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1713 lines
83 KiB
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From: agr00@ccc.amdahl.com (Anthony G Rose)
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Newsgroups: talk.religion.misc
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Subject: Adam Is God ??? (Brigham Young's false doctrinal teachings)
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Message-ID: <78Ey02sb32d=01@JUTS.ccc.amdahl.com>
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Date: 16 Jan 93 22:31:06 GMT
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Organization: Amdahl Corporation, Sunnyvale CA
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Lines: 1704
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ADAM IS GOD???
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Chris A. Ulachos
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BRIGHAM YOUNG'S FALSE TEACHING: ADAM IS GOD
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====================================================================
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PREFACE: This is a reprint of an article appearing in the Journal of
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Pastoral Practice, Volume III, Number 2, pages 93 through 119. It is
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reprinted in this form with the permission of the author.
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Copyright 1979, Institute of Pastoral Studies of The Christian
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Counseling & Education Foundation.
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====================================================================
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Of all the vices that entangle a man, perhaps none is as unholy as
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jealousy. Jealousy, the "green-eyed monster", dwells in the deeper
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regions of sin because the source of its existence is unbridled
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covetousness growing out of pride and insecurity. However, in the
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case of jealousy, what is a vice in human nature is a virtue in the
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divine nature of God. Though among men jealousy is a ravaging and
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soul-destroying cancer, in God it is a righteous zeal, based upon
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His covenant love for His own people, which seeks to protect a love-
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relationship and avenge it when broken. The godly zeal which the
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Lord has for those whom He has chosen is an attribute worthy of all
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praise and adoration.
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The fact that He is a jealous God was one of the first
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characteristics that the Lord made known to Israel after He had
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redeemed her out of the slave market of Egypt. She became His love
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and possession, and He demanded from her a love and devotion that
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would extend to no other (1).
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I am the LORD thy God, which have brought thee out of
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the land of Egypt, out of the house of Bondage. Thou
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shalt have no other gods before me...for I the LORD
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thy God am a jealous God (Ex. 20:1,3,5).
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Thou shalt worship no other god; for the LORD, whose
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name is Jealous, is a jealous God (Ex. 34:14).
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Throughout Old Testament history the Lord taught Israel that He was
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the only God with whom they had to do. For her to worship and serve
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another would be sheer adultery and whoredom:
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And yet they would not hearken unto their judges, but
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they went a whoring after other gods, and bowed
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themselves unto them (Judges 2:17).
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In the New Testament we find the same teaching. The New Testament
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writers shared the Lord's jealousy over His covenant people:
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For I am jealous over you with a godly jealousy: for I
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have espoused you to one husband, that I may present
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you as a chaste virgin to Christ (II Cor. 11:2).
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While throughout the flow of Bible history we see God proclaiming
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that He alone is to be worshiped, at the same time we find prophets
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who were not of God taught the contrary. True prophets would never
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be found teaching the people to worship another god - whether is
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was a stone idol, and imaginary god dwelling in heaven, or a deified
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man. They knew that it was Jehovah who had redeemed Israel out of
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Egypt and that He alone is God. Inspired by God's Spirit, they knew
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the mind of the Lord: that He would give His glory to no other.
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Therefore, when these living oracles of God spoke as prophets, they
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were moved to proclaim, "Thou shalt worship the LORD thy God, and
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Him only shalt thou serve."
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In light of this insistence upon the exclusiveness of the true God,
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we can understand the test of a prophet that Moses taught the
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children of Israel. By applying this timeless test, people
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throughout all ages may detect the false ones:
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If there arise among you a prophet, or a dreamer of
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dreams, and giveth thee a sign or a wonder, and the
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sign or wonder come to pass, whereof he spake unto
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thee, saying, let us go after other gods, which thou
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hast not known, and let us serve them; thou shalt
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not hearken unto the words of that prophet, or that
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dreamer of dreams: for the LORD proveth you, to know
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whether ye love the LORD your God with all you soul.
