religion is found only where men worship the true and living
God.
False religion always results from the worship of false gods.
Eternal life itself, which is the greatest of all the gifts of God, is
available to those and those only who know God and Jesus Christ whom he
hath sent.
"It is all the rage in this modern world to worship false gods
of every sort and kind.
There are those who bow before idols of wood and stone, and others who
lisp their petitions to icons and images.
There are those who worship cows and crocodiles, and others who acclaim
Adam or Allah or Buddha as their Supreme Being.
"There are those who apply the names of Deity to some spirit essence
that is immaterial, uncreated and unknowable and
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that fills the immensity of space and is everywhere and nowhere in particular
present.
"And there are even those who champion the almost unbelievable
theory that God is an Eternal Student enrolled in the University of the
Universe where he is busily engaged in learning new truths and amassing
new and strange knowledge that he never knew before.
"How belittling it is -- it borders on blasphemy -- to demean the
Lord God Omnipotent by saying he is an idol, or an image, or an animal,
or a spirit essence, or that he is ever learning but never able to come
to a knowledge of all truth.
"It is the first principle of revealed religion to know the nature
and kind of being that God is.
As for us: 'We know [and testify] that there is a God in heaven, who is
infinite and eternal, from everlasting to everlasting the same unchangeable
God, the framer of heaven and earth, and all things which are in them.'
(D&C 20:17.)
"This great God, the Lord Almighty, is a personage of tabernacle.
He 'has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's.'
(D&C 130;22.)
He is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent.
He has all power, knows all things, and, by the power of his Spirit, is
in and through all things."
On Tuesday, February 17, 1981, I was the speaker at the BYU Devotional.
My subject was "The Three Pillars of Eternity," under which
heading I spoke of the creation, the fall and the atonement.
With reference to the omnipotence and omniscience of God I said in that
talk:
"Who is Elohim? He is God the Eternal Father.
He is a glorified and exalted personage.
He has a body of flesh and bones as tangible as man's.
In the language of Adam, Man of Holiness is his name.
He is omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent.
He knows all things and has all power -- not simply as pertaining to us
or in some prescribed sphere or realm -- but in the absolute, eternal,
and unlimited sense.
In the ultimate sense, he is the Creator.
And anything you may have heard to the contrary, whether in the creeds
of Christendom or the mouthings of intellectuals who, in their own eyes,
know more than the Lord, is false."
Now may I say something for your guidance and enlightenment.
If what I am about to say should be taken out of context and published
in Dialogue or elsewhere, it would give an entirely erroneous impression
and would not properly present the facts.
As it happens, I am a great admirer of Brigham Young and a great believer
in his doctrinal presentations.
He was called of God.
Page 6
He was guided by the Holy Spirit in his teachings in general.
He was a mighty prophet.
He led Israel the way the Lord wanted his people led.
He built on the foundation laid by the Prophet Joseph.
He completed his work and has come on to eternal exaltation.
Nonetheless, as Joseph Smith so pointedly taught, a prophet is not always
a prophet, only when he is acting as such.
Prophets are men and they make mistakes.
Sometimes they err in doctrine.
This is one of the reasons the Lord has given us the Standard Works.
They become the standards and rules that govern where doctrine and philosophy
are concerned.
If this were not so, we would believe one thing when one man was president
of the Church and another thing in the days of his successors.
Truth is eternal and does not vary.
Sometimes even wise and good men fall short in the accurate presentation
of what is truth.
Sometimes a prophet gives personal views which are not endorsed and approved
by the Lord.
Yes, President Young did teach that Adam was the father of our spirits,
and all the related things that the cultists ascribe to him.
This, however, is not true.
He expressed views that are out of harmony with the gospel.
But, be it known, Brigham Young also taught accurately and correctly,
the status and position of Adam in the eternal scheme of things.
What I am saying is that Brigham Young, contradicted Brigham Young, and
the issue becomes one of which Brigham Young we will believe.
The answer is we will believe the expressions that accord with the teachings
in the Standard Works.
Yes, Brigham Young did say some things about God progressing in knowledge
and understanding, but again, be it known, that Brigham Young taught,
emphatically and plainly, that God knows all things and has all power
meaning in the infinite, eternal and ultimate and absolute sense of the
word.
Again, the issue is, which Brigham Young shall we believe and the answer
is: We will take the one whose statements accord with what God has revealed
in the Standard Works.
I think you can give me credit for having a knowledge of the quotations
from Brigham Young relative to Adam, and of knowing what he taught under
the subject that has become known as the Adam God Theory.
President Joseph Fielding Smith said that Brigham Young will have to make
his own explanations on the points there involved.
I think you can also give me credit for knowing what Brigham Young said
about God progressing.
And again, that is something he will have to account for.
As for me and my house, we will have the good sense to choose between
the divergent teachings of the same man and come up with those that accord
with
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what God has set forth in his eternal plan of salvation.
This puts me in mind of Paul's statement: "There must be also heresies
among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest among you."
(1 Cor. 11:19.)
I do not know all of the providences of the Lord, but I do know that he
permits false doctrine to be taught in and out of the Church and that
such teaching is part of the sifting process of mortality.
We will be judged by what we believe among other things.
If we believe false doctrine, we will be condemned.
If that belief is on basic and fundamental things, it will lead us astray
and we will lose our souls.
This is why Nephi said: "And all those who preach false doctrines,
. . . wo, wo, wo be unto them, saith the Lord God Almighty, for they shall
be thrust down to hell!: (2 Ne. 28:15.)