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Ye shall walk after the LORD your God, and fear Him,
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and keep His commandments, and obey His voice, and ye
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shall serve Him, and cleave unto Him. And that
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prophet, or that dreamer of dreams shall be put to
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death; because he has spoken to turn you away form the
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LORD your God, which brought you out of the land of
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Egypt, and redeemed you out of the house of bondage,
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to thrust thee out of the way which the LORD thy God
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commanded thee to walk in. So shalt thou put the evil
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away from the midst of thee (Deut. 13:1-5)
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These words tell us that though a man might exercise miraculous
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powers, he could not be a prophet of the Lord if he sought to
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lead the people away to a strange god. Any prophet who advocates
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the service and worship of another god is not a mouthpiece of the
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Lord, is false, and, under the theocratic nation of Israel, was to
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be slain.
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Holding fast to these truths let us now turn to Brigham Young, a
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man who claimed for himself the station and office of prophet of
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God. Recent history records the lives of few men who have
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possessed the leadership qualities that Young exhibited. For thirty
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years he presided as Prophet, Seer, and Revelator over the Mormon
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Church, a people claiming to be led by prophets of God as in the
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days of ancient Israel. On the basis of this claim the Mormons
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have always regarded themselves as the only true Church on earth
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today (2). Their priesthood claims sole possession of the
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authority or power needed to act on behalf of God (3), and they
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consider all other "Christian churches" to be in a state of
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apostasy, who at best teach a partial truth about the gospel of
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Christ(4). Now if Brigham Young, Mormon prophet from 1847 to 1877,
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were a false prophet all along, then the claims of those who have
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sought to derive their priesthood authority through him are empty
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and void (5). If Brigham taught false doctrine, that cuts the
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ground from under Mormonism's claim of latter-day prophetic
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revelation and the Mormon Church is not divinely led. Acknowledging
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this to be true, LDS Apostle Orson Hyde stated:
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To acknowledge that this is the Kingdom of God, and
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that there is a presiding power, and to admit that he
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[Brigham Young] can advance incorrect doctrine is to
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lay the axe at the root of the tree. Will he suffer
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his mouthpiece to go into error? No. (6)
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Any boast of prophetic guidance would be worthless if that guidance
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were false. John Taylor, Mormon Apostle and later President,
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admitted also this to be the case: "If that mouthpiece [Brigham
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Young] has not the power to dictate I would throw all Mormonism
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away." (7)
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The Mormon Church must base the truth of her claims on the
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authenticity of Brigham's calling. Yet, we shall see that Brigham
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Young, who presided over the Mormon Church longer than any other
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man, did indeed advance false doctrine that focused worship on a
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god other than the Lord God of Israel.
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ADAM-GOD FIRST PROCLAIMED
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It stormed heavily on April 9, 1852, but the people turned out for
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the sessions of the Spring LDS Conference that were that day. Each
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session of the six-day church conference was filled to capacity.
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Those desiring the best seats lined up outside the doors hours
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before they opened. At times, because the crowds were so large,
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many male members would leave the tabernacle to allow more room for
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the women to attend.
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At 6:00 on the evening of the ninth, all LDS male members gathered
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together in the Salt Lake Tabernacle for another session. The house
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was full. After the usual introductory exercises, Mormon Prophet and
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President Brigham Young began to address his brethren upon various
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subjects. He instructed them concerning the place recreation and
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amusements should occupy in their lives and concerning the
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principle of tithing.
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Then, after a moment's pause, the Mormon Prophet took up his next
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topic. The question was, Who begat Jesus Christ in the flesh? This
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was a hot issue. There had been no little dispute about it among the
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LDS Elders, and there were opposing views. As a Prophet and `
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mouthpiece of God, Brigham Young stepped forward to silence all
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erroneous opinions and to declare with finality the true answer to
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the inquiry (8).
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First, he repeated the fundamental Mormon doctrine that the Father
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and Son each has a physical body of flesh and bones. Next, he set
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forth Mormonism's belief that God the Father in a pre-existent
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period, begot every spirit that would come to this earth. Then
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Brigham looked out over the vast audience and boldly commanded all
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of his hearers, whether near or far, Mormon or non-Mormon to take
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heed to his next statements:
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Now hear it, O inhabitants of the earth, Jew and
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Gentile, Saint and sinner! When our father Adam came
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into the garden of Eden, he came into it with a
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celestial body, and brought Eve, one of his wives,
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with him. He helped to make and organize this world.
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He is MICHAEL, the Archangel, the ANCIENT OF DAYS!
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about whom holy men have written and spoken - He is
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our father and our God, and the only God with whom WE
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have to do. Every man upon the earth, professing
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Christians or non-professing, must hear it, and will
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know it sooner or later (9).
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After declaring that Adam was the God of this world and the Father
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of its inhabitants, Brigham then addressed the original inquiry
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concerning the savior's birth:
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When the Virgin Mary conceived the child Jesus, the
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Father had begotten him in his own likeness. he was
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not begotten by the Holy Ghost. And who is the
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Father? He is the first of the human family; and when
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he took a tabernacle, it was begotten by his father
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in heaven, after the same manner as the tabernacles
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of Cain, Abel, and the rest of the sons and daughters
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of Adam and Eve.... I could tell you much more about
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this; but were I to tell you the whole truth,
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blasphemy would be nothing to it, in the estimation
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of the superstitious and over-righteous of mankind.
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However, I have told you the whole truth as far as I
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have gone... What a learned idea! Jesus, our elder
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brother, was begotten in the flesh by the same
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character that was in the Garden of Eden, and who is
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our Father in heaven. Now let all who may hear these
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doctrines, pause before they make light of them, or
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treat them with indifference, for they will prove
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their salvation or damnation. I have given you a few
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leading items upon this subject, but a great deal more
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remains to be told. Now, remember from this time
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forth, and forever, that Jesus Christ was not begotten
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by the Holy Ghost. I will repeat a little anecdote. I
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was in conversation with a certain learned professor
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upon this subject, when I replied, to this idea - "if
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the Son was begotten by the Holy Ghost, it would be
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very dangerous to baptize and confirm females, and
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give the Holy Ghost to them, lest he should beget
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children, to be palmed upon the Elders by the people,
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bringing the Elders into great difficulties." Treasure
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up these things in your hearts. In the Bible, you have
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read the things I told you tonight; but you have not
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known what you did read (10).
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Having made this response, Young concluded his comments with another
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reference to tithing. The Mormon choir then sang a hymn and Elder H.
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G. Sherwood gave the closing benediction.
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Few of the Latter-day Elders who filed out of the Tabernacle that
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night missed the meaning of what their prophet had just announced.
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Upon returning home that evening, Hosea Stout, the prominent Mormon
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pioneer, recorded the following in his daily journal:
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Friday 9th April 1852. - Stormy morning. attended
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conference House much crowded, did not stay in House
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long. after noon was not in because of the crowd. -
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Another meeting this evening. President B. Young taught
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that Adam was the father of Jesus Christ and the only
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God to us. That he came to this world in a resurrected
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body &c more hereafter (11).
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Samuel Rogers, who also was present that night, similarly noted the
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content of Brigham Young's discourse:
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April 16 1852, Conference commenced on the 6 and
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continued untill the 11, it was heled in the new
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tabernacle, adjourned untill the 6 of next October we
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had the best Conference that I ever attended during
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the time of the Conference President Brigham Young
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said that our spirits ware begotten before that Adam
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came to the earth, and that Adam helped to make the
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Earth, that he had a Celestial boddy when we came to
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the Earth, and that he brought his wife or one of his
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wives with him, and that Eave was allso a Celestial
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being, that they eat of the fruit of the ground untill
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they begat children from the Earth, he said that Adam
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was the only God that we would have, and that Christ
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was not begotten of the Holy Ghost, but of Father
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Adam...(12).
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DENIAL ADAM-GOD WAS TAUGHT
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As we consider Brigham Young's claim that Adam is God, it becomes
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clear that he was a false, uninspired prophet. This teaching not
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only runs counter to what has been revealed in the Bible, but it is
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also branded as false doctrine in modern Mormonism. LDS Apostle Mark
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E. Petersen, one of Mormonism's doctrinal authorities, stated:
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Some dissidents would have us believe that Adam is our
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God and that we have nothing to do with any other God,
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which, on the face of it, is ridiculous. To say that
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Adam is God is, of course, opposed utterly and
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completely to the scriptures as well as to our
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Articles of faith,.(13)
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Spencer W. Kimball, Mormon Prophet, also denounced the teaching that
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Adam is God:
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We warn you against the dissemination of doctrines
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which are not according to the scriptures and which
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are alleged to have been taught by some of the General
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Authorities... Such, for instance is the Adam-God theory.