This clearly means that people who teach false doctrine in the fundamental
and basic things will lose their souls.
The nature and kind of being that God is, is one of these fundamentals.
I repeat: Brigham Young erred in some of his statements on the nature
and kind of being that God is and as to the position of Adam in the plan
of salvation, but Brigham Young also taught the truth in these fields
on other occasions.
And I repeat, that in his instance, he was a great prophet and has gone
on to eternal reward.
What he did is not a pattern for any of us.
If we choose to believe and teach the false portions of his doctrines,
we are making an election that will damn us.
It should be perfectly evident that under our system of church discipline,
it would be anticipated that some others besides Brigham Young would pick
up some of his statements and echo them.
Those who did this, also on other occasions, taught accurately and properly
what the true doctrines of the gospel are.
I do not get concerned when a good and sound person who.
On the over-all, is teaching the truth happens to err on a particular
point and say something in conflict with what he has said himself on a
previous occasion.
We are all mortal.
We are all fallible.
We all make mistakes.
No single individual all the time is in tune with the Holy Spirit, but
I do get concerned when some person or group picks out false statements
and makes them the basis of their presentation and theology and thus ends
up having a false concept of the doctrine, which in reality, was not in
the mind of the person whose quotations they are using.
Wise gospel students do not build their philosophies of life on quotations
of individuals, even though those quotations come from presidents of the
Church.
Wise people anchor their doctrine on the Standard Works.
When Section 20 says that God is infinite and eternal, it means just that
and so on through all
Page 8
of the revelations.
There is no need to attempt to harmonize conflicting views when some of
the views are out of harmony with the Standard Works.
This is what life is all about.
The Lord is finding out what we will believe in spite of the allurements
of the world or the philosophies of men or the seemingly rational and
logical explanations that astute people make.
We do not solve our problems by getting a statement from the president
of the Church or from someone else on a subject.
We have been introduced to the gospel; we have the gift of the Holy Ghost;
we have the Standards Works and it is our responsibility to get in tune
and understand properly what the Lord has revealed and has had us canonize.
The end result of this course of personally and individually pursuing
light and truth is to reach that millennial state of which the scriptures
say it will no longer be necessary for every man to say to his neighbor
"know the Lord," for all shall know him from the greatest to
the least.
Joseph Smith says this will be by the spirit of revelation.
If it is true, as I am advised, that you speak on this subject of the
progression of God at firesides and elsewhere, you should cease to do
so.
If you give other people copies of the material you sent me, with the
quotations it contains, you should cease to do so.
It is not in your province to set in order the Church or to determine
what is doctrines shall be.
It is axiomatic among us to know that God has given apostles and prophets
"for the edifying of the body of Christ," and that their ministry
is to see that "we henceforth be no more children, tossed to and
fro, and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the slight of men,
and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive."
(Eph. 4:11-16.)
This means, among other things, that it is my province to teach to the
Church what the doctrine is.
It is your province to echo what I say or to remain silent.
You do not have a divine commission to correct me or any of the Brethren.
The Lord does not operate that way.
If I lead the Church astray, that is my responsibility, but the fact still
remains that I am the one appointed with all the rest involved so to do.
The appointment is not given to the faculty at Brigham Young University
or to any of the members of the Church.
The Lord's house is a house of order and those who hold the keys are appointed
to proclaim the doctrines.
Now you know that this does not mean that individuals should not do
research and make discoveries and write articles.
What it does mean is that what they write should be faith promoting and
where doctrines are concerned, should be in harmony with that which comes
from the head of the Church.
And those at
Page 9
the head of the Church have the obligation to teach that which is in
harmony with the Standard Works.
If they err then be silent on the point and leave the event in the hands
of the Lord.
Some day all of us will stand before the judgment bar and be accountable
for our teachings.
And where there have been disagreements the Lord will judge between us.
In the meantime if we want to save our own souls we need to strive with
all the power we have to be in harmony with the revelations and not to
be teaching or promulgating doctrines that suit our fancy.
I advise you to take my counsel on the matters here involved.
If I err, that is my problem; but in your case if you single out some
of these things and make them the center of your philosophy, and end up
being wrong, you will lose your should.
One of the side effects of preaching contrary to what the Brethren preach
is to get a spirit of rebellion growing up in your heart.
This sort of thing cankers the soul spiritually.
It drives people out of the Church.
It weakens their faith.
All of us need all of the faith and strength and spiritual stability we
can get to maintain our positions in the Church and to work out our salvation.
Now, I think I have said enough in this letter so that if you are receptive
and pliable, you will get the message.
If you are not, rebellion will well up in your heart.
I pray for your well-being.
I repeat: the door to my office is open.
Perhaps I should tell you what one of the very astute and alert General
Authorities said to me when I chanced to mention to him the subject of
your letter to me.
He said: "Oh dear, haven't we rescued him enough times already."
Now I hope you will ponder and pray and come to a basic understanding
of fundamental things and that unless and until you can on all points,
you will remain silent on those where differences exist between you and
the Brethren.
This is the course of safety.
I advise you to pursue it.
If you do not, perils lie ahead.
It is not too often in this day that any of us are told plainly and bluntly
what ought to be.
I am taking the liberty of so speaking to you at this time, and become
thus a witness against you if you do not take the counsel.
I repeat: I have every good wish for you, pray that the Lord will bless
you and hope that things will work out properly and well in your life.
Sincerely,
Bruce R. McConkie
BRM:vh
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P.S. I am taking the liberty of sending copies of this response to those
to whom you sent your communication.
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