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We denounce that theory and hope that everyone will be
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cautioned against this and other kinds of false
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doctrine (14).
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These and most other Mormon General Authorities, while denouncing
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the doctrine that Adam is God, avoid or deny the fact that Brigham
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Young himself was the major exponent of this doctrine. In his book,
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_Adam_Who_Is_He?_, Mark E. Petersen tries to rescue Mormonism's
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second prophet from teaching false doctrine by maintaining that
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Brigham Young was misquoted in the address in question. On pages
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16-17 of his book, Petersen sets forth as evidence for his defense
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as reference in which C. C. Rich supposedly stated that Brigham was
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misquoted in this sermon. Petersen claims that Rich was present on
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the ninth of April and was therefor in a position to note the
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misquotation which later crept into the published account of the
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discourse:
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Elder Charles C. Rich, of the Council of the Twelve,
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was present on a day when President Young gave an
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address that was wrongly reported as saying that
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Adam was Deity. In the copy of the Journal of
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Discourses that he had, Elder Rich referred to the
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misquotations as it appears in the Journal of
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Discourses,and in his own hand he wrote the following
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as the correct statement made by President Young:
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"Jesus our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh
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by the same character who talked with Adam in the
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Garden of eden, and who is our heavenly Father."
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(This signed statement is in the hands of the Church
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Historian.) Some of the reporters at the Tabernacle
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in those days were not as skill as others, and
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admittedly made mistakes, such as the misquotation of
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President Young as above, which was corrected by
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Brother Rich and which has caused some persons in the
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Church to go astray. The erroneously reported
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statement has been mistakenly made to read: "Jesus,
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our elder brother, was begotten in the flesh by the
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same character that was in the Garden of Eden, and who
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is our Father in Heaven." (JD, 1:51) On the face of
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it the mistake is obvious and was quickly noted by
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Elder Rich, who was present and heard the sermon.
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Hence the correction that he made.
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What seems to be a good case made by Petersen crumbles, however,
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upon cross examination. C. C. Rich, who Petersen claims "was present
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and heard the sermon," was in reality not even in Salt Lake City on
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that day! Rich left San Bernardino, California, on March 24, 1852,
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for the Great Salt Lake (15). He did not reach his destination until
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April 21. Under this date, the LDS Journal History records:
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April 21, 1852:
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Elder Chas. C. Rich and thirteen others arrived today
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in G.S.L. from California (16).
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In the May 1, 1852, issue of the Mormon _Deseret_Weekly_ the
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following announcement was made:
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Elder C. C. Rich arrived on Wednesday, the 21
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of April, in company with 13 others...direct
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from San Bernardino (17).
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Hosea Stout, in his journal, also noted the event:
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Wednesday 21st April 1852 Engaged as yesterday. Gen
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Rich and some 15 others arrived today from
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California by the South rout all well.
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Furthermore, not only was C. C. Rich absent on the ninth, but the
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reference which Petersen claims was written by C. C. Rich "in his
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own hand" was in reality written and signed by his son, Ben E. Rich,
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many years after the sermon was delivered! (18).
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Whether Mr. Petersen was deliberately seeking to suppress the facts
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or not, the truth is that there is no evidence whatsoever that
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Brigham Young was misquoted. As we shall see, Young came under much
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criticism from outside and from within the Mormon Church for
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teaching that Adam was God the Father. If he had merely been
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misquoted, Brigham simply could have corrected his hearers and
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accusers. Instead, however, Young continued to affirm and preach
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this doctrine against all opposition (19).
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These facts have forced other Mormon writers to maintain that
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Brigham was quoted correctly, but that he has been misinterpreted
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by his hearers and readers. Realizing the implications of one of
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their prophets teaching false doctrine on such an essential matter
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as who God is, these LDS apologists insist that Brigham Young did
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not mean to say that Adam was deity. Characteristic of this
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argument are the following statements made by the tenth Mormon
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President, Joseph Fielding Smith:
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In discussing the statement by President Brigham Young
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that the Father of Jesus Christ is the same character
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who was in the garden of Eden, I maintain that
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President Young was not referring to Adam, but to God
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the Father, who created Adam, for he was in the garden
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of Eden, and according to Mormon doctrine Adam was in
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his presence constantly, walked with him, talked with
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him and the Father taught Adam his language. It was
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not until the fall, that the Father departed from Adam
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and from the Garden of Eden (20).
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In regard to Brigham's statement that Jesus was begotten by "the
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First of the human family", Smith states that this is referring to
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the God and creator of Adam, who was the "first of the human family",
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being its "progenitor" (21).
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Brigham's statement that Adam is "our Father and our God and the
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only God with whom we have to do" is interpreted to mean that Adam,
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being the first man, is the patriarchal head of the human race, and
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in this regard he could be considered a god. In no way would these
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later Mormon writer believe that Brigham is identifying Adam as God
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their heavenly Father and the Father of Jesus in the flesh. (22).
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YOUNG'S STATEMENTS BECOME PLAINER
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It must be admitted that Brigham's statements in the 1852 discourse
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can be taken in more than one way. However, it again needs to be
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asserted that both Brigham's friends and his opponents had
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understood him to mean that Adam was God and was the Father of
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Jesus Christ in the flesh. He simply could have corrected the
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misinterpretation, but he didn't. Instead, 25 years after his
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original "Adam-God" sermon, we find that the Mormon "Revelator"
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continued to declare in no uncertain terms that Adam was the Lord
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God Almighty (23).
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During a discourse given on Sunday night, February 19, 1854, Brigham
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Young again addressed the question of who begot Jesus Christ in the
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flesh. Speaking of Christ, he asked:
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Who did beget him. His Father, and his father is our
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God, and the Father of our spirits, and he is the
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framer of the body, the God and Father of our Lord
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Jesus Christ. Who is he. He is Father Adam; Micheal;
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the Ancient of days. Has he a father? He has. Has he
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a mother? He has. Now to say the Son of God was
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begotten by the Holy Ghost, is to say that the Holy
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Ghost is God the Father, which is inconsistent, and
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contrary to all the revelations of God both modern,
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and ancient. I silenced this erroneous doctrine a year
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ago last fall conference. It was I think when a
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dispute arose among some of our best Elders, as to who
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was the Father of the Son of Man pertaining to the
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flesh. Some contended it was the H Ghost, and some
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that it was Elohim. When I spoke upon it in this stand
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before a conference of Elders, I cautioned them when
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they laid their hands upon people for the gift of the
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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 for us all:... (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,
|
|
1973, 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 THE 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.
|
|
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CHRIS ALEX VLACHOS
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COMMUNITY CHRISTIAN MINISTRIES
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288 NORTH 100 WEST
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PROVO, UTAH 84601
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---------------------------------------------------------------------
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Even as this article was being prepared for its publication, Mormon
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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:
|
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|
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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 out 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 we was quoting a man who was not even there?
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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********FOOTNOTES********
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(1) 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).
|
|
|
|
(2) 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).
|
|
|
|
(3) 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).
|
|
|
|
(4) 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).
|
|
|
|
(5) 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.
|
|
|
|
(6) "Misc. Minutes" unpublished ms., Brigham Young Collection,
|
|
Church Archives, Salt Lake City, p.1.
|
|
|
|
(7) Ibid., pp.6-7.
|
|
|
|
(8) 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).
|
|
|
|
(9) 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.
|
|
|
|
(10) Ibid., pp. 50-51.
|
|
|
|
(11) 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.
|
|
|
|
(12) Journal of Samuel H. Rogers, Vol. 1, p. 179. Copied from
|
|
the original located at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections,
|
|
Provo, Utah.
|
|
|
|
(13) Mark E. Peterson, ADAM WHO WAS HE? (Deseret Book, 1976),
|
|
p.14.
|
|
|
|
(14) Spencer W. Kimball, Deseret News, October 9, 1976, Church
|
|
News Section, p.11).
|
|
|
|
(15) Leonard J. Arrington, Charles C. Rich (B.Y.U. Press, 1974),
|
|
p.173
|
|
|
|
(16) Copied from microfilm of original. B.Y.U. Library, Special
|
|
Collections, Prove, Utah.
|
|
|
|
(17) Copied from Deseret Weekly, microfilm, B.Y.U. Library.
|
|
|
|
(18) 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.
|
|
|
|
(19) 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).
|
|
|
|
(20) Joseph Fielding Smith, ANSWERS TO GOSPEL QUESTIONS, Vol.
|
|
5, p.123.
|
|
|
|
(21) Ibid., pp. 122-123.
|
|
|
|
(22) See Bruce R. McConkie, MORMON DOCTRINE (Bookcraft, 1966),
|
|
pp. 18-19.
|
|
|
|
(23) 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).
|
|
|
|
(24) Brigham Young Papers, Feb. 19, 1854, call number Ms. F219
|
|
#81, Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
|
|
|
|
(25) Copied from microfilm of journal located at B.Y.U. Library,
|
|
Special Collections, Provo, Utah.
|
|
|
|
(26) See Bruce R. McConkie, MORMON DOCTRINE, pp.516-517.
|
|
|
|
(27) Millenial Star, Vol. 16, No. 31, August 5, 1854, p.482.
|
|
|
|
(28) Ibid., p.483
|
|
|
|
(29) Ibid., Vol. 16, No. 34, August 26, 1854, p.530.
|
|
|
|
(30) Ibid., pp.534-535.
|
|
|
|
(31) 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.
|
|
|
|
(32) Brigham Young Papers. Oct. 8, 1854, call number Ms. d 1234,
|
|
Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
|
|
|
|
(33) Brigham Young, Journal of Discourses, Vol. 4, p.54).
|
|
|
|
(34) Ibid., Vol. 6, p.275.
|
|
|
|
(35) Deseret News, Vol. 4, No. 31, October 12, 1854, p.2.
|
|
|
|
(36) Journal of Wilford Woodruff, October 6-8, 1854.
|
|
|
|
(37) Journal of the Southern Indian Mission, p.88.
|
|
|
|
(38) Joseph Lee Robinson Journal, copied from typed transcript
|
|
located at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, p.62.
|
|
|
|
(39) Eliza R. Snow was a plural wife of Joseph Smith and was
|
|
later married to Brigham Young.
|
|
|
|
(40) Millenial Star, Vol. 17, No. 20, p.320.
|
|
|
|
(41) 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.
|
|
|
|
(42) Diary of Samuel Whitney Richards, copied from typed
|
|
transcript at B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo,
|
|
Utah, p.113.
|
|
|
|
(43) Journal of Discourses, Vol. 4, p.2.
|
|
|
|
(44) Wilford Woodruff Journal, December 29, 1856. Typed from
|
|
microfilm of original.
|
|
|
|
(45) Journal of Discourses, Vol. 5, p.331f.
|
|
|
|
(46) The minutes of this session are found in the Wilford
|
|
Woodruff Journal, under the date of January 27, 1860.
|
|
|
|
(47) The council minutes are located in the Brigham Young
|
|
Collection, Miscellaneous Papers, Church Historian's
|
|
Office.
|
|
|
|
(48) 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.
|
|
|
|
(49) 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.
|
|
|
|
(50) A MORMON CHRONICLE: THE DIARIES OF JOHN D. LEE (The
|
|
Huntington Library, 1955), Vol. 1, p.293.
|
|
|
|
(51) Sacred History, Solomon F. Kimball Papers, Church Historian's
|
|
Office, Salt Lake City.
|
|
|
|
(52) Manuscript Sermon, "A FEW WORDS OF DOCTRINE", Brigham
|
|
Young Collection, Church Historian's Office, Salt Lake City.
|
|
|
|
(53) Journal of Discourses, Vol. 8, p.58.
|
|
|
|
(54) Ibid., Vol. 13, p.95.
|
|
|
|
(55) Ibid., p.264.
|
|
|
|
(56) L. John Nuttall Journal, pp.20-24, copied from original at
|
|
B.Y.U. Library, Special Collections, Provo, Utah.
|
|
|
|
(57) See Mark E. Peterson, ADAM WHO IS HE?
|